SUMMARY:
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POPE'S MESSAGE FOR DAY OF REFLECTION ON THE MINING INDUSTRY
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ANGELUS: WAR AGAINST EVIL MEANS SAYING NO TO FRATRICIDAL HATE AND ALL
FORMS OF VIOLENCE
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KEEP PRAYING - THE SEARCH FOR PEACE IS LONG
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AUDIENCES
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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
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POPE'S
MESSAGE FOR DAY OF REFLECTION ON THE MINING INDUSTRY
Vatican
City, 9 September 2013 (VIS) – Today Cardinal Secretary of State
Tarcisio Bertone S.D.B. sent a message on behalf of the Holy Father
to participants in the Day of Reflection on the world mining
industry, organised by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.
The Day will be celebrated on 7 September and will be attended by
representatives of the world's most important mining companies,
including the Anglo American, China Minmetals Corporation, Rio Tinto
and Zamin Resources, as well as experts in the sector from within the
Catholic Church, Caritas and Oxfam America.
The
cardinal states that the meeting was of great importance, not only
due to the presence of numerous leaders of multinational companies,
but also because it is the first time that the directors of the
mining industry have met, “close to the Successor of Peter, to
reflect on the importance of their human and environmental
responsibilities”, and adds that “the extraction industries are
seen, not always without reason, as unjustly exploiting resources and
local populations, resorting even to slavery and the forced removal
of entire populations. … Mining, like many other industrial
activities, has ecological and social consequences which go well
beyond national borders and pass from one generation to the next”.
“The
participants in this meeting are aware that, so as not to repeat
grave errors of the past, decisions today cannot be taken solely from
geological perspectives or the possible economic benefits for
investors and for the states in which the companies are based. A new
and more profound decision-making process is indispensable and
inescapable, one which takes into consideration the complexity of the
problems involved, in a context of solidarity. Such a context
requires, first of all, that workers be assured of all their economic
and social rights, in full accordance with the norms and
recommendations of the International Labour Organisation. Likewise it
requires the assurance that extraction activities respect
international standards for the protection of the environment. The
great challenge of business leaders is to create a harmony of
interests, involving investors, managers, workers, their families,
the future of their children, the preservation of the environment on
both a regional and international scale, and a contribution to world
peace”.
Cardinal
Bertone concludes by commenting that the local Churches “will
surely wish to imitate your Pontifical Council's solicitude, and
place themselves at the service of miners, so as to help them develop
an ever more integral version of this question”.
ANGELUS:
WAR AGAINST EVIL MEANS SAYING NO TO FRATRICIDAL HATE AND ALL FORMS OF
VIOLENCE
Vatican
City, 8 September 2013 (VIS) – Pope Francis, following yesterday's
fast and prayer vigil for peace in Syria, the Middle East and all
over the world, returned to the theme of peace during the Angelus at
midday today. He commented on today's Gospel reading in which Jesus
states the condition for his disciples: to put nothing before their
love for Him, carrying their cross, and following him.
The
Holy Father explained that many people approached Jesus, especially
in the wake of some prodigious dream, that indicated Him as the
Messiah, the King of Israel. But Jesus knows that in Jerusalem the
cross awaits Him and does not wish to create illusions; he knows that
the path will lead him to sacrifice Himself for the redemption of our
sins. “Following Jesus does not mean taking part in a triumphal
parade!” the Pope said. “It means sharing in His merciful love,
becoming part of His great mission of mercy towards each and every
man. … And this universal forgiveness, this mercy, comes through
the cross. Jesus does not want to carry out this mission alone: He
wants to involve us too, in the mission that the Father entrusted to
Him. ... A disciple of Jesus gives up all his or her goods, because
he or she has found in Him the greatest Good, within which every
other asset receives its true worth and meaning: family relations,
other relationships, work, cultural and economic wealth, and so
forth”.
To
explain his demand, Jesus uses the parable of the king who, before
leaving to go to war, would surely first sit down and consider
whether with ten thousand men he could stand up to his adversary, who
was advancing against him with twenty thousand? If not, then while
the other king was still a long way off, he would send envoys to sue
for peace. “Here Jesus doesn’t want to discuss war – it is only
a parable” commented the Holy Father. “But at this moment in
time, when we are praying intensely for peace, this Word of the Lord
affects us profoundly, and fundamentally it says: there’s a deeper
war we must fight, all of us! It is the strong and brave decision to
renounce evil and its seductions, and to choose good, fully prepared
to pay personally: that is, following Christ, and taking up our
cross! It is a profound war against evil! What is the point of
fighting wars, many wars, if you are not capable of fighting this
deeper war against evil? There’s no point!”
He
continued, “This war against evil means saying no to fratricidal
hatred, and to the lies that it uses; saying no to violence in all
its forms; saying no to the proliferation of arms and their sale on
the black market. There are so many of them! And the doubt always
remains: this war over there, this other war over there – because
there are wars everywhere – is it really a war over problems, or is
it a commercial war, to sell these arms on the black market? These
are the enemies we must fight, united and coherent, following no
other interests but those of peace and of the common good”.
The
Pope concluded by mentioning that today we remember the Nativity of
the Virgin Mary, a celebration particularly beloved by the Oriental
Churches. “All of us, now, can send our warm greetings to all the
brothers, sisters, bishops, monks, nuns of the Oriental Churches,
Orthodox and Catholic. … Jesus is the sun, Mary is the first light
that announces its dawning. Yesterday evening we kept vigil, calling
on Her intercession in our prayer for peace in the world, especially
in Syria and in the whole of the Middle East. We invoke Her now as
Queen of Peace. Queen of Peace, pray for us!”
KEEP
PRAYING - THE SEARCH FOR PEACE IS LONG
Vatican
City, 8 September 2013 (VIS) - “I would like to thank everyone who,
in various ways, joined in the Vigil of Prayer and Fasting yesterday
evening. I thank the many people who united the offering of their
sufferings. I express my gratitude to the civil authorities, as well
as to the members of other Christian communities and of other
religions, and to men and women of good will who have undertaken, on
this occasion, periods of prayer, fasting and reflection”, said the
Pope after today's Angelus.
“But
the task remains: we move forward with prayer and works of peace. I
invite you to continue to pray so that the violence and devastation
in Syria may cease immediately and that a renewed effort be
undertaken to achieve a just solution to this fratricidal conflict.
Let us pray also for other countries in the Middle East, in
particular for Lebanon, that it may find its hoped-for stability and
continue to be a model of peaceful co-existence; for Iraq, that
sectarian violence may give way to reconciliation; and that the peace
process between the Israelis and Palestinians may proceed with
determination and courage. Finally, let us pray for Egypt, that all
Egyptians, Muslims and Christians, may commit themselves to build up
together a society dedicated to the good of the whole population.
“The
search for peace is long and demands patience and perseverance! Let
us keep praying for this!”
The
Pope concluded by mentioning that yesterday in Rovigo, Italy, Maria
Bolognese was declared blessed. A laywoman of the region, she was
born in 1924 and died in 1980. “She dedicated her entire life to
the service of others”, the Pope said, “especially the poor and
the sick, enduring great suffering in profound union with the passion
of Christ. We give thanks to God for this witness to the Gospel”.
AUDIENCES
Vatican
City, 9 September 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father received in
audience:
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Piotr Nowina-Konopka, the new ambassador of Poland to the Holy See,
presenting his letters of credence.
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Fr. Bruno Cadore, Master of the Order of Preachers of the Dominican
Order.
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Professor Franco Miano, national president of Azione Cattolica
Italiana.
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Salvatore Martinez, national president of Renewal in the Holy Spirit.
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Matteo Calisi, president of the Catholic Fraternity of Charismatic
Communities and Fellowship and Michelle Moran, president of the
International Charismatic Renewal Services.
On
Saturday 7 September, the Holy Father received in audience:
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Peter Sopko, the new ambassador of the Slovak Republic to the Holy
See, presenting his letters of credence.
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Cardinal Marc Ouellet, P.S.S., prefect of the Congregation for
Bishops.
On
the afternoon of Friday, 6 September the Holy Father received in
separate audiences:
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Cardinal Lluis Martinez Sistach, archbishop of Barcelona
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Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 9 September 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father accepted the
resignation from the pastoral care of the office of auxiliary of the
archdiocese of Bamberg, Germany, presented by Bishop Werner
Radspieler, upon having reached the age limit.
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