Pope: believers must condemn
violence in name of religion
Mourners at the funeral of worshippers killed in an attack on a Coptic church south of the Egyptian capital, Cairo.- AFP |
Pope Francis meets in the Vatican with participants in a
conference on ways of combatting religious violence
By Philippa Hitchen
Pope Francis met on Friday with participants at a conference
on how to combat violence committed in the name of religion. In his address,
the Pope stressed that every human life is sacred, whatever the individual’s
ethnicity, religion, culture, or ideological and political convictions.
Adherence to a particular religion, he insisted, does not
confer additional dignity and rights upon individuals, nor does non-adherence
deny or diminish them.
Pope Francis reiterated the words that he used in Cairo at
an international peace conference last April, where he said that “violence is
the negation of every authentic religious expression. We have an obligation to
denounce violations of human dignity and human rights, he said, to expose
attempts to justify every form of hatred in the name of religion, and to
condemn these attempts as idolatrous caricatures of God”.
Such violence, the Pope said, must be condemned by all, and
especially by genuinely religious people, who know that “God is always
goodness, love and compassion, and that in him there is no room for hatred,
resentment or vengeance”.
The religious person, he added, knows that among the
greatest blasphemies is to invoke God to justify killing, mass murder,
enslavement, exploitation, oppression and persecution of individuals and entire
populations”.
Encouraging the participants in their efforts to promote a
culture of peace, the Pope said political authorities, religious leaders,
teachers, as well as those engaged in training and communications, must warn
people tempted by “perverse forms of misguided religiosity” that these have
nothing to do with the profession of a religion worthy of this name”.
Please find below the full text of the Pope’s address to
participants
Dear Friends,
I offer you a warm welcome and I thank you for your presence. It is
highly significant that political authorities and religious leaders can meet to
discuss how to respond to acts of violence committed in the name of religion.
I would begin by reiterating what I have often stated, and in particular during
my visit to Egypt: “God, the lover of life, never ceases to love man, and so he
exhorts us to reject the way of violence. Above all and especially in our
day, the religions are called to respect this imperative, since, for all our
need of the Absolute, it is essential that we reject any ‘absolutizing’ that
would justify violence. For violence is the negation of every authentic
religious expression… We have an obligation to denounce violations of
human dignity and human rights, to expose attempts to justify every form of
hatred in the name of religion, and to condemn these attempts as idolatrous
caricatures of God” (Address to Participants in the International Peace
Conference, Al-Azhar Conference Centre, Cairo, 28 April 2017).
Violence promoted and carried out in the name of religion can only discredit
religion itself. Consequently, such violence must be condemned by all,
and especially by genuinely religious persons, who know that God is always
goodness, love and compassion, and that in him there is no room for hatred,
resentment or vengeance. The religious person knows that among the
greatest blasphemies is to invoke God as the justification for one’s own sins and
crimes, to invoke him in order to justify killing, mass murder, enslavement,
exploitation in whatever form, oppression and persecution of individuals and
entire populations.
The religious person knows that God is the Holy One, and that no one can claim
to use his name in order to perpetrate evil. Every religious leader is
called to unmask any attempt to manipulate God for ends that have nothing to do
with him or his glory. We need to show, with unremitting effort, that
every human life is sacred, that it deserves respect, esteem, compassion and
solidarity, without regard for ethnicity, religion, culture, or ideological and
political convictions.
Adherence to a particular religion does not confer additional dignity and
rights upon individuals, nor does non-adherence deny or diminish them.
There is a need, then, for a common commitment on the part of political
authorities, religious leaders, teachers and those engaged in the fields of
education, training and communications, to warn all those tempted by perverse
forms of misguided religiosity that these have nothing to do with the
profession of a religion worthy of this name.
This will help all those people of good will who seek God to encounter him in
truth, to encounter the One who sets us free from fear, hatred and violence,
and who desires to use the creativity and energy of each person to spread his
plan of love and peace, which is offered to all.
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