Posted by Deborah Castellano Lubov on 6 March, 2017
‘What if we turned to our Bible as we do our smart phone?’
Pope Francis asked those in St. Peter’s Square this question during his Sunday, March 6, 2017, Angelus address at noon
as he reflected on yesterday’s Gospel showing Jesus, while fasting
forty days in the desert, being subjected to the devil’s temptations
(Matthew 4:1-11).
Through a threefold temptation, the Jesuit
Pope reminded, Satan wants to divert Jesus from the way of obedience
and humiliation – “because he knows that, through this way, evil will
thus be defeated – and lead Him on the false shortcut of success and
glory.”
“However, the devil’s poisonous arrows are
all ‘stopped’ with the shield of the Word of God,” Francis observed,
noting that in this way, Jesus comes out of the desert victoriously.
“As Christians, we are invited, during the
forty days of Lent,” Francis said, “to follow in Jesus steps and face
the spiritual combat against the Evil One with the strength of the Word
of God.”
“Not with our ‘word,’ which is useless,” he added, but with “the Word of God: tha has the strength to defeat Satan.”
Therefore, he said, it is necessary to
draw confidence from the Bible: to read it often, meditate on it and
assimilate it. Francis then pointed out that containing the Word of
God, the Bible is always timely and effective.
“Someone said: what would happen if we
treated the Bible as we treat our mobile phone? If we always carried it
with us, or at least a small pocket Bible, what would happen? If we went
back when we forgot it: you forgot your mobile phone – ‘O, I don’t have
it, I’ll go back to find it’; if we opened it several times a day; what
would happen if we read God’s messages contained in the Bible, as we
read our phone messages?”
The paragon is clearly paradoxical, he admitted, but pointed out that it still makes us reflect.
“In fact, if we had the Word of God always
in the heart, no temptation would be able to estrange us from God and
no obstacle would be able to make us deviate from the path of goodness;
we would be able to overcome the daily suggestions of evil that are in
us and outside of us; we would be more capable of living a resurrected
life according to the Spirit, receiving and loving our brothers,
especially the weakest and neediest, and also our enemies.”
Before reciting the Angelus, the Pope
prayed that the Virgin Mary, “perfect icon of obedience to God and of
unconditional trust in His will, sustain us on our Lenten journey, so
that we place ourselves in docile listening to the Word of God, to
undertake a true conversion of the heart.”
After the midday prayer, and reminding
those present to pray for his and the Curia’s week of spiritual
exercises, Francis said: “And please, don’t forget – don’t forget! –
what would happen if we treated the Bible as we treat our mobile phone.
Think about it — the Bible always with us, close to us!”
As usual, Pope Francis concluded, telling those present to have a good Sunday and good lunch.
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