Pope addresses Romania’s civil
authorities: Full text
Pope Francis shakes hand with President Klaus Iohanius (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis addresses the authorities, civil society, and
diplomatic corps of Romania, the first engagement of his 3-day Apostolic
Journey. The full text of his prepared remarks is below:
Address of His Holiness Pope Francis
Meeting with Authorities, Civil Society and the Diplomatic Corps
Bucharest, Presidential Palace
31 May 2019
Meeting with Authorities, Civil Society and the Diplomatic Corps
Bucharest, Presidential Palace
31 May 2019
Mr President
Madam Prime Minister,
Your Beatitude,
Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished Authorities,
Representatives of the different Religious Confessions and of Civil Society,
Madam Prime Minister,
Your Beatitude,
Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished Authorities,
Representatives of the different Religious Confessions and of Civil Society,
Dear Friends,
I
offer a cordial greeting and express my gratitude to Their Excellencies the
President and the Prime Minister for the invitation to visit Romania and for
their kind words of welcome, extended also in the name of the other Authorities
of the nation, and of this beloved people. I greet the members of the
Diplomatic Corps and the representatives of civil society gathered here.
My
respectful greeting goes likewise to His Beatitude Patriarch Daniel, and to the
Metropolitans and Bishops of the Holy Synod, and to all the faithful of the
Romanian Orthodox Church. With affection, I greet the Bishops and
priests, men and women religious, and all the members of the Catholic Church,
whom I have come to confirm in faith and to encourage on their journey of life
and Christian witness.
I am
happy to find myself in this, your ţara frumoasă (beautiful
land), twenty years after the visit of Saint John Paul II and in this semester
when Romania, for the first time since its entrance into the European Union,
holds the presidency of the Council of Europe.
This is a fitting time to think back on the thirty years
that have passed since Romania was liberated from a regime that oppressed civil
and religious liberty, isolated the nation from other European countries, and
led to the stagnation of its economy and the exhaustion of its creative powers.
In these years, Romania has been committed to building a sound democracy
through the plurality of its political and social forces and their reciprocal
dialogue, through the fundamental recognition of religious freedom and through
the country’s full participation on the greater international stage. It
is important to acknowledge the great strides made on this journey, despite
significant difficulties and privations. The determination to advance in
various areas of civil, social, cultural, and scientific life has released much
energy and generated many projects; it has unleashed great creative forces that
had previously been pent up, and has encouraged a number of new initiatives
that have guided the country into the twenty-first century. I trust that
you will carry forward these efforts to consolidate the structures and
institutions needed to respond to the legitimate aspirations of the citizenry
and to encourage the nation’s people to realize its full potential and native
genius.
At
the same time, it must be acknowledged that while the changes brought by the
dawn of this new era have led to genuine achievements, they have also entailed
inevitable hurdles to be overcome and problematic consequences for social
stability and the governance of the territory itself. I think in the
first place of the phenomenon of emigration and the several million people who
have had to leave their homes and country in order to seek new opportunities
for employment and a dignified existence. I think too of the depopulation
of many villages, which have lost many of their inhabitants, the effects of
this on the quality of life in those areas, and the weakening of the profound
cultural and spiritual roots that have sustained you in times of trial.
At the same time, I pay homage to the sacrifices endured by so many sons and
daughters of Romania who, by their culture, their distinctive identity and
their industriousness, have enriched those countries to which they have
emigrated, and by the fruit of their hard work have helped their families who
have remained at home.
Confronting the problems of this new chapter of history, identifying effective
solutions, and finding the resolve to implement them, calls for greater
cooperation on the part of the nation’s political, economic, social and
spiritual forces. It is necessary to move forward together with
conviction in following the highest calling to which every state must aspire:
that of responsibility for the common good of its people. To move forward
together, as a way of shaping the future, requires a noble willingness to
sacrifice something of one’s own vision or best interest for the sake of a
greater project, and thus to create a harmony that makes it possible to advance
securely towards shared goals.
This
is the path to the building of an inclusive society, one in which everyone
shares his or her own gifts and abilities, through quality education and
creative, participatory and mutually supportive labour (cf. Evangelii
Gaudium, 192). In this way, all become protagonists of the common
good, where the weak, the poor and the least are no longer seen as undesirables
that keep the “machine” from functioning, but as citizens and brothers and
sisters to be fully incorporated into the life of society. Indeed, how
they are treated is the best indicator of the actual goodness of the social
model that one is attempting to build. Only to the extent that a society
is concerned for its most disadvantaged members, can it be considered truly
civil.
This
entire process needs to have a heart and soul, and a clear goal to achieve, one
imposed not by extrinsic considerations or by the growing power of centres of
high finance, but by an awareness of the centrality of the human person and of
his or her inalienable rights (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 203).
For a harmonious and sustainable development, the concrete practice of
solidarity and charity, and the increased concern of social, civil and
political forces for the pursuit of the common good, it is not enough to
modernize economic theories, or professional techniques and abilities, however
necessary these in themselves may be. It requires developing not just
material conditions but the very soul of your people.
In
this regard, the Christian Churches can help to rediscover and strengthen the
beating heart that can be the source of a political and social action based on
the dignity of the person and leading to commitment to work with fairness and
generosity for the overall common good. At the same time, they themselves
seek to become a credible reflection of God’s presence and an attractive
witness to his works, as they grow in authentic mutual friendship and
cooperation. This is the path that the Catholic Church wishes to
follow. She desires to contribute to the building up of society.
She desires to be a sign of harmony in the hope of unity and to be at the service
of human dignity and the common good. She wishes to cooperate with the
civil authorities, with the other Churches and with all men and women of good
will, journeying together with them and placing her specific gifts at the
service of the entire community. The Catholic Church is no stranger to
this; she shares fully in the spirit of the nation, as is demonstrated by the
participation of her faithful in the shaping of the country’s future and in the
creation and development of the structures of integral education and forms of
charitable assistance suited to a modern state. In this way, she desires
to contribute to the building up of society and of civil and spiritual life in
your beautiful land of Romania.
Mr President,
In
offering my prayerful good wishes for Romania’s prosperity and peace, I invoke
upon you, your family, upon all those here present, and upon all the country’s
people an outpouring of God’s blessings.
God
bless Romania!
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