Pope: Love of God and neighbour is heart of everything
By Pope
Highlighting the “conversation of the Spirit” experienced at the Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, Pope Francis presided over the closing Mass of the month-long gathering. he recalled how the Synod participants “experienced the loving presence of the Lord and discovered the beauty of fraternity.”
The Sunday morning celebration on 29 October in Saint Peter’s Basilica marked the culmination of this first session of the Synod on Synodality looking at communion, participation, and mission. The next session will take place in October 2024.
Reflecting on the day’s Gospel reading when a doctor of the Law tests Jesus by asking him which commandment in the law is greatest, the Pope said this important and enduring question can arise in our own hearts and the life of the Church. The Lord’s answer that we should love God with our whole life and love our neighbour as ourselves points to “the heart of everything” and how everything can begin anew, he explained.
To love is to adore
Love invites adoration, the Pope observed, as a response to “God’s gratuitous and astonishing love.”
By worshiping God, “we rediscover that we are free,” the Pope explained, which is why the Scriptures often warn against every form of idolatory since idols, whatever they may be, enslave us. This warning is every present today as well, the Pope went on to say, when we are tempted with worldly idols of selfishness and greed, but also some disguised as spirituality, such us my own religious ideas or pastoral skills. He emphasized vigilance and always putting the Lord back at the center of our lives.
To love is to serve
The second great commandment “binds God and neighbour together so that they will never be disconnected,” said the Pope. And authentic religious experiences requires that we hear the cry of those who suffering, the cry of the world and the need to show care and concern for our neighbour.
A “worshiping Church and a Church of service” calls on us to wash the feet of “wounded humanity” the Pope stressed and accompany those who are “frail, weak and cast aside, going out lovingly to encounter the poor.” He recalled the victims of the atrocities of war; the suffering of migrants, those living alone and in poverty and those crushed by the burdens of life.
The Pope added that we are called to “dream” as a Church in serving the least of our brothers and sisters.
Conversation of the Spirit
In conclusion, the Pope recalled how the Synod allowed for a renewed experience of the Lord’s loving presence and the discovery of “the beauty of fraternity.” By listening to each other and learning from the rich variety of backgrounds and concerns, “we have listened to the Holy Spirit,” the Pope said, and “with farsightedness” we can look to the horizon opening up and fruits of this experience.
The Pope then thanked all those taking part in the Synod for their contribution of listening and dialogue in a journey of fraternity together.
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