Pope Francis told the story of a man who felt ashamed of being a bishop
to say that people should not worry of being sinners but should
concentrate on allowing Jesus to transform them.
“He was ashamed because he did not feel worthy, he had a spiritual
torment and he went to the confessor,” Pope Francis said at his May 17
daily Mass.
“The confessor heard him and said, ‘but do not worry, if after the mess
Peter made of things, they made him Pope, then you go ahead!’” he
recalled.
The Pope delivered his homily on the Gospel reading from John 21, which
tells the story of Jesus asking Peter if he loved him three separate
times.
According to the pontiff, people should try harder to encounter Jesus rather than focus on their own sins.
“Many times, we look the other way because we do not want to talk with
the Lord or allow ourselves to encounter the Lord,” he stated.
“Meeting the Lord is important, but more importantly, let us be met by the Lord, this is a grace,” he added.
“Peter let himself be shaped by his many encounters with Jesus,” the
Pope noted, “and this is something we all need to do as well, for we are
on the same road.”
“Peter is great, not because he is good, but because he has a nobility
of heart, which brings him to tears, leads him to this pain, this shame
and also to take up his work of shepherding the flock,” he remarked.
The pontiff noted “the problem is not that we are sinners: the problem
is not repenting of sin; not being ashamed of what we have done, that’s
the problem.”
“The Lord makes us mature with many meetings with Him, even with our
weaknesses, when we recognize them with our sins,” Pope Francis said.
“The point is that this is how the Lord is, that’s the way He is,” he said.
Referring back to the Gospel reading, Pope Francis said the questions
Jesus posed to Peter are “a dialogue of love between the Lord and his
disciple.”
He explained that the narration goes back to the history of Peter’s
meetings with Jesus, from his invitation to follow the Lord, to his
receiving the name of the Rock, “a mission which was there, even if
Peter understood nothing of it at the time.”
“Peter was saddened that, for a third time, Jesus asked him, ‘do you love me?’” said Pope Francis.
Peter was a great man, the Holy Father remarked, but he was also a sinner and this question made him feel “pain” and “shame.”
“The Lord makes him feel that he is a sinner, makes us all feel that we
are sinners,” but this shame and humility “brings him to a new encounter
with Jesus” and “to the joy of forgiveness,” the Pope preached.