Homily for Mass at Westminster Eucharistic Festival

Do you remember watching European football on television in the 1990s? There was often someone to be seen in the crowd behind the goal with a placard. It read invariably, โ€œJohn 3, 16โ€. Just that: โ€œJohn 3, 16โ€. โ€œGod so loved the worldโ€ฆ

Time to Read:

3โ€“5 minutes

Given at the Mass for the Westminster Eucharistic Festival at Westminster Cathedral on 14th September 2024.

Do you remember watching European football on television in the 1990s? There was often someone to be seen in the crowd behind the goal with a placard. It read invariably, โ€œJohn 3, 16โ€. Just that: โ€œJohn 3, 16โ€. โ€œGod so loved the world that he gave his only Sonโ€ โ€“ the very words we hear on the lips of Jesus today.

I was always moved to see it. I used to think: if only we could speak those words louder. Then it occurred to me that we do speak those words โ€“ very loud โ€“ with the millions, billions of crosses with which Christians have populated the world, every cross announcing that God so loved the world that he gave his only Son; none so eloquently as the huge cross which adorns our Cathedral here.

Pope Benedict was keen to affirm this when he came among us fourteen years ago this week. โ€œThe visitor to this Cathedral,โ€ he said, โ€œcanโ€™t fail to be struck by the great crucifix dominating the nave, which portrays Christโ€™s body, crushed by suffering, overwhelmed by sorrow, the innocent victim whose death has reconciled us with the Father and given us a share in the very life of God.โ€

He was announcing not just Christโ€™s love but the very triumph of his cross over evil. It is wonderful to think of the countless people, including Pope Benedict, who have beheld with their eyes this very same cross as we do; and now behold for themselves the One who triumphed on Calvary over the devil.

I think of Cardinal Hume when I behold not just this cross but the cross before which he prayed in his private chapel. He used to feel overwhelmed, he said, by the number of crosses people shared with him. He didnโ€™t mean their crucifixes but the hardships they had to endure and for which they sought his prayer โ€“ till he was inspired to tell each one simply, โ€œI shall pray for you tomorrow morning.โ€ And so, the next morning he would bring their crosses to lay at the foot of his own cross upstairs in the chapel of Archbishopโ€™s House.

Cardinal Hume knew how hard it can be to pray โ€“ especially when weโ€™re suffering. โ€œSometimes, in the morning,โ€ he said, โ€œwe can feel too tired, too preoccupied, to anxious, to meet God with our head โ€“ but we can still pray with our eyes.โ€ By which he meant, when you can no longer pray with your head, then use your eyes: โ€œset your eyes,โ€ he said, โ€œupon the cross of Christ; and allow Christโ€™s dying words to resonate with in you.โ€ Christโ€™s dying words:

โ€œFather, forgive them.โ€
โ€œToday you will be with me in paradise.โ€
โ€œWhy have you forsaken me?โ€
โ€œI thirst.โ€
โ€œIt is accomplished.โ€

Pope Benedict wasnโ€™t the only Pope to behold this cross. Pope St John Paul II did too. His secretary, Cardinal Dziwisz, tells a story which shows how much the cross meant to Pope John Paul. One night, they had to wake the Pope about some matter of state. Not finding him in his bedroom they searched the papal apartments high and low until they eventually found the Holy Father in his chapel, prostrate on the floor before the Blessed Sacrament โ€“ his arms stretched out in the shape of the cross: Peter uniting himself to Christ in his moment of triumph over sin.

The memory of these holy pastors should serve, I think, to encourage us โ€“ encourage us to contemplate the cross of Christ more deeply ourselves; and feel its power. This afternoon, we welcome to this Cathedral the relic of someone who belongs to our Diocesan family. I mean the young Blessed Carlo Acutis, baptised just 33 years ago in Our Lady of Dolours, Fulham. Carlo was a true contemplative. He loved to contemplate Jesus in the Most Blessed Sacrament. But he had also contemplated the Cross โ€“ to the point of being able to say, on his deathbed, โ€œMum, Golgotha is for everyone.โ€ He was just 15.

Carlo is a very good saint to ask that, when we arrive at Golgotha ourselves, he might be with us there to make us strong. That this is possible we find affirmed by the Catechism of the Catholic Church, when it says, โ€œTo the offering of Christ are united not only the members still here on earth but also those already in the glory of heaven.โ€ (#1370) โ€œTo the offering of Christ are united not only the members still here on earth but also those already in the glory of heaven.โ€

So we can believe that when we gaze upon the Cross in the presence of the Most Holy Eucharist, we are indeed united to Blessed Carlo and all the saints; and should rightly ask them to help us learn to contemplate the cross and begin to feel its power transforming us.

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