Pope
to Catholic Charities USA: No one is to be a "leftover"
(Vatican Radio) “No one is to be a “leftover.” No one is to
be “excluded” from God’s love and from our care”. This was the heart of a video
message sent by Pope Francis to participants in the annual meeting of the
Catholic Charities USA, October 5-7 in North Carolina.
Charles Collins reports:
Speaking in his native Spanish, Pope Francis said that like
the Good Samaritan and Innkeeper in the Bible, “we are called to be in
the “streets” inviting and serving those who have been left out”.
Describing the umbrella group of Charities as “the engine of
the Church that organizes love”, he praised their work on behalf of “the poor,
the lonely single, the elderly shut-in, the young family, the homeless adult,
the hungry child, the refugee youth, the migrant father, and so many others”.
He said their work allows these people “to know and
experience the tremendous and abundant love of God through Jesus Christ”.
Pope Francis described the charity workers and volunteers as
“the very hands of Jesus in the world”, whose witness “helps to change the
course of the lives of many persons, families and communities”.
Encouraging the Charities to continue in their work of
service, Pope Francis concluded, “We are called to be a church, a people of and
for the poor”.
Below please find the full text of the Holy Father’s
address
Greeting on the Occasion of the Opening of the Annual
Catholic Charities USA Gathering
Charlotte, North Carolina October 5, 6, 7, 2014
My dear brothers and sisters in Christ, I send you my
warmest greetings of peace and abundant joy as you gather together in
Charlotte, North Carolina, to celebrate the work and ministry of Catholic
Charities in the United States of America. I really like your theme: “Setting
the Pace: Changing the Course.” That really fits in with what I want to share
with you today.
As I wrote in Evangelii Gaudium, “The joy of the gospel
fills the hearts and lives of all who encounter Jesus (par. 1).” That encounter
with the Lord Jesus sets our pace; it changes the course of our lives.
As Jesus called the Apostles and the early Church to
“follow” Him, the course of their own lives changed. The early Church witnessed
that change of pace and called for a new way to relate to each other and serve
the “least of these.” The Gospel message of Matthew gave the true “course” to
follow: ‘Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of these least brothers
(and sisters) of mine, you did for me.’ (MT 25:40).
The early Christian community took that message and
encounter to heart. They modeled a new way of being, charting a new course in a
world that seemed uncaring. We hear that “The community of believers was of one
heart and mind, and no one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but
they had everything in common . . .There was no needy person among them, for
those who owned property or houses would sell them, bring the proceeds of the
sale, and put them at the feet of the apostles, and they were distributed to
each according to need.” (Acts 4:32, 34-35)
Again, that joy encountered by the disciples of Jesus --
both then and today -- leads one to act in ways that can turn heads and hearts.
It really changes the course of our lives. Like in the story of the Good
Samaritan, we are called to be like that Samaritan who stopped on his busy
journey to care for his “neighbor,” and more so, we are called to be like the
“inn-keeper” (LK 10:35) remaining open to heal and provide a safe place for
on-going care. We are called today to respond in the same way. We are called to
be in the “streets” inviting and serving those who have been left out. We see
the “image of God” in each person’s eyes.
I noted in my Apostolic Exhortation that “Human beings are
themselves considered consumer goods to be used and then discarded. We have
created a ‘throw away’ culture which is now spreading. It is no longer simply
about exploitation and oppression, but something new. Exclusion ultimately has
to do with what it means to be a part of the society in which we live; those
excluded are no longer society’s underside or its fringes or its
disenfranchised – they are no longer even a part of it. The excluded are not
the ‘exploited’ but the outcast, the ‘leftovers’.” (EG, par. 53) They are
leftovers, they are surplus. No one is to be a “leftover.” No one is to be
“excluded” from God’s love and from our care.
As Catholic Charities workers, board members, donors, parish
social ministers, volunteers and organizations, you bring that joy with each
and every encounter you have. I know that the work that you do in the United
States of America in Catholic Charities in your local dioceses, and on the
national level, on behalf of the poor person, the lonely single, the elderly
shut-in, the young family, the homeless adult, the hungry child, the refugee
youth, the migrant father, and so many others, allows them to know and experience
the tremendous and abundant love of God through Jesus Christ. You are the very
hands of Jesus in the world. Your witness helps to change the course of the
lives of many persons, families and communities. Your witness helps to change
your heart.
My predecessor, now Saint John Paul II, visited your annual
gathering back in 1987, in San Antonio, Texas. At that meeting, he exhorted
Catholic Charities of the United States to “Gather, transform, and serve!” He
continued: “When (this is) done in the name of Jesus Christ this is the spirit
of Catholic Charities and all who work for this cause, because it is the
faithful following of the one who did not come to be served but to serve.”
He in effect called upon you to first serve those in need by
taking “direct action to relieve their anxieties, and to remove their burdens,
and at the same time lead them to the dignity of self-reliance.” Secondly,
“Service to the poor also involves speaking up for them and trying to reform
structures which cause or perpetuate their oppression.” Finally, what you are
doing here today -- gathering together persons and communities to do the same
-- must continue in all your work.
I am grateful and give God praise and thanks for the great
work that you do every day in Catholic Charities in the United States of
America. I know that you are in the streets caring for the people in need
through all your works of charity and justice.
Here I repeat for all the Church what I have often said:
Going out on the streets you can have an accident, but staying locked in will
make you ill. I prefer a Church which is bruised, hurting and dirty because it
has been out on the streets, rather than a Church which is unhealthy from being
confined and from clinging to its own security.” (EG, par. 49)
You are the engine of the Church that organizes love -- Caritas -- for all
believers to work together to respond through the corporal works of mercy. You
set the pace for the Church to be in the world each day. You help others change
the course of their own lives. You are the salt, leaven and light that provides
a beacon of hope to those in need. You as Catholic Charities USA help to change
the course of your local communities, your states, your country and the world
by your witness to that encounter with the Lord Jesus, who gives us abundant
life and joy. The joy of serving and, advocating for the good of all continues
that call of the early Church to make sure that all needs are met.
I ask that you see your leadership as service; that you
practice mercy which is a core Christian message for us; and that you keep the
poor always before you, in all that you do. They will precede us into the
Kingdom of Heaven, they will open the gates for us. We are called to be a
church, a people of and for the poor.
I also ask you to pray for me because I need it.
I bless you with all my heart.

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