Pope Francis
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
June 30 2022
Even if our faith journey is imperfect, we can ask Saints Peter and Paul to teach us how to always increase our trust in the Lord and grow closer to Him.
During the Angelus, following Mass in St Peter’s Basilica, Pope Francis offered this suggestion as he reflected on Saints Peter and Paul on their 29 June feast day.
He began by recalling the day’s Gospel according to St. Matthew, in which Peter says to Jesus: “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”
Apprenticeship of faith
The Pope noted that for the fisherman Simon, later called Peter, it was the beginning of a journey, and that “it would indeed have to be a long time before the scope of those words entered deeply into his life, involving him entirely.”
The Holy Father pointed out the two Apostles experienced an ‘apprenticeship’ of faith, a journey many faithful likewise face.
To illustrate, Pope Francis recalled that Peter, just after having declared his faith to the Lord, rejects the idea that Jesus will have to suffer and be condemned to death, provoking Jesus to turn and say to him: ‘Get behind me, Satan!”
In trials, like Peter, does our faith falter?
The Pope suggested that we can relate to Peter’s wavering faith.
“We are inclined to protest to the Lord, telling Him that it is not right, that there must be other, more direct, less strenuous paths. We experience the laceration of the believer, who believes in Jesus, trusts in Him; but at the same time,” Francis acknowledged, “feels that it is difficult to follow Him and is tempted to seek paths other than those of the Master.”
St. Peter, the Holy Father said, experienced this inner turmoil, and needed time to grow in maturity.
“At first, he was horrified at the thought of the Cross; but at the end of his life, he bore witness to the Lord with courage, even to the point of being crucified—according to tradition—upside down.”
St. Paul’s doubts and conversion
The Apostle Paul also went through a slow maturation of faith, experiencing moments of uncertainty and doubt.
The apparition of the Risen One on the road to Damascus, the Pope said, turned him from a persecutor into a Christian, and “must be seen as the start of a journey during which the Apostle came to terms with the crises, failures, and constant torment.”
The journey of faith, the Pope said, “is never a walk in the park, but is instead demanding, sometimes arduous.”
Even Paul, who became a Christian, he said, had to learn to be one in a gradual manner, especially through times of trial.
Before praying the midday prayer of the Angelus, Pope Francis prayed, “May the Virgin Mary, Queen of the Apostles, teach us to imitate them by advancing every day on the path of faith.” – Vatican News