Newly created Cardinal McElroy celebrates Mass in Rome

Friday, Sep. 02, 2022
By Catholic News Service

ROME  — Christian humility implies placing one’s desire to maintain appearances or selfish interests aside and instead putting the well-being of others first, said Cardinal Robert W. McElroy of San Diego, one of the 20 churchmen welcomed into the College of Cardinals during the Aug. 27 consistory in St. Peter’s Basilica..

Celebrating a Mass of Thanksgiving at St. Patrick’s Church, official home of the U.S. Catholic community in Rome, Aug. 28, Cardinal McElroy said many often have the wrong notion of what is Christian humility, which is not “putting ourselves down, it is not underestimating ourselves” nor “presenting ourselves as less than we are.”

“Humility is two things,” he said. “It is putting aside the pretenses and facades we often erect to try to look better to others than we are and, secondly, challenging and facing the impulse all of us have to place our own interests ahead of those of others.”

In his homily, Cardinal McElroy reflected on the Sunday Gospel from St. Luke, in which Jesus proclaimed that “every one who exalts himself will be humbled, but the one who humbles himself will be exalted,” Cardinal McElroy said that seven Trappist monks who were kidnapped by terrorists from the Tibhirine monastery in Algeria and beheaded in 1996, depicted in the 2010 French film“Of Gods and Men,” were only able to arrive at a consensus to stay after humbling themselves by setting aside “pretenses and facades.”

“So it is in our lives,” the cardinal said. “People can get caught up; we can all so easily get caught up in pretenses and facades that hide what’s really going on with us and they become prisons; prisons that imprison us and prisons that shut out other people from understanding our lives.”

Humility, he added, “calls us to put aside those facades and to be open and honest with people; not to build facades, not to pretend that we are better than we are.”

Cardinal McElroy said that Jesus’ words in the Gospel challenges Christians to be humble and “to understand that we are called here in this world to take account of the rights, the lives, the love of others as much as we do ourselves.”

“That is the humility that Christ calls us to in the Gospel today, and that is the humility which we should ask God for today and every day,” the cardinal said.

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