It started with Pope Francis on Holy Thursday. It didn’t
surprise me that he would visit a juvenile prison. What surprised me was that
he prayed Mass there in place of the big Mass at St. John Lateran’s. It crossed
my mind: what about all the hundreds of people who might have wanted to
celebrate with the Pope? And how did these young people get so lucky? Now,
these very messed-up, probably a little jealous thoughts were soon interrupted
by thoughts of how annoyed the Pharisees etc. were with Jesus for eating with
tax collectors and sinners, and how Jesus said he’d come to heal the sinners,
since the righteous didn’t need healing. Now, I hardly mean to say that the
hordes of pilgrim-tourists in Rome for Easter are more righteous than the kids
in this prison. (Having been one of these pilgrim-tourists myself four years
ago, I remember how un-righteous the crowds and the jostling and the long hours
in line can leave you feeling, even if the overall experience is way cool, for once
in a lifetime.) But the young people whose lives were literally touched by this
beautiful feet-washing ceremony were probably much more in need of healing than
many of the people who just wanted to see the Pope, and probably got a lot more
out of the experience than a few blurry pictures. Alone the message that, yes,
they are totally worth the attention of such an important personality on such
an important day, is a powerful message to the young people, and maybe even
more so to the rest of us.
The message of the Pope’s actions on Holy Thursday carried
over to Good Friday for me, when I actually saw a clip of the Mass on the
evening news. I was so surprised that, after washing the young people’s feet,
he kissed them! I’d never seen any priest do that before. Apart from briefly
wondering just how awkward it might feel to have my feet kissed, my thoughts
immediately jumped to the Good Friday tradition of kissing the feet of Jesus on
the Cross. I happen to like this gesture very much, and always manage to
overcome my fear of germs to kiss those little wooden feet as a sign of love
for the One hanging on the cross for me. (The last couple years I’ve had to do
without, since this custom doesn’t seem as prevalent here in Germany.) But
anyway, the Pope’s gesture got me wondering whether I could imagine myself
kissing the feet of my fellow humans, in whom Jesus is more present than he is
in a carved crucifix. Whatsoever you do for the least of my people, that you do
unto me…
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