Cover: Mosaic at the welcome centre for disabled people in Lotung-Taiwan.
The Face of Mercy
SOME SUGGESTIONS FROM THE
BULL OF INDICTION OF THE EXTROARDINARY JUBILEE OF MERCY
Jesus Christ is the face of the Father’s mercy. These words might well sum up the mystery of the Christian faith. Mercy has become living and visible in Jesus of Nazareth, reaching its culmination in him. Jesus of Nazareth, by his words, his actions, and his entire person reveals the mercy of God.
We need constantly to contemplate the mystery of mercy. It is a wellspring of joy, serenity, and peace. Our salvation depends on it. Mercy: the word reveals the very mystery of the Most Holy Trinity. Mercy: the ultimate and supreme act by which God comes to meet us. Mercy: the fundamental law that dwells in the heart of every person who looks sincerely into the eyes of his brothers and sisters on the path of life. Mercy: the bridge that connects God and man, opening our hearts to a hope of being loved forever despite our sinfulness. When faced with the gravity of sin, God responds with the fullness of mercy. Mercy will always be greater than any sin, and no one can place limits on the love of God who is ever ready to forgive.
In fact, I will open the Holy Door on the fiftieth anniversary of the closing of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council. The Church feels a great need to keep this event alive. With the Council, the Church entered a new phase of her history. The walls which too long had made the Church a kind of fortress were torn down and the time had come to proclaim the Gospel in a new way. The Church sensed a responsibility to be a living sign of the Father’s love in the world.
We recall the poignant words of Saint John XXIII when, opening the Council, he indicated the path to follow: ‘Now the Bride of Christ wishes to use the medicine of mercy rather than taking up arms of severity…’
Saint Bede the Venerable, commenting on this Gospel passage, wrote that Jesus looked upon Matthew with merciful love and chose him: miserando atque eligendo. This expression impressed me so much that I chose it for my episcopal motto, because mercy is presented as a force that overcomes everything, filling the heart with love and bringing consolation through pardon.
Mercy is the very foundation of the Church’s life. All of her pastoral activity should be caught up in the tenderness she makes present to believers; nothing in her preaching and in her witness to the world can be lacking in mercy. The Church’s very credibility is seen in how she shows merciful and compassionate love. The Church is commissioned to announce the mercy of God, the beating heart of the Gospel, which in its own way must penetrate the heart and mind of every person. The Church’s first truth is the love of Christ. The Church makes herself a servant of this love and mediates it to all people.
It is my burning desire that, during this Jubilee, the Christian people may reflect on the corporal and spiritual works of mercy. It will be a way to reawaken our conscience, too often grown dull in the face of poverty. And let us enter more deeply into the heart of the Gospel where the poor have a special experience of God’s mercy: to feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothe the naked, welcome the stranger, heal the sick, visit the imprisoned, and bury the dead. And let us not forget the spiritual works of mercy: to counsel the doubtful, instruct the ignorant, admonish sinners, comfort the afflicted, forgive offences, bear patiently those who do us ill, and pray for the living and the dead. Christ’s flesh becomes visible in the flesh of the tortured, the crushed, the scourged, the malnourished, and the exiled … to be acknowledged, touched, and cared for by us.
Let us place the Sacrament of Reconciliation at the centre once more in such a way that it will enable people to touch the grandeur of God’s mercy with their own hands. For every penitent, it will be a source of true interior peace. I will never tire of insisting that confessors be authentic signs of the Father’s mercy. We become good confessors when, above all, we allow ourselves to be penitents in search of his mercy. Confessors are called to embrace the repentant son who comes back home and to express the joy of having him back again.
There is an aspect of mercy that goes beyond the confines of the Church. It relates us to Judaism and Islam, both of which consider mercy to be one of God’s most important attributes. Israel was the first to receive this revelation which continues in history as the source of an inexhaustible richness meant to be shared with all mankind. I trust that this Jubilee year celebrating the mercy of God will foster an encounter with these religions and with other noble religious traditions; may it open us to even more fervent dialogue so that we might know and understand one another better; may it eliminate every form of closed-mindedness and disrespect, and drive out every form of violence and discrimination.
Franciscus
COLOMBIA – ECUADOR
ITALIAN/ENGLISH/SPANISH/PORTUGUESE
TAIWAN
Gianfranco Lunardon, the General Secretary of the Order, visited our religious brothers of Taiwan on 1-12 April of this year. On 6-11 April he animated the course of spiritual exercises entitled ‘Not Perfect but Happy. Towards a Sustainable Prophecy of Consecrated Life’ for the group of Italian-speaking religious.
He also took part in the celebration of Easter Thursday in Hanshi, of Good Friday in Lunpei (two small Christian communities of Aborigines), in the Easter Vigil of the Camillian parish of Lotung and on Easter Sunday in the celebration of the Eucharist and Holy Mass in the new Church of St. Camillus, visiting the sick and meeting the elderly.
Read here ‘The Camillians in Taiwan’ the report of Fr. Gianfranco.
KENYA
SPAIN
During this period of formation, in order to achieve an increasingly effective integration into the reality of this religious Province, they will be accompanied by Fr. Ludovic Konseiga, the head of formation for the community of Tres Cantos.
VERONA – THE PROVINCE OF ITALY
ROME – MEETING OF PEOPLE WHO PROVIDE FORMATION
Together with Fr. Laurent Zoungrana, the Vicar General and the Consultor for Formation, the following took part in this meeting: Fr. Alfréd György(Austria), Fr. Armand Assavedo (the Province of Sicily and Naples); Fr. Babychan Pazhanilath (India); Fr. Denis Kaboré (Burkina), Fr. Mateus Locatelli (Brazil), Fr. Neiber Cabrera (Argentina); Fr. Pierre Yanoogo (the Province of Rome). At the end of the meeting, at the generalate house, the General Secretariat for Formation held a meeting.
Read here the article by Fr. Armand Assavedo
CAMILLIANI/CAMILLIANS
PERU
Together with them, another three young men have begun their pathways as postulants and two have begun the pre-novitiate.
The admission to ordination as a deacon of the religious Daniel Silva Muñoz has also been approved and very probably this will be celebrated in the month of April.
THE ARCHDIOCESE OF TRANI
THE ROMAN PROVINCE OF THE CAMILLIANS AND THE DAUGHTERS OF ST. CAMILLUS
BROTHERS OF EBOLA – MAKENI (SIERRA LEONE)
THE DAUGHTERS OF ST. CAMILLUS
Look at the photos of the blog
ACTS OF THE GENERAL CONSULTA
The canonical erection of the seat of the Vice-Provincial of India as a residence under the community of Snehadaan has been approved.
THE APPOINTMENT OF FR. ARIS MIRANDA
THE AGENDA OF THE SUPERIOR GENERAL AND THE CONSULTORS
Leocir Pessini and Fr. Aris Miranda left on Thursday 16 April for India where they will visit the Vice-Province and meet our religious brothers and the Camillian communities.
On 13-18 May Fr. Leocir Pessini together with Fr. Gianfranco Lunardon will go to Poland for a fraternal visit to our religious brothers and the Camillian communities.
On 18-23 May of this year, in Warsaw (Poland), the meeting will take place of the Superior General and the Consultors with the Major Superiors of the Order. This will be the first annual meeting for dialogue, discussion and planning since the Extraordinary General Chapter of June 2014.
DECEASED RELIGIOUS
On 20 March 2015 the death took place in the community of the ‘M.G. Vannini’ Hospital (Rome) of Sister Romana Lureti of the Daughters of St. Camillus. She was 77, and 52 of these years were spent as a woman religious, serving God and our sick brethren.
‘Now they live in Christ whom they met in the Church, followed in their vocations, and served in the sick and the suffering. Trusting that the Lord, the Holy Virgin our Queen, St. Camillus and our deceased religious brothers will welcome them in their midst, we commend them in our prayers, remembering them with affection, esteem and gratitude’.