Pope's
focus is spiritual
(Vatican Radio) As journalists covering the
papal visit to Korea try to divine Pope Francis’ agenda, Vatican Radio’s Sean
Patrick Lovett says the Pope’s focus is spiritual:
One of the advantages of working inside an International Press
Centre (like the one I’m in right now in the heart of Seoul) – apart from the
air-conditioning and free coffee – is the opportunity to eavesdrop on what my
fellow media professionals are saying about the papal visit.
Take
this morning, for example.
August
15th is a national holiday here, not because the Catholic Church celebrates it
as the Feast of the Assumption, but because it coincides with the surrender of
the Japanese army at the end of World War II. So, in Korea, today is
Independence Day – a political recurrence, not a spiritual one.
Secular
media outlets are carrying stories that are pertinent to the occasion: calls
for belated apologies from Japan (69 years after the event), pleas for
reunification of the two Koreas (61 years after the division of the peninsula
at the 38th parallel), and garbled debates about militarization and
demilitarization (delightfully illustrated by a cartoon in “The Korea Times”
depicting two soldiers in a guard tower: “So, if war breaks out, which side are
you shooting at?” – asks one. “I dunno yet!” responds the other).
Naturally,
all this sparks equal debate among the press corps over what the Pope might or
might not say during his public speeches during the day. Will he echo the same
calls, repeat the same pleas, enter the same discussions? Will he criticize
North Korea for not sending a delegation to Asia Youth Day? Will he weigh in on
the country’s nuclear power debate? Korea has the 5th highest number of nuclear
plants on the planet and plans to build another 20.
The
answer, of course, as we religious correspondents know – is “no”.
For
Catholics, today is a holy day. Which is why the Pope celebrated Holy Mass –
together with some 500,000 faithful in the World Cup Stadium of Daejeon.
Everything he had to say he said in his homily, which was dedicated to the
Feast of the Assumption. As such, his reflections included constant references
to Our Lady as source of hope and consolation. He also focused specifically on
the Church in Korea, encouraging Catholics (“heirs of a noble tradition”, as he
described them) to reject materialism and unbridled consumerism. At the Angelus
he prayed for the suffering, the sick, the poor and the unemployed – as well as
for those who died in the Sewol ferry disaster and their families, 40 members
of which he met before the Mass. One of them asked to be baptised. Pope Francis
said he will perform the ceremony himself tomorrow morning at the Nunciature
where he is staying.
Now,
on a day like today, that’s the kind of news we need to hear.
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