Vatican
City, 12 October 2013 (VIS) – This morning Pope Francis received in
audience the participants in the study seminar “God entrusts
humanity to women”, promoted by the Pontifical Council for the
Laity, on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the publication of
Blessed John Paul II's apostolic letter, “Mulieris dignitatem”,
dated 15 August 1988. The seminar was attended by experts and
representatives of ecclesial movements, from twenty-five countries
and from diverse professional fields.
The
Holy Father remarked that “'Mulieris dignitatem' is an historical
document, the first of the pontifical Magisterium entirely dedicated
to the theme of women”, and with reference to the title of the
seminar, he observed that in his opinion the key to understanding
John Paul II's phrase is maternity.
“Many
things can change and have changed in cultural and social evolution,
but there remains the fact that it is the woman who conceives,
carries and gives birth to the sons and daughters of men. And this is
not simply a biological fact, but also gives rise to a wealth of
implications both for the woman herself, for her way of being, and
for her relationships, for the way in which she positions herself
with regard to human life and life in general. In calling the woman
to the role of maternity, God has in an entirely special way
entrusted the human being to her.
“However,
two dangers are always present, two extreme opposites which mortify
the woman and her vocation. The first is to reduce maternity to a
social role, to a task which, while noble, in practice marginalises
women, along with all their potential, and does recognise their full
value in building communities. This occurs in both the civil and
ecclesial contexts. And as a reaction to this there is another, of a
nature opposed to the first: that of the promotion of a type of
emancipation that, in order to occupy the spaces subtracted from the
male, abandons the female, along with her valuable characteristics.
And here I would like to emphasise that women have a particular
sensibility for 'matters of God', especially in helping us to
understand mercy, tenderness and the love that God has for us.
“'Mulieris
dignitatem', concluded Pope Francis, “is located in this context,
and offers profound, organic reflection, with a solid anthropological
basis illuminated by the Revelation. From here we must undertake anew
the task of deepening and promotion that I have already expressed on
a number of occasions. Also in the Church, it is important to ask:
what type of presence do women have? Could it be accorded greater
worth? It is an issue of great importance to me, and for this reason
I wished to meet with you and bless you and your work. Thank you, and
let us continue in this work together! May Mary Most Holy, great
woman, Mother of Jesus and of all the children of God, accompany us”.
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