'Cry out,' pope tells young people at Palm Sunday Mass

IMAGE: CNS photo/Paul Haring

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Celebrating Palm Sunday Mass with
thousands of young people, Pope Francis urged them to continue singing and
shouting “hosanna” in the world, proclaiming the lordship of Jesus
and following his example of outreach to the poor and suffering.

The crowd that shouted “hosanna” as Jesus entered
Jerusalem included all those for whom Jesus was a source of joy, those he
healed and forgave, and those he welcomed after they had been excluded from
society, the pope said in his homily March 25.

But others were irritated by Jesus and tried to silence his
followers, the pope said. In the same way, people today will try to silence
young people who continue to follow Jesus, because “a joyful young person
is hard to manipulate.”

“There are many ways to silence young people and make
them invisible,” the pope said. There are “many ways to anesthetize
them, to make them keep quiet, ask nothing, question nothing. There are many
ways to sedate them, to keep them from getting involved, to make their dreams
flat and dreary, petty and plaintive.”

Pope Francis asked the young people “not to keep quiet.
Even if others keep quiet, if we older people and leaders keep quiet, if the
whole world keeps quiet and loses its joy, I ask you: Will you cry out?”

Gabriella Zuniga, 16, and her sister Valentina Zuniga, 15,
were among the thousands in St. Peter’s Square. The sisters, students at
Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, had participated March 24 in
the local Rome “March for Our Lives,” calling for gun control.

The Palm Sunday Mass marked the local celebration of World
Youth Day and included the more than 300 young adults who, at the Vatican’s
invitation, had spent a week discussing the hopes, desires and challenges
facing the world’s young people and ways the Catholic Church should respond.

At the end of the Mass, they formally presented their final
document to the pope; it will be used, along with input from the world’s
bishops’ conferences, in drafting the working document for the Synod of Bishops
in October, which will focus on young people, faith and vocational discernment.

Holding five-foot tall palm branches, the young adults led
the procession to the obelisk in the center of St. Peter’s Square. They were
joined by others carrying olive branches and by bishops and cardinals holding
“palmurelli,” which are intricately woven palm fronds.

In his homily, Pope Francis said that the Palm Sunday Mass,
which begins with the singing of “hosanna” and then moves to the
reading of Jesus’ passion, combines “stories of joy and suffering,
mistakes and successes, which are part of our daily lives as disciples. “

The acclamation of the crowd praising Jesus as he enters
Jerusalem gives way to the shouts of “crucify him” as Jesus’
suffering and death draw near, the pope noted. “It somehow expresses the
contradictory feelings that we too, the men and women of today, experience: the
capacity for great love, but also for great hatred; the capacity for courageous
self-sacrifice, but also the ability to ‘wash our hands.'”

The Gospel also demonstrates how the joy Jesus awakened in
some is “a source of anger and irritation for others,” Pope Francis
said, and the same is true today.

Joy is seen in all those “who had followed Jesus
because they felt his compassion for their pain and misery,” the pope
said. “How could they not praise the one who had restored their dignity
and hope? Theirs is the joy of so many forgiven sinners who are able to trust
and hope once again.”

But others in Jerusalem, “those who consider themselves
righteous and ‘faithful’ to the law and its ritual precepts” and “those
who have forgotten the many chances they themselves had been given” find
such joy intolerable, the pope said.

“How hard it is for the comfortable and the self-righteous
to understand the joy and the celebration of God’s mercy,” he said. “How
hard it is for those who trust only in themselves, and look down on others, to
share in this joy.”

The shouts of “crucify him” did not begin
spontaneously, the pope said, but were incited by those who slandered and gave
false witness against Jesus, “‘spinning’ facts and painting them such that
they disfigure the face of Jesus and turn him into a ‘criminal.'”

Theirs, he said, was “the voice of those who twist
reality and invent stories for their own benefit, without concern for the good
name of others” and “the cry of those who have no problem in seeking
ways to gain power and to silence dissonant voices.”

Pope Francis told the young people gathered in the square
that in the face of such attempts to demolish hope, kill dreams and suppress
joy, Christians must look to Christ’s cross and “let ourselves be
challenged by his final cry. He died crying out his love for each of us: young
and old, saints and sinners, the people of his times and of our own.”

“We have been saved by his cross, and no one can
repress the joy of the Gospel,” he said. “No one, in any situation
whatsoever, is far from the Father’s merciful gaze.”

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