Pope Francis in Colombia prays Angelus in Cartagena
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| Pope Francis prays the Angelus with Colobians in Cartagena.- AFP |
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis prayed the Angelus on
Sunday with the faithful of Cartagena during his Apostolic Visit to Colombia,
inviting them to pay attention to the example of the poor and humble of the
Earth.
The Pope recited the traditional prayer of Marian devotion
outside the Church and Monastery of St. Peter Claver in Cartagena de Indias.
head of the Angelus, Pope Francis recalled how the image of
Our Lady of Chinquinquirá was restored. The Pope prayed before her image at the Cathedral of Bogota on
Thursday.
He said that for a long time the image was “abandoned,
discoloured, torn and full of holes. It was treated like an old piece of cloth,
shown no respect, and finally discarded.”
Tradition has it, he said, that “a humble woman, Maria
Ramos, and the first devotee of the Blessed Virgin of Chiquinquirá, saw
something different in that piece of cloth.”
The Pope said Ms. Ramos had the courage and faith to restore
the image and its lost dignity.
“She encountered and honoured Mary who held her Son in her
arms, doing precisely what was despicable and useless in the eyes of others.”
In this way, he said, she became “a model for all those who,
in different ways, seek to restore the dignity of our brothers and sisters lost
through the pain of life’s wounds, to restore the dignity of those who are
excluded.”
Pope Francis said the Lord “teaches us through the example
of the humble and those who are not valued” because, through their lowliness,
they are able to recognize “the radiance of divine light which transforms and
renews all things.”
Finally, the Holy Father noted that the Virgin Mary of
Chinquinquirá, as well as the example of St. Peter Claver, invites us to work
to promote the dignity of all people, especially the poor, the outcast, the
abandoned, immigrants, and those who suffer violence and human trafficking.
“They all have human dignity,” he said, “because they are
living images of God.”
Please find below the official English translation of
the Pope’s prepared remarks:
Cartagena de Indias
Sunday, 10 September 2017
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Shortly before I entered this church where the relics of
Saint Peter Claver are kept, I blessed the first stones of two institutions
that will minister to the those most in need, and I visited the house of Mrs
Lorenza, who daily welcomes many of our brothers and sisters, offering them
food and affection. These visits have done me much good because
they demonstrate how the love of God is made visible each day.
As we pray the Angelus, recalling the incarnation of the
Word, we also reflect on Mary who conceived Jesus and brought him into the
world. We look to her this morning under the title of Our Lady of
Chiquinquirá. As you well know, over a long period of time this image was
abandoned, discoloured, torn and full of holes. It was treated like an
old piece of cloth, shown no respect, and finally discarded.
It was then that, according to tradition, a humble woman,
Maria Ramos, and the first devotee of the Blessed Virgin of Chiquinquirá, saw
something different in that piece of cloth. She had the courage and faith
to put this blurred and torn fabric in a special place, restoring its lost
dignity. She encountered and honoured Mary who held her Son in her arms,
doing precisely what was despicable and useless in the eyes of others.
And so, this woman became a model for all those who, in
different ways, seek to restore the dignity of our brothers and sisters lost
through the pain of life’s wounds, to restore the dignity of those who are
excluded. She is a model for all those who make efforts to provide
dignified accommodation and care to those most in need. She is, above
all, a model for all those who pray perseveringly so that the men and women who
are suffering may regain the splendour of the children of God which they have
been robbed of.
The Lord teaches us through the example of the humble and
those who are not valued. While he gave María Ramos, an ordinary woman,
the grace to receive the image of the Blessed Virgin in its poor and torn
state, he also granted to the indigenous Isabel and her son Miguel the grace of
being the first to see the transformed and renewed fabric of the Blessed
Virgin. They were the first to look humbly upon this completely renewed
piece of fabric and recognize there the radiance of divine light which
transforms and renews all things. They are the poor, humble ones, who
contemplate the presence of God, and to whom the mystery of God’s love is
revealed most clearly. They, the poor and simple of heart, were the first
to see the Blessed Virgin of Chinquinquirá and they became missionaries and
heralds of her beauty and holiness.
In this church we will pray to Mary, who referred to herself
as “the handmaid of the Lord”, and to Saint Peter Claver, the “slave of the
blacks forever”, as he wanted others to know him from the day of his solemn
profession. He waited for the ships from Africa to arrive at the New
World’s main centre of commerce in slavery. Given the impossibility of
verbal communication due to the language difference, he often ministered to
these slaves simply through evangelizing gestures. He knew that the
language of charity and mercy was understood by all. Indeed, charity
helps us to know the truth and truth calls for acts of kindness. Whenever
he felt revulsion towards the slaves, he kissed their wounds.
Saint Peter Claver was austere and charitable to the point
of heroism. After consoling hundreds of thousands of people in their
loneliness, he spent the last four years of his life in sickness and confined
to his cell which was in a terrible state of neglect.
Saint Peter Claver witnessed in a formidable way to the
responsibility and care that we should have for one another. Furthermore, this
saint was unjustly accused of being indiscreet in his zealousness and he faced
strong criticism and persistent opposition from those who feared that his
ministry would undermine the lucrative slave trade.
Here in Colombia and in the world millions of people are
still being sold as slaves; they either beg for some expressions of humanity,
moments of tenderness, or they flee by sea or land because they have lost
everything, primarily their dignity and their rights.
María de Chiquinquirá and Peter Claver invite us to work to
promote the dignity of all our brothers and sisters, particularly the poor and
the excluded of society, those who are abandoned, immigrants, and those who
suffer violence and human trafficking. They all have human dignity
because they are living images of God. We all are created in the image
and likeness of God, and the Blessed Virgin holds each one of us in her arms as
her beloved children.
Let us now turn to Our Blessed Virgin Mother in prayer, so
that she may help us recognize the face of God in every man and woman of our
time.
(Devin Sean Watkins)

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