Showing posts with label Pope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pope. Show all posts
Sunday, August 25, 2019
Pope fears for Amazon, the planet's 'vital lung'
VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis on Sunday voiced concern for the Amazon rainforest, a "vital" lung for the planet, as the worst blazes in years have sparked a global outcry.
"We are concerned about the vast fires that have developed in the Amazon," the pope told the faithful at the Vatican.
"That forest lung is vital for our planet."
He urged the world's 1.3 billion Catholics to pray for the fires to be extinguished as quickly as possible.
Official figures show 78,383 forest fires have been recorded in Brazil this year, the highest number of any year since 2013.
The Argentine pope, who will gather bishops for a conference on the Amazon in October, met Brazilian indigenous leader Raoni in 2013 when he toured Europe warning of the dangers of deforestation.
The pope denounced the exploitation of the Amazon by "huge international economic interests" in a 2015 encyclical.
In January 2018 he visited Puerto Maldonado village in the Amazonian jungle of southeastern Peru where thousands of tribespeople had gathered, including from neighboring Brazil and Bolivia.
The Catholic Church acknowledges the bloody history of the spread of Christianity through South America and that it has not always respected Amazon tribes. Today it is committed to numerous projects to support indigenous populations.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Sunday, April 14, 2019
Palm Sunday at the Vatican
Pope Francis walks along Cardinals holding palm fronds across St. Peter's square as he celebrates the Palm Sunday Mass in the Vatican. The pope marked the moveable feast by blessing the palm fronds of Catholic faithful before celebrating Mass.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
A kiss for peace
Pope Francis and Grand Imam of al-Azhar Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayeb kiss each other after signing a document on fighting extremism, during an inter-religious meeting at the Founder's Memorial in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates on Monday. The Pope is on a three-day historic visit to the gulf state, the first by a pontiff.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Pope loses his cool with person who almost knocked him down
MORELIA, Mexico - Pope Francis, who is usually calm and accommodating with his admirers, clearly lost his temper with a person who pulled on him so hard that he fell onto a child on a wheel chair.
Video footage showed that while the pope was walking at the edge of a crowd in an stadium, he stopped to greet children who were sitting.
Two arms reached out to grab him and the person would not let go, even after the pope lost his balance and his chest was pressing on the child's head.
Aides and security men stopped the pope from falling to the ground.
After he returned to an upright position, his face turned angry.
He looked at the person, raised his voice and said twice in Spanish: "Don't be selfish!"
It was not clear if the person who pulled the pope was a man or a woman.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Thursday, June 18, 2015
The green vision of Pope Francis
VATICAN CITY - Main points of Pope Francis's Encyclical on the environment, released on Thursday:
- Main Challenge -
Climate change represents one of the principal challenges facing humanity in our time. Its worst impact will probably be felt by developing countries in coming decades.
"The urgent challenge to protect our common home includes a concern to bring the whole human family together to seek sustainable and integral development."
- A man-made problem -
Scientific studies indicate that most global warming in recent decades is mainly as a result of human activity.
Humanity must recognise the need for changes of lifestyle, production and consumption.
- Conflict and war -
"It is foreseeable that, once certain resources have been depleted, the scene will be set for new wars."
- Throwaway culture -
"The earth, our home, is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile of filth...
"These problems are closely linked to a throwaway culture."
- Carbon emissions -
"We know that technology based on the use of highly polluting fossil fuels – especially coal, but also oil and, to a lesser degree, gas – needs to be progressively replaced without delay."
- Consequences -
"If present trends continue, this century may well witness extraordinary climate change and an unprecedented destruction of ecosystems, with serious consequences for all of us."
A quarter of the world's population lives on, or near, the coast so sea level rises would be extremely dangerous.
- Drastic reductions -
Polluting gases must be "drastically reduced" with the reduction of fossil fuels and development of renewable energy.
- Rich to blame -
Developed countries ought to significantly limit their consumption of non-renewable energy and assist poorer countries to support policies and programmes of sustainable development.
"Many of those who possess more resources and economic or political power seem mostly to be concerned with masking the problems or concealing their symptoms."
- Drinking water -
"Access to safe drinkable water is a basic and universal human right.... Some studies warn that an acute water shortage may occur within a few decades unless urgent action is taken."
- Biodiversity -
"The earth’s resources are also being plundered because of short-sighted approaches to the economy, commerce and production. The loss of forests and woodlands entails the loss of species which may constitute extremely important resources in the future, not only for food but also for curing disease and other uses."
- Binding agreements -
Enforceable international agreements are urgently needed, since local authorities are not always capable of effective intervention.
- Carbon credits -
The strategy of buying and selling carbon credits "can lead to a new form of speculation which would not help reduce the emission of polluting gases worldwide".
It may simply become a ploy which permits maintaining the excessive consumption of some countries and sectors.
- Religion -
"Most people profess to be believers. This should spur religions to dialogue among themselves for the sake of protecting nature, defending the poor, and building networks of respect and fraternity."
- Economy and growth -
"We need also to think of containing growth by setting some reasonable limits and even retracing our steps before it is too late...
"That is why the time has come to accept decreased growth in some parts of the world."
- Consumerism -
"Obsession with a consumerist lifestyle, above all when few people are capable of maintaining it, can only lead to violence and mutual destruction."
- Technology and profit -
"The economy accepts every advance in technology with a view to profit, without concern for its potentially negative impact on human beings."
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Fil-Ams make lifestyle changes to follow Pope Francis
CALIFORNIA - Pope Francis’ messages on simplicity, humility and love for all while in the Philippines were heard loud and clear at St. Patrick’s Church in San Francisco where majority of the parishioners and clergy are Filipino.
They said they’re inspired to make changes in their own lives because of how the Holy Father lives his life.
"He lives simply. He doesn’t even live in the papal palace. He takes ordinary cars wherever he goes. He makes me feel guilty, actually," quipped Fr. Robert Andrey, parish priest of St. Patrick’s Church.
Amy Mohler, member of the Sacred Heart group of St. Patrick’s Church said she also chose not to drive a fancy car because she was inspired to live simpler by the Pope.
"I live in a simple place. I don’t shop. I’d rather be in Church. The Church is my home," she said.
They said they have also learned to be more forgiving, more accepting of all kinds of people, regardless of race, color, religion and gender because of the Pope.
"Accept people for what they are, whatever religion they have," said Estela Sullivan, also a member of the Sacred Heart Group.
Another group member, Corazon Salcedo San Jose remarked, "I don't judge them on their beliefs, on situations they are in, what kind of relationships they have. You don’t have to judge."
For Pope Francis, the Filipino culture has indeed been shaped by faith. He said Filipinos everywhere are known for their love of God and devotion to the Church’s teachings.
Read more from Balitang America.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Pope Francis arrives in Manila
MANILA - Pope Francis arrived in the Philippines on Thursday, the second and last stop in his week-long Asia tour, to send a message of mercy and compassion to millions of poor Filipinos, including those hit by one of the strongest typhoons to ever hit land.
Asia's most populous Catholic nation mounted its biggest security operation for Francis' visit, deploying nearly 50,000 soldiers and police in the capital and in the central Philippine province of Leyte for his weekend trip there.
Francis is the third pontiff to visit the world's third biggest Roman Catholic country after Brazil and Mexico. About 80 percent of the Philippines' 100 million population are Roman Catholics, accounting for half of Asia's total. (Reporting By Manuel Mogato; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Pope Francis prays in Istanbul's Blue Mosque
ISTANBUL - Pope Francis prayed silently alongside a senior Islamic cleric in Istanbul's Blue Mosque on Saturday, in a gesture of inter-religious harmony in a country bordering the conflicts in Syria and Iraq.
Francis took off his shoes as he entered the huge mosque, before bowing his head in prayer for several minutes, facing Mecca and standing next to Istanbul's Grand Mufti Rahmi Yaran, in what a Vatican spokesman described as a joint "moment of silent adoration" of God.
A similar act by his predecessor Pope Benedict in 2006 drew criticism from conservative Catholics and some Muslims.
Several hundred people, many of them tourists, watched from behind police barriers as the pope then walked to the nearby Aya Sofya museum, once the Christian church Hagia Sophia.
A group of school children waving Turkish and Vatican flags chanted "Long live Pope Francis" in Italian as the Muslim call to prayer rang out across the Sultanahmet square, the heart of Istanbul's historic quarter.
"We must show respect for each others beliefs. God willing the pope's visit will help in this respect," said Halil Ibrahim Cil, 24, a hospital worker from Istanbul.
"We want to practise our religion in peace. We want people to understand Islam. We don't want war."
Islamic State insurgents have captured swathes of neighboring Syria and Iraq, persecuting and killing Shi'ite Muslims, Christians and others who do not share their ultra-radical brand of Sunni Islam.
The Blue Mosque, known officially as the Sultanahmet mosque, opened in 1616 and is the most famous in Turkey. Its popular name is a reference to the fine blue Iznik tiles in its main prayer room.
Francis was later given a rapturous welcome by Istanbul's tiny Roman Catholic community when he celebrated a Mass in the city's Holy Spirit Cathedral. Several thousand people from a Catholic population of around 53,000 packed the small building and others watched from an outdoor courtyard.
He later went to a joint service with Bartholomew I, spiritual leader of some 300 million Orthodox Christians worldwide. The main purpose of his trip is to hold a joint ceremony on Sunday with Bartholomew to renew their commitment to reunite the eastern and western branches of Christianity.
Bartholomew's seat remains in Istanbul, a vestige of the Byzantine Empire, even as his flock in Turkey has dwindled to less than 3,000 among a population of 75 million Muslims.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Pope Francis: Big Bang theory does not contradict role of God
VATICAN CITY - Scientific theories including the "Big Bang" believed to have brought the universe into being 13.7 billion years ago and the idea that life developed through a process of evolution do not conflict with Catholic teaching, Pope Francis said on Tuesday.
Addressing a meeting of the Pontificial Academy of Sciences, an independent body housed in the Vatican and financed largely by the Holy See, Francis said scientific explanations for the world did not exclude the role of God in creation.
"The beginning of the world is not the work of chaos that owes its origin to something else, but it derives directly from a supreme principle that creates out of love," he said.
"The 'Big Bang', that today is considered to be the origin of the world, does not contradict the creative intervention of God, on the contrary it requires it," he said.
"Evolution in nature is not in contrast with the notion of (divine) creation because evolution requires the creation of the beings that evolve," the pope said.
The Church once opposed early scientific explanations of the universe that contradicted the account of creation in the Bible, famously condemning the 17th century astronomer Galileo Galilei who showed that the earth revolved around the sun.
However, more recently it has sought to shed its image as an enemy of science and the pope's comments largely echoed statements from his predecessors.
Pope Pius XII described evolution as a valid scientific approach to the development of humans in 1950 and Pope John Paul reiterated that in 1996.
In 2011, the former Pope Benedict said scientific theories on the origin and development of the universe and humans, while not in conflict with faith, left many questions unanswered.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Thursday, October 23, 2014
How Marcos tried to claim credit for saving Pope's life
MANILA - Two men came to the airport in costume the day Pope Paul VI set foot in the Philippines in November 1970 -- the first Pope ever to visit the Philippines and the Far East.
The first, Alex Allan, a young reporter for "The Manila Chronicle," wore a local police officer's uniform.
The second -- Bolivian surrealist painter Benjamin Mendoza -- was dressed like a priest. He had come to the Philippines the year before the papal visit.
Allan recounted how he ended up wearing the police uniform: He wanted to cover the arrival of the pope, but failed to get a media pass.
“They were only allowing two reporters per paper,” he said. “The Malacanang reporter grabbed the first accreditation, and the second one went to the Senate reporter. I felt so bad. I was the one covering the Defense department, and the head of Task Force Holy Father was the Metrocom Chief, General Mariano Ordonez, yet I wasn’t allowed there. So I called Ordonez, and he said: ‘Punta ka rito bukas.’”
Ordonez couldn’t issue a media pass, but he gave Allan the uniform instead. “On the day of the pope’s arrival, there I was--walking with General Ordonez at the tarmac. He let go of his aide. I became his aide,” he said.
Within minutes of the pope’s arrival, Allan found himself two feet away from the pontiff and his would-be assassin—and yes, President Ferdinand Marcos and First Lady Imelda Marcos.
Little did Allan know that he was about to witness a historic moment. He saw the Bolivian artist attack the pope with a 9-inch kris, a dagger with a wavy blade.
“It was a very fast thing, somebody shouted 'Pare! Pare!' What they meant pala was, (the attacker) was a priest,” he said.
“I was surprised to find out he wasn’t really a priest,” said Allan, trying to describe Mendoza. “He didn’t look right. I couldn’t say that he was crazy or out of his mind because he was answering me. He was on a mission, that’s all he was saying. He kept repeating it.”
Mendoza was pushed to the ground by the pope’s secretary, Monsignor Pascale Macci. The 38-year-old Bolivian artist later received a karate blow by Stephen Cardinal Kim of Korea.
From there, Allan, a certain Sergeant Balacqua and Ordonez would take over. “(Mendoza) was struggling,” Allan said. “He was kicking. First thing I saw was the leg, so I grabbed it. We brought him to the van and then to a safe house.”
A photo of the three men lugging Mendoza to a van appeared on the front page of "The Manila Chronicle" the following day, November 28, 1970.
Metrocom chief's order
As Allan was about to write his story that day, things took an interesting turn. “Here comes Ordonez, and says: ‘Alex, hindi tayo ang nag-save kay pope, ha? It was Marcos who blocked him and karate chopped him. And it was Imelda who picked up the knife.’”
But Allan said he didn’t have the stomach for a tall tale. “I know what happened. He knows what happened. I couldn’t say that Marcos did it, because he didn’t do it.”
It had been a turbulent year for the Philippines, marked by violent anti-government protests, rising oil prices, rumors of martial law, a sex scandal involving the president, two super typhoons, and an assassination attempt.
But Allan said the pope’s visit somehow brought calm to a weary nation, albeit just for a few days. “Long after, people I talked to would say, I saw the pope. The fact that they saw him, had a rosary blessed by him, people said they felt holy water sprinkled on them. It was enough to have seen a pope.”
The Pope and his assassin had long gone, but Allan still remembers the two men -- and how he covered one of the biggest stories of his time.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, October 5, 2014
Pope launches review of Church teaching on family, marriage
VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis on Sunday launches a major review of Catholic teaching on the family that could have far-reaching implications for the Church's attitude to marriage, cohabitation and divorce.
An extraordinary synod, or meeting, of nearly 200 bishops from around the world and a sprinkling of lay Catholics will, for the next two weeks, address the huge gulf between what the Church says on these issues and what tens of millions of believers actually do.
Addressing tens of thousands of believers in St Peter's square on the eve of the synod on Saturday night, Francis said the synod could open the door to a "renewal of the Church and society."
Since becoming pontiff just over 18 months ago, Francis has repeatedly highlighted the "wounds" caused by family breakdown in modern society, while suggesting the Church needs to adapt to this new reality.
"The wounds have to be treated with mercy. The Church is a mother, not a customs office, coldly checking who is within the rules," he has said, in an allusion to the many divorced people, cohabiting couples and single mothers within the ranks of the Church.
Francis underlined where he stands last month by personally marrying 20 Roman couples, some of whom had been "living in sin" prior to their weddings.
- Deep divisions within Church -
In his 18 months in the Vatican, the 77-year-old pope has already taken steps to overhaul the way the Vatican bank and administration are run and has sent out strong signals about the determination of the Church to deal with the issue of clerical sex abuse.
But a reform agenda on social issues could prove much harder to implement because of deep divisions within the Church, Vatican experts say.
Conservatives in the Church hierarchy have already made it clear they will fight any dilution of traditional doctrine.
The Church's view of marriage has come to be seen as increasingly outdated by many in a world where, in some developed countries, nearly one in two marriages ends in divorce and where the notion of the institution itself has been challenged by the global trend towards the legalisation of same-sex weddings.
The bishops gathered in Rome are certainly not about to embrace gay marriage and few Vatican observers expect much, if any, change on questions such as contraception, another area where Catholic teaching contrasts with the daily practice of millions.
But with Francis on the side of reform, the feeling is that the synod process could lead to some highly symbolic changes when it finally reaches conclusions, which is not expected to happen before 2016 at the earliest.
The most notable of these could be a change in the rules to make it possible for Catholics who divorce and then remarry to receive communion.
That has been banned for centuries but critics say the Church's stance is ludicrous given that individuals who have declared their repentance from more serious breaches of the Christian code, including murder or involvement in organised crime, can take communion.
While the Church may not yet be ready to take a step that would amount to a de facto acceptance of divorce in certain circumstances, the discussions could result in steps to make it easier for failed marriages to be annulled.
Another area in which the Church could send out a signal of compassion is by making it clear that priests should be ready to baptise the children of same sex couples, regardless of the doctrinal disapproval of their parents' union.
The synod will also discuss how priests and parishioners can practically help to shore up marriages within their community. Among questions to be addressed on that score is whether the easy availability of pornography in modern society is a factor in family breakdown.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, April 20, 2014
On Easter, Pope calls for end to war
VATICAN CITY -- Pope Francis, in his Easter address before a huge crowd, on Sunday denounced the "immense wastefulness" in the world while many go hungry and called for an end to conflicts in Syria, Ukraine and Africa.
"We ask you, Lord Jesus, to put an end to all war and every conflict, whether great or small, ancient or recent," he said in his "Urbi et Orbi" (to the city and the world) message.
Francis, marking the second Easter season of his pontificate, celebrated a Mass to an overflowing crowd of at least 150,000 in St. Peter's Square and beyond.
The crowd stretched back along all of Via della Conciliazione, the boulevard between the Vatican and the Tiber River.
Speaking under a sunny sky after a midnight rainstorm soaked the tens of thousands of flowers that bedecked the square, Francis weaved his message around the suffering of people across the globe.
He prayed to God to "help us to overcome the scourge of hunger, aggravated by conflicts and by the immense wastefulness for which we are often responsible".
Since his election as the first non-European pope in 1,300 years, Francis had made defense of the poor a hallmark of his papacy, often criticizing developed nations and the excesses of capitalism and consumerism.
The 77-year-old pope, wearing white vestments for the service, prayed for the protection of those members of society who are particularly vulnerable to exploitation, abuse and abandonment - women, children, the elderly and immigrants.
Easter is the most important day on the liturgical calendar because it commemorates the day Christians believe Jesus rose from the dead after his crucifixion and the Church sees it as a symbol of hope, peace and reconciliation among peoples and nations.
Bold peace negotiations
The pope called on the international community to "boldly negotiate the peace long awaited and long overdue" in Syria, where more than 150,000 people have been killed in the civil war, a third of them civilians. Millions have fled the country.
"We pray in a particular way for Syria, that all those suffering the effects of the conflict can receive needed humanitarian aid and that neither side will again use deadly force, especially against the defenseless civil population," he said.
Francis asked God to "enlighten and inspire the initiatives that promote peace in Ukraine so that all those involved, with the support of the international community, will make every effort to prevent violence and, in a spirit of unity and dialogue, chart a path for the country's future."
He also asked for an end to violence in Iraq, Venezuela, South Sudan and the Central Africa Republic.
Francis appealed for more medical attention for the victims of the deadly Ebola epidemic in Guinea Conakry, Sierra Leone and Liberia, and care for those suffering from many other diseases spread through neglect and dire poverty.
He called for a "halt to the brutal terrorist attacks" in f Nigeria, an apparent reference to Nigerian Islamist militant group Boko Haram, which earlier this month abducted some 130 girls from a school in the north of the country.
The Easter Sunday services were the culmination of four hectic days of Holy Week activities for the pontiff.
Next Sunday, he will canonize Pope John Paul II, who reigned from 1978 to 2005, and Pope John XXIII, who was pontiff from 1958 to 1963 and called the Second Vatican Council, a landmark meeting that modernized the Church.
Hundreds of thousands of people are due to come to Rome for the canonizations, the first time two popes are be made saints simultaneously and the first canonizations of a pope since 1954.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Pope mistakenly says Italian word for 'f--k'
Pope Francis committed a mistake during his Sunday address in Saint Peter's Square.
The Pope accidentally said the Italian counterpart of the "f" word instead of saying caso, which is Italian for "example." He was calling for an end to the conflict in Ukraine.
A transcript from the Vatican of the Pope's speech in Italian reads:
"Se ognuno di noi non accumula ricchezze soltanto per sé ma le mette al servizio degli altri, in questo caso la Provvidenza di Dio si rende visibile in questo gesto di solidarietà ."
Loosely translated into English, the text says: "If each of us does not accumulate riches only for himself but puts them at the service of others, in this case the Providence of God is made visible in this gesture of solidarity."
He did realize his mistake, correcting himself on the spot.
Francis also tweeted, "In life, we all make many mistakes. Let us learn to recognize our errors and ask forgiveness."
People have generally been forgiving.
They say, the Pope's mix-up is a common mistake for those who move from speaking Spanish to Italian.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Pope Francis renews passport as a regular Argentine
BUENOS AIRES - Pope Francis wants to travel the world as a regular Argentine and not a privileged citizen of the Vatican City microstate, Argentina said on Monday.
The head of the Catholic Church and former bishop of Buenos Aires has asked his birth country to renew his passport and identification card, the country's interior and transportation ministry said.
"Francis specifically asked not to enjoy any privileges so his new identification card and passport have been processed through the usual administrative channels," Minister Florencio Randazzo said.
"In coming days, he will receive his passport in the Casa Santa Marta in the Vatican, where he has stated he is a resident," Randazzo said.
Francis has opted to live in the smaller Vatican guest house instead of the official papal apartments, part of the humble lifestyle he has embraced since assuming the papacy last year.
Argentina's government, which enjoys drawing attention to the popular new pope's roots, released pictures of Francis' new identification card on Monday.
Francis already holds a passport issued by the Vatican, Randazzo said.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Pope to create 19 cardinals next month
VATICAN CITY -- Pope Francis said on Sunday he will next month elevate 19 prelates to the rank of cardinal, his first appointments to the elite group of men who advise him, including 16 who can one day elect his successor.
Sixteen of the new cardinals are under 80 and are "cardinal electors," meaning they can enter a conclave to choose a new pope after his death or resignation.
They are from Italy, Germany, Britain, Nicaragua, Canada, Ivory Coast, Brazil, Argentina, South Korea, Chile, Burkina Faso, the Philippines and Haiti.
The three over 80 who will assume the title cardinal emeritus and will not be able to enter a conclave, come from Spain, Italy and the Caribbean island nation of Saint Lucia.
The ceremony to elevate the new cardinals, known as consistory, will be held on Feb. 22, the pope said.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, March 15, 2013
Pope Francis warns Church of dangers of inaction
VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis warned on Thursday that the troubled Catholic Church risked becoming little more than a charity with no spiritual foundations if it failed to undergo renewal.
The 76-year-old Argentinian told the cardinals who elected him as Latin America's first pope that the Church could "end up a compassionate NGO".
"I would like all of us after these days of grace to have the courage to walk in the presence of the Lord," Francis said in his first mass, amid the splendour of the Sistine Chapel.
He warned the cardinals against "the worldliness of the Devil".
"Walking, building and confessing are not so easy. Sometimes there are tremors," the pope said, in a homily that will be scrutinised for clues to the style of his leadership.
The new head of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics, who was formerly known as Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, had begun his reign by meeting people in Rome and laying a bouquet of flowers in homage to the Virgin Mary in a basilica.
The pope also prayed at the altar of St Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuit order to which he belongs.
He returned to the priests' quarters where he stayed before the conclave and settled his own bill.
The election of the son of an Italian emigrant railway worker, who was considered a rank outsider, was met with widespread surprise and expressions of hope for change in a Church riven by scandal and internal conflict.
His elevation was also seen as recognition of the Church's power in Latin America, which now accounts for 40 percent of the world's Catholics, while it is in decline in Europe.
"The choice of Bergoglio shows that the Church is determined not to remain in mourning for the crisis in Europe but has opened its doors to the revitalising energy of Catholicism's biggest continent," Vatican expert Luigi Accatoli told AFP.
Projecting an image as a simple man of the people, the pope chose to name himself after St Francis of Assisi, the 13th century saint who shunned the riches of his family to devote himself to God and the poor.
The Vatican revealed that, for the ride back to the conclave lodgings after Wednesday's election, Francis shunned the papal limousine with the "Vatican City State One" number plates and instead boarded a minibus with the cardinals.
It was in keeping with his image as a man who as archbishop of Buenos Aires chose to live in a modest apartment rather than the official residence and took buses to work.
Poisonous rivalries
Experts said they expected the new pope to shake up the Vatican, where poisonous rivalries within the Curia -- its governing body -- plagued the papacy of Francis's predecessor Benedict XVI.
Benedict, 85, abruptly ended his eight-year papacy last month saying he lacked the strength to deal with the rigours of the job.
The Vatican confirmed that Francis had part of a lung removed as a boy, but its spokesman Federico Lombardi insisted: "This is not a handicap in his life.
"Those who know him have always seen him in good health."
Francis and Benedict are to meet within days.
The new pope is also the first non-European pontiff in nearly 1,300 years and the first from the Society of Jesus order, or the Jesuits, known for their work in education and promotion of social justice.
World leaders greeted his election, while the Organisation for the Islamic Conference said Muslim nations hoped "the relationship between Islam and Christianity will regain its cordiality and sincere friendship" during his papacy.
The pointed message reflected a rocky relationship between the two faiths that reached a low in 2006, when Benedict sparked fury across the Muslim world with remarks seen as linking Islam with violence.
Bergoglio is not without controversy.
He was only 36 when he was named to lead Argentina's Jesuits, a job he held for six years under the country's 1976-83 military dictatorship.
The future pope and other Catholic clergy were lambasted by leftist critics for failing to act against the "Dirty War" during which 30,000 people died or disappeared.
More recently, his opposition to gay marriage and contraception has brought him into conflict with the Argentine government of President Cristina Kirchner.
The Argentinian of Italian descent, the 266th pope, faces the immediate challenges of stamping his authority on the Vatican machinery and trying to coax back worshippers that are deserting churches across the West
The sexual abuse of children by paedophile priests stretching back decades cast a dark shadow over the conclave, which included several cardinals implicated in the scandals.
A US man who has just won a $1 million settlement for abuse at the hands of a Californian priest called for Francis to excise the "cancer" in the Church and defrock one of those cardinals, former Los Angeles archbishop Roger Mahony, for allegedly hushing up the abuse.
"I hope that our new pope defrocks ... Cardinal Mahony for his role in covering up the abuse that I suffered," Michael Duran said, while acknowledging: "I don't have high hopes for that."
Francis's inauguration mass will take place on Tuesday -- a significant date in the Catholic calendar because it is the Feast of St Joseph.
source: abs-cbnnews.com
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
'Papal conclave a spiritual process'
MANILA - The cardinals moved into the Vatican on Tuesday to vote for the next leader of around 1.2 billion Catholics after the resignation of Benedict XVI.
Fr. Jose Quilongquiliong, rector of the Loyola House of Studies in Ateneo de Manila University and a close friend of Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle, described the conclave as a spiritual process.
“It is done in prayer, it is not about political campaign, it is not about influence. In fact, sa loob ng Sistine Chapel, bawat cardinal pagkasulat ng pangalan, pupunta sa harap ng altar at sasabihin niya sa harap, ‘I call as my witness Christ the Lord, who will be my judge, that my vote is given to the one who before God I think should be elected,” he told dzMM on Tuesday.
The cardinal electors will live inside the Vatican completely cut off from the outside world until they have made their choice.
Quilongquiliong said even the “assistants” in the Vatican had to take an oath of secrecy.
“Kahapon was the special oath taking of the assistants, mga cooks, mga waiters, mga taga-bukas ng elevator, around 90 of them. Silang lahat ay kailangan din mag oath of secrecy na kung ano ang marinig nila ay hindi pwedeng pag-usapan...,” he said.
Favorites
Three candidates have emerged as favorites in the conclave, all of whom are conservatives cast in the same mold as "pope emeritus" Benedict XVI.
They are Italy's Angelo Scola, Brazil's Odilo Scherer and Canada's Marc Ouellet,
But the rumor mill in the Vatican has thrown up more names, including cardinals from Austria, Hungary, Mexico, the Philippines, South Africa and the United States.
Mexican Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera said there was no agreement yet among the cardinal electors on what type of candidate they wanted.
"Some imagine him to be more academic, able to establish a dialogue with culture. Others ask for someone who is close to the people. Others still want someone with more authority to put some Church problems in order," he said.
Carrera said there is "no majority" so far.
Quilongquiliong, meanwhile, said Benedict XVI, then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, was the one who recruited Tagle into the International Theological Commission.
He said Tagle’s dissertation, titled “Episcopal Collegiality and Vatican II: The Influence of Paul VI,” got the attention of Ratzinger.
Tagle became just the second Filipino to join the elite group of theologians. -- With a report from Agence France-Presse
source: abs-cbnnews.com
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Vatican readies for conclave to elect new pope
VATICAN CITY - The Vatican installed a special chimney on the Sistine Chapel from which white smoke will signal the election of a new leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics as cardinals prepare for the centuries-old tradition starting on Tuesday.
The conclave of 115 cardinal electors will be held under Michelangelo's famous frescoes to choose the 266th pope, after the ageing Benedict XVI became the first pope to resign since the Middle Ages saying he wanted to be "a simple pilgrim" again.
French cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois, the Archbishop of Paris, told AFP in an interview that there were around "half a dozen possible candidates."
Italian cardinal Angelo Scola, the Archbishop of Milan, is often cited as a favourite, along with Canada's Marc Ouellet and Brazil's Odilo Scherer.
Other names mentioned on the rumour mill in recent days have been Hungary's Peter Erdo, Mexico's Jose Francisco Robles Ortega, Austria's Christoph Schoenborn and Sri Lanka's Albert Malcolm Ranjith.
"The problem with this conclave is that there is no early frontrunner like Joseph Ratzinger in 2005," said John Allen, a Vatican expert at the National Catholic Reporter, a US weekly.
Luis Antonio Tagle, the Archbishop of Manila, a youthful and popular cardinal with strong pastoral skills, has also been mentioned as a possible.
The first vote will be on Tuesday after cardinals move into a Vatican residence where they will live in total isolation for the duration of the conclave and hold a special mass "For the Election of the Roman Pontiff" in St Peter's Basilica.
Cardinals will swear a solemn oath not to reveal the secrets of their deliberations on pain of excommunication at 1545 GMT on Tuesday after which the actual conclave will begin, the Vatican said.
The strict rules also apply to their residence, St Martha's House, where windows will be locked and telephones allowed for internal use only.
Ballots will usually be burnt daily at 1100 GMT and 1800 GMT, with the smoke turned black to show no two-thirds majority has been found or white to signal that a papal election has taken place.
The conclave could last up to a few days.
The decision on the date of the conclave was taken on Friday at one of a series of closed-door meetings held by cardinals over the past week to discuss the many challenges facing the next pope.
Cardinals, with no new pope to defer to and no late pope to grieve over, have seized on the rare chance to air grievances against the Vatican administration and call for greater transparency.
The 85-year-old Benedict last month admitted he was too weak in body and mind to keep up with a fast-changing modern world and became only the second head of the Catholic Church ever to resign by choice in its 2,000-year history.
"Pope emeritus" Benedict has stayed out of pre-conclave debates and is living at the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo near Rome for the next couple of months, after which he will move to a former convent inside the Vatican.
Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi on Saturday said Benedict's "Fisherman's Ring" -- the personalised gold ring that symbolised his pontifical powers -- had been annulled with an "X" mark along with four other official seals.
The ring and the seals were traditionally disposed of to prevent the use of the papal seal on any false documents after a pontiff's death.
Conclave lockdown
Vatican workers meanwhile have put the final touches on preparations for the Sistine Chapel, blacking out windows to prevent any spying on the conclave and installing scrambling devices to prevent any communication with the outside world.
Under the rules of the conclave, cardinals have to swear not to reveal any details of their deliberations on pain of excommunication and the Sistine Chapel will be swept for recording devices.
No-one except the "cardinal electors" -- cardinals below the threshold age of 80 -- can be present during the two daily rounds of voting.
The Renaissance jewel takes its name from pope Sixtus IV, who had it built between 1477 and 1480.
It is situated next to St. Peter's Basilica.
One of the most visited sites in the world, with up to 20,000 tourists a day, the Sistine Chapel features one of art history's most famous scenes, depicting God stretching out his arm to touch Adam's hand and give him life.
The chapel is now off limits to visitors and the Floreria, the Vatican department in charge of preparing for papal audiences and ceremonies, has been outfitting it for the conclave with a raised platform and tables.
The cardinals -- traditionally known as "Princes of the Church" -- will sit on cherry-wood chairs to fill in their ballot papers.
Folded votes will then be slid into an urn.
On the left of the entrance to the chapel, two stoves with one common flue have been installed for the burning of the votes.
Once the new pope accepts his nomination, he emerges onto a balcony overlooking St Peter's Square to a cheering crowd and the Latin cry of "Habemus Papam"! ("We Have a Pope!")
source: abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, March 3, 2013
A look at Benedict XVI's first days in Castel Gandolfo
VATICAN CITY – Calm and serene.
These are the words to describe the Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s first days at Castel Gandolfo.
Vatican spokesperson Federico Lombardi said Benedict XVI had watched several news programs and expressed his gratitude for the work of journalists.
He also thanked the people who assisted him in his departure from the Vatican and his arrival at Castel Gandolfo.
The pope also spent time listening to music, reading and praying.
On Friday, he celebrated mass and prayed the liturgy of the hours.
The Pope Emeritus also enjoyed brief walks at the beautiful garden of Castel Gandolfo.
He is expected to do a lot of walking and reading. He brought with him various books on theology, history, and spirituality.
With the pope seat vacant, Vatican City has now issued four stamps to be used for postage.
The stamps will only be available during the Sede Vacante, and will cease circulation when a new pope is elected.
A 2-euro coin will also be issued to commemorate the Sede Vacante.
Filipinos in Rome have also prepared a special gift for the Pope Emeritus: a book with personal messages and dedication.
Through the book, Filipinos in Rome would like to extend their deepest appreciation of the Pope's service as the leader of the Catholic Church for almost 8 years.
source: abs-cbnnews.com
These are the words to describe the Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s first days at Castel Gandolfo.
Vatican spokesperson Federico Lombardi said Benedict XVI had watched several news programs and expressed his gratitude for the work of journalists.
He also thanked the people who assisted him in his departure from the Vatican and his arrival at Castel Gandolfo.
The pope also spent time listening to music, reading and praying.
On Friday, he celebrated mass and prayed the liturgy of the hours.
The Pope Emeritus also enjoyed brief walks at the beautiful garden of Castel Gandolfo.
He is expected to do a lot of walking and reading. He brought with him various books on theology, history, and spirituality.
With the pope seat vacant, Vatican City has now issued four stamps to be used for postage.
The stamps will only be available during the Sede Vacante, and will cease circulation when a new pope is elected.
A 2-euro coin will also be issued to commemorate the Sede Vacante.
Filipinos in Rome have also prepared a special gift for the Pope Emeritus: a book with personal messages and dedication.
Through the book, Filipinos in Rome would like to extend their deepest appreciation of the Pope's service as the leader of the Catholic Church for almost 8 years.
source: abs-cbnnews.com
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Pinoy Catholics want open-minded pope
MANILA, Philippines - As the world waits to see who will follow in Pope Benedict's papal legacy, Philippine Catholics are calling for a more open-minded leader to succeed him.
Catholics comprise 83 percent of the Philippines' population of 94 million, making it the largest Catholic country in Asia.
The Catholic clergy is a powerful force here, helping overthrow two corrupt presidents and lending its moral judgment on several issues.
But while majority of newborns are being baptized into the faith, many adults are leaving the flock, some turning to Protestantism or simply giving up Catholic rituals like going to church on Sunday.
Last year, the Catholic church suffered a big blow when a landmark birth control bill was signed into law, after more than a decade of debate in which bishops and conservative believers aggressively opposed the legislation.
Fr. John Leydon, an Irish missionary priest who has served in the Philippines for decades, says the new pope must embrace modernity and evolve from hidebound attitudes that he says are pushing away more and more members of the flock.
"The whole area of sexuality, and what it is to be human, what it is to be a sexual human being, what it is to be a sexual human being -- all of these questions, the church I think needs to be humble and in dialogue with people, and you know, listen to the wisdom of people in these matters," said Leydon, who is parish priest of the Malate Catholic church.
"If it doesn't, it will find itself more and more alienated. And people, if it doesn't correspond to them, people will walk away," he added.
Though many Filipinos have adopted liberal views towards sex, reproductive health and gender issues, conservative attitudes still prevail amongst staunch Catholics.
"I would prefer that the next pope will not agree to birth control legislation and the use of contraceptives, as well as this so-called 'same-sex marriage,'" said government worker Jojo dela Cruz, who hears mass regularly.
Some young Filipino Catholics, a key constituent for the church to sustain its growth in a population where the median age is 23, say they are looking for a pontiff who is more attuned to their realities.
One student said she appreciated how Pope Benedict launched a Twitter account, to reach out to the youth, but called for more openness.
"A pope that has an open mind, and not conservative, but would always preserve the teachings of Christ," said Charlene Salas, a student at a Catholic university.
Other Catholics said they just hoped the cardinals will choose a good leader.
"I hope the Holy Spirit can guide the cardinals, so they can elect a person who can shepherd the church, who can really deliver or even surpass the services of the previous popes," said Noel Lorenzo.
Once Pope Benedict leaves the chair of St. Peter vacant on Thursday (February 28) when he departs from the Vatican, cardinals from around the world will begin planning the closed-door conclave that will elect the successor.
The Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, spoke to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Vatican City saying he admired him as a teacher.
"I think the biggest disappointment was his butler, that he copied so many thousands of pages. I think the governance is done by most of the people around the Pope and that wasn't always done brilliantly and I'm not breaking any ground there, this is said very commonly. But the Pope was a magnificent teacher," said Pell.
The Vatican seems to be aiming for an election by mid-March so the new pope can be installed in office before Palm Sunday on March 24 and lead the Holy Week services that culminate on Easter Sunday.
source: abs-cbnnews.com
Catholics comprise 83 percent of the Philippines' population of 94 million, making it the largest Catholic country in Asia.
The Catholic clergy is a powerful force here, helping overthrow two corrupt presidents and lending its moral judgment on several issues.
But while majority of newborns are being baptized into the faith, many adults are leaving the flock, some turning to Protestantism or simply giving up Catholic rituals like going to church on Sunday.
Last year, the Catholic church suffered a big blow when a landmark birth control bill was signed into law, after more than a decade of debate in which bishops and conservative believers aggressively opposed the legislation.
Fr. John Leydon, an Irish missionary priest who has served in the Philippines for decades, says the new pope must embrace modernity and evolve from hidebound attitudes that he says are pushing away more and more members of the flock.
"The whole area of sexuality, and what it is to be human, what it is to be a sexual human being, what it is to be a sexual human being -- all of these questions, the church I think needs to be humble and in dialogue with people, and you know, listen to the wisdom of people in these matters," said Leydon, who is parish priest of the Malate Catholic church.
"If it doesn't, it will find itself more and more alienated. And people, if it doesn't correspond to them, people will walk away," he added.
Though many Filipinos have adopted liberal views towards sex, reproductive health and gender issues, conservative attitudes still prevail amongst staunch Catholics.
"I would prefer that the next pope will not agree to birth control legislation and the use of contraceptives, as well as this so-called 'same-sex marriage,'" said government worker Jojo dela Cruz, who hears mass regularly.
Some young Filipino Catholics, a key constituent for the church to sustain its growth in a population where the median age is 23, say they are looking for a pontiff who is more attuned to their realities.
One student said she appreciated how Pope Benedict launched a Twitter account, to reach out to the youth, but called for more openness.
"A pope that has an open mind, and not conservative, but would always preserve the teachings of Christ," said Charlene Salas, a student at a Catholic university.
Other Catholics said they just hoped the cardinals will choose a good leader.
"I hope the Holy Spirit can guide the cardinals, so they can elect a person who can shepherd the church, who can really deliver or even surpass the services of the previous popes," said Noel Lorenzo.
Once Pope Benedict leaves the chair of St. Peter vacant on Thursday (February 28) when he departs from the Vatican, cardinals from around the world will begin planning the closed-door conclave that will elect the successor.
The Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, spoke to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Vatican City saying he admired him as a teacher.
"I think the biggest disappointment was his butler, that he copied so many thousands of pages. I think the governance is done by most of the people around the Pope and that wasn't always done brilliantly and I'm not breaking any ground there, this is said very commonly. But the Pope was a magnificent teacher," said Pell.
The Vatican seems to be aiming for an election by mid-March so the new pope can be installed in office before Palm Sunday on March 24 and lead the Holy Week services that culminate on Easter Sunday.
source: abs-cbnnews.com
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