It
is hard to love our enemies, but that is exactly what God is asking us
to do, said Pope Francis at Mass Tuesday morning. He said we must pray
for those who hate us and have done us wrong, ‘that their heart of stone
be turned to flesh, that they may feel relief and love’. God lets sun
shine and rain fall on the good and the bad, on the just and the unjust
and, the Pope added, we must do the same or else we are not being
Christian.
Pope Francis began his homily,
with a series of questions that encompassed some of the most pressing
dramas of humanity. How can we love our enemies? The Pope asked, how can
we love those who decide to “bomb and kill so many people?" And again,
how can we "love those who out of their for love money prevent the
elderly from accessing the necessary medicine and leave them to die"? Or
those who only seek "their own best interests, power for themselves and
do so much evil?" "It seems hard to love your enemy," he noted, but
Jesus asks it of us. This current liturgy, he said, proposes "Jesus’
updating of the law", of the law of Mount Sinai with the Law of the
Mount of Beatitudes. The Pope also pointed out that we all have enemies,
but deep down we too we can become enemies of others:
"We too
often we become enemies of others: we do not wish them well. And Jesus
tells us to love our enemies! And this is not easy! It is not easy ...
we even think that Jesus is asking too much of us! We leave this to the
cloistered nuns, who are holy, we leave this for some holy soul, but
this is not right for everyday life. But it must be right! Jesus says:
'No, we must do this! Because otherwise you will be like the tax
collectors, like pagans. Not Christians. '"
So how can we
love our enemies? Pope Francis noted that Jesus, "tells us two things":
first look to the Father who "makes the sun rise on evil and good" and
"rain fall on the just and unjust”. God "loves everyone." And then he
continued, Jesus tells us to be "perfect as the Heavenly Father is
perfect", "imitate the Father with that perfection of love." He added
Jesus "forgive his enemies", "does everything to forgive them”. He
warned that taking revenge is not Christian. The Pope asks But how can
we succeed in loving our enemies? By praying. "When we pray for what
makes us suffer - the Pope said - it is as if the Lord comes with oil
and prepares our hearts for peace":
"Pray! This is what Jesus
advises us:' Pray for your enemies! Pray for those who persecute you!
Pray! '. And say to God: 'Change their hearts. They have a heart of
stone, but change it, give them a heart of flesh, so that they may feel
relief and love '. Let me just ask this question and let each of us
answer it in our own heart: 'Do I pray for my enemies? Do I pray for
those who do not love me? 'If we say' yes', I will say, 'Go on, pray
more, you are on the right path! If the answer is' no ', the Lord says:'
Poor thing. You too are an enemy of others! '. Pray that the Lord may
change the hearts of those. We could say: 'But this person really
wronged me', or they have done bad things and this impoverishes people,
impoverishes humanity. And following this libe of thought we want to
take revenge or that eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth".
Pope
Francis reaffirmed, it’s true that love for our enemies "impoverishes
us”, because it makes us poor "like Jesus", who, when he came to us,
lowered himself and became poor" for us. The Pope noted that some could
argue this was not a good deal "if the enemy makes me poorer" and of
course, "according to the criteria of this world, it is not a good
deal." But this, he said, is "the path Jesus travelled" who from rich
became poor for us. In this poverty, "in this Jesus’ lowering of himself
– he said - there is the grace that has justified us all, made us all
rich." It is the "mystery of salvation":
"With
forgiveness, with love for our enemy, we become poorer: love
impoverishes us, but that poverty is the seed of fertility and love for
others. Just as the poverty of Jesus became the grace of salvation for
all of us, great wealth ... Let us think today at Mass, let us think of
our enemies those who do not wish us well: it would be nice if we
offered the Mass for them: Jesus, Jesus' sacrifice, for them, for those
who do not love us. And for us too, so that the Lord teaches us this
wisdom which is so hard, but so beautiful, because it makes us look like
the Father, like our Father: it brings out the sun for everyone, good
and bad. It makes us more like the Son, Jesus, who in his humiliation
became poor to enrich us, with his poverty. "