Pope
Francis concludes trip to the Philippines
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis left Manila on Monday morning,
after a weeklong trip to Asia which took him to Sri Lanka and the Philippines.
Hundreds of thousands of Filipinos lined the streets of Manila to catch a final
glimpse of the Holy Father as he went to the airport.
Pope Francis drew over
6 million to his final Mass in Manila’s Luneta Park on Sunday, the largest
crowd for a Papal event in history.
At a press conference
after the Pope’s departure, the Archbishop of Manila, Cardinal Luis Antonio
Tagle said everyone in the Philippines was “overwhelmed right now with
thanksgiving and gratitude to God” for the trip, and were “challenged” by Pope
Francis to face problems such as inequality in the country.
“The priest, religious, the lay, all of us got the message
clearly,” said Cardinal Tagle. “We will call on everyone to put this message
into action.”
He added that the
papal message on bridging the gap between the rich and poor is “not just for
Christians but for all.”
Cardinal Tagle also
said Pope Francis is challenging the culture to not blindly accept every
novelty.
“I think the Holy
Father is also inviting us to be discerning and to be critical,” he said.
“Not everything new is
necessarily good. Here I think the Christian spirituality of discernment
can be handy,” continued the Cardinal. “How do we immerse ourselves in
the World of God, in prayer, in the teachings of the Church, and with that deep
resource How do you address the changes in the world?”
Cardinal Tagle said
when speaking privately with Pope Francis, the Holy Father said one solid
foundation is popular religiosity.
“He said it is the
simple faith that makes people survive the changes in society,” said Cardinal
Tagle.
Bishop Mylo Vergara,
the head of the Communications Committee of the Philippines Bishops Conference,
said the trip was full of surprises.
“You have witnessed
how he did not read the prepared homilies,” Bishop Vergara said, calling it the
“homily of the heart”. He also mentioned the events on Saturday in
Tacloban, as a Tropical Storm approached the area.
“I think it is also a
first that he wore a raincoat,” he said.
It was also confirmed
at the press conference that the Bishops have invited Pope Francis to return to
the Philippines next year for the International Eucharistic Congress in Cebu.
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