Pope to Japanese bishops: witness
to the Gospel and protect life
Pope addressing the bishops of Japan at the Apostolic Nunciature in Tokyo, November 23, 2019 (ANSA) |
In his first meeting in Japan, Pope Francis encourages
Japan’s tiny Catholic community to witness daily to the Lord by protecting life
and proclaiming the Gospel of compassion and mercy.
By Robin Gomes
Hardly an hour after his arrival in Tokyo from Bangkok,
Thailand, on the second leg of his 2-nation 32nd Apostolic Journey, Pope
Francis met the bishops of Japan, Saturday evening, at the Apostolic Nunciature
in the capital.
Recalling that the motto of his Japan visit is “Protect All
Life”, he suggested ways of how to witness to the faith and serve life.
Great witnesses to the faith
The Pope disclosed his fondness for Japan saying how as a
young Jesuit in his native Argentina, he yearned to be a missionary in their
land. But today, a dream
long come true, he said, he was among them as a missionary pilgrim in the
footsteps of great witnesses to the faith, such as Saint Francis Xavier whose
arrival there 470 years ago marked the beginning of the spread of Christianity
in the country.
The Pope also mentioned the martyrs, Saint Paul Miki and his
companions, Blessed Justo Takayama Ukon and the “hidden Christians” who, amidst
trials and persecutions, kept the faith alive for generations, as authentic
domestic Churches like the Holy Family of Nazareth.
Protecting life, proclaiming the Gospel
The Holy Father commended the Church in Japan, saying the
DNA of their communities is marked by a witness to the Lord in daily life,
which he said is an antidote against despair, that points out the path they
must follow.
According to the Pope, protecting all life means, first of
all, having a contemplative gaze capable of loving the life of the entire
people entrusted to you, and recognizing it, above all, as the Lord’s gift.
Only that which is loved, he said, can be saved and only that which is embraced
can be transformed.
Protecting all life and proclaiming the Gospel, he pointed
out, are not separate or opposed; rather each appeals to, and requires, the
other. “Both entail being careful and vigilant about anything that could
hinder, in these lands, the integral development of the people entrusted to the
light of the Gospel of Jesus,” the Pope said.
A Church of witness, dialogue
Shintoists and Buddhists form the bulk of Japan’s some 126.7
million people, with Catholics forming a tiny minority of 0.42%. This,
the Pope said, must not diminish the Church’s commitment to evangelization through
a humble, daily witness and openness to dialogue with other religious
traditions.
In this regard, he expressed appreciation for the Church’s
hospitality and care to many foreign workers, which he said is not only a
witness to the Gospel within Japanese society, but also attest to the
universality of the Church.
Ushering hope, healing, reconciliation
“A Church of witness can speak with greater freedom,
especially when addressing pressing issues of peace and justice in our world,”
the Pope said, adding that during his visit to Nagasaki and Hiroshima on
Sunday, he will pray for the victims and echo the bishops’ prophetic calls for
nuclear disarmament.
The suffering caused by the two nuclear bombs and the triple
disaster of a the massive earthquake that triggered a tsunami and crippled the
Fukushima nuclear power plant, the Pope said, are an eloquent reminder of our
human and Christian duty to assist those who are troubled in body and spirit,
and to offer to all the Gospel message of hope, healing and
reconciliation.
The Pope thus encouraged the efforts of the Japanese bishops
to ensure that the Catholic community offers a clear witness to the Gospel amid
the larger society. The Church’s highly respected educational apostolate, he
noted, represents a great resource for evangelization and engagement with
larger intellectual and cultural currents.
Social ills
In this spirit, he also encouraged the Church to address
Japan’s grave social problems such as loneliness, despair, isolation, suicide,
bullying and new forms of alienation and spiritual disorientation, which
particularly affect the young.
“Try to create spaces in which the culture of efficiency,
performance and success can become open to a culture of generous and selfless
love,” the Pope urged.
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