Tag: pope

  • Easter: Pope prays, begs God to end church scandals, global killings

    Easter: Pope prays, begs God to end church scandals, global killings

    Head of the Catholic Church worldwide, Pope Francis, at Good Friday service, asked God for forgiveness for scandals in the Church and for the “shame” of humanity.

    He referred to daily scenes of bombed cities and drowning migrants.

    Francis presided at a traditional candlelight Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) service at Rome’s Colosseum attended by some 20,000 people and protected by heavy security following recent attacks in European cities.

    Francis sat while a large wooden cross was carried in procession, stopping 14 times to mark events in the last hours of Jesus’ life from being sentenced to death to his burial.

    At the end of the two-hour service, Francis read a prayer he wrote that was woven around the theme of shame and hope, Reuters reports.

    In reference to the Church’s sexual abuse scandal, he spoke of “shame for all the times that we bishops, priests, brothers and nuns scandalized and wounded your body, the Church.”

    Francis lamented “the daily spilling of the innocent blood of women, of children, of immigrants” and prayed for those who are persecuted because of their race, social status or religious beliefs.

    He spoke of “shame for all the scenes of devastation, destruction and drownings that have become ordinary in our lives.”

    Francis expressed the hope “that good will triumph despite its apparent defeat.”

    In 2017 alone, more than 650 migrants have died (or are unaccounted for) while trying to cross the sea.

     

  • Pope ahead of Easter: ‘Violence is no cure for our broken world’

    Pope Francis issued a fresh appeal for world peace on Thursday, in an interview published hours before he was due to perform the pre-Easter ritual of washing prison inmates’ feet.

    After leading a mass in St Peter’s Basilica, Francis was scheduled to visit Paliano prison, about 75 km south-east of Rome.

    In previous years, the pope washed feet in a juvenile prison, a centre for the disabled, a high-security jail and a refugee centre.

    “All I want is to call even more strongly for peace for this world subjugated by arm traffickers who profit from the blood of men and women,” Francis told Italian newspaper La Repubblica.

    “Violence is no cure for our broken world,” he added.

    The washing of the feet recalls the gesture that Christians believe Jesus performed on the 12 apostles before the Last Supper. It shows that the man the apostles saw as their leader was capable of the most humble act.

    Francis said the Catholic Church’s duty should be to “stand by the last in line, the marginalized, the discarded,” and added that convicts should not be judged too harshly because “we are all sinners, but Jesus forgives us with his mercy.”

    Easter, falling on Sunday, celebrates the resurrection of Jesus and is the most important Christian holiday.

    In the run-up to it, Francis is scheduled to preside over the traditional Via Crucis (Way of the Cross) procession on Friday, and lead an Easter vigil on Saturday.

  • Pope to visit South Sudan with Anglican leader

    Pope Francis said he wants to make a trip to South Sudan together with the head of the Anglican Church to bring attention to the suffering of people stricken by civil war and famine.

    Francis made the disclosure in impromptu comments during a visit to Rome’s Anglican church, the first to the parish by a pope, to mark the 200th anniversary of its opening.

    “My aides and I are studying the possibility of a trip to South Sudan,” the pope said in response to a question about Christian Churches in Africa.

    He recalled that in October 2016 the Catholic, Episcopalian and Presbyterian bishops came to Rome to discuss the situation in their country and invited him to visit.

    Francis said they told him “but don’t come alone, come with Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury”. Welby is spiritual head of the worldwide Anglican communion, which counts about 85 million members and is the world’s third-largest Christian denomination.

    “The situation is a bit ugly down there but we have to do it because the three of them (the local bishops from different churches) together want peace and they are working together for peace,” Francis said.

    Oil-producing South Sudan, which became independent in 2011, descended into civil war in December 2013 when a dispute between President Salva Kiir and his sacked deputy Riek Machar ended with fighting, often occurring along ethnic lines.

    Both sides have targeted civilians, human rights groups say.

    Kiir’s government declared a famine in some part of the country last week.

    South Sudan has been hit by the same east African drought that has pushed Somalia back to the brink of famine, six years after 260,000 people starved to death in 2011.

    Francis said the trip would likely last just one day, which Vatican sources have said would be for security reasons.

    Francis gave no indication when it could take place but sources have said it would be this year.

    The Anglican and Roman Catholic Churches have been split since 1534 when King Henry VIII broke with Rome to start the Church of England.
    President

    NAN reports that the UN says it has been unable to reach some of the worst hit areas because of the insecurity.

    South Sudan has been hit by the same east African drought that has pushed Somalia back to the brink of famine, six years after 260,000 people starved to death in 2011.

    The UN children’s agency UNICEF on Tuesday said nearly 1.4 million children were at “imminent” risk of death in famines in South Sudan, Somalia and Yemen .

     

    NAN

  • Celibacy should be scrapped, we are dying of loneliness – Catholic priests tells pope

    Celibacy should be scrapped, we are dying of loneliness – Catholic priests tells pope

     

    A group of senior priests in Germany has called on the Roman Catholic Church to end the celibacy rule in priesthood.

    The 11 high ranking clerics, who were ordained in Cologne in 1967, are of the opinion that every man should have the right to choose to take the vow or not as other Protestant and Orthodox Church pastors have

    They wrote the letter as part of a review of their 50 years in the Catholic Church.

    A group member Franz Decker told DW, “We believe that requiring that every man who becomes a priest to remain celibate is not acceptable.

    We think, every Catholic should be allowed to choose if they would rather be celibate or not, regardless of whether they want to work as priests or not – just like in the Protestant Church or the Orthodox church, really, every church but the Catholic Church.”

    To the group, celibacy causes many modern priests to suffer from seclusion and believe the men have little to gain from church-imposed solitude.

    What moves us is the experience of loneliness – as elderly people who are unmarried because our office required this from us, we feel it vividly on some days after 50 years on the job. We agreed to this clerical life because of our jobs, but we didn’t choose it,” the group wrote.

    They also gave a number of suggestions as to how the Catholic Church could “modernise”, including allowing women to join the clergy.

    However, the office of Pope Francis is yet to react to the open letter

     

  • Pope Francis warns about scammers selling tickets to papal event

    Pope Francis on Wednesday warned Catholics against “scammers” trying to sell tickets to his weekly general audience, the Vatican said in a statement.

    “One does not have to pay for access to the audience,” the leader of the Catholic Church said.

    “You need tickets to attend the audience, and on these tickets it says in one, two, three, four, five and six languages that the ticket is entirely free of charge,” the pontiff said.

    “But it has come to my attention that there are some smooth operators who charge for the tickets.

    “If anyone says you must pay to attend the audience with the pope, it’s a scam and if anyone gets paid to let you into the audience, they are committing a crime”.

    Francis explained admission was free because the 6,300-seat Paul VI Audience Hall, where he conducts his weekly general audience, was everyone’s home.

    The Wednesday-morning audience is sometimes held in St Peter’s Square, and is usually attended by thousands of faithful from Italy and around the world.

  • Pope turns down early 80th birthday wishes, says ‘it bring bad luck’

    Pope turns down early 80th birthday wishes, says ‘it bring bad luck’

    Pope Francis on Wednesday quipped that people should not send him early birthday wishes because, in his native Argentina, doing so brings bad luck.

    Francis turns 80 on Saturday for the occasion; the Vatican has opened seven email accounts that can receive birthday messages in Latin, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, English, French, German and Polish.

    “I thank you all for the wishes for my upcoming birthday, thanks a lot.

    “ But let me tell you something that will make you laugh: In my country early birthday wishes bring bad luck,’’ the pontiff said during his weekly audience.

    Meeting the faithful in the Vatican’s Paul VI’s hall, Francis was presented with a cake from a woman.

    It had two lit candles, one in the shape of an “8” and another in the shape of a “0” the pope blew them out.