SUMMARY:
-
ANGELUS: THE PARABLE OF THE SOWER STILL APPLIES TODAY
-
NEW CALL FOR PEACE IN THE HOLY LAND
-
POPE FRANCIS' VIDEOMESSAGE TO PATIENTS IN GEMELLI HOSPITAL
-
REDUCTIONISM DISCARDS AN ENTIRE GENERATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE
-
OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
______________________________________
ANGELUS:
THE PARABLE OF THE SOWER STILL APPLIES TODAY
Vatican
City, 13 July 2014 (VIS) – At midday Pope Francis appeared at the
window of his study to pray the Sunday Angelus with thousands of
faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square. Before the Marian prayer,
the Holy Father commented on the Gospel reading of the day's liturgy,
which was the parable of the sower.
“Jesus
uses many parables”, he said. These constitute “a language
comprehensible to everyone, with images drawn from nature and
situations from daily life. The first is an introduction to all the
parables: that of the sower who casts his seed freely on all types of
terrain”.
“The
true protagonist of this parable is indeed the seed, which produces
more or less fruit, depending on the land on which it falls. The
first three terrains are unproductive: on the path, the seeds are
eaten by birds; on the rocky ground, the buds dry quickly because
they have no roots; among bushes, the seeds are choked by thorns. The
fourth ground is good ground: only there does the seed take root and
bears fruit”.
In
this case, continued Francis, Jesus does not limit himself simply to
presenting the parable, but also explains it. “The seed that fell
on the path signifies those who hear the proclamation of the Kingdom
of God but do not receive him, so the Evil One comes and takes it
away, as he does not want the seed of the Gospel to germinate in the
hearts of men. This is the first comparison. The second is the seed
that fell on stony ground: this represents those who hear the word of
God, and receive it immediately, but superficially, so it does not
take roots and they are inconsistent; and when trials and
tribulations arrive, these people lose heart immediately. The third
case is that of the seed that fell among thorns. Jesus explains that
it refers to those who hear the word but, owing to worldly concerns
and the seduction of wealth, it remains stifled. Finally, the seed
that fell on fertile soil represents those who hear the word, welcome
it, safeguard it, and understand it – and it bears fruit. The
perfect model of this good ground is the Virgin Mary”.
This
parable speaks to each of us today, as it spoke to the listeners of
Jesus two thousand years ago. It reminds us that we are the land
where the Lord tirelessly throws the seed of His Word and His love.
How do we receive it? How is our heart? What type of ground do we
offer it: a path, a stone, a thorn bush? It is up to us to become
good soil without thorns or stones, but instead cultivated with care,
so that it can bring forth good fruit for us and for our brethren”.
The
Pope concluded, “it is good for us not to forget that we too are
sowers. God sows good seeds, and at this point too we can ask
ourselves: what type of seed comes out of our heart and our mouth?
Our words can do great good and also much evil; they can heal and
they can wound, they can encourage and they can depress. Remember:
what counts is not what enters, but what emerges from the mouth and
the heart”.
NEW
CALL FOR PEACE IN THE HOLY LAND
Vatican
City, 13 July 2014 (VIS) – After praying the Angelus, the Pope
launched a fresh appeal for fervent prayer for peace in the Holy Land
in the light of the tragic events of recent days.
“I
still recall the meeting of 8 June with Patriarch Bartholomaios,
President Peres and President Abbas, with whom we invoked the gift of
peace and heard the call to break the cycle of hatred and violence.
Some might think that such a meeting took place in vain. But no,
because prayer helps us not to allow ourselves to be overcome by
evil, nor resign ourselves to violence and hatred taking over
dialogue and reconciliation. I urge the parties concerned and all
those who have political responsibility at local and international
levels to offer a prayer and make some effort to bring an end to all
hostilities and to achieve the desired peace for the good of all. And
I invite everyone to unite in prayer. In silence everyone, let us
pray. Now, Lord, help us! Grant us peace, teach us peace, guide us
toward peace. Open our eyes and our hearts and give us the courage to
say: “No more war!” “War destroys everything”. Give us the
courage to take concrete actions to build peace. Make us willing to
listen to the cry of our citizens who ask us to transform our weapons
into instruments of peace, our fears into trust, and our tensions
into forgiveness”.
The
Holy Father then went on to comment that today is “Sea Sunday”,
and greeted all seafarers, fishermen and their families, urging
Christian communities, particularly those living in coastal areas, to
be attentive to them. “I also invite the chaplains and volunteers
of the Apostleship of the Sea to continue their commitment to the
pastoral care of these brothers and sisters”, he added, entrusting
all, “especially those who are in difficulty and away from home, to
the maternal protection of Mary, Star of the Sea”.
Finally,
he blessed all the spiritual sons and daughters of St. Camillus de
Lellis, as tomorrow marks the 400th anniversary of his death, and
invited the Camillan family, in this jubilee year, “to be a sign of
the Lord Jesus who, as the Good Samaritan, tends to the wounds of the
body and the spirit of suffering humanity, pouring the oil of
consolation and the wine of hope. To those of you gathered here in St
Peter's Square, as well as to health professionals serving in
hospitals and nursing homes, it is my hope that you may continue grow
in the charism of charity, fuelled by daily contact with the sick”.
POPE
FRANCIS' VIDEOMESSAGE TO PATIENTS IN GEMELLI HOSPITAL
Vatican
City, 14 July 2014 (VIS) – On Sunday morning the Holy Father sent a
video message to patients in Rome's Agostino Gemelli Hospital, in
which he apologised for be unable to attend the visit planned for 27
June, cancelled due to an unexpected indisposition. “I extend my
apologies not only to the hospital directors but to all those who
have worked with such effort and passion. Above all, I include the
patients waiting to be able to pray together during the Holy Mass,
whom I would have liked to greet personally”.
Francis
encouraged the sick to cultivate in prayer “the flavour of the
things of God; bear witness that your strength lies in God alone. You
who, as patients, experience the frailty of the body, can offer a
powerful testimony to those who are near you of how the Gospel and
the merciful love of the Father are a precious asset in life, not
money or power. Indeed, even when a person is important according to
a worldly logic, he is not able to add even one extra day to his own
life”.
The
Pope commented that the summer vacations were approaching and that
many people go on holiday to relax. “However, summer is also a
difficult moment especially for the elderly and the sick, who are
more likely to remain alone and who encounter greater difficulties in
obtaining certain services, especially in big cities. So, this time
of repose is also the time in which the difficulties in life can
become even greater”. He concluded by highlighting the passion and
dedication of the hospital staff, and thanked them warmly for their
work. “I truly looked forward to meeting with you but, as you well
know, we are not the masters of our own lives and things do not
always go to plan. We must accept our frailty. With me, cultivate the
trust that our strength lies in God alone. I entrust you to Mary and
ask that you continue to pray for me, as I need your prayers”.
REDUCTIONISM
DISCARDS AN ENTIRE GENERATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE
Vatican
City, 13 July 2014 (VIS) – Yesterday, Saturday, the Holy Father
lunched with the participants in the international seminar dedicated
to Pope Francis' proposal in the Apostolic Exhortation “Evangelii
Gaudium”, for “an increasingly inclusive economy”, which took
place in the Casina Pio IV in the Vatican.
“What
you do is very important”, he said. “Reflecting on reality, but
reflecting without fear, reflecting with intelligence. Without fear
and with intelligence. And this is a service”. Referring to the
themes considered during the seminar, he went on to offer a brief
discourse on anthropological reductionism.
“I
believe that this is the strongest moment for anthropological
reductionism. What is happening to humanity at the moment is what
happens when wine becomes brandy: it passes through a phase of
distillation, in organisational terms. It is no longer wine, but it
is something else: perhaps more useful, more qualified, but it is not
wine! For mankind it is the same: man passes through this
transformational phase and ends up – and I am serious – losing
his humanity and becoming a tool of the system, a social and economic
system, a system where imbalance reigns. When mankind loses his
humanity, what happens to us? What occurs is what I would describe in
simple terms as a throwaway policy or sociology: what is no longer
useful is discarded, because man is not at the centre. And when man
is not at the centre, there is something else in his place and man is
at the service of this other thing. The idea, therefore, is to save
mankind, in the sense of restoring him to the centre: to the centre
of society, of thought, of reflection. Restoring mankind to the
centre. You do good work. You study, reflect, hold conferences for
this reason – so that mankind is not discarded. Children are
discarded – we all know about today's birth rates, at least in
Europe; the elderly are discarded, because they are not 'useful'. And
now? An entire generation of young people is discarded, and this is
very serious! I have seen a figure: 75 million young people, under
the age of 25, without work. The 'neither-nor' young: those who
neither work nor study. They do not study because they do not have
the opportunity, and the do not work because there is no work. Who
will be the next to be discarded? Let us stop this in time, please!”.
The
Pope thanked those present for their work and their initiatives “to
restore balance to this imbalanced situation and to recover mankind,
restoring him to the centre of reflection and the centre of life. He
is the king of the universe!” he exclaimed. “And this is not
theology, it is philosophy and human reality”.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 12 July 2014 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:
-
appointed Archbishop Luigi Bianco, as apostolic nuncio in Ethiopia.
Archbishop Bianco was previously apostolic nuncio in Honduras.
-
appointed Bishop Claudio Maniago, auxiliary of the archdiocese of
Florence, Italy, as bishop of Castellaneta (area 1,043, population
128,687, Catholics 125,861, priests 54, permanent deacons 1,
religious 41), Italy.
-
appointed Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, archbishop of La
Habana (Cuba), as his special envoy to the concluding celebration of
the 350 th anniversary of the foundation of the parish of Notre
Dame-de-Québec, Canada, “mother-church of all the parishes of
North America” scheduled for 14 September 2014.
-
appointed Rev. Luca Sansalone of the clergy of Rome as judicial vicar
of the Tribunal of First Instance for the causes of nullity of
marriage for the region of Latium. Rev. Sansalone was previously
adjunct judicial vicar at the same Tribunal.
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