By Junno Arocho Esteves
VATICAN CITY (CNS) —
Jealousy and envy are ugly sins that grow like weeds in one’s heart, Pope
Francis said at his morning Mass.
A heart that is envious is
not only tormented, but can even “lead one to kill,” the pope said Jan. 21 during
the Mass in the chapel of Domus Sanctae Marthae.
The pope focused his homily
on the day’s first reading (1 Sm 18: 6-9; 19: 1-7) in which Saul plots to kill
David out of jealousy for his growing fame. Although Saul heeded his son’s
advice to not murder David, the
pope said, his jealousy returned like a “sickness” that opened
the door to envy.
“Envy is an ugly thing!
It is an attitude, an ugly sin,” he said. “And jealousy or envy grows
in the heart like a bad weed: It grows, but does not let the grass grow.”
One who has an envious heart,
he continued, cannot find peace and is tormented. The pope noted that because
of Satan’s envy, “death entered into the world.”
“Envy kills and it
cannot tolerate that someone has something that I don’t have,” he said.
“And he is always suffering because the heart of someone jealous or
envious suffers. It is a suffering heart.”
The pope called on Christians
to pray for the grace to not open their “hearts to jealousy, to not open
the heart to envy because these things always lead to death.”
Envy, he added, was also
“the instrument” used by the high priests and scribes to deliver
Jesus to Pontius Pilate and be put to death.
“Let us also ask the
Lord for the grace to never deliver to death a brother, a sister of the parish,
of the community, not even a neighbor because of envy,” Pope Francis said.
“Each one has their sins, each one has their virtues; they are specific to
each one. Look for the good and do not kill (others) with gossip out of envy or
jealousy.”
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