SUMMARY:
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Bull of Indiction for the Jubilee of Mercy: 11 April in St. Peter's
Basilica
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Pope Francis' prayer intentions for April
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Declaration of the Vice Director of the Holy See Press Office
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The Holy See on the Sustainable Development Goals
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Other Pontifical Acts
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Bull
of Indiction for the Jubilee of Mercy: 11 April in St. Peter's
Basilica
Vatican
City, 31 March 2015 (VIS) – Following the first announcement of the
next extraordinary Holy Year by Pope Francis on 13 March, the Holy
Father will proceed with the official indiction of the Jubilee of
Mercy with the publication of the Bull of Indiction on Saturday 11
April, at 5.30 pm in St. Peter’s Basilica.
The
rite of publication will involve the reading of various passages of
the Bull before the Holy Door of the Vatican Basilica. Pope Francis
will subsequently preside at the celebration of First Vespers of
Divine Mercy Sunday, thus underlining in a particular way the
fundamental theme of the extraordinary Holy Year: God’s Mercy.
The
term bull (from the Latin bulla = bubble or, more generally, a
rounded object) originally indicated the metal capsule used to
protect the wax seal attached with a cord to a document of particular
importance, to attest to its authenticity and, as a consequence, its
authority. Over time, the term began to be used first to indicate the
seal, then the document itself, so that nowadays it is used for all
papal documents of special importance that bear, or at least
traditionally would have borne, the Pontiff’s seal.
The
bull for the indiction of a jubilee, for instance in the case of an
extraordinary Holy Year, aside from indicating its time, with the
opening and closing dates and the main ways in which it will be
implemented, constitutes the fundamental document for recognising the
spirit in which it is announced, and the intentions and the outcomes
hoped for by the Pontiff, who invokes it for the Church.
In
the case of the last two extraordinary Holy Years, 1933 and 1983, the
Bull of Indiction was published on the occasion of the Solemnity of
the Epiphany of the Lord. For the next extraordinary Holy Year, the
choice of the occasion on which the publication of the Bull will take
place clearly demonstrates the Holy Father’s particular attention
to the theme of Mercy.
Pope
Francis' prayer intentions for April
Vatican
City, 31 March 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father's universal prayer
intention for April is: “That people may learn to respect creation
and care for it as a gift of God”.
His
intention for evangelisation is: “That persecuted Christians may
feel the consoling presence of the Risen Lord and the solidarity of
all the Church”.
Declaration
of the Vice Director of the Holy See Press Office
Vatican
City, 31 March 2015 (VIS) – The Vice Director of the Holy See Press
Office, Fr. Ciro Benedettini, C.P., today issued the following
declaration:
“Prior
to the recent appointment of His Excellency Msgr. Juan de la Cruz
Barros Madrid as bishop of Osorno, Chile, the Congregation for
Bishops carefully examined the prelate’s candidature and did not
find objective reasons precluding the appointment”.
The
Holy See on the Sustainable Development Goals
Vatican
City, 31 March 2015 (VIS) – Archbishop Bernardito Auza, Holy See
Permanent Observer at the United Nations in New York, spoke at the
session dedicated to intergovernmental negotiations on the Post-2015
Development Agenda, held on 24 March.
The
prelate expressed his appreciation for the “ambitious and
compelling nature” of the sustainable development goals (SDGs), and
his conviction of the need for a “transformative and
action-oriented post-2015 agenda”. “Moreover”, he continued,
“we SDGs must integrate in a balanced manner the three pillars of
sustainable development – economic, social and environmental
development – with an overarching focus on the eradication of
poverty and the achievement of a life of dignity for all. It is
imperative that the SDGs focus more on the needs of the most
vulnerable countries, notably the Least Developed Countries (LDCs),
Land-Locked Developing Countries (LLDCs) and Small Island Developing
States (SIDS), with particular attention to the sectors of the
populations where poverty is most pervasive, to those regions where
armed conflicts continue to block even the realisation of the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – and indeed cause further
regression towards underdevelopment – and to those areas most
affected by natural disasters.
The
Holy See delegation, affirmed the Archbishop, “is fully aware that
SDGs are a carefully and purposefully crafted package to respond to
the desires of the stakeholders”, and therefore does not support
“the technical proofing of the goals and targets, as it may lead to
the re-opening and re-negotiating of what is already a politically
balanced agreement acceptable to the great majority of the
stakeholders”. Furthermore, results and progress if the SDGs are
implemented “would have to be assessed and verified against
indicators agreed by the stakeholders themselves”.
“Therefore”,
he continued, “my delegation takes note of the work of the UN
Statistical Commission in providing a preliminary list of indicators
for the SDGs and targets. We further emphasise that the development
of evidence-based indicators should continue to be carried out in an
open and transparent manner and guided by Member States. These
indicators should not upset the political balance of the SDGs, nor
should they serve to impose ideas or ideologies that do not find
consensus under the outcome of the Open Working Groups (OWGs)”.
Archbishop
Auza concluded by indicating that certain goals and targets “are
understood differently in different cultural and religious contexts
and will translate differently into their national policies and
legislation. We believe the indicators must take these differences
into consideration and be drafted in a way that allows countries to
assess their results in a way that both reflects and respects their
national values, as well as is consistent with their national
policies and legislation. … My delegation strongly believes that
the indicators should be global, while taking into consideration the
national and regional specificities, especially different capacities.
Indicators cannot be unrealistic figures that only, or not even,
developed countries can achieve”.
Other
Pontifical Acts
Vatican
City, 31 March 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:
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Fr. Christophe Amade, M. Afr., as bishop of Kalemie-Kirungu (area
71,577, population 5,950,013, Catholics 3,663,230, priests 100,
religious 125), Democratic Republic of the Congo. The bishop-elect
was born in Mune, Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1961 and was
ordained a priest in 1990. He studied theology at the London
Missionary Institute, England, and holds a doctorate in philosophy
from the Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome. He has exercised his
pastoral ministry in Funsi in the diocese of Wa, Ghana, and has
served as lecturer and subsequently rector of the Consortium of
Philosophy in Jinja, Uganda, and lecturer in philosophy at the
Consortium of Philosophy in Kumasi, Ghana and at the St. Augustin
University, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo. He is
currently provincial superior of the Society of the Missionaries of
Africa (“White Fathers”) for Central Africa.
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Fr. Donatien Bafuidinsoni, S.J., and Msgr. Jean-Pierre Kwambamba Masi
as auxiliaries of the archdiocese of Kinshasa (area 8,500, population
10,516,000, Catholics 5,830,000, priests 1166, religious 3,643),
Democratic Republic of the Congo. Bishop-elect Bafuidinsoni is
currently judicial vicar of the same archdiocese; Bishop-elect
Kwambamba Masi, currently of the clergy of Kenge, is an official of
the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments.
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Rev. Fr. Giorgio Demetrio Gallaro as bishop of Piana degli Albanese
di Sicilia (area 420, population 30,500, Catholics 29,000, priests
28, permanent deacons 4, religious 159), Italy. The bishop-elect was
born in Pozzallo, Italy in 1948 and was ordained a priest in 1972. He
holds a doctorate in oriental canon law from the Pontifical Oriental
Institute, Rome, and a licentiate in ecumenical theology from the
Pontifical Institute of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum), Rome. In the
U.S.A. he has served in pastoral and academic roles in the Melkite
eparchy of Newton, Massachusetts, the Ukrainian eparchy of Stamford,
Connecticut, and the Ruthenian archieparchy of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. He is currently syncellus for canonical affairs and
judicial vicar in the archieparchy of Pittsburgh, lecturer in canon
law and ecumenical theology at the Byzantine Catholic Seminary of
Sts. Cyril and Methodius in Pittsburgh, and judge of appeal for the
archieparchy of Philadelphia of the Ukrainians.
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Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, president of the Prefecture for the
Economic Affairs of the Holy See, as prefect of the Congregation for
Catholic Education.
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Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki, archbishop of Koln, Germany, as member
of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See.
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