SUMMARY:
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THE POPE RECEIVES ARAM I, CATHOLICOS OF THE ARMENIAN APOSTOLIC CHURCH
OF CILICIA: WE SHARE THE SAME HOPES
-
FRANCIS: GYPSIES ARE ONE OF THE GROUPS MOST VULNERABLE TO NEW FORMS
OF SLAVERY
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FUNERAL OF CARDINAL LOURDUSAMY
-
AUDIENCES
-
OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
______________________________________
THE
POPE RECEIVES ARAM I, CATHOLICOS OF THE ARMENIAN APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
CILICIA: WE SHARE THE SAME HOPES
Vatican
City, 5 June 2014 (VIS) – “On our journey towards full communion,
we share the same hopes and a similar sense of responsibility as we
strive to be faithful to the will of the Lord Jesus Christ”. With
these words, Pope Francis greeted His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of
the Armenian Apostolic Church of Cilicia, during their meeting in the
Vatican this morning.
As
the Pope observed, His Holiness Aram I's commitment to the cause of
Christian unity is well known to all. The Catholicos has played an
important role in the World Council of Churches and in the Middle
East Council of Churches, which support Christian communities in the
Middle East, and has made a significant contribution to the Joint
Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and
the Oriental Orthodox Churches.
Francis
also remarked that Aram I represents “a part of the Christian world
that is irrevocably marked by a history of trials and sufferings
courageously accepted for the love of God. The Armenian Apostolic
Church has had to become a pilgrim people; it has experienced in a
singular way what it means to journey towards the Kingdom of God. The
history of emigration, persecutions and the martyrdom experienced by
so many of the faithful has inflicted deep wounds on the hearts of
all Armenians. We must see and venerate these as wounds inflicted on
the very body of Christ, and for this very reason a cause for
unfailing hope and trust in the provident mercy of the Father”.
“Trust
and hope. How much these are needed! They are needed by our Christian
brothers and sisters in the Middle East, especially those living in
areas racked by conflict and violence. But we too need them, as
Christians who are spared such sufferings yet so often risk losing
our way in the desert of indifference and forgetfulness of God, or
living in conflict with our brothers and sisters, or succumbing in
our interior struggle against sin. As followers of Jesus Christ, we
need to learn humbly to bear one another’s burdens and to help each
other to be better Christians, better followers of Jesus. So let us
advance together in charity, as Christ loved us and gave Himself for
us, offering Himself to God as a pleasing sacrifice”.
“In
these days before Pentecost … in faith, let us invoke the Spirit,
the Lord and Giver of Life, that he may renew the face of the earth,
be a source of healing for our wounded world, and reconcile the
hearts of all men and women with God the Creator. May He, the
Paraclete, inspire our journey towards unity. May He teach us to
strengthen the fraternal bonds which even now unite us in the one
baptism and in the one faith”, concluded Francis.
After
the meeting, the Catholicos and the Pope prayed together in the
Redemptoris Mater Chapel.
FRANCIS:
GYPSIES ARE ONE OF THE GROUPS MOST VULNERABLE TO NEW FORMS OF SLAVERY
Vatican
City, 5 June 2014 (VIS) – “New civil, cultural and social
approaches, and a new pastoral strategy for the Church” against
“modern forms of persecution, oppression and slavery” are
necessary to face the situation of gypsies throughout the world, said
Pope Francis during this morning's audience with the participants in
the meeting “The Church and gypsies: proclaiming the Gospel in the
peripheries”, organised by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral
Care of Migrants and Itinerant Peoples.
The
theme of the meeting, said Francis, involves “the memory of a
relationship, that between the ecclesiastical community and the gypsy
population, the history of a journey to get to know each other, to
encounter one another; and then the challenge for today, a challenge
that regards both ordinary pastoral care and new evangelisation”.
He
commented that often gypsies find themselves on the margins of
society, “and at times are looked upon with hostility and
suspicion; they are rarely involved in the political, economic and
social dynamics of the country”. He continued, “We know that it
is a complex reality, but certainly the gypsy population is also
required to contribute to the common good, and this is possible with
adequate itineraries of co-responsibility, the observance of duties
and the promotion of the rights of every person”.
He
observed that among the causes of misery among various sectors of the
population there are factors such as “a lack of educational
structures for cultural and professional formation, the difficulty of
access to healthcare, discrimination in the employment market and a
lack of decent accommodation”. He added that while these social
ills affect everyone, “the weakest groups are those who most easily
become victims of new forms of slavery. Indeed, the least protected
are those who fall into the trap of abuse, forced begging and other
forms of abuse. Gypsies are among the most vulnerable, especially
those who are receive no help in relation to integration or the
promotion of the person in the various dimensions of civil life”.
The
care of the Church is relevant here: “Indeed, the Gospel is the
proclamation of joy for all and especially for the weakest and most
marginalised. We are called upon to ensure our closeness and
solidarity to these people, following the example of Jesus Christ,
who demonstrated His Father's predilection for them”. However,
alongside this united action in favour of the gypsy population, there
needs to be “commitment on the part of local and national
institutions and the support of the international community, to
identify projects and action for improving quality of life”.
The
Holy Father concluded by urging the Pontifical Council to continue in
its task and not to be discouraged, adding, “May gypsies find in
you brothers and sisters who love them with the same love that Christ
had for the marginalised. Be, for them, the welcoming and joyful face
of the Church”.
FUNERAL
OF CARDINAL LOURDUSAMY
Vatican
City, 5 June 2014 (VIS) – At 11.30 this morning, at the major altar
of St. Peter's Basilica, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the College
of Cardinals, presided at the funeral mass for Cardinal Simon
Lourdusamy, prefect emeritus of the Congregation for the Oriental
Churches, who died on Monday in Rome at the age of 90.
In
his homily, the dean of the College of Cardinals described Cardinal
Lourdusamy as “a zealous priest who worked for more than ten years
in his beloved diocese of Pondicherry and then, for almost a decade,
was pastor of the archdiocese of Bangalore. He then generously
accepted Pope Paul VI's call to Rome, to serve in the missionary
Congregation of Propaganda Fide. Here, for twenty years, he dedicated
his energies to the great cause of the evangelisation of peoples,
until finally, submitting to the trials of illness, he continued to
serve the Church in prayer and suffering, with an attitude of great
serenity”.
Following
the Eucharistic celebration, the Holy Father administered the rites
of “Uitima Commendatio” and “Valedictio”.
AUDIENCES
Vatican
City, 5 June 2014 (VIS) – The Holy Father has received in audience:
-
Archbishop Charles Daniel Balvo, apostolic nuncio in Kenya and South
Sudan; permanent observer of the Holy See for the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Human Settlements Programme
(UN-Habitat).
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Doug Coe of the National Prayer Breakfast, U.S.A., and entourage.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 5 June 2014 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:
-
approved the appointment by the Cardinal Secretary of State of
Tommaso Di Ruzza as vice-director “ad interim” of the Financial
Information Authority (AIF). Dr. Di Ruzza was previously study
assistant at the AIF.
-
appointed, for a further five-year period, the following members of
the managing board of the Financial Information Authority: Maria
Bianca Farina, managing director of Poste Vita and Poste Assicura,
Italy; Marc Odendall, administrator of various foundations and
financial advisor for the philanthropic sector, Switzerland; Joseph
Yuvaraj Pillay, president of the Council of Consultors of the
president of the Republic of Singapore, Singapore; Juan C. Zarate,
senior advisor at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS) and lecturer in law at Harvard University, U.S.A.
You
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