Apostles For Today
March 2016
Easter 2016 - The mercy of God in the mystery of the death and resurrection of Christ
During
the opening of the extraordinary Holy Year of Mercy, Pope Francis reminded us
that this year is “ a gift of grace” .
He invites us “ to rediscover the
infinite mercy of the Father who welcomes everyone and goes out personally to
encounter each of them” (Homily of
12/8/2015). This invitation resonates strongly in our hearts. As members and
collaborators of the Union of Catholic Apostolate, we are called to make that
invitation our own, like our Founder Saint Vincent Pallotti who recognized
himself to be a prodigy of mercy and wanted the infinite love and Mercy of God
to be the hallmarks of the members and collaborators of the Union.
The mercy of God was fully
revealed to us in the person of Christ who, though he was in the form of God,
did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself,
taking the form of a servant, being born in human form. And being found in
human form, he humbled himself and became obedient unto death— even death on a
cross! (Ph 2:6-8).
This is
this mystery of the merciful love of God that we proclaim with conviction in
our Creed: “I believe […] in Jesus
Christ, his only Son [...who] was crucified, died, […] rose again from the
dead, […] ascended into heaven [to give us life]” ; it is the foundation of
our faith. God, who with one word could save thousands of worlds, as Saint
Faustina said, wanted our redemption to be through the cross of His Son Jesus
Christ and he, Jesus Christ, in his infinite love and mercy agreed to assume
the entire fate of the human condition; a fate marked by suffering and death,
in order to save us from evil, sin and death. By accepting suffering and death
on the cross, Christ revealed the unfathomable love of God for every person,
his passion being the culmination of his work of salvation. The passion of
Christ is a sign of the unlimited and merciful love of God, the most striking gesture of his love
and mercy.
In his
passion, the Lord Jesus has given us an unparalleled love that surpasses all
human understanding. All forms of physical trial were for Jesus the source of
unspeakable pain reaching the limits of human endurance. From the agony up to
the total gift of his life, Christ demonstrated a merciful heart, every gesture
revealing that mercy; he takes upon himself human misery and suffering. Jesus
takes upon himself all that separates us from God. He joined himself to all our
loneliness, our situations of anguish, our betrayals.
When the day to extend his
arms came, he did not want to leave us on our own, without a remembrance; in
his mercy, he instituted the Holy Eucharist as a sign of his presence among us
so full of love and mercy. St. Faustina said to this effect: “On leaving the earth, O Lord, You wanted to
stay with us, and so You left us Yourself in the Sacrament of the Altar, and
You opened wide Your mercy to us. [...] In the Blessed Sacrament, You left us
Your mercy; your love deigned to arrange it so, that, going through life, suffering
and toil, I might never doubt of Your goodness and mercy” (Diary 1747-8).
St.
Vincent Pallotti him says in God infinite Love: “ Enlightened by faith I recall that Our Lord Jesus Christ showed us his
infinite love and mercy, during his holy life, by speaking and working for our
eternal salvation. But, before He went to Calvary to die for us on the Cross,
He deigned to institute the Holy Eucharist [...] as an unbloody Sacrifice and
as a sacrament for the nourishment of our souls [... for] the perpetual
renewal of the Sacrifice of the Cross on
our altars” (GIL, p. 119; OOCC XIII,
pp. 166-7).
It was during this meal that
Christ gave us the sublime example that our love and mercy should be shown in
our service towards our brothers and sisters (Jn 13:14). Pope Francis, in his
Bull of Indiction for the Jubilee Year, says that: “While he was instituting the Eucharist as an everlasting memorial of
himself and his paschal sacrifice, he symbolically placed this supreme act of
revelation in the light of his mercy. Within the very same context of mercy,
Jesus entered upon his passion and death, conscious of the great mystery of
love that he would consummate on the Cross” (MV 7).
At the time of the agony he
experienced a sadness so terrible as to declare: “ My soul is sorrowful even
unto death” (Mt 26:38). Although his
sadness was caused by human sin, still he approached his suffering with the
salvation of all humankind at heart.
On the cross, he continued to
show his mercy, forgiving the sins of the wrongdoer who repented (Lk 23:42-43),
putting his life in the hands of the Father for the salvation of human beings
(Lk 23:46) and accepting to die in the terrible agony of the Passion, suspended
on the wood of the cross. And all this for love of me! Pope John Paul II, in
Dives in Misericordiae said, “In this way
the cross of Christ, on which the Son, consubstantial with the Father, renders
full justice to God, is also a radical revelation of mercy, or rather of the
love that goes against what constitutes the very root of evil in the history of
man: against sin and death”.
After his death, he opened the
inexhaustible source of mercy for us; He gave us what was most dear to him: the
blood and water from his side, the source of all mercy. St. Faustina wrote in
the Diary “In Your inconceivable love,
You allowed Your most holy side to be opened, and streams of Blood and Water
gushed forth from Your Heart. Here is the living fountain of Your mercy” (Diary
1748).
In this way, Christ completely
fulfilled the will of God, having the redemption and salvation of humankind at
heart. Through his obedience, Christ was received the mercy of the Father, a
love more powerful than death, when God the Father raised him from the dead. As
we read in the Acts of the Apostles: “God has made him both Lord and Messiah,
this Jesus whom you, you crucified” (Acts 2:36). In his resurrection Christ
shows us the fullness of the always compassionate love of God which addresses
all human misery; it is undoubtedly a sign and instrument of divine mercy, the
crowning of this mercy and of the entire saving mission. In Jesus, evil is
defeated by good, hatred by love, death by the resurrection.
Indeed, Christ, whom “the
Father did not spare” for the sake of human beings, and who, in his passion and
death on the cross, was not the object of human mercy, revealed in his
resurrection the fullness of the love the Father nurtures towards him and,
through him, to all people. “He is not God of the dead but of the living” (Mk 12:27). In his resurrection Christ has revealed
the God of merciful love, precisely because he has accepted the cross as the
way to the resurrection. And that is why, when we remember the cross of Christ,
his passion and death, our faith and hope are based on the Risen One.
So mercy is the way that
unites God and humans, so that we may open our hearts to the hope of being
loved forever despite the limitations of our sin; everything in Him speaks of
mercy. The merciful love of every Christian, and especially of every member and
collaborator of the Union of Catholic Apostolate must be on the same
wavelength. As the Father loves, so the children love. As he is merciful, so
are we called to be merciful towards each other.
To be
capable of mercy, we must first apply ourselves to listening to the Word of God.
This means that we must rediscover the value of silence in order to meditate on
the Word addressed to us. It is in this way that it becomes possible to
contemplate the mercy of God and make it our lifestyle.
In the words of Pope Francis
in the Urbi et Orbi Message of Easter 2013, “let us accept the grace of Christ’s Resurrection! Let us be renewed by
God’s mercy, let us be loved by Jesus, let us enable the power of his love to
transform our lives too; and let us become agents of this mercy, channels through
which God can water the earth, protect all creation and make justice and peace
flourish”.
For our reflection:
•
During the Jubilee, Pope
Francis wants all Christian people to reflect on the corporal and spiritual
works of mercy, as our response to the merciful love of the Father. It will, he
said, “be a way to reawaken our
conscience, too often grown dull in the face of poverty. And let us enter more
deeply into the heart of the Gospel where the poor have a special experience of
God’s mercy” (MV 15).
1.
Let us recall these corporal
works of mercy: feeding the hungry, giving drink to the thirsty, clothing the
naked, sheltering the homeless, visiting the sick, visiting prisoners, burying
the dead. And the spiritual works of mercy: counselling the doubtful, instructing
the ignorant, admonishing sinners, comforting the afflicted, forgiving
offenses, bearing wrongs patiently, praying for the living and the dead.
2.
What exactly are we proposing
to our communities, our families, our LCCs or NCCs during this year of mercy?
Let us pray
with our Founder, St. Vincent Pallotti:
“My God, [..] you who are infinite love, infinite mercy, forgive me if I
dare, as a mode of expression, to say
that you are Crazy with Love and Mercy towards me since, at every moment, and
from all eternity, you think of me and pour out on me infinite floods of
graces, favours, gifts and mercies, of all of your infinite divine attributes
which are all infinitely merciful, and always Father, Son and Holy Spirit, you
feed me with me with all of your being, your essence, your properties, your
divine actions and all of your infinite attributes”. Amen (OOCC X, pp.
235-6).
Sr.
Angeline Kambugu SAC,
Rwanda
____________________________________________________
Segretariato Generale, Unione dell’Apostolato
Cattolico
Piazza San Vincenzo Pallotti 204, 00187 Roma, Italia uac@uniopal.org
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