SUMMARY:
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The Nativity and the Christmas Tree are signs of light and hope
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Francis: sport to promote friendship between peoples
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Audiences
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The
Nativity and the Christmas Tree are signs of light and hope
Vatican
City, 19 December 2014 (VIS) – This morning in the Clementine Hall
the Pope received delegations from the Italian provinces of Verona
and Catanzaro, which provided the Nativity scene with its terracotta
figures and the Christmas tree that are decorating St. Peter's Square
during the festive season this year, and which will be illuminated
before the public this evening.
“Christian
values have enriched the culture, literature, music and art of your
lands, and today such values continue to constitute a valuable
heritage to be preserved and transmitted to future generations”, he
said. “The Nativity and the Christmas tree are evocative festive
symbols very dear to our Christian families: they recall the mystery
of the Incarnation, the only begotten Son of God, made flesh in order
to save us, and the light that Jesus has brought to the world through
His birth. But the creche and the tree touch the hearts of all, as
they speak of fraternity, intimacy and friendship, calling to people
of our time to rediscover the beauty of simplicity, sharing and
solidarity. They are an invitation to unity, harmony and peace; an
invitation to make room, in our personal and social life, for God,
Who does not come with arrogance, imposing His power, but instead
offers His omnipotent love through the fragile figure of a Child. The
creche and the tree therefore bring a message of light, hope, and
love”.
“The
Messiah made Himself man and came among us, to dispel the shadows of
error and sin, bringing His divine light to humanity. Jesus Himself
says of Himself: 'I am the light of the world; whoever follows me
will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life'. Let us
follow Him, the true light, so as not to lose our way and in turn to
reflect light and warmth on those who go through moments of
difficulty and inner darkness”.
Francis:
sport to promote friendship between peoples
Vatican
City, 19 December 2014 (VIS) – The Italian National Olympic
Committee (CONI) celebrates its centenary this year. This morning
around five thousand managers and athletes from the Committee
attended a Mass in St. Peter's Basilica, after which Pope Francis
addressed a brief discourse to them. “In our times sport is the
home of the Church, and this meeting is the proof of this: we
celebrate together your centenary, an important anniversary for
Italian sport”, he said.
The
Holy Father commented that for one hundred years the CONI has
promoted and organised sport in Italy not only in relation to the
great global event that is the Modern Olympics, but also focusing on
the popular, social, educational and cultural dimensions. “It does
this taking inspiration from the principles of the Olympic Charter,
that places among its main aims the centrality of the person, the
harmonious development of humanity, the defence of human dignity,
and, moreover, the contribution to a better world, without wars or
tension, educating the young through sport practised without
discrimination of any type, in a spirit of friendship, solidarity and
fair play”.
“Sport
has always promoted universalism characterised by fraternity and
friendship among peoples, accord and peace between nations; respect,
tolerance, and harmony in diversity”, he added. “Every sporting
event, especially Olympic ones, in which representatives of nations
with different histories, cultures, traditions, faiths and values
compete, can be come a channel for an ideal strength able to open up
new paths, at times unexpected, in overcoming conflicts caused by the
violation of human rights”.
The
Olympic motto, “Citius, altius, fortius”, “is not an incitement
to the supremacy of one nation over another, of one people over
another people, nor of the exclusion of the weakest and least
protected, but rather represents the challenge posed to all of us,
not just athletes: that of making the effort and the sacrifice to
reach the important goals in life, accepting one's own limits without
allowing oneself to be obstructed by them, but seeking instead to
overcome them”.
The
Holy Father encouraged the members of CONI to continue their work in
schools, in the world of work and in solidarity “to promote a sport
that is accessible to all, mindful of the weakest and of the most
precarious sectors of society; an inclusive sport for the
differently-abled, foreigners, those who live in peripheries and are
in need of meeting places, sociality, sharing and play; a sport that
aims not at being 'useful', but at the development of the human
person, in a gratuitous fashion”.
Finally,
Francis remarked that CONI was the first national Olympic committee –
whose example was later followed by others – to include an Olympic
chaplain in its organisation. “It is a friendly presence to
demonstrate the closeness of the Church and to stimulate in sports
people a strong sense of spiritual training. Indeed, there are
certain words typical of sport that can be used to refer to spiritual
life. The saints understood this, and knew how to interpret passion,
enthusiasm, constancy, determination, challenge and limits, looking
beyond themselves, towards the horizon of God”.
Audiences
Vatican
City, 19 December 2014 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father received in
audience:
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Cardinal Marc Ouellet, P.S.S., prefect of the Congregation for
Bishops;
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Archbishop Georges Pontier of Marseilles, France, president of the
Conference of Bishops of France, accompanied by Bishop Pascal
Delannoy of Saint-Denis, vice president, and Msgr. Olivier Ribadeau,
general secretary.
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