The Church and all Christians must have the courage to pass on the
faith, " faith in the Risen Jesus, in Jesus who has forgiven our sins
through His death and reconciled us with the Father."
Because " When
the Church loses courage, the Church enters into a 'lukewarm' atmosphere. The
lukewarm, lukewarm Christians, without courage ... That hurts the Church so
much, because this tepid atmosphere draws you inside, and problems arise among
us; we no longer have the horizon, or courage to pray towards heaven, or the
courage to proclaim the Gospel. We are lukewarm ... We have the courage to get
involved in our small things in our jealousies, our envy, our careerism, in
selfishly going forward ... In all these things, but this is not good for the
Church: the Church must be courageous! We all have to be courageous in prayer,
in challenging Jesus" who said," Whatever you ask in My name I will do so
that the Father may be glorified in the Son. "
The
"grace of courage" to proclaim "with life and word" was the
focus of the homily that Pope Francis gave during Mass, like every morning, in
the chapel of Casa Santa Marta, concelebrated with Msgr. Claudio Maria Celli,
president of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, which was
attended by the Swiss Guards with their commander Daniel Rudolf Anrig. At the
end of the celebration, the Pope addressed a special greeting to them. Yours,
he said, "is a beautiful testimony of fidelity to the Church" and
"love for the Pope."
All of us
Christians who have received the faith, Francis said, as reported by Vatican
Radio, "we must pass this on", "we must proclaim this with our
lives, with our word." But what is this fundamental faith?
It is faith in the Risen Jesus, in Jesus who has forgiven our sins through His
death and reconciled us with the Father". And transmitting this requires us to
be courageous: the courage of transmitting the faith. A sometimes simple
courage. I remember - excuse me - a personal story: as a child every Good
Friday my grandmother took us to the Procession of Candles and at the end of
the procession came the recumbent Christ and my grandmother made us kneel down
and told us children, 'Look he is dead, but tomorrow he will be Risen! '. That
is how the faith entered: faith in Christ Crucified and Risen. In the history
of the Church there have been many, many people who have wanted to blur this
strong certainty and speak of a spiritual resurrection. No, Christ is alive".
"Christ
is alive" and is "also live among us."
But there is also another
courage that Jesus asks of us:"Jesus - to put it in stronger terms -
challenges us to prayer and says this:' Whatever you ask in my name, I will do
so that the Father may be glorified in the Son '. If you ask anything in my name, I will do it ... But
this is really powerful! We must have the courage to go to Jesus and ask him:
'But you said this, do it! Make the faith grow, make evangelization move
forward, help me to solve this problem... Do we have this courage in prayer? Or
do we pray a little, when we can, spending a bit' of time in prayer? But that
courage, that parresia even in prayer ... ".