Homily by the Servant of God Joseph De Piro
about the Sacred Heart of Jesus
Undoubtedly the heart is the most important part
of the human body. It works continuously to
safeguard the health of the human body. At
night, when after a full day’s work the tired
arms are limp, the eyes shut and the brain
paralysed in sleep, the heart works on. It
continues to beat, always vigilant in its
responsibility to maintain our healthy life.
Let us now focus on the most perfect person who
ever lived on this earth. Jesus Christ chose to
unite our human nature to his divinity. In his
humanity we also find a heart perfectly
fulfilling its functions, pumping through the
veins the pure blood it received from the
Immaculate Virgin Mary. As we reflect further,
we think about the motives that led Jesus Christ
to assume this human heart, making him one with
us. We discover that the aim of this remarkable
action was nothing else than our redemption.
Jesus Christ wanted nothing other more than to
repay the debts we had contracted with the
Divine Justice through our sin.
It is precisely within this heart, dear
brothers and sisters, that we encounter Jesus’
infinitive love for us. Here that we come across
a real mystery of love. Jesus himself affirmed
this saying: “This is the heart that has loved
humanity so much”.
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“It
was necessary for him to show us his love,
to help us understand his
infinite love
for us.” |
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You see therefore that just one voluntary act by
Our Lord Jesus Christ has infinite value. He
therefore had no need to suffer for our
redemption. There was no other need for his
Sacred Heart than to keep Jesus alive in order
to unite his humanity with his divinity. Yet
what do we discover? Jesus was not happy with
simply sharing our humanity. He had already
chosen to suffer for our sake. He did not choose
only to suffer a little pain, but to the point
of shedding all his blood. He put no limits on
his suffering. He wanted to shed his blood till
there was not even a drop left in his Sacred
Heart. “This is the heart that has loved
humanity so much”.
In
order to be able to somehow understand Jesus’
immense love for us, let us come down and tell a
human mother that her lavish care for her sick
child is unnecessary and fruitless ... Listen to
her reply: she will endure sleepless nights; she
will be ready for any sort of sacrifice; she
will seek all remedies, futile for her child’s
cure, but necessary for the child to feel loved,
and even more necessary as a declaration of her
love.
The
same happens with Jesus. Tell him that he need
not have been born in a cave, exposed to the
winter cold. Tell him that he need not have
suffered - that he need not have suffered so
much. Tell him that he could have done something
less for us. Tell him that he could have saved
at least one a drop of that precious blood with
which his Sacred Heart functioned. He would
immediately reply that he could not. For the
Sacred Heart of Jesus all this was necessary. It
was inevitable. It was necessary for him to show
us his love, to help us understand his infinite
love for us. “This
is the heart that has loved humanity so much”. |