Vatican City - Heralds must be open to the newness of the Gospel, while warning of the dangers of distorted zeal said Pope Francis during his catechesis at the Wednesday General Audience on the St. paulâs description of evangelical zeal in his New Testament letters.
Starting with St Paulâs description of the âarmour of Godâ in the Letter to the Ephesians, Pope Francis focused on the verse, âAs shoes for your feet put on whatever will make you ready to proclaim the gospel of peaceâ which also brings to mind the words of Isaiah, âHow beautiful on the mountains are the feet of the one who brings good tidings.â
Both St Paul and Isaiah, reference âthe feet of a herald of good newsâŚbecause the one who goes to proclaim must move.â
But Paul also considers the shoes in the context of the analogy of a suit of armour, because soldiers must have stable footing in battle, and be prepared to run and move in the right direction.
âEvangelical zeal is the support on which proclamation is based.â
Apostolic zeal pushes Christians forth
Pope Francis went on to explain that âevangelical zeal is the support on which proclamation is based, and heralds are like the feet of the Body of Christ, the Church.â
Proclamation, he said, requires zeal that pushes Christians to go forth, arguing that the Christians cannot proclaim the Gospel while standing still, like âkeyboard warriors.â
The Gospel, he affirmed, âis proclaimed by moving, by walking, by going forth.â
Finally, Pope Francis emphasized the need to be prepared for the newness of the Gospel. He warned against a âmisdirected zealâ that stubbornly persists âin the observance of purely human and obsolete norms for the Christian community.â
Instead, those who proclaim the Gospel must recognize that âthe Lord passes by in a surprising way,â and must be âready to follow a wisdom that is not of this world.â
Unattached to their own schemes or plans of actions, he said, heralds must not allow âopportunities to promulgate the Gospel of peaceâ to pass by.
-VN