Pope
meets with Kenyan Bishops
(Vatican Radio)
Pope Francis on Thursday morning met with the Bishops from Kenya who are in
Rome on their ad Limina visit. In his prepared remarks the Holy Father
said “the Church in Kenya must always be true to her mission as an instrument
of reconciliation, justice and peace.”
Below find
the Pope’s address to the Kenyan Bishops.
Dear Brother
Bishops,
I offer you my fraternal welcome on the occasion of your visit ad Limina
Apostolorum as you make your pilgrimage to the tombs of Blessed Peter and
Paul. Your time in the Eternal City and your visits to the offices of the
Roman Curia provide numerous opportunities to deepen communion between the
Church in Kenya and the See of Peter. I thank Cardinal Njue for his warm
words on your behalf and in the name of the priests, men and women religious,
and all the lay faithful of Kenya. I ask you kindly to assure them of my
prayers and spiritual closeness.
For some of you,
this visit to Rome will bring to mind your time spent here preparing for
ordination to the priesthood. The many seminarians studying in this City,
like the numerous seminarians in your own country, are an eloquent sign of
God’s goodness to the universal Church and to your Dioceses. They remind
us of the great resource you have in the many youth of your local Churches, as
well as your paternal care in helping young men answer the call to the priesthood.
I think in a special way of the zeal, hope and dedication of seminarians
who wish to give everything to Christ through service to the Church.
While the seeds of a priestly vocation are sown long before a man arrives at
the seminary, first in the heart of the family, it pertains to seminary
formators to nurture the growth of these vocations. For this reason, it
is imperative that seminarians’ goodwill and earnest desires be met with a
formation that is humanly sound, spiritually deep, intellectually rich, and
pastorally diverse (cf. Pastores Dabo Vobis, 43-59). I am aware of the
challenges which this entails, and I encourage you to strengthen your efforts,
individually within your Dioceses and collectively in your Episcopal
Conference, so that the good work which the Lord is accomplishing in your
candidates for priestly Orders will be brought to completion (cf. Phil 1:6).
In the
exercise of your episcopal office, each of you is called to be a pastor of
souls (cf. Christus Dominus, 1), a father and a shepherd
(ibid., 16). This will be accomplished primarily with your closest
collaborators, your priests. They need you to guide them with clarity and
strength, but also, and especially, with compassion and tenderness. As
Bishops, we must always look to the example of Jesus, who tended personally to
the Apostles, spent time with them and enjoyed their company. You also
must strive to be with your priests, to know them and listen to them.
Your support will help them to be faithful to the promises they have made and
strengthen your common efforts to build up God’s kingdom in Kenya.
In this Year of
Consecrated Life, my heart is also close to the men and women religious who
have renounced the world for the sake of the kingdom thus bringing many
blessings to the Church and society in Kenya. I ask you, dear brother
Bishops, to convey to them my gratitude, affection and prayerful closeness, and
to express my hope that during this year dedicated to consecrated life, they
may be joyful and brave as they point to Christ by their lives. I
encourage you to deepen the bonds of charity and ecclesial communion that you
have with the religious Institutes in Kenya. The Church’s mission, though
multifaceted, is one: much more will be accomplished for the praise and glory
of God’s name when our actions are in harmony.
The united and
selfless efforts of many Catholics in Kenya are a beautiful witness and example
for the country. In so many ways, the Church is called to offer hope to
the broader culture, a hope based on her unstinting witness to the newness of
life promised by Christ in the Gospel. In this regard, without wishing to
interfere in temporal affairs, the Church must insist, especially to those who
are in positions of leadership and power, on those moral principles which
promote the common good and the upbuilding of society as a whole. In the
fulfilment of her apostolic mission, the Church must take a prophetic stand in
defence of the poor and against all corruption and abuse of power. She
must do so, in the first place, by example. Do not be afraid to be a
prophetic voice! Do not be afraid to preach with conviction! Bring
the wisdom of the Church, enshrined particularly in her social teaching, to
bear on Kenyan society.
In a particular
way, I wish to offer a word of appreciation to the many humble and dedicated
workers in Church-run institutions throughout your country, whose daily
activities bring spiritual and material benefit to countless people. The
Church has contributed, and continues to contribute, to all of Kenya through a
diverse array of schools, institutes, universities, clinics, hospitals, homes
for the sick and dying, orphanages and social agencies. Through these,
dedicated priests, religious men and women, and laity make a vital contribution
to the welfare of the entire nation. Such praiseworthy works are
continually sustained by the life of prayer and worship experienced in so many
parishes, convents, monasteries and lay movements. May this hymn of
praise and the fruits of your apostolic works continue to grow!
Dear brothers,
the Church in Kenya must always be true to her mission as an instrument of
reconciliation, justice and peace. In fidelity to the entire patrimony of
the faith and moral teaching of the Church, may you strengthen your commitment
to working with Christian and non-Christian leaders alike, in promoting peace
and justice in your country through dialogue, fraternity and friendship.
In this way you will be able to offer a more unified and courageous
denunciation of all violence, especially that committed in the name of
God. This will bring deeper reassurance and solace to all your fellow
citizens. With you, I pray for all those who have been killed by acts of
terror or ethnic or tribal hostilities in Kenya as well as other areas of the
continent. I think most especially of the men and women killed at Garissa
University College on Good Friday. May their souls rest in peace and their
loved ones be consoled, and may those who commit such brutality come to their
senses and seek mercy.
I wish to offer
you a word of encouragement in your pastoral care to the family. As the
Church prepares for the Ordinary Synod dedicated to “the pastoral challenges to
the family in the context of evangelization”, I am confident that you will
continue to assist and strengthen all those families who are struggling because
of broken marriages, infidelity, addiction or violence. I ask you
likewise to intensify the Church’s ministry to youth, forming them to be
disciples capable of making permanent and life-giving commitments – whether to
a spouse in marriage, or to the Lord in the priesthood or religious life.
Teach the saving truth of the Gospel of Life to all. May the beauty,
truth and light of the Gospel shine forth ever more radiantly from the youthful
and joyful face of the Kenyan Church.
Finally, with
you I pray that the forthcoming Jubilee of Mercy will be a time of great
forgiveness, healing, conversion, and grace for the entire Church in
Kenya. Touched by Christ’s infinite mercy, may all the faithful be signs
of the reconciliation, justice and peace that God wills for your country, and
indeed, all of Africa.
With these
thoughts, dear brother Bishops, I commend all of you to the intercession of
Mary, Mother of the Church, and with great affection I impart my Apostolic
Blessing, which I willingly extend to all the beloved priests, religious and
lay faithful of Kenya.
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