2016-06-11T17:56:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 11, 2016 / 11:56 am (CNA/EWTN News).- No single person is more valuable than another, especially when it comes to those with disabilities, Pope Francis said on Saturday,, insisting that these people have a unique richness, and that discriminating against them is “one of the ugliest things” we can do. When asked by a young woman named Serena, 25 and in a wheelchair, why some disabled people aren’t able to receive Communion or go to Mass like other members of their parish, the Pope said the question touches on “one of the ugliest things among us: discrimination. It’s a very ugly thing.” To say that “you aren’t like me, you go over there” or that it’s not possible to receive catechesis because “this parish is for those who are the same, without differences,” is one of the worst things that can happen. Francis, who spoke off-the-cuff, said that if a priest does this to someone, he must “convert,” because having diversity doesn’t mean someone “with five senses that function well is better than one who is blind and deaf. No, that’s not true.” “We all have the same ability to grow, to go forward, to love the Lord, to do good things, to understand Christian doctrine. We all have the same capacity to receive the sacraments.” While it’s true that a good formation is needed if someone wants to receive the Eucharist, there ought to be a way for those with disabilities to receive the same preparation as everyone else, he said. For example, if a person is deaf, there must be “the opportunity in that parish to prepare yourself with sign language. It’s important.” Pope Francis spoke to several hundred disabled persons and their caregivers June 11 as part of a conference organized by the Department of Catechesis for Disabled Persons of the Italian National Office of Catechesis in honor of the 25th anniversary of their founding. The conference, titled “…and you will always eat at my table!”, coincided with the June 10-12 Jubilee for the Sick and Disabled currently taking place as part of the wider Jubilee of Mercy. Francis told participants that a world in which everyone is the same “would be boring,” and that diversity is a gift. He tossed his prepared text aside, jesting that “as we all know, to read a speech is also a bit boring, right?” He then took three questions from people in the audience. The first was from a woman named Lavinia, who spoke about the fear that often comes when associating with people who have disabilities. In his response, the Pope stressed that “we are all different. There is not one equal to the other,” and that the fear of meeting a person who is different from us comes because it presents us with a challenge. “It’s a challenge. It's more comfortable to stay still, to ignore diversity and pretend that we’re all equal,” he said, noting that while every challenge brings about some sort of fear, diversity “is a richness,” because each person is able to give something to the other. “I have something, you have another,  and together we have something bigger and more beautiful. This is how we go forward.” Francis admitted that while some differences among individuals have painful causes rooted in illness, these also enrich, because they challenge us and help us to overcome our fears. “We should never be afraid of diversity,” he said, explaining that in order for this to happen we must learn how to connect with the things that we have in common. A concrete gesture that can get us started on this path, he said, is “extending the hand.” “When I extend my hand, I put in common what I have and what you have. If someone extends their hand sincerely, I give you what is mine and you give me what is yours.” Pope Francis also took a question from a priest, Fr. Luigi, who is in charge of catechesis in a parish in the south of Rome, on how to teach parish communities to welcome and listen to everyone who comes to them. In his answer, Francis stressed the importance of welcoming everyone, without exception. If a priest doesn’t do this, “what advice would the Pope give?” he asked, saying the answer would be to “Please, close the doors of the parish – either everyone, or no one!” The role of the priest, assisted by the laity and catechists, is to ensure that everyone truly understands the faith, understands love and how to get along, even amid differences, he said. He also stressed the importance of what he called “the pastoral of the ears,” meaning to listen. While the Church does a lot of good things in her pastoral work, this is one thing everyone, but especially priests, “must do more.” Even though the stories might get old, it’s not the same person telling them, he said, adding that “the Lord is in the heart of every person, and you must have the patience to listen, to welcome and to listen to everyone.” In his answer to the third question, posed by Serena, the Pope noted how disabled people are frequently discriminated against, even with “offensive words,” and insisted that this shouldn’t happen. While some parish priests might say they are denying catechesis or the necessary formation to receive the sacraments to a disabled people because they aren’t able to understand, this is no excuse, Francis said. “Each one of us has a different way of understanding things…but each of us has the ability to know God,” he said, and pointed to St. Pius X’s decision in 1910 to allow children aged 7 and older to receive Holy Communion. “Many were scandalized” by the decision, saying that children weren’t able to understand the mystery of the sacrament, Francis observed. However, St. Pius X “did something different, an equality, because he knew that children understood in a different way.” Each person has their own unique richness that is different from everyone else’s, he said, but noted that in the Mass and in the sacraments,  everyone is  equal because we all have Christ and we all have the same mother, Mary. Pope Francis then thanked those present for coming, and asked for prayers. He led the group in reciting the Hail Mary before spending several minutes greeting the elderly and disabled in the first few rows of the auditorium. Read more

2016-06-11T17:56:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 11, 2016 / 11:56 am (CNA/EWTN News).- No single person is more valuable than another, especially when it comes to those with disabilities, Pope Francis said on Saturday,, insisting that these people have a unique richness, and that discriminating against them is “one of the ugliest things” we can do. When asked by a young woman named Serena, 25 and in a wheelchair, why some disabled people aren’t able to receive Communion or go to Mass like other members of their parish, the Pope said the question touches on “one of the ugliest things among us: discrimination. It’s a very ugly thing.” To say that “you aren’t like me, you go over there” or that it’s not possible to receive catechesis because “this parish is for those who are the same, without differences,” is one of the worst things that can happen. Francis, who spoke off-the-cuff, said that if a priest does this to someone, he must “convert,” because having diversity doesn’t mean someone “with five senses that function well is better than one who is blind and deaf. No, that’s not true.” “We all have the same ability to grow, to go forward, to love the Lord, to do good things, to understand Christian doctrine. We all have the same capacity to receive the sacraments.” While it’s true that a good formation is needed if someone wants to receive the Eucharist, there ought to be a way for those with disabilities to receive the same preparation as everyone else, he said. For example, if a person is deaf, there must be “the opportunity in that parish to prepare yourself with sign language. It’s important.” Pope Francis spoke to several hundred disabled persons and their caregivers June 11 as part of a conference organized by the Department of Catechesis for Disabled Persons of the Italian National Office of Catechesis in honor of the 25th anniversary of their founding. The conference, titled “…and you will always eat at my table!”, coincided with the June 10-12 Jubilee for the Sick and Disabled currently taking place as part of the wider Jubilee of Mercy. Francis told participants that a world in which everyone is the same “would be boring,” and that diversity is a gift. He tossed his prepared text aside, jesting that “as we all know, to read a speech is also a bit boring, right?” He then took three questions from people in the audience. The first was from a woman named Lavinia, who spoke about the fear that often comes when associating with people who have disabilities. In his response, the Pope stressed that “we are all different. There is not one equal to the other,” and that the fear of meeting a person who is different from us comes because it presents us with a challenge. “It’s a challenge. It's more comfortable to stay still, to ignore diversity and pretend that we’re all equal,” he said, noting that while every challenge brings about some sort of fear, diversity “is a richness,” because each person is able to give something to the other. “I have something, you have another,  and together we have something bigger and more beautiful. This is how we go forward.” Francis admitted that while some differences among individuals have painful causes rooted in illness, these also enrich, because they challenge us and help us to overcome our fears. “We should never be afraid of diversity,” he said, explaining that in order for this to happen we must learn how to connect with the things that we have in common. A concrete gesture that can get us started on this path, he said, is “extending the hand.” “When I extend my hand, I put in common what I have and what you have. If someone extends their hand sincerely, I give you what is mine and you give me what is yours.” Pope Francis also took a question from a priest, Fr. Luigi, who is in charge of catechesis in a parish in the south of Rome, on how to teach parish communities to welcome and listen to everyone who comes to them. In his answer, Francis stressed the importance of welcoming everyone, without exception. If a priest doesn’t do this, “what advice would the Pope give?” he asked, saying the answer would be to “Please, close the doors of the parish – either everyone, or no one!” The role of the priest, assisted by the laity and catechists, is to ensure that everyone truly understands the faith, understands love and how to get along, even amid differences, he said. He also stressed the importance of what he called “the pastoral of the ears,” meaning to listen. While the Church does a lot of good things in her pastoral work, this is one thing everyone, but especially priests, “must do more.” Even though the stories might get old, it’s not the same person telling them, he said, adding that “the Lord is in the heart of every person, and you must have the patience to listen, to welcome and to listen to everyone.” In his answer to the third question, posed by Serena, the Pope noted how disabled people are frequently discriminated against, even with “offensive words,” and insisted that this shouldn’t happen. While some parish priests might say they are denying catechesis or the necessary formation to receive the sacraments to a disabled people because they aren’t able to understand, this is no excuse, Francis said. “Each one of us has a different way of understanding things…but each of us has the ability to know God,” he said, and pointed to St. Pius X’s decision in 1910 to allow children aged 7 and older to receive Holy Communion. “Many were scandalized” by the decision, saying that children weren’t able to understand the mystery of the sacrament, Francis observed. However, St. Pius X “did something different, an equality, because he knew that children understood in a different way.” Each person has their own unique richness that is different from everyone else’s, he said, but noted that in the Mass and in the sacraments,  everyone is  equal because we all have Christ and we all have the same mother, Mary. Pope Francis then thanked those present for coming, and asked for prayers. He led the group in reciting the Hail Mary before spending several minutes greeting the elderly and disabled in the first few rows of the auditorium. Read more

2016-06-11T15:37:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Jun 11, 2016 / 09:37 am (CNA).- Young women and religious sisters from around the country are gathering in Washington, D.C. to discover and share their unique talents, training them to use those gifts for the good of the Church and of ... Read more

2016-06-11T12:48:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 11, 2016 / 06:48 am (CNA/EWTN News).- As thousands of young people prepare to hit Krakow in July for World Youth Day, the race to spread the word about the event is well underway, with organizers turning to social media as a primary platform in conveying the message of a very “sharable” Pope Francis. “Francis is a digital Pope because he’s physical. He has a corporeality, a physicality which is expressed very well with his body posture, with the gestures he does, with his facial expressions,” Fr. Antonio Spadaro, SJ, told CNA. The Pope's words are tangibly expressed through his actions, the priest said, noting that this “physicality” emerges on social media “almost with, I would say, powerfulness.” Pope Francis “doesn’t speak with complex speeches,” but rather in simple phrases, “and these are very easily tweetable and shareable. It’s a message which circulates in networks very easily.” Fr. Spadaro, editor of the Jesuit journal La Civiltà Cattolica, will be among some 70 journalists traveling to Krakow on board the papal plane with Francis for his appearance at World Youth Day. A veteran in covering papal trips, Fr. Spadaro said an increasing emphasis on social media was already seen in the 2011 World Youth Day in Madrid, and that the social dimension of this year’s encounter “will be a very important moment to hold in consideration.” Jamie Lynn Black, a young American working in English on the International Media Team for WYD in Krakow, told CNA that social media “is one of the main ways we communicate the message of WYD.” With a team of volunteers based in Krakow and individual volunteers working remotely throughout the world, the team is currently interacting in 20 languages. Gustavo Huguenin, social media coordinator for this year’s WYD event, told CNA that as July draws nearer, “we have intensified our work to inform pilgrims, engage Catholic audience, and attract new followers to discover this amazing experience.” In terms of platforms, the social media team has already gone digital on 11 different social networks: Facebook, Twitter, Periscope, Youtube, Flickr, Instagram, Snapchat, Tumblr, Foursquare, Pinterest, and Soundcloud. While not all of the networks are available in each of the 20 working languages, Facebook features the entire palate. Among the languages available are Arabic, Croatian, Czech, Hungarian, Japanese, Maltese, Filipino, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Ukrainian and Vietnamese. Black, a native of Philadelphia, said her experience with WYD stems back to a meaningful experience she had in the 2002 gathering in Toronto with St. John Paul II, which had a strong impact on her faith. Fast forward to 2015, when she was finishing up graduate studies in communications at Rome’s Pontifical University of the Holy Cross. Black was given the opportunity to coordinate international media for the Pope’s visit to Philadelphia for the World Meeting of Families, and through that experience was able to jump on board with the WYD Krakow team. She estimates that “as many as 2.5 million pilgrims” could make their way to Krakow in July, and that social media will be a primary way for the youth to share memories and special moments with friends and family. However, Black also noted that there are many youth who will not be able to make it to the encounter, so social media “is the perfect way not just to inform them about what is happening here but to include them in the dialogue and the experience.” “We also hope that social media will help us to spread the message of WYD and of Pope Francis, his message of mercy, to those who many not have otherwise known about our event,” she said. For his part, Huguenin explained that the international media team will be keeping an eye out for anything published on the Pope Francis’ own social media accounts, in order to promote how the Pope himself “talks with young people in the digital world.” “We will share all messages about WYD and create content inspired by that,” he said, and told those following the coverage to keep an eye out for the hashtag “#krakow2016,” which is the official tag being used by the WYD communications team. In terms of using social media as a means of evangelization, Fr. Spadaro said that rather than being an “instrument,” the networks actually build their own digital “environment.” “The network is not an instrument to use for an end, but a life environment in which one’s own reflections, images of one’s life, dialogue between people, are shared,” he said, noting that these can be used for both good and bad purposes. “So we need to go out from the mentality of the use of social networks and enter that of living evangelically the digital environment…I think that the Church is called to be there where the people are: today people are on social media so the Church is called to be on social media and not to use it.” Read more

2016-06-11T12:48:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 11, 2016 / 06:48 am (CNA/EWTN News).- As thousands of young people prepare to hit Krakow in July for World Youth Day, the race to spread the word about the event is well underway, with organizers turning to social media as a primary platform in conveying the message of a very “sharable” Pope Francis. “Francis is a digital Pope because he’s physical. He has a corporeality, a physicality which is expressed very well with his body posture, with the gestures he does, with his facial expressions,” Fr. Antonio Spadaro, SJ, told CNA. The Pope's words are tangibly expressed through his actions, the priest said, noting that this “physicality” emerges on social media “almost with, I would say, powerfulness.” Pope Francis “doesn’t speak with complex speeches,” but rather in simple phrases, “and these are very easily tweetable and shareable. It’s a message which circulates in networks very easily.” Fr. Spadaro, editor of the Jesuit journal La Civiltà Cattolica, will be among some 70 journalists traveling to Krakow on board the papal plane with Francis for his appearance at World Youth Day. A veteran in covering papal trips, Fr. Spadaro said an increasing emphasis on social media was already seen in the 2011 World Youth Day in Madrid, and that the social dimension of this year’s encounter “will be a very important moment to hold in consideration.” Jamie Lynn Black, a young American working in English on the International Media Team for WYD in Krakow, told CNA that social media “is one of the main ways we communicate the message of WYD.” With a team of volunteers based in Krakow and individual volunteers working remotely throughout the world, the team is currently interacting in 20 languages. Gustavo Huguenin, social media coordinator for this year’s WYD event, told CNA that as July draws nearer, “we have intensified our work to inform pilgrims, engage Catholic audience, and attract new followers to discover this amazing experience.” In terms of platforms, the social media team has already gone digital on 11 different social networks: Facebook, Twitter, Periscope, Youtube, Flickr, Instagram, Snapchat, Tumblr, Foursquare, Pinterest, and Soundcloud. While not all of the networks are available in each of the 20 working languages, Facebook features the entire palate. Among the languages available are Arabic, Croatian, Czech, Hungarian, Japanese, Maltese, Filipino, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Ukrainian and Vietnamese. Black, a native of Philadelphia, said her experience with WYD stems back to a meaningful experience she had in the 2002 gathering in Toronto with St. John Paul II, which had a strong impact on her faith. Fast forward to 2015, when she was finishing up graduate studies in communications at Rome’s Pontifical University of the Holy Cross. Black was given the opportunity to coordinate international media for the Pope’s visit to Philadelphia for the World Meeting of Families, and through that experience was able to jump on board with the WYD Krakow team. She estimates that “as many as 2.5 million pilgrims” could make their way to Krakow in July, and that social media will be a primary way for the youth to share memories and special moments with friends and family. However, Black also noted that there are many youth who will not be able to make it to the encounter, so social media “is the perfect way not just to inform them about what is happening here but to include them in the dialogue and the experience.” “We also hope that social media will help us to spread the message of WYD and of Pope Francis, his message of mercy, to those who many not have otherwise known about our event,” she said. For his part, Huguenin explained that the international media team will be keeping an eye out for anything published on the Pope Francis’ own social media accounts, in order to promote how the Pope himself “talks with young people in the digital world.” “We will share all messages about WYD and create content inspired by that,” he said, and told those following the coverage to keep an eye out for the hashtag “#krakow2016,” which is the official tag being used by the WYD communications team. In terms of using social media as a means of evangelization, Fr. Spadaro said that rather than being an “instrument,” the networks actually build their own digital “environment.” “The network is not an instrument to use for an end, but a life environment in which one’s own reflections, images of one’s life, dialogue between people, are shared,” he said, noting that these can be used for both good and bad purposes. “So we need to go out from the mentality of the use of social networks and enter that of living evangelically the digital environment…I think that the Church is called to be there where the people are: today people are on social media so the Church is called to be on social media and not to use it.” Read more

2016-06-11T12:14:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Jun 11, 2016 / 06:14 am (CNA).- After U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan announced a task force on poverty this, Catholic leaders and economists weighed in, saying that it was a good starting point, but that more needed to be done. Archbish... Read more

2016-06-11T12:14:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Jun 11, 2016 / 06:14 am (CNA).- After U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan announced a task force on poverty this, Catholic leaders and economists weighed in, saying that it was a good starting point, but that more needed to be done. Archbish... Read more

2016-06-10T20:13:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 10, 2016 / 02:13 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Physician-assisted suicide is part of a “throwaway culture” that offers a “false compassion” and treats a human person as a problem, Pope Francis told medical leaders on Th... Read more

2016-07-22T09:57:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jul 22, 2016 / 03:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Faithful to the wish of Pope Francis, a new decree has bumped the liturgical celebration honoring St. Mary Magdalene from a memorial to a feast, putting her on par with the apostles. The reason, ... Read more

2016-06-10T12:12:00+00:00

Santiago, Chile, Jun 10, 2016 / 06:12 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Saturday, June 4, right around lunch time, Chilean priest Father Francisco Rencoret Mujica received an unexpected call. The 35-year-old priest, who is suffering from metastasized lung cancer, received encouragement in the form of a surprise phone call from Pope Francis. Fr. Rencoret, who was studying Canon Law at the Gregorian University in Rome, returned to Chile this year to treat his illness. At first, his mother said, she thought the phone call was from a Spanish priest, Father Arturo, who called frequently to inquire about the state of her son’s health. “Hello, Father Arturo,” she recalled saying. “It's not Fr. Arturo, it's the Holy Father. Yes, it's His Holiness, it's the pope!” Then his father, Gustavo joined the conversation. Quite moved, he said that they had a photograph of Pope Francis in their home. Fr. Rencoret explained to CNA that the reason for the call was to “inquire about my health, to tell me that he was praying for me, to give me a lot of support, encouragement and the love of the Church.” Among other topics of conversation, the diocesan priest recalled to the Pope that on the day that the 2015 Synod on the Family closed at the Vatican, he had given the Pope a portrait that he had made of the pontiff’s parents. Before ending their conversation, the priest told the Holy Father that he is “offering some of my pains for his vocation, difficulties and sorrows” and that they were “very much in communion because God is in fact merciful.” He described the phone call as “beautiful, surprising, moving.” The contact between Pope Francis and Fr. Rencoret came about after the former extraordinary ambassador and plenipotentiary of Chile to the Holy See, Mónica Jiménez, asked the Pope to give the priest a call. Fr. Rencoret lives in Santiago with his parents and is praying to Servant of God Pope John Paul I for “his healing and salvation.” “He's been my friend since childhood. My dad had on his nightstand a book called Ilustrísimos Señores, and in the seminary I read his discourses while he was pope. I saw the film 'God's Smile' and I went to see him (where he is buried) when I came to Rome,” the priest recalled. Fr. Rencoret is the fourth of five children. He graduated from law school in 2005 and that same year entered the Pontifical Seminary in Santiago de Chile. He was ordained a priest on April 13, 2013 and has stayed connected with the Divine Word School, where he studied. Read more




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