2016-11-22T18:48:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 22, 2016 / 11:48 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Death and God’s judgment should be on everyone’s mind, but faithfulness to God will conquer our fears, Pope Francis has said. “Fidelity to the Lord does not disappoint. If each one of us is faithful to the Lord, when death comes, we will say like Francis (of Assisi) 'come sister death...' we won't be afraid,” the Pope said Nov. 22. “And when the day of judgement comes, we will look at the Lord: 'Lord I have many sins but I have tried to be faithful.' And our Lord is good,” he said. “I give you this advice: 'be faithful until death – said the Lord – and I will give you the crown of life.' With this fidelity we won't be afraid of death, when we die we won’t be afraid of the day of judgment.” Pope Francis spoke in his homily for Tuesday morning Mass at the chapel of his Santa Marta residence. Reflecting on the daily reading from the Book of Revelation, he reminded the congregation that each one of them would die. He asked each person to consider what he or she will say before God on Judgment Day.   “We'd do well to think: But what will the day be like when I will be in front of Jesus? When He asks me about the talents that he gave me, what use I made of them, when He will ask me: how was my heart when the seed was dropped, like a path or like thorns: that Parable of the Kingdom of God. How did I receive His Word? With an open heart? Did I make it germinate for the good of all or in secret?” The Pope cited Jesus’ warning against false signs of the end of the world: “Do not be deceived.” The pontiff warned against deceptions: alienation, estrangement and living “as though we never had to die.”   When God comes, the Pope asked, “How will he find me? Waiting for Him or in the midst of the many 'alienations' of life?” For Pope Francis, Judgment Day reminded him of his childhood religious lessons. “I remember as a child, when we went to catechism we were taught four things: death, judgement, hell or glory. After the judgment there is this possibility. “But Father, this is to frighten us…,” he imagined someone asking.   “No, this is the truth because if you do not take care of your heart, because the Lord is with you, and (if) you always live estranged from the Lord, perhaps there is the danger,” the Pope warned, “the danger of continuing to live estranged in this way from the Lord for eternity.” “And this is a terrible thing!” He cited the day’s gospel acclamation, from the Book of Revelation: “remain faithful until death and I will give you the crown of life.” Read more

2016-11-22T14:43:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 22, 2016 / 07:43 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Tuesday the Vatican announced the themes for the next three World Youth Day encounters, which are focused on Mary and form the basis of a spiritual journey culminating in the next global encoun... Read more

2016-11-22T13:02:00+00:00

Indianapolis, Ind., Nov 22, 2016 / 06:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Critics say an Indiana mayor's decision to rename the city's Good Friday holiday in the name of inclusivity ended up marginalizing Christians. Mayor John Hamilton of Bloomington cited the city’s diverse workforce and said changing the names of Good Friday and Columbus Day holidays would “better reflect cultural sensitivity in the workplace.” “That diversity makes us stronger and more representative of the public we proudly serve,” he said. “These updated names for two days of well-merited time off is another way we can demonstrate our commitment to inclusivity.” City employees receive paid time off for both holidays. Good Friday will now be known as “Spring Holiday” while Columbus Day will be changed to “Fall Holiday.” The mayor’s Good Friday change drew criticism from Bill Donohue of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights. “He opted to rename Good Friday ‘Spring Holiday,’ because he doesn’t mind offending Christians. Yes, it is just that simple,” Donohue charged. He said the name change excludes Christians by “denying recognition of a central day in their religious calendar.” Pastor Alan Phillips of Bloomington’s Sherwood Oaks Christian Church told WDRB News he was saddened by the move. “It just seems like, almost to me, singled out to put Christianity down,” Pastor Phillips said. Hamilton’s wife, Dawn Johnsen, is a past legal director of the pro-abortion rights group NARAL Pro-Choice America and served on the White House transition team. She was named to head President Obama’s Office of Legal Counsel, but her nomination was held up for years and withdrawn. The Catholic League had opposed her nomination, claiming she had an “anti-Catholic record.” The group cited her 1988 support for an American Civil Liberties Union effort to strip the tax exempt status from the Catholic Church because of its pro-life position. Mayor Hamilton also changed Columbus Day's name to Fall Holiday. Christopher Columbus has traditionally been lauded by Italian-Americans, many Catholics and others for his role in bringing Christianity to the New World and establishing permanent relations between the Old World and the New. His critics cite Columbus’ mistreatment of indigenous peoples or hold him responsible for the injustices of European colonialism that followed his arrival. CNA sought comment from the Archdiocese of Indianapolis but did not receive a response by deadline. Read more

2016-11-22T10:22:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Nov 22, 2016 / 03:22 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The kingship of Christ is lived out through service to those in need, said the homilist at the annual Washington, D.C. Mass for those with special needs and those who care for them. “We ... Read more

2016-11-22T07:08:00+00:00

Mosul, Iraq, Nov 22, 2016 / 12:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Two years after the sound of church bells was replaced by the sound of explosives in Bashiqa, Iraq, just north of Mosul, Christians are again celebrating Mass after forcing the Islamic State out of... Read more

2016-11-21T22:10:00+00:00

Kigali, Rwanda, Nov 21, 2016 / 03:10 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Catholic bishops of Rwanda have apologized for Christians' role in the deadly 1994 genocide. “We apologize for all the wrongs the Church committed. We apologize on behalf of all Christians for all forms of wrongs we committed. We regret that church members violated (their) oath of allegiance to God’s commandments,” said Rwanda's Conference of Catholic Bishops The statement, read at parishes across Rwanda, said that some Catholics planned, assisted, and executed the genocide. Hutu extremists killed over 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus. Clergy members were included in the ranks of both perpetrators and victims. In some cases, Hutu priests, bishops and religious helped to hide and protect Tutsis. In other cases, they took up arms against them. They ushered victims into church buildings with false promises of security and then trapped and betrayed them, facilitating their massacre. “Forgive us for the crime of hate in the country to the extent of also hating our colleagues because of their ethnicity. We didn’t show that we are one family but instead killed each other,” the bishops said. Bishop Phillipe Rukamba, spokesman for the Catholic bishops, said the statement's release was timed to be released at the end of the Catholic Church's Year of Mercy, according to the Associated Press. There were complex causes for the violence, including decades of ethnic tension dating back to Belgian colonialism. The violence was inflamed by hate-filled propaganda broadcast by political extremists. The genocide began April 7, 1994 after controversy over the plane crash that killed the then-president of Rwanda, a Hutu. About 57 percent of Rwanda is Catholic, with another 37 percent Protestant or Seventh-Day Adventist. The churches have worked to bring about healing and reconciliation as well. As the country sought to recover from the genocide, the Catholic Church suggested the revival of traditional communal court system called Gacaca, to relieve the burden on the nation’s justice system in adjudicating charges. Well-respected elders served as judges and aimed to facilitate justice for both victims and perpetrators. In a 2013 interview, Fr. Celestin Hakizimana, general secretary of the Rwandan bishops’ conference, described the current relationship between Church and State in Rwanda as generally good. Efforts are ongoing to repair relationships that were damaged during the genocide, and the Church is dealing with modern challenges, including a recent law to legalize abortion, which the bishops vocally opposed. Although obstacles do exist, the Church in Rwanda is strong, Fr. Hakizimana said. With the help of Catholic Relief Services, the national bishops’ conference has improved its structure and organization, and many dioceses are working with the international agency to strengthen their efficiency, professionalism and financial management capabilities. In addition, Fr. Hakizimana explained that he knows the Church is growing “because every Sunday, there are baptisms.” As of October 2013, the seminaries in the small country were filled to capacity, with 530 men studying in major seminaries. Church leaders have been forced to limit the number of applicants while one facility is being expanded. As Rwanda works to rebuild, the local Church grows as well. Read more

2016-11-21T22:02:00+00:00

Lima, Peru, Nov 21, 2016 / 03:02 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- When a deadly fire broke out at a mall in Lima, Peru last week, fire fighters responded to put out the flames and rescue those trapped inside the building. With them was Fr. Christopher Dunn Mahardy, the 62-year-old American Franciscan priest who serves as chaplain of the Volunteer Firemen's Company in the San Juan de Miraflores district in Lima. “I was praying the Rosary for the victims and for the firemen as they were working,” Fr. Christopher told CNA. “I also assisted the relatives of the people who died so they could regain their composure. When they pulled out one of the bodies I offered the final prayers.” On Nov. 16, a fire was reported in the movie theater at the Larcomar mall, located in the Miraflores district of Lima. At least four people were killed. The cause of the fire is still under investigation. The Expreso Peruvian daily reported that the fire occurred in the morning hours in Auditorium 10 of the UVK theater chain, shortly before a special press screening of the “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” film. According to the newspaper, “the authorities reported that the flames spread because of a highly flammable type of insulation which covers the wall of this movie theater to contain sound.” <blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="es" dir="ltr">Infierno en Larcomar <a href="https://t.co/IJrlZKEdCC">https://t.co/IJrlZKEdCC</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/CGBVP_Oficial">@CGBVP_Oficial</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/congresoperu">@congresoperu</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/PoliciaPeru">@PoliciaPeru</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/fzavalal">@fzavalal</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/ppkamigo">@ppkamigo</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/MuniMiraflores">@MuniMiraflores</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/pcmperu">@pcmperu</a> <a href="https://t.co/UsfqshugaU">pic.twitter.com/UsfqshugaU</a></p>&mdash; Diario Expreso Perú (@ExpresoPeru) <a href="https://twitter.com/ExpresoPeru/status/799299759362154496">November 17, 2016</a></blockquote> <script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> Fr. Christopher was among those who responded. In addition to working as a parish priest in a church on the outskirts of Lima, he also works as chaplain for the Miraflores Volunteer Fireman’s Company three part-days per week. The priest came to Peru in 1981 and joined the Peruvian Fire Department after the earthquake that leveled the city of Pisco in 2007. Certified in several courses by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in the United States, Fr. Christopher has also completed certification in psychology and patient management in disasters, strengthening his commitment to the firemen's company. When the alarm sounds at the fire station, the chaplain leads the medical unit, making use of the medical knowledge he gained when he participated as a volunteer in an emergency medical unit in New York. “I am always watching out for the welfare of the fire fighters,” he said. “I also help them with everything related to their faith, their family life, and with their stress management training. I'm with them, I pray with them, I accompany them, I encourage them.” Regarding the spiritual life of a fireman, Fr. Christopher said that they must have a “strong faith” because they have to “live on the edge of death every day.” “To be a fireman is a form of disinterested service and of mercy, to help those in a difficult situation. What has touched my heart is to see the service the firemen perform in extreme situations,” the priest told CNA. “Even though the Fire Department is very poor and does not have much equipment, its members are very big-hearted,” the priest emphasized. Speaking to the Peruvian Volunteer Firemen's Journal in 2009, Fr. Christopher said that “serving as a chaplain serves the local community” and allows him to “stand in solidarity with all the firemen in the world who risk their lives to save others and their property.”     Read more

2016-12-24T14:25:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Dec 24, 2016 / 07:25 am (CNA/EWTN News).- If you're itching to welcome in the yuletide with Christmas carols, a new album released by the friars of the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C. might just hold the holiday tune you’ve been searching for. From traditional classics such as Away in a Manger, Silent Night, and Hark! The Herald Angels Sing, the Dominicans of the Eastern Province have released their Christmas album Christ Was Born to Save, available on CD or for digital download on iTunes. “All the music on this album flows from our prayerful contemplation of this great mystery: that God became man to save us from ourselves, and make us more like him,” wrote Fr. Gabriel Gillen, OP in a statement from the Dominican Foundation. The Dominican House of Studies isn’t new to the music business – they have produced three other albums over the years, including In Medio Ecclesiae: Music for the New Evangelization, Ave Maria: Dominican Chant for the Immaculate Conception, and Gaudeamus: Celebrating 800 Years of Dominican Life. In addition to the newest Christmas album, the friars have also produced a music video for the hymn ‘Good Christian Men Rejoice,’ in which they honor the Blessed Henry Suso, the friar who wrote the song almost 700 years ago. According to Fr. Gillen, Blessed Suso was inspired to write the hymn based on a vision he had “of angels singing and dancing with joy about the birth of the Infant Jesus.” “The German preacher and mystic poet was soon swept up by the angelic song, and penned the Christmas hymn In Dulci Jubilo as a result,” he continued. Blessed Suso's hymn, written in Latin, is performed in a loose English translation as Good Christian Men Rejoice, which is just one of the “many other beautiful carols, chants, and choral works,” featured on the friars’ Christmas album. Proceeds from their Christmas album will be used to support Dominican students in Washington D.C. on their paths to priesthood.  This article was originally published on CNA Nov. 21, 2016. Read more

2016-11-21T11:00:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Nov 21, 2016 / 04:00 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Although the Jubilee of Mercy has ended, Pope Francis has decided that some of the novelties he applied to the Church during the Holy Year will continue. He is allowing all priests to absolve the sin of abortion from here on out, while SSPX priests will be able to continue hearing confessions validly. In addition, he has indefinitely extended the mandate of the Missionaries of Mercy and has decided to institute the World Day for the Poor, which will take place each year on the Thirty-Third Sunday of Ordinary Time. The Pope announced his decision in his new Apostolic Letter “Misericordia et Misera,” meaning “Mercy with Misery.” Published Nov. 21, the letter was signed by the Pope Nov. 20 during Mass for the close of the Jubilee of Mercy. In the letter, Pope Francis said that “the Sacrament of Reconciliation must regain its central place in the Christian life.” “Given this need, lest any obstacle arise between the request for reconciliation and God’s forgiveness, I henceforth grant to all priests, in virtue of their ministry, the faculty to absolve those who have committed the sin of procured abortion,” the letter read. The provision made for the duration of the Extraordinary Holy Year “is hereby extended, notwithstanding anything to the contrary.” Pope Francis firmly stressed that “abortion is a grave sin, since it puts an end to an innocent life,” but insisted that “there is no sin that God’s mercy cannot reach and wipe away when it finds a repentant heart seeking to be reconciled with the Father.” “May every priest, therefore, be a guide, support and comfort to penitents on this journey of special reconciliation.” The Pope had initially declared that all priests could forgive the sin of abortion in a set of pastoral guidelines for the Jubilee issues Sept. 1, 2015, in which he also granted SSPX priests the faculty to forgive sins in confession. A woman who obtains an abortion automatically incurs a "latae sententiae" excommunication, along with those who assisted her in the process. Because of this excommunication, the sin of abortion can normally only be absolved by a bishop, or certain priests appointed by him. For specific occasions such as Advent or Lent, some bishops extend this faculty to all priests within their diocese. In the U.S., the faculty to absolve abortion has already been delegated to all priests. However, the Pope’s new provisions take it to a universal level. In his new apostolic letter, Pope Francis also extended his decree allowing SSPX priests to hear valid confessions. He noted how during the Jubilee, he allowed “that those faithful who, for various reasons, attend churches officiated by the priests of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X, can validly and licitly receive the sacramental absolution of their sins.” “For the pastoral benefit of these faithful, and trusting in the good will of their priests to strive with God’s help for the recovery of full communion in the Catholic Church, I have personally decided to extend this faculty beyond the Jubilee Year, until further provisions are made, lest anyone ever be deprived of the sacramental sign of reconciliation through the Church’s pardon.” The Society of St. Pius X was founded by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre in 1970 to form priests, as a response to what he described as errors that had crept into the Church following the Second Vatican Council. Its relations with the Holy See became strained in 1988 when Archbishop Lefebvre consecrated four bishops without the permission of Pope John Paul II. The illicit consecration resulted in the excommunication of the five bishops; the excommunications were lifted in 2009 by Benedict XVI, and since then, negotiations between the Society and the Vatican to re-establish full communion have continued. Pope Francis has taken several steps to move forward on the path of full unification with the SSPX Society, including the offer of a personal prelature, which is a Church jurisdiction without geographical boundaries designed to carry out particular pastoral initiatives. At present, the only personal prelature in the Church is Opus Dei. However, the SSPX Society has so far rejected this proposal. As another sign of his push for this emphasis on mercy to continue beyond the Jubilee, Francis also extended the special faculties given to the Missionaries of Mercy. On Ash Wednesday more than 1,000 priests were sent out around the world as ambassadors of mercy. Selected from every continent, the Missionaries of Mercy placed a special emphasis on their role as preachers and confessors. They were given two special faculties that are usually unavailable to the average priest, the first being that they were not limited in geographic location in terms of hearing confessions. Usually a priest has to ask permission from the local bishop before hearing confessions in a diocese other than their own, however for the Missionaries of Mercy that was not the case. A second aspect of the Missionaries' mission was that they were able to absolve sins in cases otherwise reserved to the Holy See. Though there are several such sins, the Holy See clarified that the faculties of the Missionaries of Mercy were limited to just four: Profaning the Eucharistic species by taking them away or keeping them for a sacrilegious purpose; the use of physical force against the Roman Pontiff; the absolution of an accomplice in a sin against the Sixth Commandment (“thou shalt not commit adultery”) and a direct violation against the sacramental seal by a confessor. Bishops were encouraged to contact Missionaries of Mercy in nearby dioceses and invite them to come to their own. In his letter, the Pope thanked the missionaries for their “valuable service aimed at rendering effective the grace of forgiveness.” “This extraordinary ministry does not end with the closing of the Holy Door,” he said, voicing his desire for their ministry “to continue until further notice as a concrete sign that the grace of the Jubilee remains alive and effective the world over.” As a “direct expression of my concern and proximity” to the Missionaries, Pope Francis said the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of the New Evangelization will oversee them and “find the most suitable forms for the exercise of this valuable ministry.” Francis stressed in his letter that “this is the time of mercy. Each day of our journey is marked by God’s presence.” “It is the time of mercy for each and all, since no one can think that he or she is cut off from God’s closeness and the power of his tender love,” he said, and pointed especially to those who are weak, vulnerable and excluded. He said it is also a special time of mercy for them “because the poor should feel that they are regarded with respect and concern by others who have overcome indifference and discovered what is essential in life.” Francis said that during the special Nov. 11-13 Jubilee for the Socially Excluded, as all Holy Doors around the world apart from that of St Peter's Basilica were closing, “I had the idea that, as yet another tangible sign of this Extraordinary Holy Year, the entire Church might celebrate, on the Thirty-Third Sunday of Ordinary Time, the World Day of the Poor.” “This would be the worthiest way to prepare for the celebration of the Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe, who identified with the little ones and the poor and who will judge us on our works of mercy,” he said, adding that the day would also help both communities and individuals “to reflect on how poverty is at the very heart of the Gospel and that, as long as Lazarus lies at the door of our homes, there can be no justice or social peace.”   “This Day will also represent a genuine form of new evangelization which can renew the face of the Church as She perseveres in her perennial activity of pastoral conversion and witness to mercy,” he said. Francis noted that during “an intense” Jubilee Year, “we have received the grace of mercy in abundance.” “Because each of us has experienced at length this loving gaze of God, we cannot remain unaffected, for it changes our lives,” he said, encouraging all to become witnesses of mercy. The Jubilee, he said, “has truly been like a new visitation of the Lord among us.” He placed a strong emphasis on the top of forgiveness throughout the document, as well as the need to look forward and continue the Jubilee path “with joy, fidelity and enthusiasm, experiencing the richness of God’s mercy.” Mercy ought to be “celebrated,” he said, above all in the liturgy and in the Sacraments, particularly those of penance and the anointing of the sick, as well as in scripture and, for priests, in their homilies. He spoke of the importance of showing compassion and consolation to others, and offered a special word of closeness to families and married couples amid the various challenges they face. “We have to remember each of us carries the richness and the burdens of our personal history; this is what makes us different from everyone else,” he said. “Our life, with its joys and sorrows, is something unique and unrepeatable that takes place under the merciful gaze of God.” Pope Francis also spoke of the importance of mercy at the time of death, which is often trivialized “to the point of treating it as an illusion or hiding it from sight.” “Yet death must be faced and prepared for as a painful and inescapable passage, yet one charged with immense meaning, for it is the ultimate act of love towards those we leave behind and towards God whom we go forth to meet,” he said, and emphasized the importance of the priest in sharing in this moment. He also placed a strong emphasis on practicing the corporal and spiritual works of mercy, which he said are “proof of mercy’s immense positive influence as a social value” in modern society. Mercy, he said, “impels us to roll up our sleeves and set about restoring dignity to millions of people; they are our brothers and sisters who, with us, are called to build a city which is reliable.” While many signs of mercy were carried out during the Jubilee, “this is not enough,” he said. “Our world continues to create new forms of spiritual and material poverty that assault human dignity.” Because of this, “the Church must always be vigilant and ready to identify new works of mercy and to practise them with generosity and enthusiasm.” Francis encouraged the faithful to “make every effort” to come up with both “specific and responsible” ways of practising charity and the works of mercy. “Mercy is inclusive and tends to expand in a way that knows no limits. Hence we are called to give new expression to the traditional works of mercy,” he said. He closed his letter by looking to Mary, “who always looks upon us with her eyes of mercy.” “Let us trust in her maternal assistance and follow her perennial counsel to look to Jesus, the radiant face of God’s mercy.”   Read more

2016-11-20T16:29:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 20, 2016 / 09:29 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis still remembers his meeting with a former prostitute who had suffered much. In a new interview, the Pope recalled the time he met with a young pregnant woman from Africa who was “beautiful, young (and) exploited.” In telling her story, the woman said she was forced to work until she was nine months pregnant. She ended up giving birth “in the winter on the street. Alone. By myself,” Francis recalled her saying. Her newborn daughter, exposed to the cold, died. This added to the woman’s suffering. “They made her work until that day, because if she didn’t bring the exploiters much, she was beaten, even tortured,” the Pope said. He recalled that another woman he met in the community had her ear cut off because she didn’t bring enough money back for her traffickers. Pope Francis said that when he heard these stories, he didn’t just think of the exploiters, but also the clients. “Do they not know that with that money, to take off for sexual satisfaction, they helped the exploiters?” he asked. His meeting with the ex-prostitutes happened in an Aug. 12 visit to women rescued from forced prostitution and under the care of the Pope John XXIII Community in Rome. The Pope recounted the meeting in an interview with TV2000 published Sunday, Nov. 20 to coincide with the end of the Catholic Church’s Year of Mercy. During the Year of Mercy, the pontiff had made a habit of “Mercy Friday” encounters with others. He told interviewers his meeting with rescued ex-prostitutes had a particular impact on him. For the Pope, another particularly striking encounter was the day he went to visit people at the beginning and at the end of life, when he traveled to a residence for the terminally ill, as well as to a neonatal unit of Rome’s San Giovanni hospital. When he arrived at the maternity ward of the hospital, the Pope recalled seeing a mother “who cried and cried and cried in front of her two twins.” She originally had three babies, but one of them had died. “She cried for her dead son, while caressing the other two,” the Pope said, explaining that his mind immediately turned to the attitude of some who “send away” their children before birth. This is a “horrible crime,” he said, recounting false justifications for abortion: “they send them away because ‘it’s better like this,’ because you are more comfortable, it’s ‘a big responsibility’.” He again stressed that this is “a serious sin.” Despite still having her other two children, the woman “cried for the one who died, unable to be consoled,” he said. He added that these visits stayed on his mind. Pope Francis' 40-minute video interview with journalists Paolo Ruffini and Lucio Brunelli of TV2000 touched on a variety of topics, including the fruits of the Jubilee of Mercy, papal temptations, the importance of having a good sense of humor and how he deals with stress. He said the Year of Mercy’s celebration in every diocese of the world universalized it. “It was the entire Church who lived this Jubilee, it was like a Jubilee atmosphere,” he said, noting how he heard news from dioceses around the world telling stories of people drawing closer to the Church and strengthening their personal encounter with Jesus. The Jubilee, he said, was “a blessing from the Lord” and “a great step forward.” He credited his predecessors Bl. Paul VI, who began the Jubilee Year tradition, and St. John Paul II, “who put a very strong accent on mercy.” “It planted a lot of seeds,” he said, crediting spiritual growth to God. “I think that the Lord will grow good things, simple, daily, in the lives of people,” rather than through spectacles, he said. When asked about a comment he had made saying “the human attitude closest to divine grace is humor,” Francis said having a good sense of humor is a grace that he asks for every day. He said he prays the same prayer of St. Thomas More: “Give me, Lord, a sense of humor,” so that he “knows how to laugh ahead of a fight.” A good sense of humor “lifts you,” he said, and allows you to see things with a renewed perspective. The Pope also cautioned against having an attitude of rigidity, as well as an attitude of hypocrisy. Pointing to the Sermon on the Mount from the Gospels, Francis noted that it ends with Jesus saying “be merciful like the Father,” which was the theme of the Jubilee. God’s justice and mercy were intertwined, he explained. “It doesn’t say: be just like the Father,” he noted, but stressed that “it’s the same! The justice and mercy of God are one thing. Mercy is justice and justice is mercy. And they cannot be separated.”  Another interview topic was the temptations a Pope faces. Francis said they are “the temptations of any person, of any man,” according to the weakness of their own personality. The devil always uses these weaknesses to enter, he said, naming impatience, egoism and “a bit of laziness” as examples. The saints were also tempted, but went to Jesus and placed their trust in him for help. Pope Francis was also asked what bothered him most: the insults of his critics versus the false admiration of flatterers. His immediate response was “the second. I am allergic to flatterers. I have an allergy.” This allergy “comes to me naturally,” he said, because “to flatter another is to use the person for a purpose...to get something for oneself.” On the topic of stress, the Pope said that even though he frequently feels tired, he has a way to keep his stress level down: “I pray: that helps me a lot.” Celebrating Mass, praying the rosary and the Liturgy of the Hours as well as simply speaking freely with the Lord are all things the Pope said help him to stay calm and balanced. The Pope has another way to relive stress. “I sleep well,” he said, deeming this “a grace from the Lord.” “I sleep like a log,” he said. Francis confessed that he has his aches and pains like everyone else, such as his sciatica, but sleeping well helps with his health. The interview then turned to various conflicts throughout the world. The Pope considered how the virtue of mercy could be lived better at the political level among States. In response, Francis again spoke against the arms trade and drug trafficking. He repeated his previous references to a piecemeal “Third World War” underway throughout the world. He said the world needs a heightened sense of tenderness capable of “caressing the flesh of the suffering Christ” to overcome this violence. Read more



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