Pope: God is real, concrete person, not mysterious, intangible mist

21 Apr 2013

By The Record

Pope Francis leads a prayer as he begins his general audience on April 17 in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. PHOTO: CNS/Paul Haring

By Carol Glatz

The Christian faith teaches that God is a real, concrete person, not some intangible essence or esoteric mist like “god-spray,” Pope Francis said.

In his homily April 18 at an early morning Mass in the chapel of his residence, the Domus Sanctae Marthae, Pope Francis said many people say they believe in God, but what kind of God do they believe in exactly?

God is a real person — a father — and faith springs forth from a tangible experience of an encounter with him, the pope told his listeners. The congregation was made up of members of the Inspectorate for Public Security at the Vatican — a special unit of the Italian police that provides security and law enforcement in St. Peter’s Square, and guarantees and coordinates all armed escorts for the pope when he leaves the Vatican.

“We believe in God who is Father, who is Son, who is Holy Spirit,” Pope Francis said.

“We believe in persons and when we talk to God we speak with persons” who are concrete and tangible, not some misty, diffused god-like “‘god-spray,’ that’s a little bit everywhere but who knows what it is.”

This faith in the real presence of Jesus is a gift from God himself, the pope said, and when he gives this gift of faith “we must continue on this path,” rejoicing.

“However, if we take this path, it is always with our own baggage — because we’re all sinners and we always have some things that aren’t right. But the Lord forgives us if we ask for forgiveness,” he said.

Referring to the day’s reading from the Acts of the Apostles when Philip preached the word to a traveling officer of the queen’s court, the pope highlighted the experience of the worldly officer who hears the Good News, is baptized and “continued on his way rejoicing.”

The pope said it is important people never get discouraged, but keep pressing on like the officer so the same encounter “will happen to us.”

The officer’s joy is “the joy of faith, the joy of having met Jesus, the joy that only Jesus can give us, the joy that gives peace, not what the world gives, but what Jesus gives,” he said.

“Let us ask the Lord that we may grow in this faith, this faith that makes us strong, makes us joyful, this faith that always begins with an encounter with Jesus and always continues throughout life with small daily encounters with Jesus,” he said. – CNS