Pope Francis meets with Irish Bishops on ad limina
visit to Rome
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis met on Friday with Irish
bishops who are in Rome this week on their ad limina visits – the first such
visit since 2006.
Following the encounter, which lasted for over two hours,
some of the bishops came to Vatican Radio to share their impressions and to
talk about the most significant challenges facing their Church today.
Less than half of the bishops meeting with Pope Francis on
Friday had been on an ad limina visit before. Yet all of them were clearly
impressed by the level of openness and dialogue they discovered in all the
offices of the Roman Curia and particularly in their closed door, informal and
unscripted conversation with the Pope.
Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh is president of the Irish
bishops conference:
“He said at the beginning, ‘I’ll throw in the ball and let’s
see what happens’, so it turned out to be a conversation about the Church in
Ireland, about the struggles and challenges we’re having, but also about the
importance of a ministry of presence, a ministry of the ear, where we’re
listening to the hopes, struggles and fears of our people….”
Featuring high on the agenda were discussions about the
family and about the need to reach out to young people, especially those whose
faith has been shattered by the numerous sex abuse scandals. As the bishops
were meeting with the Pope in Rome, a new report was being published in Belfast
about abuse cases and the bishops pledged their full cooperation in order to
support victims and ensure the highest standards of child protection throughout
the Church.
During their meetings the bishops said they spoke frankly of
problems such as poverty and homelessness, the current political crisis in
Northern Ireland, but also concerns about the place of women in the Catholic
Church today, as Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin explained:
“No subject was off the agenda….Pope Francis again said to
talk about our experiences, our challenges, our criticisms….One theme that came
up on numerous occasions was the position of women in the Church, we brought it
up in almost every congregation we went to and there was a willingness to
listen and a recognition that we were asking a valid question, because the
Irish episcopal conference is quite concerned about that theme”
The bishops said they also talked about preparations for the
World Meeting of Families which will take place in Dublin next year, adding
that they discussed with Pope Francis the possibility of his visit to
Ireland for the occasion, a first papal trip there since Pope John Paul
travelled to the country, back in 1979.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét