El Papa envía medicinas a las víctimas del terremoto de Turquía

Por Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO (CNS) — El Papa Francisco envió productos farmacéuticos a las víctimas del terremoto en Turquía, donde dos terremotos mortales en febrero mataron al menos a 50,000 personas y dejaron más de 200,000 edificios gravemente dañados o arrasados.

El cardenal Konrad Krajewski, el limosnero papal, y la Embajada de Turquía ante la Santa Sede coordinaron la última ronda de ayuda del Papa, dijo el Dicasterio para el Servicio de la Caridad en un comunicado el 28 de marzo.

Unas 10,000 unidades de medicamentos sin especificar debían llegar por vía aérea a Turquía antes del 28 de marzo, indicó.

Inmediatamente después del terremoto, que desplazó a casi 2 millones de personas en Turquía, el Dicasterio para el Servicio de la Caridad envió alimentos enlatados, pañales y otros suministros que se necesitaban con urgencia, dijo.

También envió unas 10,000 camisetas térmicas a mediados de febrero para distribuirlas entre Turquía y Siria, también afectada por los sismos. A finales de febrero se enviaron tres paletas de medicinas, añadió.

Dos terremotos de magnitud 7.8 y 7.5 devastaron la región el 6 de febrero, matando a más de 55,000 personas.

Mustafa Avci, un sobreviviente del terremoto que estuvo atrapado bajo los escombros durante más de 10 días, conoce a su hija, Almile, por primera vez y se reúne con su esposa, Bilge, en un hospital en Mersin, Turquía, el 17 de febrero de 2023. Almile nació el día del terremoto. (Foto OSV News/Clodagh Kilcoyne, Reuters)

El Papa dice en un telegrama que el tiroteo de Nashville fue un ‘acto de violencia sin sentido’

Por Carol Glatz

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO (CNS) — El papa Francisco calificó el mortal tiroteo en una escuela de Nashville como un “acto de violencia sin sentido” y rezó para que las familias en duelo se mantengan firmes en su fe y “saquen el bien de un mal indecible”.

En un telegrama enviado al obispo Joseph M. Spalding de Nashville y firmado por el cardenal Pietro Parolin, secretario de Estado del Vaticano, el Papa dijo que estaba “profundamente entristecido al enterarse del reciente tiroteo en The Covenant School”.

“El Papa Francisco le pide que transmita su más sentido pésame y la certeza de sus oraciones a todos los afectados por este acto de violencia sin sentido”, dijo el telegrama, difundido por el Vaticano el 29 de marzo.

“Se une a toda la comunidad en el duelo por los niños y adultos fallecidos y los encomienda al abrazo amoroso del Señor Jesús”, dijo.

“Asimismo, invoca el consuelo y la fuerza del Espíritu Santo sobre las familias en duelo y reza para que sean confirmadas en su fe en el poder del Señor resucitado para curar todo daño y sacar el bien de males indecibles”, continuó.

Seis personas fueron asesinadas, entre ellas tres niños de 9 años, en la escuela cristiana privada a media mañana del 27 de marzo. El tirador, que iba armado con dos fusiles de asalto, fue abatido por las fuerzas del orden en el lugar de los hechos.

Los carteles colocados por los niños de la Academia Cristiana St. Paul se exhiben a lo largo de la calle en Nashville, Tennessee, el 28 de marzo de 2023, en recuerdo de las víctimas de un tiroteo mortal en la Escuela Covenant. Tres adultos y tres niños, todos de 9 años, recibieron disparos fatales el 27 de marzo. (Foto OSV News/Austin Anthony, Reuters)

El Papa Francisco reza por los migrantes muertos en un ‘trágico’ incendio cerca de la frontera entre México y Estados Unidos

Por Justin McLellan

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO (CNS) — El Papa Francisco rezó por las víctimas de un “trágico” incendio que mató al menos a 38 personas e hirió a otras 29 en un centro de procesamiento de migrantes en Ciudad Juárez, México, el 27 de marzo.

Durante su saludo a los fieles de habla hispana en su audiencia general del 29 de marzo en la Plaza de San Pedro, el papa dedicó una oración silenciosa a las víctimas y sus familias.

“Recemos por los migrantes que fallecieron ayer en un trágico incendio en Ciudad Juárez, México, para que el Señor los reciba en su Reino y dé consuelo a sus familias”, dijo antes de inclinar la cabeza en silencio.

Una mujer entre la multitud en la Plaza de San Pedro se puso en pie y ondeó una bandera mexicana.

Según autoridades mexicanas, el incendio se produjo cuando los migrantes prendieron fuego a unos colchones tras enterarse de que iban a ser deportados.

El centro de procesamiento de migrantes de Ciudad Juárez se encuentra frente a El Paso (Texas), en la frontera de Estados Unidos con México. Entre los muertos y las decenas de heridos había personas procedentes de Guatemala, Honduras, Venezuela, El Salvador, Colombia y Ecuador que pretendían entrar a Estados Unidos.

Una migrante venezolana llora afuera de una ambulancia por su esposo herido mientras las autoridades mexicanas y los bomberos sacan a los migrantes heridos, en su mayoría venezolanos, del interior del edificio del Instituto Nacional de Migración durante un incendio, en Ciudad Juárez, México, el 27 de marzo de 2023. Al menos 39 personas en el centro de detención de inmigrantes en la frontera de EE. UU. murió en el incendio que se desató en la instalación durante la noche, según un comunicado emitido por el centro. (Foto OSV News/José Luis González, Reuters)

To be an apostle is to serve, not move up church’s hierarchy, pope says

By Justin McLellan
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Being an apostle does not mean climbing up the church’s hierarchy to look down on others but humbling oneself in a spirit of service, Pope Francis said.

During his general audience in St. Peter’s Square March 15, the pope explained that apostleship as understood by the Second Vatican Council produces an equality – rooted in service – among laypeople, consecrated religious, priests and bishops.

“Who has more dignity in the church? The bishop? The priest? No, we are all Christians at the service of others,” he said. “We are all the same, and when one part (of the church) thinks it is more important than the others and turns its nose up (at them), they are mistaken.”

Vatican II, the pope said, did not focus on the laity’s relationship with the church’s hierarchy as a “strategic” move to adapt to the times, but as “something more that transcends the events of that time and retains its value for us today.”

The Second Vatican Council’s Decree on the Church’s Missionary Activity states that collaboration between the hierarchy and the laity is essential for the church to fully live out its mission.

Viewing Christian life as a chain of authority “where the person on top commands the rest because they were able to climb up (the ladder)” is “pure paganism,” said the pope.

Reflecting on the passage from St. Luke’s Gospel in which Jesus sends out 72 apostles ahead of him two-by-two, Pope Francis said that service is the vocation Jesus gives to all, including “to those that seem to be in more important positions.”

“Listening, humbling yourself, being at the service of others: this is serving, this is being Christian, this is being an apostle,” he said.

The pope encouraged Christians to pray for members of the church’s hierarchy who appear conceited since “they have not understood the vocation of God.”

Pope Francis also asked that all members of the church reflect on their relationships and consider how that impacts their capacity for evangelization.

Pope Francis addresses the crowd in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican during his general audience March 15, 2023. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

“Are we aware that with our words we can harm people’s dignity, thus ruining relationships?” he asked. “As we seek to dialogue with the world, do we also know how to dialogue among ourselves with believers? Is our speech transparent, sincere and positive, or is it opaque, ambiguous and negative?”

“Let us not be afraid to ask ourselves these questions,” the pope said, because examining the responses can help lead Christians toward a more apostolic church.

In his greetings to the faithful, Pope Francis also asked that religious sites in Ukraine be respected in the midst of the war. He expressed his closeness to the Ukrainian Orthodox religious community at the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra monastery complex after the Ukrainian government said it would not renew a lease for the monks who belong to the Orthodox community related to the Russian Orthodox Church.

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church declared its independence from Moscow May 27, 2022, yet members of its senior clergy have since been accused of openly collaborating with the Russian army in Ukraine.

Everyone must take part in politics for the common good, pope says

By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Everyone must engage in politics, which is simply what it means to take part constructively in the life of a nation or society, Pope Francis said in a new book of interviews.
Even the Gospel has “a political dimension” in that it seeks to convert “the social, including religious, mindset of the people,” he said, according to a series of excerpts published by Vatican News and other outlets Feb. 26.

Marking the 10th anniversary of the pope’s election, journalists Sergio Rubin and Francesca Ambrogetti will release a book-length compilation of a decade of interviews with the pope in Spanish March 1.
Titled “El Pastor” (“The Shepherd”), the book covers the “challenges, reasons and reflections” of Pope Francis over the course of his pontificate. Rubin and Ambrogetti had previously compiled two years of interviews with then-Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Buenos Aires for their 2010 book “The Jesuit,” which became a bestseller after the cardinal was elected pontiff, and retitled “Pope Francis. Conversations with Jorge Bergoglio: His Life in His Own Words.”

In “The Shepherd,” the authors pick up where they left off to cover his papacy and the path he has followed.

Journalists Sergio Rubin and Francesca Ambrogetti released a book-length compilation of interviews with Pope Francis March 1, 2023. Titled, “El Pastor” (The Shepherd), the book, whose cover is shown in this screengrab, covers the “challenges, reasons and reflections” of Pope Francis over the course of his pontificate. (CNS photo/Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial Argentina)

He said his plan has always been “to carry out what the cardinals expressed in the general congregations on the eve of the conclave,” which was to “revitalize the proclamation of the Gospel, reduce centralization in the Vatican,” eradicate the abuse of minors and fight economic corruption.

When asked what he would say to those who accuse him of “doing politics,” the pope said, “Yes, I am doing politics. Because everybody has to do politics. Christian people have to do politics. When we read what Jesus said we see that he was doing politics.”

The pope then explained what he meant by “politics,” saying it is “a way of life for the ‘polis,’ for the city.”
“What I do not do, nor should the church do, is party (or partisan) politics. But the Gospel has a political dimension, which is to transform the social, including religious, mindset of the people,” he said.

Speaking about the increasing polarization in the world, the pope said, “we are not water and oil, we are brothers and sisters.”

Humanity must rise above this “category of water and oil and move toward fraternity,” which is precisely what people have a hard time seeing when there is a conflict, that their vocation is fraternity, he said.

“When we ignore this, divisions begin and it’s like that everywhere,” he said.

When it comes to economic activity, Pope Francis said he does not “condemn” capitalism or the market economy, but that there needs to be what St. John Paul II advocated for, that is, a new “social economy of the market,” which would balance competition and social progress.

Today, the world of finance prevails, he said, and “where we can all agree is that the concentration of wealth and inequalities have increased and many people die of hunger.” If he focuses so much on the poor and those in need, “that’s because that is what Jesus did and what the Gospel says.”

Guadalupe is a message of communion amid
mixed cultures, pope says

By Justin McLellan
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Our Lady of Guadalupe is a message of “mestizaje,” or a fusion of cultures that leads to an encounter between humanity and God, Pope Francis said.

In a message to Archbishop Francisco Cerro Chaves of Toledo, Spain, Pope Francis reflected on the figure of Guadalupe to mark the occasion of the shrines of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico and in Spain becoming “sister shrines.”

“Mary, our mother, is always a bond of communion for her people,” and her invitation to prayer and communion “has been expressed in many places in the world with the invitation to build a temple that would be a house with doors always open to all,” the pope said in his message, which was published Feb. 13.

Two of the most famous temples in Hispanic culture built at Mary’s request are the Guadalupe shrines in Spain and Mexico which are considered “sister shrines” following a ceremony in Guadalupe, Spain, Feb. 13 in which Archbishop Cerro and Cardinal Carlos Aguiar Retes, archbishop of Mexico City, Mexico, both participated.

Pope Francis passes a banner of Our Lady of Guadalupe as he leaves after presiding at Mass marking the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican Dec. 12, 2022. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

The royal monastery of St. Mary of Guadalupe in Spain was constructed in the 14th century on the site where tradition holds that Mary appeared to a farmer who discovered a dark-skinned statue of Mary. Many Spanish conquistadors who traveled to the New World came from the area around Guadalupe and had a strong devotion to the Marian figure.
The Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City houses St. Juan Diego’s tilma, the mantle that bears the miraculous image of Mary who appeared to the Indigenous saint and spoke to him in Nahuatl, an Aztec language. An estimated 12 million people visited the basilica each year before the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, making it Catholicism’s most popular Marian shrine.

In his message to Archbishop Cerro, Pope Francis said the origin of the word “Guadalupe” is not entirely known, and its roots have been traced to Arabic, Latin or Nahuatl. He noted that while this could be interpreted as a conflict, it can also “be read as a sign from the Holy Spirit who makes his message of love heard in every language.”

The pope then traced how the different linguistic interpretations of “Guadalupe” combine to produce new meanings: in Arabic it means “hidden river,” which refers to grace; its Latin origins could mean “river of wolves,” referring to a “haven of peace for those troubled by their own sins” and violence; and the Nahuatl roots would mean “the one who conquers the serpent.”

The Gospel, while remaining the same, is “enriched in meaning” in every historical moment and by every culture it encounters, the pope said.

Marriage is a gift from God that benefits everyone, pope says

By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Marriage is not a ceremony, a social event, a mere formality or an abstract ideal, Pope Francis said.

Marriage, according to Christian revelation, is a gift from God that joins a man and woman together so that “the two shall become one flesh,” and “what God has joined together, no human being must separate,” the pope said, quoting the Gospel of Matthew.

Marriage is also “an extraordinary good, a good of extraordinary value for everyone: for the spouses themselves, for their children, for all families with whom they form relationships, for the entire church, for all of humanity,” the pope told members of the Roman Rota, a Vatican-based tribunal that deals mainly with marriage cases and requests for marriage annulments.

“Every true marriage, even a non-sacramental one, is a gift of God to the spouses,” the pope told the tribunal members Jan. 27. “Matrimony is always a gift! Conjugal fidelity rests on divine fidelity; conjugal fruitfulness is based on divine fruitfulness. Man and woman are called to accept this gift and freely correspond to it with the reciprocal gift of self.”

Pope Francis talks to a group of sisters attending an audience with members of the Roman Rota, a Vatican tribunal, at the end of an audience at the Vatican Jan. 27, 2023. The Vatican court deals mainly with appeals in marriage annulment cases. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

As the members inaugurated the tribunal’s judicial year, Pope Francis said he wanted to focus his talk on marriage “because there is a great need in the church and in the world to rediscover the meaning and value of the conjugal union between a man and a woman on which the family is based.”

St. John Paul II described the celebration of the sacrament of matrimony as offering a “new heart” so that “the couples are not only able to overcome ‘hardness of heart,’ but also and above all they are able to share the full and definitive love of Christ, the new and eternal covenant made flesh,” the pope said, quoting from the 1981 document, “Familiaris Consortio.”

“Marriage according to Christian revelation is not a ceremony or a social event, no,” Pope Francis said. “It is neither a formality nor an abstract ideal: it is a reality with its own precise consistency, not a form of mere emotional satisfaction that can be constructed in any way or modified at will.”

At the same time, the pope said, “marriage should not be idealized, as if it existed only where there are no problems.”

God’s plan “is always fulfilled imperfectly” in human hands, he said, and yet the Lord is present in the family “with all their daily troubles and struggles, joys and hopes.”

Life as a family makes it “difficult to pretend and lie; we cannot hide behind a mask,” he said. “If that authenticity is inspired by love, then the Lord reigns there, with his joy and his peace.”

For married couples in crisis, “the church, both pastors and other faithful, accompanies them with love and hope, seeking to support them,” he said. “A fundamental resource for facing and overcoming crises is to renew awareness of the gift received in the sacrament of marriage, an irrevocable gift, a source of grace on which we can always count.”

Pope Francis said there is a need “to rediscover the permanent reality of marriage as a bond,” especially since the “bond” is often thought of as an “imposition, a burden, a ‘tether’ in opposition to the authenticity and freedom of love.”

“If, on the other hand, the bond is understood precisely as a bond of love, then it reveals itself as the core of marriage, as a divine gift that is the source of true freedom and that safeguards married life,” he said.

The church can assist engaged and married couples to deepen their love and overcome difficulties not just by helping them accept its doctrinal teachings and its valuable spiritual resources, he said. The church can also help by offering “practical programs, sound advice, strategies based on experience and psychological guidance.”

Papa a los trabajadores de la iglesia en Sudán del Sur: Caminen con los que sufren

Por Cindy Wooden

JUBA, Sudán del Sur (CNS) — Cuando el Papa Francisco oró para que los obispos, sacerdotes y religiosos en Sudán del Sur fueran “pastores y testigos generosos, armados solo con oración y amor”, de muchas maneras estaba predicando al coro.

En una reunión en la Catedral de Santa Teresa en Juba el 4 de febrero, les pidió que se dejen “sorprender constantemente por la gracia de Dios”.

Las sonrisas en los rostros de los cientos de trabajadores de la Iglesia dentro de la catedral y los miles de miembros de sus rebaños afuera mostraron ese tipo de apertura.

El Papa Francisco saluda a una joven desplazada internamente durante una reunión con personas desplazadas internamente en Freedom Hall en Juba, Sudán del Sur, el 4 de febrero de 2023. También en la foto aparecen el reverendo Iain Greenshields, a la izquierda, moderador de la Iglesia Presbiteriana de Escocia y anglicano. Arzobispo Justin Welby, a la derecha. (Foto del SNC/Paul Haring)

La Hermana de Loreto Orla Treacy, una religiosa irlandesa y directora de una escuela en Rumbek, estaba adentro, pero llevó a los periodistas afuera para conocer a algunos de los 50 estudiantes y exalumnos que habían hecho una peregrinación “híbrida” con ella a Juba; durante nueve días, alternaron caminar (un total de 110 millas) y tomar paseos durante unas 140 millas.

James Gawar, de 20 años, le dijo a Catholic News Service: “La mejor parte de nuestro viaje fue el drama que presentamos en el camino” en los pueblos donde se detenían cada noche. “La obra teatral es sobre la paz”.

“Mi esperanza para la visita del papa es la paz y la reconciliación en Sudán del Sur”, dijo. “Esto es posible porque estamos Unidos con la visita”.

Ariong Tina Deng, de 18 años, dijo que, para ella, “la mejor parte del viaje fue cuando fuimos al Nilo a nadar y luego comimos pescado. Cada poblado preparó un festín para nosotros”.

“Al principio teníamos un poco de miedo” de ir a pueblos donde no conocían a nadie, dijo. “Pero cuando llegábamos a 5 kilómetros de los pueblos, la gente estaba esperándonos para darnos la bienvenida. Caminaron con nosotros, y todos bailamos, y vemos que todos queremos la paz”.

La Hermana Treacy le dijo a CNS que la mayoría de los estudiantes nunca habían salido de su condado, y mucho menos de Lakes State. Cuando compartieron al final de su último día de ruta, “todos decían que habían tenido miedo. Pero el recibimiento fue maravilloso, y experimentaron que todos somos iguales”.

En lugar de que una hermana religiosa hablara en nombre de todas las mujeres presentes sobre su ministerio en el país, la reunión del papa en Sudán del Sur incluyó una presentación sobre las vidas y muertes de las Hermanas del Sagrado Corazón Mary Daniel Abut y Regina Roba Luate, quienes fueron capturadas en una emboscada y asesinadas en agosto de 2021.

En su discurso a los obispos, religiosos y sacerdotes, el Papa Francisco dijo que quería centrarse en “lo que significa para nosotros ser ministros de Dios en una tierra marcada por la guerra, el odio, la violencia y la pobreza”.

Primero, dijo, significa ser humilde, recordar que la fe se trata de Dios y no de la propia personalidad o talentos.

Niñas se preparan para recibir al Papa Francisco a su llegada para una reunión con obispos, sacerdotes, religiosos y seminaristas en la Catedral de Santa Teresa en Juba, Sudán del Sur, el 4 de febrero de 2023. (Foto de CNS/Paul Haring)

“En el fondo, pensamos que nosotros somos el centro, que podemos confiar — si no en teoría, al menos en la práctica — casi exclusivamente en nuestras propias habilidades”, dijo. “O, como Iglesia, pensamos dar respuestas a los sufrimientos y a las necesidades del pueblo con instrumentos humanos, como el dinero, la astucia, el poder. En cambio, nuestra obra viene de Dios. Él es el Señor y nosotros estamos llamados a ser dóciles instrumentos en sus manos”.

El ministerio en Sudán del Sur también incluye la voluntad de interceder en nombre del pueblo, y no solo en oración, dijo el papa. Interceder significa “ponerse en medio del pueblo, ‘hacerse puentes’ que lo unen con Dios”.

“Nuestro primer deber no es el de ser una iglesia perfectamente organizada”, insistió, “sino una Iglesia que, en nombre de Cristo, está en medio de la vida dolorosa del pueblo y se ensucia las manos por la gente”.

Y, dijo, un auténtico anuncio del Evangelio exige a los creyentes “a alzar la voz contra la injusticia y la prevaricación, que aplastan a la gente y utilizan la violencia para sacar adelante sus negocios a la sombra de los conflictos”.

Para el Padre Peter Othow, un párroco en Malakal, la devastación causada por casi 10 años de guerra está justo a las afueras de su puerta. La ciudad tenía unos 60,000 habitantes antes de que estallaran los combates, dijo, ahora son la mitad, mientras que el campamento para personas desplazadas administrado por la ONU superó su capacidad en diciembre y alberga a unas 50,000 personas.

“La visita del papa significa esperanza”, dijo a CNS.

Nothing can diminish the value of any human being, pope says

By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – No physical limitation or setback can diminish the value of any human being because each person is a unique and beloved child of God, Pope Francis said.

“We are not anonymous, we are not photocopies, we are all originals! And this is how we should be: originals, not photocopies,” he said during an audience at the Vatican Jan. 14 with members of the Pope John XXIII Community association.

“God knows us one by one, with our name and our face, which is unique,” he said.

“Certainly, we also have our limitations; some of us unfortunately have heavy limitations to bear,” the pope said. “But this detracts nothing from the value of a person: each one is unique, a son or daughter of God, each one is a brother or sister of Jesus.”

“A Christian community that welcomes the person as he or she is thus helps to see them as God does,” which is with a look of love, he said.

“God also sees our limitations, it is true, and helps us to bear them,” the pope said. “But God looks above all at the heart and sees every person in his or her entirety. God sees us as an image of Jesus, his only begotten son, and with his love he helps us to become more and more like him.”

The pope thanked the many families at the audience who offer foster care, emphasizing the importance of welcoming children and others into a loving home so they may be “regenerated by Christian love.”

These are men and women “who open the doors of their home to give a family to those who do not have one. A real family; not a job, but a life choice. In it there is room for everyone: minors, people with disabilities, the elderly, Italians or foreigners, and anyone who is looking for a fixed point from which to start again or a family in which to find themselves,” he said.

Pope Francis greets a young girl during an audience with members of the John XXIII Community at the Vatican Jan. 14, 2023. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Pope Francis also thanked those who were unable to be at the day’s audience and had sent him their stories and questions.

“I would like to address some of you personally,” he said, such as Sara, 13, who fled Iraq and carries in her heart “the holy desire that children not be robbed of their childhood: May God help you achieve this!”

The people offered guidance to others without naming them, urging one child who “would like to see your grandmother who has gone to heaven,” to “speak with her in your heart and follow her good example, and one day you will see her again.”

Another young person, the pope said, “like many teenagers,” wrote about the “struggle to perceive the beauty of Mass.” But the pope responded, “Do not fear; at the right moment, the living Jesus will let you feel his presence.”

Pope Francis also thanked a “little friend, who remembers the innocents who are killed in the womb.”
Noting that many members of the community meet online to pray the rosary for peace every Sunday, the pope told them, “God listens to your prayer for peace, even if he does not seem to. God listens to it, and we believe that God gives us peace, immediately, today!”

El Papa anuncia vigilia de oración ecuménica antes de la asamblea del sínodo en octubre

Por Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Al alentar a los católicos a participar en la Semana de Oración por la Unidad de los Cristianos, el Papa Francisco también anunció que antes de que comience la asamblea del Sínodo de los Obispos a principios de octubre, habrá una vigilia de oración ecuménica en la Plaza de San Pedro.

La Semana de Oración por la Unidad de los Cristianos se celebra todos los años del 18 al 25 de enero, y el papa y los representantes de otras comunidades cristianas en Roma cierran la semana con vísperas en la Basílica de San Pablo Extramuros.

El tema para 2023, “Haz el bien; busca la justicia”, proviene de Isaías 1:17.

“Demos gracias al Señor que con fidelidad y paciencia guía a su pueblo hacia la plena comunión, y pidamos al Espíritu Santo que nos ilumine y nos sostenga con sus dones”, dijo el Papa Francisco a las personas que se unieron a él el 15 de enero para la recitación del Ángelus en la Plaza de San Pedro.

“El camino hacia la unidad de los cristianos y el camino de conversión sinodal de la Iglesia están vinculados”, dijo a la multitud.

Por eso, dijo, “aprovecho esta ocasión para anunciar que el sábado 30 del próximo mes de septiembre, en la plaza de San Pedro, tendrá lugar una Vigilia ecuménica de oración, con la que encomendaremos a Dios los trabajos de la XVI Asamblea General Ordinaria del Sínodo de los Obispos”.

Las sesiones de trabajo de la asamblea están programadas del 4 al 29 de octubre y nuevamente un año después.

El Papa Francisco también anunció que la comunidad ecuménica de Taizé, con sede en Francia, dirigirá un programa especial para los jóvenes el fin de semana de la vigilia.

“Invito a los hermanos y hermanas de todas las confesiones cristianas a participar en esta reunión del Pueblo de Dios”, dijo el papa.