POPE FRANCIS ON THE NARROW GATE.
POPE FRANCIS: OUR LIFE IS SERIOUS AND THE GOAL TO ACHIEVE IS IMPORTANT: ETERNAL SALVATION.
Dear brethren in Christ, below you have the beautiful speech of Pope Francis during Angelus at St. Peter’s Square on Aug. 21, 2016.
In it he reminds us that Jesus is the door which leads to salvation. The door is narrow not because it is oppressive but so as to prohibit the entry of pride which bloats us. He invites us to enter His door leaving behind worldly attitudes, bad habits, selfishness and the closing ourselves off. Let us seize Jesus’ pressing invitation to enter his door because at a certain moment, it will be closed and locked up. Our life is not a video game or a soap opera; our life is serious and the goal to achieve is important: eternal salvation.
Fr. Rolly Arjonillo, priest of Opus Dei.
FOR THIS SUNDAY’S MASS PRAYERS AND READINGS, SEE https://catholicsstrivingforholiness.org/21st-sunday-of-ordinary-time-mass-prayers-and-readings/
+++SPEECH STARTS HERE. TITLES MINE+++
“Dear brothers and sisters, good morning!
1. The path that leads to salvation is the door.
Today’s Gospel passage invites us to meditate on the theme of salvation. The Evangelist Luke tells us that Jesus is on the way to Jerusalem and along the way is approached by a man who asks him this question: “Lord, will only a few people be saved?” (Luke 13:23). Jesus does not give a direct answer, but takes the discussion to another level, with suggestive language that at first, the disciples don’t understand: “Strive to enter through the narrow door; for many, I say unto you, will seek to enter, but they will not succeed” (v.24 ). With the image of the door, He wants to explain to his listeners that it is not a question of numbers – how many people will be saved. It doesn’t matter how many, but it is important that everyone knows which is the path that leads to salvation: the door.
2. Jesus is the door. It is a narrow door but always wide open to everyone. It is narrow not because it is oppressive but so as to prohibit the entry of pride which bloats us.
To go along this path, one must pass through a door. But where is the door? What is it like? Who is the door? Jesus himself is the door (cf. Jn 10,9). He himself says it, ‘I am the door’ in John’s Gospel. He leads us in communion with the Father, where we find love, understanding and protection. But why is this door narrow? One can ask. Why is it narrow? It is a narrow door not because it is oppressive – no, but because it asks us to restrict and limit our pride and our fear, to open ourselves with humble and trusting heart to Him, recognizing ourselves as sinners, in need of his forgiveness. For this, it is narrow: to contain our pride, which bloats us. The door of God’s mercy is narrow but always wide open, wide open for everyone! God has no favorites, but always welcomes everyone, without distinction. A door, that is narrow to restrict our pride and our fear. Open because God welcomes us without distinction. And the salvation that He gives us is an unceasing flow of mercy…which breaks down every barrier and opens up surprising perspectives of light and peace. The narrow but always open door: do not forget this. Narrow door, but always open.
3. Jesus, the sole source of joy and meaning of our existence, offers us a pressing invitation to go to him, to be reconciled with him and be happy. He invites us to enter His door leaving behind worldly attitudes, bad habits, selfishness and the closing ourselves off.
Jesus offers us today, once again, a pressing invitation to go to him, to cross the threshold of a full life, reconciled and happy. He waits for each of us, no matter what sin we have committed, no matter what! To embrace us, to offer us his forgiveness. He alone can transform our hearts, He alone can give full meaning to our existence, giving us true joy. Upon entering the door of Jesus, the door of faith and of the Gospel, we can leave behind worldly attitudes, bad habits, selfishness and the closing ourselves off. When there is contact with the love and mercy of God, there is real change. And our life is illuminated by the light of the Holy Spirit: an inextinguishable light!”
“I’d like to make you a proposal,” the Pope said to the pilgrims in the square, and invited them to think in silence for a moment about the things they have inside that prevent them from passing over the threshold: pride, arrogance, sin. “And then, let us think about that other door, the one open to God’s mercy and He is waiting on the other side to forgive us,” Francis added.
4. This door is an opportunity that must not be wasted because at a certain moment, it will be closed and locked up. Our life is not a video game or a soap opera; our life is serious and the goal to achieve is important: eternal salvation.
“The Lord offers us many opportunities to save ourselves and to enter through the door of salvation,” the Pope continued. “This door is an opportunity that must not be wasted: we must not make an academic discourse of salvation, as did the man who questioned Jesus, but we must seize the opportunities for salvation. Because at a certain moment “the landlord got up and locked the door” (v.25), as mentioned in the Gospel. But if God is good and loves us, why does he close the door – he will close the door at a certain point? Because our life is not a video game or a soap opera; our life is serious and the goal to achieve is important: eternal salvation.
To the Virgin Mary, Door of Heaven, we ask help so that we seize the opportunities that the Lord gives us to cross the threshold of faith and thus to enter into a wide road: it is the path of salvation that can accommodate all those who allow themselves to love and be loved (it: si lasciano coinvolgere dall’amore). It is love which saves; the love that is already here on earth is a source of happiness to those who, in meekness, patience and justice, forget themselves and give themselves to others, especially the weakest.”
SPEECH SOURCE: http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2016/08/21/pope_francis_life_is_no_video_game,_salvation_is_serious/1252717
PHOTO CREDITS:
“Cristo de la Buena Muerte” by Enrique Ayllon
Rembrandt
Simon Dewey
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