By Kerri Lenartowick
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Pope Francis celebrated Mass in cloudy St. Peter’s Square this morning,
cautioning the faithful against the danger of losing their personal
identity to materialism.
“Whenever material things, money, worldliness, become the center of our
lives, they take hold of us, they possess us; we lose our very identity
as human beings,” he said on September 29.
Sunday’s Mass was held at the close of an international weekend conference in Rome for catechists during the year of faith.
The Pope explained that Christians must be on guard against “the danger
of complacency, comfort, worldliness in our lifestyles and in our
hearts, of making our well-being the most important thing in our lives.”
When materialism takes over, we “end up becoming self-absorbed and
finding security in material things which ultimately rob us of our face,
our human face.”
The human person is “made in the image and likeness of God, not in the
image and likeness of material objects, not in that of idols!” he
exclaimed.
Too much concern for material things can lead us to “lose the memory of
God.” With this forgetfulness, Christians “become empty; like the rich
man in the Gospel, we no longer have a face!”
Mary serves as an example for all because she maintains the remembrance of God.
Moreover, Mary “sees God’s wondrous works in her life but doesn’t think
about honor, prestige or wealth; she doesn’t become self-absorbed,”
noted the Pope.
Instead, she goes to help others.
When Mary visits her cousin Elizabeth after the Annunciation, Pope
Francis said, she recalls “God’s work, God’s fidelity in her own life,
in the history of her people.”
Christian catechists should seek to be like Mary, putting the
remembrance of God “at the service of proclamation, not to be important,
not to talk about himself or herself, but to talk about God, about his
love and his fidelity.”
“The catechist, then, is a Christian who is mindful of God, who is
guided by the memory of God in his or her entire life and who is able to
awaken that memory in the hearts of others,” explained the Pontiff.
Yet, “this is not easy!” he acknowledged. “It engages our entire existence!”
The work of the catechist is not merely his or her own work, Pope Francis reminded the congregation.
Rather, the gift of faith in our lives “contains our own memory of
God’s history with us, the memory of our encountering God who always
takes the first step, who creates, saves, and transforms us.”
An estimated 600 priests were vested for the mass, as well as cardinals
and bishops from around the world, including Archbishop Rino
Fisichella, President of the Pontifical Council for the New
Evangelization, and Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, who is part of the
group of eight cardinals appointed to advise the Pope on possible
reforms to the Roman Curia.
Pope Francis concluded Mass with the traditional noon Angelus prayer and greeted the various groups present.
He particularly thanked His Beatitude John X, the Greek Orthodox
Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, for his presence at the liturgy.
He called the Patriarch “my brother.”
The Pope then greeted the cheering pilgrims from his Popemobile, stopping to bless babies and the disabled.
The crowds were so large that they spilled out of St. Peter’s Square,
filling Via della Conciliazione, the street leading to the square.
Hand-painted flags waved with messages like “thank you for having called
us” and “we go to serve without fear.” Many people wore “Year of
Faith” scarves around their necks.
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