Take a risk by following Jesus, pope says at Mass

802 0

 By Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Following Jesus and entering into a relationship with him comes with risks, including the risk of looking foolish sometimes, Pope Francis said.

The Gospels are full of stories about people who took a risk to follow Jesus and those who, filled with bitterness or concerned with their own pride and status, simply sat by the wayside watching Jesus pass, the pope said Jan. 13 during his early morning Mass in the chapel of the Domus Sanctae Marthae.

While he was preaching Jan. 13 about the story from Mark’s Gospel of four men opening a hole in a roof above Jesus’ head to lower down a paralyzed man, the pope also mentioned the stories of the Canaanite woman whose daughter was possessed, the woman with the hemorrhage and the story of the Samaritan woman at the well.

“The women risk more than the men, don’t they?” the pope said. “It’s true. They are better and we must recognize that.”

Jesus knew that many of the people who followed him did not have the purest of intentions. They were looking for help and healing, he said, but he allowed them to approach “because he knew that we are all sinners.”

The problem was not those who were trying to get close to Jesus, he said, but those who stood still.

“The stationary! Those who were on the edge of the path, watching,” were the problem, he said. The scribes and others were watching, but not following. “They never risked anything ever. They only judged. They were the ‘pure’ and would not get involved.”

They looked at the poor people trying to get close to Jesus and thought, “What ignorant people! What superstitious people,” the pope said. Unfortunately, “how many times, when we see the piety of the simple people,” do similar judgments come to mind? Such judgments, he said, are the result of “that clericalism that does such harm to the church.”

Faith, the pope said, means trusting Jesus, following him, asking for his help or healing and accepting the risk that one might look ridiculous to others.

Related Post

Good Shepherd lay partners pose with Sister Maria Juanita "Nenet" Dano (center, wearing white) after a July 19 paralegal training held at the Lyceum of the Philippines College of Law. Sister Dano is a licensed social worker who has been doing outreach work since 2011. (CNS photo/Global Sisters Report)

Philippine nun works to help users avoid death in drug war

Posted by - August 13, 2017 0
MANILA, Philippines (CNS) — After emerging from a face-to-face meeting with six drug users, Sister Maria Juanita “Nenet” Dano heaved…
Sister Patricia Jean, a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph the Worker of Walton, Ky., listens to a participant July 1 during a Fiat Days discernment retreat at Mount St. Mary's Seminary in Emmitsburg, Md. The vocations office of the Diocese of Harrisburg, Pa., hosts the retreat each year for young women ages 15-25 to learn about consecrated life and better discern God's call. (CNS photo/Jen Reed, The Catholic Witness)

For young women and religious, joy radiates at Fiat Days retreat

Posted by - July 21, 2018 0
EMMITSBURG, Md. (CNS) — Counting on her fingers to keep track of points in an ice-breaker game she was playing…
Spanish Missionary of Charity Sister Paul supports a patient Oct. 16, 2009, at the House for the Dying in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. People who feel restless or lacking inner peace will discover it when they visit those who are experiencing great difficulty, suffering, illness or persecution, Pope Francis said. (CNS photo/Paul Jeffrey)

People can find peace by visiting those who suffer, pope says

Posted by - May 4, 2019 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — People who feel restless or lacking inner peace will discover it when they visit those who…