To the question, “Who is Jesus,” we can simply answer what we know from the Creed. But the question “Who is Jesus for you” requires soul-searching. Today in his morning homily, Pope Francis suggested we examine our hearts to find the answer to this question.
It is a question that can embarrass us a little bit, the pope said, because in order to answer that question, “I have to dig into my heart”; that is, we have to begin from our own experience.
St. Paul experienced precisely this uneasiness in bearing witness to Jesus Christ, he said.
Paul wants Christians to feel what he himself felt. [In response] to the question that we can put to Paul – “Paul, who is Christ for you?” – he spoke simply about his own experience: “He loved me, and gave Himself for me.” … And Paul wants every Christian – in this case, the Christians of Ephesus – to have this experience, to enter into this experience, to the point that each one can say, “He loved me, and gave Himself for me,” but to say it from their own personal experience.
Reciting the Creed can help us to know about Jesus, Pope Francis said. But in order to really know Him, as St. Paul came to know Him, it is better to begin by acknowledging that we are sinners. This, the pope said, is the first step.
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When Paul says that Jesus gave Himself for him, he is saying that He paid for him, and this comes out in all of his letters. And the first definition Paul gives of himself follows from this: He says he is “a sinner”; he admits that he persecuted Christians. He begins precisely by recognising that he was “chosen through love, although he is a sinner.”
“The first step in knowing Christ,” Pope Francis emphasized, lies precisely in recognizing that we are sinners. In the Sacrament of Reconciliation, we confess our sin – but, he noted, “it is one thing to tell our sins,” and another to recognize ourselves as sinners, capable of doing anything.” St Paul “had this experience of his own wretchedness,” and recognized that he needed to be redeemed, recognized that he needed someone who “would pay for his right to call himself a ‘son of God.'”
“We are all sinners, but to say it, to feel it, we need the sacrifice of Christ.”
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Step 2
But in order to know Jesus, there is also a second step, the pope continued: We get to know Him through contemplation and prayer.
The pope recalled a “a beautiful prayer, from a saint: ‘Lord, let me know You, and know myself.”
We should not content ourselves “with saying three or four good things about Jesus,” he continued, because knowing Jesus “is an adventure, but a serious adventure, not an adventure of a child,” because the love of Jesus is without limits.
Paul says that He “is able to accomplish far more than all we can ask or imagine.” He has the power to do it. But we have to ask Him: “Lord, let me know you; so that when I talk about you, I am not repeating words like a parrot, [but rather] I am saying words born from my own experience. So that like Paul I can say: ‘He loved me, and gave Himself for me’ – and say it with conviction. This is our strength, this is our witness. Christians of words, we have many words; we too, so many [words]. And this is not sanctity. Sanctity is being Christians who work in life that which Jesus has taught and what Jesus has sown in our hearts.
In conclusion, Pope Francis repeated the two steps we need to take to really know Jesus Christ:
The first step is knowing oneself: [that we are] sinners, sinners. Without this understanding, and without this interior confession – that I am a sinner – we cannot go forward. The second step is prayer to the Lord, who with His power makes us know this mystery of Jesus, which is the fire that He has brought upon the earth. It would be a good habit if every day, in every moment, we could say, “Lord, let me know You, and know myself.”
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