Pope: Idolatry empties lives, ruins hearts, which only Christ can revive

622 0
Pope Francis blesses a painting he received from a group of migrants during his general audience Nov. 28 in Paul VI hall at the Vatican. (CNS photo/Max Rossi, Reuters)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Every heart enslaved by false idols and evil desires needs a “transplant” with a heart filled with love, joy, goodness, hope and generosity, Pope Francis said.

“How does this ‘heart transplant’ happen? From an old heart to a new heart? Through the gift of new desires,” the pope said Nov. 28 during his weekly general audience in the Vatican’s Paul VI hall.

The new desires are seeds planted by the Holy Spirit, growing into a thirst for a new life, like Christ’s, that is hopeful, grateful, free, blessed, generous and sincere, he said.

The pope’s catechesis before the start of Advent Dec. 2, was the last of his series of talks on the Ten Commandments.

The commandments, he said, should not be seen as a series of rules, but rather as a process of “benediction and liberation” that leads to a true, authentic life, finding “rest” and salvation in God.

God, he said, “asks for nothing before he has given so much more” first.

“He invites us to be obedient in order to free us from the deception of idolatries that have so much power over us. In fact, seeking self-fulfillment in the idols of this world empties us and enslaves us while what gives us stature and substance” is a relationship with God, the pope said.

God calls people to “the beauty of fidelity, generosity and authenticity,” he said, but how does one get there?

“We need a new heart, in which the Holy Spirit dwells,” the pope said.

This new heart grows from new desires that are “sown in us by God’s grace, particularly through the Ten Commandments,” which Jesus brought to fulfillment.

“The Lord Jesus did not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it, to make it grow” from being a list of rules and prohibitions to becoming new life, the flesh of Christ himself, “who loves us, seeks us, forgives us, consoles us,” leading people back to God the Father after losing their way through sin and disobedience, he said.

Through Christ, the “negative” don’ts and shall nots of the commandments are transformed into positive attitudes and actions, such as love and making room for others in one’s heart, Pope Francis said.

The commandments, he said, are like “an X-ray” of Christ or like the Holy Shroud of Turin, where his face is revealed in the negative.

Gazing at Christ “we see beauty, the good, the truth,” and reflecting on a life guided by the commandments, one discovers it is an image of the life of Christ, a life that is “grateful, free, authentic,” blessed, mature, caring, loving of life, faithful, generous and sincere, he said.

By opening one’s heart to God, the Holy Spirit will come and generate new life there, planting seeds of hope, faith and love, helping people conform their hearts ever closer to Christ’s.

“In Christ and only in him, the Ten Commandments stop being condemnation and become the authentic truth of human life, that is, the desire for love, a desire for the good, to do the good, a desire for joy, peace, magnanimity, benevolence, kindness, fidelity, meekness, self-control.”

“Those no’s switch to yeses, positive actions of a heart open to the power of the Holy Spirit,” the pope said.

Once that heart is opened and seeks to be conformed to Christ’s, “the door is then open to salvation, which cannot help but come because God the Father is generous.”

New life is not a “titanic effort” of adhering to a rule, but is the Holy Spirit himself, who is guiding people there, “in a happy synergy between our joy of being loved and his joy of loving us.”

After the pope’s main talk, a small child wearing a bright blue shirt sauntered from the seated section of the hall up the marble steps toward a Swiss guard standing near the pope. Curious about the perfectly immobile guard, the boy took the soldier’s gloved hand and pulled on it gently, then lost interest and wandered behind the pope’s chair.

When the boy’s mother came to retrieve her son, she spoke briefly to the pope and mentioned they also were from Argentina. The pope turned to German Archbishop Georg Ganswein, prefect of the papal household, and jokingly explained the boy was Argentine, therefore, “undisciplined.”

The pope let the boy continue wandering about on stage even though his guards and aides tried coaxing him away.

When the pope greeted Spanish-speaking visitors in the hall he said, “This boy cannot talk. He is mute, but he knows how to communicate and express himself” nonetheless.

“He has something, which makes me reflect. He is free. Free in an undisciplined way,” he laughed as the audience applauded.

“He makes me think: ‘Am I also free like this before God?'”

“When Jesus says we have to be like children, he is saying we have to have the freedom a child has with his father,” and that is what this child has displayed and “has preached to all of us,” the pope said, asking people also pray for the child to be able to speak someday.

Related Post

Students and parishioners from St. Elisabeth of Hungary School in Van Nuys venerate the incorrupt heart of St. John Vianney after Mass in Van Nuys Feb. 22, 2019. The heart was on tour through several parishes of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles Feb. 20-26. The heart was on tour through several parishes of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles Feb. 20-26. (CNS photo/Pablo Kay, The Angelus News)

Relic of ‘holy priest’ offers chance to pray for church and her ministers

Posted by - March 2, 2019 0
VAN NUYS, Calif. (CNS) — In the few moments she spent up close and personal with the incorrupt heart of…
Faithful in Manila, Philippines, celebrate the Black Nazarene Jan. 7. When Catholics are "deaf to the word of God," their hearts are hardened, and "they lose the meaning of faithfulness," the pope said March 23 in his homily during morning Mass at Domus Sanctae Marthae. (CNS photo/Mark R. Cristino, EPA)

Hardened hearts can turn believers into atheists, pope says

Posted by - March 30, 2017 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Not listening to God’s voice can distance Christians from him and lead them instead to seek…
Pope Francis greets a disabled pilgrim during his general audience in Paul VI hall at the Vatican Aug. 7, 2019. Returning for the first audience following the summer break, the pope continued his series of talks on the Acts of Apostles and reflected on the words spoken by Peter and John before healing a disabled man asking for alms at the entrance to the temple. (CNS photo/Yara Nardi, Reuters)

Church is a mother to all, remains close to those who suffer, pope says

Posted by - August 16, 2019 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Like the apostles who brought spiritual and physical healing to those in need, Christians are called…