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Santa Marta Saturday: Pope Offers Prayers for Funeral Workers

‘What they do is something very painful and sad.  They are touched closely by the pain of this pandemic’

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As the world battles the coronavirus, the Pope and countless others have offered prayers for the many people who have a key role in the fight: doctors, nurses, first responders, public-health officials.

At the beginning Mass On Saturday, April 25, the Holy Father included special prayers for another group that has a terrible responsibility during these days: funeral workers.

As reposed by Vatican News, at the start of the Mass at Casa Santa Marta, Saturday morning, Pope Francis urged for prayers for those working in funeral services.

“What they do is something very painful and sad.  They are touched closely by the pain of this pandemic,” he said.

Celebrating the liturgical feast of St. Mark, the Pope in his homily reflected on the Saint’s Gospel, where Jesus, before going away to the Father, sends forth His disciples saying, “Go into the whole world and proclaim the Gospel to every creature.”

Stressing the missionary nature of faith, he said, “Faith is either missionary or it is no faith at all.”   It is not something only for oneself.  One grows with faith which leads one to go out of oneself to others, which is what “sending forth” means, the Pope said.  “Faith must be transmitted, it must be offered, above all through witness,” he stressed.

The Holy Father, according to Vatican News,  recalled a priest working in a European city complaining of much agnosticism and lack of faith among Christians. The Pope said this is because of the lack of the missionary spirit.  Faith is something that we offer, above all, through witness.

The designation of a Christian or a Catholic on the identity card is a mere data, something cultural.  “This is not faith,” the Pope said. “Faith necessarily takes you out, it leads you to give it to others, because faith must be essentially transmitted. It does not remain quiet.”

Being a missionary does not consist in just going to distant lands.  It means that if you have faith, you necessarily have to get out of yourself and show your faith socially.  This does not mean proselytizing, as if recruiting people for a soccer team or a charity.

The transmission of faith is to reveal God through witness and service so that the Holy Spirit can act in people.  Service is a way of life, the Pope said.  If I say that I am a Christian and live like a pagan, no one will be convinced.  Instead, if I am a Christian and live as a Christian, people are attracted, and this is witness.

A university student in Poland had asked the Pope what he could do to convince many of his atheist friends. The Pope said, “The last thing you need to do is say something.”  “Start living, and, seeing your testimony, they will ask you: ‘Why do you live like this?’.”  Faith, the Holy Father explained, must be transmitted, not to convince but to offer as a treasure.

This, the Pope said, is done with humility as St. Peter urges in the first reading: “Clothe yourselves all with humility towards each other” (1 Peter 5:5).

He said there are many instances of men or women in the Church, in history, in movements and groups, who preached like proselytizers and ended up in corruption.

The Pope concluded saying that the Lord assures us that if we go out of ourselves to witness to Him, we will be fruitful and work wonders.  In the transmission of ideologies, he pointed out, there will be teachers but in the transmission of faith, the Lord will be with us and accompanies us until the end of the world.

With many of the faithful confined to home due to the pandemic, Pope Francis continues to offer his daily homily from Casa Santa Marta without a congregation. However, it can be view live or replayed on the Vatican YouTube Channel.

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Jim Fair

Jim Fair is a husband, father, grandfather, writer, and communications consultant. He also likes playing the piano and fishing. He writes from the Chicago area.

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