We must guard against becoming "lukewarm Christians" because they
"lose the ability to contemplate, the ability to see the great and
beautiful things of God" and risk not being able to recognize when he
knocks on their door, warned Pope Francis at Mass this morning in Santa
Marta.
The Pope was commenting on a passage from John’s Book of Revelations
(3,1-6.14-22) in which the Lord rebukes the "lukewarm" Christians of the
Church of Laodicea, to talk about this same risk that exists for the
Church today and not just for the first Christian community.
The Pope highlighted how the Lord uses strong language, of rebuke for
the lukewarm, "who are neither hot nor cold: I am about to spit you out
of my mouth.” Beware of the calm which deceives: God is not there The
Lord, Francis said, warns against that calm “without substance” of the
lukewarm, calling it “a calm which deceives”.
“But what does a lukewarm
person think? The Lord says it here: He thinks he is rich. ‘I have grown
rich and have need of nothing. I am calm.’ That calm which deceives.
If, in the heart of the Church, of a family, of a community, of a person
there is an ever-present calm, God is not there". To the lukewarm, the
Pope said not to fall asleep in the false belief of needing nothing.
The Lord shows that the lukewarm are naked; their richness comes not from God
Jesus, the Holy Father warned, defines those who believe themselves
rich as unhappy and miserable. However, “he did it out of love”, so that
they might discover a different richness, that which only the Lord may
bestow.
“Not that richness of the soul which you think you possess because
you are good, because you do everything well, all is calm. There is
another richness – that which comes from God, which always carries its
cross, always carries some restlessness of the soul. And I urge you to
buy white clothes in which to dress, so that your shameful nakedness is
not seen. The lukewarm are not aware they are naked.”
The lukewarm, Pope Francis said, “lose the capacity to contemplate,
the capacity to see the great and beautiful things of God”. For this the
Lord seeks to awaken us, to help us convert. But, he continued, the
Lord is “present in another way: He is there to invite us: ‘Behold, I
knock at the door.’” Here the Pope underlines the importance of being
able to “hear when the Lord knocks at our door… because He wants to
gives us something good.”
Pope Francis went on to say there are Christians who “are not aware
when the Lord knocks. For them every noise is the same.” We must
“understand well” when the Lord knocks, when He wants to bring us His
consolation. The Lord, Francis added, is before us also to invite us to
invite Him, which is exactly what happens with Zacchaeus, as the day’s
Gospel recounts: “That curiosity of Zacchaeus, who was small, was a seed
from the Holy Spirit.”
“The initiative is from the Spirit towards the Lord. He raises His
eyes and says: ‘But come; invite me into your house.” The Lord is there…
He is always there with love: whether to correct us, to invite us to
supper, or to be invited by us. He is there to tell us: ‘Awake’… ‘Open’…
‘Come down’. It is always He. Do I know how to distinguish in my heart
when the Lord tells me to awake, to open, or to come down? May the Holy
Spirit give us the grace to know how to discern these calls.”