The savior is in: Jesus was always available to those in need, pope says

587 0

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Priests and bishops need to model themselves after Jesus, who never posted inconvenient office hours or shied away from people and their problems, Pope Francis said in a morning homily.

“Jesus throws himself into the midst of the people,” showing them tenderness, closeness and offering immediate healing — the very same things a minister of the church should be doing, the pope said in his homily Jan. 30 at morning Mass in the Domus Sanctae Marthae.

Reflecting on the day’s Gospel reading from St. Mark (5:21-43), Pope Francis looked at how Jesus interacted with the large crowds that gathered around him and with the people who reached out to him for help.

“Jesus doesn’t open an office for spiritual guidance with a sign: ‘The prophet receives (the public) Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Admission costs this much or if you like, you can make a donation.’ No. Jesus doesn’t do this,” he said.

Jesus didn’t operate like a doctor’s office either, telling people to come a particular day to be healed, he added.

Jesus goes to the people and dives in, bolstered by a deep desire to be close and tender, he said.

“A pastor who doesn’t get close (to people) is missing something. Maybe he is a leader in his field, but he is not a pastor,” the pope said. “A pastor who is missing tenderness will be rigid, hitting his sheep.”

Pope Francis asked people to pray for the church’s priests “so that the Lord may give them this grace of walking with the people, being available to the people with lots of tenderness, with so much closeness.”

“And when people find their shepherd,” he said, “they will feel that special thing that you only feel in God’s presence” — the awe and astonishment of “feeling the closeness and tenderness of God in the pastor.”

Related Post

Riley Benner, a sophomore at the Jesuit-run College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., sports one of his handmade ties that can be ordered though the online site phoenixhaberdashery.com. He started the tie company, Phoenix Haberdashery, when he was a junior at McQuaid Jesuit High School in Rochester, N.Y., and employed refugee workers from the Rochester area. (CNS photo/courtesy Riley Benner)

Student-run business literally ties ideas together

Posted by - December 23, 2017 0
WASHINGTON (CNS) — A panel discussion last year on the challenges faced by refugees didn’t sit well with a freshman…