Pope Francis: corruption is 'varnished putrefaction' of whitewashed tomb
(Vatican Radio) Those who don’t truly repent and only pretend to be Christian are
damaging the Church. These were the words of Pope Francis at Mass on Monday morning
in the Vatican’s Santa Marta.
Listen to Giulia Cirillo’s report:
Pope Francis
focused his homily on the Lord’s exhortation to forgive our brothers and sisters who
have sinned. Jesus, he said, never tired of forgiving, and neither should we. As the
Gospel says, if our brother wrongs us seven times in one day, and repents every time,
we should forgive him.
However, Pope Francis warned, there is difference between
being a sinner and being corrupt. Those who sin and repent, who ask for forgiveness,
are humble before the Lord. But those who continue to sin, while pretending to be
Christian, lead a double life, they are corrupt. A Christian who is a benefactor,
Pope Francis said, who gives to the Church with one hand, but steals with the other
hand from the country, from the poor, is unjust. And Jesus says: “It would be better
for him if a millstone were put around his neck and he be thrown into the sea”. This
is because, the Pope explained, that person is deceitful, and “where there is deceit,
the Spirit of God cannot be”.
“We should all call ourselves sinners”, Pope
Francis said, but those who are corrupt do not understand humility. Jesus called them
whitewashed tombs: they appear beautiful, from the outside, but inside they are full
of dead bones and putrefaction. And a Christian who boasts about being Christian,
but does not lead a Christian life, is corrupt.
We all know such people, Pope
Francis said, and they damage the Church because they don’t live in the spirit of
the Gospel, but in the spirit of worldliness. St Paul in his letter to the Romans
clearly urges them not to enter into the framework, into the mentality of worldliness,
because it leads to this double life.
The corrupt life is a “varnished putrefaction”,
Pope Francis said. Jesus did not say that those who are corrupt are sinners, but he
said they’re hypocrites. Let us ask the Holy Spirit, Pope Francis concluded, for the
grace to admit that we are sinners, but not corrupt.