Cardinal Ribat of PNG: putting the peripheries at the
centre
(Vatican Radio) Papua New Guinea’s first ever Cardinal, Sir
John Ribat, is preparing to receive the red hat from Pope Francis with the
humbleness and simplicity that befit truly special people.
The news of the Archbishop of Port Moresby’s appointment
spread like wildfire through the Pacific region where Ribat serves as the
President of the Federation of Catholic Bishops of Oceania.
Visiting Vatican Radio just two days before the Consistory,
Cardinal elect Ribat (who by the way was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II this
year) said that although Papua New Guinea is geographically as far as you can
get from the See of Peter, Pope Francis’ appointment makes him feel very close…
“It gives me a great feeling of closeness, in the sense that
when we have issues or things that need to be attended to we will have someone
who will be our voice representing the Church in PNG, Solomon Islands and the
neighbouring countries as well” Cardinal Ribat says.
Speaking with passion of the work he spearheads – as
Chairman of the ecumenical movement in Papua New Guinea - to promote ecumenical
dialogue in a region where a large percentage of the faithful belong to
protestant denominations, the Cardinal said they too “share this feeling of
closeness”.
Cardinal Ribat also talks about his personal, very deep,
experience of dialogue and sharing with other communions as he comes from a
family where many of his relatives are from the Methodist tradition.
He speaks of the pain both Catholics and Protestants have to
live with as they cannot share Holy Communion during Mass but says that for the
moment this is what they all have to live with as they push towards full
Christian Unity, a pathway that leads to lasting peace and friendship
especially at this moment in history which is seeing so many divisions and
conflicts.
Cardinal Ribat concedes that perhaps his ecumenical
commitment is one of the reasons Pope Francis chose him to be part of the
College of Cardinals.
“While we are saying that the Catholic Church is the mother
church, then we have to be true to our name and embrace all” he says.
Regarding other issues that he feels are particular
challenges he is called to address, the Cardinal speaks of the relationship his
Bishops’ Conference has with Muslims – who are a minority in his geographical
area – but whom have been invited to share their concerns with representatives
of other faiths in this very difficult time.
“To go this way together means the building of peace, the
building of unity, and that extends to all aspects of our life”, so this
relationship, he says, is something I really value.
Cardinal Ribat also speaks of the need to give the right
kind of spiritual and moral guidance to the people of a small nation that are
dealing with exploitation and human trafficking.
He says that possibly in a moment in which the Pacific
region is suffering first-hand the devastating effects of climate change, with
rising sea levels that force island populations to abandon their homes in
search of new environment to settle down, the Cardinal thinks that the
experience of the Church in PNG can provide a precious contribution to Pope
Francis’ call to “care for our common home”.
He also links this issue to the current migration issue that
is affecting the entire globe and calls on the United Nations to redefine
refugees and consider those being deeply affected by climate change on a par
with those fleeing persecution and conflict.
Commenting on the fact that Francis has “sort of broken the
protocol” of the way Cardinals are appointed by reaching so far out to small
countries across the globe (countries that are not seen as world players when
it comes to taking significant decisions and making investments), Cardinal
Ribat said this speaks not only of the Pope’s will to promote inclusion for
all, but also shows how the Church today is shifting its focus from the center
to the peripheries.
And he says, developed nations have much to learn from
smaller, underdeveloped nations regarding lifestyle and the protection of the
environment.
Asked what he is going to say to Pope Francis when he meets
him for the first time, Cardinal Ribat said he brings the greetings and the
invitation to visit Papua New Guinea not only from the Catholics of the nation,
but of all of its inhabitants!
Sir Cardinal Ribat, is 59-years-old. He was ordained in the Congregation of the Sacred Heart Missionaries in 1985. He was appointed as the auxiliary Bishop of Bereina in PNG in 2000 and became the bishop there in 2002. He became Archbishop of Port Moresby in 2008.
Sir Cardinal Ribat, is 59-years-old. He was ordained in the Congregation of the Sacred Heart Missionaries in 1985. He was appointed as the auxiliary Bishop of Bereina in PNG in 2000 and became the bishop there in 2002. He became Archbishop of Port Moresby in 2008.
Not only is he the first Cardinal from Papua New Guinea, his
appointment marks a first for the religious order of the Missionaries of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus.
(Linda Bordoni)
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