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APOSTOLIC VISIT OF HIS HOLINESS TO IRELAND ON THE OCCASION OF THE IX WORLD MEETING OF FAMILIES [25-26 AUGUST 2018] MEETING WITH AUTHORITIES, CIVIL SOCIETY AND DIPLOMATIC CORPS, ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS

[…] The Gospel reminds us that true peace is ultimately God’s gift; it flows from a
healed and reconciled heart and branches out to embrace the entire world. Yet it
also requires constant conversion on our part, as the source of those spiritual
resources needed to build a society of authentic solidarity, justice and service of the
common good. Without that spiritual foundation, our ideal of a global family of
nations risks becoming no more than another empty platitude. Can we say that the
goal of creating economic or financial prosperity leads of itself to a more just and
equitable social order? Or could it be that the growth of a materialistic “throwaway
culture” has in fact made us increasingly indifferent to the poor and to the most
defenceless members of our human family, including the unborn, deprived of the
very right to life? Perhaps the most disturbing challenges to our consciences in these
days is the massive refugee crisis, which will not go away, and whose solution calls
for a wisdom, a breadth of vision and a humanitarian concern that go far beyond
short-term political decisions. […]

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POPE FRANCIS: ANGELUS

After the Marian prayer and the blessing the Holy Father continued:
Dear brothers and sisters, tomorrow is the un-sponsored World Day against
Trafficking in Persons. This plague reduces many men, women and children to slavery
for the purposes of labour and sexual exploitation, trade in organs, mendicancy and
forced delinquency. Even here in Rome. Migration routes too are often used by
traffickers and exploiters to recruit new trafficking victims. It is the responsibility of
all to denounce these injustices and to firmly oppose this shameful crime. […]

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MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER FRANCIS TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE 3rd INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF “CATHOLIC THEOLOGICAL ETHICS IN THE WORLD CHURCH”

[…]
The theme of your meeting is one to which I myself have often called attention: the
need to build bridges, not walls. I keep repeating this in the lively hope that people
everywhere will pay attention to this need that is increasingly acknowledged, albeit
at times resisted by fear and forms of regression. Without renouncing prudence, we
are called to recognize every sign and mobilize all our energy in order to remove the
walls of division and to build bridges of fraternity everywhere in the world.
The three focal points of your meeting intersect along this journey of bridge building
in a critical time like our own. You have given a central place to the ecological
challenge, since certain of its aspects can create grave imbalances not only in terms
of the relationship between man and nature, but also between generations and
peoples. This challenge – as it emerges from the Encyclical Laudato Si’ – is not simply
one of many, but the broader backdrop for an understanding of both ecological ethics
and social ethics. For this reason, your concern for the issue of migrants and refugees
is very serious and provokes a metanoia that can foster ethical and theological
reflection, even before inspiring suitable pastoral attitudes and responsible and
carefully planned political policies.
[…]

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POPE FRANCIS ANGELUS

After the Angelus, the Holy Father continued:
Dear brothers and sisters, in recent weeks we have heard the tragic news of the
shipwrecks of boats laden with migrants in the waters of the Mediterranean. I express
my grief before such tragedies and I assure my thoughts and prayers for the
deceased and their families. I direct a heartfelt appeal to the international community
to act decisively and promptly, in order to avoid similar tragedies from being repeated
and to guarantee the safety and the respect of the rights and dignity of all.
[…]

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JOURNEY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO BARI ADDRESS OF THE POPE AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE DIALOGUE

[…]
Hope has the face of children. In the Middle East, for years, an appalling number of
young people mourn violent deaths in their families and see their native land
threatened, often with their only prospect being that of flight. This is the death of
hope. All too many children have spent most of their lives looking at rubble instead
of schools, hearing the deafening explosion of bombs rather than the happy din of
playgrounds. May humanity listen – this is my plea – to the cry of children, whose
mouths proclaim the glory of God (cf. Ps 8:3). Only by wiping away their tears will
the world recover its dignity. […]

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLENARY ASSEMBLY OF THE PONTIFICAL ACADEMY FOR LIFE

[…]
It is necessary to undertake a careful discernment of the complex fundamental
differences present in human life: between man and woman, fatherhood and
motherhood, filiation and fraternity, various social factors and the different ages of
life. Then too, between all the difficult conditions and all the delicate or dangerous
situations that call for particular ethical wisdom and courageous moral resistance:
sexuality and the transmission of life, sickness and old age, limitation and disability,
poverty and exclusion, violence and war. “The defense of the unborn, for example,
needs to be clear, firm and passionate, for at stake is the dignity of human life, which
is always sacred and demands love for each person, regardless of his or her stage of
development. Equally sacred, however, are the lives of the poor who are already
born, the destitute, the abandoned and the underprivileged, the vulnerable infirm
and elderly exposed to covert euthanasia, the victims of human trafficking, new forms
of slavery, and every form of rejection.” (Gaudete et Exsultate, 101).
[…]

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE REUNION OF AID AGENCIES FOR THE ORIENTAL CHURCHES (ROACO)

I am pleased to meet you at the conclusion of your Plenary Assembly, which this year
coincides with the fiftieth anniversary of the establishment of ROACO. I offer a cordial
greeting to Cardinal Sandri and I thank him for his words of introduction. My greetings
and my appreciation go likewise to the Papal Representatives of the countries of the
Middle East, who daily accompany the aspirations of Christians and people of other
religious traditions in lands tragically marked by conflict and suffering. I also greet
with gratitude the representatives of the Catholic agencies and the benefactors of the
Congregation for the Oriental Churches, as well as all those who in the past have
offered their services and are present for this important anniversary.
In the wake of the recent celebrations marking the centenary of the Congregation,
ROACO now celebrates its own jubilee year. According to the Scriptures, every fiftieth
year was heralded by the shofar, the horn that proclaimed the year of freedom for
slaves, the cancellation of debt, the restitution of land, all based on the people’s
acknowledgment of God’s gracious gift of the Covenant and of the land that was its
sign. I invite you to think back with gratitude on the years that have passed, and
especially on the faces of so many people – some of whom have already ended their
earthly pilgrimage – that have worked in the Congregation and in your various
agencies in support of their works of charity and assistance. The study of various
projects and their financing, made possible by the generosity of so many of the
faithful worldwide, has enabled the Oriental Catholic Churches, both in their native
lands and in the diaspora, to carry forward their witness to the Gospel. That witness
has been severely tested, often amid sufferings and persecution, first by the
totalitarian regimes of Eastern Europe and then, more recently, by forms of allegedly
religious fundamentalism and fanaticism, to say nothing of apparently interminable
conflicts, especially in the Middle East. The concrete solidarity that you have shown
has helped meet emergency situations resulting from wars and movements of
migration, but above all it has helped ensure the very existence of the Churches,
their activities of pastoral care and evangelization, and their social and charitable
works. All these make manifest the face of Christ’s Church, which proclaims the
Gospel in action and in word, thus making present God’s charity for mankind. Indeed,
the “year of grace” of the Lord is always marked by liberation, both within the heart
of sinful human beings and without, in the new life of the redeemed, which prefigures
the new heavens and that new earth where justice will dwell.
Saint Peter, on the day of Pentecost, recalled the prophecy, so dear to me, of Joel:
“I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall
prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream
dreams” (Joel 2:17). The Oriental Catholic Churches, as living witnesses to their
apostolic origins, are called in a special way to protect and pass on a spark of
Pentecostal fire. They are called daily to discover anew their own prophetic presence
in all those places where they dwell as pilgrims. Beginning with Jerusalem, the Holy
City, whose identity and particular vocation needs to be safeguarded beyond different
tensions and political disputes, Christians, even though present as a small flock, draw
strength from the Spirit for their mission of witness. Today that mission is more
urgent than ever before. From the holy places, where God’s plan was fulfilled in the
mystery of the incarnation, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, may there come
about a renewed spirit of strength to inspire Christians in the Holy Land and the
Middle East to embrace their special vocation and to offer an account of their faith
and their hope. May the sons and daughters of the Oriental Catholic Churches cherish
their prophetic charge to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus, even in settings that are often
even more secularized than in the West, where they come as immigrants or refugees.
May they find a welcome, both on the practical level and in the Church’s life, as they
seek to preserve and enrich the patrimony of their various traditions. These men and
women, thanks also to your help, can bear witness to us, whose hearts are often
dulled, that it is still worth living and suffering for the Gospel, even as a minority, or
the object of persecution, for the Gospel is the joy and the life of men and women of
every age.
Allow me to offer a final word of thanks and encouragement. Because of the work of
ROACO, through the attentiveness and the acts of charity that sustain the life of the
Oriental Churches, the Successor of Peter is able also to continue his mission of
pursuing possible paths to the visible unity of all Christians. In the effort to extend a
cordial and sincere hand to our most distant brothers and sisters, our sons and
daughters are no less loved, and certainly not forgotten. With your help, they are
always listened to and helped to continue their journey as the Church of the Risen
Christ, amid every challenge, and every spiritual and material suffering, in the Middle
East and in Eastern Europe.
Dear brothers and sisters, may God’s constant assistance always accompany you in
your activities. To all of you I impart my Apostolic Blessing, which I extend to the
agencies you represent, your families and the communities to which you belong. And
I ask you, please, to please pray for me. Thank you.
[…]

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MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHERTO THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE “MEAL OF ENCOUNTER” IN THE “SAINT JOHN PAUL II” CARITAS SOUP KITCHEN IN VIA MARSALA, ROME

Dear Brother and Dear Sisters,
With this message I wish to encourage you to continue your journey with migrants
and refugees, and to share a meal with them, like the one organized here by Caritas.
As Caritas, you have accepted the invitation to start a global awareness initiative in
support of migrants and refugees: it is the “Share the Journey” campaign, which we
inaugurated together last 27 September. Today, I would like to invite you all —
migrants, refugees, Caritas workers and institutions — to identify the traits of this
journey that have had the most impact on you: what hope inspires your path? Try to
share this thought and to “celebrate” what we have in common.
Finally, I wish to encourage you members of Caritas, the community of faithful with
its pastors, and all people of good will, to always create new spaces for sharing, so
that a renewed fraternity with migrants and refugees may emerge from our
encounters.
I heartily bless your soup kitchen, and I wish you a good lunch.

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POPE FRANCIS: ANGELUS

[…] Next Wednesday, World Refugee Day will be observed. It is promoted by the
United Nations to call attention to what is experienced, often with great anxiety and
suffering, by our brothers and sisters forced to flee their land due to conflicts and
persecution. A Day which, this year, falls as consultations are underway among
governments for the adoption of a Global Compact on Refugees, which is hoped to
be adopted within the year, as well as that for safe, orderly and legal migration. I
hope that the states involved in these processes may reach an agreement to ensure,
with responsibility and humanity, assistance and protection to those who are forced
to leave their own country. But each one of us is also called to be close to refugees,
to find moments of encounter with them, to appreciate their contribution, so that
they too may be better integrated into the communities that receive them. In this
encounter and in this mutual respect and support there is a solution to many
problems. […]

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ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO PARTICIPANTS AT THE NATIONAL CONVENTION OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS OF LABOUR FEDERATION

[…]
May the Beatitudes of Jesus in the Gospel guide us along this arduous but exciting
journey (cf. Mt 5: 3-11, Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete et exsultate, 67-94); may
they lead us to look always with love to Jesus Himself who incarnated them in His
person; may they show us that holiness does not concern the spirit alone, but also
the feet, so that we go towards our brothers, and the hands, so as to share with
them. May they teach us and our world not to distrust or leave at the mercy of the
waves those who leave their land hungry for bread and justice; may they lead us not
to live for the superfluous, but to spend ourselves for the development of all, and to
bow with compassion to the weakest. Without the comfortable illusion that, from the
rich table of the few, wellbeing might “rain” automatically upon everyone. This is not
true.
[…]