Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Pope tells us prayer really works, can bring miracles

Pope Francis during today's Mass in Santa Marta, 30 October 2015

At Casa Santa Marta, Tells Story of Buenos Aires Man Who Obtained With Prayer the Healing of His Daughter
 

Staff Reporter | | ZENIT.org | Pope and Holy See | Rome          
At his morning Mass today in the Casa Santa Marta, Pope Francis assured that prayer does bring miracles and that it keeps hearts from growing hard.
“It’s the prayer of the faithful that brings change to the Church,” the Pope said, as reported by Vatican Radio. “It’s not us popes, bishops or priests who carry the Church forward, but the saints.”
The Pope focused his homily on the First Reading, which relates the story of Hannah as she prays to God about her infertility and Eli, who assumes she is drunk.
“Hannah was praying silently, her lips moved but her voice was not heard. Hers is the courage of a woman of faith who is weeping and grieving and asks the Lord for his grace,” the Pope explained.
He continued, “There are many good women in the Church, many! They place all their trust in prayer... Let us think of one of them, Saint Monica, who was able with her tears to be granted the grace of conversion for her son, Saint Augustine. There are so many!”

So easy to judge

Meanwhile, the Holy Father described Eli as a poor man, with whom he said he feels a “certain sympathy” because, he explained, “I find faults in myself that allow me to understand him well and feel close to him.”
“How easily do we judge people and lack the respect to say: 'I wonder what he has in his heart? I do not know, but I will say nothing,’” the Pope reflected. “When the heart lacks compassion one always thinks evil" and does not understand those who pray “with pain and anguish” and “entrust that pain and anguish to the Lord.”
“Jesus knows this kind of prayer. When he was in Gethsemane and was so anguished and hurt he sweated blood; He did not accuse the Father,” Francis reflected, drawing a parallel between Jesus’ response and that of Hannah, since both prayed with meekness.
“Sometimes, we pray, we ask things of God, but often we do not know how to engage with the Lord, to ask for grace,” he added.

Daring to believe

The Pope also recalled the story of a man in Buenos Aires whose 9-year-old-daughter was dying. He said he spent the night at the shrine of the Virgin of Luján clinging to the gate and praying for the grace of healing. The next morning, when he returned to the hospital, his daughter was healed:
“Prayer works miracles; it works miracles for Christians, whether they be faithful laypeople, priests, bishops who have lost compassion. The prayers of the faithful change the Church: It’s not us popes, bishops, priests or nuns who carry the Church forward, but saints,” the Pontiff concluded. “Saints are those who dare to believe that God is the Lord and that He can do everything.”

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