VATICAN CITY (CNS) – The early November feasts of All Saints and All Souls call Catholics to contemplate their ultimate destiny, hope in the eternal happiness of their beloved dead and remember the thousands of innocent people dying each day because of human evil and selfishness.
Because human beings believe they are gods and the lords of creation, they discard the poor, the old and the young, they wage wars and persecute those who do not believe the way they do, Pope Francis said Nov. 1 as he celebrated an evening Mass at Rome’s Verano cemetery.
The pope told thousands of people gathered amid the tombs that before Mass, he noticed a plaque commemorating the 1943 Allied bombing of the cemetery and thought, “That’s nothing compared to what is happening today.”
“Man has made himself lord of all, he thinks he’s god, he thinks he’s king,” the pope said. There is a whole “industry of destruction” with wars, pollution, “throwing away babies, throwing away the aged.”
As winter begins in the Northern Hemisphere, he said he was thinking of the thousands of people forced to leave their homes and flee to the desert, living “in tents, feeling the cold, without medicine, hungry” because of those who believe they are god. The pope presumably was talking about the situation in Syria and Iraq where Islamic State fighters continue to drive people from their homes.
God has given his children a blessing, the pope said: “hope. The hope that he will have pity on his people, that he would have pity on those who are in the midst of the ‘great tribulation’” described in Revelation 7:14.
The Beatitudes – Blessed are the poor in spirit, blessed are the peacemakers – is the only path “that will lead us to an encounter with God,” he said. “Only that path will save us from destruction, from the devastation of the earth, of creation, of morals, of history, of the family.”