| May 18, non-binding commemoration | |
| Position: | Pope |
| Death: | 526 |
CURRICULUM VITAE
| May 18, non-binding commemoration | |
| Position: | Pope |
| Death: | 526 |
CURRICULUM VITAE
It is such beautiful symbolism – the saint does not stand in a quiet church but in the midst of the hustle and bustle of this world, on a bridge over which a huge number of people pass daily. He stands in the middle of the world in priestly garb – he has a clear identity, publicly declares his allegiance to the Catholic Church,Whentime, but and hides nothing… and this is precisely in such an atheistic country as our neighbors are. So the first thing this saint inspires us with is courage – the courage to be readable at first glance… the courage to bear witness to Christ… the courage not to merge with this world.
Another thing we can notice is how he is portrayed. Saint John has his finger on his mouth… because he knew how to speak at the right time but also how to remain silent at the right time. In the era of the rise of mass media, where we are bombarded with one piece of information after another from all sides—via the Internet, radio, newspapers, or television… we lose our sense of what to share – what to move forward with, and what to feed our hearts with because of what to develop into topics in conversations. And so, in the place of the greatest tourist traffic, Saint John has his mouth closed but both eyes and ears open, as if he wanted to tell us, “Be quiet! Listen to God’s voice and do not close your eyes to His care; let your words be guided by love for the truth.
However, John’s silence also applies to the mystery of confession, for which he underwent a martyr’s death. And so, with his silence, he clearly speaks of the amazing gift of God’s mercy that God has placed in holy confession.
And finally, the saint is often depicted with a cross in his hands, which he looks at with love and fear… as if he wanted to draw our gaze to it and reveal to us where we can find the source of life and happiness. So let the memory of John of Nepomuk lead us to self-reflection and to the questions we need to askAsAndSomeone. How often do I spend time in silence—the silence that is necessary for hearing the voice of God? Can I keep a secret someone confides in me… and not spread others’ mistakes? Can I be discreet?
Sometimes we meet people who do not believe but are sincerely interested in what we actually believe and why. Talking to them can enrich both parties. We get rid of prejudices against them, and they, on the other hand, can confront our experience of faith with their deepest life questions.
But is it advisable for him to bear witness to faith and ‘preach the gospel’? What if, even without accepting God in this life, we can accept him in the next? You may have had different experiences with good people. Sometimes they simply dismiss our faith, sometimes they like to discuss it as an exotic intellectual topic and sometimes they are genuinely interested in our beliefs. Such a conversation can enrich both parties. We can overcome our prejudices towards them, and they can confront our experience of faith with their deep questions about the meaning of life, good and evil, pain, eternity, and so on. Through these conversations, we learn to delve into the core of our own experiences. As Loffeld says, ‘The support for faith today is neither tradition nor Christian culture, only the experience of faith.’
The second point is prayer. When Jesus ascends to heaven, he does not separate himself from us. Physically yes, but he remains constantly united with us to intercede for us. He shows the Father his wounds, the price he paid for us, for our salvation. We must therefore ask for the grace of contemplation of heaven, the grace of prayer, a relationship with Jesus who hears us and is with us. Then there is the third: the world. Before his departure, as we heard yesterday in the Gospel of the Ascension, Jesus says to his disciples: “Go into all the world”. Go. The Christian’s place is the world, to proclaim the Word of Jesus, to announce that we are saved and that Jesus came to give us the grace to take us all with him to the Father.
This is the topography of Christian thought. Three points of support for our life: memory, prayer, andto missionary mission; three words for our journey: Galilee, heaven and world. The Christian must move in these three dimensions, asking for the grace of memory and saying to the Lord: “May I not forget the moment you chose me, may I not forget the moments when we met.” Praying and looking to heaven, because there He intercedes for us. And then the mission. This does not mean that everyone has to go abroad. Going on missions means living and testifying to the Gospel, letting people know what Jesus is like. And this is through testimony and the Word, because if I talk about what Jesus is like and what the Christian life is like, but I live like a pagan, it is useless. Such a mission is useless.
However, if we live with memory, prayer, and missions, the Christian life will be beautiful and joyful. And this is the last sentence of Jesus from today’s Gospel (John 16:20-23): “On the day you live as a Christian, you will know everything, and your joy will not be taken from you. “Noto one, because I have in my memory the encounter with Jesus, the certainty that Jesus is now in heaven, interceding for me and with me. I pray; I dare to go out of myself, to speak to others, and to testify with my life that Jesus is risen from the dead and is alive. Memory, prayer, mission. May the Lord grant us the grace to understand this topography of Christian life and to move forward with a joy that no one can take from us.
Instead of saying ‘I love you’ out loud, we can quietly say, ‘Let me love you.’ We can even add ‘Help my unbelief’ to our profession of faith (Mk 9:24). It is difficult to listen to pious women praying together, for example. ‘Our Father and Hail Mary for sinners,’ ‘Our Father for priests,’ ‘Our Father for our youth,’ and so on, thirty times over. Yet the intention is never expressed in all those repeated Our Fathers and Hail Marys. Even in the ‘Our Father,’ we say, ‘Thy will be done,’ yet perhaps we ask for something that is not God’s will. If we think it is difficult to seek the truth, we should start with ourselves. Let us seek the truth in relation to God.