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Catholic News 2

IMAGE: CNS photo/Yannis Kolesidis, EPABy Junno Arocho EstevesMEXICO CITY (CNS) -- PopeFrancis demanded forceful denunciations of drug violence in Mexico from thecountry's bishops, who have preferred timid pronouncements instead of speakingprophetically on a tragedy that has claimed more than 100,000 lives over the past 10 years and left another 25,000 Mexicans missing.Speaking Feb. 13 to an audienceof bishops in Mexico City's Metropolitan Cathedral, Pope Francis urged them to confrontthe scourge of drug cartels and organized crime by raising their voices,developing pastoral plans, and "drawing in and embracing the fringes ofhuman existence in the ravaged areas of our cities.""I urge you not tounderestimate the moral and anti-social challenge, which the drug trade representsfor young people and Mexican society as a whole," Pope Francis said. "Themagnitude of this phenomenon ... and the gravity of the violence ... do notallow us as pastors of the church to hide behind anodyne denunci...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Yannis Kolesidis, EPA

By Junno Arocho Esteves

MEXICO CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis demanded forceful denunciations of drug violence in Mexico from the country's bishops, who have preferred timid pronouncements instead of speaking prophetically on a tragedy that has claimed more than 100,000 lives over the past 10 years and left another 25,000 Mexicans missing.

Speaking Feb. 13 to an audience of bishops in Mexico City's Metropolitan Cathedral, Pope Francis urged them to confront the scourge of drug cartels and organized crime by raising their voices, developing pastoral plans, and "drawing in and embracing the fringes of human existence in the ravaged areas of our cities."

"I urge you not to underestimate the moral and anti-social challenge, which the drug trade represents for young people and Mexican society as a whole," Pope Francis said. "The magnitude of this phenomenon ... and the gravity of the violence ... do not allow us as pastors of the church to hide behind anodyne denunciations."

The pope spoke to the Mexican bishops for more than 40 minutes, delivering a tough talk on matters the pope plans to highlight in his six-day Mexican trip, including violence, migrants and indigenous issues. In off-the-cuff remarks, he warned of "the temptation of aloofness and clericalism" for bishops, called for clerical transparency and asked for unity in the Mexican bishops' conference, which has pursued closer ties with political leaders in recent years, while speaking softly -- if at all -- on uncomfortable issues such as corruption.

Pope Francis hit hardest on the drug issue, something retired Pope Benedict XVI said nothing about in his 2012 trip to Mexico. It's an issue that has vexed Mexico and the Catholic Church over the past decade as a crackdown on drug cartels and organized crime has caused violence to rise, along with offenses such as extortion and kidnap. Many of those victims and victimizers were baptized Catholics.

The violence has claimed the lives more than a dozen priests over the past five years, while some dioceses have been accused to collecting "narcolimosnas" or "drug alms," and drug bosses -- who often consider themselves proper Catholics -- construct and fix parishes and sponsor patron saint feast days.

Pope Francis urged "prophetic courage" and implementing a pastoral approach of going to the peripheries, working with families and building bridges with parish communities, schools and the authorities, saying that only then "will people finally escape the raging waters that drown so many, either victims of the drug trade or those who stand before God with their hands drenched in blood, though with pockets filled with sordid money and their consciences deadened."

Pope Francis also alluded to the folkloric Santa Muerte, a skeletal pseudo-saint attracting hordes of followers in Mexico and Latin America, including many in the illegal drug trade.

"I am particularly concerned about those many persons who, seduced by the empty power of the world, praise illusions and embrace their macabre symbols to commercialize death in exchange for money which, in the end, 'moth and rust consume,'" he said.

The rise of Santa Muerte worship over the past 15 years has alarmed the Mexican church and drawn Vatican condemnations, said Andrew Chesnut, religious studies professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, who has studied the pseudo-saint and estimates it now has 10 million followers in Mexico and abroad.

"It's the chief concern of the Mexican church in terms of religious rivals," he said. "A week doesn't go by in which some Mexican bishop or priest denounces it as satanic."

Still, Pope Francis praised popular piety, common in Mexico, where the faithful adore the saints and participate in pilgrimages, while ignoring the sacramental part of the church.

"I invite you to give yourselves tirelessly and fearlessly to the task of evangelizing and deepening the faith by means of a mystagogical catechesis that treasures the popular religiosity of people," Pope Francis said. "Our times require pastoral attention to persons and groups who hope to encounter the living Jesus."

He also lauded the church for its work with the many mostly Central American migrants transiting the country on trips that expose them to crime such as extortion, robbery and rape.

"There are millions of sons and daughters of the church who today live in the diaspora or who are in transit, journeying to the North in search of new opportunities," he said, calling migration, "the challenge of our age."

Pope Francis plans to celebrate Mass a stone's throw from the U.S. border in Ciudad Juarez Feb. 17, when he is expected to expand on the migrant issue.

The pope travels to Chiapas at the other end of the country Feb. 15 for a Mass with Mexico's indigenous peoples, who have fallen away from the church in droves. He urged the bishops to build a church more inclusive for indigenous peoples, who often live in impoverished conditions and in communities where Spanish is seldom spoken.

"I ask you to show singular tenderness in the way you regard indigenous peoples and their fascinating but not infrequently decimated cultures," Pope Francis said.

"Mexico needs its American-Indian roots so as not to remain an unresolved enigma. The indigenous people of Mexico still await true recognition of the richness of their contribution and the fruitfulness of their presence."

Pope Francis expressed his admiration for Our Lady of Guadalupe, who "teaches us that the only power capable of conquering the hearts of men and women is the tenderness of God."

He also told the bishops, "We do not need 'princes,' but rather a community of the Lord's witnesses.

"Do not allow yourselves to be corrupted by trivial materialism or by the seductive illusion of underhanded agreements," he added in an allusion to suggestions that bishops sometimes smooth things out behind closed doors with corrupt officials and even criminals, instead of acting publicly. "Do not place your faith in the 'chariots and horses' of today's pharaohs, for our strength is in the pillar of fire that divides the sea in two, without much fanfare."

He ended with a call for unity, departing from his prepared comments to do so.

"If you have to fight, then fight; if you have to say things, say them but like men, face-to-face, like men of God, who can pray together, who can discern together, and if you argue to ask for forgiveness," he said. "But always maintain the unity of the episcopal body."

Church observers said the pope's message was unprecedented for Mexico, where the bishops' conference has become quite conservative over the past quarter-century as the church and government restored relations. In some Catholic circles, critical voices on issues such as human right have been considered an impediment to that process.

"Francis is saying something along the lines of 'I am aware of the differences among you,'" said Rodolfo Soriano Nunez, a sociologist and church observer in Mexico City. "There are lots of 'sects' within the Mexican bishops, groups that fight bitterly with each other while trying to offer themselves as the most reliable partners to the government."

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Follow Agren on Twitter: @el_reportero.

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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By Junno Arocho EstevesMEXICO CITY (CNS) -- PopeFrancis fulfilled his much-desired wish to pray in silence before themiraculous image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.After celebrating thefirst Mass of his papal trip to Mexico Feb. 13, the pope made his way to the"camarin" ("little room") behind the main altar of thebasilica dedicated to Mary.The miraculous mantle,which normally faces the congregation, can be turned around to allow a closerand more private moment of veneration.Laying a bouquet ofyellow roses in front of the image, the pope sat down in prayerful silence witheyes closed and head bowed. After roughly 20 minutes, the pope stood up, laidhis hand on the image and departed from the small room.About 12,000 peoplepacked the basilica for the papal Mass and another 30,000 were watching on screensset up in the outercourtyard. Built in 1976, the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe is located nearTepeyac hill, the site of Mary's apparitions to St. Juan Diego in 1531. With some 12 million ...

By Junno Arocho Esteves

MEXICO CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis fulfilled his much-desired wish to pray in silence before the miraculous image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

After celebrating the first Mass of his papal trip to Mexico Feb. 13, the pope made his way to the "camarin" ("little room") behind the main altar of the basilica dedicated to Mary. The miraculous mantle, which normally faces the congregation, can be turned around to allow a closer and more private moment of veneration.

Laying a bouquet of yellow roses in front of the image, the pope sat down in prayerful silence with eyes closed and head bowed. After roughly 20 minutes, the pope stood up, laid his hand on the image and departed from the small room.

About 12,000 people packed the basilica for the papal Mass and another 30,000 were watching on screens set up in the outer courtyard. Built in 1976, the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe is located near Tepeyac hill, the site of Mary's apparitions to St. Juan Diego in 1531. With some 12 million people visiting each year, it is Catholicism's most popular Marian shrine.

In his homily, the pope reflected on the Gospel reading, which recalled Mary's visit to her cousin Elizabeth. Mary's humility in saying "yes" to God's will, he said, is a response "which prompted her to give the best of herself, going forth to meet others."

That very humility also led her to appear to a poor indigenous man, he said. "Just as she made herself present to little Juan, so too she continues to reveal herself to all of us, especially to those who feel -- like him -- 'worthless,'" the pope said.

Recalling the miraculous appearance of Mary's image, Pope Francis noted that through such a miracle, "Juan experienced in his own life what hope is, what the mercy of God is."

The pope said that despite the indigenous saint's feelings of inadequacy, Mary chose him to "oversee, care for, protect and promote the building of this shrine."

"In this way, she managed to awaken something he did not know how to express, a veritable banner of love and justice: no one could be left out in the building of that other shrine: the shrine of life, the shrine of our communities, our societies and our cultures," he said.

God's true shrine, he added, is the life of his children, especially young people without a future, the elderly who are often unacknowledged and forgotten and families lacking even the most basic necessities.

"The shrine of God is the faces of the many people we encounter each day," the pope said.

Pope Francis said that those who suffer do not weep in vain and their sufferings are a silent prayer that rises to heaven, "always finding a place in Mary's mantle."

Like St. Juan Diego, Christians are called to be Mary's ambassadors and console those who are overwhelmed by trials and sufferings, he said.

"'Am I not your mother? Am I not here with you?' Mary says this to us again. Go and build my shrine, help me to lift up the lives of my sons and daughters, your brothers and sisters," the pope said.

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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IMAGE: CNS/Paul HaringBy SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico (CNS) -- Paying homage tothe culture and ancient wisdom of Mexico's indigenous peoples, Pope Francisurged them to hold on to hope and condemned those who exploit their people andtheir land."Some have considered your values, culture andtraditions to be inferior. Others, intoxicated by power, money and markettrends, have stolen your lands or contaminated them," the pope said at aMass Feb. 15 with representatives of Mexico's indigenous communities."You have much to teach us," he told the elders,activists and simple faithful gathered at a sports complex in San Cristobal deLas Casas, a city in Chiapas, Mexico's southernmost state, and a center ofadvocacy and struggle for the indigenous rights.Chiapas, and particularly the Diocese of San Cristobal deLas Casas, also has been a center of official Catholic support for indigenousculture, support that was not always shared by all of Mexico's bishops. During his stay in the city, Pope ...

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By

SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico (CNS) -- Paying homage to the culture and ancient wisdom of Mexico's indigenous peoples, Pope Francis urged them to hold on to hope and condemned those who exploit their people and their land.

"Some have considered your values, culture and traditions to be inferior. Others, intoxicated by power, money and market trends, have stolen your lands or contaminated them," the pope said at a Mass Feb. 15 with representatives of Mexico's indigenous communities.

"You have much to teach us," he told the elders, activists and simple faithful gathered at a sports complex in San Cristobal de Las Casas, a city in Chiapas, Mexico's southernmost state, and a center of advocacy and struggle for the indigenous rights.

Chiapas, and particularly the Diocese of San Cristobal de Las Casas, also has been a center of official Catholic support for indigenous culture, support that was not always shared by all of Mexico's bishops.

During his stay in the city, Pope Francis communicated the Vatican's official approval of the use of the local languages in liturgical prayer. Two of the languages -- Tzotzil and Tzeltal -- were used for some of the readings and prayers during the pope's Mass. And, after the pope read his homily in Spanish, it was translated for the many in the crowd who speak only their Mayan tongue.

It was under Pope Francis that the diocese was allowed to start ordaining permanent deacons again in 2014 after ordering a 12-year suspension. The vast majority of the diocese's more than 300 permanent deacons are married leaders in their indigenous communities; the late Bishop Samuel Ruiz Garcia began ordaining large numbers of the leaders in a program of pastoral outreach that many saw as exaggerating the place of indigenous culture in the local church, but also as a potential first step toward pushing for married priests for indigenous communities.

As the pope toured the crowd in the popemobile, a priest led the people in chanting: "Welcome, pope of peace. Welcome, pope of mercy. Welcome, pope of justice. Welcome, pope of freedom. Welcome, pope of the struggle."

The cheer also hailed the pope for wanting "a church that is born of the people" and bishops and priests who are "alongside the poor."

To applause, the priest also acclaimed, "The people walk with Tatic Samuel (Bishop Ruiz) and Tatic Francis, who encourages us." Tatic is the Mayan word for father.

In a country rich in natural resources, but scarred by pollution and inequality, Pope Francis compared the indigenous communities to the ancient Israelites enslaved in Egypt, and he assured them that God hears their cry for dignity and respect and their longing to protect their cultures.

In responding to the oppression of the Israelites, the pope said, God showed them his true face, "the face of a father who suffers as he sees the pain, mistreatment and lack of justice for his children."

"They say that Chiapas is a rich state, but we don't know where these riches are," said Manuel Mendez, a vegetable farmer. Wearing a lambs-wool robe at Mass, Mendez comes from the tough indigenous town of San Juan Chamula -- where the local authorities clashed with Bishop Ruiz and refused to allow his priests to serve while he led the diocese.

The federal and state governments have sent enormous sums of money to Chiapas since the 1994 Zapatista uprising of indigenous, but poverty rates have remained unchanged and still top 75 percent of the population.

"It's better, but there are still great needs," said Domingo Lopez, a corn farmer from the municipality of Oxchuc, who camped out overnight in the cold at the Mass site with 11 family members.

Pope Francis quoted "Popol Vuh," a collection of traditional indigenous literature, which says, "The dawn rises on all of the tribes together. The face of the earth was immediately healed by the sun." The story, he said, illustrates how "the sun rose for the people who at various times have walked in the midst of history's darkest moments."

The quotation expresses a yearning for freedom and for reaching "a promised land where oppression, mistreatment and humiliation are not the currency of the day," Pope Francis said.

Mexico's indigenous and many other people around the world still yearn for such a land and "for a time when human corruption will be overcome by fraternity, when injustice will be conquered by solidarity and when violence will be silenced by peace."

Today, too, God suffers when his children do, he said.  In his greatest sign of solidarity with humanity, God sent his son into the world to live like them and to suffer and die to save them.

God's son rose "so that darkness may not have the last word and dawn may not cease to rise on the lives of his sons and daughters," the pope told the people.

The yearning for freedom and a bright future is something to hold on to and keep alive, Pope Francis said. People must resist attempts others make to silence their yearning, "anesthetize our soul" or "lull our children" into thinking that nothing can change and their dreams will never come true.

The main road leading to the sports center was decorated with banners featuring photos of local people and quotations from Pope Francis, many of them from his encyclical, "Laudato Si'," on safeguarding creation.

At the Mass, the pope praised the indigenous people's wisdom in caring for the earth and encouraged their efforts to defend it from further destruction.

"The environmental challenge that we are experiencing and its human causes, affect us all and demands our response," he said. "We can no longer remain silent before one of the greatest environmental crises in world history."

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Contributing to this story was David Agren in San Cristobal de Las Casas.

Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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IMAGE: CNS/Paul HaringBy Dennis SadowskiSAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS,Mexico (CNS) -- Pope Francis warned against moves to diminish the importance ofthe family, peppering his talk with anecdotes and off-the-cuff remarks thatkept a packed soccer stadium cheering, laughing and applauding.Speaking under a scorching-hotsun as dozens were treated for heat stroke, the pope said family life was notalways easy and often was a struggle, but he pleaded for perseverance, saying familylife was one of the solutions to increasing isolation and uncertainty and itsunintended consequences."I prefer a wounded familythat makes daily efforts to put love into play to a society that is sick fromisolationism and is habitually afraid of love," Pope Francis said Feb. 15 infront of a boisterous audience of families, who came from across southernMexican and nearby Guatemala for a celebration in the city of Tuxtla Gutierrez."I prefer a family that makes repeated efforts to begin again to a societythat is narciss...

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Dennis Sadowski

SAN CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico (CNS) -- Pope Francis warned against moves to diminish the importance of the family, peppering his talk with anecdotes and off-the-cuff remarks that kept a packed soccer stadium cheering, laughing and applauding.

Speaking under a scorching-hot sun as dozens were treated for heat stroke, the pope said family life was not always easy and often was a struggle, but he pleaded for perseverance, saying family life was one of the solutions to increasing isolation and uncertainty and its unintended consequences.

"I prefer a wounded family that makes daily efforts to put love into play to a society that is sick from isolationism and is habitually afraid of love," Pope Francis said Feb. 15 in front of a boisterous audience of families, who came from across southern Mexican and nearby Guatemala for a celebration in the city of Tuxtla Gutierrez. "I prefer a family that makes repeated efforts to begin again to a society that is narcissistic and obsessed with luxury and comfort. I prefer a family with tired faces from generous giving to faces with makeup that know nothing of tenderness and compassion."

The pope's focus on families turned the focus of his six-day visit toward the pastoral issues after hitting hard on matters such as corruption, crime and the country's often impoverished and exploited indigenous populations.

During the event, a couple from the city of Monterrey -- one of whom was divorced -- spoke of the stigma and sense of not belonging by not being able to receive Communion, but finding a home in the Catholic Church by serving others and organizing pastoral projects.

"As we came close to our church, we received loved and compassion," said Humberto and Claudia Gomez, who are married civilly, but not in the church. "It's marvelous to have a marriage and family in which God is at the center."

Another speaker, single mother Beatriz Munoz Hernandez, 52, spoke of a childhood marked by "poverty, violence and abandonment" by her father, then of becoming pregnant as a teenager.

"I found the love of God through his church and he rescued me, announced that he loved me, that he didn't reject me and, above all, that he forgave me," said Munoz, adding her faith helped in overcoming the temptation of seeing abortion as a solution to several pregnancies.

Pope Francis cracked jokes throughout his speech and strayed from his prepared text. He mentioned a couple married for 50 years and asked "who was the most patient." The answer was obvious for the pope: "Both of them."

Departing from prepared remarks, he offered advice for creating happy families and keeping the peace in times of turbulence.

"Do not end the day without making peace," Pope Francis said. "If you end the day in war, you will end up in cold war, and a cold war is very dangerous in the family, because it will undermine families from underneath."

Pope Francis focused most on overcoming isolation and uncertainty and its insidious effects.

"Uncertainty is not only a threat to our stomach (which is already serious), but it can also threaten our soul, demoralizing us and taking away our energy, so that we seek apparent solutions that, in the end solve nothing," he said. "There is a kind of uncertainty which can be very dangerous, which can creep in surreptitiously; it is the uncertainty born of solitude and isolation."

He cited the example of Humberto and Claudia and their service to others as a solution. Another solution, he said, was with smart public policy, "which protects and guarantees the bare necessities of life so that every home and every person can develop through education and dignified employment."

"Laws and personal commitment," the pope said, "are a good pairing to break the spiral of uncertainty."

Family is often seen as a social safety net in Mexico and a pillar in a low-trust society, though state statistics show people are marrying less, divorcing more and increasingly living in nontraditional families.

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Follow Agren on Twitter: @el_reportero.

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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IMAGE: CNS/photo Alessandro Di Meo, EPABy VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- A talk given to new bishops duringa Vatican-sponsored course does not represent new guidelines on the church'sresponse to abuse against minors by religious, a Vatican spokesman said. A 44-page report authored by French Msgr. Tony Anatrellaand just published by the Vatican publishing house "is not in any way --as someone erroneously interpreted -- a new Vatican document or a newinstruction or new guidelines for bishops," Jesuit Father FedericoLombardi said in a written statement released late Feb. 11.The talk was part of a conference of experts given inSeptember and was "published together with other (talks) on differentsubjects," Father Lombardi wrote.Msgr. Anatrella's talk addressed emotional maturity anddeviant behaviors in the priesthood as well as church procedures for dealingwith accusations of the abuse of children by clergy.The monsignor, a psychoanalyst and a consultant to thepontifical councils for the family a...

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VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- A talk given to new bishops during a Vatican-sponsored course does not represent new guidelines on the church's response to abuse against minors by religious, a Vatican spokesman said.

A 44-page report authored by French Msgr. Tony Anatrella and just published by the Vatican publishing house "is not in any way -- as someone erroneously interpreted -- a new Vatican document or a new instruction or new guidelines for bishops," Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi said in a written statement released late Feb. 11.

The talk was part of a conference of experts given in September and was "published together with other (talks) on different subjects," Father Lombardi wrote.

Msgr. Anatrella's talk addressed emotional maturity and deviant behaviors in the priesthood as well as church procedures for dealing with accusations of the abuse of children by clergy.

The monsignor, a psychoanalyst and a consultant to the pontifical councils for the family and for health care ministry, "does not say anything new or different from what has been said up until now by relevant church institutions," Father Lombardi said.

The Vatican recently released the speeches, homilies and reflections from last year's course in a book, "Witnesses of the Risen One." The texts were published only in the original language in which they were delivered. Since 2001, all newly ordained bishops serving in dioceses that report to the Congregation for Bishops have been obliged to come to Rome in September for an eight- or nine-day course for new bishops.

Some media outlets reported that Msgr. Anatrella's talk, written in French, said bishops are not obligated to report accusations of abuse to authorities.

The Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith mandated in a 2011 letter that in every nation and region, bishops should have clear and coordinated procedures for protecting children, assisting victims of abuse, dealing with accused priests, training clergy and cooperating with civil authorities.

Describing sexual abuse of minors as "a crime prosecuted by civil law," the doctrinal congregation said bishops should follow local laws that require reporting cases of sexual abuse to police. Not all countries mandate the reporting of abuse cases to police, however.

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors reaffirmed that beyond the mandates of civil law, all members of the church "have a moral and ethical responsibility to report suspected abuse to the civil authorities who are charged with protecting our society."

U.S. Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley of Boston, president of papal commission, issued the written statement Feb. 15, quoting Pope Francis, who said Sept. 27 that "the crimes and sins of the sexual abuse of children must not be kept secret for any longer. I pledge the zealous vigilance of the church to protect children and the promise of accountability for all."

Cardinal O'Malley reiterated the commission's willingness to provide educational resources not only to new bishops during their annual course in Rome, but also to all offices at the Vatican "for their use in their own child protection efforts."

The U.S. bishops' "Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People" -- first adopted in 2002 and revised in 2005 and 2011 -- outlined how the church leaders would provide a safe environment for children and young people in church-sponsored activities. It established uniform procedures for handling sex-abuse allegations and adopted a "zero tolerance" policy. It also required background checks and training in child protection for church employees and required dioceses facing allegations made about priests or other church workers to alert authorities, conduct an investigation and remove the accused person from duty.

Newly appointed bishops in the United States also receive two training sessions, which "clearly and explicitly" underline the obligation to report suspected abuse to public authorities, Cardinal O'Malley said in the papal commission's written statement.

Last June, Pope Francis also approved new procedures for the Vatican's doctrinal office to investigate and judge claims of "abuse of office" by bishops who allegedly failed to protect minors and vulnerable adults from sex abuse.

In the portion of his talk on a bishop's responsibility concerning abuse accusations against one of his priests, Msgr. Anatrella reiterated directives requiring bishops to open a canonical investigation as soon as possible into alleged abuses in order to "establish the truth of the facts."

After spelling out mandated church procedures concerning such crimes, he also underlined the church's call to bishops to follow local laws.

The monsignor said that in countries where reporting was mandatory, it was "not necessarily up to" the bishop to report to civil authorities as soon as he has learned of an accusation, but up to the alleged victim and/or the family.

Nevertheless, the monsignor wrote, the bishop always possesses "the faculty" of reporting "in good conscience" the abuse if necessary to civil authorities based on how serious the situation is.

Given the new powers of the Vatican's doctrinal office to investigate and penalize bishops for failing to protect minors, the monsignor added that bishops have to be able to prove they acted upon learning of alleged abuse, investigated allegations and sanctioned those found guilty according to church laws.

"The bishops must be able to prove that he has tried something without being lax in order to neutralize the acts of the abuser" with canonical procedures, he wrote. The bishop will be disciplined -- not because of how the investigation turned out -- but for a failure to act to protect victims from assault by someone under his authority, he wrote.

In an interview Feb. 12 with the French news agency iMedia, Msgr. Anatrella said: "For the church, it is obvious that there must be cooperation between church tribunals and police and judicial authorities" concerning the crime of abuse.

He also clarified his remark about the obligation falling first to victims and families -- not necessarily bishops -- to report abuse in countries where reporting is mandatory.

"I said in this paragraph that the bishop or his representative will first encourage the minor-victim and his or her family to file a complaint with the police. If they do not, then it is up to the church authority to make a report," he told the news agency.


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IMAGE: CNS/Nancy WiechecBy ELPASO, Texas (CNS) -- Two days before Pope Francis' main event in Ciudad Juarez,Mexico, the Diocese of El Paso was coordinating the final touches to its own two mainpapal events.Whilethe Diocese of Juarez's chancery was bustling with church officials obtainingtheir papal Mass credentials, El Paso Bishop Mark J. Seitz was handling a fullday of meetings, greeting incoming dignitaries and doing media interviews. Heclosed the day meeting with parishioners at St. Ignatius Church to distribute200 free tickets to a celebration to be held at the Sun Bowl Stadium Feb. 17."Wehad this idea because we knew many people would not be able to go across (toJuarez)," Bishop Seitz told Catholic News Service Feb. 15, "and thenit became clear that not many people would be able to gather at the border --actually no one -- so we were looking for an alternative."Thebishop said the tickets to the Sun Bowl, priced at $15 for nonparishioners and$10 for parishioners, were selling we...

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EL PASO, Texas (CNS) -- Two days before Pope Francis' main event in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, the Diocese of El Paso was coordinating the final touches to its own two main papal events.

While the Diocese of Juarez's chancery was bustling with church officials obtaining their papal Mass credentials, El Paso Bishop Mark J. Seitz was handling a full day of meetings, greeting incoming dignitaries and doing media interviews. He closed the day meeting with parishioners at St. Ignatius Church to distribute 200 free tickets to a celebration to be held at the Sun Bowl Stadium Feb. 17.

"We had this idea because we knew many people would not be able to go across (to Juarez)," Bishop Seitz told Catholic News Service Feb. 15, "and then it became clear that not many people would be able to gather at the border -- actually no one -- so we were looking for an alternative."

The bishop said the tickets to the Sun Bowl, priced at $15 for nonparishioners and $10 for parishioners, were selling well, but he was doubtful the event would sell the 51,500 tickets needed to fill it. The 4 p.m. (local time) papal Mass will be simulcasted at the stadium after an afternoon musical show.

"Tickets for the other one were no problem," he said referring to a gathering scheduled at a reserved area on the edge the causeway of the Rio Grande, the natural U.S.-Mexico border. "There are only 600 (guests) permitted in an area that is very restricted by the Border Patrol."

Before starting the Juarez Mass, Pope Francis will take some time to pray, not only with Mass attendees, but also with church officials, migrants, refugees, immigration activists, and victims of violence seated across the river.

Bishop Seitz will be in the party receiving Pope Francis to Ciudad Juarez early Feb. 17, and also will stand with the pope when he prays facing the river and greets the people on the opposite side.

"It's difficult to put into words how wonderful that is, to have the leader of 1.2 billion Catholics of people here, in our region, people who have suffered a good deal from all the violence across the border," the bishop said.

Bishop Seitz chose St. Ignatius to receive the free tickets because the parish is located close to the area that will be blocked off all day for the river event. Segundo Barrio, as the neighborhood is called, is one of the poorest in the city.

The Diocese of El Paso has a population of 890,500, of which just over 81 percent is Hispanic; 75 percent of the population is Catholic.

"This is one metropolitan area with a line drawn across it," said Bishop Seitz of the El Paso-Juarez conglomerate. "And yet there are so many things that connect us. This is a very important day here in El Paso even if the pope isn't physically crossing the border."

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IMAGE: CNS/Paul HaringBy Gaby ManiscalcoMORELIA, Mexico (CNS) -- The devil loves Christians -- especiallypriests and nuns -- who are resigned to the violence and corruption aroundthem, Pope Francis said.Celebrating Mass Feb. 16 at a stadium in Morelia, PopeFrancis repeated his frequent call to priests, religious and seminarians to getout of their churches and convents and take God's mercy and offer of salvationto the world.But in Morelia, the geographic center of Mexico and capitalof Michoacan state -- a stronghold of the Knights Templar drug cartel -- thepope was not talking just about traditional evangelization.The pope's message was an encouragement to those priests andreligious who literally risk their lives standing up to the drug lords andurging their faithful to do the same.Mexico's Catholic Multimedia Center reported in earlyFebruary that 40 priests in Mexico have been murdered or simply disappeared inthe past 10 years. Many of the cases are clearly linked to the priests'den...

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Gaby Maniscalco

MORELIA, Mexico (CNS) -- The devil loves Christians -- especially priests and nuns -- who are resigned to the violence and corruption around them, Pope Francis said.

Celebrating Mass Feb. 16 at a stadium in Morelia, Pope Francis repeated his frequent call to priests, religious and seminarians to get out of their churches and convents and take God's mercy and offer of salvation to the world.

But in Morelia, the geographic center of Mexico and capital of Michoacan state -- a stronghold of the Knights Templar drug cartel -- the pope was not talking just about traditional evangelization.

The pope's message was an encouragement to those priests and religious who literally risk their lives standing up to the drug lords and urging their faithful to do the same.

Mexico's Catholic Multimedia Center reported in early February that 40 priests in Mexico have been murdered or simply disappeared in the past 10 years. Many of the cases are clearly linked to the priests' denunciation of the drug trade.

Pope Francis told an estimated 20,000 church workers gathered in the stadium that the Christian faith is not a matter for the intellect alone or something that occupies a few hours each day or each week. It is about one's life.

Jesus, he said, did not simply teach his disciples, he brought them into his life, showing them who he was and how they were to live by keeping them with him as he ate, slept, cured, preached and prayed.

"He invited them to share his life," the pope said, and when he prayed and referred to God as "father," it was not simply a word, but contained "a sense of life, of experience, of authenticity."

All Christians, but especially those charged with the pastoral care of others, also must share Jesus' life with them. 

"Woe to us if we are not witnesses to what we have seen and heard. Woe to us," he said.

"We are not and do not want to be 'administrators of the divine,'" he said. "We are not and do not want to be God's employees, for we are invited to share in his life."

In his Lenten reflection, Pope Francis asked the priests and religious to think about the temptations they face in their lives.

"What temptation can come to us from places often dominated by violence, corruption, drug trafficking, disregard for human dignity and indifference in the face of suffering and vulnerability?" he asked.

The big temptation, he said, is resignation.

In the face of overwhelming violence and death, the pope said, "the devil can overcome us with one of his favorite weapons: resignation. A resignation that paralyzes us and prevents us not only from walking, but also from making the journey."

The devil wants to sow a resignation "which not only terrifies us, but which also entrenches us in our 'sacristies' and false securities," he said. Such an attitude "not only hinders our looking to the future, but also thwarts our desire to take risks and to change."

Some of the prayers at the Mass were offered in Purepecha, and Pope Francis called for special care of the Purepecha indigenous people. As a model of one who resisted the temptation of resignation, he offered Bishop Vasco Vazquez de Quiroga, the first bishop of Michoacan. Ministering in the mid-1500s, the Spaniard was shocked by how the Purepecha were treated, enslaved and impoverished.

Bishop Vazquez did not fall prey to resignation, but was inspired to act "in the midst of so much paralyzing injustice. The pain and suffering of his brothers and sisters became his prayer, and his prayer led to his response."

The Purepechas referred to him as "Tata Vasco," which means "father, dad, daddy," the pope said. It is the same kind of language Jesus used when referring to God.

Pope Francis ended his homily with a prayer: "Father, dad, daddy, lead us not into the temptation of resignation ...." He also told the priests and religious that the pastoral staff and chalice he was using at the Mass belonged to Bishop Vazquez.

The pope's somber homily was a contrast with the atmosphere of fiesta that preceded his arrival. Filling the stands and the field of the sports stadium, the priests and religious sang with gusto and chanted papal cheers while jumping up and down or doing the wave.

Pope Francis was welcomed to Morelia with the largest crowds of his Mexico trip, which began Feb. 12. Thousands of people -- standing five and six deep -- lined miles of roadway leading to the stadium.

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Contributing to this story was Junno Arocho Esteves.

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Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) -- Standing in a line of thousands outside an arena at Colorado State University, Aleksandr Cronk contemplated the grim possibility that the man he was waiting to see, Bernie Sanders, may not make it to the November ballot and he'd have to decide whether to vote for Hillary Clinton....

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