Vatican City, 14 September 2015 (VIS) –
This morning the eleventh meeting of the Holy Father with the Council
of Cardinals began. The work of the “Council of Nine” will
continue until Wednesday 16 September.
Monday, September 14, 2015
In two interviews the Pope reaffirms that unfair economic systems cause migration and insists on care for creation
Vatican City, 14 September 2015 (VIS) –
Pope Francis has recently granted two interviews: one to the
Portuguese broadcaster Radio Renascenca, on the occasion of the
Portuguese bishops' “ad Limina” visit, and the other to the
Argentine Radio Milenium, focusing on care for creation and the value
of friendship and dialogue.
In the first, in response to a question
regarding an eventual visit to Portugal to commemorate the centenary
of the apparitions of the Virgin at Fatima, Francis expresses his
wish to visit the country and adds that “the Virgin always asks us
to receive and care for the family and the commandments. She does not
ask for anything unusual. … And she appears to children. It is
curious, she always seeks the simplest souls”.
With regard to the phenomenon of
migration to Europe, he affirms, “it is the tip of an iceberg. We
see these refugees, these poor people, who flee from war, from
hunger. … But behind this there is the cause, and the cause is an
unfair socio-economic system”. He adds, “Speaking of the
ecological issue, within our socio-economic structure, within
politics, at the centre there must always be the person. And today's
dominant economic system has replaced the person at the centre with
the god of money, the idol”. Therefore, he says, it is necessary to
look to the root causes. “When the cause is hunger, create jobs and
invest. When the cause is war, seek peace, work for peace. Today the
world is at war; it is at war against itself”.
In this respect, the Pope reaffirms the
importance of acceptance. “Accepting people, and welcoming them as
they come”. With regard to his appeal to all parishes in Europe to
host a family of refugees, he specified, “When I talk about a
parish welcoming a family, I do not mean that they should go and live
in the parish house, but rather that the parish community seek a
place, a corner where they can make a little apartment or, if there
is no other option, rent a modest apartment for this family; that
they should have a roof over their heads, they should be welcomed,
and that they should be included within the community”.
He also considers the theme of the
culture of well-being, commenting that the birthrate is very low in
many countries such as Italy, Portugal and Spain. “When there is an
empty space, people seek to fill it. If a country has no children,
migrants come to occupy that space. … Not wanting children is, in
part – and this is my interpretation, I don't know if it is correct
– it is linked to the culture of comfort, isn't it? And then the
elderly are left alone. I think that the great challenge facing
Europe is to become once again Mother Europe, rather than Grandmother
Europe. … It must be recognised that Europe has an exceptional
culture – centuries of culture – and must regain her capacity for
leadership in the concert of nations. Or rather, she must become once
again the Europe who shows the way, as she has the culture to do so.
… Europe must assume her role once again, as she has the culture to
do so, to recover her identity. It is true that Europe has made
mistakes. I do not reproach, I merely recall this. When she has
wanted to speak about her identity, she has avoided recognising what
is probably the deepest part of it: her Christian roots. We all make
mistakes in life, but for Europe it is not too late to change”.
The Pope also emphasises that the
Church must be outbound and must be willing to take risks. “If a
church, a parish, a diocese, an institute, lives closed up in itself,
it comes to a halt. It is the same thing that happens to a closed up
home. We end up with an unhealthy Church, with fixed rules, without
creativity, 'insured' but not safe. Instead, if a church or a parish
goes out and evangelises, the same thing happens that can occur to
any person who goes out into the street – accidents can befall
them. So, between a sickly Church or an accident-prone one, I would
prefer an accident-prone Church as at least she reaches out”.
With reference to his expectations of
the Jubilee of Mercy, he expresses his hope that “everyone will
come. May they come and experience God's love and forgiveness”, and
with regard to the letter to Archbishop Fisichella in which he
requests forgiveness during the Jubilee for the most difficult cases
and to his two Motu Proprios on the reform of processes for declaring
nullity of marriage, he explains that his intention is “to simplify
… to facilitate faith among the people … to enable the Church to
be a mother”.
In the interview granted to Milenium,
Francis says that “we are mistreating creation; at times we treat
it as if it were our worst enemy”, and “we live in a system that,
to earn money, has displaced man from the centre and put money in his
place, leading to the existence of “corrupt systems, with slavery,
forced labour and disregard for creation”.
In relation to fundamentalism “as its
followers are faithful to an idea but not to a reality”, Francis
warns of the danger represented by this “darkness that obscures our
horizon” and causes us to become closed up in our own convictions
and 'ideologies'. “It is a wall that prevents encounter with
others”.
Angelus: following Jesus means rejecting the worldly mentality
Vatican City, 13 September 2015 (VIS) –
The path of those who follow Jesus does not lead to glory but is
instead destined for true freedom, explained the Pope to the
thousands of faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square this morning to
pray the Angelus.
Francis commented on today's Gospel
reading in which Jesus, on the path to Caesarea Philippi, asks His
disciples what the people said about Him, as some of them considered
Him to have been sent by God, but did not yet recognise Him as the
Messiah. The apostles answered that some considered Him as the living
image of John the Baptist, others Elijah or one of the great
prophets. Jesus then asked His disciples, “But who do you say that
I am?”.
“Here is the most important question,
that Jesus addresses to those who followed him, to confirm their
faith. Peter answers on behalf of all of them, without hesitation,
'You are the Christ'. Jesus is moved by Peter's faith and recognises
that it is the 'fruit … of the special grace of God the Father'.
And so he openly reveals to the disciples what awaits him in
Jerusalem: that is, that 'the Son of Man must suffer many things …
and be killed, and after three days rise again'. But upon hearing
this Peter, who has just proclaimed his faith in Jesus as the
Messiah, is horrified. He takes the Master aside and rebukes him.
Jesus reacts with great severity, saying 'Get behind me, Satan! For
you are not setting your mind on the things of God, but on the things
of man'”.
“Jesus realises that in Peter, as in
the other disciples – and in each one of us! - the grace of God is
opposed by the temptation of the Evil one, that would divert us from
God's will. By announcing that He must suffer and be put to death to
then rise again, Jesus wishes to show to those who follow Him that He
is a humble servant. And the Servant obeys His Father's Word and
will, unto the complete sacrifice of His own life. Therefore, turning
to the crowd around Him, He declares that he who wishes to be His
disciple must accept being a servant, as He has made Himself a
servant, and warns, 'If anyone would come after me, let him deny
himself and take up his cross and follow me'”.
“Following Jesus means bearing one's
own cross – we all have one – to accompany Him on the way, a
rough path that is not that of success or fleeting glory, but which
leads to true freedom, which liberates us from selfishness and sin.
It means clearly refusing that worldly mentality that places the self
and one's own interests at the centre of existence. … Jesus instead
invites us to give our life for Him, for the Gospel, so as to receive
it again renewed, fulfilled and authentic. We are certain, thanks to
Jesus, that this path leads ultimately to resurrection, to full and
definitive life with God. The decision to follow our Master and Lord
Who made Himself the Servant to all demands that we walk behind Him
and listen carefully to His Word – reading every day a passage from
the Gospel, and in the Sacraments”.
Finally he addressed the young people
in the Square: “I ask you: have you felt the wish to follow Jesus
more closely? Think, pray, and let the Lord speak to you”.
The Pope remembers the first Catholic martyr of South Africa
Vatican City, 13 September 2015 (VIS) –
After today's Angelus prayer, the Pope mentioned that today in South
Africa Samuel Benedict Daswa, the Catholic Church's first martyr in
that country, is proclaimed blessed. A primary school teacher, Daswa
was stoned to death in 1990 in Tshitanini, a village in the province
of Limpopo, for attributing a fire affecting some huts to lightning
and not to the forces of evil, and for refusing to pay for the
services of a sangoma to end the storms. “In his life, he always
showed great coherence, bravely assuming Christian attitudes and
refusing worldly and pagan habits. May his witness especially help
families to spread Christ's truth and charity. His witness joins that
of many of our brothers and sisters, young and elderly, children,
persecuted, cast out and killed for confessing Jesus Christ. We thank
all these martyrs for their witness, Samuel Benedict Daswa and all of
them, and ask them to intercede for us”.
He concluded by greeting teachers from
Sardinia in precarious working conditions, and expressed his hope
that the problems of the world of work “be faced taking into full
consideration the family and its needs”.
Cooperatives must defend and promote an economy of honesty
Vatican City, 12 September 2015 (VIS)
“The Church knows the value of cooperatives. Many of them
originated from priests, committed lay faithful, and communities
inspired by the spirit of Christian solidarity … and in the
encyclical 'Laudato si'' I have underlined their value in the fields
of renewable energy and agriculture”, said the Pope this morning as
he received in audience in the Vatican's Paul VI Hall more than seven
thousand people, including directors, employees and their families,
from the Cooperative Credit Bank of Rome (BCC).
In his address Francis reiterated the
suggestions he made in February to the Confederation of Cooperatives,
adding that each one should dedicate itself to its specific mission:
“Continue to be a motor for the development of the weakest part of
local communities and of civil society, thinking especially of the
young unemployed and aiming at the birth of new cooperative
enterprises. Be agents in proposing and implementing new welfare
solutions, starting in the field of healthcare. Occupy yourselves
with the relationship between the economy and social justice, keeping
the dignity and value of the person at the centre. The person must
always be at the centre, not the god of money. Facilitate and
encourage family life, and propose cooperative and mutual solutions
for the management of common goods, that cannot become the property
of the few or the object of speculation. Promote a fraternal and
social use of money, in the style of the true cooperative, in which
people are not guided by capital, but instead capital is guided by
people. Favour the growth of an economy of honesty”.
“The economy of honesty – in this
age in which the wind of corruption blows in all places. You are
required not only to be honest – this is normal – but to spread
and entrench honesty everywhere. A struggle against corruption”,
remarked the Pope, suggesting as a final point “active
participation in globalisation so that it may be a globalisation of
solidarity”.
“You are the largest Cooperative
Credit Bank in Italy”, he recalled. “The most important challenge
you face is to grown while continuing to be truly cooperative,
rather, becoming even more so. This means promoting the active
participation of your members. Work together and work for others. …
Banking is delicate enterprise that requires great rigour. But a
cooperative bank must have something more: it must seek to humanise
the economy, uniting efficiency with solidarity”.
In social doctrine there is an
important word: “solidarity. As cooperative credit banks you have
put the principle of subsidiarity into practice when you faced the
difficulties of the crisis with your means, joining forces and not at
the expense of others. This is subsidiarity: not placing a burden on
institutions and therefore on the country when it is possible to face
problems with one's own strengths, responsibly”. It is also
important for cooperatives to allocate resources to charity and
mutual funds and to be aware of where income is produced, “with
attention to keep people, the young and families, at the centre”.
“At the origin of rural savings banks
it was expected that the credit cooperative would be able to
stimulate further initiatives of cooperation”, observed Francis.
“This spirit remains valid. The BCC can be the nucleus around which
a large network can be built, allowing the birth of businesses that
create employment … there are many people without work. Businesses
that create work in order to support families, and to experiment with
microcredit and other ways of humanising the economy, and above all
to give every man and woman the opportunity to have the dignity of
work”, he concluded.
Pope's message for the opening of the plenary Assembly of the Council of Episcopal Conferences of Europe
Vatican City, 12 September 2015 (VIS) –
Yesterday afternoon the Holy Father send a message to Cardinal Peter
Erdo, president of the Council of Episcopal Conferences of Europe,
which holds its plenary assembly in the Holy Land from 11 to 16
September. The following is the full text of the message:
“I send fraternal greetings and
prayerful good wishes to you and all the members of the Council of
European Bishops' Conferences gathering in the Holy Land from 11 to
16 September 2015. As you reflect on the life of the Church in your
various countries, I pray that your time together may be above all a
time of deep prayer and solidarity. May your rest in the Lord renew
you in holiness of life and in apostolic zeal for those entrusted to
your care. May it also rekindle for you the freshness of the Gospel,
from which 'new avenues arise, new paths of creativity open up, with
different forms of expression, more eloquent sings and words with new
meaning for today's world'. I especially entrust to your prayers the
upcoming General Synod, that the Church may respond with ever greater
urgency and generosity to the needs of the family. Invoking the
intercession of Mary, our Mother, I willingly impart my Apostolic
Blessing to all of you as a pledge of wisdom and strength in Jesus
Christ our Lord”.
Holy Father's calendar for September to November 2015
Vatican City, 12 September 2015 (VIS) –
The Office of Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff has
published the following calendar of liturgical celebrations at which
the Holy Father will preside from September to November:
SEPTEMBER
Saturday 19 to Monday 28: Apostolic
trip to Cuba and the United States of America.
OCTOBER
Saturday 3: at 7 p.m. in St. Peter's
Square, prayer vigil in preparation for the 14th Ordinary General
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops.
Sunday 4, 27th Sunday of Ordinary Time:
at 10 a.m. in the Vatican Basilica, Holy Mass for the opening of the
14th General Ordinary Assembly of the Synod of Bishops.
Sunday 18, 29th Sunday of Ordinary
Time: at 10.15 a.m. in the Vatican Basilica, Holy Mass for the
canonisation of Blesseds Vincenzo Grossi, Mary of the Immaculate
Conception, and the couple Louis and Marie-Azelie Martin.
Sunday 25, 30th Sunday of Ordinary
Time: at 10 a.m. in the Vatican Basilica, Holy Mass for the
conclusion of the 14th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of
Bishops.
NOVEMBER
Sunday 1, Solemnity of All Saints: Holy
Mass at 4 p.m. in the Verano Cemetery, Rome
Monday 2, All Souls Day: at 6 p.m. in
the Vatican Grottoes, a moment of prayer for deceased Supreme
Pontiffs.
Thursday 5: at 11.30 a.m. at the altar
of the Cathedra in the Vatican Basilica, Holy Mass for the souls of
cardinals and bishops who died during the year.
Sunday 15: at 4 p.m., visit to the
Evangelical and Lutheran Church of Rome.
Wednesday 25 to Monday 30: Apostolic
trip to Kenya, Uganda and the Central African Republic.
Cor Unum convenes meeting on the humanitarian crisis in Syria and Iraq
Vatican City, 14 September 2015 (VIS) –
The Pontifical Council “Cor Unum” has organised a meeting on the
humanitarian crisis in Syria and Iraq to be held on 17 September,
which will be attended in particular by the Catholic charitable
organisations active in the Middle East and the bishops of the
region.
The meeting, supported by more than 30
organisations, will be divided into two parts. During the morning,
after the introduction by Msgr. Giampietro Dal Toso, secretary of the
Pontifical Council, there will be addresses from Cardinal Leonardo
Sandri, prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches, and
the United Nations under-secretary general for Humanitarian Affairs.
There will then be a presentation of the report on humanitarian aid
provided by ecclesial entities in the context of the crisis in Syria
and Iraq (2014-2015), prepared by “Cor Unum”.
In the afternoon, following the
presentation by Msgr. Khaled Akasheh, director of the Office for
Islam of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, and
updates from the local Churches by Archbishop Mario Zenari, apostolic
nuncio in Syria, Bishop Antoine Audo, president of Caritas Syria and
Bishop Shlemon Warduni, president of Caritas Iraq, the meeting will
focus on concrete aspects of cooperation between the various actors
in Syria, Iraq and the neighbouring countries.
The aim of the meeting, following the
itinerary adopted during the last three years, will be to evaluate
the work carried out so far by Catholic charitable organisations in
the context of the crisis; to share information on the evolution of
the crisis and the Church's responses to the humanitarian situation;
to discuss key issues that have emerged and to identify future
priorities; to analyse the situation of Christian communities
resident in the countries affected by war, promoting synergy between
ecclesial organisms, religious congregations and dioceses; and to
analyse the activity of the “Humanitarian Focal Point”,
instituted by Catholic charitable agencies within “Cor Unum” last
year.
The crisis in Syria and Iraq is at the
centre of the attention of the international community due to the
seriousness of the situation caused by war. The Holy See, aside from
its diplomatic activity, participates actively in aid programmes and
in offering humanitarian assistance. Since 2011, according to
available data, the crisis has claimed over 250 thousand victims and
has caused a million injuries. There are currently over 12 million
people in need of aid in Syria and more than eight million in Iraq;
there are 7.6 million internally displaced people in Syria and more
than three million in Iraq, and four million Syrian refugees
throughout the Middle East: in particular, there are 1.9 in Turkey,
1.1 in Lebanon, and more than 600 thousand in Jordan.
The Courtyard of Francis, from 23 to 27 September in Assisi
Vatican City, 14 September 2015 (VIS) –
From 23 to 27 September the Italian city of Assisi will be the seat
of the “Courtyard of Francis”, a place of encounter and dialogue,
that will welcome political and institutional figures, artists and
intellectuals, and all other men and women who wish to listen and to
participate.
The initiative, which develops from the
“Courtyard of the Gentiles” organised by the Pontifical Council
for Culture some years ago, proposes, in the birthplace of the saint
who “was not afraid to speak with the Sultan of Egypt, to embrace a
leper, to involve all of creation in a choral chant”, to delve into
the deepest identity of people, “way beyond differences of faith,
ideas, behaviour and political and social alliances”, as Cardinal
Gianfranco Ravasi explained today in a press conference held in the
Holy See Press Office.
The other speakers at the Conference
were the sociologist Zygmunt Bauman, the director of the Museum of
Bardo Moncef Ben Moussa, the architect Santiago Calatrava and the
philosopher Massimo Cacciari.
Cardinal Kurt Koch, Pope's special envoy to the 1500th anniversary of the Swiss Abbey of Saint-Maurice
Vatican City, 13 September 2015 (VIS) –
In a letter published today, written in Latin and dated 8 August, the
Holy Father appoints Cardinal Kurt Koch president of the Pontifical
Council for Promoting Christian Unity, as his special envoy to the
closing celebration of the 1500th anniversary of the founding of the
Abbey of Saint-Maurice, Switzerland, to be held on 22 September.
The mission accompanying the cardinal
will be composed of Bishop Markus Buchel of Sankt Gallen and
president of the Conference of Swiss Bishops, and Rev. Dom Marc de
Pothuau,O.Cist., Cistercian Abbey of Hauterive, Fribourg.
Audiences
Vatican City, 14 September 2015 (VIS) –
Today, the Holy Father received in audience Archbishop Martin Krebs,
apostolic nuncio in New Zealand, Fiji, Cook Islands, Marshall
Islands, Kiribati, Nauru, Palau, Samoa, Federated States of
Micronesia, Vanuatu and Tonga, and apostolic delegate for the Pacific
Ocean.
On Saturday 12 September 2015, the Holy
Father received in audience:
- Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, prefect
of the Congregation for Catholic Education (for Educational
Institutions), accompanied by the secretary of the same dicastery,
Archbishop Angelo Vincenzo Zani;
- Archbishop Guido Pozzo, secretary of
the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei”;
- Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, archbishop
of Genoa, Italy, president of the Italian Episcopal Conference;
- Rev. Fr. Raul Reinaldo Troncoso.
Other Pontifical Acts
Vatican City, 14 September 2015 (VIS) –
The Holy Father has appointed:
- Msgr. Angelo De Donatis as auxiliary
of the diocese of Rome (area 849, population 2,885,272, Catholics
2,365,923, priests 4,834, permanent deacons 122, religious 27,524).
The bishop-elect was born in Casarano, Italy in 1954 and was ordained
a priest in 1980. He holds a licentiate in moral theology from the
Pontifical Gregorian University, and has served in a number of roles,
including parish vicar in the parishes of San Saturnino and
Santissima Annunziata a Grottaperfetta and officer of the General
Secretariat of the Vicariate. He is currently archivist of the
Secretariat of the College of Cardinals; director of the Clergy
Office of the Vicariate of Rome and spiritual director of the
Pontifical Roman Major Seminary, pastor of San Marco Evangelista in
Campidoglio, Rome, and assistant for the diocese of Rome at the
National Association of Families of Clergy.
On Saturday 12 September the Holy
Father appointed:
- Cardinal Malcolm Ranjit Patabendige
Don, archbishop of Colombo, Sri Lanka, as his special envoy to the
National Eucharistic Congress of India, to be held in Mumbai from 12
to 15 November 2015.