Blessing of the Pallia and Eucharistic
Celebration on the Solemnity of the Saints
Apostles Peter and Paul, 29.06.2020
On the Solemnity of the Saints Apostles Peter
and Paul, at 9.30, at the Altar of the Cathedra,
in the Vatican Basilica, the Holy Father Francis
blessed the Pallia which are conferred to the
Dean of the College of Cardinals and the
metropolitan archbishops appointed during the
year. The Pallium will then be imposed to each
metropolitan archbishop and the pontifical
representative in the respective metropolitan
See.
After the rite of the blessing of the Pallia,
the Pope presides at the Eucharistic celebration
with the cardinals of the Order of Bishops and
the archpriest of the Papal Basilica of Saint
Peter, His Eminence Cardinal Angelo Comastri.
The following is the homily pronounced by the
Holy Father after the proclamation of the
Gospel:
Homily of the Holy Father
On the feast of the two Apostles of this City, I
would like to share with you two key words:
unity and prophecy.
Unity. We celebrate together two very different
individuals: Peter, a fisherman who spent his
days amid boats and nets, and Paul, a learned
Pharisee who taught in synagogues.
When they went forth on mission, Peter
spoke to Jews, and Paul to pagans.
And when their paths crossed, they could
argue heatedly, as Paul is unashamed to admit in
one of his letters (cf. Gal 2:11).
In short, they were two very different
people, yet they saw one another as brothers, as
happens in close-knit families where there may
be frequent arguments but unfailing love.
Yet the closeness that joined Peter and
Paul did not come from natural inclinations, but
from the Lord.
He did not command us to like one
another, but to love one another.
He is the one who unites us, without
making us all alike.
He unites us in our differences.
Today’s first reading brings us to the source of
this unity.
It relates how the newly born Church was
experiencing a moment of crisis: Herod was
furious, a violent persecution had broken out,
and the Apostle James had been killed.
And now Peter had been arrested.
The community seemed headless, everyone
fearing for his life.
Yet at that tragic moment no one ran
away, no one thought about saving his own skin,
no one abandoned the others, but all joined in
prayer.
From prayer they drew strength, from
prayer came a unity more powerful than any
threat.
The text says that, “while Peter was kept
in prison, the Church prayed fervently to God
for him” (Acts 12:5).
Unity is the fruit of prayer, for prayer
allows the Holy Spirit to intervene, opening our
hearts to hope, shortening distances and holding
us together at times of difficulty.
Let us notice something else: at that dramatic
moment, no one complained about Herod’s evil and
his persecution.
No one abused Herod – and we are so
accustomed to abuse those who are in charge.
It is pointless, even tedious, for
Christians to waste their time complaining about
the world, about society, about everything that
is not right.
Complaints change nothing.
Let us remember that complaining is the
second door that closes us off from the Holy
Spirit, as I said on Pentecost Sunday.
The first is narcissism, the second
discouragement, the third pessimism.
Narcissism makes you look at yourself
constantly in a mirror; discouragement leads to
complaining and pessimism to thinking everything
is dark and bleak.
These three attitudes close the door to
the Holy Spirit.
Those Christians did not cast blame;
rather, they prayed.
In that community, no one said: “If Peter
had been more careful, we would not be in this
situation”.
No one.
Humanly speaking, there were reasons to
criticise Peter, but no one criticised him.
They did not complain about Peter; they
prayed for him.
They did not talk about Peter behind his
back; they talked to God.
We today can ask: “Are we protecting our
unity, our unity in the Church, with prayer?
Are we praying for one another?”
What would happen if we prayed more and
complained less, if we had a more tranquil
tongue?
The same thing that happened to Peter in
prison: now as then, so many closed doors would
be opened, so many chains that bind would be
broken.
We would be amazed, like the maid who saw
Peter at the gate and did not open it, but ran
inside, astonished by the joy of seeing Peter
(cf. Acts 12:10-17).
Let us ask for the grace to be able to
pray for one another.
Saint Paul urged Christians to pray for
everyone, especially those who govern (cf. 1 Tim
2:1-3).
“But this governor is…”, and there are
many adjectives.
I will not mention them, because this is
neither the time nor the place to mention
adjectives that we hear directed against those
who govern.
Let God judge them; let us pray for those
who govern!
Let us pray: for they need prayer.
This is a task that the Lord has
entrusted to us. Are we carrying it out?
Or do we simply talk, abuse and do
nothing?
God expects that when we pray we will
also be mindful of those who do not think as we
do, those who have slammed the door in our face,
those whom we find it hard to forgive.
Only prayer unlocks chains, as it did for
Peter; only prayer paves the way to unity.
Today we bless the pallia to be bestowed on the
Dean of the College of Cardinals and the
Metropolitan Archbishops named in the last year.
The pallium is a sign of the unity
between the sheep and the Shepherd who, like
Jesus, carries the sheep on his shoulders, so as
never to be separated from it.
Today too, in accordance with a fine
tradition, we are united in a particular way
with the Ecumenical Patriarchate of
Constantinople. Peter and Andrew were brothers,
and, whenever possible, we exchange fraternal
visits on our respective feast days.
We do so not only out of courtesy, but as
a means of journeying together towards the goal
that the Lord points out to us: that of full
unity.
We could not do so today because of the
difficulty of travel due to the coronavirus, but
when I went to venerate the remains of Peter, in
my heart I felt my beloved brother Bartholomew.
They are here, with us.
The second word is prophecy.
Unity and prophecy.
The Apostles were challenged by Jesus.
Peter heard Jesus’ question: “Who do you
say I am?” (cf. Mt 16:15).
At that moment he realized that the Lord
was not interested in what others thought, but
in Peter’s personal decision to follow him.
Paul’s life changed after a similar
challenge from Jesus: “Saul, Saul, why do you
persecute me?” (Acts 9:4).
The Lord shook Paul to the core: more
than just knocking him to the ground on the road
to Damascus, he shattered Paul’s illusion of
being respectably religious.
As a result, the proud Saul turned into
Paul, a name that means “small”.
These challenges and reversals are
followed by prophecies: “You are Peter, and on
this rock I will build my Church” (Mt 16:18);
and, for Paul: “He is a chosen instrument of
mine to carry my name before the Gentiles and
kings and the sons of Israel” (Acts 9:15).
Prophecy is born whenever we allow
ourselves to be challenged by God, not when we
are concerned to keep everything quiet and under
control.
Prophecy is not born from my thoughts,
from my closed heart.
It is born if we allow ourselves to be
challenged by God.
When the Gospel overturns certainties,
prophecy arises.
Only someone who is open to God’s
surprises can become a prophet.
And there they are: Peter and Paul,
prophets who look to the future.
Peter is the first to proclaim that Jesus
is “the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Mt
16:16).
Paul, who considers his impending death:
“From now on there is laid up for me the crown
of righteousness, which the Lord will award to
me” (2 Tim 4:8).
Today we need prophecy, but real prophecy: not
fast talkers who promise the impossible, but
testimonies that the Gospel is possible.
What is needed are not miraculous shows.
It makes me sad when I hear someone say,
“We want a prophetic Church”.
All right.
But what are you doing, so that the
Church can be prophetic?
We need lives that show the miracle of
God’s love.
Not forcefulness, but forthrightness.
Not palaver, but prayer.
Not speeches, but service.
Do you want a prophetic Church?
Then start serving and be quiet.
Not theory, but testimony.
We are not to become rich, but rather to
love the poor.
We are not to save up for ourselves, but
to spend ourselves for others.
To seek not the approval of this world,
of being comfortable with everyone - here we
say: “being comfortable with God and the devil”,
being comfortable with everyone -; no, this is
not prophecy.
We need the joy of the world to come.
Not better pastoral plans that seem to
have their own self-contained efficiency, as if
they were sacraments; efficient pastoral plans,
no.
We need pastors who offer their lives: lovers of
God.
That is how Peter and Paul preached
Jesus, as men in love with God.
At his crucifixion, Peter did not think
about himself but about his Lord, and,
considering himself unworthy of dying like
Jesus, asked to be crucified upside down.
Before his beheading, Paul thought only
of offering his life; he wrote that he wanted to
be “poured out like a libation” (2 Tim 4:6).
That was prophecy.
Not words.
That was prophecy, the prophecy that
changed history.
Dear brothers and sisters, Jesus prophesied to
Peter: “You are Peter and on this rock I will
build my Church”.
There is a similar prophecy for us too.
It is found in the last book of the
Bible, where Jesus promises his faithful
witnesses “a white stone, on which a new name is
written” (Rev 2:17).
Just as the Lord turned Simon into Peter,
so he is calling each one of us, in order to
make us living stones with which to build a
renewed Church and a renewed humanity.
There are always those who destroy unity
and stifle prophecy, yet the Lord believes in us
and he asks you: “Do you want to be a builder of
unity?
Do you want to be a prophet of my heaven
on earth?”
Brothers and sisters, let us be
challenged by Jesus, and find the courage to say
to him: “Yes, I do!”
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