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Bulletins

The Pope calls for increased attention for the environment

(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis has invited everyone to pay attention to environmental issues.
Speaking after the Sunday Angelus in St. Peter’s Square, Pope Francis said his first encyclical will be published on Thursday, and he said: “This encyclical is aimed at everyone”
Listen to the report by Linda Bordoni:  

Calling on everyone to accompany this event with renewed attention to environmental degradation, and the need to act to salvage one’s territory, the Pope said of his encyclical: Let us pray that everyone can receive its message and grow in responsibility toward the common home that God has entrusted to us”.
The document entitled “Laudato Si’, On the Care of Our Common Home” will be launched at a Vatican news conference this week.
The Pope’s appeal followed a reflection on the Gospel reading of the day that speaks of the seed that sprouts and grows and of the mustard seed which is the smallest of all seeds but becomes the largest of plants.
Francis said that through these images Jesus speaks to us of strength of God’s life-giving Word, and of how Christ’s love transforms that what is small and modest into something that makes the whole world and all of history ferment.
And reminding those present to always carry a pocket-sized copy of the Gospel, and to read a passage every day, the Pope said in the Gospel is the strength that makes the Kingdom of God germinate and sprout within us.
Above all – he said – the two parables teach us something important: the Kingdom of God is a gift of the Lord, but it requires our collaboration.
He said that although our contribution may appear meagre before the complexity of problems in the world, thanks to God’s love each seed of goodness will sprout and grow, and this – Pope Francis said – gives life to hope; notwithstanding the injustice and pain we may come across, the seed of charity and peace will yield its fruits thanks to the mysterious love of God.
   
(from Vatican Radio)…

The Pope calls for increased attention for the environment

(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis has invited everyone to pay attention to environmental issues. Speaking after the Sunday Angelus in St. Peter’s Square, Pope Francis said his first encyclical will be published on Thursday, and he said: “This encyclical is aimed at everyone” Listen to the report by Linda Bordoni:  Calling on everyone to accompany this…
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Bulletin: June 14, 2015- 11th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Bulletin-June 14, 2015-11th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Promote human person, social stability, Pope tells Italian judiciary council

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis met with the Italian Superior Council of the Judiciary at the Vatican on Saturday.  The Pope told council members it is important for all public authorities to use their office to promote the human person and to give stability and solidity to society.
Listen to the report by Laura Ieraci:

Globalization brings with it confusion and disorientation and can introduce concepts, norms and customs that are foreign to the social fabric, said Pope Francis.
In a context of such “deep shocks” to a culture’s roots, the Pope said it is important for public authorities to use their office to “make the foundations for human coexistence” more “stable” and “solid” through “the recuperation of fundamental values.”
“To these values, Christianity has offered the most appropriate true foundation: the love of God, which is inseparable from love of others,” he said.
These fundamental values can serve as an “effective dam” against the increase in crime and “the scourge of corruption,” which also affect developed democracies, he said.
Education is also important in this process as a preventive strategy, offering new generations “an anthropology, that is not relativist, and a model of life that are able to meet the high and deep inspirations of the human soul,” he said.
“To this end,” he continued, “institutions are required to recover a long-term strategy, geared to the promotion of the human person and to peaceful co-existence.”
People who have a judicial function contribute to building this, he said.
Speaking on the practical aspect of judicial functions, the Pope said judges are called to intervene when a rule has been violated. Their reaffirmation of that rule in the process, while applied to a single individual, is of interest and impact to the entire community, which in turn reaffirms the value of that rule and identifies with it.
On human rights, the Pope said they are fundamental in “the recognition of the essential dignity of humankind.”  However, he warned, this recognition “should be done without abusing that category,” wanting the judiciary to accept “practices and behaviours that, rather than promoting and guaranteeing human dignity, in reality threaten or event violate it.”
“Justice is not done in the abstract,” he said, “but always considering the person in his or her true value, as  beings created in the image of God and called to realize, here on earth, his likeness.”
The Pope also remembered a former vice-president of the council, Vittorio Bachelet, who was killed 35 years ago.
“May his witness as a man, a Christian and a jurist continue to animate your commitment to the service of justice and to the common good,” he said. 
(from Vatican Radio)…

Promote human person, social stability, Pope tells Italian judiciary council

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis met with the Italian Superior Council of the Judiciary at the Vatican on Saturday. The Pope told council members it is important for all public authorities to use their office to promote the human person and to give stability and solidity to society. Listen to the report by Laura Ieraci: Globalization brings…
Read more