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Catholic News 2

Vatican City, Mar 24, 2016 / 03:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- For Archbishop Peter Wells, the Pope’s new ambassador to South Africa, being in the diplomatic service of the Holy See isn’t about politics or governing,  but is  above all a ministry centered on Jesus Christ.“At the end of the day what is papal diplomacy? What does it mean to be a papal diplomat? It’s about one thing at the end of the day: Jesus Christ. That’s it,” Archbishop Wells told CNA March 23.He said that apostolic nuncios, the Holy See's ambassadors, always have to look for effective means of showing that they are in a country “to bring the concerns, the hopes, the suffering of the local population back to the Vicar of Christ.”Apostolic nuncios differ from secular diplomats because “we’re not really there to represent the political, economic, diplomatic views of our government,” but rather “to listen to what the people need,” he...

Vatican City, Mar 24, 2016 / 03:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- For Archbishop Peter Wells, the Pope’s new ambassador to South Africa, being in the diplomatic service of the Holy See isn’t about politics or governing,  but is  above all a ministry centered on Jesus Christ.

“At the end of the day what is papal diplomacy? What does it mean to be a papal diplomat? It’s about one thing at the end of the day: Jesus Christ. That’s it,” Archbishop Wells told CNA March 23.

He said that apostolic nuncios, the Holy See's ambassadors, always have to look for effective means of showing that they are in a country “to bring the concerns, the hopes, the suffering of the local population back to the Vicar of Christ.”

Apostolic nuncios differ from secular diplomats because “we’re not really there to represent the political, economic, diplomatic views of our government,” but rather “to listen to what the people need,” he said.

As representatives of the Pope, “we’re dealing with the local Church, the local bishops, we’re there for them as the Pope’s representatives to be their voice when we come back to the Pope, but also to be the Pope’s voice when we go back to them.”

Archbishop Wells said he detests it “when people talk about priests who are working in the Vatican, people who are in my kind of job, as bureaucrats or CEOs. We’re not. We’re priests. We’re ministers first and foremost.”

One of the things the archbishop said he has always emphasized to his colleagues in the Secretariat of State is that “the minute you start feeling like a bureaucrat is the minute you need to get out. You need to get back to the parish.”

“We are doing ministry here,” he said, adding that while it may be a more indirect, behind-the-scenes form of ministry,  “it is helping the Holy Father as the Vicar of Christ in his ministry.”

“If you lose touch with that you better get out of there quick because you need to get yourself grounded again.”

Archbishop Well's appointment as apostolic nuncio to South Africa, as well as Botswana, Lesotho, and Namibia, was made in February. He was consecrated a bishop March 19 by Pope Francis.

His episcopal consecration “was an extraordinary moment,” he said. “It was a moment filled with grace and thanksgiving, great humility, a sense of awe but also a real serenity.”

The archbishop, 52, was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Tulsa in 1991. He has been working in Rome in Vatican diplomacy since 2002, giving him a 14 year tenure in which he has served under three Roman Pontiffs: St. John Paul II, Benedict XVI, and Pope Francis.

Since July 2009 he has served as the Assessor for the General Affairs of the Secretariat of State, which handles the majority of Church affairs aside from relations with other states. His role as assessor made Archbishop Wells the fifth ranking official in the Secretariat of State.

Though he is happy to be back in active ministry, the archbishop said his time in the Vatican was “a real grace,” especially in serving under three Popes.

Having arrived toward the end of St. John Paul II’s pontificate, Archbishop Wells said he was amazed to see that the Polish Pope was “still so active, still so engaged with his limitations.”

Benedict XVI, with whom the Archbishop frequently traveled, including during his 2008 visit to the United States, “was such a humble, incredibly humble person,” he said.

While many thought the German pontiff was timid, Archbishop Wells said he didn’t see him that way.

“I never thought he was timid…he’s humble and incredibly respectful. And because of the respect, maybe as a professor…he always showed incredible respect for the other person, but he wanted to let them express their ideas, their views, and then he would say something.”

Francis, on the other hand, has been “a whirlwind since day one,” the archbishop said, chuckling.

He said that though the Argentine has only been in office for three years, “it’s been an extremely invigorating time and a very beautiful time, especially to see how Pope Francis has this ability to touch everyone’s heart immediately.”

Touching on the differences in the diplomatic tone of each of the Popes under whom he’s served, Archbishop Well said that St. John Paul II “was extraordinary” in terms of his diplomatic service.

“(John Paul) interacted on the entire world stage and was very much a part of the fall of the Eastern Bloc,” he said, crediting the saint’s  input, diplomatic tact, and rapport with other heads of state in helping to eliminate communism in Europe.

The archbishop said that in his opinion, one of the most significant contributions of Benedict XVI in the diplomatic world was that he continuously talked about “the importance of the relationship between faith and reason,” as well as the importance of religious communities in having a voice in the public forum.

Francis has followed closely in his predecessors’ footsteps, and has already had a huge impact in just three years, Archbishop Wells said, pointing specifically to Francis’ role in helping to restore U.S.-Cuba relations and in drawing attention to the global migrant crisis.

“He has a keen sense of what is happening, but he never, ever loses the idea that it’s the human person who is at the center,” he said, adding that “we can never lose the concept of the integral and core nature of the human person.”

The archbishop said that one of the biggest challenges in his tenure has been not only his assistance in streamlining Vatican communications – he is one of the officials who pushed for the Pope’s Twitter account – but also knowing how to deal with Benedict XVI’s resignation.

“We didn’t have instruments, or really archives, of how to deal with the resignation of the Pope and how to move forward in the interim, so we had to come up with new models of dealing with things.”

A large part of the discussion centered on determining what would happen when Benedict actually resigned, he said.

In order to signify that he had actually stepped down, they finally agreed to close the doors to Castel Gandolfo and to  remove the Swiss Guard (the personal protectors of the Holy Father), replacing them with the Gendarme, the Vatican's police service.

“Our communications office did a beautiful job following Pope Benedict in the helicopter, and the way that that was shown to the world was extraordinary,” he said. “Everyone could really participate in what was happening, because it was a historical moment.”

Despite his time serving in Rome, Archbishop Wells said he is eager to jump into his new position as nuncio. He hopes to make the move to South Africa in time for the April 30 consecration of an auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Johannesburg.

One of the things the archbishop said he’s looking forward to as nuncio is that “now I get to be involved in direct ministry again.”

While the diplomatic work of someone inside the Secretariat of State is important, it’s indirect, he said, voicing his excitement at being able to say Mass in communities and help with sacramental preparations such as marriage and confirmations.

“I’ll also get to be present in a very direct way for the local bishops, for the priests and the laypeople. That’s definitely going to be a real joy: I’m really looking forward to that.”

 

Mary Shovlain contributed to this article.

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Vatican City, Mar 24, 2016 / 04:54 am (CNA/EWTN News).- During Holy Thursday’s Chrism Mass Pope Francis focused on the topic of mercy, telling priests that one of their primary tasks is to make mercy visible in the same way as Jesus, who always gave it in excess.“As priests, we are witnesses to and ministers of the ever-increasing abundance of the Father’s mercy; we have the rewarding and consoling task of incarnating mercy, as Jesus did,” the Pope said March 24.He told priests that they have a special role in enculturating mercy, “so that each person can embrace it and experience it personally.”This, he said, “will help all people truly understand and practice mercy with creativity, in ways that respect their local cultures and families.”Pope Francis spoke to those present in St. Peter’s Basilica for the Chrism Mass, which takes place in the Catholic Church each year on Holy Thursday and involves the blessing of oils used for th...

Vatican City, Mar 24, 2016 / 04:54 am (CNA/EWTN News).- During Holy Thursday’s Chrism Mass Pope Francis focused on the topic of mercy, telling priests that one of their primary tasks is to make mercy visible in the same way as Jesus, who always gave it in excess.

“As priests, we are witnesses to and ministers of the ever-increasing abundance of the Father’s mercy; we have the rewarding and consoling task of incarnating mercy, as Jesus did,” the Pope said March 24.

He told priests that they have a special role in enculturating mercy, “so that each person can embrace it and experience it personally.”

This, he said, “will help all people truly understand and practice mercy with creativity, in ways that respect their local cultures and families.”

Pope Francis spoke to those present in St. Peter’s Basilica for the Chrism Mass, which takes place in the Catholic Church each year on Holy Thursday and involves the blessing of oils used for the sacraments of Confirmation, Holy Orders and the Anointing of the Sick.

As part of the Mass all priests, bishops and cardinals present renewed the promises they made on the day of their ordination.

Francis began his homily by noting how during his life, Jesus was a sign of contradiction, just as the elderly prophet Simeon had predicted.

“By his words and actions, Jesus lays bare the secrets of the heart of every man and woman,” he said, noting that in the Gospel, the privileged place where Jesus preaches the Father’s unconditional mercy is to the poor, the outcast and the oppressed.

“(This) is the very place we are called to take a stand and fight the good fight,” Francis said, explaining that Jesus also fought, but never to build power.

“If he breaks down walls and challenges our sense of security, he does this to open the flood gates of that mercy which, with the Father and the Holy Spirit, he wants to pour out upon our world.”

He then pointed to two areas where he said God shows “an excess” of mercy. These areas, he said, are encounter and forgiveness.

On the theme of encounter, the Pope explained that Jesus gives of himself “completely and in such a way that every encounter leads to rejoicing.”

Francis pointed to the parable of the prodigal son, calling it the parable of the “Merciful Father,” in which the father waits for his son, runs out to meet him, kisses him, gives him a ring and throws a party.

When thinking about the “superabundance of the Father’s joy that is freely and boundlessly expressed when his son returns, we should not be fearful of exaggerating our gratitude,” he said.

Our attitude when we encounter the mercy of the Father, he said, should mirror that of the leper who, after being healed, leaves the nine others who do what Jesus ordered and returns to Jesus, kneeling at his feet and glorifying God aloud.

“Mercy restores everything; it restores dignity to each person,” the Pope said, adding that this is the reason why “effusive gratitude is the proper response.”

Pope Francis then pointed to the second area of forgiveness, saying that “God does not only forgive incalculable debts,” but he also enables us to “move directly from the most shameful disgrace to the highest dignity without any intermediary stages.”

However, he noted that we frequently tend to separate the attitudes of shame and dignity. When we are ashamed of our sins, he said, “we hide ourselves and walk around with our heads down, like Adam and Eve.”

On the other hand, when we elevated to some sort of rank of dignity, “we try to cover up our sins and take pleasure in being seen, almost showing off.”

The only response to God’s abundant forgiveness, Francis said, “should be always to preserve that healthy tension between a dignified shame and a shamed dignity.”

This is the attitude of someone “who seeks a humble and lowly place, but who can also allow the Lord to raise him up for the good of the mission, without complacency,” he observed.

Francis then pointed to the prophet Isaiah's words “You will be called priests of the Lord, ministers of our God.”

The people the Lord chooses to transform into a priestly people, he noted, are precisely the poor, hungry, prisoners of war, those with no future and those are “cast to one side and rejected.”

A priest must identify with people who are excluded, the Pope said, and encouraged the clergy present to remind themselves that there are “countless masses of people who are poor, uneducated, prisoners, who find themselves in such situations because others oppress them.”

However, he cautioned that a priest must also keep in mind the extent to which he himself is “blind, lacking the radiant light of faith, not because we do not have the Gospel close at hand, but because of an excess of complicated theology.”

Often times a priest can feel trapped, though not with the stone walls that enclose others, he said. Instead, a priest can feel imprisoned by “a digital, virtual worldliness that is opened and closed by a simple click.”

“We are oppressed, not by threats and pressures, like so many poor people, but by the allure of a thousand commercial advertisements which we cannot shrug off to walk ahead, freely, along paths that lead us to love of our brothers and sisters,” the Pope observed.

However, despite the many trials and temptations a priest can face, “Jesus comes to redeem us, to send us out, to transform us from being poor and blind, imprisoned and oppressed, to become ministers of mercy and consolation.”

Pope Francis concluded his homily by praying that during the Jubilee of Mercy, all would be able to receive “with a dignity that is able to humble itself, the mercy revealed in the wounded flesh of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday will point to his years as Senate Judiciary Committee chairman to cast Republicans' election-year Supreme Court blockade as a dangerous new escalation of partisanship - hoping to put the focus on his record on high-court nominations and not his much-discussed remarks....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday will point to his years as Senate Judiciary Committee chairman to cast Republicans' election-year Supreme Court blockade as a dangerous new escalation of partisanship - hoping to put the focus on his record on high-court nominations and not his much-discussed remarks....

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DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- Syrian government forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, on Thursday pushed into the ancient town of Palmyra, which has been held by the Islamic State group since May, state TV reported....

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- Syrian government forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, on Thursday pushed into the ancient town of Palmyra, which has been held by the Islamic State group since May, state TV reported....

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DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- The Latest on fighting against Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq (all times local):...

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- The Latest on fighting against Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq (all times local):...

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BRUSSELS (AP) -- A second attacker is suspected of taking part in the bombing this week of a Brussels subway train and may be at large, according to Belgian and French media reports, amid growing signs that the same Islamic State cell was behind the attacks in Brussels and bloodshed in Paris last year....

BRUSSELS (AP) -- A second attacker is suspected of taking part in the bombing this week of a Brussels subway train and may be at large, according to Belgian and French media reports, amid growing signs that the same Islamic State cell was behind the attacks in Brussels and bloodshed in Paris last year....

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BRUSSELS (AP) -- The Latest on the suicide bombings this week in Brussels (all times local):...

BRUSSELS (AP) -- The Latest on the suicide bombings this week in Brussels (all times local):...

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BAGHDAD (AP) -- An Iraqi military spokesman says the long-awaited military operation to recapture the northern city of Mosul from Islamic State militants "has begun."...

BAGHDAD (AP) -- An Iraqi military spokesman says the long-awaited military operation to recapture the northern city of Mosul from Islamic State militants "has begun."...

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BOSTON (AP) -- A federally funded effort in Boston, Los Angeles and Minneapolis to combat extremist recruitment has been slow to start since it was announced a year and a half ago....

BOSTON (AP) -- A federally funded effort in Boston, Los Angeles and Minneapolis to combat extremist recruitment has been slow to start since it was announced a year and a half ago....

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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -- Confronting a dark chapter in Latin America's history, President Barack Obama will pay tribute to victims of Argentina's "Dirty War," as he works to bring closure to questions about the U.S. role in one of the region's most repressive dictatorships....

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -- Confronting a dark chapter in Latin America's history, President Barack Obama will pay tribute to victims of Argentina's "Dirty War," as he works to bring closure to questions about the U.S. role in one of the region's most repressive dictatorships....

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