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Pope Francis

Pope prays for pastors to find ways to minister amid pandemic

Friday, March 13, 2020

An empty St. Peter’s Basilica is seen at the Vatican March 12, 2020. Acknowledging how difficult it can be to adapt to restrictive measures aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus, Pope Francis told people watching his morning Mass March 12 that it was for “our own good.” (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

By Junno Arocho Esteves
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis urged people to pray for parish priests so that they may find ways to accompany their people while the coronavirus pandemic continues to restrict movement around the country and the world.

The pope offered his intention at the beginning of his livestreamed morning Mass March 13, the seventh anniversary of his election to the papacy.

A day earlier, Cardinal Angelo De Donatis, papal vicar for the Diocese of Rome, announced that all churches, which had remained open for private prayer, would be closed to prevent the spread of the virus. He modified the order the next day, allowing pastors to make the choice to open, but only if people maintain a safe distance from one another.

The pope discouraged priests from taking “drastic measures” to be near their faithful and prayed that the Holy Spirit would help their pastoral discernment in finding ways to not leave “the holy, faithful people of God alone.”

In his homily, the pope reflected on the day’s Gospel reading from St. Matthew, in which Jesus tells the parable of a wealthy landowner who leased his vineyard to tenants.

The landowner’s servants and son attempted to collect the fruits of the vineyard. However, the tenants beat and murdered them to acquire the son’s inheritance.

The pope explained that the tenants represented members of the people God chose to receive the covenant so that they “may look forward with hope.” However, when the time came to gather the fruits, “these people forgot that they weren’t the masters.”

“It is a story of unfaithfulness, of unfaithfulness to the election, of unfaithfulness to the promise, of unfaithfulness to the covenant, which is a gift,” the pope said. “These people appropriated the gift and took away this being a gift in order to transform it into ‘my’ property.”

Through his parable, the pope continued, Jesus wanted to show that in this way, God’s promise “lost its nature as a gift” and ended up becoming a moralistic ideology that “was closed and caged in a doctrine of laws.”

“This is the great sin,” he said. “It is the sin of forgetting that God has made himself a gift for us, that God has given us this gift and in forgetting this, we become masters. Thus, the promise is no longer a promise, the election no longer an election. ‘The covenant is interpreted according to my ideologized opinion.'”

Pope Francis said that in the Gospel, Jesus confronted “the beginning of clericalism, which is a perversion that always renounces the free election of God, the free covenant of God, the free gift of God.”

“Clericalism isn’t something that’s just today, rigidity isn’t something just today, it was already there in Jesus’ time,” he said. “Let us ask the Lord today for the grace to receive the gift as a gift and to transmit this gift as a gift and not as a property, not in a sectarian way, a rigid way, a ‘clericalistic’ way.”

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