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The Vatican Information Service is a news service, founded in the Holy See Press Office, that provides information about the Magisterium and the pastoral activities of the Holy Father and the Roman Curia...[+ ]
The Vatican Information Service is a news service, founded in the Holy See Press Office, that provides information about the Magisterium and the pastoral activities of the Holy Father and the Roman Curia...[+ ]
Last 5 news
Monday, June 30, 2014
THE POPE RECEIVES IN AUDIENCE KING FELIPE VI ON HIS FIRST FOREIGN ENGAGEMENT
Vatican City, 30 June 2014 (VIS) –
Today in the Vatican Apostolic Palace Pope Francis received in
audience Their Majesties King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia of Spain,
who subsequently met with Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin,
accompanied by Mgsr. Antoine Camilleri, under-secretary for Relations
with States.
During the cordial discussions,
satisfaction was expressed for today’s visit, their first trip
abroad as reigning monarchs, which follows the recent visit by King
Juan Carlos I and Queen Sofia on 28 April. It is hoped that this may
mark the strengthening of the existing good relations between the
Holy See and Spain.
The conversation focused on themes of
common interest and the importance of promoting dialogue and
collaboration between the Church and the State for the good of all
Spanish society. Finally, mention was made of various problems of an
international and regional nature, paying particular attention to
areas of conflict.
POPE FRANCIS' PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR JULY
Vatican City, 30 June 2014 (VIS) –
The Pope's universal prayer intention for July is “that sports may
always be occasions of human fraternity and growth”.
His prayer intention for evangelisation
is “that the Holy Spirit may support the work of the laity who
proclaim the Gospel in the poorest countries”.
PASTORAL VISIT TO MOLISE
Vatican City, 30 June 2014 (VIS) –
This coming 5 July, the Pope will visit the Italian region of Molise.
He will depart from the Vatican heliport at 7.45 a.m. and, after an
hour's journey, will land at the heliport of the University of Molise
in Campobasso. At 9 a.m. he will meet with a group of representatives
from the world of work and industry in the Great Hall of the
University. At 10.30 a.m. he will preside at a Eucharistic
celebration at the old Romagnoli Stadium and, to conclude, will greet
a group of sick people at the Cathedral of Campobasso and lunch with
the poor at the “House of Angels”.
At 2.30 p.m. he will transfer by
helicopter to Castelpetroso, where he will encounter a group of young
people from the diocese of Abruzzo and Molise in Piazza del Santuario
di Castelpetroso. At 4 p.m. he will travel by car to Isernia, where
he will meet with the detainees in the local prison. He will greet
the sick in the Cathedral of Isernia and, in the surrounding square,
will meet with all the citizens and announce the Celestine Jubilee
Year. Finally, he will depart for Rome from the heliport of the
Isernia fire service. He is expected to arrive in the Vatican around
8.15 p.m.
TO THE NEW METROPOLITAN ARCHBISHOPS: SEEK THE ESSENTIAL AND PROCLAIM THE GOSPEL, ESPECIALLY TO THE LEAST AMONG US
Vatican City, 29 June 2014 (VIS) –
This morning in the Vatican basilica, on the occasion of the
Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul, Pope Francis imposed the pallium
– symbol of the bond of unity with the see of Peter – on
twenty-four new metropolitan archbishops. It will be imposed on a
further three – the archbishops of Lilongwe, Malawi; Mandalay,
Myanmar; and Freiburg im Bresgau, Germany – in their metropolitan
sees.
Pope Francis concelebrated the
Eucharist with the new archbishops. As is customary on the feast day
of the patron saints of Rome, the event was attended by a delegation
from the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, sent by the
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomaios I and led by Metropolitan of
Pergamo Ioannis (Zizioulas), co-president of the Mixed Commission for
Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox
Church.
In his homily, the Holy Father spoke
about various problems and the two issues the clergy can be led to
face as a result: fear, and the pastoral responsibility for combating
it. He began by considering the beginning of Peter's service in the
Christian community of Jerusalem, where fear still reigned because of
Herod's persecution of members of the Church.
“There had been the killing of James,
and then the imprisonment of Peter himself, in order to placate the
people. While Peter was imprisoned and in chains, he heard the voice
of the angel telling him, 'Get up quickly… dress yourself and put
on your sandals… Put on your mantle and follow me!'. The chains
fell from him and the door of the prison opened before him. Peter
realised that the Lord had 'rescued him from the hand of Herod'; he
realized that the Lord had freed him from fear and from chains. Yes,
the Lord liberates us from every fear and from all that enslaves us,
so that we can be truly free. Today’s liturgical celebration
expresses this truth well in the refrain of the Responsorial Psalm:
'The Lord has freed me from all my fears'”.
“The problem for us, then, is fear
and looking for refuge in our pastoral responsibilities. I wonder,
dear brother bishops, are we afraid? What are we afraid of? And if we
are afraid, what forms of refuge do we seek, in our pastoral life, to
find security? Do we look for support from those who wield worldly
power? Or do we let ourselves be deceived by the pride which seeks
gratification and recognition, thinking that these will offer us
security? Dear brother bishops, where do we find our security?”
“The witness of the Apostle Peter
reminds us that our true refuge is trust in God. Trust in God
banishes all fear and sets us free from every form of slavery and all
worldly temptation. Today the Bishop of Rome and other bishops,
particularly the metropolitans who have received the pallium, feel
challenged by the example of Saint Peter to assess to what extent
each of us puts his trust in the Lord. Peter recovered this trust
when Jesus said to him three times: 'Feed my sheep'. Peter thrice
confessed his love for Jesus, thus making up for his threefold denial
of Christ during the passion. Peter still regrets the disappointment
which he caused the Lord on the night of his betrayal. Now that the
Lord asks him: 'Do you love me?', Peter does not trust himself and
his own strength, but instead entrusts himself to Jesus and his
mercy: 'Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you'.
Precisely at this moment fear, insecurity and cowardice dissipate”.
“Peter experienced how God’s
fidelity is always greater than our acts of infidelity, stronger than
our denials. He realises that the God’s fidelity dispels our fears
and exceeds every human reckoning. Today Jesus also asks us: 'Do you
love me?'. He does so because he knows our fears and our struggles.
Peter shows us the way: we need to trust in the Lord, who 'knows
everything' that is in us, not counting on our capacity to be
faithful, but on his unshakable fidelity. Jesus never abandons us,
for he cannot deny himself. He is faithful. The fidelity which God
constantly shows to us pastors, far in excess of our merits, is the
source of our confidence and our peace. The Lord’s fidelity to us
keeps kindled within us the desire to serve him and to serve our
sisters and brothers in charity”.
“The love of Jesus must suffice for
Peter. He must no longer yield to the temptation to curiosity,
jealousy, as when, seeing John nearby, he asks Jesus: 'Lord, what
about this man?'. But Jesus, before such temptations, says to him in
reply: 'What is it to you? Follow me'. This experience of Peter is a
message for us too, dear brother archbishops. Today the Lord repeats
to me, to you, and to all pastors: Follow me! Waste no time in
questioning or in useless chattering; do not dwell on secondary
things, but look to what is essential and follow me. Follow me
without regard for the difficulties. Follow me in preaching the
Gospel. Follow me by the witness of a life shaped by the grace you
received in baptism and holy orders. Follow me by speaking of me to
those with whom you live, day after day, in your work, your
conversations and among your friends. Follow me by proclaiming the
Gospel to all, especially to the least among us, so that no one will
fail to hear the word of life which sets us free from every fear and
enables us to trust in the faithfulness of God. Follow me!”.
ANGELUS: GOD IS ALWAYS CAPABLE OF TRANSFORMING US
Vatican City, 29 June 2014 (VIS) –
After celebrating Mass in the Vatican basilica with the new
metropolitan archbishops, the Pope appeared at the window of his
study to pray the Angelus with the faithful gathered in St. Peter's
Square, as on every Sunday. He remarked that ever since ancient
times, the Church of Rome has celebrated the apostles Peter and Paul
in a single festivity on the same day, 29 June, so that “the faith
in Jesus Christ which made them brothers and martyrs made them into a
single entity”.
“St. Peter and St. Paul, so different
from each other from a human point of view, were chosen personally by
the Lord Jesus and responded to His call, offering all their lives.
In both, Christ's grace achieved great things, transforming them.
Simon had denied Jesus in the dramatic moment of the passion; Saul
had harshly persecuted Christians. But both welcomed God's love and
allowed themselves to be transformed by His mercy; they thus became
friends and apostles of Christ. They therefore continue to speak to
the Church and even nowadays they show us the path of salvation. If
we too fall prey to the gravest sins and the darkest night, then God
is always able to transform our heart and forgive us everything, thus
transforming the darkness of our sin into a dawn of light”.
He went on to cite the Acts of the
Apostles, which demonstrate many aspects of their witness. “Peter,
for example, teaches us to look to the poor through the eyes of faith
and to give them that which is most precious: the power of the name
of Jesus. This is what he did with the paralytic; he gave him what he
had, which was Jesus”. And the episode of Paul's conversion on the
road to Damascus, the fulcrum of his life, “clearly marks a before
and after. Before, Paul was an arch-enemy of the Church. After, he
placed all his existence at the service of the Gospel. Also for us,
the encounter with the Word of Christ is able to completely transform
our lives. It is not possible to listen to this Word and stand firm,
unswayed in our habits. It gives us the impetus to defeat the
selfishness we have in our hearts, to follow decisively that Master
who gave His life for His friends. But it is He Who, with His word,
changes us; it is He Who transforms us; it is He Who forgives
everything, if we open our hearts and ask for forgiveness”.
This feast day inspires great joy in
us, because it places us before the work of God's mercy in the hearts
of two men. It is the work of God's mercy in these two men who were
great sinners. And God wishes to fill us too with His grace, as He
did with Peter and Paul. May the Virgin Mary help us to welcome it as
they did, with an open heart, and not to receive this grace in vain!
And may she support us in the hour of need, to give witness to Jesus
Christ and His Gospel”.
POPE FRANCIS' NEW APPEAL FOR PEACE IN IRAQ
Vatican City, 29 June 2014 (VIS) –
“The news from Iraq is, unfortunately, very painful”, said the
Holy Father after today's Angelus prayer. “I join with the bishops
of the country in their appeal to the authorities so that, through
dialogue, national unity may be maintained and war avoided. I am
close to the thousands of families, especially Christians, who have
had to leave their homes and who are in grave danger. Violence begets
violence; dialogue is the only path to peace. Let us pray to the
Virgin Mary that she might safeguard the people of Iraq”.
A CHRISTIAN WITHOUT MARY IS AN ORPHAN
Vatican City, 30 June 2014 (VIS) – On
Saturday afternoon, in the Lourdes Grotto in the Vatican Gardens, the
Pope met with a group of young people from the diocese of Rome
embarking on a vocational journey. “This visit to the Virgin is
very important in our lives”, he said. “She accompanies us also
in our definitive choice, the vocational choice, as she accompanied
her Son on his vocational path which was so hard and so painful”.
“When a Christian says to me, not
that he does not love the Virgin, but rather that it does not come to
mind to look to the Virgin or to pray to the Virgin, I feel sad”,
he said, adding that “a Christian without the Virgin is an orphan.
A Christian needs these two women, these two mothers, two virgin
women: the Church and Our Lady. And to 'test' a true Christian
vocation, it is necessary to ask oneself, 'how is my relationship
with these two Mothers?”.
The Pontiff went on to remark that in
today's provisional culture, care must be taken not to lose sight of
the definitive. “We are afraid of the definitive. And to choose a
vocation, any vocation, including vocations that involve a 'state'
such as marriage, consecrated life, the priesthood, one must choose
with a view to the definitive. This is contrary to the culture of the
provisional. It is a part of the culture in which we must live in
this time, but we must live through this and conquer it”.
In conclusion, the Pope encouraged all
present to sing the “Salve Regina” and imparted his blessing to
all the young people and their families, asking them to pray for him.
MADAGASCAR: THE CATHOLIC CHURCH'S POSITIVE CONTRIBUTION ON THE PATH TO RECONCILIATION AND STABILITY
Vatican City, 28 June 2014 (VIS) –
This morning in the Vatican Apostolic Palace the Holy Father Francis
received in audience the president of the Republic of Madagascar,
Hery Martial Rajaonarimampianina, who subsequently met with Cardinal
Secretary of State Pietro Parolin, accompanied by Msgr. Antoine
Camilleri, under-secretary for Relations with States.
During the cordial discussions, after
expressing satisfaction with the good relations between the Holy See
and the Republic of Madagascar, the Parties focused on the current
phase of recovery within the country, underlining the positive
contribution of the Catholic Church on the path to national
reconciliation and political stability, as well as her contribution
in the education and healthcare sectors. Themes of common interest
were then considered, such as the struggle against poverty and social
inequality.
Mention was made of the international
situation and the conflicts affecting various regions in the world.
ECUMENISM: LET US SEE OURSELVES ACCORDING TO GOD'S PLAN, NOT THE HISTORICAL CONSEQUENCES OF OUR SINS
Vatican City, 28 June 2014 (VIS) –
The Solemnity of the Holy Patrons of the Church of Rome, the Apostles
Peter and Paul, again provided Pope Francis the opportunity to meet
with a delegation from the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople,
which always visits Rome on this date. In exchange, a delegation from
the Vatican visits Instanbul, Turkey, every 30 November, St. Andrew's
Day.
On this occasion the delegation was
headed by the metropolitan of Pergamo, Ioannis (Zizioulas),
co-president of the international mixed Commission for theological
dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, who was
accompanied by Archbishop Job de Telmissos and the patriarchal
archdeacon John Chryssavgis.
The Holy Father recalled with great
affection his “beloved brother” Bartholomaios, with whom he
shared his recent pilgrimage to the Holy Land, during which they were
able to repeat the historical embrace between their predecessors,
Athenagoras I and Paul VI, which took place fifty years ago in the
holy city of Jerusalem. “That prophetic gesture gave a decisive
impulse to a journey which, thank God, has never ceased”, remarked
Pope Francis. “I consider it a special gift from the Lord that we
were able to venerate the holy places together and to pray at each
other’s side at the place of Christ’s burial, where we can
actually touch the foundation of our hope”. The joy of their common
prayer was then renewed during the recent meeting in the Vatican
Gardens where they joined in prayer, together with the Presidents of
Israel and Palestine, to invoke the gift of peace in the Holy Land”.
“The Lord granted us these occasions
of fraternal encounter, in which we were able to express the love
uniting us in Christ, and to renew our mutual desire to walk together
along the path to full unity”, continued the Holy Father. “We
know very well that this unity is a gift of God, a gift that even now
the Almighty grants us the grace to attain whenever, by the power of
the Holy Spirit, we choose to look at one another with the eyes of
faith and to see ourselves as we truly are in God’s plan, according
to the designs of his eternal will, and not what we have become as a
result of the historical consequences of our sins. If all of us can
learn, prompted by the Spirit, to look at one another in God, our
path will be even straighter and our cooperation all the more easy in
the many areas of daily life which already happily unite us”.
This theological vision “is nourished
by faith, hope and love; it gives rise to an authentic theological
reflection which is truly 'scientia Dei', a participation in that
vision which God has of himself and of us. It is a reflection which
can only bring us closer to one another on the path of unity, despite
our differing starting points. I hope and I pray, then, that the work
of the Joint International Commission can be a sign of this profound
understanding, this theology 'on its knees'. In this way, the
Commission’s reflections on the concepts of primacy and synodality,
communion in the universal Church and the ministry of the Bishop of
Rome will not be an academic exercise or a mere debate about
irreconcilable positions. All of us need, with courage and
confidence, to be open to the working of the Holy Spirit. We need to
let ourselves be caught up in Christ’s loving gaze upon the Church,
his Bride, in our journey of spiritual ecumenism. It is a journey
upheld by the martyrdom of so many of our brothers and sisters who,
by their witness to Jesus Christ the Lord, have brought about an
ecumenism of blood”, concluded the Pope.
THE POPE CANCELS HIS VISIT TO THE GEMELLI HOSPITAL
Vatican City, 28 June 2014 (VIS) –
Pope Francis did not make his scheduled visit to Rome's Agostino
Gemelli Hospital on Friday afternoon due to a mild indisposition. The
Mass at which the Holy Father was expected to preside was instead
celebrated by Cardinal Angelo Scola, archbishop of Milan, who also
pronounced the homily prepared by the Pontiff.
The director of the Holy See Press
Office, Fr. Federico Lombardi, S.J., confirmed the Holy Father's
engagements planned for Saturday 28 and Sunday 29 and emphasised that
there is no cause for concern regarding the Pope's health.
GOD IS NOT AFRAID OF HIS BONDS WITH US
Vatican City, 28 June 2014 (VIS) –
Below are extensive extracts from the homily the Holy Father prepared
for his planned visit to the Roman “Agostino Gemelli” Hospital,
which he did not attend due to a mild indisposition. The homily was
read on behalf of the Pontiff by Cardinal Angelo Scola, archbishop of
Milan, during the Mass celebrated at the hospital yesterday.
“God is bound to us, He chose us, and
this bond is for ever, not because we are faithful but because the
Lord is faithful and tolerates our infidelity, our slowness, our
lapses. God is not afraid of bonding with us. … He loves these
bonds, he creates bonds; bonds which free, rather than constrain”.
“Nowadays, in particular, fidelity is
a value under threat, as we are induced always to seek change,
presumed novelty, negotiating the roots of our existence, of our
faith. Without fidelity to its roots, however, a society does not
move ahead; it may make great technical progress, but not the full
progress of all man and all humankind. God's faithful love towards
His people was made manifest and fully realised in Jesus Christ …
[who] remains faithful and never betrays; even when we err, He always
awaits us to forgive us: He is the face of the merciful Father”.
“This love, this faithfulness to the
Lord demonstrates the humility of His heart. … We are able to
experience and savour the tenderness of this love in every phase of
life: in times of joy and of sadness, in times of health and of
infirmity and sickness. God's faithfulness teaches us to welcome life
as a manifestation of His love and enables us to bear witness to this
love to our brethren in humble and meek service. This is what the
doctors and paramedical staff in this hospital, which belongs to the
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, are especially called upon
to do. Here, each one of you brings to the sick a little of the love
from Christ's Heart, and you do so with competence and
professionalism. This means staying faithful to the fundamental
values that Fr. Gemelli placed at the base of this university for
Italian Catholics, to unite scientific research enlightened by faith
to the preparation of qualified Christian professionals”.
THE AIF SIGNS INFORMATION SHARING AGREEMENT WITH THE USA OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
Vatican City, 30 June 2014 (VIS) –
The Autorità Informazione Finanziaria (AIF), the Financial
Intelligence Authority of the Holy See and Vatican City State, has
signed an agreement to exchange information with the US Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).
This Information Sharing Exchange of
Letters is the first bilateral agreement of AIF in its role as
Financial Supervisor and Regulator within the Holy See and Vatican
City State. It represents a significant strengthening of
international cooperation between the Holy See and the United States
of America.
“This is a further step in Holy See’s
efforts towards perfecting a system of financial regulation and part
of our commitment to transparency and international cooperation,”
said Rene Bruelhart, the Director of AIF. “The Holy See is part of
the global family of well-regulated jurisdictions and the signing of
this agreement reflects that very clearly.”
The agreement with the OCC follows the
passing of the new law regarding financial activities in the Holy
See, Law XVIII, in October 2013 and the enactment of AIF’s new
statute in November 2013, which introduced a new supervisory function
as part of AIF’s mandate.
AIF expects further bilateral
agreements with financial supervisors and regulators of other
countries to follow in due course, and continues in its efforts to
strengthen its own regulatory infrastructure in fostering
international cooperation.
The OCC is an independent authority
within the Treasury Department of the United States and serves to
charter, regulate and supervise all national banks and the federal
branches and agencies of foreign banks in the United States.
AIF is the competent authority of the
Holy See and Vatican City State to fight money laundering and the
financing of terrorism. According to its mandate, AIF has a double
role and acts both as Financial Supervisor and Regulator as well as
Financial Intelligence Unit. In its function as Financial
Intelligence Unit, AIF became a member of the Egmont Group in July
2013, and has already signed MOUs with the Financial Intelligence
Units of more than a dozen countries, including the U.K., the United
States, France, Spain, Italy and Germany. It was established in 2010
and became operational in 2011.
AUDIENCES
Vatican City, 30 June 2014 (VIS) –
Today, the Holy Father received in audience:
- Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Muller,
prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
- Archbishop Jean-Paul Gobel, apostolic
nuncio in the Arab Republic of Egypt, delegate of the Holy See to the
League of Arab States.
- Archbishop Marek Zalewski, apostolic
nuncio in Zimbabwe, with members of his family.
- Archbishop Hubertus Matheus Maria van
Megen, apostolic nuncio in Sudan and Eritrea.
- Archbishop Daniel Fernando Sturla
Berhouet of Montevideo, Uruguay.
- Charles Ghislain, ambassador of
Belgium, on his farewell visit.
- Fernando Felipe Sanchez Campos,
ambassador of Costa Rica, on his farewell visit.
- Cardinal Raymond Leo Burke, prefect
of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura.
On Saturday, 28 June, the Holy Father
received in audience:
- Cardinal Marc Ouellet, prefect of the
Congregation for Bishops.
- Archbishop Zygmunt Zimowski,
president of the Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers (Health
Care Pastoral).
- Cardinal Stanislaw Rylko, president
of the Pontifical Council for the Laity.
OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican City, 28 June 2014 (VIS) –
The Holy Father has appointed Msgr. Gennaro Acampa as auxiliary of
the archdiocese of Naples (area 274, population 1,744,000, Catholics
1,715,000, priests 287, permanent deacons 292, religious 3,413),
Italy. The bishop-elect was born in Naples, Italy in 1945 and was
ordained a priest in 1968. He holds a licentiate in sacred theology
from the Pontifical Theological Faculty of Southern Italy. He has
served in a number of pastoral roles, including priest in the parish
of Sacro Cuore di Gesu in Santa Maria Ognibene, spiritual father of
the “Paul VI” minor seminary; spiritual father for aspiring
permanent deacons, dean of the 1st deanery of the archdiocese of
Naples and member of the diocesan presbyteral council. He is
currently curate prepositor of the Collegiate Parish of San Giovanni
Maggiore in Naples and episcopal vicar for the clergy and for
formation.
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In accordance with international regulations on Intellectual Property and Author’s Rights, VIS authorises reproduction of news items issued by the Vatican Information Service, partially or in their entirety, on condition that the source (VIS – Vatican Information Service) is quoted.