Joy is more than emotion, it is a gift of the Holy Spirit, Pope Francis says

Vatican City, Apr 16, 2020 / 03:12 am (CNA).- Joy is a grace and a gift of the Holy Spirit, not just positive emotions or feeling cheerful, Pope Francis said at Mass at the Vatican Thursday.

Joy “is not the consequence of emotions that burst for a wonderful thing… No, it is more,” he said April 16. “This joy, this which fills us, is a fruit of the Holy Spirit. Without the Spirit one cannot have this joy.”

“To be full of joy,” the pope said, “is the experience of the highest consolation, when the Lord makes us understand that this is something different from being cheerful, positive, bright…”

“No, it is another thing,” he continued. It is “an overflowing joy that really hits us.”

“Receiving the joy of the Spirit is a grace.”

The pope reflected on joy as a fruit of the Holy Spirit during his morning Mass at his Vatican residence, the Casa Santa Marta.

He focused his homily on a line from St. Luke’s Gospel, which recounts the appearance of Jesus to his disciples in Jerusalem after his resurrection.

The disciples were scared, believing they had seen a ghost, Francis explained, but Jesus showed them the wounds on his hands and feet, to assure them that it was him in the flesh.

A line then says: “while [the disciples] were still incredulous for joy and were amazed…”

This phrase “gives me so much consolation,” the pope said. “This passage from the Gospel is one of my favorites.”

He repeated: “But since for joy they did not believe…”

“There was so much joy that [the disciples thought], ‘no, this cannot be true. This is not real, it is too much joy.’”

He said the disciples were so overflowing with joy, which is the fullness of consolation, the fullness of the presence of the Lord, it “paralyzed” them.

This is one of the desires St. Paul had for his people in Rome, when he wrote “may the God of hope fill you with joy,” Pope Francis explained.

He noted that the expression “full of joy” continues to be repeated throughout the Acts of the Apostles and on the day of Jesus’ ascension.

“The disciples returned to Jerusalem, says the Bible, ‘full of joy.’”

Pope Francis encouraged people to read the last few paragraphs of St. Pope Paul VI’s exhortation, Evangelii nuntiandi.

Pope Paul VI “speaks of joyful Christians, joyful evangelizers, and not those who live always ‘down,’” Francis said.

He also pointed to a passage in the Book of Nehemiah which he said can help Catholics reflect on joy.

In Nehemiah chapter 8, the people returned to Jerusalem and rediscovered the book of the law. There was a “great celebration and all the people gathered to listen to the priest Ezra, who read the book of the law,” the pope described.

The people were moved and wept tears of joy, he said. “When the priest Ezra finished, Nehemiah said to the people: ‘Rest assured, now do not cry anymore, keep the joy, because joy in the Lord is your strength.’”

Pope Francis said, “this word from the book of Nehemiah will help us today.”

“The great strength that we have to transform, to preach the Gospel, to go forward as witnesses of life is the joy of the Lord, which is a fruit of the Holy Spirit, and today we ask him to grant us this fruit,” he concluded.

At the end of Mass, Pope Francis led an act of spiritual communion for all those who cannot receive the Eucharist and offered several minutes of silent adoration concluding with benediction.

Francis’ intention during the Mass, offered amid the coronavirus pandemic, was for pharmacists: “they too work a lot to help the sick recover from sickness,” he said. “We also pray for them.”


If you value the news and views Catholic World Report provides, please consider donating to support our efforts. Your contribution will help us continue to make CWR available to all readers worldwide for free, without a subscription. Thank you for your generosity!

Click here for more information on donating to CWR. Click here to sign up for our newsletter.


1 Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

All comments posted at Catholic World Report are moderated. While vigorous debate is welcome and encouraged, please note that in the interest of maintaining a civilized and helpful level of discussion, comments containing obscene language or personal attacks—or those that are deemed by the editors to be needlessly combative or inflammatory—will not be published. Thank you.


*