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European Churches and Ecclesiastic Communities: Collaborating in
Solidarity to Welcome Immigrants
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Pope thanks Bishops of Mali for Safeguarding Interreligious Dialogue
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Pope Francis receives Sporting Association of Lazio, Italy: True
Sports help overcome Situations of Injustice
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Audiences
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Other Pontifical Acts
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European
Churches and Ecclesiastic Communities: Collaborating in Solidarity to
Welcome Immigrants
Vatican
City,7 May 2015 (VIS) This morning Pope Francis received members of
the joint committee of the Conference of European Churches (CEC),
whose objective is facilitating ecumenism throughout the continent,
where many of the divisions and wars between Christians began. The
current situation is very different. Thanks to ecumenical dialogue,
ecclesiastic communities have taken great steps on the path to
reconciliation and peace, as demonstrated by the recent European
Ecumenical Assemblies and the Ecumenical Charter written in
Strasbourg, France in 2001. These are landmarks in the collaboration
between the CEC and the Council of the Bishops' Conferences of Europe
(CCEE) that give rise to the hope of achieving full and visible union
between believers in Christ.
The
Holy Father, who noted that the ecumenical journey, even with all its
difficulties, is already an integral part of the process of
reconciliation and communion, recalled that the conciliar decree
Unitatis Redintegratio affirms that the division between Christians
damages the holy cause of preaching the Gospel to every creature.
This is evident, he stated, when, for example, the European Churches
and ecclesiastic communities have different points of view on
important anthropological or ethical questions. Nevertheless, I hope
that opportunities for common reflection in light of Sacred Scripture
and shared tradition will not be lacking and that they will be
fruitful and that we might find common answers to the questions that
contemporary society asks of Christians. The closer we are to Christ,
the closer we are united among ourselves.
Today
the European Churches and ecclesiastic communities face new and
decisive challenges, that can only be effectively answered by
speaking with one voice, the Pope affirmed. I am thinking, for
example, of the challenges of legislation that, in the name of a
misunderstood principle of tolerance wind up blocking citizens from
freely expressing and practicing their religious convictions
peacefully and legitimately. Moreover, faced with the attitude that
Europe seems to have toward the dramatic and often tragic emigration
of thousands of persons fleeing war, persecution, and misery, the
European Churches and ecclesiastic communities have the duty to
promote solidarity and hospitality. European Christians are called
upon to intercede with prayer and by actively working to bring
dialogue and peace to current conflicts.
Pope
thanks Bishops of Mali for Safeguarding Interreligious Dialogue
Vatican
City, 7 May 2015 (VIS) The peaceful coexistence among believers of
different religions, the safeguarding of interreligious dialogue, the
common commitment of Christians and Muslims in defense of cultural
heritage, promotion of women, and the consolidation of the family
were some of the topics that Pope Francis addressed in the speech he
delivered this morning to the bishops of the Episcopal Conference of
Mali, at the end of their ad Limina visit. Following are extensive
excerpts from the address.
I
would like to direct your attention toward the person of Christ in
the delicate situation that your country has faced in recent years,
including security challenges. At times, this situation has
undermined the coexistence between the various sectors of society as
well as the harmony between men and women of different religions
present in the land of Mali, which is rich with a glorious past,
synonymous with admirable traditions among which are tolerance and
cohesion. I thank your Episcopal Conference for knowing how to
preserve the spirit of interreligious dialogue in this delicate
context. The common commitment of Christians and Muslims to safeguard
the Mali's cultural treasures, especially the large libraries of
Timbuktu, patrimony of humanity, is an eloquent example. When you
return, I want you to express my nearness, not only to your faithful,
but also to your fellow citizens of all social classes and religions,
men and women of good will involved in the fight against intolerance
and exclusion.
In
this situation, the Christian communities and their pastors are
called to give an even greater witness to their faith based on the
unconditional acceptance of the Gospel values. You are already
following this path in translating the Bible into local languages
because, in order to live the Word of God and to witness to it
faithfully, we must first know it, diligently study it, and
assimilate it. In this sense, the efforts made in your dioceses to
develop new Catechesis manuals are to be welcomed. Thanks to a solid
formation, the lives of the faithful will be even more rooted in
faith and strengthened to withstand all threats.
Despite
the serious problems facing it, the Church in Mali shows a beautiful
dynamic in its work of evangelization, preserving a profound respect
of conscience. Christ's followers grow in number and fervor. But the
Christian witness of the family still needs greater coherence. In
your cultural context, also marked by divorce and polygamy, Catholics
are called upon to concretely proclaim, through their witness, to the
Gospel, life, and the family. I also encourage you to continue your
pastoral work, paying particular attention to the situation of women:
promoting the role of women in society and fighting against abuse and
violence toward women is also a way of proclaiming the Gospel of
Jesus Christ, who chose to be born of a woman, the Virgin Mary.
If
in any particular church the synergy inspired by charity is needed to
ensure its credibility, then your context of the charity and unity
lived in the Church are among the most important signs of fruitful
dialogue with other religions, an expression of authentic Christian
witness... It is to be hoped that even nowadays these witnesses of
members of other religions toward our Christian communities multiply.
Likewise,
the Gospel lived in its authentic dimension of charity should inspire
social ministry. The Church is present in Mali in the areas of
education for peace and your Christian communities actively
contribute to promoting genuine national reconciliation. In
congratulating you for your pastoral sensitivity in the field of
promoting the human person without consideration limited to ethnic or
religious affiliation, I would like to pay tribute to the many
Christians who spread the culture of solidarity and hospitality,
especially in facing the violence of the last years.
Dear
Brothers in the Episcopate, strengthened by the Lord's promise to be
with his family until the end of time, I am convinced that despite
the difficulties on their path, the Church in Mali will continue to
be a testament to hope and peace.
Pope
Francis receives Sporting Association of Lazio, Italy: True Sports
help overcome Situations of Injustice
Vatican
City, 7 May 2015 (VIS) Seven thousand players, managers, members,
and supporters of the Sporting Association of Lazio (Societa Sportiva
Lazio), one of the Italian capital city's two football teams, were
welcomed this afternoon in the Paul VI Audience Hall to meet with the
Pope. The Association was created 15 years ago when a group of youths
decided to create a club open to the youth of the city that would
perpetuate the moral and ethical values of the sport. At that time,
Pope Francis said, organized sports were a privilege of the rich. The
intention of the founding group was to make it accessible at all
levels and in all social categories. I encourage you, therefore, to
continue being welcoming, to continue to value various talents. May
your sporting association always be an open house where fraternity
and harmony without discrimination can be found.
The
club's motto is a phrase from the Roman historian and politician
Sallust: Concordia parvae res crescunt, discordia maximae dilabuntur
(small things thrive with harmony; discord brings the greatest things
to ruin). The Pope asserted that the sporting association's long
history has confirmed that truth, enriched by different associated
activities, structured in various sporting sections, and united by
the Olympic spirit and mutual solidarity. One of [your] merits is
that of having worked to bring equal status to all sports. In Italy,
as in my country, Argentina, too, there is the risk of speaking
always about football and neglecting other sports. Instead, every
sports discipline has its value, not only physical or social, but
also moral since it offers the possibility to people, especially to
children and the young, to develop balance, self-control, sacrifice,
and loyalty towards others. I want to emphasize this last one:
loyalty. Loyalty towards others because betrayal is increasing a bit
everywhere...Loyalty! Sports allows it to grow.
The
Bible teaches us, the Pope concluded, that the human person is a
unity: spirit and body. I therefore encourage you to always
cultivate, together with sporting activities the religious and
spiritual dimension. We must not neglect studies, friendship, or the
service of the poor either. We can't overlook these things to do just
one thing. ...Thanks be to God we have wonderful examples of men and
women athletes, even great champions, who never stopped living
faithfully and serving others. In fact, true sports allows us to
build a more fraternal and supportive world, helping overcome
situations of injustice and of human and social discomfort.
Audiences
Vatican
City, 7 May 2015 (VIS) Today, the Holy Father received in audience
five prelates of the Episcopal Conference of Mali, on their ad Limina
visit:
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Archbishop Jean Zerbo of Bamako,
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Bishop Jonas Dembele of Kayes,
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Bishop Jean-Gabriel Diarra of San,
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Bishop Augustin Traore of Segou, and
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Bishop Jean-Baptiste Tiamaof Sikasso.
Yesterday
afternoon the Holy Father Francis received in audience Archbishop
Luis Hector Villalba of Tucuman, Argentina.
Other
Pontifical Acts
Vatican
City, 7 May 2015 (VIS) Today, the Holy Father:
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appointed Msgr. Lucio Bonora, of the clergy of the Diocese of
Treviso, Italy, as a judge of the Ecclesiastic Tribunal of Vatican
City State. The Holy Father has also appointed Fr. Paolo Scevola, of
the clergy of the Diocese of Vigevano, Italy, as an actuary notary of
the same tribunal. Both will continue in their roles as officials of
the Secretary of State in the General Affairs section.
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appointed Bishop Esteban Escudero Torres as auxiliary of Valencia
(area 13,090, population 3,225,000, Catholics 3,041,000, priests
1,541, permanent deacons 16, religious 4,785), Spain, assigning him
the Titular See of Diano. Bishop Escudero Torres was previously
bishop of Palencia, Spain.
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