HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS
POPE JOHN PAUL II
BEATIFICATION OF FRANCISCO AND JACINTA MARTO SHEPERDS OF FATIMA
- Saturday, 13 May 2000
Saturday, 13 May 2000 - Fátima
1. "Father, ... to you I offer praise; for what you have hidden
from the learned and the clever you have revealed to the merest
children" (Mt 11: 25).
With these words, dear brothers and sisters, Jesus praises the
heavenly Father for his designs; he knows that no one can come to
him unless he is drawn by the Father (cf. Jn 6: 44); therefore he
praises him for his plan and embraces it as a son: "Yes, Father,
for such was your gracious will" (Mt 11: 26). You were pleased
to reveal the kingdom to the merest children.
According to the divine plan, "a woman clothed with the sun"
(Rv 12: 1) came down from heaven to this earth to visit the privileged
children of the Father. She speaks to them with a mother's voice
and heart: she asks them to offer themselves as victims of reparation,
saying that she was ready to lead them safely to God. And behold,
they see a light shining from her maternal hands which penetrates
them inwardly, so that they feel immersed in God just as - they
explain - a person sees himself in a mirror.
Later Francisco, one of the three privileged children, exclaimed:
"We were burning in that light which is God and we were not
consumed. What is God like? It is impossible to say. In fact we
will never be able to tell people". God: a light that burns
without consuming. Moses had the same experience when he saw God
in the burning bush; he heard God say that he was concerned about
the slavery of his people and had decided to deliver them through
him: "I will be with you" (cf. Ex 3: 2-12). Those who
welcome this presence become the dwelling-place and, consequently,
a "burning bush" of the Most High.
2. What most impressed and entirely absorbed Bl. Francisco was
God in that immense light which penetrated the inmost depths of
the three children. But God told only Francisco "how sad"
he was, as he said. One night his father heard him sobbing and asked
him why he was crying; his son answered: "I was thinking of
Jesus who is so sad because of the sins that are committed against
him". He was motivated by one desire - so expressive of how
children think - "to console Jesus and make him happy".
A transformation takes place in his life, one we could call radical:
a transformation certainly uncommon for children of his age. He
devotes himself to an intense spiritual life, expressed in assiduous
and fervent prayer, and attains a true form of mystical union with
the Lord. This spurs him to a progressive purification of the spirit
through the renunciation of his own pleasures and even of innocent
childhood games.
Francisco bore without complaining the great sufferings caused
by the illness from which he died. It all seemed to him so little
to console Jesus: he died with a smile on his lips. Little Francisco
had a great desire to atone for the offences of sinners by striving
to be good and by offering his sacrifices and prayers. The life
of Jacinta, his younger sister by almost two years, was motivated
by these same sentiments.
3. "Another portent appeared in heaven; behold, a great red
dragon" (Rv 12: 3).
These words from the first reading of the Mass make us think of
the great struggle between good and evil, showing how, when man
puts God aside, he cannot achieve happiness, but ends up destroying
himself.
How many victims there have been throughout the last century of
the second millennium! We remember the horrors of the First and
Second World Wars and the other wars in so many parts of the world,
the concentration and extermination camps, the gulags, ethnic cleansings
and persecutions, terrorism, kidnappings, drugs, the attacks on
unborn life and the family.
The message of Fátima is a call to conversion, alerting
humanity to have nothing to do with the "dragon" whose
"tail swept down a third of the stars of heaven, and cast them
to the earth" (Rv 12: 4). Man's final goal is heaven, his true
home, where the heavenly Father awaits everyone with his merciful
love.
God does not want anyone to be lost; that is why 2,000 years ago
he sent his Son to earth, "to seek and to save the lost"
(Lk 19: 10). And he saved us by his death on the cross. Let no one
empty that Cross of its power! Jesus died and rose from the dead
to be "the first-born among many brethren" (Rom 8: 29).
In her motherly concern, the Blessed Virgin came here to Fátima
to ask men and women "to stop offending God, Our Lord, who
is already very offended". It is a mother's sorrow that compels
her to speak; the destiny of her children is at stake. For this
reason she asks the little shepherds: "Pray, pray much and
make sacrifices for sinners; many souls go to hell because they
have no one to pray and make sacrifices for them".
4. Little Jacinta felt and personally experienced Our Lady's anguish,
offering herself heroically as a victim for sinners. One day, when
she and Francisco had already contracted the illness that forced
them to bed, the Virgin Mary came to visit them at home, as the
little one recounts: "Our Lady came to see us and said that
soon she would come and take Francisco to heaven. And she asked
me if I still wanted to convert more sinners. I told her yes".
And when the time came for Francisco to leave, the little girl tells
him: "Give my greetings to Our Lord and to Our Lady and tell
them that I am enduring everything they want for the conversion
of sinners". Jacinta had been so deeply moved by the vision
of hell during the apparition of 13 July that no mortification or
penance seemed too great to save sinners.
She could well exclaim with St Paul: "I rejoice in my sufferings
for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's
afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church"
(Col 1: 24). Last Sunday at the Colosseum in Rome, we commemorated
the many witnesses to the faith in the 20th century, recalling the
tribulations they suffered through the significant testimonies they
left us. An innumerable cloud of courageous witnesses to the faith
have left us a precious heritage which must live on in the third
millennium. Here in Fátima, where these times of tribulation
were foretold and Our Lady asked for prayer and penance to shorten
them, I would like today to thank heaven for the powerful witness
shown in all those lives. And once again I would like to celebrate
the Lord's goodness to me when I was saved from death after being
gravely wounded on 13 May 1981. I also express my gratitude to Bl.
Jacinta for the sacrifices and prayers offered for the Holy Father,
whom she saw suffering greatly.
5. "Father, to you I offer praise, for you have revealed these
things to the merest children". Today Jesus' praise takes the
solemn form of the beatification of the little shepherds, Francisco
and Jacinta. With this rite the Church wishes to put on the candelabrum
these two candles which God lit to illumine humanity in its dark
and anxious hours. May they shine on the path of this immense multitude
of pilgrims and of all who have accompanied us by radio and television.
May Francisco and Jacinta be a friendly light that illumines all
Portugal and, in special way, this Diocese of Leiria-Fátima.
I thank Bishop Serafim, of this illustrious particular Church,
for his words of welcome, and with great joy I greet the entire
Portuguese Episcopate and their Dioceses, which I deeply love and
which I urge to imitate their saints. A fraternal greeting goes
to the Cardinals and Bishops present, with a special word for the
Pastors from the community of Portuguese-speaking countries: may
the Virgin Mary obtain reconciliation for the Angolan people; may
she bring comfort to the flood victims of Mozambique; may she watch
over the steps of Timor Lorosae, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde, São
Tomé and Príncipe; may she preserve her Brazilian
sons and daughters in the unity of faith.
I extend a respectful greeting to the President of the Republic
and to the authorities who have wished to take part in this celebration.
I take this occasion to express, through them, my gratitude to everyone
who helped make my pilgrimage possible. A cordial embrace and a
particular blessing to the parish and city of Fátima, which
today rejoices in her children who are raised to the honours of
the altar.
6. My last words are for the children: dear boys and girls, I see
so many of you dressed like Francisco and Jacinta. You look very
nice! But in a little while or tomorrow you will take these chothes
off and ... the little shepherds will disappear. They should not
disappear, should they?! Our Lady needs you all to console Jesus,
who is sad because of the bad things done to him; he needs your
prayers and your sacrifices for sinners.
Ask your parents and teachers to enrol you in the "school"
of Our Lady, so that she can teach you to be like the little shepherds,
who tried to do whatever she asked them. I tell you that "one
makes more progress in a short time of submission and dependence
on Mary than during entire years of personal initiatives, relying
on oneself alone" (St Louis de Montfort, The True Devotion
to the Blessed Virgin Mary, n. 155). This was how the little shepherds
became saints so quickly. A woman who gave hospitality to Jacinta
in Lisbon, on hearing the very beautiful and wise advice that the
little girl gave, asked who taught it to her. "It was Our Lady",
she replied. Devoting themselves with total generosity to the direction
of such a good Teacher, Jacinta and Francisco soon reached the heights
of perfection.
7."Father, to you I offer praise, for what you have hidden
from the learned and the clever you have revealed to the merest
children".
Father, to you I offer praise for all your children, from the Virgin
Mary, your humble Servant, to the little shepherds, Francisco and
Jacinta.
May the message of their lives live on for ever to light humanity's
way!
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