Pope releases video message for charity’s “Be God’s
Mercy” project
(Vatican Radio) A video
message by Pope Francis was released on Friday to highlight an awareness and
fund-raising initiative by the Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need
(ACN). The charity’s “Be God’s Mercy” initiative marking the Jubilee Year of
Mercy was formally launched at a press conference in the offices of Vatican
Radio.
Please click here to
listen and watch Pope Francis' video message.
In his video message the Pope
urged people to “carry out works of mercy together with ACN in every corner of
the world, in order to meet the many, many needs of today.”
Please find below a
full English translation of the Pope's video message on behalf of the charity,
ACN:
"I want to appeal to all
men and women of good will all around the world for a work of mercy to be done
in each town, in each diocese, in each association. We, men and women, need
God’s mercy, but we also need each other’s mercy. We need to take each other’s
hand, caress each other, take care of each other and not make so many wars. I
am looking here at the dossier prepared by Kirche in Not, a papal foundation, to
carry out works of mercy in the whole world. I trust Kirche in Not with this
work… I also entrust them to carry on the spirit they have inherited from
Father Werenfried van Straaten who had the vision at the right time to carry
out in the world these gestures of closeness, of proximity, of goodness, of
love and of mercy. So I invite all of you, together with Kirche in Not, to do,
everywhere in the world, a work of mercy but one that stays, a permanent work
of mercy; a structure for so many needs that there are today in the world. I
thank you for everything you do. And do not be afraid of mercy: mercy is God’s
caress."
ACN projects supported during
the four-month “Be God’s Mercy” campaign in 2016 include prison ministry, drug
rehabilitation centres and support groups for women who have suffered violence.
The charity said Pope Francis
has supported an ACN project providing medicine for St Joseph’s Clinic, Erbil,
in the Kurdish north of Iraq, which serves 2,800 displaced people who fled
their homes when militants of the so-called Islamic State group captured large
swathes of Iraqi territory.
Also speaking at the press
conference was Archbishop Sebastian Shaw of Lahore, Pakistan, who gave an
account of the atrocity on Easter Sunday in Yohannabad near Lahore where
suicide bombers killed 76 people in a park, most of them Christian families
celebrating Easter with a picnic. Archbishop Shaw was interviewed by Susy
Hodges after the press conference:
Christians in Pakistan form a
tiny minority and have been long been the victims of targeted attacks by
Islamic extremists but the suicide bombing on Easter Day outside Lahore was by
far the bloodiest attack since 2113. Asked about the morale of Catholics
living in Pakistan, Archbishop Shaw said “fear was always there” but despite
this Christians were "strong in their faith" and “morale was still
high.”
Turning to Pope Francis’
video message to highlight the “Be God’s Mercy” awareness and fund-raising
campaign organized by the ACN, Archbishop Shaw said they were “very much
encouraged” by this papal gesture. He also disclosed that they had received
financial aid from the Pope to help the victims of the Easter Day suicide
bombing and spoke of his gratitude for this.
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