Pope
Francis said that people cannot be Christians without the Church,
explaining that Christian identity is rooted in it and that believers
cannot stand alone.
"Our Christian identity is belonging to a people: the Church. Without this, we are not Christians. We entered the Church through baptism: there we are Christians," Francis said during Mass on Thursday, Vatican Radio reported.
Pope
Francis consecrated the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary at an
October 13, 2013 Mass in St. Peter’s Square, in the climactic ceremony
of a Marian Day celebration.
"A
Christian without a church is something purely idealistic, it is not
real," the Roman Catholic Church leader argued. He said that one cannot
"understand a Christian alone" any more than "Jesus Christ alone" can be
understood.
"Jesus
Christ did not fall from the sky like a superhero who comes to save us.
No. Jesus Christ has a history. And we can say, and it is true, that
God has a history because He wanted to walk with us. And you cannot
understand Jesus Christ without His history. So a Christian without
history, without a Christian nation, a Christian without the Church is
incomprehensible. It is a thing of the laboratory, an artificial thing, a
thing that cannot give life," Francis said.
The
Vatican leader urged believers to "ask for the grace of memory, the
memory of the journey that the people of God has made," as well as for
personal memory – "What God did for me, in my life, how has He made me
walk."
He
added that the "grace of hope" is also necessary for Christian
identity, explaining that he does not mean optimism, but "something
else." "Ask for the grace to renew the covenant with the Lord who has
called us every day," Francis said.
During Mass on Monday, Francis also theorized about alien life forms, and suggested that even Martians should be welcomed to be baptized as well.
"If
– for example – tomorrow an expedition of Martians came, and some of
them came to us, here ... Martians, right? Green, with that long nose
and big ears, just like children paint them ... And one says, 'But I
want to be baptized!' What would happen?" Pope Francis remarked, and
told the audience that baptism is open to everyone. He also recalled the
words of Peter: "If then God gave them the same gift He gave to us when
we came to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I to be able to
hinder God?" source - Christian Post