Prayer Is What Opens The Door
Prayer Is What Opens The Door
According to Vatican News, Pope Francis stressed this in his homily today,
April 20, during his private daily Mass at his residence Casa Santa Marta, as
he reflected on today’s Gospel according to St. John (John 21: 1-14).
At the start of the Mass, while remembering all victims of coronavirus, Francis
prayed for politicians during the COVID crisis.
“Let us pray today,” the Pontiff said, “for the men and women who have a
political vocation. Politics is a high form of charity.”
The Holy Father also prayed that political parties might “seek together the
good of the country and not the good of their own parties.”
In his homily, the Holy Father reflected on the importance of prayer and letting
the Holy Spirit operate and help us in our lives.
When the disciples were afraid, faced with difficulties and closed doors, “not
knowing how to go forward, they go to the Lord, they open their heart and the
Spirit comes and gives them what they need and they go out to preach, with
courage, and forward.”
When reflecting on how we can have a new start with the Lord, the Pope
encouraged prayer.
“With prayer,” is how we pick up and get started, the Pontiff underscored.
“Prayer is what opens the door to the Spirit and give one this freedom, this
boldness, this courage of the Holy Spirit, which one will never know where He
will lead one, but it’s the Spirit.”
Pope Francis concluded, praying: “May the Lord help us to be always open to
the Spirit, because it will be He who carries us forward in our life of service to
the Lord.”
The Masses in Francis’ chapel normally welcome a small group of faithful, but
due to recent measures’ taken by the Vatican, are now being kept private,
without their participation. The Holy Week and Easter celebrations in the
Vatican were also done without the presence of faithful, but were able to be
watched via streaming.
Likewise, the Pope had a private Mass for Divine Mercy Sunday, with very
limited participation by others, at the Roman Church of Santo Spirito in Sassia.
One could watch via streaming.
It was announced at the start of the lockdowns in Italy that the Pope would
have these Masses, in this period, be available to all the world’s faithful, via
streaming on Vatican Media, on weekdays, at 7 am Rome time, along with his
weekly Angelus and General Audiences.
In Italy where more than 23,660 people have died from coronavirus, public
Masses are still prohibited. To date, in the Vatican, there have been seven
cases of coronavirus; at least two people healed.
The Vatican Museums are now closed, along with the Vatican’s other similar
museums. There have also been various guidelines implemented throughout
the Vatican, to prevent the spread of the virus.
For anyone interested, the Pope’s Masses at Santa Marta can be watched live
and can be watched afterward on Vatican YouTube. Below is a link to today’s
Mass. Also, a ZENIT English translation of the Pope’s full homily is available
below:
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To be a Christian isn’t only to obey the Commandments: yes, one must do so;
this is true. However, if you stop there, you aren’t a good Christina. To be a
good Christians is to let the Spirit enter into you and carry you, to carry you
where He wills. Many times, in our Christian life we stop, as Nicodemus, in
face of the “therefore,” we don’t know what step to take, we don’t know how to
do it, or we don’t have trust in God to take this step and let the Spirit enter. To
be born anew is to let the Spirit enter me and that it be the Spirit that guides
me and not I and here, free, with this freedom of the Spirit, which one never
knows where it will end.
When the Spirit came, the Apostles, who were in the Cenacle, went out to
preach with that courage, with that boldness . . . they didn’t know that this
would happen, and they did it because the Spirit was guiding them. A Christian
must never stop only at complying with the Commandments: yes, he must do
so, but he must go beyond, to this new birth, which is birth in the Spirit, which
gives one the freedom of the Spirit. It’s what happened to this Christian
community of the First Reading, after John and Peter returned from that
interrogation they had with the priests. They went to their brothers in this
community and referred to all that they had said to the rulers of the priests
and the Elders. And when the community heard all this, all of them together,
were somewhat scared. And what did they do? They prayed. They didn’t stop
at prudential measures. “No, now we do this, we go a bit calmer . . . “No. They
pray, so that it is the Spirit that says to them what they must do. They raised
their voice to God saying: “Lord!” and they prayed. This beautiful prayer in a
dark moment, in a moment when they must take decisions and don’t know
what to do. They want to be born of the Spirit; they open their heart to the
Spirit, that He may say it to them. And they ask: “Lord, Herod, Pontius Pilate
with the nations and the people of Israel allied themselves against your Holy
Spirit and Jesus,” they recount the history and say: “Lord, do something!” And
now, Lord, look upon their threats,” those of the group of priests, “and grant to
thy servants to speak thy word with all boldness” — they ask for boldness, for
the courage not to be afraid — “while thou stretches out thy hand to heal, and
signs and wonders are performed through the name of thy holy servant
Jesus.” “And when they had prayed, the place in which they were gathered
together was shaken; and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the
word of God with boldness.” A second Pentecost happened here.
In face of the difficulties, in face of a closed door, so that they don’t know how
to go forward, they go to the Lord, they open their heart and the Spirit comes
and gives them what they need and they go out to preach, with courage, and
forward. This is to be born of the Spirit; this is not to stop at the “therefore,” at
the “therefore” of the things I’ve always done, at the “therefore” of after the
Commandments, at the “therefore” after the religious habits: no! This is to be
born again. And how does one prepare to be born again? With prayer — prayer
is what opens the door to the Spirit and give one this freedom, this boldness,
this courage of the Holy Spirit, which one will never know where He will lead
one, but it’s the Spirit.
May the Lord help us to be always open to the Spirit, because it will be He who
carries us forward in our life of service to the Lord.
The Pope ended the celebration with Eucharistic Adoration and Benediction,
inviting the faithful to make a Spiritual Communion.
I prostrate myself at your Feet, O my Jesus, and I offer You the repentance of
my contrite heart, which abases itself in its nothingness and in your holy
Presence. I adore You in the Sacrament of your Love, the Eucharist. I desire to
receive you in the poor abode that my heart offers You; while waiting for the
happiness of Sacramental Communion, I want to possess You in spirit. Come
to me, O my Jesus, so that I may come to You. May your Love be able to
inflame my whole being in life and in death. I believe in You, I hope in You, I love
You.
Before leaving the Chapel dedicated to the Holy Spirit, the Marian
antiphon Regina Caeli” was intoned, sung in Eastertide: