Jesus does not tolerate hypocrisy, pope says

823 0
Pope Francis gives the homily as he celebrates morning Mass in the chapel of his residence, the Domus Sanctae Marthae, at the Vatican Oct. 15, 2019. The pope, in his homily, said Christians must avoid hypocrisy by scrutinizing and acknowledging their own faults and sins. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Jesus enjoys unmasking hypocrisy, which is the work of the devil, Pope Francis said.

Christians, in fact, must learn to avoid hypocrisy by scrutinizing and acknowledging their own personal faults, failings and sins, he said Oct. 15 during morning Mass at the Domus Sanctae Marthae.

“A Christian who does not know how to accuse himself is not a good Christian,” he said.

The pope focused his homily on the day’s Gospel reading (Lk 11:37-41) in which Jesus criticizes his host for being concerned only with outward appearances and superficial rituals, saying, “although you cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, inside you are filled with plunder and evil.”

Pope Francis said the reading shows how much Jesus does not tolerate hypocrisy, which, the pope said, “is appearing one way but being something else” or hiding what one really thinks.

When Jesus calls the Pharisees “whitewashed tombs” and hypocrites, these words are not insults but the truth, the pope said.

“On the outside you are perfect, strait-laced actually, with decorum, but inside you are something else,” he said.

“Hypocritical behavior comes from the great liar, the devil,” who is a huge hypocrite himself, the pope said, and he makes those like him on earth his “heirs.”

“Hypocrisy is the language of the devil; it is the language of evil that enters our heart and is sown by the devil. You can’t live with hypocritical people, but they exist,” the pope said.

“Jesus likes to unmask hypocrisy,” he said. “He knows it will be precisely this behavior that leads to his death because the hypocrite does not think about using legitimate means or not, he plows ahead: slander? ‘Let’s use slander.’ False witness? ‘Let’s look for an untruthful witness.'”  

Hypocrisy, the pope said, is common “in the battle for power, for example, (with) envy, jealousies that make you appear to be one way and inside there is poison for killing because hypocrisy always kills, sooner or later, it kills.”

The only “medicine” to cure hypocritical behavior is to tell the truth before God and take responsibility for oneself, the pope said.

“We have to learn to accuse ourselves, ‘I did this, I think this way, badly. I am envious. I want to destroy that one,'” he said.

People need to reflect on “what is inside of us” to see the sin, hypocrisy and “the wickedness that is in our heart” and “to say it before God” with humility, he said.

Pope Francis asked people to learn from St. Peter, who implored, “Depart from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man.”

“May we learn to accuse ourselves, us, our own self,” he said.

Related Post

Actor Aldis Hodge and the real-life Brian Banks pose in an undated photo. The new film "Brian Banks," staring Hodge, recounts the true story of the high school football star whose promising future was derailed when he was falsely accused of rape. The California Innocence Project, a law school clinic at California Western School of Law in San Diego, which helped bring about Banks' exoneration, hosted a special screening of the film Aug. 3, 2019, at the Museum of Photographic Arts in Balboa Park. (CNS photo, Katherine Bomboy, courtesy Bleecker Street)

Banks holds no resentment for wrongful conviction; he’s focused on others

Posted by - August 16, 2019 0
SAN DIEGO (CNS) — The new film “Brian Banks” recounts the true story of a high school football star whose…
A grandmother who has been part of a Catholic Relief Services' program for family nutrition shares her lunch with her youngest of seven grandchildren in the kitchen of the family home in Konjiko, Kenya, May 1, 2019. Lenten alms donated through the CRS Rice Bowl program support the agency's work in roughly 45 different countries. (CNS photo/Georgina Goodwin for Catholic Relief Services)

Almsgiving: An overshadowed Lenten pillar has something to say

Posted by - March 1, 2020 0
WASHINGTON (CNS) — When it comes to the three pillars of Lent, almsgiving is a little bit like the middle…
Irish Bishop Paul Tighe, adjunct secretary of the Pontifical Council for Culture, speaks June 7 during the "Sport at the Service of Humanity: A Regional Conference on Faith and Collegiate Sports" at Villanova University in Pennsylvania. The conference was the first to be sanctioned by the Vatican following its inaugural conference on faith and sports in Rome in October 2016. (CNS photo/courtesy Villanova University)

Villanova University conference explores intersection of faith and sports

Posted by - June 17, 2017 0
VILLANOVA, Pa. (CNS) — Last October, the Vatican hosted a groundbreaking conference to explore the ways faith and sports could…