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Month: September 2015

The Cardinal Archbishop of Washington on the Holy Father’s visit to the United States -To walk with Francis

We all look forward with faith-filled joy
and enthusiasm to Pope Francis’ visit to Washington to begin his first
apostolic journey to the United States.
The theme for his visit to this archdiocesan Church is “Share the Joy,
Walk with Francis,” as vividly reflected in our preparation for this time of
grace. Extensive educational and resource
materials, including homily guides, have been produced to help people in our
schools and parishes learn more about who the Pope is, his role as Peter in the
Church today, and his message of Christ’s love for us. Meanwhile, a vast evangelization effort is
underway in our neighborhoods. Also, our archdiocesan social media has been
particularly engaged on Facebook, Twitter and other outlets, allowing a wide
range of people to share their excitement through words and pictures. To show our solidarity with the Holy Father
in anticipation of his visit, and to say to him that we embrace the Gospel
message and try to live it, the Archdiocese of Washington has launched a
special initiative known as the Walk with Francis Pledge. A multitude of people
of all faiths and backgrounds have already joined together to participate and
also spread the word via #WalkwithFrancis. Now we invite our sisters and
brothers in Rome and New York and Philadelphia and Buenos Aires and throughout
the whole Church to visit the website WalkWithFrancis.org and join us in this
outreach through prayer, charitable service, or action to help build up the
kingdom of God in our midst. Another exciting venture for these times is
the “YouServe” Papal Visit Video Contest sponsored by the Archdiocese. Here people have been invited to share their
faith witness through videos showing how they are answering the Holy Father’s
call to serve others. In addition, we
have held competitions to design the altar for the Papal Mass and for the
special choirs that will sing at the liturgy. All of our preparation has been a way for
us to share the joy of the Gospel as we accept Pope Francis’ invitation to walk
together in our pilgrim journey. It has
been already a moment of grace. It is an enormous privilege always to host
the Successor of Peter and Vicar of Christ and this honor is made even greater
with the historic celebration of the first Mass of Canonization in this country
at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception facing the
campus of The Catholic University of America. The canonization of Blessed
Junípero Serra, the extraordinary Franciscan priest who evangelized California,
will be an inspiration for all of us to answer the call to be Spirit-filled
missionary disciples who bring to others the Gospel love of Jesus Christ. At this Eucharistic liturgy, and throughout
his trip to the United States, Pope Francis will see the face of the world — a
diversity of men and women from all backgrounds and languages who have gathered
around him in harmony. As a sign of this diversity and the universality of the
Church, the Canonization Mass will largely be celebrated in Spanish, the native
language of Blessed Junípero and millions of people in the Americas, including
the large Latino community in the Washington area. Throughout his pontificate, our Holy Father
has worked to foster this harmony throughout society. Speaking in a simple,
inviting way to the hearts of people, he urges us time and again to see one
another not as rivals, but as brothers and sisters to be accepted and embraced. In a particular way here in Washington,
home to our national government, Pope Francis’ visit presents a blessed
opportunity for people to set-aside their differences, political and cultural.
Coming to us as a pastor, we can anticipate his words of outreach and renewal
for our entire human family. Perhaps this moment will inspire public leaders
and people throughout society to more often overcome division and indifference
to seek the common good, especially to protect and enhance the lives and
dignity of those who are poor and vulnerable. The Holy Father offers a beautiful vision —
a way of life that involves mercy and compassion, hunger and thirst for
righteousness, patience and forgiveness. It is the Good News of Jesus Christ.
People are drawn to this and his presence here is sure to bear fruit for many
years to come as we take his words to heart and go out to care for one another,
bringing mercy and hope and the joy of being loved. The legacy of Pope Francis’ visit, I
believe, will be a strengthening of faith among those already active in Church
life, an increase in vocations to the priesthood and consecrated life, a return
to the practice of the faith by some who have drifted away, a renewed openness
by non-Catholics and non-believers to the message of the Gospel and an
invitation to all to draw closer to God. As the Gospel message that our Holy
Father brings radiates throughout our entire society, we should better be able
to work together to realize more effectively a truly good, just and beautiful
world — our common home. Donald Wuerl Cardinal-Archbishop of Washington…

Pope Francis urges greater care for street women and children

(Vatican Radio) Abandoned children and exploited sex workers are a “shameful reality in our societies”. That was Pope Francis’s message on Thursday to participants at an  international symposium on the pastoral care of street people that has been taking place in the Vatican this week. The five day meeting, organised by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People, has focused especially on the plight of women and children living on the streets.
In his words to participants Pope Francis praised the commitment of the many different organisations that care for street children and for girls or women who’re exploited by criminal gangs, or even by their own family members. He said “every child abandoned or forced to live on the streets, at the mercy of criminal organizations, is a cry rising up to God, who created man and woman in his own image.  It is an indictment of a social system which we have criticized for decades, but which we find hard to change in conformity with criteria of justice”.
The Pope urged participants not to be disheartened by the many challenges facing those working with street people in countries across the globe. “The Christian community,” he said, “needs to be involved at all levels in working to eliminate everything which forces a child or a woman to live on the street or to earn a livelihood on the street
Please find below the full text of Pope Francis’ address
Address of His Holiness Pope Francis to Participants in the International Symposium on the Pastoral Care of the Street
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
            I offer you a warm welcome at the conclusion of the International Symposium on the Pastoral Care of the Street, organized by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People.  I thank Cardinal Vegliò for his kind words, and in a particular way I thank him and his staff for their work in this sector.  These days of study and reflection have sought to prepare an action plan in response to the phenomenon of children and women – and their families – who spend their lives for the most part on the street.  I greatly appreciate your commitment to care for and promote the dignity of these women and children, and I encourage you to persevere in your work with confidence and apostolic zeal.
            The often sad realities which you encounter are the result of indifference, poverty, family and social violence, and human trafficking.  They involve the pain of marital separations and the birth of children out of wedlock, frequently doomed to a life of “vagrancy”.  Street children and street women are not numbers, or “packets” to be traded; they are human beings, each with his or her own name and face, each with a God-given identity.
            No child chooses to live on the streets.  Sadly, even in our modern, globalized world, any number of children continue to be robbed of their childhood, their rights and their future.  Lack of legal protection and adequate structures only aggravates their state of deprivation: they have no real family or access to education or health care.  Every child abandoned or forced to live on the streets, at the mercy of criminal organizations, is a cry rising up to God, who created man and woman in his own image.  It is an indictment of a social system which we have criticized for decades, but which we find hard to change in conformity with criteria of justice.
            It is troubling to see the increasing number of young girls and women forced to earn a living on the street by selling their own bodies, victims of exploitation by criminal organizations and at times by parents and family members.  This is a shameful reality in our societies, which boast of being modern and possessed of high levels of culture and development.  Widespread corruption and unrestrained greed are robbing the innocent and the vulnerable of the possibility of a dignified life, abetting the crime of trafficking and other injustices which they have to endure.  No one can remain unmoved before the pressing need to safeguard the dignity of women, threatened by cultural and economic factors!
            I ask you, please: do not be disheartened by the difficulties and the challenges which you encounter in your dedicated work, nourished as it is by your faith in Christ, who showed, even to death on the cross, the preferential love of God our Father for the weak and the outcast.  The Church cannot remain silent, nor can her institutions turn a blind eye to the baneful reality of street children and street women.  The Christian community in the various countries needs to be involved at all levels in working to eliminate everything which forces a child or a woman to live on the street or to earn a livelihood on the street.  We can never refrain from bringing to all, and especially to the most vulnerable and underprivileged, the goodness and the tenderness of God our merciful Father.  Mercy is the supreme act by which God comes to meet us; it is the way which opens our hearts to the hope of an everlasting love.
            Dear brothers and sisters, I offer prayerful good wishes for the fruitfulness of your efforts, in your various countries, to offer pastoral and spiritual care, and liberation, to those who are most frail and exploited; I likewise pray for the fruitfulness of your mission to advance and protect their personhood and dignity.  I entrust you and your service to Mary, Mother of Mercy.  May the sweetness of her gaze accompany the efforts and the firm purpose of all those who care for street children and street women.  Upon each of you I cordially invoke the Lord’s blessing.
 
(from Vatican Radio)…

Council of cardinals approves Congregation for laity, family, life

(Vatican Radio) The head of the Vatican press office, Fr Federico Lombardi, held a briefing for journalists on Wednesday to report on the work of Pope Francis’ council of nine cardinals which has been meeting at the Casa Santa Marta since Monday.
Listen to Philippa Hitchen’s report: 

The closed door encounter of the Pope and his closest advisors focused on the ongoing process of establishing two new Congregations to bring together the work of several existing Pontifical Councils. In particular, the C9, as it’s called, approved a project for the setting up of a Congregation to deal with laity, family and life issues, presented by Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi, the former archbishop of Milan. That project is now awaiting final approval from Pope Francis, though Fr Lombardi gave no further details regarding the scope or mandate of this new institution.
The cardinals also continued discussions on the formation of a second Congregation dealing with charity, justice and peace, as well as reflecting on the existing process of selecting and appointing new bishops in light of the challenges facing the Church today.
The head of the newly formed Secretariat for Communications, Msgr Dario Viganò reported back to the cardinals on the ongoing work to integrate the nine different institutions that make up the Vatican media machine. In particular he has set up a working group to study the legal and administrative work involved and to move towards the drawing up of a statute for the new Secretariat.
Finally, the cardinals also continued discussions on the work of the Pontifical Commission for Child Protection, looking at the practical implementation of a series of proposals and reviewing a draft preamble for a new constitution. In particular, Fr Lombardi said the cardinals stressed the importance of seeking to speed up the process of dealing with outstanding cases of sexual abuse.
Just one of the C9 group, Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras, was absent from the meeting for health reasons. Participants agreed to hold their next encounter from December 10th to 12th.
(from Vatican Radio)…

Briefing on the eleventh meeting of the Council of Cardinals

Vatican City, 16 September 2015 (VIS) – The director of the Holy See Press Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi, S.J., held a briefing this morning on the results of the eleventh meeting of the Council of Cardinals with the Holy Father, which began on Monday 14 November. “The proposal for a new Congregation, provisionally entitled “Laity, Family and Life”, was again taken into consideration”, said Fr. Lombardi. “In this regard Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi, designated by the Holy Father in recent months to prepare a study on the feasibility of the project, was heard. At the end of their reflections the Council presented to the Pope a proposal orientated towards the implementation of the project. Consideration of the proposal for a new Congregation dedicated to “Charity, Justice and Peace” was resumed and further reflections were made without yet reaching, however, a conclusive proposal by the Council. The Cardinals went on to reflect on the procedures for the appointment of new bishops, or more specifically on the qualities and requisites for candidates in view of the needs of today’s world, and on the related issue of information gathering. Naturally the theme will need to be explored further and developed in collaboration with the competent Dicasteries concerned. The Prefect of the new Secretariat for Communication reported to the Council on the first steps taken so far and in particular on the appointment of a group to draw up the Statutes for the new Dicastery. The working group has been constituted and has already commenced activity. It is made up of representatives of the institutes variously involved. The Statutes, while taking into account the progressive phase of consolidating the different entities that will form the Secretariat, defines the structure of the Dicastery as “definitive”. Particular attention will be given to evaluating legal and administrative aspects of the communication activities of the Holy See. The regulations will subsequently be drafted and issued. The Cardinals expressed their unanimous appreciation and stressed that, despite the progressive nature of the work, precise guidance must be given to the institutions involved so that, as the Motu Proprio requires, the reform can make decisive progress towards integration and unitary management. The theme proposed during the last session of the Council regarding issues linked to the abuse of minors was again taken into consideration. The matter of how to implement proposals was explored in further depth, especially with regard to the possibility of accelerating the resolution of the many cases still pending. A draft Preamble of the new Constitution was also re-evaluated. Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodríguez Maradiaga was absent for health reasons. The next session of the Council is scheduled to be held from 10 to 12 December”….

Pope urges EU Environment Ministers to work hard in view of SDGs

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has urged EU Environment Ministers to work harder to put into place new policies to fight environmental degradation and poverty, which he says are closely connected.
The Pope was speaking to Environment Ministers of European Union Member States whom he received on Wednesday morning in audience in the Vatican.
Please find below Vatican Radio’s translation of the Pope’s address:
 
Ladies and gentlemen, good morning!
I cordially greet all of you Environment Ministers of the European Union whose appointment, in recent years, has become increasingly important for the care of our common home. In fact, the environment is a collective heritage of all humanity, and each of us is responsible for it. It is a responsibility that can only be shared and that requires effective collaboration within the international community.
Thank you very much for having called this meeting which gives me the opportunity to share with you, if only briefly, some thoughts also in view of  important international events in the coming months: the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals at the end of this month and the Cop 21 Summit in Paris.
I would like to focus on three principles. First of all, the principle of solidarity, a word that is sometimes forgotten and others abused in a sterile manner. We know that those who are most vulnerable to environmental degradation are the poor; they are the ones who suffer its most serious consequences. Thus, solidarity means the implementation of effective tools that are able to fight environmental degradation and poverty at the same time. There are many positive experiences in this regard. For example the development and transfer of appropriate technologies that are able to make the best possible use of the human, natural and socio-economic resources that are most readily available at a local level, in order to ensure their long-term sustainability.
Second, the principle of justice. In the “Laudato si’” encyclical I spoke of “ecological debt”, especially between North and South connected to trade imbalances with consequences in the context of ecology, as well as the disproportionate use of natural resources historically exploited  by some countries. We must honor this debt. These nations are called upon to contribute to solving this debt by setting a good example: limiting in a big way  consumption of non-renewable energy; providing resources to countries in need for the promotion of policies and programmes for sustainable development; adopting appropriate systems for the management of forests, transportation, waste; seriously addressing the grave problem of food waste; favouring a circular model of economy; encouraging new attitudes and lifestyles.
Thirdly, the principle of participation, which requires the involvement of all stakeholders, even of those who often remain at the margins of decision-making. We live, in fact, in a very interesting historical time: on the one hand science and technology give us unprecedented power; on the other, a proper use of this power requires that we adopt a more integral and inclusive vision. This demands that we open the door to dialogue, a dialogue that is inspired by a vision which is rooted in that of integral ecology, the very subject of the “Laudato si’” encyclical.  This is obviously a big cultural, spiritual and educational challenge. Solidarity, justice and participation for the respect of our dignity and for respect of creation.
Dear Ministers, the Cop21 summit is fast approaching and there is still a long way to go to achieve a result that is capable of bringing together the many positive stimuli that have been offered as a contribution to this important process. I strongly encourage you to intensify your work, along with that of your colleagues, so that in Paris the desired result is achieved. On my part and on the part of Holy See there will be no lack of support for an adequate response to the cry of the Earth and to the cry of the poor. Thank you.
 
 
(from Vatican Radio)…