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Month: October 2016

Pope Francis visits Svietyskhoveli Cathedral in Mtskheta

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis’ final engagement on Saturday in Georgia was a visit to the Svietyskhoveli Patriarchal Cathedral in the ancient capital of Mtskheta , the seat of the Orthodox Church of Georgia.
In his address, the Pope spoke of Christian identity which, he said, “is maintained when deeply rooted in faith, and also when it is open and ready, never rigid or closed. ”Reminding we are called to be “One in Jesus Christ,” the Pope said we must avoid “putting first disharmony and divisions between the baptized” and urged Christians to avoid “giving in to closed ways of thinking which darken life.”  
Please find below an English translation of the Pope’s address at the Svietyskhoveli Patriarchal Cathedral in Mtskheta:
Address of His Holiness Pope Francis
Visit to the Svietyskhoveli Patriarchal Cathedral
Mtskheta, 1 October 2016
Your Holiness,
Mr Prime Minister,
Distinguished Authorities and Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Dear Brother Bishops and Priests,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
                At the end of my pilgrimage to Georgia, I thank God for the opportunity to spend prayerful time in this holy temple.  I wish to express my heartfelt gratitude for the welcome I have received, for your moving witness of faith, for the goodness of the Georgian people.  Your Holiness, the words of the psalmist come to mind: “Behold how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity!  It is like the precious oil upon the head” (Ps 133:1-2).  Dear Brother, the Lord has granted us the joy of meeting one another and of exchanging a holy kiss; may he pour out upon us the fragrant balm of concord and bestow his abundant blessings upon our path, and on the path of this beloved people.
                The Georgian language is rich in meaningful expressions which describe fraternity, friendship and closeness among people.  There is one expression, both noble and genuine, which evokes a readiness to exchange places with another, the will to bear their burden, the desire to say wholeheartedly, “I wish to be in your place” (shen genatsvale).  Sharing the joys and sorrows in the communion of prayer and in the union of souls, and carrying each other’s burdens (cf. Gal 6:2): may this fraternal attitude mark the way ahead for our journey together.
                This magnificent Cathedral, which houses so many treasures of faith and history, invites us to remember the past.  This is more necessary than ever, as “a people’s fall begins where its memory of the past ends” (Ilia Chavchavadze, “People and History”, in Iveria, 1888).  The history of Georgia is like an ancient book that, with each page, relates holy testimonies and Christian values which have forged the soul and culture of the country.  This esteemed book, no less so, speaks to us of deeds of great openness, welcome and integration.  These are most precious and enduring values, both for this land and the entire region.  Such values express the Christian identity, which is maintained when deeply rooted in faith, and also when it is open and ready, never rigid or closed.
                The Christian message – as this holy place recalls – has for centuries been the pillar of Georgian identity: it has given stability through so many upheavals, even when, sadly not infrequently, the fate of the nation was bitterly left to fend for itself.   But the Lord never abandoned the beloved land of Georgia, because he is “faithful in all his words and loving in all his deeds; he upholds all who are falling and raises up all who are bowed down” (Ps 145:13-14).
                The Lord’s tender and compassionate closeness is especially represented here in the sign of the sacred tunic.  The mystery of the tunic, “without seam, woven from top to bottom” (Jn 19:23), has attracted the attention of Christians from the beginning.  One of the early Church Fathers, Saint Cyprian of Carthage, declared that in the undivided tunic of Jesus there appears that “bond of concord inseparably cohering”, that “unity which comes from above, that is, from heaven and from the Father, which could not be definitively rent” (De Catholicae Ecclesiae Unitate, 7: SCh 1 [2006], 193).  The holy tunic, a mystery of unity, exhorts us to feel deep pain over the historical divisions which have arisen among Christians: these are the true and real lacerations that wound the Lord’s flesh.  At the same time, however, “that unity which comes from above”, the love of Christ which has brought us together, giving us not only his garment but his very body, urge us to not give up but rather to offer ourselves as he did (cf. Rom 12:1): they urge us to sincere charity and to mutual understanding, to bind up wounds, with a spirit of pure Christian fraternity.  Naturally, all this requires patience nurtured through trusting others and through humility, without fear and discouragement, but rather rejoicing in the certainty which Christian hope allows us to enjoy.  This gives us the incentive to believe that differences can be healed and obstacles removed; it invites us never to miss opportunities for encounter and dialogue, and to protect and together improve what already exists.  I am thinking, for example, of the current dialogue of the International Joint Commission and other propitious occasions for exchange.
                Saint Cyprian stated also that Christ’s tunic – “one, undivided, all in one piece, indicates the inseparable concord of our people, of us who have been clothed in Christ” (De Cath., 195). Those baptized in Christ, as Saint Paul teaches, have been clothed in Christ (cf. Gal 3:27).  Thus, notwithstanding our limitations and quite apart from all successive cultural and historical distinctions, we are called to be “one in Christ Jesus” (Gal 3:28) and to avoid putting first disharmony and divisions between the baptized, because what unites us is much more than what divides us.
                In this Patriarchal Cathedral, many of our brothers and sisters receive Baptism, which in the Georgian language, beautifully expresses the new life received in Christ, evoking the light which gives meaning to everything, as it leads out of the darkness.  In Georgian, the word “education” comes from the same root, and thus relates strictly to Baptism.  The elegance of the language helps us think of the beauty of Christian life that, from its radiant beginnings, is maintained when it remains in the light of goodness, and when it rejects the darkness of evil.  Such beauty of the Christian life is preserved when, by guarding faithfulness to its own roots, it does not give in to closed ways of thinking which darken life, but rather remains well-disposed to welcome and to learn, to be enlightened by all that is beautiful and true. May the resplendent riches of this people be known and esteemed!  May we always increasingly share the treasures that God gives to each person, for our mutual enrichment, and to help one another grow in what is good!
                I sincerely assure you of my prayers, so that the Lord, who makes all things new (cf. Rev 21:5), through the intercession of the Holy Brothers and Apostles Peter and Andrew, of the Martyrs and of all the Saints, may deepen the love between all believers in Christ and the enlightened pursuit of everything which brings us together, reconciles us and unites us.  May fraternity and cooperation increase at every level!  And may prayer and love make us ever more receptive to the Lord’s ardent desire, so that everyone who believes in Him, through the preaching of the Apostles, will “be one” (cf. Jn 17:20-21).
(from Vatican Radio)…

Pope Francis meets charity workers in Tbilisi

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis met Catholic charity workers in the Georgian capital and encouraged them in their work, saying “the poor and the weak are the ‘flesh of Christ’ who call upon Christians of every confession, urging them to act without personal interests, following only the prompting of the Holy Spirit.” The meeting took place in the grounds of the Camilliani health clinic in Tbilisi and was attended by its director and the head of Caritas Georgia .  Also present were staff and volunteers working for various Catholic charitable organisations in Georgia as well as patients and medical staff from the Camilliani clinic.   
Please find below an English translation of the Pope’s address to the charity workers in Tbilisi:
Greeting of His Holiness Pope Francis
Meeting with Volunteers and Assistants
Tbilisi, Camilliani Centre
1 October 2016
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
                I greet you warmly and am pleased to meet all of you who are charity workers here in Georgia.  Through your care,  you express in an eloquent way love of neighbour which is the hallmark of Christ’s disciples.  I thank Father Zurab for his words offered on your behalf.  You represent a variety of charitable centres in the country: male and female religious institutes, Caritas, Church associations and other organizations, and groups of volunteers.  To each one I offer my appreciation for your generous commitment to those most in need.
                Your work is a journey of fraternal cooperation among the Christians of this country and the faithful of various rites.  Our meeting in the name of evangelical charity is a witness to communion and a means of fostering the way of unity.  I encourage you to pursue this demanding yet fruitful path:  the poor and weak are the “flesh of Christ” who call upon Christians of every confession, urging them to act without personal interests, following only the prompting of the Holy Spirit.
                I offer a special greeting to the elderly, the sick, the suffering and those assisting them from various charitable organizations.  I am happy to be with you for a little while to offer you my encouragement: God never turns away; he is always close to you, ready to listen, to give you his strength in times of difficulty.  You are the beloved of Jesus, who wished to identify himself with all who suffer, he himself having suffered in his passion.  Charitable initiatives are the ripe fruit of a Church that serves, offers hope and shows forth God’s mercy.  Therefore, dear brothers and sisters, your mission is a great one!  Continue to live out charity in the Church and to manifest this charity in all areas of society with the zealous love that comes from God.
                May the Blessed Virgin Mary, icon of gratuitous love, guide you and protect you.  May the blessing of the Lord sustain you, which I now willingly invoke upon all of you.
(from Vatican Radio)…

Pope: there’s a global war against marriage nowadays

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis’ first engagement on Saturday afternoon in the Georgian capital was a meeting with priests, religious and seminarians in Tbilisi’s Church of the Assumption. In an off-the-cuff address to the gathering, the Pope warned against what he termed “a global war to destroy marriage” in contemporary society, saying the great enemy of marriage nowadays was “gender theory.”
In his wide-ranging address to priests, religious and seminarians gathered in Tbilisi’s Church of the Assumption, Pope Francis spoke about being strong in our faith, the threats facing the institution of marriage and warned about the dangers of proselytizing with our “Orthodox brothers.”
Picking up on the testimony offered by a group of Catholics, the Pope stressed the importance of being strong in our faith and passing it on to the next generation, noting that in many cases it is the grandparents who perform the valuable task of helping to transmit the faith to the young.
Turning next to the issue of marriage and the threats against it mentioned by one of the speakers, Pope Francis said that nowadays there is “a global war to destroy marriage,” saying the great enemy of marriage today is “gender theory.” This war, he explained, is not “being waged with weapons but with ideas,” describing them as ideological colonizations. He warned his listeners against them and said if a couple is arguing and facing problems in their marriage, they must make peace before the end of day.  Don’t forget, said the Pope, that there are three golden expressions that can help keep a marriage afloat. These are “May I, thank you and sorry.”
The question of ecumenism and the problems it can pose, was another issue discussed by the Pope that had been mentioned earlier by one of the speakers. Pope Francis told his listeners never to argue with their Orthodox friends or neighbours and especially warned Catholics never to try “to convert them.” He described proselytism as “a big sin against ecumenism” and encouraged his audience to be on friendly terms with Orthodox believers, to perform works of charity together and never to condemn them or refuse to greet them on account of who they are.
Pope Francis concluded his address by touching on the dangers of worldliness, reminding that Jesus had “spoken out strongly” against this ever present danger facing believers. May the Lord free us from worldliness, he said, and keep us strong in the faith that “we received from our mothers and grandmothers.” 
Listen to this report by Susy Hodges (includes clips of the Pope’s voice):  

(from Vatican Radio)…

Bulletin for 10/02/2016

Bulletin for 10/02/2016

Pope Francis at Tbilisi Mass: God’s consolation calls us to be childlike

(Vatican Radio)  In Tbilisi Saturday, Pope Francis offered words of consolation to Georgia’s small Catholic community  and invited the faithful to be like little children who are so lovingly embraced by God. 
Celebrating Mass at Tbilisi’s Mikheil Meskhi Stadium on day two of his pastoral visit to the country, Pope Francis spoke of the “importance of women” as one of the nation’s many treasures.  

Quoting Saint Therese of the Child Jesus whose feast is celebrated on this day, the Pope said, “‘they love God in much larger numbers than men do.’”  He noted the “great number of grandmothers and mothers who unceasingly defend and pass on the faith” in Georgia, whose female Saint Nino is credited with first evangelizing in the fourth century.
As a mother takes upon herself the burdens and weariness of her children, “ the Pope stressed, “so too does God take upon himself our sins and troubles” in his infinite love for us.
Keep the door of consolation open to Jesus
God, he said, is always ready to offer us consolation in times of need, “amid the turmoil we experience in life.”  It “liberates us from evil, brings peace and increases our joy.”
But, he warned, we must leave the “doors of consolation” open to Jesus, through daily reading of the Gospel, silent prayers in adoration, confession and receiving  the Eucharist.
When the door of our heart is closed, he said, we “get accustomed to pessimism” and “end up absorbed in our own sadness, in the depths of anguish, isolated.”
God best consoles us, he noted, “when we are united, in communion” and the Church is “the house of consolation” to which we should turn.
Pope Francis urged the faithful to offer to others the same consolation that  they receive.  “Even when enduring affliction and rejection,” he said, “a Christian is always called to bring hope to the hearts of those who have given up, to encourage the downhearted, to bring the light of Jesus…and his forgiveness.”
“Countless people suffer trials and injustice and live in anxiety,” he continued.  And though God’s consolation cannot take away our problems, he said, it “gives us the power to love, to peacefully bear pain.”
Consolation: the Church’s urgent mission
Receiving and bringing God’s consolation, he stressed, is the Church’s “urgent” mission.
And in order to do this, he said, we must become, as Jesus tells us, like a little child.  “For God is not known through grand ideas and extensive study,” he noted, “but rather through the littleness of a humble and trusting heart.”  Likewise, prestige and earthly success mean little to God who wishes us to empty ourselves of such things.  “A child has nothing to give and everything to receive,” the Pope went on: “the one who becomes like a little child is poor in self but rich in God.”
We are not the masters of our lives:  live in simplicity like children
Children have much to teach us, he observed: they show us that God “accomplishes great things in those who put up no resistance to him, who are simple and sincere, without duplicity.”
The Pope reminded the faithful that we are all children of the Father: “not masters of our lives” or “autonomous and self-sufficient adults,” but children “who need love and forgiveness.”
In the same way, Christian communities who live the Gospel with this simplicity may be “poor in means” but “are rich in God.”  And blessed are those “Shepherds,” the Pope said, “who do not ride the logic of worldly success, but follow the law of love: welcoming, listening, serving.”  Blessed too, he observed, is the Church “who does not entrust herself to the criteria of functionalism and organizational efficiency, nor worries about her image.”
Again quoting St. Theresa, Pope Francis concluded his Homily by inviting the faithful to “bear with the faults of others” and delight in the “smallest acts of virtue we see them practice.”  Charity, he said, “cannot remain hidden in the depths of our hearts.”
 
(from Vatican Radio)…