Homilies
Homily of the Apostolic Nuncio, Chapel of the Apostolic Nunciature, Sunday 30 June 2019
First Reading: 1 Kings 19:16,19-21
Second reading: Galatians 5:1,13-18
Gospel: Luke 9:51-62
 
This Sunday’s Gospel Reading shows a very important step in Christ’s life: the moment when, as St Luke writes: “He [Jesus] set his face to go to Jerusalem”. Jerusalem is the final destination where Jesus, at his last Passover, must die and rise again.
 
From that moment, after that “firm decision” Jesus aimed straight for his goal and in addition said clearly to the people he met and who asked to follow him what the conditions were: to have no permanent dwelling place; to know how to be detached from human affections and not to give in to nostalgia for the past.
 
Jesus, however, never imposes, Jesus is humble, Jesus invites. If you want to, come. The humility of Jesus is like this: he is always inviting but never imposing.
 
All of this gives us food for thought. It tells us, for example, of the importance which the conscience had for Jesus too: listening in his heart to the Father’s voice and following it. Jesus, in his earthly existence was the incarnate Word, the Son of God made man, and at a certain point he made the firm decision to go up to Jerusalem for the last time; it was a decision taken in his conscience, but not alone: together with the Father, in full union with him! 
 
He decided out of obedience to the Father and in profound and intimate listening to his will. For this reason, moreover, his decision was firm, because it was made together with the Father. 
 
In the Father Jesus found the strength and light for his journey. And Jesus was free, he took that decision freely. Jesus wants us to be Christians, freely as he was, with the freedom which comes from this dialogue with the Father, from this dialogue with God. Jesus does not want selfish Christians who follow their own ego, who do not talk to God. Nor does he want weak Christians, Christians who have no will of their own, “remote-controlled” Christians incapable of creativity. Jesus wants us free. 
 
And where is this freedom created? It is created in dialogue with God in the conscience. If we are unable to speak with God, if we cannot hear God in our own conscience, we are not free.
 
This is why we must learn to listen to our conscience more. This does not mean following my own ego.... It is not this! The conscience is the interior place for listening to the truth, to goodness, for listening to God; it is the inner place of our relationship with him, the One who speaks to our heart and helps us to discern, to understand the way we must take and, once the decision is made, to go forward, to stay faithful.
 
May Mary help us to become increasingly men and women of conscience, free in our conscience, because it is in the conscience that dialogue with God takes place; men and women, who can hear God’s voice and follow it with determination, who can listen to God’s voice, and follow it with decision.