Pope Says Jesus Christ cannot be understood without His mother ;marks 2015 with critiques of everyday slavery, faith outside church
Pope
Francis began the New Year criticizing those who might seek to follow Jesus
Christ outside the structures of the church, saying they introduce an
"absurd dichotomy" and ignore that the church is God's family,
bringing Christ to all.
Celebrating
Mass in St. Peter's Basilica Jan. 1, the pontiff said the faith "is not an
abstract doctrine or philosophy, but a vital and full relationship with a
person: Jesus Christ."
"Where
can we encounter him?" asked Francis. "We encounter him in the
church. It is the church which says today: 'Behold the Lamb of God;' it is the
Church, which proclaims him; it is in the Church that Jesus continues to
accomplish his acts of grace which are the sacraments."
"No
manifestation of Christ, even the most mystical, can ever be detached from the
flesh and blood of the Church, from the historical concreteness of the Body of
Christ," Francis continued.
"Without
the Church, Jesus Christ ends up as an idea, a moral teaching, a feeling,"
said the pontiff. "Without the Church, our relationship with Christ would
be at the mercy of our imagination, our interpretations, our moods."
Francis
was celebrating Mass at the start of the year for the World Day of Peace and
the Catholic feast of the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, both celebrated by
the church Jan. 1.
Before
speaking on the role of the church in sharing Jesus, the pontiff meditated on
Mary's place in loving and raising him, saying: "Christ and his mother are
inseparable."
"Mary
is so closely united to Jesus because she received from him the knowledge of
the heart, the knowledge of faith, nourished by her experience as a mother and
by her close relationship with her Son," said Francis.
"The
Blessed Virgin is the woman of faith who made room for God in her heart and in
her plans; she is the believer capable of perceiving in the gift of her Son the
coming of that 'fullness of time' in which God, by choosing the humble path of
human existence, entered personally into the history of salvation," he
said.
"That
is why Jesus cannot be understood without his Mother," said Francis.
"Likewise inseparable are Christ and the Church; the salvation
accomplished by Jesus cannot be understood without appreciating the motherhood
of the Church."
Quoting
from Pope Paul VI's 1975 encyclical Evangelii Nuntiandi, Francis said
"to separate Jesus from the Church would introduce an 'absurd
dichotomy.'"
After
the Mass Thursday, Francis saluted pilgrims who had come to a frosty St.
Peter's Square to say the noontime Angelus prayer.
The
pontiff said the start of a new year is a good time to remember your baptism,
to "rediscover the gift received in that sacrament that has regenerated a
new life: the divine life."
Going
off his text, he repeated a question he has asked before, querying the crowd:
"How many of you remember the date of your baptisms?"
Seeing
that many did not raise their hands, the pontiff told them that they had
"homework" -- to ask their parents and grandparents about the day and
how it was celebrated.
Mentioning
the annual New Year's celebration of the World Day of Peace, Francis also said
three times during his Angelus remarks that "peace is always
possible."
"We
must search for it," he said. "Remember well: peace is possible and
the roots of peace are prayer. Pray for peace!"
The
church has celebrated Jan. 1 as the World Day of Peace since 1967. Each year
since 1968, the pope has released a peace message to the world on that day.
Francis'
message this year takes the theme "No Longer Slaves, but Brothers and
Sisters," and makes a forceful and personal plea
for the end of modern-day slavery -- calling on governments, communities and
individuals globally "not to become accomplices" to human trafficking
and exploitation in their myriad forms.
The
pontiff also addressed the issue of slavery while closing out 2014, saying in a
vesper's service in St. Peter's Basilica Dec. 31 that God sent Jesus to ransom
sinners from slavery.
"Do
we live as children [of God] or as slaves?" asked Francis during his
homily at the service.
"Do
we live as people baptized in Christ, anointed by the Spirit, ransomed and
free?" he asked. "Or do we live according to worldly logic: corrupt,
doing what the devil wants us to believe is in our best interest?"
Pope
Francis told those gathered in the basilica that all people, even Christians,
have "a tendency to resist freedom; we fear freedom and, paradoxically, we
prefer slavery" although often people are not aware that that is what they
are doing.
"Freedom
frightens us because it places time before us and, with it, the responsibility
to live it well," he said. "A nostalgia for slavery nests in our
hearts because it appears more reassuring than freedom, which is much
riskier."
Saying
the New Year is a time for people to examine their consciences, Francis called
especially for people to evaluate how they helped and served the poor.
Christians,
he said, must have "the courage to proclaim in our city that the poor must
be defended and that we do not need to defend ourselves from the poor, that the
weak must be served and not used."
Monitored by Eberechukwu Anagor
Pope Says Jesus Christ cannot be understood without His mother ;marks 2015 with critiques of everyday slavery, faith outside church
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, January 01, 2015
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, January 01, 2015
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