Vatican City, 27 November 2014 (VIS) –
This morning the Pope received in audience the members of the Pauline
Family, the group of institutions that encompasses the Society of St.
Paul and the Daughters of St. Paul (Paulines), dedicated to the
apostolate through means of communication. Founded by Blessed Giacomo
Alberione (1884-1971), the Pauline Family is composed of ten members:
five religious congregations, four aggregated institutes and an
association of lay collaborators. This year it celebrates the
centenary of its foundation and, to commemorate this anniversary,
Francis invited them to renew their “commitment to living and
communicating faith”, especially through the editorial and
multimedia tools typical of their charism.
He also encouraged them to continue the
path their founder opened up and which the Family has followed so
far, “always keeping your gaze on broader horizons”, adding that
we must never forget that “evangelisation is essentially connected
with the proclamation of the Gospel to those who do not know Jesus
Christ, or have always denied Him. … Everyone has the right to
receive the Gospel. Christians have the duty of announcing it without
excluding anyone. This impulse to move towards the people, but also
to existential peripheries, this 'Catholic' impulse, is something you
have in the blood, in your DNA, for the very fact that your founder
was inspired by the figure and the mission of the apostle Paul”.
Francis explained that Blessed Giacomo
Alberione saw, in the announcement of Christ and of the Gospel to the
masses, the most authentic and most necessary form of charity that
could be offered to men and women who thirst for truth and justice”.
He added, “you too are called to serve the people of today, to whom
the Spirit sends you, with creativity and dynamic fidelity to your
charism, identifying the most appropriate ways of announcing Jesus. …
The imagination of charity knows no bounds, and knows how to open up
ever new roads to bring the breath of the Gospel into the most
diverse cultures and social environments”.
“Vatican Council II presented the
Church to us as a population on the move … a vision that expresses
Christian hope. … Therefore, our being a Church in progress, while
it roots us in the task of announcing Christ and His love for every
creature, also prevents us from being imprisoned by earthly and
mundane structures; it keeps the spirit open and makes us capable of
outlooks and demands that find their fulfilment in the beatitude of
the Lord.
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