Pope
meets members of lay apostolate
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis met with members of a lay
apostolate at the Kkottongnae Spirituality Center on Saturday as part of his
Apostolic Journey to Korea. During his address, the pope emphasized the
importance of ensuring that everyone experiences the dignity of being able to
provide for oneself.
The full text of Pope Francis’ speech is below:
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I am grateful to have this opportunity to meet you, who
represent the many expressions of the flourishing apostolate of the laity in
Korea: flourishing because it was always flourishing! It is a flower that never
dies! I thank the President of the Catholic Lay Apostolate Council, Mr Paul
Kwon Kil-joong, for his kind words of welcome in your name.
The Church in Korea, as we all know, is heir to the faith of
generations of lay persons who persevered in the love of Christ Jesus and the
communion of the Church despite the scarcity of priests and the threat of
severe persecution. Blessed Paul Yun Ji-chung and the martyrs beatified
today represent an impressive chapter of this history. They bore witness
to the faith not only by their sufferings and death, but by their lives of
loving solidarity with one another in Christian communities marked by exemplary
charity.
This precious legacy lives on in your own works of faith,
charity and service. Today, as ever, the Church needs credible lay
witnesses to the saving truth of the Gospel, its power to purify and transform
human hearts, and its fruitfulness for building up the human family in unity,
justice and peace. We know there is but one mission of the Church of God,
and that every baptized Christian has a vital part in this mission. Your
gifts as lay men and women are manifold and your apostolates varied, yet all
that you do is meant to advance the Church’s mission by ensuring that the
temporal order is permeated and perfected by Christ’s Spirit and ordered to the
coming of his Kingdom.
In a particular way, I wish to acknowledge the work of the many
societies and associations directly engaged in outreach to the poor and those
in need. As the example of the first Korean Christians shows, the
fruitfulness of faith is expressed in concrete solidarity with our brothers and
sisters, without any attention to their culture or social status, for in Christ
“there is no Greek or Jew” (Gal 3:28). I am
deeply grateful to those of you who by your work and witness bring the Lord’s
consoling presence to people living on the peripheries of our society.
This activity should not be limited to charitable assistance, but must also
extend to a practical concern for human growth. Not just assistance, but
also the development of the person. To assist the poor is good and necessary,
but it is not enough. I encourage you to multiply your efforts in the
area of human promotion, so that every man and every woman can know the joy
which comes from the dignity of earning their daily bread and supporting their
family. This dignity, at this moment, is in danger of being taken by this culture
of money, which leaves many people without work . . . We can say: “Father, we
feed them!” But that is not enough! He and she, who are without work, must
experience in their hearts the dignity of providing the bread for their own
home, of earning bread for themselves! I entrust this work to you.
I wish also to acknowledge the outstanding contribution made by
Korean Catholic women to the life and mission of the Church in this country as
mothers of families, as catechists and teachers, and in countless other
ways. Similarly, I can only stress the importance of the witness given by
Christian families. At a time of great crisis for family life – as we all
know! – our Christian communities are called to support married couples and
families in fulfilling their proper mission in the life of the Church and
society. The family remains the basic unit of society and the first
school in which children learn the human, spiritual and moral values which
enable them to be a beacon of goodness, integrity and justice in our
communities.
Dear friends, whatever your particular contribution to the
Church’s mission, I ask you to continue to promote in your communities a more
complete formation of the lay faithful through ongoing catechesis and spiritual
direction. In all that you do, I ask you to work in complete harmony of
mind and heart with your pastors, striving to place your own insights, talents
and charisms at the service of the Church’s growth in unity and missionary
outreach. Your contribution is essential, for the future of the Church in
Korea – as throughout Asia – will depend in large part on the development of an
ecclesiological vision grounded in a spirituality of communion, participation
and the sharing of gifts (cf. Ecclesia in Asia, 45).
Once again I express my gratitude for all that you do for the
building up of the Church in Korea in holiness and zeal. May you draw
constant inspiration and strength for your apostolates from the Eucharistic
sacrifice, wherein “that love of God and of humanity which is the soul of the
apostolate is communicated and nourished” (Lumen Gentium, 33). Upon you
and your families, and all who take part in the corporal and spiritual works of
your parishes, associations and movements, I invoke joy and peace in our Lord
Jesus Christ and the loving protection of Mary, our Mother.
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