POPE FRANCIS’ NOVEMBER PRAYER NETWORK REFLECTION - 17th November
I hate to start talking about Christmas prematurely, but it's hard not to think about it when the shops in Horsham seem to have been blasting out festive pop music for weeks already now! The impending preparations for a secular season almost entirely focussed on spending and material goods not only risk obscuring the feast of the Lord's Nativity, but, also, can blunt us to the plight of the poor, who find it hard to find joy in this way. Surely a society-wide spending spree does nothing to help the mental anxiety of those struggling to survive each day, but risks leaving them with a sense of failure and emptiness. It makes sense then, as Advent draws near, to mark a World Day of the Poor this Sunday, which, Pope Francis tells us in his message for the day published this week, has a special focus on the spiritual, and not just the material, welfare of the needy. "The worst discrimination", he recalled, "which the poor suffer is the lack of spiritual care... we must not fail to offer them God's friendship, his blessing, his word, the celebration of the sacraments and a journey of growth and maturity in the faith." [Evangelii Gaudium, 200]
The poor are very close to God. Likewise, only friendship with God can make us truly alterative to friendship with them. Pope Francis quotes his predecessor Pope Benedict, who noted 'without daily prayer lived with fidelity, our acts... lose their profound soul and are reduced to being mere activism' (Catechesis, April 25, 2012). He also rejoices that this same insight was taught to us in a lived-out way by Blessed Theresa of Calcutta, who once, at the General Assembly of the UN, held up her rosary for all to see and said "I am only a poor sister who prays. By praying, Jesus puts his love in my heart and I go to give it to all the poor I meet along the way. Pray too! Pray one you will notice the poor who are beside you. Perhaps on the same floor in your apartment building. Perhaps even in your houses, someone is waiting for your love. Pray, and your eyes will open, and our heart will fill with love." (Oct 26, 1985)
This beautiful wisdom teaches us to reach out with little gestures of friendship and prayer throughout the whole day to anyone in need around us. This not only heals our sinful nature, by freeing us from the slavery of our often all too material desires, but also leads us to present the evangelising face of the Christ Child wherever we go. In turn, we learn to contemplate that face in those who, though they have little, are spiritually richer than we can imagine.





