First year of the Vatican
Dicastery for Human Development
Pope Francis and Cardinal Peter Turkson. |
Listen to Cardinal Peter Turkson speak about the first year
of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development.
By Robin Gomes
The Vatican’s Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human
Development has just completed its first year of activity. The
Dicastery is an outcome of Pope Francis reform of the Roman Curia to overhaul
and stream line the central administration of the Catholic Church here in the
Vatican.
The Pope announced the new Dicastery on 31 August 2016 with
the release of his Motu Proprio “Humanam progressionem”(Latin for “Human
Development”). He appointed Cardinal Peter Turkson, the
President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace to be its first
prefect.
The Dicastery came into effect on 1 January 2017, with the
merger of four Pontifical Councils: Justice and Peace, Cor Unum,
Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People, and Health Care Workers.
Cardinal Turkson spoke to Stefano Leszczynky of Vatican News
about the first year of activity of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human
Development.
Four levels of activity
He outlined four levels of activity. The first
is merging the four Pontifical Councils into a single
dicastery. The second is managing the personnel and
staff, ensuring sure there is no overlapping of activites. The third is
having a location or office for the new dicastery, which
Cardinal Turkson said is “still under construction”. However, they need
to get things going. It is about “getting the elephant on its feet and making
it move,” he said.
The Dicastery’s also needs to share its “story” with the
rest of the Church by organizing a lot of meetings with regional
episcopal conferences. The Prefect of the Dicastery said
they have held many meetings with bishops’ conferences during their ‘ad limina’
visit to Rome in 2017, explaining the “core business” of the Dicastery.
Collegial action on “Laudato Si”
Cardinal Turkson said they also want to tell the episcopal
conferences about Pope Francis environmental encyclical of 2015, “Laudato
Si”. Many local churches, the cardinal noted, have developed study groups
and “subsidiary instruments” for the application of the encyclical but many
others have done nothing.
The Ghanaian cardinal said that “Laudato Si” is a “great
example of collegial action” because the Pope quotes a lot from the episcopal
conferences around the world, “suggesting he is teaching with the local
episcopal conferences.” Hence, it is time local Churches
come “on board” to get the message of the encyclical out. This
collegiality, the cardinal explained, is bi-directional, not unidirectional,
and the Dicastery wants to ensure this happens.
Retreat for Dicastery
Speaking about this year, Cardinal Turkson said he plans to
organize a “small retreat” for the superiors at the headquarters of the
Dicastery, which will not just be prayers but will also include inputs by
experts to help them keep focused on their “objectives and core mission”.
This will be passed on to the rest of the staff, so all “move together”.
Funding mission Churches
Regarding funding mission Churches around the world will
still continue, Cardinal Turkson said, but the Dicastery needs to find
fund-raising mechanisms to replenish their stocks. He noted
that aid for the Churches is the southern hemisphere is “always dwindling”,
but pastoral work is on the increase.
The Prefect said they need to provide local churches access
to certain capital and ethical investment instead of
relying on donations and grants. They need to “make money serve the human
person, not the human person serve money,” as Pope Francis put it. In
this regard, Cardinal Turkson said he has organized 3 seminars on this and they
now need to take to the local Churches whose personnel and staff need to be
trained and prepared accordingly.
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