In St. Peter’s Basilica Thursday, Cardinal Sean O’Malley asked
American bishops to pray for the grace to make a profession of faith,
hope, and love at the tomb of St. Peter before meeting with Pope
Francis.
Cardinal O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston, and the other bishops from New England are in Rome for an ad limina apostolorum
visit — a pilgrimage to “the threshold of the apostles” — in which they
are meeting the pope and curial officials to discuss the state of their
dioceses.
In his homily in the crypt of the basilica, O’Malley touched upon some of the problems currently affecting American Catholics.
“Today many people have lost hope. It is one of the reasons that
people are not having children, turning to drugs, and seeking thrills,”
he said.
The American cardinal said that bishops need to be evangelizers: “Jesus is our hope. He is the reason we trust in his promises.”
He connected a recent Pew survey on American Catholics’ belief in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist to the decline in Mass attendance in the U.S.
“In today’s world, too many Catholics are quick to dismiss the hard
saying about the Eucharist, and as the Pew poll indicates, they do not
accept the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. Hence the
diminished Mass attendance, and no sense of urgency to confess our sins
to receive worthily,” O’Malley said.
He related this to the crowd’s reaction to Jesus’ bread of life
discourse in the Gospel of John chapter 6. After many left because “this
saying is hard,” Jesus turned to Peter and asked, “Are you going to
abandon me too?”
Peter replied: “Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life.”
Cardinal O’Malley highlighted this as one of three key questions
Christ asked Peter in the Gospels. He said that Christ’s three questions
to Peter: “Who do you say that I am?”, “Are you going to abandon me
too?”, and “Do you love me?” correspond to the theological virtues of
faith, hope, and love respectively.
“Today before Peter’s tomb, let us bishops ask for the grace to
answer those questions as Peter did with a profession of faith, a
profession of hope, and a profession of love,” he said.
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