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Pope warns against being 'halfway Christians'


A Christian is called to make a radical choice in life, Pope Francis said during his morning homily at Casa Santa Marta yesterday. You can't be "half Christian". You can't "follow Jesus and the things of this world."

Pope Francis reflected on Peter's query to Jesus: what would he and the disciples get in return for following Him? Peter asks the question after the Lord told the rich young man to sell all his possessions and give everything to the poor.

The Pope noted that Jesus responds in an unexpected way. He does not speak of riches to his disciples, but promises instead the Kingdom of Heaven "with persecution, with the cross."

"So when a Christian is attached to worldly things, he gives the bad impression of a Christian who wants to have two things: both heaven and earth. And the touchstone of comparison precisely, is what Jesus says: the cross, the persecutions. This is to deny oneself, to suffer the cross every day... The disciples had this temptation, to follow Jesus but then: how will this bargain end up?"

The Pope then referred to the reading from Mathew where James and John's mother asks Jesus to secure a place at His side for her children.

"'Ah, make this one prime minister for me - this one, the minister of the economy ...', and she took the worldly interest in following Jesus," the Pope said with irony.

But , Francis noted "the heart of these disciples was cleansed," through to Pentecost, when "they understood everything."

"The gratuitousness of following Jesus," the Pope says, is the answer to the gratuitousness of love and salvation that Jesus gives us." And when "one wants to go and be with both Jesus and with the world, with both poverty and with riches," he warned, "this is half-way Christianity that desires material gain. It is the spirit of worldliness."

Echoing the words of the prophet Elijah, Pope Francis alludes to this kind of Christian as one "limping on two legs" because he "does not know what he wants." So, the Pope affirmed, in order to understand this, we must remember that Jesus says "the first shall be last and the last shall be first," meaning "the one who believes or who is the greatest" must be "the servant, the smallest one. "

"Following Jesus from the human point of view is not a good deal: it's serving. He did so, and if the Lord gives you the opportunity to be the first, you have to act like the last one, that is, in service. And if the Lord gives you the ability to have possessions, you have to act in service, that is, to others. There are three things, three steps that take us away from Jesus: wealth, vanity and pride. This is why they are so dangerous, the riches, because they immediately make you vain and you think you are important. And when you think you are important, you lose your head and you lose yourself."

What the Lord wants from us is to "strip" ourselves of worldy things the Pope stresses. And it took Jesus a long time to get this message across to His disciples "because they did not understand well." We too must ask Him to teach us "this science of service" the Pope said, "this science of humility, this science of being the last to serve our brothers and sisters in the Church."

"It's sad to see a Christian, whether it's a lay person, consecrated priest, bishop - it's sad when you see he wants two things: to follow Jesus and worldly things, to follow Jesus and worldliness. And this is a counter-witness and furthers people from Jesus. We continue now the celebration of the Eucharist, thinking of Peter's question. 'We left everything: what will you give us in return?' And thinking about Jesus' response. The recompense that He will give us is resemblance to Him. This will be our 'recompense'. Big 'recompense', to be like Jesus!"

Source: Vatican Radio

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