Vatican City, Feb 10, 2018 / 10:22 am
In an off-the-cuff speech Saturday, Pope Francis told members of the Stigmatine Fathers that in community life, fraternity is a grace which requires concrete prayer for each other, and that to hold onto resentment after arguments is a sin.
"The life of community, the life of fraternity, is difficult because there are human problems, jealousies, competitiveness, misunderstandings… Fraternity is a grace, and if there is no prayer, this grace does not come," the Pope said Feb. 10.
You might say that you pray the Divine Office or meditate on the Gospel, but "do you pray for this brother, for the other… for the Superior?"
The sin is not to argue, Francis continued, pointing out that even in good marriages there are fights. The sin comes in the "rancor, the resentment that you keep in your heart, having quarreled."
Pope Francis spoke to about 40 participants in the General Chapter of the Congregation of the Sacred Stigmata of Our Lord Jesus Christ, commonly called "Stigmatine Fathers." The Pope opted to speak off-the-cuff, so copies of his prepared speech were instead handed out to participants after the audience.
Besides fraternity, Francis also spoke about the "terrorism" of gossip, which he said is like throwing a bomb to destroy another from afar.
To have a good community doesn't mean everyone has to be close friends, but you must have respect and esteem for one another, and you must pray for one another, he said, inviting those present to make an examination of conscience on this issue.
He also spoke about the wounds of Christ, especially the stigmata, which is found in the name of their order. As St. Bernard said, if you are depressed or if you have sinned, done this or that, "Go and take refuge in the wounds of the Lord," the Pope said.
"Only the conscience of a 'wounded' Church, of a 'wounded' Congregation, of a 'wounded' soul or heart leads us to knock on the door of mercy in the wounds of the Lord."
He encouraged them not to be ashamed of their devotion to the wounds of Christ, because it is their path to sanctification, and they are called to teach anyone "plagued" by their sins to find comfort there.
"A 'wounded' sinner finds forgiveness, peace and consolation only in the wounds of the Lord, not elsewhere," he said.
In his prepared speech, Pope Francis invited the Stigmatine Fathers to revive both within themselves and their community the "fire of the Word of God."
In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus announces: "I have come to set the earth on fire, and how I wish it were already blazing!" the Pope said. "Imitating the divine Master, you too are called to bring fire into the world."
He noted that there is a good, holy kind of fire and a wrong kind, however. The wrong kind he said is that illustrated in the Gospel of Luke, when Jesus is on his way to Jerusalem, but sends messengers before him to a village of Samaritans, who did not want to welcome him.
The disciples, James and John, said, "Lord, do you want us to call down fire from heaven to consume them?" But in answer to this, Jesus rebukes them. "This is the wrong fire," the Pope said. "God in the Bible is likened to fire, but it is a fire of love…"
He encouraged them to announce the Gospel with meekness and joy like the founder of the Stigmatine Fathers, St. Gaspare Bertoni. "This is the style of evangelization of Jesus, our Master. He welcomed and approached everyone and conquered people with kindness, mercy, with the penetrating word of Truth," he said.
"So you missionary disciples, who are evangelizers, can bring people to conversion, to communion with Christ, through the joy of your life and with meekness."
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