Sunday, October 04, 2015

Weekly HOMILY for September 27, 2015: 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Cycle B


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26th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Cycle B
St. Mary Magdalene Mission
September 27, 2015       

The People’s Pope

By Nicholas Amato


This has been quite a week for us Catholics, with the visit of Pope Francis to our country.

My sense is that the Pope has reached well beyond the Catholic community, to Americans of many or of no religious tradition.  Some of the media have given him the title “The Peoples’ Pope.”

This way of speaking of Francis strikes me as rather accurate.  The title – “The Peoples’ Pope” – leads me to several reflections on him today.

“I am a sinner”


About three months after he was elected, Francis gave an interview to the Jesuit magazine in Italy.

The interviewer was a Jesuit priest and he asked Francis: “Who is Jorge Mario Bergoglio?”   As you know, that is the Holy Father’s birth name.

In response to the question, Francis said: “I do not know what might be the most fitting description.  I am a sinner. I am a sinner. I am a sinner. That is the most accurate definition.” 

As I read those words and the entire interview, I remember thinking that Francis very much sees himself as one of us, one with all people. 

He doesn’t hold himself higher or above us.  He knows that he is clearly human and identifies with us. 

He seems to understand human life with its ups and downs, with its messiness and challenges.  In short he is a “Peoples’ Pope.”     

“The Lord has redeemed all…”

My second reflection comes from one of the Pope’s daily Mass homilies.

In one of these, he says: “The Lord has redeemed all of us, all of us,” he reiterates forcefully, “not just Catholics.  He then pretends that someone asks him: “Father, what about atheists?”

“Even the atheists,” he retorts, everyone!” 

And he continues, “We are created children in the likeness of God, and the Blood of Christ has redeemed us all.  And we have a duty to do good.

“And this commandment for everybody to do good, I think, is a beautiful path to peace.  We must meet one another doing good.”

Again, he pretends someone is talking to him and says: “But I don’t believe, Father, I’m an atheist,” to which he says, “But do good.  We will meet one another there.”

Francis’ words here are very insightful and they relate to a human tendency that we see in today’s first reading and in the Gospel.

In the first reading, Joshua wants Moses to stop two people from prophesying, from doing good, because they are not of their group. 

In the Gospel, the Apostles are trying to prevent someone from casting out demons in Jesus’ name, again from doing good because they are not of their group.

In both instances, notice what Moses and Jesus say: “Do not stop them.  They are doing good; let them be!”

Francis’ words declare the insight: Yes, we may want all people to have the full richness that Christ offers and yes, that it would be wonderful for them to be part of our Catholic community…

But in some way, God’s love in Christ extends to everyone and as Francis says, “We meet together in doing good!”  Perhaps we’re not yet one in our understanding of God, not one in our understanding of Jesus, but we are one in doing good.

Francis has captured in an open and positive way the truth that is in God’s Word today.  And in doing that, he is again a “Peoples’ Pope.”
    
“No Room for indifference…”

The last feature I want to lift up is Francis’ concern about indifference to the poor.

In his Lenten message this past February, he was speaking of the Eucharist and he says in the Mass, “We become what we receive: the Body of Christ.  In this body there is no room for…indifference…”

“For whoever is of Christ, belongs to one body, and in him we cannot be indifferent to one another.  In this way we will receive a heart which is firm and merciful, attentive and generous, a heart which is not closed or indifferent…”

The Pope then prays that we “may become islands of mercy in the midst of the see of indifference.”  Francis comes from Latin America and he has seen much poverty.

He is calling us to heed the warning in the passage from Saint James today.  If we have enough and are comfortable, we must share with the 3 billion of the 7 billion people of the world who lack the basics in food, water, and housing. Three out of 7 billion!

The Eucharist is to quicken us, to awaken us to such indifferences on our part.  So again, he is the “Peoples’ Pope.”

Conclusion

With a beautiful smile on his face and great love in his heart, (1) He sees himself as a sinner, (2) Proclaims that all are saved, and (3) Calls us to be an island of mercy in a sea of indifference.

Yes, he’s very much The People’s Pope.


The only question that remains is, “Is he yours and mine as well?”