SUMMARY:
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FRANCIS: REALITY IS UNDERSTOOD BETTER FROM PERIPHERY
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ANGELUS: WE ARE NOT SLAVES TO THE MAFIA
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POPE: NO WORSE POVERTY THAN PREVENTING PEOPLE FROM EARNING A LIVING
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AUDIENCES
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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
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FRANCIS:
REALITY IS UNDERSTOOD BETTER FROM PERIPHERY
Vatican
City, 26 May 2013 (VIS) – “We understand reality better not from
the center, but from the outskirts”, Pope Francis said to the
thousands of persons awaiting him this morning at the Roman parish of
Sts. Elizabeth and Zechariah in the Prima Porta neighbourhood on the
northern outskirts of the city. Upon arriving, the Holy Father, who
was accompanied by Cardinal Agostino Vallini, vicar general of the
Diocese of Rome, and Auxiliary Bishop Guerino Di Tora, greeted the
families with children who had been baptized during the year and also
heard several confessions. Also with the Pope were his two
secretaries, one of whom, one of whom, Msgr. Alfred Xuereb, was
celebrating the 29th anniversary of his ordination. The pontiff noted
the happy occasion and asked for an applause for Msgr. Xuereb.
At
9:30am, in the square in front of the church, after being welcomed by
the parish pastor, Don Benoni Ambarus, he presided at Mass, during
which he administered the Sacrament of the Eucharist to 16 children
and gave communion to another 28 children who had made First
Communion in the past few weeks.
In
his homily, warm and conversational in tone, interspersed with
questions from and answers to the children present, the Pope recalled
Mary’s visit to her cousin Isabel, observing that, as soon as the
Virgin heard the news that her cousin was also pregnant, Mary--the
Gospel says—“set out in haste”, without waiting or thinking
that Isabel “will probably have friends who will help her.” “It’s
beautiful to think this about the Virgin, our Mother, who sets out in
haste because she has this within her: helping. She goes to help, not
to boast and say to her cousin: ‘Listen, I’m in charge now
because I am the mother of God!’ No she didn’t do that. She went
to help! And Our Lady is always like that. She is our Mother, who
always comes in haste when we need help. It would be nice to add to
the litanies of Our Lady one that says ‘Our Lady who sets out in
haste, pray for us!’ … Because she always sets out in haste, she
doesn’t forget her children. And when her children are in
difficulty, when they are in need and call upon her, she sets out in
haste. And this gives us a security, the certainty of always having
our mother near, always at our side. … Our Lady who always comes
for us quickly.”
“Our
Lady also helps us to understand God well … to understand Jesus’
life,” the pontiff continued, beginning a conversation with the
children.
“I
ask you, children: Who knows who God is? Raise your hands, tell me.
Okay! Creator of the earth. And how many Gods are there? One? But
they told me that there are three: the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Spirit! … They are three in one, three persons in one. And what
does the Father do? The Father is the origin: the Father, who created
all things, who created us. What does the Son do? … He loves us?
And what else? He brings the Word of God! Jesus came to teach us
God’s Word. And what else? What did Jesus do on earth? He saved us!
Jesus came to give his life for us. The Father creates the world;
Jesus saves us. And the Holy Spirit, what does He do? He loves us!”
“Now
all the children together: the Father creates everything, He creates
the world. Jesus saves us; and the Holy Spirit? He loves us! And this
is the Christian life: talking with the Father, talking with the Son,
and talking with the Holy Spirit. Jesus saved us, but He also walks
with us in life. … And how does He walk? What does He do when He
walks with us in life? This is hard. The one who answers it wins the
trophy! What does Jesus do when He walks with us? … First of all He
helps us. He guides us! Very good! He walks with us, helps us, guides
us, and teaches us how to go forward. Jesus also gives us the
strength to walk. … When it’s difficult, right? And even with our
homework! … He gives us strength. How does Jesus give us strength?
… In Communion He gives us strength, He helps us exactly by giving
us strength. … But when you say ‘He gives us Communion’, does a
piece of bread give you so much strength? … It looks like bread!
But it’s not really bread. What is it? It Jesus’ body. Jesus
comes into our hearts.”
“Well,
let’s all think about this, all of us. The Father gave us life;
Jesus gave us salvation. He accompanies us, guides us, supports us,
and teaches us. And the Holy Spirit? What does the Holy Spirit give
us? He loves us! He gives us love. Let us think about God like this
and ask Our Lady, Our Lady who is our Mother, who is always quick to
help us, to teach us to understand how God is: how the Father is, how
the Son is, and how the Holy Spirit is.”
After
Mass, the Pope greeted the parish pastors and returned to the Vatican
to pray the Angelus.
ANGELUS:
WE ARE NOT SLAVES TO THE MAFIA
Vatican
City, 26 May 2013 (VIS) – At noon today, the Feast of the Most Holy
Trinity, the Holy Father appeared at the window of his study to pray
the Angelus with the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square.
“Every
year, the light of Easter renews in us the joy and wonder of the
faith,” Pope Francis said. “We recognize that God is not
something vague. Our God is not some smoke. He is concrete; not an
abstraction but having a name: ‘God is love.’ Not some
sentimental or affective love, but the love of the Father who is the
origin of all life; the love of the Son who dies upon the cross and
rises again; the love of the Spirit, who renews humanity and the
world. Understanding that God is love does us much good, because it
teaches us to love, to give ourselves to others as Jesus gave himself
to us and walks with us.”
“The
Most Holy Trinity is not a product of human reasoning. It is the face
with which God revealed himself, not from a cathedra on high, but
walking with humanity. It is Jesus who revealed the Father to us and
who promised us the Holy Spirit … who teaches us everything that we
don’t know, who guides us from within, who gives us good ideas and
good inspiration.”
At
the end of the Marian prayer, the Pope recalled Don Giuseppe Puglisi,
priest and martyr, who was killed by the mafia in 1993 and proclaimed
a blessed yesterday, Saturday 25 May.
“Don
Puglisi,” he continued, “was an exemplary priest, especially
dedicated to pastoral work with young people. Teaching them according
to the Gospel, he snatched them away from a life of crime. For this
[the mafia] tried to defeat him by killing him. In fact, however, he
is the one who won, with the Risen Christ. I think of the many
sufferings of the men and women, and even of children, who are
exploited by the different mafias, who exploit them by forcing them
into work that makes them slaves, with prostitution, and with many
societal pressures. The mafias are behind this exploitation and
slavery.”
“Let
us pray to the Lord,” the Holy Father asked, “to convert the
hearts of these people. They cannot do this! Brothers and sisters,
they cannot make us slaves! We must pray to the Lord! Let us …
praise God for Don Giuseppe Puglisi’s shining witness and let us
treasure his example!”
POPE:
NO WORSE POVERTY THAN PREVENTING PEOPLE FROM EARNING A LIVING
Vatican
City, 25 May 2013 (VIS) – Members of the "Centesimus Annus -
Pro Pontefice" Foundation, which was established 20 years ago by
Blessed John Paul II, were received this afternoon by Pope Francis
during their annual international conference. This year's theme is
“Rethinking Solidarity for Work: Challenges of the 21st Century”.
In
his address to them, the Bishop of Rome noted that the foundation
bears the same name as an encyclical published by John Paul II on the
centenary anniversary of “Rerum Novarum” and has, therefore, the
Church's social doctrine as the scope of its analysis and action.
“Rethinking solidarity,” he said, “doesn't mean questioning the
recent Magisterium that, in fact, demonstrates ever more its vision
and its relevance. Rather, 'rethinking' seems to me to mean two
things: first of all combining the Magisterium with socio-economic
development that, being constant and quick, always presents new
aspects and second, 'rethinking' means going more in depth,
reflecting further, to make all of a value's worth emerge—solidarity
in this case—which draws upon the Gospel profoundly, that is, upon
Jesus Christ and thus contains inexhaustible potential.”
“The
current economic and social crisis adds urgency to this 'rethinking'.
… It is a phenomenon, like that of unemployment—the lack and the
loss of a job—that is spreading like wildfire in large areas of the
West and that is alarmingly extending the boundaries of poverty. And
there is no worse material poverty, I would like to emphasize, than
that which deprives someone of earning their living, deprives them of
the dignity of work. By now this 'something wrong' is not just
affecting the southern regions of the world, but the entire planet.
Hence the need to 'rethink solidarity', no longer as simple
assistance to the poor but as a global rethinking of the entire
system, seeking ways to reform and correct it in a manner consistent
with fundamental human rights, the rights of all men and women. This
word 'solidarity', which isn't seen in a good light by the economic
world—as if it were a bad word—needs to have its deserved social
citizenship restored.”
At
the end of his address, the Holy Father reiterated that the crisis is
not just an economic or financial one, but rather is rooted in an
ethical and anthropological crisis. “Chasing the idols of power,
profit, and money over and above the value of the human person has
become a basic rule of operation and a decisive criterion of
organization. It has been forgotten, and still we forget, that above
business logic and the parameters of the market lies human being and
that there is something owed to humans as humans, in virtue of their
profound dignity: the opportunity to live in dignity and to actively
participate in the common good.”
AUDIENCES
Vatican
City, 27 May 2013 (VIS) – This morning, the Holy Father received:
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Archbishop Zygmunt Zimowski, president of the Pontifical Council for
Pastoral Assistance to Health Care Workers,
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Cardinal Velasio De Paolis, C.S., president emeritus of the
Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, and
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Bishop Lucio Andrice Muandula of Xai-Xai, Mozambique and president of
the Episcopal Conference of Mozambique.
On
Saturday, 25 May, the Holy Father received:
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Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Pontifical Council for
Culture, and
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Cardinal Baselios Cleemis Thottunkal, major archbishop of Trivandrum
of the Syro-Malankars, India.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 25 May 2013 (VIS) - Today, the Holy Father:
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accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the Archdiocese of
Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia, presented by Cardinal Julio
Terrazas Sandoval, C.SS.R., upon having reached the age limit. He is
succeeded by Archbishop Sergio Alfredo Gualberti Calandrina,
previously coadjutor of the same archdiocese.
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appointed Cardinal Francesco Monterisi, archpriest emeritus of the
Saint Paul Outside-the-Walls Basilica, as special envoy to the
closing celebration of the sixth centenary of the discovery of the
statue of Santa Maria della Libera to be held in the shrine of
Cercemaggiore, Italy on 2 July of this year.
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