"In n a world we could call an orphan,” Pope Francis concluded, “in
this world that suffers the crisis” of a great experience of being
orphaned, “perhaps our help lies in saying ‘Look to your Mother!’”
We
have a mother “who defends us, teaches us, accompanies us; who is not
ashamed of our sins. She is not ashamed, because she is our Mother” said
Pope Francis at Mass this morning in Casa Santa Marta, on the day when
the Church celebrates the memorial of Our Lady of Sorrows and in which
the Gospel of the day brings us to Calvary. All the disciples had fled,
except for St John and a few women. At the foot of the Cross is Mary,
the Mother of Jesus and some women.
Everyone is looking at her, saying, “That’s the mother of this
delinquent! That is the mother of this subversive!” “And Mary heard
these things. She suffered terrible humiliation. And she also heard the
dignitaries, even some priests, whom she respected, because they were
priests, [saying] “You who are so good, come down! Come down!” With her
Son, naked, there [on the Cross]. And Mary had such great suffering, but
she didn’t go away. She didn’t deny her Son! He was her flesh.”
Pope Francis recalled that, when he was in Buenos Aires and would
visit prisoners in the jails, he always saw lines of women waiting to
enter: “They were moms. But they were not ashamed: their flesh was there
inside. And these women suffered not only the shame of being there –
“Look at her! What did her son do?” -- but they also suffer the ugly
humiliation of the searches they had to undergo before entering. But
they were mothers, and they went to find their own flesh. And so it was
with Mary: she was there, with her Son, with that very great suffering.”
Jesus, the Pope said, has promised not to leave us orphans, and on
the Cross he gives us His Mother as our Mother: “We Christians have a
Mother, Jesus’ [Mother]; we have a Father, Jesus’ [Father]. We are not
orphans! And she gives birth to us in that moment with such great
sorrow: She is truly a martyr. With a pierced heart, she accepts giving
birth to all of us in that moment of sorrow. And from that moment she
becomes our Mother, from that moment she is our Mother, the one who
takes care of us and is not ashamed of us: she defends us.”
The mystics of the early centuries, Pope Francis said, counsel us to
take refuge under the mantle of the Mother of God in moments of
spiritual turbulence: “The devil can’t enter there.” He continued,
explaining that Mary is a mother, and she will defend as a Mother. The
West later took this advice to heart and composed the Latin version of
the Marian antiphon: Sub tuum praesidium, “under your mantle, under your
protection, O Mother!” We are safe there, he said.
“In a world we could call an orphan,” Pope Francis concluded, “in
this world that suffers the crisis” of a great experience of being
orphaned, “perhaps our help lies in saying ‘Look to your Mother!’” We
have a mother “who defends us, teaches us, accompanies us; who is not
ashamed of our sins. She is not ashamed, because she is our Mother. May
the Holy Spirit, this friend, this companion along the way, this
Paraclete or advocate Whom the Lord has sent, make us understand this
very great mystery of the maternity of Mary".