2019: The Year in Review with Pope Francis
Pope francis proclaiming the message of the Gospel (Ossevatore Romano) |
As 2019 draws to a close, we look back at the events,
encounters, discourses and journeys that have marked this year for Pope
Francis.
By Vatican News
Pope Francis constantly reminds us that the most important
task is to proclaim the Gospel. 2019 saw him doing exactly that, through
41 General
Audiences (reflecting on the Our Father and Acts of the Apostles),
56 Angelus
and Regina Caeli addresses, over 60 public
homilies, and 44 homilies delivered
during his private morning Masses in the Casa Santa Marta. All this without
counting the messages, letters, documents, interviews, and about 260 speeches,
delivered in Rome and on his Apostolic Journeys abroad.
Certainty not confusion
Throughout the year, the Pope has reminded us of one
consoling certainty: that God loves us and that, in Jesus, He gave His life for
us. This is the central message of Pope Francis’ entire mission, as expressed
in Evangelii
gaudium. He invites us to remember the “simple
and robust faith” of mothers and grandmothers, which gave, and continues to
give, “strength and constancy to go forward”. The kind of “home-made faith,
which goes unnoticed, but which gradually builds the kingdom of God”. A faith
that is never confused, because it is based on the essentials of the Gospel.
Faith not idolatry
In an increasingly pagan society, Pope Francis constantly
encourages us to turn to the One True God: “Idolatry is not just entering a
pagan temple and worshipping a statue”, he says, “Idolatry
is an attitude of the heart“. Idols may have changed their names, but they
are present today more than ever. Money, success, career, self-realization,
pleasure: all these idols promise happiness, but fail to give it. On the
contrary, they enslave us. Pope Francis reminds us how “idols
promise life, but take it away… while the true God does not ask for life,
but gives it”.
Self-correction not self-justification
Like Jesus, Pope Francis is not afraid to admonish,
especially those who consider themselves better than others. He calls this “the
religion of the ego”, practiced by those who claim to be Catholic, “but
have forgotten to be Christian and human”. They have forgotten that worshipping
God “always passes through love of neighbor”. Pope Francis warns how “the
Pharisee” is always ready to rise up in all of us, presumptuous and
self-justifying. Faith, insists the Pope, means having the humility to let
ourselves be corrected.
Meekness not rigidity
Also like Jesus, the words of Pope Francis can produce a
dual effect: some hear them and are converted, others become more hardened than
before. On the flight
back from Africa in September, the Pope said he is unafraid of schism:
“Today we have many schools of rigidity within the Church”, he said. These are
not schisms “but pseudo-schisms which will end badly”, because behind this
rigidity “there is not the sanctity of the Gospel”.
Pope Francis asks us to respond to evil with good, to
accompany “with meekness” those who fear the Church is no longer Catholic,
claiming the Pope said things he never did. No dogma has been changed, he
reminds us, no devotion has been cancelled. The Pope simply encourages us to
move forward in a spirit of welcome and mercy, to walk united as a people, so
that the development
of doctrine may be united with true Tradition always.
Putting Christ at the centre
During the Synod on the Amazon in October, Pope Francis
constantly repeated the word “conversion”,
a concept that found its place in the Final
Document of the Assembly. In reality, the Synod asked for a fourfold
conversion: synodal, because the Church must walk as one, not divided or alone;
cultural, because we must know how to speak to different cultures; ecological,
because selfish exploitation of the environment leads to the destruction of
peoples; pastoral, because the proclamation of the Gospel is urgent.
At the basis of these four conversions is conversion to the
living Gospel, which is Jesus. True conversion means putting oneself aside,
says Pope Francis, putting Christ at the center and letting the Holy Spirit be
the protagonist of our lives.
Combatting abuse
The “Protection
of Minors in the Church” summit in February was historic in many ways:
it brought together Church leaders from all continents, and with courage and
transparency, it focused on ways to combat the scourge of child abuse in the
Church. In his closing remarks, Pope Francis stressed the fact that abuse is “a
universal problem, tragically present almost everywhere and affecting
everyone”. He cited data showing how the majority of abuse is carried out by
family members and educators, in homes, schools, sports and church facilities,
not to mention through sex tourism and human trafficking. “The brutality of
this worldwide phenomenon becomes all the more grave and scandalous in the
Church”, he said, “for it is utterly incompatible with her moral authority and
ethical credibility”.
Abolishing “pontifical secrecy”
With the Motu proprio, Vos
estis lux mundi, the Pope established new
procedures for reporting abuse, harassment and violence, and for
ensuring that bishops and religious superiors are held accountable for their
actions. The document includes the obligation for clerics and religious to
report abuse, while every diocese must provide itself with a system that is
easily accessible to the public, to receive such reports. This year, Pope
Francis abolished
“pontifical secrecy” for these cases and changed the rule regarding
the crime of child pornography: the possession and distribution of pornographic
images involving minors up to the age of 14 had already been among the “delicta
graviora” — the most serious crimes; with the new regulations, the age has
been raised to 18.
Reforming the Roman Curia
The Council of Cardinals continued their work on reforming
the Roman Curia, with the purpose of ensuring all Church structures are more
missionary. A draft of the new Apostolic Constitution, with the provisional
title Praedicate evangelium, “Proclaim the Gospel”, is currently
under revision. At the end of the year, Pope Francis accepted the resignation
of the Dean of the College of Cardinals, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, who had
been in office since 2005. With a Motu
proprio, the Pope has limited the position to a five-year term, which can
be renewed if necessary.
Reforming the Vatican economy
Reform in the financial field also progressed during 2019,
in terms of both transparency and cost containment. Pope Francis renewed
the Statutes of the Vatican Institute for Religious Works (IOR), and
introduced the figure of the External Auditor for accounts auditing, according
to international standards, on a permanent basis. The Pope appointed Jesuit Fr
Juan Antonio Guerrero Alves as Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, and
authorized a Vatican judiciary investigation into various people in the service
of the Holy See, regarding certain financial transactions. Referring to “Peter’s
Pence”, the Pope specified that it is “good administration” to make money
received profitable, and not “put it in a drawer”. All investments must be
“ethical”, however, so that money is always at the service of evangelization
and the poor.
Sunday of the Word of God
With an Apostolic Letter Aperuit
illis, dated 30 September, Pope Francis established
the Sunday of the Word of God, a special day to encourage all the faithful
to read and meditate on the Bible because, as Saint Jerome said, “ignorance of
the Scriptures is ignorance of Christ”. The annual celebration will take place
on the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time (the first being on 26 January 2020).
The Nativity scene
On 1 December, in the town of Greccio, Pope Francis signed
another Apostolic Letter, Admirabile
signum, in which he invites us to rediscover the
beautiful tradition of the Christmas crib. “The depiction of Jesus’ birth
is itself a simple and joyful proclamation of the mystery of the Incarnation of
the Son of God”, writes the Pope. “The nativity scene is like a living Gospel
rising up from the pages of sacred Scripture”. “Wherever it is, and
whatever form it takes, the Christmas crèche speaks to us of the love of God,
the God who became a child in order to make us know how close He is to every
man, woman and child, regardless of their condition”.
Persecuted Christians
Pope Francis never tires of denouncing anti-Christian
persecution, reminding us that, today, there are more martyrs than in the early
days of Christianity. In January, the Supreme Court of Pakistan definitively
acquitted Asia Bibi of the unjust accusation of blasphemy, for which
she had been sentenced to death. A Catholic mother of five children, Asia Bibi
had been in prison since 2009. Both Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis had
followed the case with great discretion. When he met one of her daughters, Pope
Francis told her he thought of her mother often and prayed for her.
On 21 April, an attack by Islamic extremists against
Christian Churches in Sri Lanka caused the death of over 250 people as they
were celebrating Easter. The Pope made an appeal on
the very same day. During the year, he also denounced
attacks against other religions, like the one against a mosque in
Christchurch, New Zealand, on 15 March, which killed more than 50 people.
Defending the family and life
On 25 March, Pope Francis visited Loreto. There he
reiterated that, for today’s world especially, “the
family founded on marriage between a man and a woman assumes an essential
importance and mission”. The Holy See’s Permanent Observer to the UN,
Archbishop Bernardito Auza, referenced the Pope’s words on gender ideology,
calling it “a step
backwards” for humanity.
Pope Francis continues to defend life from conception to its
natural end. In 2019, he spoke out in defence of 42 year-old Vincent
Lambert, left to die in a state of minimal consciousness. “Let us not build
a civilization that eliminates people whose lives we believe are no longer
worth living”, said the Pope. “Every life has value, always”: whether it be the
life of an unborn child, someone suffering because of hunger, violence, or
injustice, whether it be the sick, the elderly, or migrants who risk dying in
search of a better future. Justice is not selective. It is not for some human
categories only. Justice is universal.
Encouraging young people
2019 saw the publication of Pope Francis’ Apostolic
Exhortation, Christus
vivit, the fruit of the Synod on Young People, held in the Vatican in
October 2018. The document opens
with the words: “Christ is alive! He is our hope, and in a wonderful way He
brings youth to our world, and everything He touches becomes young, new, full
of life. The very first words, then, that I would like to say to every young
Christian are these: Christ is alive and He wants you to be alive!”
The Pope asks the Lord “to free the Church from those who
would make her grow old, encase her in the past, hold her back or keep her at a
standstill. But let us also ask Him to free her from another temptation: that
of thinking she is young because she accepts everything the world offers her,
thinking that she is renewed because she sets her message aside and acts like
everybody else. No! The Church is young when she is herself”.
In the Post-Synodal document, Pope Francis proposes “paths
of fraternity” to live the faith, avoiding the temptation “to withdraw into
small groups”. He invites young people to build “social friendship, where
everyone works for the common good”. He challenges them to “serve the poor, be
protagonists of the revolution of charity and service, capable of resisting the
pathologies of consumerism and superficial individualism”.
Apostolic journeys
Pope Francis went on seven
apostolic journeys in 2019. He visited eleven countries on four
continents, making it a record year in terms of visits outside of Italy. The
year began with World Youth Day in Panama, and continued in the United Arab
Emirates where the Pope signed a
historic Document on Human Fraternity with the Great Imam of al Azhar.
In Morocco, he reiterated the importance of inter-religious dialogue. In
Bulgaria, North Macedonia and Romania, he encouraged Christian unity. In
Mozambique, Madagascar and Mauritius, he spoke out in defence of the poor and
Creation. In Thailand, he appealed for the promotion of women’s and children’s
rights. In Japan, his message centred on peace, and he repeated that both the
use and the possession of nuclear weapons is immoral.
The Pope’s visits in Italy included Camerino, where he
embraced earthquake victims in the Marches Region. In Loreto, he signed the
Post-Synodal Exhortation to Youth, and in Greccio, the town where Saint Francis
set up the first nativity scene, the Pope signed his letter concerning the
Christmas crib.
Saints and Blesseds
2019 saw numerous canonizations and beatifications,
including many martyrs from all continents and ideologies. Several were killed
“in hatred of the faith” during the Spanish Civil War. They died forgiving
their murderers. Others, like the
seven bishops of the Greek-Catholic Church in Romania beatified by
Pope Francis in Blaj, were martyrs of the communist regime. Others still,
like Argentine
Bishop Enrique Angelelli and his companions, were victims of right-wing
dictatorships. Lay people too were proclaimed saints: like Margherita
Bays of Switzerland, or the “saints next door” who lived their
vocation in the family, amidst everyday challenges. The list included a
cardinal too: John
Henry Newman, an Anglican who converted to the Catholic faith in 1845.
A priest for fifty years
2019 was also the year Pope Francis celebrated 50
years of his priesthood. His vocation story dates back to 21 September
1953, the Feast of Saint Matthew. It was then, during Confession, that the
young Jorge Mario Bergoglio had a profound experience of God’s mercy. Since
then, as Pope, he has described priests as men living among people with the
merciful heart of Jesus. Today is the time of mercy, he says. The Church
understands this more and more: Pope Saint John XXIII took an important step in
this direction, one that was continued by his successors. Inspired by Saint
Faustina Kowalska, Pope Saint John Paul II instituted Divine Mercy Sunday.
On Divine
Mercy Sunday 2019, Pope Francis confirmed how “all of us need mercy”. He
invited us to “draw near to Jesus and touch His wounds in our suffering
brothers and sisters. Jesus’ wounds are a treasure: mercy issues from them”, he
said.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét