If a Christian wants to reach heaven, he or she should ask themselves
if they are living for the pleasures of the world, or if they are
striving after holiness with all their strength, Pope Francis said on
the feast of All Saints.
“Let us ask ourselves what side we are on: that of heaven or that of
the earth? Do we live for the Lord or for ourselves, for eternal
happiness or for some fulfillment now?” the pope said Nov. 1.
“Let us ask ourselves: do we really want holiness?” he continued. “Or
do we content ourselves with being Christians without disgrace and
without praise, who believe in God and esteem others but without going
too far?”
“In short, either holiness or nothing!” he said.
The pope led the Angelus from a window overlooking St. Peter’s Square
in honor of the feast day. In his message before the prayer, he said it
is good for Catholics to let themselves be encouraged by the saints,
who did not live their lives by “half measures.”
In heaven, the saints “cheer” for those on earth when they see them
“choose God, humility, meekness, mercy, purity,” he said. The saints
“understand us, they love us, they know what our true good is, they help
us, and they wait for us. They are happy, and they want us to be happy
with them in paradise.”
He noted that among the saints are also those who may not be known to
us, or who are not on the Church’s liturgical calendar, but are
nevertheless with God in heaven. And they are all one’s brothers and
sisters – making the feast of All Saints, “a family party,” he said.
Pope Francis recalled a significant point in the Mass, when the
“Sanctus,” or “Holy, Holy, Holy,” is recited or sung. “It is a hymn –
that the Bible says – comes from heaven,” he said.
When singing the “Sanctus” at Mass, Catholics “not only think of the
saints, but we do what they do [in heaven]: at that moment, in the Mass,
we are united with them more than ever.”
The saints encourage people to follow the Beatitudes, which are “the
path of happiness,” he said. He acknowledged that this is not always
easy, especially because the world says, blessed are the rich and the
arrogant, not “blessed are the poor in spirit” or “blessed are the
meek.”
But as the day’s first reading from the book of Revelation says, the
saints have “palm branches in their hands,” which is a symbol of
victory, the pope said, adding that the saints “have won them, not the
world, and they exhort us to choose their part, that of God who is
holy.”
Today Christians are called to hear and to put the Beatitudes into
practice, Francis said. Winning the victory of heaven is not always
about doing extraordinary things but is “about following this path every
day… in the family, at home.”
“Today we glimpse our future and celebrate what we were born for: we
were born to never die again, we were born to enjoy the happiness of
God!” he said. “May the Holy Mother of God, Queen of the saints, help us
to firmly walk the path of holiness.”
No comments:
Post a Comment