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Pope Francis gave the homily at Mass marking the feast of Divine Mercy in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican April 24.
Pope Francis gave the homily at Mass marking the feast of Divine Mercy in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican April 24.
Photo Credit: Paul Haring | Catholic News Service

God’s mercy brings joy, comfort to those in need, pope says

On Divine Mercy Sunday, pope said that mercy often makes us aware of the sufferings of our neighbor

VATICAN CITY — The mercy shown by God to His children can transform hearts and makes Christians become channels of that mercy to those in need, Pope Francis said.

“In the midst of our own crises and our difficulties, divine mercy often makes us aware of the sufferings of our neighbor,” the pope said April 24 at a Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica commemorating Divine Mercy Sunday.

“We think that we are experiencing unbearable pain and situations of suffering, and we suddenly discover that others around us are silently enduring even worse things,” he said.

Divine Mercy Sunday, celebrated every year on the Sunday after Easter, was added to the universal Church calendar by St. John Paul II in 2000. The Polish pope was a longtime devotee of the Divine Mercy devotions of St. Faustina Kowalksa, whom he beatified in 1993 and canonized in 2000.

Like on Easter, Pope Francis did not preside over the Mass due to difficulty walking. In an interview with the Argentine daily newspaper La Nación published April 21, the pope explained that his limited mobility and pronounced limp are due to a torn knee ligament.

Italian Archbishop Rino Fisichella, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting New Evangelization, was the main celebrant at the Mass. However, Pope Francis delivered his homily from a chair in front of the altar.

In his homily, the pope reflected on the Sunday Gospel reading from St. John, which recalled Jesus appearing to His disciples after His resurrection and greeting them with the words, “Peace be with you.”

The pope said those words gave the disciples joy, granted them forgiveness and offered them comfort, which are three key aspects of God’s mercy toward His children.

Jesus’ greeting gave joy to the disciples, who had not only locked themselves behind closed doors after Christ’s death, but “were also closed in on themselves, burdened by a sense of failure,” he explained.

“They were disciples who had abandoned their master; at the moment of His arrest, they had run away. Peter even denied Him three times, and one of their number — one from among them — had betrayed Him. They had good reason to feel not only afraid, but useless; they had failed,” the pope said.

Upon appearing to His disciples, he continued, Jesus did not reproach them but instead showed them kindness which “revives them, fills their hearts with the peace they had lost and makes them new persons, purified by a forgiveness that is utterly unmerited.”

Like them, he said, Christians also feel that joy after confession, through the consoling words of others or through an unexpected event that brings God’s pardon and peace.

“The joy God gives is indeed born of forgiveness. It bestows peace. It is a joy that raises us up without humiliating us,” he said.

After greeting His disciples, the pope continued, Jesus sends them to the world to become “agents of reconciliation” and to bring mercy to others, “not on account of their merits, but as a pure gift of grace, based on their experience of having been themselves forgiven.”

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