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Friday, February 10, 2017

FROM THE POPE WHO INSISTS UPON DIALOGUE, THIS MORNING'S HOMILY IS A POWERFUL SELF-REBUKE

This is what is so confounding and confusing about Pope Francis: His Holiness' inconsistencies and over-exposure of His Holiness' bloviating. His Holiness himself is often guilty of the very things His Holiness excoriates.

But with that said, His Holiness is certainly a restorationist when it comes to preaching about the devil! How many of you in your OF parishes have even heard one reference to the devil in your parish homilies? I have lost count in terms of the pope's references!

Pope: Temptation calls for prayer, not dialogue

Pope Francis delivers the homily during the morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta.
Pope Francis delivers the homily during the morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta.
10/02/2017 12:10
(Vatican Radio) In the weakness of temptation, which we all experience, the grace of Jesus helps us to not hide ourselves from the Lord, but to seek forgiveness in order to get up and go forward. That was Pope Francis’ message during the morning Mass at the Casa Santa Marta. The Holy Father was reflecting on the devil’s temptation both of Adam and Eve, in the first Reading, and of Jesus in the Gospel. With Satan, the Pope said, there is no dialogue, because dialogue with the devil ends in sin and corruption.
The devil uses dialogue to deceive
Temptations lead us to hide ourselves from the Lord, so that we remain with our “fault,” our “sin,” our “corruption.” Beginning with the first Reading, from the Book of Genesis, Pope Francis focused on the temptation of Adam and Eve, and then considered that of Jesus in the desert. The devil appears in the form of a serpent: he is “attractive,” and with his cunning he seeks “to deceive.” In this he is a specialist, he is “the father of lies,” “a liar.” So he knows how to deceive and how to “cheat” people. This is what he did with Eve: he made her “feel good,” the Pope explained, and so he began to dialogue with her; and, step by step, Satan led her where he wanted. With Jesus it is different; it ended badly for the devil, the Pope said. “He tries to dialogue” with Christ, because when the devil deceives a person he does so with dialogue.” He attempts to deceive Him, but Jesus does not give in. Then the devil is revealed for who he is. Jesus answers him, not with His own words, but with the Word of God, because “you can’t dialogue with the devil”; you’ll end up, like Adam and Eve, “naked”:
“The devil is a bad paymaster, he doesn’t pay well. He is a cheat! He promises you everything and leaves you naked. Jesus, too, ended up naked, but on the Cross, through obedience to the Father: this is a different path. The serpent, the devil is cunning: you can’t dialogue with the devil. We all know what temptations are, we all know, because we all have them. So many temptations! Of vanity, pride, greed, avarice… so many!”
Corruption begins in small things
Today, the Pope said, there is a lot of talk of corruption; and for this, too, we should ask for the Lord’s help:
“There are so many corrupt people, corrupt ‘big fish’ in the world, whose lives we read about in the papers. Perhaps they began with a small thing, I don’t know, maybe not adjusting the scales well. What was a kilo… no, let’s make it 900 grams, but that will seem like a kilo. Corruption begins in small things like this, with dialogue: ‘No, it’s not true that this fruit will harm you. Eat it, it’s good! It’s a little thing, no one will notice. Do it! Do it!’ And little by little, little by little, you fall into sin, you fall into corruption.”
In temptation, you don’t dialogue: you pray
The Church teaches us in this way, the Pope said, so we will not be deceived – not to say foolish – so that when we are tempted we have our “eyes open” and know to ask the Lord for help, “because we can’t do it on our own.” Adam and Eve hid themselves from the Lord; on the contrary, it takes the grace of Jesus in order to “turn and seek forgiveness”:
“In temptation, you don’t dialogue, you pray: ‘Help me, Lord, I am weak. I don’t want to hide from you.’ This is courage, this is winning. When you start to dialogue, you end up overcome, defeated. May the Lord give us that grace, and accompany us in this courage. And if we are deceived because of our weakness in temptation, may He grant us the courage to get up and go forward. It’s for this that Jesus came, for this.”
10/02/2017 12:10


4 comments:

TJM said...

Is he talking about himself?

Rood Screen said...

And then in an address on Thursday morning to the Congregation for Education, he said, "Catholic educational institutions are called to be on the front line in practicing a grammar of dialogue".

Must be some form of dementia.

Anonymous 2 said...

Sorry, but this is just silly. Doesn’t God engage in dialogue in the Bible? Doesn’t Jesus engage in dialogue in the Gospel accounts?

What is required, surely, is not wholesale rejection of dialogue but discernment regrading when, and how, dialogue is appropriate.



Gene said...

Anon 2, To speak the Pope's rambling, senile, and ambiguous dialogue in the same context with Christ's dialogue in Scripture is absurd. As far as God's "dialogue" goes, it was pretty one sided. "Dialogue" is the weapon of the Left, both theologically and politically. They see a willingness to dialogue as weakness and exploit it in every way. No, there is no reason to dialogue with the Left or with unbelief...both should be marginalized, rejected, and viewed as a treacherous enemy.