Mercy can scandalize those who don't see their own sin, pope says

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Celebrating the feast of St. Matthew,
the anniversary of the day when as a 17-year-old he said he was overwhelmed by
God’s mercy, Pope Francis said it was interesting how many Catholics today seem
to be scandalized when God shows mercy to someone.

In his homily at Mass in the Domus Sanctae Marthae Sept. 21,
Pope Francis looked in depth at the day’s short Gospel story of the calling of
St. Matthew.

The story, the pope said, has three parts: “the
encounter, the celebration and the scandal.”

Jesus sees Matthew, a tax collector — “one of those
who made the people of Israel pay taxes to give to the Romans, a traitor to his
country” — and calls him to follow. Jesus looks at him “lovingly,
mercifully” and “the resistance of that man who wanted money, who was
a slave to money, falls.”

“That man knew he was a sinner,” the pope said.
“He was liked by no one and even despised.” But it was
“precisely that awareness of being a sinner that opened the door to Jesus’
mercy. He left everything and followed.”

“The first condition for being saved is knowing you are
in danger,” he said. “The first condition for being healed is feeling
sick.”

In the Gospel story, Matthew celebrates by inviting Jesus
for a meal. Pope Francis said it reminded him of what Jesus said in the Gospel of St. Luke,
“There will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over 99
righteous people who have no need of repentance.”

But, the pope said, the Pharisees saw Jesus with Matthew and
were scandalized that he would eat with tax collectors and sinners.

The Pharisees were people who continually repeated, “The
law says this, doctrine says that,” the pope said. “But they forgot
the first commandment of love and were closed in a cage of sacrifices,
(saying), ‘We make our sacrifices to God, we keep the Sabbath, we do all we
should and so we’ll be saved.'”

But, the pope said, “God saves us, Jesus Christ saves
us and these men did not understand. They felt secure; they thought salvation
came from them.”

In the same way today, he said, “we often hear faithful
Catholics who see mercy at work and ask, ‘Why?'”

There are “many, many, always, even in the church
today,” the pope said. “They say, ‘No, no you can’t, it’s all clear, they
are sinners, we must send them away.'”

But, Pope Francis said, Jesus himself answered them when he
said, “I have come not to call the just, but sinners.” So, “if
you want to be called by Jesus, recognize you are a sinner.”

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