Pope: Only God can make fruitful our barren aridity
Vatican City (AsiaNews) - Only the intervention of God
overcomes the arid bareness of our life and makes it fruitful: This is what Pope
Francis spoke of at Mass this morning in Casa Santa Marta. Often in the Bible
we find women who are sterile, to whom the Lord gives the gift of life. That
was the starting point of Pope Francis' homily on the day's readings,
particularly the Gospel, which tells the story of Elizabeth, who was sterile
but who had a son - John. "From the impossibility of giving life," the Pope
said, "comes life." And this, he continued, happened not only for sterile women
but to those "who had no hope of life," such as Naomi who eventually had a
grandson:
"The Lord intervened in the life of this woman to tell us: 'I am capable of
giving life.' In the Prophets too there is the image of the desert, the desert
land that cannot grow a tree, a fruit, to bring forth anything. 'But the desert
will be like a forest,' the Prophets say, "it will be huge, it will flower." But
can the desert flower? Yes. Can the sterile woman give life? Yes. The promise
of the Lord: 'I can!' From dryness, from your dryness I can make life,
salvation grow. From aridity I can make fruit grow!"
And that salvation, Pope Francis said, is this: "The intervention of God who
makes us fruitful, who gives us the capacity to give life." He warned that we
cannot do it by ourselves. And yet, the Pope said, many people have tried to
imagine that we are capable of saving ourselves:
"Even Christians, eh? We think of the Pelagians for example. All is grace. And
it is the intervention of God that brings us salvation. It is the intervention
of God that helps us along the path of sanctity. Only He can do it. But what
are we to do on our part? First, recognize our dryness, our incapacity to give
life. Recognize this. Second, ask: 'Lord, I want to be fruitful.' I desire that
my life should give life, that my faith should be fruitful and go forward and
be able to give it to others. Lord, I am sterile, I can't do it. You can. I am
a desert: I can't do it. You can."
And this, he added, could be our prayer during these days before Christmas. "We
think about how the proud, those who think they can do it all by themselves,
are struck." The Pope turned his thoughts to Michal, the daughter of Saul. She
was a woman, he said, "who was not sterile, but was proud, and was not able to
understand what it was to praise God," and in fact laughed at the praise that
David gave to the Lord. And she was punished with sterility:
"Humility is necessary for fruitfulness. How many people imagine they are just,
like Michal, but who are really [sorry souls (poveracce)]. The humility to say
to the Lord: 'Lord, I am sterile, I am a desert' and to repeat in these days
this beautiful antiphon that the Church makes us pray: O Son of David, O
Adonai, O Wisdom - today! - O Root of Jesse, O Emmanuel, come and give us life,
come and save us, because only You can, by myself I cannot!' And with this
humility, this humility of the desert, this humility of a sterile soul, receive
grace, the grace to flourish, to give fruit, and to give life."
17/05/2020 12:35
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