Pope tells Somascan Fathers to continue to serve
abandoned youth
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on
Thursday encouraged Somascan Fathers to continue and further
develop their mission to serve the poor and take care of orphans and abandoned
youth.
Receiving a group of Somascan Fathers who are holding their General
Chapter, the Pope expressed appreciation for the theme chosen for the
Chapter: “Let's cross to the other side with our brothers with whom we live and
die” and he highlighted their missionary openness.
Pope Francis recalled the shining example provided by the
Somascan Fathers’ founder, St. Girolamo Emiliani, and quoted the words of Pope
Benedict XVI in a message to the Order asking them “to take to heart
every kind of poverty experienced by our youth: moral, physical, existential
poverty; and above all the poverty of love, the root of every serious human
problem”.
He pointed out that the ideal at the root of St. Girolamo
Emiliani’s mission was to reform the Church through works of charity.
His first project, he said, was to renew his own commitment
to faith and the Gospel and then to reach out to the Christian community and to
civil society highlighting the plight of the poor and the marginalized and
promoting integral human development.
“I encourage you to remain faithful to the original
inspiration of your Order and to go out into the world assisting humanity that
is wounded and discarded, with evangelically effective choices that arise from
the ability to look at the world and humanity through the eyes of Christ” he
said.
Underscoring the fact that the care for youth and their
human and Christian education is the mark of the charism of Somascans, the Pope
lauded their method of education which is centered on the person, on his or her
dignity, on the development of intellectual and manual skills.
Pope Francis noted that in the effort to make their service more effective, the Somascan Fathers and Brothers are working on new ways to accomplish their mission.
Pope Francis noted that in the effort to make their service more effective, the Somascan Fathers and Brothers are working on new ways to accomplish their mission.
He encouraged them to be attentive to new and different
forms of marginalization in geographical and existential peripheries.
And, he said: “Do not be afraid to ‘leave the old wineskins’
and address the transformation of structures where this would be useful for a
more evangelical and consistent service. Structures, he said, in some cases can
give false security and hinder the dynamism of charity”.
But he pointed out that at the basis of these processes
there must always be the joyful encounter with Christ.
The Pope invited those present to engage with laypeople of
the Somascan community in the effort to protect human rights, enforce child
protection and the rights of children and adolescents, oppose child labor,
prevent exploitation and fight trafficking.
“These are issues that must be addressed through the
liberating power of the Gospel and, at the same time, through adequate
operational tools and professional skills” he said.
Pope Francis recalled that St. Girolamo Emiliani was a
contemporary of Luther and suffered for the tear in the fabric of Christian
unity.
He urged the Somascan Fathers to continue to teach catechism
and to provide formation to catechists in fidelity to the Sacraments and within
the love for the Virgin Mary, but he also encouraged them to support ecumenical
dialogue and urged them to continue their collaboration with other ecclesial
communities, in particular in Africa and in Asia.
“Dear Brothers, you have the task to go forward with the
work inspired by St. Girolamo Emiliani, who was declared patron of orphans and
abandoned youth by Pope Pius XI” he said.
“I encourage you, Pope Francis concluded, to carry on your
journey following your apostolic zeal, always open to new expressions according
to the most urgent needs of the Church and society in different times and
places”.
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