SUMMARY:
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POPE AT CASAL DEL MARMO: AS PRIEST AND BISHOP, I MUST BE AT YOUR
SERVICE
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VARIATIONS IN PAPAL COAT OF ARMS
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POPE
AT CASAL DEL MARMO: AS PRIEST AND BISHOP, I MUST BE AT YOUR SERVICE
Vatican
City, 29 March 2013 (VIS) – At 5:00pm yesterday afternoon, Holy
Thursday, Pope Francis left the Vatican to go to the Casal del Marmo
Penitential Institute for Minors where he celebrated the “in Coena
Domine”—the Lord's Supper—Mass, which is the first of the
Easter Triduum. Around fifty of the boys and girls detained at the
juvenile centre located on the outskirts of Rome were in attendance.
The Pope washed the feet of ten boys and two girls and, in his
homily, said that their obligation is to help others “as a priest
and as a bishop should be at your service. It is a duty that comes
from my heart.”
At
the moment of washing their feet, Pope Francis kneeled six times,
each time washing the feet of the young people in front of him. The
Holy Father began by washing their feet, then dried them, and finally
kissed them. The girls whose feet he washed were an Italian and an
Eastern European. Following is the full text of the homily that the
Pope delivered after the Gospel was read.
“This
is touching. Jesus washing the feet of his disciples. Peter did not
understand anything; he refused. But Jesus explained to him.
Jesus—God—has done this! And He himself said to his disciples:
'Do you realize what I have done for you? You call me “teacher”
and “master”, and rightly so, for indeed I am. If I, therefore,
the master and teacher, have washed your feet, you ought to wash one
another’s feet. I have given you a model to follow, so that as I
have done for you, you should also do.' (Jn 13:12-15)”
“This
is the Lord's example: He is the most important one and He washes
[other's] feet because those who are the highest among us must be at
the service of others. And this is a symbol, a sign, isn't it?
Washing someone's feet is [saying] 'I am at your service'. And us
too, among us, shouldn't we wash one another’s feet every day—but
what does this mean? That we must help each other, help one another.
Sometimes I'm angry at someone … but … let it go. Forget it. And,
if someone asks a favour of you, do it. Help each other.”
“This
is what Jesus teaches us and this is what I am doing. I do it
wholeheartedly because it is my duty. As priest and as bishop I must
be at your service. But it is a duty that comes from my heart: I love
it. I love this and I love doing it because the Lord has taught me
this. But you as well, help each other; always help each other; help
one another.”
“And
so, in helping one another we do good to each other. Now we'll have
this ceremony of washing of the feet and we will think, each of us
will think: 'Am I truly ready, am I ready to serve and to help
another?' Let's just think of that. And let's think that this sign is
Jesus' caress that Jesus does because He came precisely for this: to
serve and to help us.”
Concelebrating
the Mass with the Holy Father were Cardinal Agostino Vallini, vicar
general of Rome, Archbishop Angelo Becciu, substitute of the
Secretariat of State, Msgr. Alfred Xuereb, the Pope's personal
secretary, and the institute's chaplain, Fr. Gaetano Greco, a
tertiary Capuchin of Our Lady of Sorrows, with one of his confreres.
The Mass was celebrated in the institute's chapel, which is dedicated
to the “Merciful Father”. Of the youth in attendance, around 11
were girls. At the end of the ceremony, Pope Francis again gathered
with the youth in the institute's gym where, among others, the
Italian Minister for Justice, Paola Severino, was present. The youth
of the detention centre gave the Pope a wooden crucifix and kneeler,
which they had made themselves in the institute's workshop.
Before
leaving, the Pope thanked the youth for welcoming him and when one of
the youth asked him why he had decided to visit their detention
centre the Pope answered that his heart had compelled him. “It is a
feeling that came from my heart; I felt it. Where are those who,
perhaps, will help me most to be humble, to be a server as a bishop
must be? And I thought, I asked: 'Where are people who would like me
to visit?' And they told me: 'Perhaps Casal del Marmo.' And when they
told me that, I came here. But it just came from my heart. Matters of
the heart cannot be explained; they just come [to you]. Thanks!” On
bidding them farewell he told the youth: “I'm going now. Thank you
so much for your welcome. Pray for me. Don't let yourselves be robbed
of hope. Always go forward. Thank you very much!”
VARIATIONS
IN PAPAL COAT OF ARMS
Vatican
City, 29 March 2013 (VIS) – The Vatican website has released a new
version of the papal coat of arms that incorporates a few changes.
The updated image is available at our blogsite:
http://visnews-en.blogspot.it/ For the Marian symbol, instead of a
five-pointed star, there is now an eight-pointed star, which also
represents the 8 beatitudes. The nard flower representing St. Joseph,
patron of the Universal Church, has been made to more closely
represent that flower. Finally, Francis' motto “miserando atque
eligendo” underneath the shield has been placed upon a scroll of
white parchment with a red backside. The Jesuit emblem remains the
same. More details on the coat of arms can be found in the “FRANCIS'
COAT OF ARMS” notice of the bulletin of 19 March:
http://visnews-en.blogspot.it/2013/03/francis-coat-of-arms.html.
You
can find more information at: www.visnews.org
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news items contained in the Vatican Information Service may be used,
in part or in their entirety, by quoting the source:
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