Holy Mass on the occasion of the 26th Day of
Consecrated Life, 02.02.2022
At 17.30 this afternoon, Feast of the
Presentation of the Lord, the Holy Father
Francis celebrated Holy Mass in the Vatican
Basilica on the occasion of the 26th Day of
Consecrated Life.
During the ceremony, which began with the
blessing of the candles and the procession, and
continued with the Eucharistic celebration, the
Pope delivered his homily.
During the Holy Mass, there was a public
celebration of the Ecclesiastica Communio
granted by the Holy Father Francis to His
Beatitude Raphaël Bedros XXI Minassian,
Patriarch of Cilicia of the Armenians.
At the end, before the blessing, His Eminence
Cardinal João Braz de Aviz, prefect of the
Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life
and Societies of Apostolic Life, addressed a
greeting to the Holy Father.
The following is the homily delivered by the
Pope during the Eucharistic Celebration:
Homily of the Holy Father
Two elderly people, Simeon and Anna, await in
the Temple the fulfilment of the promise that
God made to his people: the coming of the
Messiah. Yet theirs is no passive expectation,
it is full of movement. Let us look at what
Simeon does. First, he is moved by the Spirit;
then he sees salvation in the Child Jesus and
finally he takes him into his arms (cf. Lk
2:26-28). Let us simply consider these three
actions and reflect on some important questions
for us and in particular for the consecrated
life.
First, what moves us? Simeon goes to the Temple,
“moved by the spirit” (v. 27). The Holy Spirit
is the protagonist in this scene. He makes
Simeon’s heart burn with desire for God. He
keeps expectation alive in his heart: He impels
him to go to the Temple and he enables his eyes
to recognize the Messiah, even in the guise of a
poor little baby. That is what the Holy Spirit
does: he enables us to discern God’s presence
and activity not in great things, in outward
appearances or shows of force, but in littleness
and vulnerability. Think of the cross. There too
we find littleness and vulnerability, but also
something dramatic: the power of God. Those
words “moved by the spirit” remind us of what
ascetic theology calls “movements of the
Spirit”: those movements of the soul that we
recognize within ourselves and are called to
test, in order to discern whether they come from
the Holy Spirit or not. Be attentive to the
interior movements of the Spirit.
We can also ask, who mostly moves us? Is it the
Holy Spirit, or the spirit of this world? This a
question that everyone, consecrated persons in
particular, needs to ask. The Spirit moves us to
see God in the littleness and vulnerability of a
baby, yet we at times risk seeing our
consecration only in terms of results, goals and
success: we look for influence, for visibility,
for numbers. This is a temptation. The Spirit,
on the other hand, asks for none of this. He
wants us to cultivate daily fidelity and to be
attentive to the little things entrusted to our
care. How touching is the fidelity shown by
Simeon and Anna! Each day they go to the Temple,
each day they keep watch and pray, even though
time passes and nothing seems to happen. They
live their lives in expectation, without
discouragement or complaint, persevering in
fidelity and nourishing the flame of hope that
the Spirit has kindled in their hearts.
Brothers and sisters, we can ask, what moves our
days? What is the love that makes us keep going?
Is it the Holy Spirit, or the passion of the
moment, or something else? How do we “move” in
the Church and in society? Sometimes, even
behind the appearance of good works, the canker
of narcissism, or the need to stand out, can be
concealed. In other cases, even as we go about
doing many things, our religious communities can
appear moved more by mechanical repetition –
acting out of habit, just to keep busy – than by
enthusiastic openness to the Holy Spirit. All of
us would do well today to examine our interior
motivations and discern our spiritual movements,
so that the renewal of consecrated life may come
about, first and foremost, from there.
A second question: What do our eyes see? Simeon,
moved by the Spirit, sees and recognizes Christ.
And he prays, saying: “My eyes have seen your
salvation” (v. 30). This is the great miracle of
faith: it opens eyes, transforms gazes, changes
perspectives. As we know from Jesus’ many
encounters in the Gospel, faith is born of the
compassionate gaze with which God looks upon us,
softening the hardness of our hearts, healing
our wounds and giving us new eyes to look at
ourselves and at our world. New ways to see
ourselves, others and all the situations that we
experience, even those that are most painful.
This gaze is not naïve but sapiential. A naïve
gaze flees reality and refuses to see problems.
A sapiential gaze, however, can “look within”
and “see beyond”. It is a gaze that does not
stop at appearances, but can enter into the very
cracks of our weaknesses and failures, in order
to discern God’s presence even there.
The eyes of the elderly Simeon, albeit dimmed by
the years, see the Lord. They see salvation.
What about us? Each of us can ask: what do our
eyes see? What is our vision of consecrated
life? The world often sees it as “a waste”:
“look at that fine young person becoming a friar
or a nun, what a waste! If at least they were
ugly… but what a waste”! That is how we think.
The world perhaps sees this as a relic of the
past, something useless. But we, the Christian
community, men and women religious, what do we
see? Are our eyes turned only inward, yearning
for something that no longer exists, or are we
capable of a farsighted gaze of faith, one that
looks both within and beyond? To have the wisdom
to look at things – this is a gift of the Spirit
– to look at things well, to see them in
perspective, to grasp reality. I am greatly
edified when I see older consecrated men and
women whose eyes are bright, who continue to
smile and in this way to give hope to the young.
Let us think of all those times when we
encountered such persons, and bless God for
this. For their eyes are full of hope and
openness to the future. And perhaps we would do
well, in these days, to go make a visit to our
elderly religious brothers and sisters, to see
them, to talk with them, to ask questions, to
hear what they are thinking. I consider this a
good medicine.
Brothers and sisters, the Lord never fails to
give us signs that invite us to cultivate a
renewed vision of consecrated life. We need to
do this, but in the light of the Holy Spirit and
docile to his movements. We cannot pretend not
to see these signs and go on as usual, doing the
same old things, drifting back through inertia
to the forms of the past, paralyzed by fear of
change. I have said this over and over again:
nowadays the temptation to go back, for
security, out of fear, in order to preserve the
faith or the charism of the founder… is a
temptation. The temptation to go back and
preserve “”traditions” with rigidity. Let’s get
this into our head: rigidity is a perversion,
and beneath every form of rigidity there are
grave problems. Neither Simeon or Anna were
rigid; no, they were free and had the joy of
celebrating: Simeon by praising the Lord and
prophesying with courage to the child’s mother.
Anna, like a good old woman, kept saying: “Look
at them!” “Look at this!” She spoke with joy,
her eyes full of hope. None of the inertia of
the past, no rigidity. Let us open our eyes: the
Spirit is inviting us amid our crises – and
crises there are –, our decreasing numbers –
“Father, there are no vocations, now we will go
to some island of Indonesia to see if we can
find one” – and our diminishing forces, to renew
our lives and our communities. And how do we do
this? He will show us the way. Let us open our
hearts, with courage and without fear. Let us
look at Simeon and Anna: although they were
advanced in years, they did not spend their days
mourning a past that never comes back, but
instead embraced the future opening up before
them. Brothers and sisters, let us not waste
today by looking back at yesterday, or dreaming
of a tomorrow that will never come; instead, let
us place ourselves before the Lord in adoration
and ask for eyes to see goodness and to discern
the ways of God. The Lord will give them to us,
if we ask him. With joy, with courage, without
fear.
Finally, a third question: what do we take into
our own arms? Simeon took Jesus into his arms
(cf. v. 28). It is a touching scene, full of
meaning and unique in the Gospels. God has
placed his Son in our arms too, because
embracing Jesus is the essential thing, the very
heart of faith. Sometimes we risk losing our
bearings, getting caught up in a thousand
different things, obsessing about minor issues
or plunging into new projects, yet the heart of
everything is Christ, embracing him as the Lord
of our lives.
When Simeon took Jesus into his arms, he spoke
words of blessing, praise and wonder. And we,
after so many years of consecrated life, have we
lost the ability to be amazed? Do we still have
this capacity? Let us examine ourselves on this,
and if someone does not find it, let him or her
ask the grace of amazement, amazement before the
wonders that God is working in us, hidden, like
those in the temple, when Simeon and Anna
encountered Jesus. If consecrated men and women
lack words that bless God and other people, if
they lack joy, if their enthusiasm fails, if
their fraternal life is only a chore, if
amazement is lacking, that is not the fault of
someone or something else. The real reason is
that our arms no longer embrace Jesus. And when
the arms of a consecrated man or woman do not
embrace Jesus, they embrace a vacuum which they
try to fill with other things, but it remains a
vacuum. To take Jesus into our arms: this is the
sign, the journey, the recipe for renewal. When
we fail to take Jesus into our arms, our hearts
fall prey to bitterness. It is sad to see
religious who are bitter: closed up in
complaining about things that do not go like
clockwork. They are always complaining about
something: the superior, their brothers or
sisters, the community, the food… They live for
something to complain about. But we have to
embrace Jesus in adoration and ask for eyes
capable of seeing the goodness and discerning
the ways of God. If we embrace Christ with open
arms, we will also embrace others with trust and
humility. Then conflicts will not escalate,
disagreements will not divide, and the
temptation to domineer and to offend the dignity
of others will be overcome. So let us open our
arms to Christ and to all our brothers and
sisters. For that is where Jesus is.
Dear friends, today let us joyfully renew our
consecration! Let us ask ourselves what “moves”
our hearts and actions, what renewed vision we
are being called to cultivate, and above all
else, let us take Jesus into our arms. Even if
at times we experience fatigue and weariness –
this too happens – , let us do as Simeon and
Anna did.
They awaited with patience the fidelity
of the Lord and did not allow themselves to be
robbed of the joy of the encounter with him. Let
us advance to the joy of the encounter: this is
beautiful! Let us put the Lord back in the
centre, and press forward with joy. Amen.
|