May 1 | 0 COMMENTS print
Pope tells priests sermons should come from the heart
Pope Francis ordained 19 men to the priesthood for Rome Diocese in St Peter’s Basilica last Sunday and told them to always avoid giving boring homilies.
On the day the Church celebrates Good Shepherd Sunday and the 52nd World Day of Prayer for Vocations the Pope reminded the 19 men being ordained that their sermons should come from the heart.
“May your homilies not be boring; may your homilies go right to people’s hearts, since they come from your heart,” he said. “For what you say to them is what you have in your heart.”
Pope Francis also told the men that they must not offer God’s Word without giving a good example.
“Words without example are empty words,” he said. “They are ideas that do not reach the heart, and may even cause injury.”
He also warned them that ‘a priest is ugly who lives for his own pleasure,’ adding that such a priest ‘acts like a peacock.’
He also told them that through their configuration to Christ the High Priest, they continue His sacrificial work, primarily through the offering of the Sacrifice of the Mass.
“When you celebrate Mass, be aware of what you are doing,” he said. “Don’t be in a hurry. Imitate what you celebrate—it is not an artificial rite, an artificial ritual.”
Speaking of their responsibility as priests to dispense the Sacraments, Pope Francis said never to refuse anyone who sincerely requests Baptism. And in the confessional, he urged the 19 men being ordained never to tire of showing mercy.
“Through the Sacrament of Penance, you will absolve sins in the name of Christ and His Church,” he said. “And I, in the name of Jesus Christ, the Lord, and His Bride, the Church, ask you never to tire of being merciful. In the confessional you are there to forgive, not to condemn. Imitate the Father, who never tires of forgiving.”
Finally, on the day the Church celebrates Good Shepherd Sunday, Pope Francis told them to keep ever before their eyes the example of Jesus, the Good Shepherd, ‘who came not to be served, but to serve; not to remain in comfort, but to go out and seek and save what was lost.’
Later on Sunday morning, at the Regina Caeli, Pope Francis presented two of the newly-ordained priests to the faithful at the window of his study in the Apostolic Palace, to greet and thank them for their prayers. The Pope asked the Blessed Virgin ‘to obtain for [him], for bishops, and for priests throughout the world the grace to serve God’s holy people through the joyous preaching of the Gospel, the sincere celebration of the Sacraments, and patient and meek pastoral guidance.’
The majority of the men ordained by the Pope were part of Roman seminaries, including the Pontifical Roman Seminary and the Madonna del Divino Amore Seminary.