SUMMARY:
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THE EXPERIENCE OF WYD MUST NOT STAY “LOCKED UP”
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KRAKOW TO HOST WORLD YOUTH DAY 2016
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FRANCIS TO CELAM: STRUCTURAL CHANGE IS PART OF THE DYNAMIC OF MISSION
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FRANCIS TO WYD VOLUNTEERS: HAVE THE COURAGE TO BE HAPPY
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POPE FRANCIS “I SHALL MISS BRAZIL”
-
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING WITH ITALIAN FINANCIAL UNIT (UIF)
-
TELEGRAM FOR THE DEATH OF CARDINAL ERSILIO TONINI
-
OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
______________________________________
THE
EXPERIENCE OF WYD MUST NOT STAY “LOCKED UP”
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – At 10.00 a.m. yesterday, Sunday (3.00
p.m. Rome time) the Pope celebrated Holy Mass for the 28th World
Youth Day on the beach at Copacabana. The celebration was scheduled
to take place at the “Campus Fidei” of Guaratiba, which holds up
to two million people, but due to poor weather conditions it was held
instead at the carioco beach. Three million pilgrims participated; a
further million joined the two million young people who had spent the
night on the beach after the Saturday's prayer vigil. The event was
attended by 1500 bishops and 15,000 priests, as well as the
presidents of Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia and Suriname. The
Eucharistic liturgy began with the official hymn of World Youth Day,
sung by a choir made up of priests from all over Brazil, including
those who evangelise through the medium of religious music. The songs
for the Holy Mass were selected by means of a national competition in
which young Brazilians participated with their own original
compositions.
The
Pope based his homily on the theme of the 28th World Youth Day: “Go
and make disciples of all nations”, and after reflecting on the
excitement of these days, of living faith with people from all four
corners of the world, he said that the moment had come to transmit
this experience to others. “Three simple ideas”, he said. “Go,
do not be afraid, and serve”.
To
explain the meaning of the first, Pope Francis spoke to the young
about the beauty of meeting Jesus in the company of others during
these days, and sensing the joy of faith, but added, “the
experience of this encounter must not remain locked up in your life
or in the small group of your parish, your movement, or your
community. That would be like withholding oxygen from a flame that
was burning strongly. Faith is a flame that grows stronger the more
it is shared ... so that everyone may know … Jesus Christ, the Lord
of life and history”.
“Sharing
the experience of faith ... proclaiming the Gospel: this is a command
that the Lord entrusts to the whole Church, and that includes you”,
he continued, “but it is a command that is born not from a desire
for domination, from a desire for power, but from the force of love,
from the fact that Jesus first came into our midst and gave us, not a
part of Himself, but the whole of Himself, and He gave His life in
order to save us and to show us the love and mercy of God. Jesus …
accompanies us … in our mission of love”.
“Where
does Jesus send us? There are no borders, no limits: He sends us to
everyone. The Gospel is for everyone, not just for some. It is not
only for those who seem closer to us, more receptive, more welcoming.
… Do not be afraid to go and to bring Christ into every area of
life, to the fringes of society, even to those who seem farthest
away, most indifferent. The Lord seeks all, He wants everyone to feel
the warmth of His mercy and His love”.
The
Holy Father emphasised that he wished for Christ’s command, “Go”,
to resonate in the young of the Church in Latin America, as “this
continent has received the proclamation of the Gospel which has
marked its history and borne much fruit. Now … the Church needs
you, your enthusiasm, your creativity and the joy that is so
characteristic of you”.
“Some
people might think: 'I have no particular preparation, how can I go
and proclaim the Gospel?'” he continued, turning to the second
idea, “do not be afraid”. He explained that their fear is not
very different from that of Jeremiah, who was also young when he was
called by God to be a prophet. “In today's reading he exclaims:
'Ah, Lord God! Behold, I do not know how to speak, for I am only a
youth'. God says the same thing to you as He said to Jeremiah: 'Be
not afraid ... for I am with you to deliver you'. He is with us!
Jesus … never leaves anyone alone. ... And then, Jesus did not say:
“One of you go”, but “All of you go”: we are sent together.
Dear young friends, be aware of the companionship of the whole Church
and also the communion of the saints on this mission. When we face
challenges together, then we are strong, we discover resources we did
not know we had. Jesus did not call the Apostles to live in
isolation. He called them to form a group, a community”.
Finally,
service, explained the Pope, means “allowing our life to be
identified with that of Jesus, it is sharing His sentiments, His
thoughts, His actions. And the life of Jesus is a life for others. It
is a life of service … Evangelizing means bearing personal witness
to the love of God, it is overcoming our selfishness, it is serving
by bending down to wash the feet of our brethren, as Jesus did”.
“Go,
do not be afraid, and serve”, he concluded. “If you follow these
three ideas, you will experience that the one who evangelizes is
evangelized, the one who transmits the joy of faith receives more
joy. Dear young friends, as you return to your homes, do not be
afraid to be generous with Christ, to bear witness to His Gospel. ...
Bringing the Gospel is bringing God’s power to pluck up and break
down evil and violence, to destroy and overthrow the barriers of
selfishness, intolerance and hatred, so as to build a new world.
Jesus Christ is counting on you! The Church is counting on you! The
Pope is counting on you!”
KRAKOW
TO HOST WORLD YOUTH DAY 2016
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – Following Holy Mass, the Pope thanked
the young people present “for all the joy you have given me in
these days”, and spoke briefly to them before praying the Angelus.
“The
Immaculate Virgin intercedes for us in heaven as a good mother who
watches over her children. May Mary teach us by her life what it
means to be a missionary disciple. Every time we pray the Angelus, we
recall the event that changed the history of mankind for ever. When
the Angel Gabriel proclaimed to Mary that she would become the Mother
of Jesus the Saviour, even without understanding the full
significance of that call, she trusted God and replied: 'Behold, I am
the handmaid of the Lord; let it be to me according to Your word'.
But what did she do immediately afterwards? On receiving the grace of
being the Mother of the Incarnate Word, she did not keep that gift to
herself; she felt responsible and so she set off, she left her home
and went in haste to help her kinswoman Elizabeth, who was in need of
assistance; she carried out an act of love, of charity, of practical
service, bringing Jesus Who was in her womb. And she did all this in
haste!”
“There,
my dear friends, we have our model. She who received the most
precious gift from God, as her immediate response sets off to be of
service and to bring Jesus. Let us ask Our Lady to help us too to
give Christ’s joy to our families, our companions, our friends, to
everyone. Never be afraid to be generous with Christ. It is worth it!
Go out and set off with courage and generosity, so that every man and
every woman may meet the Lord”.
“Dear
young friends”, he concluded, “we have an appointment for the
next World Youth Day in 2016 in Krakow, Poland. Through Our Lady’s
maternal intercession, let us ask for the light of the Holy Spirit
upon the journey that will lead us to this next stage in our joyful
celebration of faith and the love of Christ”.
FRANCIS
TO CELAM: STRUCTURAL CHANGE IS PART OF THE DYNAMIC OF MISSION
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – During the afternoon of Sunday, 28 July,
Pope Francis met with the forty-five bishops who form the
Coordinating Committee of the Latin American Episcopal Conference
(CELAM). He focused on the legacy of the meeting of the Fifth General
Conference of the Bishops of Latin America and the Caribbean, held in
Aparecida in May 2007.
He
began his address by mentioning four hallmarks or pillars of the
Aparecida conference. First, the participation of the Particular
Churches as a process of preparation culminating in a document of
synthesis, which while serving as a point of reference throughout the
Fifth General Conference, was not taken as a starting point; the
prayerful setting and the accompaniment in the form of the songs and
prayers of the faithful; that Aparecida did not end with a document
but instead continued in the Continental Mission; and finally, that
it was the first conference of the bishops of Latin America and the
Caribbean to be held in a Marian shrine.
The
Pope spoke of the two dimensions of the Continental Mission: the
programmatic, consisting in a series of missionary activities, and
the paradigmatic, setting in a missionary key all the day-to-day
activities of the Particular Churches. The Pope explained that “this
entails a whole process of reforming ecclesial structures. The
'change of structures' (from obsolete ones to new ones) … will
result from the very dynamics of mission. What makes obsolete
structures pass away, what leads to a change of heart in Christians,
is precisely missionary spirit”. Francis mentioned two of the
current challenges of missionary discipleship: “the Church’s
inner renewal and dialogue with the world around us”.
The
Holy Father went on to outline some “temptations against missionary
discipleship”, such as the transformation of the Gospel message
into an ideology: “the attempt to interpret the Gospel apart from
the Gospel itself and apart from the Church”; functionalism, which
“reduces the reality of the Church to the structure of an NGO”
and “applies a sort of 'theology of prosperity' to the organization
of pastoral work”; and finally, clericalism, “a temptation very
present in Latin America” which “explains, in great part, the
lack of maturity and Christian freedom in a good part of the Latin
American laity”.
The
Pope then suggested some ecclesiastical guidelines: first, “the
missionary discipleship which Aparecida proposed to the Churches of
Latin America and the Caribbean is the journey which God desires for
the present 'today' … It is given in the 'today', but also 'in
tension'. There is no such thing as static missionary discipleship”,
linked neither to the past nor the future.
Second:
“The Church is an institution, but when she makes herself a
'centre', she becomes merely functional, and slowly but surely turns
into a kind of NGO. … From an 'institution' she becomes a
'enterprise'. She stops being a bride and ends up being an
administrator; from being a servant, she becomes an 'inspector'.
Aparecida wanted a Church which is bride, mother and servant, a
facilitator of faith and not an inspector of faith”.
Third:
“In Aparecida, two pastoral categories stand out”, Francis said.
“They arise from the uniqueness of the Gospel, and we can employ
them as guidelines for assessing how we are living missionary
discipleship in the Church: nearness and encounter. Neither of these
two categories is new; rather, they are the way God has revealed
himself to us in history”, he continued, recalling that the
pastoral plans which do not take account of these dimensions “can
at best provide a dimension of proselytism, but they can never
inspire people to feel part of or belong to the Church”, and added
that “one touchstone for measuring whether a pastoral plan embodies
nearness and a capacity for encounter is the homily”.
The
fourth and final aspect: the Pope commented that “Bishops must
lead, which is not the same thing as being authoritarian”, and
offered some guidelines: “Bishops must be pastors, close to people,
fathers and brothers, and gentle, patient and merciful. Men who love
poverty, both interior poverty, as freedom before the Lord, and
exterior poverty, as simplicity and austerity of life. Men who do not
think and behave like 'princes'. Men who are not ambitious, who are
married to one church without having their eyes on another. Men
capable of watching over the flock entrusted to them and protecting
everything that keeps it together: guarding their people out of
concern for the dangers which could threaten them, but above all
instilling hope: so that light will shine in people’s hearts. Men
capable of supporting with love and patience God’s dealings with
his people. The Bishop has to be among his people in three ways: in
front of them, pointing the way; among them, keeping them together
and preventing them from being scattered; and behind them, ensuring
that no one is left behind, but also, and primarily, so that the
flock itself can sniff out new paths”. In conclusion, Francis added
“we are lagging somewhat as far as Pastoral Conversion is
concerned. We need to help one another a bit more in taking the steps
that the Lord asks of us in the 'today' of Latin America and the
Caribbean. And this is a good place to start”.
FRANCIS
TO WYD VOLUNTEERS: HAVE THE COURAGE TO BE HAPPY
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – On Sunday, 28 July, before the closing
ceremony of Word Youth Day, Pope Francis met with a group of young
volunteers. In the Congress Centre Pavilion he encountered 15,000 of
the 60,000 volunteers who have worked during the two years of
preparation for the Brazilian World Youth Day. The young welcomed him
with songs and applause, and Pope Francis did not greeted them warmly
with hugs and kisses.
He
thanked them for their work and “the countless little ways by which
you have made this World Youth Day an unforgettable experience of
faith. With your smiles, your acts of kindness and your willingness
to serve, you have shown that 'it is more blessed to give than to
receive'”.
He
compared them to St. John the Baptist, “who prepared the way for
Jesus”, he said. “And this is the most beautiful service we can
give as missionary disciples: to prepare the way so that all people
may know, meet and love the Lord. … May you always be generous with
God and with others: one loses nothing thereby, but gains great
enrichment in life”.
He
continued, “God … has a plan for each of you: to discover that
plan and to respond to your vocation is to move toward personal
fulfilment. … Some are called to holiness through family life in
the sacrament of Marriage”, and he commented that in today's
cultural of the ephemeral, many say that marriage is out of fashion.
“Many preach the importance of 'enjoying' the moment”, he said;
“they say that it is not worth making a life-long commitment,
making a definitive decision, for ever, because we do not know what
tomorrow will bring”. He urged the young volunteers “to be
revolutionaries, to swim against the tide; yes, I am asking you to
rebel against this culture that sees everything as temporary and that
ultimately believes that you are incapable of responsibility, that
you are incapable of true love. ... Have the courage to be happy”.
The
Pope went on to say that the Lord calls some to the priesthood or to
the religious life, and shared with the young volunteers his
experience at the age of 17 of first hearing God's call. “Do not be
afraid of what God asks of you! It is worth saying 'yes' to God. In
Him we find joy!”
Finally,
he addressed those who “may not yet know what you will do with your
lives”, and encouraged them to “ask the Lord, and He will show
you the way. … Do not forget what you have experienced here! You
can always count on my prayers, and I know I can count on yours”.
POPE
FRANCIS “I SHALL MISS BRAZIL”
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – “I depart with many happy memories
which I know will nourish my prayers. Already I am beginning to miss
Brazil, this great people showing so much affection and friendship. …
I shall miss the hope filling the eyes of the young people in the
Hospital of Saint Francis. I shall miss the faith and joy shown by
the residents of Varginha in the midst of their hardship. … Thank
you for the warm welcome and the friendship that have been offered to
me. This too I shall miss”.
And
so, yesterday afternoon, Pope Francis said goodbye to Brazil. During
the farewell ceremony at Galeao/Antonio Carlos Jobim airport, the
Holy Father thanked President Dilma Roussef “for expressing the
sentiments of the entire population of Brazil towards the Successor
of Peter”, the bishops and their collaborators, the volunteers, the
media workers and all those who in one way or another participated in
the organisation and hosting of the event, and finally, “the many
people who prayed ... for this World Youth Day to be an authentic
experience of growth in faith”.
However,
the young people were at the heart of the celebrations. “I will
always place my hopes in the young people of Brazil and in the young
around the world: through them, Christ is preparing a new springtime
all over the earth. I have seen its first fruits and I know that
others will joyfully reap the full harvest … Many of you came here
as disciples; I have no doubt that all of you will leave as
missionaries. Through your joyful witness and service, help to build
a civilization of love. Show, by your life, that it is worth giving
your time and talents in order to attain high ideals, it is worth
recognizing the dignity of each human person, and it is worth taking
risks for Christ and His Gospel”.
Finally,
before embarking the aircraft, Francis recalled his visit to the
shrine of Aparecida, where “I knelt to pray for the entire human
family and in particular for all Brazilians”, and implored Mary to
strengthen them in their Christian faith, “which forms part of the
noble soul of Brazil, as indeed of many other countries; this faith
is your culture’s treasure and serves as encouragement and support
in the task of building a renewed humanity in harmony and
solidarity”.
“As
he departs, the Pope says to all of you affectionately: 'see you
soon'. He asks you not to forget to pray for him. The Pope needs the
prayers of all of you. I offer you an affectionate embrace. May God
bless you!”
At
7.00 p.m. (local time) the aircraft carrying the Holy Father departed
from Rio de Janeiro and, after a flight lasting eleven and a half
hours, landed this morning at Rome's Ciampino military airport at
11.30. From there, the Pope proceeded to the Basilica of St. Mary
Major to give thanks for the return journey, as he did previously
before departing for Rio de Janeiro, and after a moment of prayer
before the Marian image, he returned by car to the Vatican.
MEMORANDUM
OF UNDERSTANDING WITH ITALIAN FINANCIAL UNIT (UIF)
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – On 26 July the Financial Intelligence
Authority (AIF) of the Holy See and Vatican City State signed a
Memorandum of Understanding with its Italian counterpart, the UnitÃ
di Informazione Finanziaria (UIF) of the Bank of Italy, according to
a memorandum published today.
The
Memorandum was signed in Rome by Cardinal Attilio Nicora, President
of AIF, and Dr. Claudio Clemente, director of UIF.
A
Memorandum of Understanding is standard practice and formalizes the
cooperation and exchange of financial information to fight money
laundering and terrorist financing across borders between the
competent authorities of both countries. It is based on the model
Memorandum of Understanding prepared by the Egmont Group, the global
organisation of national Financial Intelligence Units, and contains
clauses on reciprocity, permitted uses of information and
confidentiality.
“The
Holy See and the Vatican City State take international
responsibilities concerning Anti-Money Laundering and the Financing
of Terrorism very seriously, and Italy is an especially important
partner for us,” said AIF director Rene Bruelhart. “We look
forward to continuing our work with the Italian Authorities in a
constructive and fruitful manner. The Memorandum of Understanding is
a clear commitment to strengthen our bilateral relationship and will
facilitate the our joint efforts and fight against money laundering.”
AIF
became a member of the Egmont Group in July of this year and over the
last several months signed MOUs with the Financial Intelligence Units
of the United States, Belgium, Spain, Slovenia and the Netherlands.
More are expected to be signed in the course of this year.
AIF
is the competent authority of the Holy See/Vatican City State to
fight money laundering and financing of terrorism. It was established
on Dec. 30, 2010.
TELEGRAM
FOR THE DEATH OF CARDINAL ERSILIO TONINI
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – The Holy Father has sent a telegram of
condolences to Archbishop Lorenzo Ghizzoni of Ravenna, Italy, for the
death of Cardinal Ersilio Tonini, former archbishop of that
archdiocese who died yesterday, Sunday, at the age of 99.
In
the text, the Holy Father joins the community of Ravenna in mourning,
and expresses his gratitude and admiration for his “fruitful and
varied” apostolic activity, recalling that he was a “zealous and
generous pastor … committed and amiable … inspired by the wish to
proclaim Christ in simple and incisive language and to give authentic
and coherent testimony to men and women of our time”.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 29 July 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father accepted the
resignation from the pastoral care of the archdiocese of Yaounde,
Cameroon, presented by Bishop Simon-Victor Tonye Bakot, in accordance
with canon 401 para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law. The Holy Father has
appointed Bishop Jean Mbarga of Ebolowa, Cameroon, as apostolic
adminstrator "sede vacante et ad nutum Sanctae Sedis" of
the archdiocese of Yaounde.
You
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