The Christian and the Church must be
"builders of bridges and not walls," be aware that evangelization is
not to proselytizing, but it is "attracting" people to Jesus with our
lives and witness.
It
is, ultimately, to do as Jesus did, who "spoke with everyone" with
sinners, publicans, teachers of the law, without closing the door to anyone.
This was Pope Francis message during Mass celebrated this morning in Casa
Santa Marta.
The
Pope, as reported by Vatican Radio, reiterated that the Christian who wants to
proclaim the Gospel must converse with everyone, knowing that no one owns the
truth, because the truth is received through our encounter with Jesus.
Christians today are, therefore, like Paul, speaking to the Greeks at the
Areopagus, building bridges to proclaim the Gospel without condemning anyone. The
Pope called Paul's attitude one that "seeks dialogue" and is "closer to the
heart" of the listener. The Pope said that this is the reason why St Paul was a
real pontifex: a "builder of bridges" and not of walls. This makes us think of
the "attitude that a Christian ought always to have".
"A Christian," said
Pope Francis, "must proclaim Jesus Christ in such a way that He be accepted:
received, not refused - and Paul knows that he has to sow the Gospel message.
He knows that the proclamation of Jesus Christ is not easy, but that it does
not depend on him. He must do everything possible, but the proclamation of
Jesus Christ, the proclamation of the truth, depends on the Holy Spirit. Jesus
tells us in today's Gospel: 'When He shall come, the Spirit of truth, shall
guide you into all the truth.' Paul does not say to the Athenians: 'This is the
encyclopedia of truth. Study this and you have the truth, the truth.' No! The
truth does not enter into an encyclopedia. The truth is an encounter - it is a
meeting with Supreme Truth: Jesus, the great truth. No one owns the truth. The
we receive the truth when we meet [it]".
Like Saint Paul, who followed "the attitude of Jesus," " "The
Christian who would bring the Gospel must go down this road: [must] listen to
everyone! But now is a good time in the life of the Church: the last 50 or 60
years have been a good time - for I remember when as a child one would hear in
Catholic families, in my family, 'No, we cannot go to their house, because they
are not married in the Church, eh!'. It was as an exclusion. No, you could not
go! Neither could we go to [the houses of] socialists or atheists. Now, thank
God, people do not says such things, right? [Such an attitude] was a defense of
the faith, but it was one of walls: the LORD made bridges. First: Paul has this
attitude, because it was the attitude of Jesus. Second, Paul is aware that he
must evangelize, not proselytize".
The Church, as taught Benedict XVI, "does not grow by means of
proselytizing," but "by attraction, by witnessing, by preaching," and Paul
had this attitude: proclamation does not make proselytization - and he
succeeds, because, "he did not doubt his Lord." The Pope warned that,
"Christians who are afraid to build bridges and prefer to build walls are
Christians who are not sure of their faith, not sure of Jesus Christ." The Pope
exhorted Christians to do as Paul did and begin to "build bridges and to move
forward": "
Paul teaches us this journey of evangelization, because Jesus did, because he
is well aware that evangelization is not proselytizing: it is because he is
sure of Jesus Christ and does not need to justify himself [or] to seek reasons
to justify himself. When the Church loses this apostolic courage, she becomes a
stalled Church, a tidy Church a nice, a Church that is nice to look at, but
that is without fertility, because she has lost the courage to go to the
outskirts, where there are many people who are victims of idolatry, worldliness
of weak thought, [of] so many things. Let us today ask St Paul to give us this
apostolic courage, this spiritual fervor, so that we might be confident. 'But
Father,' [you might say], 'we might make mistakes...' ... '[Well, what of it,' I
might respond], 'Get on with you: if you make a mistake, you get up and go
forward: that is the way. Those who do not walk in order not to err, make a the
more serious mistake".