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WATYKAN, DROGA KRZYŻOWA

AP/Associated Press/East News

VaticanNews.va - published on 04/24/20

Francis reflects on how Jesus progressively formed his Apostles as pastors.
We pray today for teachers who have to work so hard to provide lessons via the internet and other digital ways, and we also pray for students who have to take exams in a way they are not used to. Let us accompany them with prayer.

This was Pope Francis’ intention for his morning Mass of April 24.

His homily, as reported by Vatican News, focused on the Gospel reading about the loaves and the fishes (John 6:1-15) especially the sentence, “He said this only to put Philip to the test; he himself knew exactly what he was going to do.”

“The sentence of this passage makes us think,” remarked the Pope. “And that’s what Jesus had in mind when he asked Philip. ‘Where can we buy some bread for these people to eat’.”



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Wishing you hadn’t done or said that? This saint can help

“Jesus knew what he was about to accomplish,” explained Pope Francis, but he was testing Philip. In this scene, he continued, “you can see Jesus’ attitude with the apostles.”

He continually put them to the test in order to teach them and if they had deviated from what Jesus had asked them to do he would stop them and he would teach them.

The Gospel, noted the Pope, “is full of these gestures of Jesus to make His disciples grow to become pastors of the people of God.”

One of the things Jesus loved most, he underlined, “was to be with the crowd because this too is a symbol of the universality of redemption. And one of the things the Apostles didn’t like most was the crowd because they liked to be close to the Lord, to hear everything the Lord said.”

Despite having their day of rest ruined, commented Pope Francis, the disciples listen to Jesus.

In this way, said the Pope, “the Lord sought closeness with the people and sought to form the hearts of the pastors to the closeness with the people of God to serve them.”

The Pope then brought up the example when Jesus was with the children. There, Jesus wanted the disciples to understand that He didn’t mind being disturbed; he wanted the little children to come to him, the Pope said.

He teaches the apostles this pastoral behavior, which is being near to the people of God.

The people of God, emphasized Pope Francis, make one tired “because they always ask for concrete things…” And so the pastor always needs to be ready to provide these things.”

In another version of the multiplication of the loaves, it was the disciples who wanted to send the people away just as darkness was descending, Jesus tests his disciples by telling them, “Give them something to eat.”

“And this is what Jesus says today to all pastors: ‘You feed them.’ ‘Are they distressed? Give them consolation. Are they lost? Show them the way out.'”

Concluding his homily, the Pope highlighted that “the power of the pastor is service. He has no other power. When you begin to make mistakes taking other powers your vocation is ruined.”

Pope Francis also prayed that the Lord would speak to pastors of the Church, teaching them above all not to be afraid of God’s people, but to be close to them.



Read more:
Francis: Prayer is the way out of our becoming “closed”

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