INTERNATIONAL: Pope at Angelus: Christians choose fidelity to Gospel over hypocrisy

22 Aug 2019

By The Record

Pope Francis greets the crowd as he leads the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking St Peter’s Square at the Vatican on 18 August 2019. Photo: Vatican Media/CNS.

By Carol Glatz

Christians must not be hypocrites, Pope Francis has said.

Not being a hypocrite, he said, means being ready to “pay the price” of being faithful to the Gospel in concrete situations every day.

Before praying the Angelus with visitors gathered in St Peter’s Square on 18 August, Pope Francis reflected on the day’s Gospel reading (Lk 12:49-53), in which Jesus says he has come “to set the earth on fire” and to bring “division”, not peace.

Polish pilgrims hold a flag as Pope Francis leads the Angelus from the window of his studio overlooking St Peter’s Square at the Vatican on 18 August 2019. Photo: Vatican Media/CNS.

What this means, the Holy Father said, is Jesus has come to separate “good from evil, the just from the unjust. In this respect, he has come to ‘divide,’ to spark a ‘crisis’ – in a healthy way – in the life of his disciples, shattering the simple illusions of those who believe they can combine Christian life and worldliness, Christian life and compromises of all kinds, religious practices and attitudes against one’s neighbour”.

“It is about living not like a hypocrite, but by being willing to pay the price” of making choices that are consistent with the Gospel.

“It’s nice to call oneself a Christian, but it demands, above all, being Christians in concrete situations, giving witness to the Gospel, which essentially is love for God and for one’s brothers and sisters” in the human family, he said.

The Supreme Pontiff praised the young people and organisations that help the sick, the poor and differently abled, especially during the summer.

In order to live according to the spirit of the Gospel, Christians will have to keep making sure they are responding to so many new needs with new forms of charity.

Pope Francis also reminded people, that together with serving others, Christians must also worship God.

“To worship God also means to learn prayers of adoration, which we often forget. That is why I invite everyone to discover the beauty of prayers of adoration and to practice it often,” he concluded.