Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Tuesday morning Papal Homily

Santa Marta: “Lord, What Do You Think?”
Familiarity with Jesus

Santa Marta © L'Osservatore Romano
Santa Marta © L'Osservatore Romano
Pope Francis encouraged Christians to live the “familiarity” with God in his homily during the morning Mass he celebrated at Santa Marta in the Vatican on September 26, 2017: “Lord wherever you are, by subway, in the kitchen, and ask “Lord, what do you think?”
In his homily quoted by Radio Vatican in Italian, the Pope commented on the Gospel of the day (Lk 8: 19-21), in which Jesus declared, “My mother and my brothers are those who listen to the word of God and put it into practice. “More than being” disciples, “the relationship with Jesus is not “formal”,” educated “or “diplomatic”: it must be “familiarity with God and with Jesus.”
The pope said, “to enter the house of Jesus: to enter into this atmosphere, to live in this atmosphere, which is in the house of Jesus. To live there, to contemplate, to be free, there. Because children are free, those who dwell in the house of the Lord are free, those who have familiarity with Him are free. ”
Familiarity with Jesus is “to remain with Him, to watch Him, to listen to His Word, to seek to put it into practice, to speak with Him,” he continued, “to make this prayer along the way ‘But, Lord, what do you think?’ It’s familiarity … Always. The saints had them. Saint Therese is beautiful, because she said that she found the Lord everywhere, she was in familiarity with the Lord everywhere, even in the midst of cooking pots.”
Those who do not live are this way are “children of the slave,” they are Christians but they do not dare to approach, they do not dare this familiarity with the Lord, and there is always a distance between them of the Lord, the Pope said. Familiarity consists in “dwelling” in the presence of Jesus, not in keeping a distance that assigns “you there and me here.”
“Let us ask this grace for all of us, to understand what familiarity with the Lord means,” concluded the Pope.

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