Mass in Havana Cathedral

The pilgrimage in Havana- Mass at Cathedral on March 27 and Papal Mass at Plaza de la Revolucion on March 28, 2012

During the afternoon of Tuesday, March 27, the 300 pilgrims gathered at Havana’s Cathedral to attend a High Mass celebrated by Archbishop Wenski and the Bishops and priests that accompanied him from the parishes of the Archdiocese of Miami.

The following pictures show the most significant moments of this event. The Homily given by Archbishop Wenski is included.

Havana Cathedral- March 27, 2012

Homily preached by Archbishop Thomas Wenski
at the Cathedral of Havana, March 27, 2012.

We are, like Pope Benedict XVI, pilgrims of charity here in Cuba. We come from Miami and the United States – in our group we have people born here, the children of people born here and people of other national heritages. We are united in one common faith.

As the theme of the jubilee of the 400th anniversary of the discovery and presence of Our Lady of Charity states so well: A Jesus por Maria, la caridad nos une (To Jesus through Mary, charity makes us one). Our presence here today in this historic cathedral is also another witness to this unity that is ours in the Body of Christ which is the Church.

On behalf of all of us, I wish to express our gratitude to His Eminence, Cardinal Ortega, for making it possible for us to celebrate Mass in this the Mother Church of the Archdiocese of Habana. The stones of this cathedral have witnessed over the centuries the unfolding of much of the history of Cuba – with all its lights and shadows. And these stones will witness in years to come the further unfolding of the history of Cuba and its people.

We come here as pilgrims to pray that – as Pope John Paul II said in his visit 14 years ago – that the Cuban people will be the protagonists of that history; and that inspired by the Word of God and the values of the Christian heritage that has shaped Cuban identity for more than 400 years, the Cuban people will build for themselves and their posterity a future of hope.

In the Psalm today we prayed: O Lord, hear my prayer and let my cry come to you. The psalmist prays: “Let this be written for the generations to come and let his future creatures praise the Lord. ‘The Lord looked down from his holy height; from the heavens he beheld the earth. To hear the groaning of the prisoners, to release those doomed to die.’”

Those doomed to die, Jesus tells us in the Gospel today, are those who die in their sins because they have refused to recognize him as the “I am” of human history. In yesterday’s feast of the Annunciation, when the Word was made flesh, Jesus is revealed both as the human face of God and the divine face of man. As Pope Benedict said yesterday in Santiago:

“God has created us as the fruit of his infinite love; hence, to live in accordance with his will is the way to encounter our genuine identity, the truth of our being, while apart from God we are alienated from ourselves and are hurled into the void. The obedience of faith is true liberty, authentic redemption which allows us to unite ourselves to the Love of Jesus in his determination to conform himself to the will of the Father.”

Again as the Pope said yesterday: “…when God is put aside, the world becomes an inhospitable place for man, and frustrates creation’s true vocation to be a space for the covenant, for the ‘Yes’ to the love between God and humanity.”

Order of Malta
Cuban Association

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Phone: (786) 888-6494/6496