Divine Mercy Sunday with POPE FRANCIS - By Sr. Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
In
his homily during the
celebration of the Divine Mercy Sunday liturgy, Pope Francis points out
that the verb “to see” is repeated over and over in the Gospel text (John
20:19-31). Although the disciples see the Lord, the Gospel “does not
describe how they saw him,” the Pope said. By mentioning the detail “he
showed them his hands and his side” (v. 20), the Gospel seems “to tell us that that
is how the disciples,” and Thomas, “recognized Jesus: through his wounds.”
“Seeing” for ourselves
Thomas
wanted to “see inside,” Pope Francis continued. He wanted to touch “with
his hand the Lord’s wounds, the signs of his love.” This is how Thomas is our
twin, because so often we need to know for ourselves that God exists rather
than taking others’ word for it. “No, we too need to ‘see God,’ to touch him with
our hands and to know that he is risen for us,” the Pope said.
A Love Story
Pope
Francis tells us that it is by seeing Jesus’ wounds that the disciples of all
time know that we have been forgiven because we “contemplate the boundless love
flowing from his heart” –a heart that beats for each person. When Thomas
touched the Lord’s wounds, Jesus became “My Lord and my God.” Pope Francis
describes the appropriation of God as mine as a “love story.” The
uncertain, wavering disciple then falls in love with the Lord telling him: “You
became man for me, you died and rose for me and thus you are not
only God; you are my God, you are my life. In you I have found
the love that I was looking for, and much more than I could ever have
imagined,” Pope Francis said.
Savouring this love
The
Pope says we can begin to savour this newfound love through the same gift Jesus
granted on the evening of his Resurrection: the forgiveness of sins.
Before forgiveness we may hide behind the doors of shame, resignation and sin.
Grace helps us understand shame as the “first step
towards an encounter” and as a “secret invitation of the soul that needs the
Lord to overcome evil,” Pope Francis said.
Resignation
tempts us to believe that nothing changes when we find ourselves lapsing, like
the disheartened disciples after the “ ‘Jesus chapter’ of their lives seemed
finished.” At a certain point, Pope Francis says that “we discover that the
power of life is to receive God’s forgiveness and to go forward from
forgiveness to forgiveness.”
The last closed door to open is sin. Pope Francis reminds us
that Jesus “loves to enter precisely ‘through closed doors,’ when every
entrance seems barred.” When we go to confession, we will learn that the very
thing we believe separates us from God – sin – instead “becomes the place where
we encounter him. There the God who is wounded by love comes to meet our
wounds.”
SOURCE:http://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2018-04/pope-francis-mass-divine-mercy-sunday.html
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