Francis opens Jubilee year with call for church that
puts mercy before judgment
Report by Joshua McElwee. The original can be found here
Pope Francis has launched
his yearlong push for a global Catholic church of mercy and forgiveness,
starting the Jubilee year focused on the subject by opening the holy door at
St. Peter’s Basilica and calling for a church that always puts mercy before
judgment.
In a solemn Mass attended
by tens of thousands in a chilly St. Peter’s Square and marked by an unusually
high security presence, the pontiff also praised the work of the Second Vatican
Council and said the newly-opened Jubilee "compels us not to neglect the
spirit which emerged" from that event.
"This Extraordinary
Holy Year is itself a gift of grace," Francis said during the homily at
the Mass. "To enter through the Holy Door means to rediscover the deepness
of the mercy of the Father who welcomes all and goes out to meet everyone
personally."
"How much wrong we
do to God and his grace when we affirm that sins are punished by his judgment
before putting first that they are forgiven by his mercy!" the pope
exhorted.
"It is truly
so," he said. "We have to put mercy before judgment, and in every
case God’s judgment will always be in the light of his mercy."
"Let us abandon all
fear and dread, for these do not befit men and women who are loved," said
Francis. "Instead, let us live the joy of encounter with the grace that
transforms all."
The pontiff was speaking
in the Mass opening the Jubilee year of mercy, which will continue from Tuesday
through Nov. 20, the day celebrated next year as the feast of Christ the King.
A Jubilee year is a
special year called by the Catholic church to receive blessing and pardon from
God and remission of sins.
While most Jubilees have
been focused on calling pilgrims to Rome to receive such pardon, Francis has
widely expanded his Jubilee, asking that dioceses throughout the world open
their own holy door at a cathedral or other church to expand the practice
globally.
A holy door is a door
normally designated in special churches -- like the four papal basilicas in
Rome -- to be opened only during Jubilee years as a sign of the possibility of
re-entering into God’s grace.
Francis opened the holy
door in St. Peter's Basilica towards the end of the Mass Tuesday. Standing in
front of the door, located at the northeast corner of the Vatican basilica, the
pontiff asked God to grant "a year of grace, a favourable time to love you
and our brothers and sisters in the joy of the Gospel."
Calling Jesus "the
shining face of your infinite mercy, safe refuge for us sinners, needing of
forgiveness and peace" and saying that Christ is the door "through
which we come to [God]," the pope pushed through the door open slowly with
both hands while walking through.
Retired Pope Benedict XVI,
looking a bit frail while grasping a cane to walk, was the second person to
follow Francis through the door, and the two pontiffs embraced and spoke
briefly both before and after the opening of the threshold.
Both Francis’ homily at
the Mass and the ceremony itself also paid tribute to the Second Vatican
Council, which officially closed its work on Dec. 8, 1965.
The Council, known
colloquially as Vatican II, has been a hot point for conversation in Catholic
circles over the past 40 years, with some praising its work to reform certain
aspects of the church's teachings and others saying those reforms may have gone
too far or have been misinterpreted.
The Eucharistic
celebration Tuesday was opened with readings of excerpts from the Council’s
four constitutions and its documents on ecumenism and religious liberty. In his
homily, Francis said the Council documents "verify the great advance in
faith" made at the event.
"In the first place,
however, the Council was an encounter," said the pontiff. "A true encounter
between the Church and the men and women of our time."
"An encounter marked
by the force of the Spirit, who pushed the Church to emerge from the shoals
which for many years had kept her closed in herself, to set out once again,
with enthusiasm, on her missionary journey," he continued.
"It was the
resumption of a journey of going to meet every person where they live: in their
cities, in their homes, in their workplaces," he said.
"Wherever there is a
person, the Church is called to reach out to them to bring the joy of the
Gospel," said Francis. "After these decades, we again take up this
missionary push with the same power and enthusiasm."
"The Jubilee
challenges us to this openness, and compels us not to neglect the spirit which
emerged from Vatican II, that of the Samaritan, as Blessed Paul VI reminded at
the conclusion of the Council," he said. "May our passing through the
Holy Door today commit us to making our own the mercy of the Good
Samaritan."
Francis' opening of the
holy door in St. Peter's Tuesday is just one of a number of signs and symbols
the pope and the Vatican will undertake in coming days to stress the opening of
the Jubilee year and the focus on the boundless nature of God's mercy.
The pontiff already made
one special sign during his November visit to the Central African Republic,
opening a holy door at the cathedral in the capital of Bangui a full eight days
before the official opening of the Jubilee.
That was the first time
in the centuries of celebration of Jubilee years that a pontiff opened a holy
door in any city other than Rome
The pope will open the
holy door at his cathedral church -- the Basilica of St. John Lateran -- on
Sunday, when U.S. Cardinal James Harvey will also open the holy door at Rome's
Basilica of St. Paul's Outside the Walls. The pontiff, in a first for a Jubilee
year, has called for similar holy doors to be opened in dioceses across the
world that same day.
Francis will open the
door of Rome’s Basilica of St. Mary Major, the fourth papal basilica, on Jan.
1.
In preparation for
visitors coming to Rome to celebrate the Jubilee, the Vatican has opened a new
office on the main road into St. Peter's Square to welcome pilgrims and to
centralize services such as obtaining tickets to walk through the holy door at
St. Peter's.
They have also placed
dozens of new metal detectors under the iconic colonnades in the Square to
streamline security access to the basilica. Hundreds of volunteers will be
available each day of the year to assist pilgrims.
Security measures for
Tuesday’s Mass were among the most stringent seen at the Vatican since at least
2014’s canonization of Sts. John Paul II and John XXIII, with a bag check at
the far east end of the Roman road entering St. Peter’s Square forcing tens of
thousands to face long queues to enter the event.
Uniformed military were
also patrolling crowds as they lined to enter the Square, uniformed and
plainclothes police officers were patrolling streets around the Vatican, and
police boats were even sighted on the normally abandoned Tiber River.
Francis has also said he
will be making a special sign of mercy one Friday of the month each month
during the Jubilee. The first will come Dec. 18, when he is to open a door at a
Caritas centre in Rome that provides shelter and food for those in need.
The holy year will get a
special push Feb. 10, Ash Wednesday next year, when the pontiff will commission
some 800 priests from around the world to serve as "Missionaries of
Mercy," giving them a special mandate to go among dioceses and forgive
even canonical penalties normally reserved to the Holy See.
In a special Angelus
prayer following the Mass Tuesday with pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square for the
feast of the Immaculate Conception, Francis said the celebration of Mary’s
birth becomes a celebration for all through a daily "yes" to let go
of selfishness and to make the lives of our brothers and sisters in the world
happier.
"Today’s feast of
the Immaculate Conception has a specific message to communicate to us: It
reminds us that in our life all is gift, all is mercy," said the pontiff.
"The Holy Virgin … helps us to rediscover always more divine mercy as the
distinctive characteristic of the Christian."
"It is the
synthesis-word of the Gospel, mercy," he said. "It is the fundamental
trait of the face of Christ: that face that we recognize in the diverse aspects
of his existence: when he goes out to meet all, when he heals the sick, when he
sits at table with sinners, and most of all when, nailed to the cross, he
pardons; there we see the face of divine mercy."
The closing of the Mass
Tuesday emphasized that while the Jubilee year is oriented towards evincing
God's immeasurable mercy towards us, it also is meant as a forceful push to
show Catholics around the world to be merciful to one another -- and to
everyone else.
"Be merciful as your
Father is merciful," a deacon intoned, ending the liturgy.
[Joshua J. McElwee is NCR
Vatican correspondent. His email address is jmcelwee@ncronline.org. Follow him
on Twitter: @joshjmac.]?
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