8 December 2016

MISERICORDIA ET MISERA: Some Key extracts



 Introduction
An apostolic letter is a document of papal magisterium less solemn than an encyclical but of great importance. With an elegance of spiritually pregnant language elevating God’s Mercy to its rightful place Misericordia et Misera, a document under study is an apostolic letter which is given by Pope Francis in Rome, at Saint Peter’s Basilica, on 20 November 2016, the solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the universe, to mark the conclusion of the Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy.

1. The name of the apostolic letter
MISERICORDIA ET MISERA is St. Augustine’s expression used while unfolding the loveliest and the most touching story of Jesus’ encounter with the woman caught in the very act of adultery (Jn 8:1-11)–“the two of them alone remained: mercy with misery.

2. The nature of God’s mercy
The bottomless ocean of God’s Mercy is like the leaven that makes the dough rise (cf. Mt 13:33), or like the mustard seed that grows into a tree (cf. Lk 13:19) (19). Sinful human beings are renewed and redeemed by God’s Mercy. God’s nature seen at its best, in every merciful encounter we find a hope-filled engagement between two hearts: the heart of God and the human heart. In this encounter human heart is warmed and healed by God’s heart, hearts of stone become hearts of flesh (cf. Ezek 36:26) and the human person becomes a “new creation” (Gal 6:15) just as iron placed in the fire is changed into fire (16). Unlike lightning that never strikes in the same place twice, in the sacramental life, God’s mercy is granted us in abundance which is very visible especially in the formulae of the two “sacraments of healing”, namely, the sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation and the sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick (5).
The woman caught in the very act of adultery [Jn 8:1-11] (1) and the woman at the home of a Pharisee (cf. Lk 7:36-50) who poured perfume over Jesus’ feet, bathed them with her tears and dried them with her hair (cf. vv. 37-38) experienced the forgiving love of Jesus and our heavenly Father who always forgive without any condition (Ps 136; Ex 34:6). Jesus even extended his forgiveness from the Cross [Lk 23:34] (2).

3. Mercy gives rise to an inexpressible joy
In an ambience of truest and sincerity, both the women mentioned in this document came to Jesus and drunk deep of his mercy and felt free and happy as never before. Mercy gives rise to inexpressible joy that helps us to do what is good, think what is good and despise sadness and live in God (3). As we scale the mount of holiness, may this joy be rooted in our hearts, help us to “Rejoice in the Lord always” (Phil 4:4; cf. 1 Thess 5:16) and may we never allow it to be robbed from us by our troubles and concerns especially in a technological civilization where emptiness, sadness, loneliness, boredom, despair and depression appear to be on the rise, particularly among young people who eventually become victims of interior conflict about the basics of Christian life (3).
Through his total self-gift–his death and resurrection, Jesus ‘returned the Mosaic Law to its true and original intent–the love of God–that reads our desire to be understood, forgiven and set free. It is striking and makes one wonder that Jesus clothed the misery of sin with the mercy of love. To those who wanted to judge and condemn the woman, Jesus replied with a lengthy and deafening silence so much so that they were seized by a sudden pang of their own conscience and left the scene one by one (1).


4. The contribution of the ‘Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy’
Let it be said at once that in this Jubilee year of mercy, each of us has experienced the mercy; favour, forgiveness (Ps 85:1-2) and loving gaze of God casting all our sins into the depths of the sea and behind his back thus, removing all our transgressions (cf. Mic7:19; Is 38:17; Ps 103:12) because of which we cannot remain unaffected, for it changes our lives (4).
With the help of the Spirit the Church attentively listened to the Father’s voice, intensely experienced his presence and closeness, was able to see with greater clarity Jesus’ gift of and mandated regarding forgiveness, felt his life-giving breath poured out upon the Church and was reminded of her mission: “Receive the Holy Spirit: if you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained” (Jn 20:22-23) (4).
In the light of our common creatureliness, we have learned that God bends down to us (cf. Hos 11:4) so that in imitation of him we too may bend down to our brothers and sisters. The Holy Year of Mercy has set us on the path of charity, and calls us to travel daily with fidelity and joy. It is required of us that we draw near to our brothers and sisters if we want to be close to Christ (16).
The year was loaded with solidarity with the poor and the unhappy; many acts of kindness by many volunteers towards the weak and the vulnerable, towards those most lonely and abandoned but often a number of  such charitable acts remained hidden since they were daily expressed in discreet and quiet gestures. Sparing a thought for those who suffered pain, these were efforts made to show God’s presence and closeness that  in turn also helped many people draw closer to the Church (17).

5. Mercy must last a lifetime, not just a year
Attention to our cultural currents, the same meeting between Jesus and the two women must be continually celebrated and lived out in our communities and local churches (1). Without putting in the cold storage the blessings and insight received in this grace-filled year, we need to unleash the creativity of mercy, to bring about new undertakings and produce the fruit of grace. Being aware that lost opportunity never returns, the Church today needs to tell of those “many other signs” that Jesus worked, which “are not written” (Jn 20:30). Having own personal works to tend to, we are strongly exhorted to do something in the area of hunger and thirst, migration, diseases, prisoners, Illiteracy, culture of extreme individualism, and the experience of God. Putting our trust in the granaries and treasures of divine providence, the corporal and spiritual works of mercy should continue in our own day to be proof of mercy’s immense positive influence as a social value. Before time slips through our fingers like tiny grains of sand, mercy impels us to do all we can to restore dignity to millions of people who, with us, are called to build a “city which is reliable” (18).

 6. How to give birth to ‘a culture of mercy’
In tune with the time, culture of mercy is shaped in assiduous and spirit-filled prayer, inspired by the lives of saints and being close to the poor (Gal 2:10) in which no one looks at another with indifference or turns away from the suffering of our brothers and sisters. Inspired by the same one God and none of them being alike, the works of mercy are “handcrafted”, crafted in a thousand different ways but fashioned from the same “material”, mercy itself.
We may be nobody in the eyes of the world yet every little work of mercy affects a person’s entire life. Leaving behind the temptation to hide behind indifference, non-involvement and individualism in order to lead a comfortable life free of problems, Christian community, should take up the works of mercy specially for the cause of the poor as Jesus identified himself with the poor people (Jn12:8) (20).



7. Priests’ permission to absolve the ‘grave sin’ of abortion has been extended
Exceedingly important to realize the fact that one of the most important lines in this document could be this: “I henceforth grant to all priests, in virtue of their ministry, the faculty to absolve those who have committed the sin of procured abortion”. Fully guided by the Holy Spirit, Pope Francis emphasizes the fact that abortion is a grave sin that puts an end to an innocent life but he also says that there is no sin that God’s mercy cannot reach and wipe away when it finds a repentant heart seeking to be reconciled with the Father. To the last atom of their strength, on this journey of special reconciliation, may every priest be a guide, support and comfort to penitents who sometimes even experience a total spiritual collapse (12).

8. SSPX priests can continue hearing confessions
For the pastoral benefit of those faithful who for various reasons, attend churches officiated by the priests of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X, genuinely willing to deal with the depth of their unworthiness, can validly and licitly receive the sacramental absolution of their sins as it was for the Holy Year of Mercy until further provisions are made (12).

9. Missionaries of mercy continue their ministry until further notice
A work of great and everlasting beauty, this extraordinary ministry of the missionaries of mercy does not end with the closing of the Holy Door. With the thought of a spiritual wellbeing of every faithful, Pope Francis has allowed it to continue until further notice so that the grace of the Jubilee remains alive and effective all over the world. It will be supervised by the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of the New Evangelization to make use of this extraordinary ministry to the maximum (9).

10. The Sacrament of Reconciliation must regain its central place in the Christian life.
The Sacrament of Reconciliation must regain its central place in the Christian life so that our friendship with the Lord remains in constant repair and progress towards a perfect human-divine relationship (11). In the Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation God’s  ocean of limitless mercy and his embrace is directly experienced by us sinners who carry the burden of the contradiction between our desire to do something and what we do in reality (Rom 7:14-21). Grace always precedes us. Grace is stronger than sin. This grace is more powerfully experienced when we live a life of charity for “love covers a multitude of sins” (1 Pet 4:8) and forgive others as we expect to be forgiven (Mt 6:12) by others. Resentment, anger and revenge should not overtake us, making our lives unhappy and become an impediment to a joyful commitment to mercy as well as full range and depth of God-experience in our life (8).
The Missionaries of Mercy while rendering effective pastoral service emphasized that God places no roadblocks in the way of those who look for him with a repentant heart. Many have encountered the Lord once more in the sacrament of Confession and found joy in their life. The opportunity to live our faith also as an experience of reconciliation should not be missed. St. Paul urges us: “Be reconciled to God” (2 Cor 5:20), and be “a new creation” (2 Cor 5:17) (9).

11. The priests are to carefully prepare for the ministry of confession
While thanking them all, Pope Francis urges all priests to prepare carefully for the truly priestly mission, the ministry of confession–an antidote to sin, to be welcomingwitnesses of fatherly love and mercy whatever the gravity of the sin involved, attentive in helping penitents to reflect on their mistakes, clear in presenting moral principles, willing to walk patiently beside the penitents, far-sighted in discerning individual cases, generous in dispensing God’s forgiveness and to be open-hearted with them since every penitent is a reminder that he himself is a sinner as well as a minister of mercy (10).
The priests are invited to reflect on the confession of Paul to Timothy that he was the greatest of sinners, “but for this reason I received mercy” (1 Tim 1:16; 1 Tim 1:12-13; 2 Cor 5:18). Cultivating in themselves the capacity to sense the fading spiritual health of every soul and without acting in a way that can contradict the experience of mercy that the penitent seeks, even in the most complex cases where there is a temptation to apply a Justice derived from rules alone, the confessors–the coaches of human hearts must believe in the power flowing from divine grace and help light up the space of personal conscience with God’s infinite love (cf. 1 Jn 3:20).
Cost what it may, with a high degree of preciseness, the priests must be prepared and be capable for the “ministry of reconciliation” (2 Cor 5:18) so that everyone is afforded the opportunity of experiencing the liberating power of forgiveness. A favorable occasion to stimulate the goodness lying dormant in each of us could be the 24 Hours for the Lord, a celebration held in proximity to the Fourth Sunday of Lent which has a great pastoral value in encouraging a more fervent experience of the sacrament of Confession–a truly divine-human dialogue (11).

12. Great care is to be taken in preparing, preaching and listening to the homily
In the liturgical setting, hearing the word of God takes on particular significance. In the biblical readings, we retrace the history of our salvation through the proclamation of God’s tireless work of mercy. The Lord continues to speak to us today so that we can concretely experience his closeness to us. Himself a spiritual man and his own example the best commentary and instruction on homiletics, Pope Francis strongly reminds priests and deacons that great care be given to preparing the homily and to preaching in general. He says that both homiletics and catechesis need to be sustained by this pulsing heart of the Christian life (6).

13. Engage actively in the ministry of New the Evangelization
It is time off we should go with burning urgency to look to the future and to understand how best to continue, with liveliness, joy, fidelity and enthusiasm, in the work of the new evangelization experiencing and celebrating the richness of God’s mercy specially in each moments of the Eucharistic celebration (Collect, Preface, more specially of the season of Lent) without any limit and without making the Holy Spirit sad who constantly inspires us to take new paths in bringing salvation to everyone (5).

 14. The Bible should be studied, celebrated, better understood, disseminated and widely diffused
The hub of God’s very life and love, the Bible is the great story of the marvels of God’s mercy. Every one of its pages is steeped in the love of the Father for his creation despite the people’s infidelity. In human concepts and terms, Jesus’ life and preaching called everyone to be a permanent instrument of his mercy and forgiveness (cf. Jn 20:23). Like lectio divina, every other efforts must be made so that God’s word is increasingly studied, celebrated, better known, better understood, disseminated and widely diffused (7).


15. Words of consolation are acts of mercy
All of us need consolation because no one is spared suffering, pain and misunderstanding  that comes from a spiteful remark born of envy, jealousy or anger, betrayal, violence, abandonment and death–the ultimate act of love towards those we leave behind and towards God whom we go forth to meet. Consolation is another face of mercy–“Comfort, comfort my people” (Is 40:1). God’s mercy finds expression also in the closeness, affection and support of our brothers and sisters at times of sadness and affliction through a reassuring word, an embrace, a caress, a prayer and even through silence which belongs very much to our language of consolation. (15).

16. Pastors must be close to the people in good times and in bad times
Though nothing and no one can ever separate us from the love of God (cf. Rom 8:35) yet the priest’s sharing in moment of death in a family is an important form of pastoral care, for it symbolizes the closeness of the Christian community at a moment of weakness, solitude, uncertainty and grief of a family (15). One cannot help wondering that Family life and love is often interrupted by suffering, betrayal and loneliness. Even joy at the gift of children is accompanied by concern about their growth and education, and their prospects for happiness and fulfillment in life. As the apple never falls far from the tree, each of us carries the richness and the burdens of our personal history which makes us different from everyone else. So it is demanded, especially of priests, a careful, profound and far-sighted spiritual discernment, so that everyone can feel accepted by God, participate actively in the life of the community and be part of that People of God which journeys tirelessly towards the fullness of his kingdom of justice, love, forgiveness and mercy (14).

17. Identify new works of mercy
 Out of deep and genuine conviction, concrete signs of mercy have been performed during this Holy Year by Communities, families and individuals and relived the joy of sharing and the beauty of solidarity. But this is not good enough. Profound and detailed analysis will betray the fact that there are new forms of spiritual and material poverty that assault human dignity. Punctuated with genuine prayers, we need to be always vigilant and ready to identify new works of mercy, to give new expression to the traditional works of mercy and to practise them with generosity and enthusiasm (19).

18. Be active in implementing social justice
Qualitatively different from all sorts of charitable work, we need but think of one corporal work of mercy–“to cloth the naked” (cf. Mt 25:36, 38, 43, 44; Gen 3:7-8; Gen 3:21; Jn 19:23-24). Rather than loading the responsibility over to secular NGOs and charitable institutions, the Church is called to be the “tunic of Christ” and to clothe her Lord once more and be committed to solidarity with the naked of the world for Jesus says: “I was naked and you clothed me” (Mt 25:36). Almost always unseen by the public light, the enemies that attack the dignity of a person are unemployment, lack of sufficient salary; lack of home, land, various forms of discrimination specially children who are the young adults tomorrow, who suffer violence that rob them of the joy of life. The social character of mercy demands that we cannot simply stand by and do nothing but to banish indifference and hypocrisy, to contribute actively and selflessly to making justice and a dignified life (19).

19. Celebration of the World Day of the Poor
With utmost seriousness, the entire Church is asked to celebrate, on the Thirty-Third Sunday of Ordinary Time, the World Day of the Poor which could be the worthiest way to prepare for the celebration of the Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe, who identified  himself with the little ones and the poor and who will judge us on our works of mercy (cf. Mt 25:31-46) to reflect on how poverty is at the very heart of the Gospel and that, as long as Lazarus lies at the door of our homes (cf. Lk 16:19-21), there can be no justice or social peace, no genuine form of new evangelization (cf. Mt 11:5) to renew the face of the Church (21).

20. The Role of the Holy Spirit in the Practice of Mercy
With the gift and help of the Holy Spirit the Church is able to see with incisive clarity the gift and mandate of Jesus Christ regarding forgiveness (Jn 20:22-23) (4).  In the formula of absolution and anointing given by a catholic priest the role of the Holy Spirit is very much visible in reconciling us and the world to God (5). Even in the past despite the people’s infidelity, the Holy Spirit made use of the prophets and the wisdom writings to shape the history of Israel as a nation that was close to God and loved by him (7.3). Without the help of the Holy Spirit it is impossible to contribute actively and selflessly to promote justice and a dignified life in order to give an expression of the presence of God’s kingdom among us (19) because the culture of mercy is shaped in assiduous prayer and being docile to the working of the Holy Spirit (20).


21. Blessed Virgin Mary as model and guide in the practice of mercy
The Holy Mother of God always looks upon us with her eyes of mercy the first to show us the way and to accompany us in our witness of love. The Mother of Mercy gathers us all under the protection of her mantle. Let us trust in her maternal assistance and follow her perennial counsel to look to Jesus, the radiant face of God’s mercy (22).

Conclusion
All told and done, may the Holy Trinity–Father, Son and the Holy Spirit; Blessed Virgin Mary–the mother of Mercy and all the saints and angels help us–poor, banished children of Eve to continually experience God’s mercy in our lives and in turn be passionate, committed and fervent in showing mercy to others especially when life throws one of its little curves at any one of us so that the rays of God’s mercy may perpetually peep into the living rooms of our hearts pushing away the darkness of sin forever.
Fr. Blasius Tete

Shillong

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