The
U.S. awaits Pope Francis
(Vatican
Radio) While Pope Francis continues his Apostolic visit to Cuba, last minute
preparations are underway in the United States for the next stage of his
journey, which will see the Holy Father address the US Congress in Washington,
speak to the United Nations in New York, canonize a saint, and lead the culminating
celebrations of the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia which opens
on Tuesday (22nd September). Vatican Radio's Chris Altieri is awaiting
the Pope in the U.S and reports on expectations ahead of his arrival.
Pope
Francis is coming to the United States of America. The visit will be rife
with historical firsts: the first time a Pope will address a joint meeting of
the US Congress (not a joint session – a technical precision perhaps
significant only to parliamentarians, but one that is there nonetheless); the
first time a Pope will speak to the United Nations during the annual general
session of the General Assembly; the first time a Pope will canonize a saint on
US soil.
Everyone
is on tenterhooks, waiting to hear just what the Pope will say: from climate
change, to immigration, to religious liberty, to the right order of society
with respect to marriage and the family – this last being the almost forgotten
keystone and centrepiece of the Holy Father’s visit, which on September 26th
and 27th will see him in the US city of Philadelphia to lead the culminating
celebrations of the World Meeting of Families.
The
issues are the same ones everyone – including the Pope - has been talking about
for months and years and even decades: so, do we really expect him to say
anything new?
This
reporter has no crystal ball, nor – as of this filing – has he seen the advance
copies of the prepared speeches. There is, however, something perhaps to be
gained from paying attention to the register in which the Holy Father has been
talking, and comparing it to the register in which pundits and commentators
have been talking in their turns.
Pundits
talk about policy: Pope Francis talks about people – real, flesh-and-blood
human beings, whose lives and livelihoods are the object of and the reason for
whatever policy political leaders may choose to advance. Whatever he shall say,
it is to real people he shall address himself, even and especially when he
addresses himself to political leaders on the US national stage and on the
global level at the United Nations.
“A
moral leader” and a “voice of great moral authority” are some of the
turns-of-phrase by which the Holy Father has been described by several of the
principal actors in world politics, including the Secretary General of the
United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, in an exclusive interview with Vatican Radio ahead
of the Holy Father’s arrival.
First,
and finally, however, Pope Francis is a pastor: his concern as a shepherd of
souls who happens also to be a global citizen is rather with making us sensible
of and sensitive to the need to take better care of the created order over
which we have been set as stewards. As the Vicar of Christ, the Good Shepherd,
he has been, and we may fairly expect he will be at pains to remind us of the
duty we have to welcome the stranger, clothe the naked, feed the hungry, care
for the sick, visit the imprisoned, and bury the dead; the duty we have to
teach the ignorant, counsel the doubtful, comfort the afflicted, to bear wrongs
patiently, to forgive offences willingly, to pray for the living and the dead –
especially our enemies, and – yes – to admonish the sinner – for it is no
slight to mercy to remind people they are in need of it; expect that in these
regards he will remind us that from those to whom much has been given, much is
required – and that there will be a heavy reckoning to make before the judgment
seat of the just and living God.
So,
whoever you are, and whatever your political leanings, your convictions in
religion, your estimation of the content and contours of a just and rightly
ordered society: pay attention, and be prepared to be uncomfortable.
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