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Pope encourages us to "build our home" with God

At the Sunday Angelus appointment, Pope Francis says our Lenten journey beacons us to build a greater sense of home with God by strengthening our relationship through prayer, trust, and intimacy, while also building fellowship and fraternity with our brothers and sisters.

By Thaddeus Jones

Addressing visitors and pilgrims in Saint Peter's Square for the midday Angelus prayer, Pope Francis reflected on the Sunday Gospel for the day that recounts the episode when Jesus drove out the merchants from the temple, admonishing all by saying "Stop making my Father’s house a marketplace."

Market and home mindsets

The Pope then examined how our approach to the Lord differs depending on whether we have a market or home-type mindset. The market approach to temple worship recalls when it was enough to buy a lamb and consume it on the altar coals to be right with God, he explained, a process of purchasing, paying and consuming.

The idea of the temple being understood as a home instead implies the opposite, where one goes there to meet the Lord, and draw close to Him as well as to our brothers and sisters as a community that shares joys and sorrows. He added, the market approach on the other hand requires doing calculations, negotiating prices, and seeking one's own interests, but the home approach is about mutual and free giving in love and fraternity without pricing and measuring it out.

The temple as our home

The zealous action of Jesus recounted in today's Gospel shows how the Lord does not accept the "market-temple" that takes the place of the "house-temple," the Pope explained, adding that the market approach creates a distant and "mercenary" relationship with God while the home understanding an intimate, trusting rapport with the Lord as in a loving family. He underscored that the Lord came to bring communion with Him and among our brothers and sisters.

“Christ came to bring communion, mercy, and closeness.”

Build our homes with God

Our Lenten journey calls on us to build a greater sense of home within ourselves and all around us, the Pope went on to say, first towards God through prayer, "like children who knock confidently at the Father's door without getting tired." Next, through building fraternity with our brothers and sisters, he added, saying "There is a great need for it."

Prayer and reaching out

The Pope observed how in our daily lives we often encounter isolation or what seems to be a hostile atmosphere in many places. He suggested we examine the nature of our relationships with others and whether we take the first step to bring down walls of silence and or bridge the emptiness that stands between us. He also recommended we look at our prayer life, whether we treat it just as a duty to pay while we look at the clock, or a time of trusting abandonment in the Lord.

“May Mary help us to "build a home" with God, among us, and around us.”

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03 March 2024, 12:16

The Angelus is a special prayer recited by Catholics three times a day, at 6am, noon, and 6pm and is accompanied by the ringing of the Angelus bell. The name comes from the Latin word for Angel and the prayer itself reminds us of how Jesus Christ assumed our human nature through the Mystery of the Incarnation.
The Pope recites the Angelus prayer in St Peter’s Square every Sunday at midday.
He also gives a brief reflection on the Gospel of the day and often comments on some issue of international concern. The Pope’s words are broadcast all over the world on radio and television and widely shared on social media.
From Easter to Pentecost the Regina Coeli is prayed instead of the Angelus. This prayer commemorates the Resurrection of Jesus Christ and, like the Angelus, concludes with the recitation of the Gloria three times.

Latest Angelus / Regina Coeli

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