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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO PARTICIPANTS AT THE WORLD CONGRESS OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF PENAL LAW

Global financial capital is the source of serious crimes not only against property but also against people and the environment. It is organized crime that is responsible, among other things, for the over-indebtedness of states and the plundering of the natural resources of our planet. Criminal law must not remain unconnected with conduct in which, by taking advantage of asymmetrical situations, a dominant position is exploited to the detriment of collective welfare. This is the case, for example, when the prices of public debt securities are artificially reduced through speculation, without worrying that this will affect or aggravate the economic situation of entire nations (see Oeconomicae et pecuniariae quaestiones. Considerations for an ethical discernment regarding some aspects of the current economic-financial system, 17). These are crimes that have the seriousness of crimes against humanity, when they lead to hunger, misery, forced migration and death from avoidable diseases, environmental disaster and ethnocide of indigenous peoples. Protection of the environment by criminal law It is true that the criminal response comes when the crime has been committed, that it does not repair damage or prevent repetition, and that it rarely has dissuasive effects. It is also true that, because of its structural selectivity, the sanctioning function usually affects the most vulnerable sectors. I am also aware that there is a punitivist current that claims to resolve the most varied social problems through the penal system.

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE CONGRESS ON “CHILD DIGNITY IN THE DIGITAL WORLD”

[…] The dramatic growth of pornography in the digital world is, in itself, most serious, the fruit of a general loss of the sense of human dignity; frequently it is linked to human trafficking. What makes this phenomenon even more disturbing is the fact that this material is widely accessible even to minors via the internet, especially through mobile devices. The majority of scientific studies have highlighted the profound impact of pornography on the thinking and behaviour of children. It will surely have lifelong effects on them, in the form of grave addiction, violent behaviour and deeply troubled emotional and sexual relationships. […] […] The potential of digital technology is enormous, yet the possible negative impact of its abuse in the area of human trafficking, the planning of terrorist activities, the spread of hatred and extremism, the manipulation of information and – we must emphasize – in the area of child abuse, is equally significant. Public opinion and lawmakers are finally coming to realize this. How can we help them take suitable measures to prevent abuse? Allow me to emphasize two things. […]

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GREETING OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO A DELEGATION OF THE SALVATION ARMY

General Peddle, Dear Brothers and Sisters, I am happy to have this opportunity to renew to you and to all the members and volunteers of the Salvation Army my grateful appreciation for the witness you give to the primacy of discipleship and service to the poor. This makes you an evident and credible sign of evangelical love, in obedience to the Lord’s commandment: “Love one another; even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples” (Jn 13:34). As I have mentioned on several occasions – and again just now, when we spoke – it was by encountering members of the Salvation Army that I received, many years ago, from my grandmother, my first lesson in ecumenism – I was four years old!. Their example of humble service to the least of our brothers and sisters spoke louder than any words. I am reminded, General, of the insight expressed by your predecessor when we met five years ago: “Holiness transcends denominational boundaries”. The holiness that shows itself in concrete actions of goodness, solidarity and healing speaks to the heart and testifies to the authenticity of our discipleship. On this basis, Catholics and Salvationists can increasingly assist one another and cooperate in a spirit of mutual respect and in a life of holiness as well. Such a common witness is like the leaven that in Jesus’s parable, a woman took and mixed with flour until the whole mass of dough began to rise (cf. Lk 13:21). The gratuitous love that inspires acts of service to those in need is not only a leaven; it also has the fragrance of freshly baked bread. It attracts and convinces. Young people in particular need to breathe in that fragrance, since in many cases it is absent from their daily experience. In a world where selfishness and divisions abound, the noble fragrance of genuine self-giving love can offer a much-needed antidote and open minds and hearts to the transcendent meaning of our existence. As the Bishop of Rome, of this Diocese, I would like to thank the Salvation Army for all that you do in this city for the homeless and the marginalized, of whom there are so many in Rome. I am also aware of your significant involvement in the fight against human trafficking and other modern forms of slavery. May God bless your efforts. Thank you once more for your visit. Let us remember one another in our prayers, and continue to work to spread God’s love through acts of service and solidarity.

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO PARTICIPANTS AT THE MEETING OF THE SOCIAL JUSTICE AND ECOLOGY SECRETARIAT OF THE SOCIETY OF JESUS

Some of you, and many of the Jesuits who preceded you, have begun works of service to the poorest, educational projects, attention to refugees, the defence of human rights and social services in many fields. Continue with this creative commitment, which is always in need of renewal in a society of accelerated change. Help the Church in the discernment which we must undertake today, also concerning our apostolates. Do not cease to network among yourselves and with other ecclesial and civil organizations in order to speak out in defense of the most needy in this increasingly globalized world. With this globalization that is lopsided, that erases cultural identities, religious identities, personal identities, everything is the same. True globalization must be multifaceted. Uniting us but each one maintaining his or her uniqueness. In the pain of our brothers and sisters and of our common home under threat, it is necessary to contemplate the mystery of the crucifix in order to be able to give one’s life to the end, as many Jesuit companions have done since 1975. This year we celebrate the 30th anniversary of the martyrdom of the Jesuits of the Central American University of El Salvador, which caused so much pain to Father Kolvenbach and which led him to seek the help of Jesuits throughout the Society. Many responded generously. The life and death of the martyrs is an encouragement to our service to the least ones.

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POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

And my thoughts go once more to the Middle East. In particular to the beloved and tormented Syria, from which tragic news is once again arriving with regard to the fate of the populations in the North-East of the country, forced to abandon their homes due to military actions: among these populations there are also many Christian families. To all the actors involved and also to the International Community: please, I renew my appeal to commit yourselves, with sincerity, with honesty and with transparency on the path of dialogue to seek effective solutions. Together with all the members of the Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon Region, especially those from Ecuador, I am following with concern what has been happening in recent weeks in that country. I entrust to the common prayer and to the intercession of the new Saints, and I join in the grief for the dead, for those who are injured and missing. I encourage the seeking of social peace, with particular attention to the most vulnerable populations, to the poor and to human rights.

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MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS FOR THE 105th WORLD DAY OF MIGRANTS AND REFUGEES 2019

Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Faith assures us that in a mysterious way the Kingdom of God is already present here
on earth (cf. Gaudium et spes, 39). Yet in our own time, we are saddened to see the
obstacles and opposition it encounters. Violent conflicts and all-out wars continue to
tear humanity apart; injustices and discrimination follow one upon the other;
economic and social imbalances on a local or global scale prove difficult to overcome.
And above all it is the poorest of the poor and the most disadvantaged who pay the
price.
The most economically advanced societies are witnessing a growing trend towards
extreme individualism which, combined with a utilitarian mentality and reinforced by
the media, is producing a “globalization of indifference”. In this scenario, migrants,
refugees, displaced persons and victims of trafficking have become emblems of
exclusion. In addition to the hardships that their condition entails, they are often
looked down upon and considered the source of all society’s ills. That attitude is an
alarm bell warning of the moral decline we will face if we continue to give ground to
the throw-away culture. In fact, if it continues, anyone who does not fall within the
accepted norms of physical, mental and social well-being is at risk of marginalization
and exclusion.
For this reason, the presence of migrants and refugees – and of vulnerable people in
general – is an invitation to recover some of those essential dimensions of our
Christian existence and our humanity that risk being overlooked in a prosperous
society. That is why it is not just about migrants. When we show concern for them,
we also show concern for ourselves, for everyone; in taking care of them, we all
grow; in listening to them, we also give voice to a part of ourselves that we may keep
hidden because it is not well regarded nowadays.
“Take courage, it is I, do not be afraid!” (Mt 14:27). It is not just about migrants: it
is also about our fears. The signs of meanness we see around us heighten “our fear
of ‘the other’, the unknown, the marginalized, the foreigner… We see this today in
particular, faced with the arrival of migrants and refugees knocking on our door in
search of protection, security and a better future. To some extent, the fear is
legitimate, also because the preparation for this encounter is lacking” (Homily in
Sacrofano, 15 February 2019). But the problem is not that we have doubts and fears.
The problem is when they condition our way of thinking and acting to the point of
making us intolerant, closed and perhaps even – without realizing it – racist. In this
way, fear deprives us of the desire and the ability to encounter the other, the person
different from myself; it deprives me of an opportunity to encounter the Lord (cf.
Homily at Mass for the World Day of Migrants and Refugees, 14 January 2018).
“For if you love those who love you, what recompense will you have? Do not the tax
collectors do the same?” (Mt 5:46). It is not just about migrants: it is about charity.
Through works of charity, we demonstrate our faith (cf. Jas 2:18). And the highest
form of charity is that shown to those unable to reciprocate and perhaps even to
thank us in return. “It is also about the face we want to give to our society and about
the value of each human life… The progress of our peoples… depends above all on
our openness to being touched and moved by those who knock at our door. Their
faces shatter and debunk all those false idols that can take over and enslave our
lives; idols that promise an illusory and momentary happiness blind to the lives and
sufferings of others” (Address at the Diocesan Caritas of Rabat, 30 March 2019).
“But a Samaritan traveller who came upon him was moved with compassion at the
sight” (Lk 10:33). It is not just about migrants: it is about our humanity. Compassion
motivated that Samaritan – for the Jews, a foreigner – not to pass by. Compassion
is a feeling that cannot be explained on a purely rational level. Compassion strikes
the most sensitive chords of our humanity, releasing a vibrant urge to “be a
neighbour” to all those whom we see in difficulty. As Jesus himself teaches us (cf. Mt
9:35-36; 14:13-14; 15:32-37), being compassionate means recognizing the
suffering of the other and taking immediate action to soothe, heal and save. To be
compassionate means to make room for that tenderness which today’s society so
often asks us to repress. “Opening ourselves to others does not lead to
impoverishment, but rather enrichment, because it enables us to be more human: to
recognize ourselves as participants in a greater collectivity and to understand our life
as a gift for others; to see as the goal, not our own interests, but rather the good of
humanity” (Address at the Heydar Aliyev Mosque in Baku, 2 October 2016).
“See that you do not despise one of these little ones, for I say to you that their angels
in heaven always look upon the face of my heavenly Father” (Mt 18:10). It is not just
about migrants: it is a question of seeing that no one is excluded. Today’s world is
increasingly becoming more elitist and cruel towards the excluded. Developing
countries continue to be drained of their best natural and human resources for the
benefit of a few privileged markets. Wars only affect some regions of the world, yet
weapons of war are produced and sold in other regions which are then unwilling to
take in the refugees produced by these conflicts. Those who pay the price are always
the little ones, the poor, the most vulnerable, who are prevented from sitting at the
table and are left with the “crumbs” of the banquet (cf. Lk 16:19-21). “The Church
which ‘goes forth’… can move forward, boldly take the initiative, go out to others,
seek those who have fallen away, stand at the crossroads and welcome the outcast”
(Evangelii Gaudium, 24). A development that excludes makes the rich richer and the
poor poorer. A real development, on the other hand, seeks to include all the world’s
men and women, to promote their integral growth, and to show concern for coming
generations.
“Whoever wishes to be great among you will be your servant; whoever wishes to be
first among you will be the slave of all” (Mk10:43-44). It is not just about migrants:
it is about putting the last in first place. Jesus Christ asks us not to yield to the logic
of the world, which justifies injustice to others for my own gain or that of my group.
“Me first, and then the others!” Instead, the true motto of the Christian is, “The last
shall be first!” “An individualistic spirit is fertile soil for the growth of that kind of
indifference towards our neighbours which leads to viewing them in purely economic
terms, to a lack of concern for their humanity, and ultimately to feelings of fear and
cynicism. Are these not the attitudes we often adopt towards the poor, the
marginalized and the ‘least’ of society? And how many of these ‘least’ do we have in
our societies! Among them I think primarily of migrants, with their burden of hardship
and suffering, as they seek daily, often in desperation, a place to live in peace and
dignity” (Address to the Diplomatic Corps, 11 January 2016). In the logic of the
Gospel, the last come first, and we must put ourselves at their service.
“I came so that they might have life and have it more abundantly” (Jn 10:10). It is
not just about migrants: it is about the whole person, about all people. In Jesus’
words, we encounter the very heart of his mission: to see that all receive the gift of
life in its fullness, according to the will of the Father. In every political activity, in
every programme, in every pastoral action we must always put the person at the
centre, in his or her many aspects, including the spiritual dimension. And this applies
to all people, whose fundamental equality must be recognized. Consequently,
“development cannot be restricted to economic growth alone. To be authentic, it must
be well-rounded; it must foster the development of each man and of the whole man”
(SAINT PAUL VI, Populorum Progressio, 14).
“So then you are no longer strangers and sojourners, but you are fellow citizens with
the holy ones and members of the household of God” (Eph 2:19). It is not just about
migrants: it is about building the city of God and man. In our time, which can also
be called the era of migration, many innocent people fall victim to the “great
deception” of limitless technological and consumerist development (cf. Laudato Si’,
34). As a result, they undertake a journey towards a “paradise” that inevitably
betrays their expectations. Their presence, at times uncomfortable, helps to debunk
the myth of a progress that benefits a few while built on the exploitation of many.
“We ourselves need to see, and then to enable others to see, that migrants and
refugees do not only represent a problem to be solved, but are brothers and sisters
to be welcomed, respected and loved. They are an occasion that Providence gives us
to help build a more just society, a more perfect democracy, a more united country,
a more fraternal world and a more open and evangelical Christian community”
(Message for the 2014 World Day of Migrants and Refugees).
Dear brothers and sisters, our response to the challenges posed by contemporary
migration can be summed up in four verbs: welcome, protect, promote and integrate.
Yet these verbs do not apply only to migrants and refugees. They describe the
Church’s mission to all those living in the existential peripheries, who need to be
welcomed, protected, promoted and integrated. If we put those four verbs into
practice, we will help build the city of God and man. We will promote the integral
human development of all people. We will also help the world community to come
closer to the goals of sustainable development that it has set for itself and that,
lacking such an approach, will prove difficult to achieve.
In a word, it is not only the cause of migrants that is at stake; it is not just about
them, but about all of us, and about the present and future of the human family.
Migrants, especially those who are most vulnerable, help us to read the “signs of the
times”. Through them, the Lord is calling us to conversion, to be set free from
exclusivity, indifference and the throw-away culture. Through them, the Lord invites
us to embrace fully our Christian life and to contribute, each according to his or her
proper vocation, to the building up of a world that is more and more in accord with
God’s plan.
In expressing this prayerful hope, and through the intercession of the Virgin Mary,
Our Lady of the Way, I invoke God’s abundant blessings upon all the world’s migrants
and refugees and upon all those who accompany them on their journey.

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POPE FRANCIS: ANGELUS

After praying the Angelus, the Holy Father continued:
Dear brothers and sisters, tomorrow is the 70th anniversary of the Geneva
Conventions, important international legal instruments that impose limitations on the
use of force and are aimed at protecting civilians and prisoners in time of war. May
this anniversary make States evermore aware of the essential need to protect the
life and dignity of the victims of armed conflict. Everyone is bound to observe the
limitations imposed by international humanitarian law, protecting the defenceless
peoples and civil structures, especially hospitals, schools, places of worship, refugee
camps. And let us not forget that war and terrorism are always a great loss for all
humanity. They are the great defeat of humanity!

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POPE FRANCIS: ANGELUS

After the Angelus
Dear brothers and sisters,
I was saddened to learn of the tragic shipwreck that happened in recent days in the
Mediterranean, in which dozens of migrants, including women and children, lost their
lives. I reiterate my heartfelt appeal for the international community to act swiftly
and decisively, to prevent any further repetition of such tragedies and to guarantee
the safety and dignity of all our sisters and brothers. Please pray with me for the
victims and their families. And also to ask from the heart: “Father, why?” [a minute’s
silence follows]

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HOLY MASS FOR MIGRANTS, HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS

Today the word of God speaks to us of salvation and liberation.
Salvation. During his journey from Beersheba to Haran, Jacob decides to stop and
rest in a solitary place. In a dream, he sees a ladder: its base rests on the earth and
its top reaches to heaven (cf. Gen 28:10-22). The ladder, on which angels of God are
ascending and descending, represents the connection between the divine and the
human, fulfilled historically in Christ’s incarnation (cf. Jn 1:51), which was the
Father’s loving gift of revelation and salvation. The ladder is an allegory of the divine
action that precedes all human activity. It is the antithesis of the Tower of Babel,
built by men with their own strength, who wanted to reach heaven to become gods.
In this case, however, it is God who comes down; it is the Lord who reveals himself;
it is God who saves. And Emmanuel, God-with-us, fulfils the promise of mutual
belonging between the Lord and humanity, in the sign of an incarnate and merciful
love that gives life in abundance.
Faced with this revelation, Jacob makes an act of trust in the Lord, which becomes a
work of recognition and adoration that marks a key moment in the history of
salvation. He asks the Lord to protect him on the difficult journey he must make, and
says: “The Lord shall be my God” (Gen 28:21).
Echoing the words of the patriarch, we repeated in the psalm: “O my God, I trust in
you”. He is our refuge and our strength, our shield and our armour, our anchor in
times of trial. The Lord is a refuge for the faithful who call on him in times of
tribulation. For it is indeed at such moments that our prayer is made purer, when we
realize that the security the world offers has little worth, and only God remains. God
alone opens up heaven for those who live on earth. Only God saves.
This total and absolute trust is shared by the head of the synagogue and the sick
woman in the Gospel (cf. Mt 9:18-26). These are scenes of liberation. Both draw
close to Jesus in order to obtain from him what no one else can give them: liberation
from sickness and from death. On the one hand, there is the daughter of one of the
city authorities; on the other, a woman afflicted by a sickness that has made her an
outcast, marginalized, someone impure. But Jesus makes no distinctions: liberation
is generously given to each of them. Their longing places both the woman and the
girl among the “least” who are to be loved and raised up.
Jesus reveals to his disciples the need for a preferential option for the least, those
who must be given the front row in the exercise of charity. There are many forms of
poverty today; as Saint John Paul II wrote: “The ‘poor’, in varied states of affliction,
are the oppressed, those on the margin of society, the elderly, the sick, the young,
any and all who are considered and treated as ‘the least’” (Apostolic Exhortation Vita
Consecrata, 82).
On this sixth anniversary of the visit to Lampedusa, my thoughts go out to those
“least ones” who daily cry out to the Lord, asking to be freed from the evils that afflict
them. These least ones are abandoned and cheated into dying in the desert; these
least ones are tortured, abused and violated in detention camps; these least ones
face the waves of an unforgiving sea; these least ones are left in reception camps
too long for them to be called temporary. These are only some of the least ones who
Jesus asks us to love and raise up. Unfortunately the existential peripheries of our
cities are densely populated with persons who have been thrown away, marginalized,
oppressed, discriminated against, abused, exploited, abandoned, poor and suffering.
In the spirit of the Beatitudes we are called to comfort them in their affliction and
offer them mercy; to sate their hunger and thirst for justice; to let them experience
God’s caring fatherliness; to show them the way to the Kingdom of Heaven. They are
persons; these are not mere social or migrant issues! “This is not just about
migrants”, in the twofold sense that migrants are first of all human persons, and that
they are the symbol of all those rejected by today’s globalized society.
We spontaneously return to the image of Jacob’s ladder. In Christ Jesus, the
connection between earth and heaven is guaranteed and is accessible to all. Yet
climbing the steps of this ladder requires commitment, effort and grace. The weakest
and most vulnerable must to be helped. I like to think that we could be those angels
ascending and descending, taking under our wings the little ones, the lame, the sick,
those excluded: the least ones, who would otherwise stay behind and would
experience only grinding poverty on earth, without glimpsing in this life anything of
heaven’s brightness.
This is, brothers and sisters, a tremendous responsibility, from which no one is
exempt if we wish to fulfil the mission of salvation and liberation in which the Lord
himself has called us to cooperate. I know that many of you, who arrived just a few
months ago, are already assisting brothers and sisters who have come even more
recently. I want to thank you for this most beautiful example of humanity, gratitude
and solidarity.

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POPE FRANCIS: ANGELUS

After the Angelus the Holy Father continued:
Dear brothers and sisters, even though several days have passed, I invite you to pray
for the poor, defenceless people who were killed or wounded in the air attack that
struck a migrant detention centre in Libya. The international community cannot
tolerate such grave acts. I pray for the victims: that the God of peace welcome the
deceased unto himself and support the wounded. I hope that humanitarian corridors
may be organized in an extensive and concerted fashion for the neediest migrants. I
also remember all the victims of the massacres that were recently carried out in
Afghanistan, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. Let us pray together. [moment of silence]
[…]