Friday, June 19, 2020

Pope Francis: Discover the Riches Hidden in the Sacred Heart of Jesus

The Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus is a liturgical feast celebrated on the Friday after Corpus Christi. Courtney Mares/CNA. VATICAN CITY — Ahead of the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Pope Francis encouraged Catholics to discover the riches of charity hidden in the heart of Christ. “Friday we will celebrate the solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Do not be afraid to present to him all the intentions of our suffering humanity, its fears, its miseries. May this Heart, full of love for men, give everyone hope and trust,” Pope Francis said June 17 in the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace. “I invite you to discover the riches that are hidden in the Heart of Jesus, to learn to love your neighbor,” the pope said via the livestream broadcast of his weekly catechesis. The Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus is a liturgical feast celebrated on the Friday after Corpus Christi. The devotion to the heart of Jesus has Christ’s unconditional love at its center, exemplified in the blood and water which poured forth from Christ’s heart in his sacrifice on the cross. St. Marguerite Marie Alacoque, a 17th-century French nun and mystic, helped spread devotion to the Sacred Heart through her visions in which Christ expressed his desire to reveal his loving heart to mankind. Pope Francis said that the saints serve as “bridges” between God and his people through their prayers of intercession. He pointed to the life of Moses as an exemplary biblical model of intercessory prayer. The pope said that Moses belonged among those who are “poor in spirit, who live by making trust in God the viaticum of their journey.” “Moses urges us to pray with the same ardor of Jesus, to intercede for the world, to remember that despite all of its frailties, it always belongs to God,” Pope Francis said. “Scripture usually depicts him with his hands outstretched towards God, as if to form a bridge between heaven and earth with his own person,” he said. “Even in the most difficult moments, even on the day when the people repudiate God and him as a guide and make themselves a golden calf, Moses does not feel like putting his people aside.” Pope Francis explained that Moses prayed for others, not only for himself and thus became “the great intercessor of God’s people.” “We too must realize that we are never before God only as individuals, but also as members of the Church and children of the one human family. This should also become visible in the way we pray for one another,” he said. “Entrusted by God to transmit the Law to his people, founder of divine worship, mediator of the highest mysteries, he will not for this reason cease to maintain close bonds of solidarity with his people, especially in the hour of temptation and sin. He was always attached to his people. Moses never forgets his people,” Francis said. The pope said that Moses provides a “beautiful example for all pastors.” He said that Moses “does not sell out his people to advance his career. He does not climb the ladder, he is an intercessor.” The “greatness of pastors,” he said, is to be close to their people and not to forget their roots. “Pastors are the bridges between the people, to whom they belong, and God, to whom they belong by vocation,” Francis said. “This is why they are called ‘pontifex,’ bridges.” “And today, too, Jesus is the ‘pontifex.’ He is the bridge between us and the Father. And Jesus intercedes for us, He shows the Father the wounds that are the price of our salvation, and He intercedes,” he said. At the conclusion of his general audience, Pope Francis remembered the life of Aristides de Sousa Mendes, a Portuguese diplomat who saved the lives of thousands of Jews during the Holocaust. “May freedom of conscience always and everywhere be respected, and may every Christian give an example of consistency with a conscience that is righteous and illuminated by the Word of God,” he said. https://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/pope-francis-discover-the-riches-hidden-in-the-sacred-heart-of-jesus

Sunday, June 14, 2020

Pope Francis on the Feast of Corpus Christi: the Eucharist heals our wounded memory

Gerard O’Connell June 14, 2020. (CNS photo/Tiziana Fabi, Reuters pool) Pope Francis spoke about the importance of the Eucharist for the life of the church community and the individual believer when he celebrated Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica, attended by some 50 people and a greater global audience following on television and the social media on Sunday, June 14. He spoke about it again, from the study window of the papal apartment, when he greeted hundreds of Romans, wearing masks and respecting social-distancing norms, in St. Peter’s Square when he recited the Angelus with them at noon. He reminded them that “today in Italy and in other nations, the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ, Corpus Christi, is celebrated.” He emphasized the “mystical” and “communal” effects of the Eucharist on the life of the Christian and said that “one cannot participate in the Eucharist without committing oneself to sincere mutual fraternity.” In his homily, Pope Francis offered a profound reflection on the Eucharist as “God’s memorial.” “Scripture has been given to us that we might overcome our forgetfulness of God,” he told his global audience. He emphasized the importance of remembering in our prayer “the deeds of the Lord” and “those wonders that the Lord has worked in our own lives.” Indeed, he said, “if we do not remember it, we become strangers to ourselves, ‘passers-by’ of existence. Without memory, we uproot ourselves from the soil that nourishes us and allow ourselves to be carried away like leaves in the wind.” In his homily, Pope Francis offered a profound reflection on the Eucharist as “God’s memorial.” On the other hand, Francis said, “if we do remember, we bind ourselves afresh to the strongest of ties; we feel part of a living history, the living experience of a people.” He explained that “memory is not something private; it is the path that unites us to God and to others…. This is why in the Bible the memory of the Lord must be passed on from generation to generation.” Aware that in many places today the faith is not being passed on, Francis raised the question, “What if the chain of transmission of memories is interrupted?” His answer: “God knows how difficult it is, he knows how weak our memory is, and he has done something remarkable: He left us a memorial. He did not just leave us words, for it is easy to forget what we hear. He did not just leave us the Scriptures, for it is easy to forget what we read. He did not just leave us signs, for we can forget even what we see. He gave us food, for it is not easy to forget something we have actually tasted.” He reminded believers that “Jesus left us bread in which he is truly present, alive and true, with all the flavor of his love. Receiving him we can say: ‘He is the Lord; he remembers me!’” He recalled that Jesus instructed us “Do this in remembrance of me” and said that “the Eucharist is not simply an act of remembrance; it is a fact, it is the Lord’s Passover made present once again for us. In Mass, the death and resurrection of Jesus are set before us.” Pope Francis told Christians worldwide, “We cannot do without the Eucharist, for it is God’s memorial. And it heals our wounded memory.” Pope Francis told Christians worldwide, “We cannot do without the Eucharist, for it is God’s memorial. And it heals our wounded memory.” He gave three examples of how the Eucharist heals our memory. First, he said, “the Eucharist heals orphaned memory.” He recalled that “so many people have memories marked by a lack of affection and bitter disappointments caused by those who should have given them love and instead orphaned their hearts. We would like to go back and change the past, but we cannot.” “God can heal these wounds by placing within our memory a greater love: his own love,” the pope said. “The Eucharist brings us the Father’s faithful love, which heals our sense of being orphans.” Next, Francis said, “through the Eucharist, the Lord also heals our negative memory, that negativity that seeps so often into our hearts.” He told believers: The Lord heals this negative memory, which drags to the surface things that have gone wrong and leaves us with the sorry notion that we are useless, that we only make mistakes, that we are ourselves a mistake. Jesus comes to tell us that this is not so. He wants to be close to us. Every time we receive him, he reminds us that we are precious, that we are guests he has invited to his banquet, friends with whom he wants to dine…because he is truly in love with us. He sees and loves the beauty and goodness that we are.” “The Lord knows that evil and sins do not define us; they are diseases, infections,” Pope Francis said. “And he comes to heal them with the Eucharist, which contains the antibodies to our negative memory. With Jesus, we can become immune to sadness.” He acknowledged that “we will always remember our failures, troubles, problems at home and at work, our unrealized dreams,” but assured believers that “their weight will not crush us because Jesus is present even more deeply, encouraging us with his love. This is the strength of the Eucharist, which transforms us into bringers of God, bringers of joy, not negativity.” “Jesus approaches us gently, in the disarming simplicity of the host. He comes as bread broken in order to break open the shells of our selfishness.” Pope Francis told Christians worldwide, “We cannot do without the Eucharist, for it is God’s memorial. And it heals our wounded memory.” He gave three examples of how the Eucharist heals our memory. First, he said, “the Eucharist heals orphaned memory.” He recalled that “so many people have memories marked by a lack of affection and bitter disappointments caused by those who should have given them love and instead orphaned their hearts. We would like to go back and change the past, but we cannot.” “God can heal these wounds by placing within our memory a greater love: his own love,” the pope said. “The Eucharist brings us the Father’s faithful love, which heals our sense of being orphans.” Next, Francis said, “through the Eucharist, the Lord also heals our negative memory, that negativity that seeps so often into our hearts.” He told believers: The Lord heals this negative memory, which drags to the surface things that have gone wrong and leaves us with the sorry notion that we are useless, that we only make mistakes, that we are ourselves a mistake. Jesus comes to tell us that this is not so. He wants to be close to us. Every time we receive him, he reminds us that we are precious, that we are guests he has invited to his banquet, friends with whom he wants to dine…because he is truly in love with us. He sees and loves the beauty and goodness that we are.” “The Lord knows that evil and sins do not define us; they are diseases, infections,” Pope Francis said. “And he comes to heal them with the Eucharist, which contains the antibodies to our negative memory. With Jesus, we can become immune to sadness.” He acknowledged that “we will always remember our failures, troubles, problems at home and at work, our unrealized dreams,” but assured believers that “their weight will not crush us because Jesus is present even more deeply, encouraging us with his love. This is the strength of the Eucharist, which transforms us into bringers of God, bringers of joy, not negativity.” “Jesus approaches us gently, in the disarming simplicity of the host. He comes as bread broken in order to break open the shells of our selfishness.” “The Eucharist satisfies our hunger for material things and kindles our desire to serve,” he said. “It raises us from our comfortable and lazy lifestyle and reminds us that we are not only mouths to be fed but also his hands to be used to help feed others.” Alluding to this time of pandemic, Francis told his global audience: “It is especially urgent now to take care of those who hunger for food and for dignity, of those without work and those who struggle to carry on. And this we must do in a real way, as real as the bread that Jesus gives us. Genuine closeness is needed, as are true bonds of solidarity. In the Eucharist, Jesus draws close to us: Let us not turn away from those around us!” RELATED STORIES Pope Francis’ message for the World Day of the Poor amid pandemic: We are all responsible Gerard O’Connell At the end of Mass, he presided at the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and then went to the papal apartment, where after reciting the Angelus with those gathered in St. Peter’s Square, he issued the following passionate appeal for peace in Libya. Pope Francis said, “I am following the dramatic situation in Libya with great apprehension and sorrow. It has been present in my prayer in recent days. Please, I urge international bodies and those who have political and military responsibilities to recommence with conviction and resolve the search for a path towards an end to the violence, leading to peace, stability and unity in the country.” He said he also prays for “for the thousands of migrants, refugees, asylum seekers and internally displaced persons in Libya” and called on “the international community to please take their plight to heart, identifying pathways and providing means to provide them with the protection they need, a dignified condition and a hopeful future.” https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2020/06/14/pope-francis-feast-corpus-christi-eucharist-heals-our-wounded-memory