Pope
Francis spent more than an hour responding to questions during an afternoon
visit to Rome’s villa Nazareth
Using
the word “genocide” to describe the persecution of Christians in the Middle
East risks downplaying the courage and witness of those who boldly profess
faith in Jesus Christ even in the face of death, Pope Francis said.
“i
want to say clearly that I do not like it when people speak of a ‘genocide of
Christians,’ for example in the middle east,” the pope said, responding to
questions on June 18. Calling the persecution “genocide,” he said, is using a
juridical and sociological category to speak of “something which is a mystery
of the faith: martyrdom.”
Jesuit
father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman, said pope Francis “was not
speaking about the use of the term ‘genocide’ on a political level, but on a
level of faith. When applied to the persecution of Christians in the Middle
East, the dimension of faith is essential,” particularly when victims are
murdered for not renouncing faith in Christ.
Pope
Francis spent more than an hour responding to questions during an afternoon
visit to Rome’s villa Nazareth, a residence for university students and
headquarters of a foundation dedicated to helping gifted students who do not
have the financial resources to continue their studies.
Asked
how young people can find courage to live their faith, Pope Francis said the
gospel calls Christians to give witness to their faith in Christ and to the
reality that he died to redeem sinners “but is alive,” working in the lives of
individuals and communities.
Martyrdom
is the fullest expression of Christian witness, he said. “It’s the maximum,
heroic.”
Recalling
Isis’s martyrdom of 21 Egyptian Christians on a Libyan beach in 2015, pope
Francis said none of them were theologians, “but they were doctors of Christian
consistency; they were witnesses of the faith.”
Fidelity
to Christ and being living witnesses requires sacrifice, though usually not to
the point of death, he said. It requires many little acts of martyrdom, “the
martyrdom of honesty, the martyrdom of patience, of raising your children, of
fidelity in love when it’s easier to take another path.”
“We
are sinners who Jesus loves and has healed, or who are in the process of being
healed,” the pope said. Recognizing one’s own sinfulness and the unfathomable
depths of god’s mercy are essential for being an authentic witness.
Asking
forgiveness in advance, Pope Francis said those who strut around like peacocks
may look impressive, but from behind you see the mess they leave. “Pardon me,”
he said, “but that’s the truth of the peacock.”
Asked
about the economy, unemployment and migration, Pope Francis repeated what he
had written in the joy of the gospel, his 2013 exhortation: “today there is an
economy that kills.”
“In
the world, globally, at the centre of the economy, there is not man and woman,
but the god money. And this is killing us,” he told the students.
Finding
work that pays only under the table or being offered only successive short-term
contracts without health insurance, pension contributions and vacation time —
“this is slave labour,” the pope said. employers who know they can always find
people willing to work under those conditions and so take advantage of people
are committing “great injustice and we must speak clearly: this is a mortal
sin.”
“War
is the business that is making the most money now,” he said. “Why? Because it’s
big business. It’s the god money.”
The
fact that it is so difficult to deliver humanitarian aid to the innocent
victims of war, yet weapons move easily across borders shows that money is more
important than people’s lives, he said. “The economic system as it operates in
the world today is immoral.”
a
young man with a question about facing doubts in one’s faith life, asked the
pope if he ever struggled with his faith.
“This
is a question you ask the pope? What courage!” pope Francis said with a smile.
“Many
times I’ve found myself in a crisis with the faith,” either asking god why he
lets something happen or even wondering if it’s all true, he said. “This
happened as a young man, a seminarian, a priest, as a religious, as bishop and
as pope.”
“a
Christian who has never felt this once in a while, one whose faith never
entered in crisis, is missing something” and is probably too content, the pope
said. a crisis brings questions and growth.
“I’ve
learned that a Christian should not be afraid to experience crisis. it’s a sign
that one is moving forward, that one is not anchored to the shore, but has set
out and is moving forward,” he said.
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