Pope to Ambassadors: Proposing
solutions in dialogue with Church
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| Pope meeting new ambassadors.(Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis receives ten new Ambassadors accredited to the
Holy See and confirms the Church’s commitment to proposing concrete solutions
to humanitarian problems in a spirit of constructive dialogue.
The ten new Ambassadors come from Switzerland, Malta, The
Bahamas, Cabo Verde, Iceland, The Gambia, Qatar, Estonia, Turkmenistan, and
Grenada. All of them are non-resident Ambassadors because their countries do
not have an established Embassy to the Holy See in Rome.
They presented their letters of credence, or diplomatic
credentials, to the Pope during an audience in the Clementine Hall in the
Vatican on Thursday. The Ambassadors from Turkmenistan and Grenada are the
first to be accredited to the Holy See from their respective countries.
Learning lessons from the past
In his address, Pope Francis recalled that this year marks
the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War which
his predecessor, Pope Benedict XV, called a “senseless slaughter”. May the
lessons learned from the two great wars of the twentieth century convince the
world’s people and their leaders of “the futility of armed conflict and the
need to resolve conflicts through patient dialogue and negotiation”, he said.
Respect for dignity and rights
The Pope also noted that 2018 marks the 70th anniversary
of the adoption of the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
This document “continues to guide the efforts of global diplomacy to secure
peace in our world and to promote the integral development of each individual
and all people”, said Pope Francis. “Respect for human dignity and human
rights”, he continued, must inspire and direct our efforts to address the
challenges of armed conflicts, poverty, discrimination, inequality, and the
crisis of mass migration.
The Church’s commitment
Addressing the Ambassadors, Pope Francis confirmed the
Church’s commitment to “working with every possible partner in a constructive
dialogue aimed at proposing concrete solutions to this and other urgent
humanitarian problems”. That commitment, the Pope concluded, aims at
“preserving human lives and dignity, alleviating suffering, and advancing an
authentic and integral human development”.

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