Francis stressed this during this morning’s mass in St. Martha’s House: “To acknowledge our misery is the very door that opens us to the Lord’s caress, His forgiveness”
Francis stressed this during this morning’s mass in St. Martha’s House: “To acknowledge our misery is the very door that opens us to the Lord’s caress, His forgiveness”
“Salvation only enters our hearts when we open them to the truth of our sins. It happens that scholars, cultured people or people with power “forget the simple gestures of the people.” In their theories, thoughts and life of government, they don’t understand the importance of these gestures. Francis shared these reflections during this morning’s mass in St. Martha’s House. Today’s homily was inspired by “the Gospel of the sinful woman who washed Jesus’ feet with her tears and anoints them with perfume drying them with her hair,” AsiaNews reports.
Speaking about faith, the Pope linked the ability to perform gestures like that of the sinful woman, to our ability to acknowledge that we are sinners, opening up to God’s love and tenderness. Pope Francis concluded by recalling Jesus’ words: “Amen, I say to you, tax collectors and prostitutes are entering the kingdom of God before you.”
“The Pharisee,” Francis said, “in his own mind, judges both Jesus and the sinful woman, because if “he truly were a prophet he would know want kind of woman is touching him”. The Pharisee “is not a bad man” he simply “cannot understand the woman’s actions. He cannot understand the simple gesture: the simple gestures of the people. Perhaps this man had forgotten how to caress a baby, how to console a grandmother. In his theories, his thoughts, his life of government – because perhaps he was a councilor of the Pharisees – he had forgotten the simple gestures of life, the very first things that we all, as newborns, received from our parents.”
Pope Francis continue, Jesus – rebukes the Pharisee “with humility and tenderness”, “his patience, his love, the desire to save everyone” leads him to explain the woman’s gesture to the Pharisee, and at the same time point to the Pharisee’s own lack of courtesy. And amid the shocked murmuring of the crowd, he says to the woman: “Your sins are forgiven”. “Go in peace, your faith has saved you! He only says the word salvation – ‘Your faith has saved you’ – to the woman, who is a sinner. And he says it because she was able to weep for her sins, to confess her sins, to say ‘I am a sinner’, and admit it to herself. He doesn’t say the same to those people, who were not bad people: they simply did not believe themselves to be sinners. Other people were sinners: the tax collectors, prostitutes … These were the sinners. Jesus says this word – ‘You are saved, you are safe – only to those who open their hearts and acknowledge that they are sinners. Salvation only enters our hearts when we open them to the truth of our sins. The privileged place to encounter with Jesus Christ is in our sins”. Pope Francis observed that this may seem like “heresy” but St. Paul also said as much when he said he would boast of only two things: his sins and the Risen Christ who saved him.This is why the ability to acknowledge our own sins, to acknowledge our misery, to acknowledge what we are and what we are capable of doing or have done is the very door that opens us to the Lord’s caress, His forgiveness, to His Word ‘Go in peace, your faith has saved you!’, because you were brave, you were brave enough to open your heart to the only One who can save you.”
Jesus said to the hypocrites, “Amen, I say to you, tax collectors and prostitutes are entering the kingdom of God before you”. These are strong words – concluded the Pope – because those who feel themselves sinners “open their hearts in the confession of their sins, to encounter Jesus, who gave His blood for us all.”
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