SUMMARY:
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Education, the natural vocation of the family
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The Pope joins the Catholics of China in prayer and recalls
Christians persecuted for their faith
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Cardinal Parolin: when the future of the planet is at stake, there
are no political frontiers, barriers and walls that can protect us
from environmental and social degradation
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The Holy See at the 68th Assembly of the World Health Organisation
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Other Pontifical Acts
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Education,
the natural vocation of the family
Vatican
City, 20 May 2015 (VIS) – The education of children as the natural
vocation of the family was the theme of Pope Francis' catechesis
during this Wednesday's general audience in St. Peter's Square.
The
Holy Father, first citing the words of St. Paul to the Colossians:
“Children, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the
Lord. Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become
discouraged”, emphasised the duty of parents to accompany their
children step by step, without demanding the impossible, so as not to
overwhelm them. He then went on to speak of the difficulties faced by
mothers and fathers who often only have the opportunity to see their
children in the evening when they return home tired after work –
“those who are lucky enough to have work”, he added – and also
referred to the even more critical situation faced by separated
parents, inviting them to ensure that the conflicts between the
couple do not have an impact on the children.
Francis
also mentioned that the family has been accused of other things,
including authoritarianism, favouritism, conformism, and emotional
repression that generates conflicts. “In fact, a fracture has
opened up between family and society, undermining mutual trust, and
in this way, the alliance between family and society in the education
of children has entered into a crisis”.
“There
are many symptoms”, he continued. “For example, in schools this
has affected relationships between parents and teachers. … On the
other hand, there has been a proliferation of so-called 'experts' who
occupy the role of parents even in the most intimate aspects of
education … and parents are expected only to listen, to learn and
to adapt. Deprived of their role, they often become excessively
apprehensive and possessive with regard to their children, to the
point of never correcting them. They tend to increasingly entrust
them to 'experts', even in relation to the most delicate and personal
aspects of their life, placing themselves in the corner. In this way,
parents run the risk of excluding themselves from the life of their
children”.
“How
have we arrived at this point? Without doubt in the past parents, or
rather, certain educational models, had certain limits. But it is
also true that there are mistakes that only parents are authorised to
make, as they are able to compensate for them in a way that is
impossible for any other person. On the other hand, as we well know,
life now spares us little time for speaking, reflection and exchange.
Many parents are 'kidnapped' by their work and other worries, and
they find themselves paralysed by the fear of making mistakes. The
problem, however, is not only about talking. … Let us ask ourselves
instead: do we seek to understand 'where' our children truly are on
their path? Where is their soul? … And above all, do we want to
know?”.
Francis
underlined that the Christian communities are called upon to offer
support to the educational mission of the family. “At the base of
everything there is love, that which God gives to us, that “is not
arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not
irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but
rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all things,
hopes all things, endures all things”. Even in the best of
families, there is much to be endured, and it takes a lot of
patience. Jesus Himself experienced education in the family”.
“Even
in this case, the grace of Christ's love fulfils what is inscribed in
human nature. How many excellent examples we have of Christian
parents full of human wisdom! They show that good family education is
the backbone of humanism. Its spread through society is the resource
that allows us to compensate for the shortcomings, the wounds, the
lack of paternity and maternity that affect the least fortunate
children, and works true miracles”.
“I
hope that the Lord may give Christian families the faith, freedom and
courage necessary for their missions. If family education rediscovers
the pride of its central role, many things will change for the
better, for uncertain parents and disappointed children. It is time
for fathers and mothers to return from their exile, and to fully
resume their role as educators”, concluded Francis.
The
Pope joins the Catholics of China in prayer and recalls Christians
persecuted for their faith
Vatican
City, 20 May 2015 (VIS) – Following today's catechesis, the Pope
remarked that on 24 May Catholics in China pray with devotion to Our
Lady Help of Christians, venerated in the Sheshan shrine in Shanghai.
“In the statue above the Shrine, Mary holds her Son aloft,
presenting Him to the world with His arms open in a gesture of love
and mercy. We too ask Mary to help Catholics in China always to be
credible witnesses of this merciful love among their people and to
live spiritually united with the rock of Peter upon which the Church
is built”.
The
Holy Father also mentioned the initiative of the Italian Episcopal
Conference, which has proposed that the dioceses, on the occasion of
the Eve of Pentecost, remember the many brothers and sisters exiled
or killed for the mere fact of being Christians. “They are martyrs.
I hope that this moment of prayer may help spread the knowledge that
religious freedom is an inalienable human right and raise awareness
of the tragedy of Christians persecuted in our time, and bring an end
to this unacceptable crime”.
Cardinal
Parolin: when the future of the planet is at stake, there are no
political frontiers, barriers and walls that can protect us from
environmental and social degradation
Vatican
City, 20 May 2015 (VIS) – Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro
Parolin has sent a message to the participants in the conference “The
New Climate Economy: how economic growth and sustainability can go
hand in hand”, held today in the Pontifical University of the Holy
Cross in Rome, in collaboration with the Pontifical Council “Justice
and Peace” the World Resource Institute, the New Climate Economy
and the embassy of the Netherlands to the Holy See.
The
conference takes place in the context of two key steps in the
preparatory process adopted by the United Nations: the UN Summit to
adopt the post-2015 development agenda and the 21st conference on the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to be held in
Paris next December, to adopt a new agreement to face the adverse
effects of climate change. “Both of them represent the serious
ethical and moral responsibility that each of us has towards the
whole human family, especially the poor and future generations”,
observed the cardinal.
“When
the future of the planet is at stake, there are no political
frontiers, barriers or walls behind which we can hide to protect
ourselves from the effects of environmental and social degradation.
There is no room for the globalisation of indifference, the economy
of exclusion or the throwaway culture so often denounced by Pope
Francis.Of course, the path is not easy, since this ethical and moral
responsibility calls into question the resetting of the development
model, requiring a major political and economic commitment. However,
as I said to the UN Climate Summit on 23 September 2014, 'the
technological and operational bases needed to facilitate this mutual
responsibility are already available or within our reach. We have the
capacity to start and strengthen a true and beneficial process which
will irrigate, as it were, through adaptation and mitigation
activities, the field of economic and technological innovation where
it is possible to cultivate two interconnected objectives: combating
poverty and easing the effects of climate change'”.
Cardinal
Parolin concluded by conveying Pope Francis' best wishes to the
participants, and his hope that “the discussions and reflections of
this Conference may contribute to further and deepen reflection on
the meaning of the economy and its goals, as well as to finding ways
to guarantee access to a truly integral human development for all,
especially the poor and the future generations”.
The
Holy See at the 68th Assembly of the World Health Organization
Vatican
City, 20 May 2015 (VIS) – Archbishop Zygmunt Zimowski, president of
the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Health Care Workers
and head of the Holy See delegation at the 68th Assembly of the World
Health Organization, held in Geneva from 18 to 26 May, participated
in the debate on the Ebola virus epidemic which has claimed 9,380
lives out of a total of more than 23,000 cases of contagion
throughout the world, mainly in West Africa.
“The
Holy See delegation wishes to note the importance and the timeliness
of the theme for the general discussion”, said the archbishop. “The
recent Ebola outbreak was a human and public health tragedy, which,
among others, showed that the need to build resilient health systems
cannot be over emphasised, as they are essential for the provision of
universal health coverage and for a prompt response to outbreaks of
disease”.
“Unfortunately,
most low income countries, which are still afflicted by infectious
disease and epidemics, have very poor health systems that need urgent
intervention, if they are to respond to the health needs of the whole
population. … This requires long-term commitment from national
governments and international donors to support resilient health
systems and to ensure universal coverage of health services, thus
strengthening the capacity of national health systems to deliver
equitable and quality health-care services, and also stepping up
their ability to respond to outbreaks and to improve community
ownership and participation. This means short and long-term
investment in a number of key elements of the health system;
particularly, improved primary health care, an adequate number of
trained health workers, availability of medicine, appropriate
infrastructure, update statistical data, sufficient public financing,
public-private partnership and scaling up the number of well-equipped
health posts and district hospitals. It is also a challenge to donors
to make a shift from short-term program funding to long-term
comprehensive health service financing”.
“The
recent report on Global evidence on inequities in rural health
protection, by the International Labour Office, revealed that more
than half of the population in rural areas worldwide does not have
access to basic healthcare, with many of them at risk of
impoverishment or deepened poverty due to out of pocket payment for
services. This is clear evidence that, in 2015, we are still a long
way from universal coverage. For various reasons, there are strong
inequalities in access to healthcare between the rural and urban
areas, with the latter often more advantaged than the former which
are most deprived. Embracing the recommendation of the report, my
delegation wishes to note the urgent need to address this rural urban
divide in the post-2015 Development Agenda, bearing in mind that
“human life is always sacred and always has ‘quality’”.
“In
many countries, the Catholic Church is privileged to be one of the
primary partners of the State in providing much needed health care
services to populations in remote areas, through its over 110,000
health and social-welfare institutions around the world”, he
concluded. “It is therefore important to offer them the necessary
collaboration and support so as to enable them to bring the services
close and to render them accessible to poor people in particular.
Indeed, in many low-income countries, the contribution of civil
society and communities to health services delivery is fundamental”.
Other
Pontifical Acts
Vatican
City, 20 May 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:
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accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the diocese of
Alto Solimoes, Brazil, presented by Bishop Evangelista Alcimar Caldas
Magalhaes, O.F.M. Cap., upon reaching the age limit. He is succeeded
by Bishop Adolfo Zon Pereira, S.X., coadjutor of the same diocese.
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appointed Fr. Paulo Jackson Nobrego de Sousa as bishop of Garanhuns
(area 8,734, population 677,000, Catholics 609,000, priests 60,
permanent deacons 7, religious 94), France. The bishop-elect was born
in Sao Jose de Espinharas, Brazil in 1969 and was ordained a priest
in 1993. He holds a licentiate in Biblical Sciences from the
Pontifical Biblical Institute, Rome, and a doctorate in biblical
theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome. He has
served in a number of pastoral roles in the diocese of Patos, Brazil,
including parish administrator, parish vicar, rector of the diocesan
seminary, formator of major seminarians at the archdiocesan seminary
of Joao Pessoa, diocesan pastoral coordinator, and parish priest. He
has also served as national secretary of the Organisation of
Seminaries and Philosophical and Theological Institutes of Brazil. He
is currently professor of sacred scripture at the Pontifical Catholic
University of Minas Gerais, parish priest of the “Senhor Bom Jesus
do Horto” parish in Belo Horizonte, and formator of seminarians in
Patos.
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appointed Bishop Laurent Dognin, auxiliary of Bordeaux, France, as
bishop of Quimper (area 6,785, population 899,870, Catholics 733,000,
priests 271, permanent deacons 33, religious 582), France.
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appointed Bishop Pedro Cunha Cruz, auxiliary of the archdiocese of
Sao Sebastiao do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, as coadjutor of the diocese
of Campanha (area 15,420, population 780,000, Catholics 762,000,
priests 116, religious 181), Brazil.
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accepted the resignation from the office of auxiliary of the
archdiocese of Hamburg, Germany, presented by Bishop Norbert Werbs
upon reaching the age limit.
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