SUMMARY:
-
PROGRAMME OF THE POPE'S PASTORAL VISIT TO CASERTA
-
IMITATE GOD'S PATIENCE AND AWAIT THE HARVEST WITH HOPE
-
APPEAL FOR THE CHRISTIAN COMMUNITIES OF THE MIDDLE EAST
-
POPE FRANCIS: TERRORISM IS A MADNESS THAT KNOWS ONLY HOW TO KILL
-
CARDINAL SANDRI TO THE ORIENTAL CHRISTIANS: YOUR TEARS AND HOPES ARE
OURS
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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
______________________________________
PROGRAMME
OF THE POPE'S PASTORAL VISIT TO CASERTA
Vatican
City, 21 July 2014 (VIS) – The programme of the Holy Father's
pastoral visit to Caserta, Italy, scheduled for Saturday 26 July, was
published today.
The
Pope will leave the Vatican by helicopter at 3 p.m. and will land 45
minutes later at the heliport of the Italian Air Force (Aeronautica
Militare) School in the Reggia or Royal Palace of Caserta. At 4 p.m.
he will meet the priests of the diocese at the Air Force Officer's
Club and at 6 p.m. he will celebrate Mass in the square adjacent to
the Royal Palace. At 7.30 p.m. he will depart for the Vatican where
he is expected to arrive at 8.15 p.m.
IMITATE
GOD'S PATIENCE AND AWAIT THE HARVEST WITH HOPE
Vatican
City, 20 July 2014 (VIS) – “In a field where the master sows the
grain, one night an enemy sowed tares among them, a plant whose name
in Hebrew has the same root as 'Satan' and refers to the concept of
division. The following morning the servants wanted to remove the
weed, but the master stopped them, 'Lest while you gather up the
tares, you root up also the wheat with them'”. The Holy Father
commented on this parable on Sunday morning, as he appeared at the
window of his study to pray the Angelus with the faithful gathered in
St. Peter's Square. “The parable of the good seed and the tares
takes on the problem of evil in the world”, explained the Pope,
“and highlights God's patience”.
“The
teaching of the parable is twofold. First, it says that the evil in
the world does not come from God, but from His enemy, the devil. This
enemy is astute; he has sown evil amidst the good, so that it is
impossible for man to clearly separate the two; but God, in the end,
will do so”. The Holy Father went on to consider the second theme:
“the constrast between the impatience of the servants and the
patient waiting of the master of the field, who represents God”. He
remarked that often we are hasty to judge, classify and sort the good
from the bad, and emphasised that God, on the other hand, knows how
to wait. “He looks at the 'field' of each person's life with
patience and mercy. He sees, far better than we do, the dirt and the
evil, but He also sees the seeds of good and waits confidently for
them to mature. God is patient, He knows how to wait”.
“The
attitude of the master is that of hope, based on the certainty that
evil has neither the first nor the last word. And, thanks to God's
patient hope, that same weed may in time become good grain. But
beware: evangelical patience is not indifference to evil; one must
not confuse good and evil! Faced with the weeds in the world, the
Lord's disciple is called to imitate God's patience, to nurture hope
with the support of an unshakeable faith in the final victory of
good, of God. In the end, we will all be judged by the same yardstick
with which we ourselves have judged: the mercy we have shown to
others will be used also with us. Let us ask Our Lady, our Mother, to
help us to grow in patience, hope and mercy”.
APPEAL
FOR THE CHRISTIAN COMMUNITIES OF THE MIDDLE EAST
Vatican
City, 20 July 2014 (VIS) – “I have received with some concern the
news from the Christian communities of Mosul, Iraq, and from other
parts of the Middle East who, ever since the beginnings of
Christianity, have co-existed there alongside their fellow citizens,
making a significant contribution to the good of society”, said the
Pope after today's Angelus prayer. “Today they are persecuted. Our
brothers are persecuted, they are cast out, they are forced to leave
their homes without having the chance to take anything with them. To
these people I wish to express my closeness and my constant prayer.
Dear brothers and sisters, so persecuted, I know how much you suffer,
I know that you have been deprived of everything. I am with you in
faith in He Who conquered evil”.
He
urged them to continue their prayer for the situations of tension and
conflict that persist in many areas of the world, especially in the
Middle East and Ukraine. “May the God of peace rouse in everyone an
authentic desire for peace and reconciliation. Violence cannot be
overcome with violence. Violence is defeated with peace! Let us pray
in silence, for peace; all of us, in silence. Mary, Queen of Peace,
pray for us!”.
POPE
FRANCIS: TERRORISM IS A MADNESS THAT KNOWS ONLY HOW TO KILL
Vatican
City, 19 July 2014 (VIS) – On Friday 18 July the Holy Father sent a
video message to the Argentine Israeli community, to convey his
closeness to the families of the victims of the bombing of the AMIA
(Argentine Israelite Mutual Association), which took place twenty
years ago in Buenos Aires (18 July 1994). It caused 85 deaths and
more than 200 casualties, making it one of the most significant
terrorist attacks the country has experienced.
“Terrorism
is a form of madness”; says Francis in the recorded message.
“Terrorism knows only how to kill – it does not build, it
destroys. Therefore, I wish to express my closeness to all those who
have seen lives derailed and hopes dashed, ruined. Sometimes it is
said that Buenos Aires is a city that needs to mourn, but has not yet
wept enough. At the risk of repeating a well-worn cliché, I repeat:
we need to mourn more. We tend to set things aside, not to come to
terms with our history, with our sufferings, with things that could
have been beautiful but were not. For this reason, it is so difficult
for us to find the path to justice, to settle the debt that this
tragedy has contracted with society. Along with my closeness, along
with my prayers for all the victims, today I wish to add my desire
for justice to be done. May God bless you all, institutions and
families. And may God give peace to those who died in this act of
lunacy”.
CARDINAL
SANDRI TO THE ORIENTAL CHRISTIANS: YOUR TEARS AND HOPES ARE OURS
Vatican
City, 21 July 2014 (VIS) – Yesterday Cardinal Leonardo Sandri,
prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches, celebrated
Mass in the Maronite Cathedral of Our Lady of Lebanon in Los Angeles,
United States, on the occasion of the festivity of Sts. Charbel and
Elias, commemorated by Lebanese Maronites all over the world on the
third Sunday of July. Around four hundred faithful of the Oriental
Churches participated in the celebration.
According
to a communiqué from the dicastery, the cardinal spoke in his homily
of the immense suffering caused by the desperate fate of many
innocent people and remarked that, while the Christians in Mosul in
Iraq and Aleppo in Syria are the most afflicted, the entire area is
in a state of insecurity, unfortunately maintained by widespread
indifference. He also made reference to those affected by current
events in Palestine, “who are in tears, unable to be men and
Christians in serenity and dignity. We tell them that their tears are
ours, nonetheless we share the same hope, and its name is Christ; and
Jesus Christ is faithful. For this, we persevere together in the same
journey”.
After
reading the appeal in support of persecuted Christians, launched by
Pope Francis during yesterday's Angelus, the Cardinal invited the
faithful to pray in silence and emphasised the Church's closeness to
the Patriarchs, the bishops and the people of the Syro-Catholic and
Chaldean Churches. He emphasised the Church's participation in their
suffering and urged them to persevere in the defence of human rights
and religious freedom, “particularly where Christians have been
living for two thousand years since the beginning of Christianity”
to the benefit of society, and where they may continue to offer their
contribution to the human community.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 21 July 2014 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed Bishop
Joseph Gebara, coadjutor of the eparchy of Nossa Senhora do Paraiso
em Sao Paolo, Brazil, as bishop of the same eparchy (Catholics
436,000, priests 11, permanent deacons 3, religious 4). He succeeds
Bishop Fares Maakaroun, M.S.P., whose resignation from the pastoral
care of the same eparchy in accordance with canon 210 para. 1 of the
Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches was accepted by the Holy
Father.
On
Saturday, 19 July, the Holy Father appointed Cardinal Ennio
Antonelli, president emeritus of the Pontifical Council for the
Family, as his special envoy to the consecration of the new Shrine of
San Gabriele dell'Addolorata, Teramo, Italy, scheduled for 21
September 2014.
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