(Vatican Radio) Allowing ourselves to be looked upon by Jesus, whose gaze changes
our lives: this was the focus of Pope Francis’ remarks after the readings at Mass
on Saturday morning, the Feast of St Matthew, Apostle and Evangelist, whose conversion
story is told in the Gospel passage of the day.
Jesus looks Matthew – a tax
collector, a public sinner whose whole life was money, which he idolized – right in
the eye. Then, said Pope Fraancis, “[Matthew feels] in his heart the gaze of the Lord
who looked upon him.”:
“That gaze overtook him completely, it changed his
life. We say he was converted. He Changed his life. ‘As soon as he felt that gaze
in his heart, he got up and followed him.’ This is true: Jesus’ gaze always lifts
us up. It is a look that always lifts us up, and never leaves you in your place, never
lets us down, never humiliates. It invites you to get up - a look that brings you
to grow, to move forward, that encourages you, because [the One who looks upon you]
loves you. The gaze makes you feel that He loves you. This gives the courage to follow
Him: ‘And he got up and followed him.’”
“The gaze of Jesus,” said Pope
Francis, “[is not something] magical: Jesus was not a specialist in hypnosis.” Jesus
looked on everyone, and everyone felt His gaze upon him, as if Jesus had called each
person by name … and this look would change the lives of everyone.” So did Peter change,
who, after denying his Lord then met His gaze and wept bitterly. Then there is the
final gaze, from the Cross. “He looked on His mother, looked at the [beloved] disciple
and said, with that look, he told us that His mother was our mother and that the Church
is mother - with a look. Then he looked at the Good Thief, and once again to Peter,
“[who was] afraid, after the Resurrection, with those three questions: ‘Do you love
me?’ - a look that shamed him. The Pope said it will do us well to think and pray
about this gaze of Jesus, and to let ourselves be looked on by Him. “Jesus goes to
the house of Matthew as he was sitting at the table many sinners arrive. “Word had
spread, and all of society - but not the [respectable folks] - felt invited to lunch,”
as it happened in the parable of the king who ordered the servants to go to the main
crossroads to invite to his son’s wedding as many people as they met, both good and
bad:
“And sinners, tax collectors and sinners, they felt that Jesus had
looked on them and that gaze of Jesus upon them – I believe – was like a breath on
embers, and they felt that there was fire in the belly, again, and that Jesus made
lifted them up, gave them back their dignity. The gaze of Jesus always makes
us worthy, gives us dignity. It is a generous look. ‘But behold, what a teacher: dining
with the dregs of the city!’: But beneath that dirt there were the embers of desire
for God, the embers of God's image that wanted someone who could help them be kindled
anew. This is what the gaze of Jesus does.”
“All of us, in our lives,”
concluded Pope Francis, “have felt this gaze, and not once only: many times! Perhaps
the person of a priest, who taught us doctrine or forgave our sins, perhaps in the
help of friends.”:
“But all of us find ourselves before that gaze, that
marvelous gaze, and we go forward in life, in the certainty that He looks upon us.
He too, however, awaits us, in order to look on us definitively – and that final gaze
of Jesus upon our lives will be forever, it will be eternal. I ask all the saints
upon whom Jesus has looked, to prepare us to let ourselves be looked upon in life,
and that they prepare us also for that final – and first! – gaze of Jesus!”