杏MAP导航

杏MAP导航 Francis celebrates Sunday Mass in Antananarivo 杏MAP导航 Francis celebrates Sunday Mass in Antananarivo 

杏MAP导航's homily at Mass in Madagascar: Full text

杏MAP导航 Francis celebrates Holy Mass in Antananarivo's Soamandrakizay diocesan field on the second day of his Apostolic Journey to Madagascar. The full text of his prepared remarks is below:

Homily of His Holiness 杏MAP导航 Francis
Holy Mass
Antananarivo, Diocesan Grounds of Soamandrakizay
Sunday, 8 September 2019

The Gospel tells us that 鈥済reat multitudes accompanied Jesus鈥  (Lk 14:25).  Like the multitudes gathered along his path, you too have come in great numbers to receive his message and follow in his footsteps.  But you also know that following Jesus is not easy.  Today, Luke鈥檚 Gospel reminds us of how demanding that commitment can be.

We should realize that Luke sets out those demands within his account of Jesus鈥 ascent to Jerusalem.  He starts with the parable of the banquet to which everyone is invited, especially the outcasts living on the streets, in the squares and at the crossroads.  And he concludes with the three 鈥減arables of mercy鈥, where a party is celebrated when what was lost was found, where someone who seemed dead is welcomed with joy and restored to life with the possibility of making a new start.  For us as Christians, our sacrifices only make sense in the light of the joyful celebration of our encounter with Jesus Christ.


Jesus鈥 first demand has to do with family relationships.  The new life the Lord holds out to us seems troubling and scandalously unjust to those who think that entry into the kingdom of heaven can be limited or reduced only to bonds of blood or membership in a particular group, clan or particular culture.  When 鈥渇amily鈥 becomes the decisive criterion for what we consider right and good, we end up justifying and even 鈥渃onsecrating鈥 practices that lead to the culture of privilege and exclusion: favouritism, patronage and, as a consequence, corruption.  The Master demands that we see beyond this.  He says this clearly: anyone incapable of seeing others as brothers or sisters, of showing sensitivity to their lives and situations regardless of their family, cultural or social background 鈥渃annot be my disciple鈥 (Lk 14:26).  His devoted love is a free gift given to all and meant for all.

Jesus鈥 second demand shows us how hard it is to follow him if we seek to identify the kingdom of heaven with our personal agenda or our attachment to an ideology that would abuse the name of God or of religion to justify acts of violence, segregation and even murder, exile, terrorism and marginalization.  This demand encourages us not to dilute and narrow the Gospel message, but instead to build history in fraternity and solidarity, in complete respect for the earth and its gifts, as opposed to any form of exploitation.  It encourages us to practise 鈥渄ialogue as the path; mutual cooperation as the code of conduct; reciprocal understanding as the method and standard鈥 (Document on Human Fraternity, Abu Dhabi, 4 February 2019).  And not to be tempted by teachings that fail to see that the wheat and the chaff must grow together until the return of the Master of the harvest (cf. Mt 13:24-30).

Finally, how difficult it can be to share the new life that the Lord offers us when we are continually driven to self-justification, because we think that everything depends exclusively on our efforts and resources!  Or, as we heard in the first reading, when the race to amass possessions becomes stifling and overwhelming, which only increases our selfishness and our willingness to use immoral means.  Jesus鈥 demand is that we rediscover how to be grateful and to realize that, much more than a personal triumph, our life and our talents are the fruit of a gift (cf. Gaudete et Exsultate, 55), a gift created by God through the silent interplay of so many people whose names we will only know in the kingdom of heaven.

With these three demands, the Lord wants to prepare his disciples for the celebration of the coming of the kingdom of God, and to free them from the grave obstacle that, in the end, is one of the worst forms of enslavement: living only for oneself.  It is the temptation to fall back into our little universe, and it ends up leaving little room for other people.  The poor no longer enter in, we no longer hear the voice of God, we no longer enjoy the quiet joy of his love, we are no longer eager to do good鈥  Many people, by shutting themselves up in this way, can feel 鈥渁pparently鈥 secure, yet they end up becoming bitter, querulous and lifeless.  This is no way to live a full and dignified life; it is not God鈥檚 will for us, nor is it the life in the Spirit that has its source in the heart of the risen Christ (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 2).

With these demands, the Lord, as he walks towards Jerusalem, asks us to lift our gaze, to adjust our priorities and, above all, to make room for God to be the centre and axis of our life.

As we look around us, how many men and women, young people and children are suffering and in utter need!  This is not part of God鈥檚 plan.  How urgently Jesus calls us to die to our self-centredness, our individualism and our pride!  In this way, we can allow the spirit of fraternity to triumph 鈥 a spirit born from the pierced side of Jesus Christ, in which we are born as God鈥檚 family 鈥 and in which everyone can feel loved because understood, accepted and appreciated in his or her dignity.  鈥淚n the face of contempt for human dignity, we often remain with arms folded or stretched out as a sign of our frustration before the grim power of evil.  Yet we Christians cannot stand with arms folded in indifference, or with arms outstretched in helplessness.  No.  As believers, we must stretch out our hands, as Jesus does with us鈥 (Homily for the World Day of the Poor, 18 November 2018).

The Word of God that we have just heard bids us set out once more, daring to take this qualitative leap and to adopt this wisdom of personal detachment as the basis for social justice and for our personal lives.  Together we can resist all those forms of idolatry that make us think only of the deceptive securities of power, career, money and of the search for human glory.

The demands that Jesus sets before us cease to be burdensome as soon as we begin to taste the joy of the new life that he himself sets before us.  It is the joy born of knowing that he is the first to seek us at the crossroads, even when we are lost like the sheep or the prodigal son.  May this humble realism inspire us to take on great challenges and give you the desire to make your beautiful country a place where the Gospel becomes life, and where life is for the greater glory of God.

Let us commit ourselves and let us make the Lord鈥檚 plans our own.

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08 September 2019, 09:42