
ROME (CNS): “While we are looking ahead to a slow and arduous recovery from the (Covid-19) pandemic, there is a danger that we will forget those who are left behind. The risk is that we may then be struck by an even worse virus, that of selfish indifference,” Pope Francis cautioned during his homily at a Mass on April 19, the 20th anniversary of Pope St. John Paul II’s declaration making the Sunday after Easter Divine Mercy Sunday.
The pope warned that the virus of indifference is “spread by the thought that life is better if it is better for me and that everything will be fine if it is fine for me. It begins there and ends up selecting one person over another, discarding the poor and sacrificing those left behind on the altar of progress.”
He stressed that the Covid-19 pandemic “reminds us that there are no differences or borders between those who suffer,” adding, “We are all frail, all equal, all precious.”
The pope said, “May we be profoundly shaken by what is happening all around us: the time has come to eliminate inequalities, to heal the injustice that is undermining the health of the entire human family.”
He added, “Let us welcome this time of trial as an opportunity to prepare for our collective future,” the pope said, because without a vision that embraces everyone, “there will be no future for anyone.”
Pope Francis exhorted, “Let us show mercy to those who are most vulnerable for only in this way will we build a new world,” emphasising, “This is not some ideology: it is Christianity” and it mirrors the way the early Christian community lived.
The Mass was celebrated privately at Rome’s Church of the Holy Spirit, which houses a shrine dedicated to Divine Mercy.
The Divine Mercy movement was founded in the early 1900s by St. Faustina Kowalska of Poland, who said Jesus told her he wanted a feast of Divine Mercy as a refuge and shelter for all souls.
Pope Francis noted that St. Faustina said Jesus told her, “I am love and mercy itself; there is no human misery that could measure up to my mercy.”
The Lord always patiently and faithfully waits for people to recognise their failings and sins and to offer them to him “so that he can help us experience his mercy,” the pope said.
Even the disciples, and especially St. Thomas, experienced fear and doubt, failing to believe in the risen Lord right away, the pope said.
Jesus doesn’t scold them because “he wants us to see him not as a taskmaster with whom we have to settle accounts, but as our father who always raises us up,” just like any father would when his child falls, the pope said.
“The hand that always puts us back on our feet is mercy: God knows that without mercy we will remain on the ground, that in order to keep walking, we need to be put back on our feet,” he said.
Right now, he said, the world is undergoing a time of trial and, like St. Thomas, “with our fears and our doubts, (we) have experienced our frailty. We need the Lord, who sees beyond that frailty an irrepressible beauty,” like a crystal that is delicate, but precious and transparent before God who lets his light of mercy “shine in us and through us in the world.”
The most beautiful message on the feast of Divine Mercy, the pope said, comes from St. Thomas, “the disciple who arrived late,” but for whom the Lord waited, not leaving him behind.
The prayers of the faithful at the Mass asked God for consolation, mercy and strength for the church, government leaders, priests, Christians, healthcare workers, volunteers and the homeless during the global pandemic.
After Mass, before praying the Regina Coeli, the pope said Christians must respond to life’s storms with mercy and compassion toward everyone, especially those who suffer, are abandoned or in need.
“May Christian mercy also inspire the just sharing among nations and their institutions in order to face the current crisis in solidarity,” he said.
The pope ended his midday address by offering Easter greetings to Orthodox and Eastern Catholics celebrating according to the Julian calendar and thanking those Eastern-rite Catholics who were also celebrating the same day as a gesture of ecumenism and fraternity.
Because of restrictions in place to curb the spread of the Covid-19 coronavirus, the Mass was celebrated without the presence of the public, with only a small choir and only two concelebrants: Archbishop Rino Fisichella, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting New Evangelisation, and Monsignor Jozef Bart, the church rector.