Pope Francis: we receive God Himself when we pray courageously
In prayer we must be courageous and discover the true grace that is given us: God
Himself. That was the Pope’s message at Thursday’s morning Mass at Casa Santa Marta.
At the heart of the homily was Jesus’ insistence, in the day’s Gospel, that
we pray with trusting insistence. The parable of the importunate friend, the friend
who obtains what he desires thanks to his insistence, gave Pope Francis the opportunity
to reflect on the quality of our prayer:
“This makes us think, in our prayer:
how do we pray? Do we pray like this, out of habit, piously but unbothered, or do
we put ourselves forward with courage before the Lord to ask for the grace, to ask
for what we’re praying for? Courage in prayer: a prayer that is not courageous is
not a real prayer. The courage to trust that the Lord listens to us, the courage to
knock on the door . . . The Lord says: ‘For everyone who asks, receives; and the one
who seeks, finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.’ But you have
to ask, seek, and knock.”
“Do we get ourselves involved in prayer,” the
Pope asked. “Do we know to knock at the heart of God?” In the Gospel Jesus says, “If
you then, who are wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more
will the Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?” This, the Pope
said, “is a great thing”:
“When we pray courageously, the Lord gives us
the grace, but He also gives us Himself in the grace: the Holy Spirit, that is, Himself!
The Lord never gives or sends a grace by mail: never! He brings it Himself! What we
ask for is a little bit like [laughing] . . . it is the envelope that grace is wrapped
in. But the true grace is Him, Who comes to bring it to me. It’s Him. Our prayer,
if it is courageous, receives what it asks for, but also that which is more important:
the Lord.”
In the Gospel, the Pope noted, “some people receive the grace
and then go away”: of the ten lepers healed by Jesus, only once returned to thank
him. Even the blind man of Jericho found the Lord in the healing, and praised God.
But we must pray “with the courage of faith” Pope Francis insisted, prompting us to
ask even for those things that prayer does not dare hope for — that is, God Himself:
"We ask for a grace, but we don’t dare say, 'But come Yourself
to bring it to me.' We know that a grace is always brought by Him: It is He Himself
who comes and brings it to us. Let us not embarrass ourselves by taking the grace
and not recognizing Him who brings it to us, Him who gives it to us: The Lord. That
the Lord may give us the grace of giving us Himself, always, in every grace. And that
we might recognize Him, and that we might praise Him as did the sick people in the
Gospel who were healed. So that, in that grace, we might find the Lord."