Pope Francis committed to showing God’s Mercy
APRIL 18,2020
Over the years, Pope Francis has explained, through words and gestures, that the mission of the Church is to reveal God’s mercy.
He said it in his first Angelus, a few days after his election.
POPE FRANCIS
God understands us. He waits for us. He doesn’t get tired of forgiving us, if we repent and go to Him with a truly open heart. Never forget this: The Lord never gets tired of forgiving us. It is we who get tired of asking for forgiveness.
Pope Francis is the first pope to go to confession in public.
He has also heard the confessions of many people, both in Rome and during his papal trips.
In 2015, he called for a jubilee with a special focus on God’s mercy.
POPE FRANCIS
I am convinced the whole Church will find in this jubilee, the joy to rediscover and make fruitful the mercy of God, with which we are all called to comfort every man and woman of our time.
The pope explains that God’s mercy doesn’t remove the weight of sin, but rather, through confession, allows for the healing of the wounds caused by sin.
POPE FRANCIS
God’s mercy does the same thing. It doesn’t ‘paint’ us a pretty face, or airbrush the reality of who we are. It isn’t photoshop. Rather, with the very threads of our poverty and sinfulness—with these, and with our sins, with these—interwoven with the Father’s love, it so weaves us that our soul is renewed and recovers its true image, the image of Jesus.
In Poland, during a trip dedicated to John Paul II and to the devotion to the Divine Mercy, the pope explained that God’s forgiveness helps people pardon and be compassionate toward others.
POPE FRANCIS
Are you able to dream? When a heart is open and prepared to dream, there is also room for mercy. There is also room to be close to those who suffer, those who want peace in their heart or who lack the necessities of life.
Pope Francis says receiving God’s forgiveness also means pardoning those who have hurt us, and not fostering resentment.
POPE FRANCIS
God forgets the terrible stories of so many sinners, of our sins. He forgives us and keeps going. He asks only this, “Do the same. Learn to forgive. Do not carry this cross of hatred, rancor, of ‘you are going to pay for this.’”
The other face of mercy is charity.
The pope’s gestures toward people in need have helped many experience the goodness of God.
Pope to leave Vatican tomorrow for Divine Mercy Mass
APRIL 18,2020
This church is the shrine of the Divine Mercy in Rome.
Since Sunday is the feast of the Divine Mercy, Pope Francis will celebrate Mass here.
At the General Audience last Wednesday, he recalled the importance of this Catholic feast, instituted by John Paul II.
It has been celebrated every second Sunday of Easter since the year 2000, in response to St. Faustina Kowalska’s revelations.
POPE FRANCIS
He established it in response to the petition Jesus made through St. Faustina. ‘I hope that the feast of mercy will offer protection and a refuge to all souls. Humanity will not find peace until it approaches my fountain of mercy.’ With confidence, let us pray to Merciful Jesus for the Church and for all humanity, especially for those who suffer in this difficult moment.
FR. JOZEF BART
Rector, Divine Mercy Shrine
“John Paul II did not only insist on mercy. He made his pontificate an example of it. When he consecrated this Sunday to Mercy, he felt the pain and suffering of people on Earth. Where can a person find refuge and hope if not in God’s divine mercy?”
This Mass will be the second occasion for which the pope leaves the Vatican during the pandemic.
The first was on March 15, when he prayed before the miraculous crucifix of San Marcello.
JMB/CT
Pope celebrates Divine Mercy: We risk being struck by a worse virus, selfish indifference
The pope left the Vatican in the middle of the pandemic to celebrate a special occasion: Divine Mercy Sunday. He celebrated Mass at the Church of the Holy Spirit in Sassia, a few yards from St. Peter’s Basilica.
John Paul II entrusted to this Roman shrine the responsibility of promoting the devotion to the Divine Mercy in the Eternal City. In the year 2000, he canonized Faustina Kowalska, known as the person who spread this devotion in the first half of the 20th century.
Pope Francis celebrated Mass with only his most essential collaborators. In his homily, he took up the ideas he had preached so strongly during the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy in 2016.
POPE FRANCIS
God wants us to see Him, not as a taskmaster with whom we have to settle accounts, but as our Father who always raises us up.
During the Mass, the pope reflected on humanity’s response to the pandemic. He expressed his hope for solidarity between countries, so they could help one another overcome the health emergency.
POPE FRANCIS
The risk is that we may then be struck by an even worse virus, that of selfish indifference. A virus spread by the thought that life is better if it is better for me, and that everything will be fine if it is fine for me. It begins there and ends up selecting one person over another, discarding the poor, and sacrificing those left behind on the altar of progress.
That’s why he said there is a lesson to be learned from the health emergency: no one is invulnerable, and everyone needs help.
POPE FRANCIS
The present pandemic however, reminds us that there are no differences or borders between those who suffer. We are all frail, all equal, all precious. May we be profoundly shaken by what is happening all around us. The time has come to eliminate inequalities, to heal the injustice that is undermining the health of the entire human family. Let us learn from the early Christian community described in the Acts of the Apostles.
This is the same idea he emphasized on the evening of extraordinary prayer for the end of the pandemic. It was an occasion on which the pope prayed in solitude, beneath the rain, before an empty St. Peter’s Square.
This was the second time Pope Francis left the Vatican since the quarantine was decreed. On the first occasion, he went to the Church of San Marcello to pray before the miraculous crucifix. He prayed for those affected by the coronavirus and for an end to the pandemic.
Javier Romero
Translation: Claudia Torres
Copyright: Vatican Media
Pope Francis’ Homily on 20th Anniversary of Divine Mercy Sunday: ‘The Lord waited for Thomas. Mercy does not abandon those who stay behind’
Here is the full text of the Pope’s Homily at the Mass on Divine Mercy Sunday, April 19, 2020, the 20th anniversary of the day’s institution by Pope St. John Paul II and of St. Faustina’s canonization, provided by the Vatican:
Last Sunday we celebrated the Lord’s resurrection; today we witness the resurrection of his disciple. It has already been a week, a week since the disciples had seen the Risen Lord, but in spite of this, they remained fearful, cringing behind “closed doors” (Jn 20:26), unable even to convince Thomas, the only one absent, of the resurrection. What does Jesus do in the face of this timorous lack of belief? He returns and, standing in the same place, “in the midst” of the disciples, he repeats his greeting: “Peace be with you!” (Jn 20:19, 26). He starts all over. The resurrection of his disciple begins here, from this faithful and patient mercy, from the discovery that God never tires of reaching out to lift us up when we fall. He wants us to see him, not as a taskmaster with whom we have to settle accounts, but as our Father who always raises us up. In life we go forward tentatively, uncertainly, like a toddler who takes a few steps and falls; a few steps more and falls again, yet each time his father puts him back on his feet. The hand that always puts us back on our feet is mercy: God knows that without mercy we will remain on the ground, that in order to keep walking, we need to be put back on our feet.
You may object: “But I keep falling!”. The Lord knows this and he is always ready to raise you up. He does not want us to keep thinking about our failings; rather, he wants us to look to him. For when we fall, he sees children needing to be put back on their feet; in our failings he sees children in need of his merciful love. Today, in this church that has become a shrine of mercy in Rome, and on this Sunday that Saint John Paul II dedicated to Divine Mercy twenty years ago, we confidently welcome this message. Jesus said to Saint Faustina: “I am love and mercy itself; there is no human misery that could measure up to my mercy” (Diary, 14 September 1937). At one time, the Saint, with satisfaction, told Jesus that she had offered him all of her life and all that she had. But Jesus’ answer stunned her: “You have not offered me the thing is truly yours”. What had that holy nun kept for herself? Jesus said to her with kindness: “My daughter, give me your failings” (10 October 1937). We too can ask ourselves: “Have I given my failings to the Lord? Have I let him see me fall so that he can raise me up?” Or is there something I still keep inside me? A sin, a regret from the past, a wound that I have inside, a grudge against someone, an idea about a particular person… The Lord waits for us to offer him our failings so that he can help us experience his mercy.
Let us go back to the disciples. They had abandoned the Lord at his Passion and felt guilty. But meeting them, Jesus did not give a long sermon. To them, who were wounded within, he shows his own wounds. Thomas can now touch them and know of Jesus’ love and how much Jesus had suffered for him, even though he had abandoned him. In those wounds, he touches with his hands God’s tender closeness. Thomas arrived late, but once he received mercy, he overtook the other disciples: he believed not only in the resurrection, but in the boundless love of God. And he makes the most simple and beautiful profession of faith: “My Lord and my God!” (v. 28). Here is the resurrection of the disciple: it is accomplished when his frail and wounded humanity enters into that of Jesus. There, every doubt is resolved; there, God becomes my God; there, we begin to accept ourselves and to love life as it is.
Dear brothers and sisters, in the time of trial that we are presently undergoing, we too, like Thomas, with our fears and our doubts, have experienced our frailty. We need the Lord, who sees beyond that frailty an irrepressible beauty. With him we rediscover how precious we are even in our vulnerability. We discover that we are like beautiful crystals, fragile and at the same time precious. And if, like crystal, we are transparent before him, his light – the light of mercy – will shine in us and through us in the world. As the Letter of Peter said, this is a reason for being “filled with joy, though now for a little while you may have to suffer various trials” (1 Pt 1:6).
On this feast of Divine Mercy, the most beautiful message comes from Thomas, the disciple who arrived late; he was the only one missing. But the Lord waited for Thomas. Mercy does not abandon those who stay behind. Now, while we are looking forward to a slow and arduous recovery from the pandemic, there is a danger that we will forget those who are left behind. The risk is that we may then be struck by an even worse virus, that of selfish indifference. A virus spread by the thought that life is better if it is better for me, and that everything will be fine if it is fine for me. It begins there and ends up selecting one person over another, discarding the poor, and sacrificing those left behind on the altar of progress. The present pandemic, however, reminds us that there are no differences or borders between those who suffer. We are all frail, all equal, all precious. May we be profoundly shaken by what is happening all around us: the time has come to eliminate inequalities, to heal the injustice that is undermining the health of the entire human family! Let us learn from the early Christian community described in the Acts of the Apostles. It received mercy and lived with mercy: “All who believed were together and had all things in common; and they sold their possessions and goods and distributed them to all, as any had need” (Acts 2:44-45). This is not some ideology: it is Christianity.
In that community, after the resurrection of Jesus, only one was left behind and the others waited for him. Today the opposite seems to be the case: a small part of the human family has moved ahead, while the majority has remained behind. Each of us could say: “These are complex problems, it is not my job to take care of the needy, others have to be concerned with it!”. Saint Faustina, after meeting Jesus, wrote: “In a soul that is suffering we should see Jesus on the cross, not a parasite and a burden… [Lord] you give us the chance to practise deeds of mercy, and we practise making judgements” (Diary, 6 September 1937). Yet she herself complained one day to Jesus that, in being merciful, one is thought to be naive. She said, “Lord, they often abuse my goodness”. And Jesus replied: “Never mind, don’t let it bother you, just be merciful to everyone always” (24 December 1937). To everyone: let us not think only of our interests, our vested interests. Let us welcome this time of trial as an opportunity to prepare for our collective future. Because without an all-embracing vision, there will be no future for anyone.
Today the simple and disarming love of Jesus revives the heart of his disciple. Like the apostle Thomas, let us accept mercy, the salvation of the world. And let us show mercy to those who are most vulnerable; for only in this way will we build a new world.
Read the source: https://zenit.org/articles/pope-francis-homily-on-20th-anniversary-of-divine-mercy-sunday-full-text/
Related Readings:
Readings & Reflections with Cardinal Tagle’s Video: Second Sunday of Easter A – Divine Mercy Sunday & St. Gianna Beretta Molla, April 19,2020 http://www.pagadiandiocese.org/2020/04/18/readings-reflections-with-cardinal-tagles-video-second-sunday-of-easter-a-divine-mercy-sunday-st-gianna-beretta-molla-april-192020/
