SUMMARY:
-
ANGELUS: THE LOVE OF GOD IS WITHOUT MEASURE
-
CHRISTIANS AGAINST TORTURE
-
THE POPE BEGINS HIS PASTORAL TRIP IN CALABRIA WITH DETAINEES IN
CASTROVILLARI PRISON
-
TO THE PRIESTS: CHOOSE BROTHERHOOD
-
MASS IN SIBARI: THOSE WHO TAKE THE PATH OF EVIL ARE EXCOMMUNICATED
-
THE ROACO HOLDS ITS 87TH PLENARY ASSEMBLY
-
CARDINAL TOMKO, POPE'S SPECIAL ENVOY IN UKRAINE
-
THE ORIENTAL CHURCHES
-
AUDIENCES
-
OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
______________________________________
ANGELUS:
THE LOVE OF GOD IS WITHOUT MEASURE
Vatican
City, 23 June 2014 (VIS) – At midday Pope Francis appeared at the
window of his study to pray the traditional Sunday Angelus with the
faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square. The Holy Father commented
that today Italy and many other countries celebrate the feast day of
the Body and Blood of Christ, “Corpus Domini” or “Corpus
Christi”, in which the ecclesial community gathers around the
Eucharist to adore the most precious gift that Jesus left to her.
In
the Gospel of St. John we find the narrative on the “bread of
life”, spoken by Jesus in the synagogue of Capernaum, in which He
states: “I am the living bread which came down from heaven. If
anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever and the bread that I
will give is my flesh for the life of the world”. Pope Francis
explained, “Jesus says that he has not come into this world to give
something, but to give himself, his life, as nourishment for those
who have faith in him. Our communion with the Lord commits us, his
disciples, to imitate him, making of our lives, with our attitudes, a
bread broken for others, just as the Master broke the bread that is
truly His flesh”.
“Whenever
we participate in Holy Mass and are nourished by the body of Christ,
the presence of Jesus and the Holy Spirit works within us; it shapes
our hearts, it communicates inner attitudes that transform within us
into modes of behaviour in accordance with the Gospel. Firstly,
docility to the Word of God, then fraternity among Christians, the
courage of Christian witness, the creativity of charity, the ability
to give hope to the disheartened, and to welcome the excluded. In
this way the Eucharist helps the Christian lifestyle to mature in us.
Christ's charity, received with an open heart … changes us,
transforms us, makes us capable of loving not according to a human
measure, which is always limited, but according to God's measure, and
God's measure is without measure”.
“And
then we become able to love even those who do not love us”,
continued the Pontiff, “and it is not easy. If we know that a
person does not love us we tend not to like that person. But no! We
must love those who do not love us! We must oppose evil with good, we
must forgive, share, welcome others. Thanks to Jesus and his Spirit,
even our life becomes 'bread broken' for our brothers. And, living in
this way, we discover true joy! The joy of making oneself a gift, to
reciprocate the great gift that we have first received, without any
merit on our part.
Francis
concluded his brief reflection by urging the faithful to recall two
things: first, that “the measure of God's love is to love without
measure”, and that our life, “with Jesus' love, receiving the
Eucharist, transforms our life into a gift”.
CHRISTIANS
AGAINST TORTURE
Vatican
City, 23 June 2014 (VIS) – This coming June 26 will be the United
Nations' Day for Victims of Torture. Pope Francis took the
opportunity to reiterate his “strong condemnation of all forms of
torture” and encouraged Christians to make every effort to
collaborate in its abolition and to support the victims and their
families. “Torturing people is a mortal sin, a very grave sin”.
THE
POPE BEGINS HIS PASTORAL TRIP IN CALABRIA WITH DETAINEES IN
CASTROVILLARI PRISON
Vatican
City, 21 June 2014 (VIS) – Pope Francis began his pastoral visit to
Cassano all'Jonio by meeting the detainees at the Castrovillari
penitentiary. He expressed the closeness of the Church to every man
and woman in jail all over the world, and reminded them of Jesus'
words: “I was in prison and you came to me”.
The
Pope arrived by Vatican helicopter at Castrovillari at 9 a.m., and
walked the short distance to the prison where he was received by the
director, Fedele Rizzo, and after listening to a short address one of
the detainees on the forecourt outside the prison, he gave the
following discourse:
“When
we talk about prisoners, we often underline the theme of respect for
the fundamental rights of man and the need for the conditions in
which the sentence is served to correspond. This aspect of prison
policy is certainly essential and a high level of attention must be
maintained in this respect. But this approach is not sufficient, if
it is not accompanied and completed by concrete commitment by
institutions with a view to the effective reinsertion within society.
When this objective is neglected, the fulfilment of the sentence is
reduced to a mere instrument of punishment and social retaliation,
damaging to both the individual and to society. And God does not do
this, with us. God, when He forgives, accompanies us and helps us
along the road. Always, and even in small things. When we go to
confess, the Lord says to us, 'I forgive you. But now, come with me'.
And He helps us to return to the path. He never condemns. He never
forgives alone; He forgives and accompanies. And then, we are fragile
and have to return to confession again, all of us. But He never
tires. He always takes us by the hand again. This is God's love, and
we must imitate Him! Society must imitate Him, and take this path”.
“On
the other hand, the true and full rehabilitation of the person does
not occur as the end point of a merely human progression. In this
path there is also the encounter with God, the capacity to allow
ourselves to be looked upon by God, Who loves us. It is more
difficult to place ourselves before God's gaze than to look at God.
It is more difficult to let ourselves be met by God than it is to
meet God, because there is always resistance within us. And He waits
for us, He watches us, He always seeks us. This God, Who loves us,
Who is able to understand us, able to forgive our mistakes. The Lord
is a master of rehabilitation: He takes us by the hand and restores
us to the social community. The Lord always forgives, He always
accompanies, He always understands; we must let ourselves be
understood, forgiven, and accompanied”.
“I
hope that for every one of you here, this time will not be wasted,
but that it can instead become valuable time during which you may ask
for and obtain this grace from God. In this way, first of all you
will contribute to improving yourselves, but at the same time also
the community, as, for better and worse, our actions influence others
and the whole of the human family”.
“I
convey my affectionate greetings to your families; may the Lord grant
you the possibility to embrace them again in serenity and peace.
Finally, I wish to offer encouragement to all those who work in this
house: the directors, the police guards, and all other staff. I
impart a heartfelt blessing to you all, and entrust you to the
protection of Our Lady, our Mother. And please, I ask you to pray for
me, because I to make my errors and must do penance. Thank you”.
TO
THE PRIESTS: CHOOSE BROTHERHOOD
Vatican
City, 21 June 2014 (VIS) – After his encounter with the detainees
at Castrovillari, the Holy Father transferred by helicopter to
Cassano all'Jonio where he landed at around 11 a.m., and was welcomed
by the local authorities in the “Pietro Toscano” sports field.
From there, he went on to the nearby “San Giuseppe Moscati”
centre for the elderly, where he spoke with residents. Finally, in
the cathedral, he met with the priests of the diocese and delivered
the text of his address based on two themes: the joy of the
priesthood and the beauty of brotherhood.
“I
wish to share with you the ever-new surprise of having been called …
by the Lord Jesus”, he writes. “Called to follow Him, to stay
with Him, to bring Him to others. … When we are before the
Tabernacle … Jesus' gaze renews us. Effectively, it is not easy to
stay there, before the Lord, as we are always busy with so many
things, with so many people … but at times it is not easy also
because Jesus' gaze unsettles us … and challenges us. But this is
good for us! In the silence of prayer, Jesus enables us to see
whether we are like good workers, or if we have become rather like
'functionaries'; if we are open and generous channels through which
His love and His grace flow, or if instead we place ourselves at the
centre, and in the place of channels we become 'screens' which do not
help in the encounter with the Lord, with the light and strength of
the Gospel”.
The
beauty of fraternity is that of “following the Lord … not one by
one, but together, with our great variety of gifts and personalities;
indeed, it is precisely this that enriches the priesthood: this
variety in terms of provenance, age, and talents. … It is all lived
in communion, in fraternity”. He adds, “and this too is not easy,
it is not immediate or to be taken for granted. Firstly because we
priests, too, are immersed in today's subjectivist culture, this
culture that exalts the 'I' to the point of idolatry. And then also
due to a certain pastoral individualism that is unfortunately
widespread in our dioceses. We must therefore react to this with the
choice of fraternity. I refer intentionally to 'choice'. It cannot
simply be something that is left to chance; … no, it is a choice,
that corresponds … to the gift that we have received but which must
always be welcomed and cultivated: communion in Christ I in the
priesthood, around the bishop. This communion needs to be experienced
by seeking concrete forms suitable to the times and the specific
situation of the territory, but always with an apostolic view, with a
missionary style, with fraternity and simplicity of life”.
Pope
Francis adds a third theme: that of staying with families and working
for them. “It is a task that the Lord asks of us especially in this
time that is difficult both for the family as an institution and for
families affected by the crisis. But it is precisely in difficult
times that God makes us aware of His vicinity, His grace and the
prophetic strength of His Word. And we are called upon to be
witnesses and mediators of this vicinity to families and this
prophetic strength for the family”, he concludes.
After
leaving the cathedral, the Pope proceeded to the bishop's residence
followed by the seminary, where he lunched with the poor assisted by
the diocesan branch of Caritas and the young people assisted at the
Saman Mauro Rostagno rehabilitation centre. After lunch, he
transferred by car to the Casa Serena where he met with elderly
residents, and finally continued on his trip to Sibari.
MASS
IN SIBARI: THOSE WHO TAKE THE PATH OF EVIL ARE EXCOMMUNICATED
Vatican
City, 21 June 2014 (VIS) – During his journey from Cassano
all'Jonio to Sibari, a distance of slightly less than twenty
kilometres, the Pope stopped in the parish of San Giuseppe where, on
3 May last year, the priest Lazzaro Longobardi was murdered. Bishop
Nunzio Galantino, secretary of the Italian Episcopal Conference,
described him as “a martyr to charity”.
The
Holy Father arrived at Marina de Sibari at 4 p.m. and, after greeting
the numerous faithful awaiting him, he celebrated the Holy Mass of
Corpus Domini, commenting that while on Holy Thursday we celebrate
the institution of the Eucharist in the Last Supper, Corpus Domini is
a feast primarily of thanksgiving and adoration.
“Indeed,
the procession with the Most Holy Sacrament is traditional on this
day”, he explained. “Adoring Jesus Christ and walking with Him.
These are the two inseparable aspects of this feast day, which
characterise all the life of the Christian people: a people who adore
God and a people who walk, who do not stay in one place, who walk!”
First
of all we are people who adore God. We adore God Who is love, Who in
Jesus Christ gave Himself for us, Who offered Himself on the Cross to
expiate our sins, and through the power of this love, rose from the
dead and lives in His Church. We have no God other than Him! When,
instead, we substitute adoration of the Lord with adoration of money,
the way opens to sin, to personal interest and abuse; when one no
longer adores God, the Lord, one becomes an adorer of evil, like
those who live through dishonesty and violence. Your land, so
beautiful, knows the signs and the consequences of this sin. The
'ndrangheta is this: adoration of evil and disdain for the common
good. We must fight this evil and expel it. We must say no!”, he
exclaimed. “The Church, who is so committed to educating
consciences, must make increasing efforts to ensure that good may
prevail. We ask this of our boys and girls, our young people in need
of hope. To be able to respond to these needs, faith can help us.
Those who follow this path of evil in life, as the mafiosi do, are
not in communion with God: they are excommunicated!”
“Today
we confess with our gaze turned to the Corpus Domini, to the
Sacrament on the altar. And for this faith we renounce Satan and all
his seductions; we renounce the idols of money, vanity, pride, power,
violence. We Christians do not wish to worship anything or anyone
else in this world other than Jesus Christ, Who is present in the
holy Eucharist”.
“Perhaps
we do not always fully realise the meaning of this: of what
consequences our profession of faith has or should have”, remarked
the Pontiff. “This, our faith in the real presence of Jesus Christ
… in the consecrated bread and wine is authentic if we make an
effort to walk behind Him and with Him. To worship is to walk; a
people who worships is a people who walks, seeking to put into
practice the commandment He gave to His disciples at the Last Supper:
'as I have loved you, so you must love one another'. A people that
loves God in the Eucharist is a people who walks in charity. Worship
God in the Eucharist, walk with God in fraternal charity”.
“Today,
as bishop of Rome, I am here to confirm you not only in faith but
also in charity, to accompany you and encourage you on your path with
Jesus Charity. … I extend my support to all the pastors and
faithful of the Church in Calabria, courageously committed to
evangelisation and promoting styles of life and initiatives centred
on the needs of the poor and the least among us. And I extend this
also to the civil authorities who endeavour to live their political
and administrative commitment for what it is, a service to the common
good. I encourage all of you to bear witness to concrete solidarity
with your brothers and sisters, especially with those most in need of
justice, hope and tenderness”.
Francis
went on to thank God for all the signs of hope that can be seen in
families, parishes, associations, and ecclesial movements in
Calabria, and urged the young not to be robbed of their hope as,
“adoring Jesus in your hearts and staying united with Him you will
be able to oppose evil, injustice and violence with the strength of
goodness, truth, and beauty”.
“The
Body of the Lord makes us one entity, one family, the People of God
reunited around Jesus, the Bread of life. What I have said to the
young I say to all of you: if you worship Christ and walk behind Him
and with Him, your diocesan Church and your parishes will grow in
faith and charity, in the joy of evangelisation. You will be a Church
in which fathers, mothers, priests, religious, catechists, children,
the elderly, and the young all walk one next to the other, they
support each other, they help each other, and they love each other
like brothers, especially in moments of difficulty. May Mary, our
mother, the Eucharistic woman you venerate in many shrines,
especially in that of Castrovillari, precede you in this pilgrimage
of faith”, he concluded.
At
5.30 p.m., after the Eucharist, the Pope transferred to the heliport
next to the sports field, departing at 6 p.m. and landing an hour and
a half later.
THE
ROACO HOLDS ITS 87TH PLENARY ASSEMBLY
Vatican
City, 23 June 2014 (VIS) – The Congregation for the Oriental
Churches will hold the 87th Plenary Assembly of the ROACO (“Riunione
Opere Aiuto Chiese Orientali”, “Reunion of Aid Agencies for the
Oriental Churches”) from 23 to 26 June. On Tuesday 24 at 8.30 a.m.
Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, prefect of the same dicastery, will
celebrate the Eucharist at the altar of St. John Paul II in the
Vatican Basilica to commend the works of the Assembly to the
intercession of the saint. In the afternoon, the participants will
visit one of the Formative Institutions of the Pontifical Oriental
Institute; the former, along with the nine Oriental Colleges, is
supported with the contribution of the ROACO agencies.
A
representative of the Secretariat of the Economy was also invited to
assist the new entity in getting to know the methods according to
which the Congregation for the Oriental Churches carries out its work
in the coordination of disbursements, the ownership of which remains
with each individual agency.
Among
the themes the Congregation will consider are the situation of the
Greek Catholic Churches in Romania and Ukraine, the grave situation
in Syria, and the ecclesial situation of the Holy Land, including
confirmation of the work carried out thanks to donations received in
the Good Friday collection.
The
Assembly will conclude on Thursday 26 June with an audience with the
Holy Father in the morning, and in the afternoon, a Eucharistic
celebration with the members of the Boards of Regents of Bethlehem
University, which celebrates its fiftieth anniversary this year.
CARDINAL
TOMKO, POPE'S SPECIAL ENVOY IN UKRAINE
Vatican
City, 21 June 2014 (VIS) – This morning a letter was published,
written in Latin and dated 9 June, by which Pope Francis appoints
Cardinal Jozef Tomko, prefect emeritus of the Congregation for the
Evangelisation of Peoples, as his special envoy to the 25th
anniversary of the liberation of the Greek Catholic eparchy of
Mukachevo, scheduled to take place at the major seminary of Uzhhorod,
Ukraine, on 28 June 2014.
The
pontifical mission to accompany the cardinal is composed of Fr.
Pavlov Sabov, former priest of the parishes of Strypa and Jarok in
Uzhhorod and currently collaborating priest at the Cathedral of
Uzhhorod, Fr. Vasyl Chvasta, priest of the Church of Divine Mercy at
Uzhhorod and syncellus for the laity.
THE
ORIENTAL CHURCHES
Vatican
City, 21 June 2014 (VIS) – His Beatitude Gregorios III, Patriarch
of Antioch of the Greek Melkites, with the assent of the Synod of
Bishops of the Greek-Melkite Church, has transferred:
-
Archbishop Georges Bacouni, previously of the archieparchy of Tiro of
the Greek Melkites in Lebanon to the archieparchy of Akka (Catholics
80,000, priests 36, religious 36, permanent deacons 4) in Israel.
-
Bishop Michael Abrass B.A., previously of the patriarchal curia of
Antioch of the Greek Melkites in Lebanon to the archieparchy of Tiro
of the Greek Melkites (Catholics 3,050 priests 8, religious 6) in
Lebanon,elevating him to the dignity of archbishop.
AUDIENCES
Vatican
City, 23 June 2014 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father received in
audience:
-
Archbishop Fortunatus Nwachukwu, apostolic nuncio in Nicaragua.
-
Archbishop Ricardo Blazquez Perez of Valladolid, president of the
Spanish Episcopal Conference, accompanied by the vice-president,
Archbishop Carlos Osoro Sierra of Valencia and the secretary general,
Fr. Jose Maria Gil Tamayo.
-
Fratel Enzo Bianchi, prior of the monastery of Bose.
-
Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Council for
the Family.
On
Saturday, 21 June, the Holy Father received in audience:
-
Cardinal George Pell, prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy.
-
Archbishop Guido Anselmo Pecorari, apostolic nuncio in Bulgaria.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 21 June 2014 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed Rev. Fr.
Real Tremblay C.SS.R, president of the Pontifical Academy Theology.
Fr. Trembaly is professor emeritus of Fundamental Moral Theology in
the Alfonsianium Academy of Rome and ordinary member and adviser to
the Pontifical Academy of Theology.
You
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