When Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of the Philippines spoke at the
World Meeting of Families in 2015, he addressed
the painful situations of loneliness, poverty, illness, addiction and other
issues that exist in the domestic church – all themes he is expected to touch
on when he comes to Vancouver March 19 March.
Cardinal Tagle’s talk two years ago in Philadelphia was
entitled The Family: A Home for the Wounded Heart. His Vancouver address is Keeping
Families in Faith: The Domestic Church in a Global Village.
Cardinal Tagle is professor of dogmatic synthesis at the Graduate School
of Theology of San Carlos Seminary, has a weekly television show, and over
500,000 followers on Facebook.
“When we talk about wounded hearts, we are talking about wounded people,” Cardinal
Tagle told the World Meeting of Families. “We are all wounded in one way
or another: spiritually, physically, financially, mentally, emotionally.
“These wounds always affect the family,” he said. “When someone we love is
wounded, their wounds become ours.”
Cardinal Tagle recognized that many personal wounds come from the family,
but they are healed there as well. “The home is the privileged place of healing
of wounded hearts,” he said.
He was clear that one of the challenges of the family is that it is always the
first and most intimate institution affected by the shadow experiences of life.
Financial struggles, disease, lack of education, war, unemployment, infidelity,
domestic violence, ethnic conflict, even religious exclusion: all of these affect
the individual and the family.
Cardinal Tagle warned that the wounds we experience are then sometimes
used as an excuse.
“Wounds make us vulnerable to exploitation and despair and even to sin,” he
said.
He said that one of the saddest things that can be experienced is a sense of
homelessness.
“You may have a big beautiful mansion,” he said, “but you can still be
homeless. The home is not measured in acres. A home is the gift of a loving
presence.”
As is his practice when he speaks to youth, Cardinal Tagle started to
sing, presenting the Burt Bacharach song, A House is Not a Home. “I'm not meant
to live alone,” Cardinal Tagle sang. “When I climb the stair and turn
the key, oh, please be there still in love with me.”
Cardinal Tagle challenged the crowd of nearly 20,000 to be radical in
their love and to allow the love that is nurtured in the family home to spill
over and be a leaven in the world.
“Every person who is wounded, even a stranger, even an enemy, needs healing,”
he explained. “I must love and offer them care.”
He went on to point out that Jesus washed the feet of his disciples, even the
one he knew would betray him.
Cardinal Tagle used the Gospel stories of the lost sheep, coin and child.
He explained that they all speak of loss and then celebration.
“The sheep in the analogy was probably sick or wounded, it was probably not
worth going after. It was a liability. Why would the shepherd look for the
sheep?” he asked.
“He searches them out because they are his own,” he answered. “And if it cannot
walk home, [Jesus] will carry it home.”
He spoke of the incarnation as the healing human condition. Cardinal Tagle sees
the act of God taking on flesh as an intimate act of solidarity.
Cardinal Tagle noted that Jesus fully embraced a wounded world by being
wounded himself.
“He experienced being hunted down … being a refugee in Egypt … being lost as a
teenager, and being branded as crazy, being homeless; he experienced the taunts
and ridicule even of religious leaders,” he listed. “He experienced betrayal by
a friend and death on a cross which was only for criminals and being buried in
a borrowed tomb.”
Cardinal Tagle said that Jesus then transforms the wounds into the triumph
of love through the resurrection. “Jesus heals by first being wounded,” he
explained.
He cited Matthew 10:7-8 which explains that the healing of the sick is a sign
of the coming of the Kingdom of God.
“When God reigns, when God rules, people are served with care, people are
honoured, people are saved,” he shared. “Where Jesus rules, wounds are attended
to.”
One of the most powerful insights Cardinal Tagle offered the
international, intergenerational audience is that it is in our very woundedness
that the charism of healing can come.
“Since all of us are wounded, no one should be able to say, 'I have no gift of
healing,' ” he said. “Our wounds will make us avenues of understanding,
solidarity, compassion, and love.”
He argued that the church must embody the redemptive mission of God and that
the church of wounded members becomes a church of solidarity. “For it is this
type of community that will prevent alienation, loneliness and further
woundedness,” he said.
“At the very core of the church's identity is mission. You are not there to
isolate … you are there to heal, to unite and to reconcile.”
Cardinal Tagle will be speaking at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre on March 19. Click here for tickets and more information.
Canadian Catholic News