|
A Heroic Son and a Heroic Daughter
of the Church in India
(Pope John Paul II’s Homily During Beatification at Kottayam on 8th
February 1986)
"I thank you Father, Lord of
heaven and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise and
understanding and have revealed them to the little ones" (Mt 11: 25)
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
1. These are the words of
Jesus of Nazareth, and he rejoiced in the Holy Spirit when he uttered
them. How full of meaning they are for us today:
"I thank you, Father,
Lord of heaven and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise
and understanding and revealed them to the little ones". (Mt 11: 25)
What things has the Lord
hidden? What mysteries has he revealed? Truly the deepest ones, the
mysteries of his own divine life, those known here on earth only by him,
only by Christ himself. For he says: "All things have been delivered to
me by my Father, and no one knows the Son except the Father and no one
knows the Father except the Son and any one to whom the Son chooses to
reveal him" (Mt 11: 27).
And behold, the Son does
reveal these things. At the same time he reveals the Father. The Father is
revealed through the Son. And to whom does the Son reveal these things? He
reveals them to those whom he chooses: "for such was your gracious will",
Jesus tells the Father. He reveals these things to the little ones.
2. Today, in this Sacred
Liturgy, we wish to unite ourselves in a special way with Christ the Lord.
Together with him we wish to bless the Father, for the particular love
which he has shown to a son and a daughter of the Church in India. We
praise the Father for his countless blessings during the two thousand
years that the Church has existed on Indian soil. With Christ we glorify
the Father for the love that he has shown to the little ones of Kerala and
all India.
The Church throughout the
world rejoices with the Church in India as Father Kuriakose Elias Chavara
and Sister Alphonsa of the Immaculate Conception are raised to the ranks
of the Blessed in the great Communion of Saints. "This man and this woman,
both members of the Syro-Malabar Church here in Kerala, advanced to great
heights of holiness through their wholehearted co-operation with the grace
of God. Each possessed an ardent love of God, yet each followed a distinct
spiritual path.
3. Father Kuriakose Elias
Chavara was born here in Kerala, and for nearly all of his sixty-five
years of earthly life he laboured generously for the renewal and
enrichment of the Christian life. His deep love for Christ filled him with
apostolic zeal and made him especially careful to promote the unity of the
Church. With great generosity he collaborated with others, especially
brother priests and religious, in the work of salvation.
In co-operation with
Fathers Thomas Palackal and Thomas Porukara, Father Kuriakose founded an
Indian Religious Congregation for men, now known as the Carmelites of Mary
Immaculate. Later, with the help of an Italian missionary. Father Leopold
Beccaro, he started an Indian Religious Congregation for women, the
Congregation of the Mother of Carmel. These Congregations grew and
flourished and religious vocations became better understood and
appreciated. Through the common efforts of the members of new religious
families, his. hopes and works were multiplied many times over.
Father Kuriakose's life,
and the lives of these new Religious, •were dedicated to the service of
the Syro-Malabar Church. Under his leadership or inspiration, a good
number of apostolic initiatives were undertaken: the establishment of
seminaries for the education and formation of the clergy, the introduction
of annual retreats, a publishing house for Catholic works, a house to care
for the destitute and dying, schools for general education and
programmes for the training of catechumens. He contributed to the Syro-Malabar
liturgy and spread devotion to the Holy Eucharist and the Holy Family. In
particular, he dedicated himself to encouraging and counselling Christian
families, convinced as he was of the fundamental role of the family in the
life of society and the Church.
But no apostolic cause was
dearer to the heart of this great man of faith than that of the unity and
harmony within the Church. It was as if he had always before his mind the
prayer of Jesus, on the night before his Sacrifice on the Cross: "That
they may all be one; even as you. Father, are in me and I in you, that
they also may be in us" (Jn 17:21). Today the Church solemnly recalls
with love and gratitude all his-efforts to resist threats of disunity and
to encourage the clergy and faithful to unity with the See of Peter and
the universal Church. His success in this, as in all his many
undertakings, was undoubtedly due to the intense charity and prayer which
characterized his daily life, his close communion with Christ on earth.
4. Sister Alphonsa of the
Immaculate Conception, born a century after Father Kuriakose Elias, would
gladly have served the Lord with similar apostolic projects. And indeed
she possessed a personal devotion to Father Kuriakose from early in her
religious life. But the path to holiness for Sister Alphonsa was clearly
a different one. It was the way of the Cross, the way of sickness and
suffering.
Already at a very young age
Sister Alphonsa desired to serve the Lord as a religious, but it was not
without enduring trials that she was finally able to pursue this goal.
When it became possible, she joined the Franciscan Clarist Congregation.
Throughout her life, which was a brief thirty-six years, she continually
gave thanks to God for the joy and privilege of her religious vocation,
for the grace of her vows of chastity, poverty and obedience.
From early in her life. Sister
Alphonsa experienced great suffering. With the passing of the years the
heavenly Father gave her an ever fuller share in the passion of his
beloved son. We recall how she experienced, not only physical pain of
great intensity, but also the spiritual suffering of being misunderstood
and misjudged by others. But she constantly accepted all her suffering
with serenity and trust in God being firmly convinced that they would
purify her motives, help her overcome all selfishness, and unite her more
closely with her beloved divine Spouse. She wrote to her spiritual
director: "Dear Father, as my good Lord Jesus loves me so very much. I
sincerely desire to remain on this sick bed and suffer not only this, but
anything else besides, even to the end of the world. I feel now that God
has intended my life to be an oblation, a sacrifice of suffering" (20
November 1944). She came to love suffering because she loved the suffering
Christ. She learned to love the cross through her love of the crucified
Lord.
Sister Alphonsa knew that
by her sufferings she shared in the Church's apostolate; she found joy in
them by offering them all to Christ. In this way, she seemed to have made
her own the words of Saint Paul: "I rejoice in my suffering 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). God endowed her with
an affectionate and happy disposition, with the ability to take delight in
ordinary and simple things. The weight of human suffering, even the
misunderstanding or jealousy of others, could not extinguish the joy of
the Lord which filled her heart. In a letter written shortly before she
died, at a time of intense physical and mental suffering, she said: "I
have given myself up completely to Jesus. Let him please himself in his
dealings with me. My only desire in this world is to suffer for love of
God and to rejoice in doing it". (February 1946).
5. Both Father Kuriakose
and Sister Alphonsa bear witness to the beauty and greatness of the
religious vocation. And I would like to take this occasion to direct my
thoughts particularly to the men and women Religious who are present here
and to all the Religious in India.
Every one who has been
baptized into Christ has discovered a "pearl of great value" and a
"treasure" worth all that one has in life. (cf. Mt 13: 44-45). For all the
baptized share in the very life of the Blessed Trinity and are called to
be "light" and "salt" for the world (cf. Mt 5:13-16). But within the great
family of the Church, God our Father calls some of you to follow Christ
still more closely and to dedicate your lives with a special consecration
through the profession of chastity, poverty and obedience. You, the
Religious of the Church, bear public witness to the Gospel and to the
primacy of the love of God. By a permanent commitment and lifelong
fidelity to your vows, you seek to grow in union with Christ and to
contribute in a unique way to the life and mission of the Church. And what
a vital contribution is yours:
In a rich variety of
forms, you live to the full your evangelical consecration. Some of you
have heard the Lord's personal call to the contemplative life where,
though hidden from the world, you offer your lives and prayers for the
sake of all humanity. Others have been called to an active apostolic life,
where you serve in teaching, health care, parochial work, retreats, works
of charity and many forms of pastoral activity.
No matter how you serve,
dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ never doubt the value of your
consecrated life. Whether your service resembles the great apostolic
endeavours of Father Kuriakose, or takes the form of hidden suffering like
Sister Alphonsa, whatever it may be, it is important in the life of the
Church. Remember the words of Saint Paul, in today's second reading, "We
know that in everything God works for good" (Rom 8:28). Even when you feel
discouraged or weighed down by personal failures or sin, trust even more
in the love of God for you. Turn to him for mercy, forgiveness and love.
For as Saint Paul says in the same reading: "the Lord helps us in our
weakness" (Rom 8:26). It is in him that we find our strength, our courage
and our joy.
Without the vital
contribution of men and women Religious, the Charity of the Church would
be lessened, her fruitfulness would be diminished. Thus, I pray that the
beatification of these two exemplary Religious of India will give you
renewed zeal for your precious vocation. In your own love for Christ may
you be inspired by their fervour. And like them, may yon keep the
simplicity of the "Little ones" of the Gospel. Be pure of heart and filled
with compassion. Be always eager to please the Lord. For it is to the
little ones that the mysteries of God are revealed (cf. Mt. 11:25).
6. And now, I wish to greet
all who have come to Kottayam for this celebration. I greet my brother
bishops and all the clergy and faithful who have come from the other
Dioceses of Kerala. With respect and esteem I thank the other entire
fellow Christians as well as our Hindu and Muslim brethren and the
followers of other religions who honour me today by being here. I am
grateful for the presence of the civil authorities and I invoke upon all
the people the blessings of joy and peace.
Truly extra-ordinary is
this day in the history of the Church and of Christianity on Indian soil.
It is important, too, in the history of the pastoral ministry of the
Bishop of Rome the Successor of Saint Peter. It is the first time that he
has had the joy of raising to the glory of the altar a son and a daughter
of the Church in India, in their native land.
Therefore we sing together
with the Psalmist in today's Liturgy. Together we give thanks:
"It is good to give thanks to the Lord
to make music to your name, 0 most High;
Your deeds, 0 Lord, have made me glad;
for the work of your hands I shout with joy.
O Lord, How great are your
works" (Ps 91 (92): 1,4-5). Truly great are the works of God: And the
greatest work of God on earth is man. The glory of God is man fully alive
with the life of God. The glory of God is the holiness of each person and
of the whole Church.
Holiness is the work of
divine grace. When we proclaim it solemnly in the midst of the People of
God in this land, we give glory to the most High. In the words of Saint
Augustine we praise God, saying: "In crowning merits, you are crowning
your own gifts".
7. Truly extra-ordinary is
this day: The Prophet Isaiah says 4- "As .the heavens are higher than the
earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your
thoughts" (Is 55:9). .
Today it is given to us to
penetrate more deeply into these divine thoughts. It is given to us to
know better the divine ways.
And behold, what ways: what
ways:
The Apostle writes: For
those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of
his Son, in order that he might be the first-born among many brethren. And
those whom he predestined he also called; and those whom he called he also
justified; and those whom he justified he also glorified (Rom 8:29-30).
These are the divine thoughts
These are the divine ways
Today it is given to us
to see how these thoughts are accomplished in Blessed Kuriakose Elias and
Blessed Sister Alphonsa. Today we see how these ways of God lead through
their hearts through their earthly pilgrimages, to the glory of the
altars.
8.
"Father, it is true". Jesus says, "you have graciously willed it
so" (Mt 11:26).
And he continues: Come to
me, all who labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my
yoke upon you, and learn from me: for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and
you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is
light" (Mt 11:28-30).
Jesus speaks in this way.
And he speaks to everyone. We are called to holiness. We are all called to
communion with him, with his heart with his Cross, with his glory.
Jesus speaks in this way.
And together with Jesus so do Blessed Kuriakose and Blessed Alphonsa.
Their hearts are united with the Heart of the Divine Redeemer and are
filled with love for all the sons and daughters of your blessed land.
Amen.
Pope John
Paul II
-----------------------------
|