11/09/2018, 13.59
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Pope: the church is not a marketplace with a 'price list' for the sacraments

"It is true that the celebrations must be beautiful - beautiful - but not worldly, because worldliness depends on the god of money. It is an idolatry like others. This makes us think about our attitude to the house of God, our respect for churches when we enter ".

Vatican City (AsiaNews) - Pope Francis on Friday urged that churches be given due respect as the “house of God” and not be transformed into markets or social lounges stained dominated by “worldliness”. Celebrating his morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta in the Vatican, inspired by the passage from the Gospel (Jn 2: 13-22), he warned that churches risked transforming themselves into marketplaces with sacraments on sale, which are free.

Celebrating his morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta in the Vatican, he warned that churches risked transforming themselves into marketplaces with sacraments on sale, which are free.

He was reflecting the Gospel reading on the feast of the Dedication of Rome’s St. John Lateran Basilica, where Jesus cleanses the temple of Jerusalem of all buyers and sellers, warning them against turning his Father’s house into a marketplace.   

Jesus noted that the temple was populated by idolaters - men ready to serve "money" instead of "God". "Behind money there is an idol,” the Pope said, adding idols are always of gold that enslaves.

Pope Francis wondered if we treat our  “temples, our churches” as the house of God, the house of prayer, a place of meeting the Lord, and whether the priests treat it like that.

The Pope recalled instances where there is a price list of the sacraments that are free of cost. To those who argue that it is an offering, the Pope said, offerings are to be put secretly into the box without anyone noticing it.  He warned that there is this danger even today.

Pope Francis admitted the Church needs to be maintained by the faithful but, he said, this is done in the offering box, not with a price list. 

Another danger that the Pope warned against was the temptation of worldliness.  He noted that during a few celebrations or commemorations in the Church one cannot make out if the house of God is a place of worship or a social parlour.   

The Pope said that some church celebrations slip into worldliness.  Celebrations must be beautiful but not worldly, because, he said, worldliness depends on the god of money.  He called this idolatry and said it should make us think about our zeal for our churches and the respect that we give when we enter them.   

Pope Francis then drew attention to the First Letter of Saint Paul to the Corinthians which speaks about our hearts as the temple of God.  Despite our sinfulness, the Pope said, each one of us should ask ourselves whether our hearts are "worldly and idolatrous".

The Holy Father said it is not the question of what our sins are, but of finding out if there is the lord of money within us.   If there is a sin, he said, we have the Lord, the merciful God, who forgives if we go to Him.  But if there is other lord, the god money, we are an idol worshipper, a corrupt person, and not a former sinner.

The Pope concluded saying the core of corruption is precisely an idolatry, of having sold one’s soul to the god of money, to the god of power.

 

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