Tag: Pope Francis

  • Wealth must be shared with others – Pope

    Wealth must be shared with others – Pope

    Being rich is not a sin, but Christians must share their wealth with others, Pope Francis, said on Wednesday, renewing the Catholic Church’s criticism of greed.

    “Money is by itself a good instrument, like almost all things at human disposal: it is a tool that broadens our capacities,’’ the pontiff wrote in a short essay published by Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper.

    However, “when economic power is a tool that produces fortunes that people keep to themselves, hiding them from others, it leads to injustice, it loses its original positive value,’’ Francis wrote.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the pontiff’s remarks were written as introduction to “Poor for the Poor. The Mission of the Church,’’ a new book written by German Archbishop, Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, who heads the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican office, which enforces Catholic teachings.

    Mueller is one of 19 cardinal-elects that the Pope is due to elevate on Saturday.

    The title of his book echoes Francis’ famous words days after his election in March last year.

    The Pope said he wanted “a poor Church, for the poor.’’

    The Argentine-born pontiff has strong views on social justice, which have riled some ultra-conservatives.

     

  • Pope sets to name cardinals

    Pope Francis would in next few weeks chose the “princes of the Church” who would help him set its future course and one day elect his successor from their number.

    Reuters reports on Tuesday in Vatican City that the Pope’s choice of cardinals was one of the clearest signals of the direction in which he wants the 1.2 billion-strong Roman Catholic Church to go, and what type of man he wants to succeed him.

    It said Francis was expected to reveal his choices before the end of January so that preparations for the ceremonial could be made.

    Reuters recounted that in the past, it was a fairly safe bet that archbishops of big dioceses or those heading Vatican departments traditionally headed by cardinals would get the three-peaked “biretta,” the red ceremonial hat that cardinals wear.

    But Francis, who renounced the spacious papal suite for a modest apartment in a Vatican guest house, and was driven around in a simple Ford Focus instead of a bulletproof Mercedes limousine, has shown little regard for precedent or tradition.

    Father Antonio Spadaro, Editor, Jesuit journal Civilta Cattolica said: “He will feel very free to choose the people he thinks should be in those positions, regardless of what was done before.

    He said the move would create better understanding of the direction of the Catholic Church.

    Spadaro said there are currently 14 vacancies in the College of Cardinals for “cardinal electors,” those who would be allowed to enter a conclave to elect a pope.

    He said the church rules in theory limit the number of “cardinal electors” to 120 but Francis can decide to bend or even abolish the rule.

     

  • Pope advocates peaceful  co-existence in Nigeria

    Pope advocates peaceful co-existence in Nigeria

    Catholic Pontiff Pope Francis yesterday identified peaceful co-existence as the only solution to the crisis in some parts of Nigeria.

    The Pope stated this in his message at the celebration of the World Day of Peace which is an annual event of Catholic faithful worldwide.

    The message was read by the Archbishop, Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos, Most Rev Adewale Martins, at the Holy Cross Catholic Church, Lagos.

    “It is easy to realise that fraternity is the foundation and pathway of peace

    “When we have the value of fraternity, a feeling of brotherhood, love and care for one another, many of our problems would not be there.

    “Our fraternity is based on the fact that we are all made on the likeness and image of God.

    “Our brotherhood is not based on any factor other than we are all children of one God.

    “What is to be done is to get back to the roots to identify ourselves and recognise and deal with ourselves as brothers and sisters that we are.

    “It will go a long way to bring peace back into the world,” he said.

    He attributed the situation to the inability of genuine relationships among the people and lack of solid family and community relationships.

    “We are concerned by the various types of hardship, marginalisation, isolation and various forms of pathological dependencies which are currently on increase.

    “This kind of problems can be overcome only through the rediscovery and valuing of fraternal relationships in the heart of families and communities.

    “Also in the sharing of joys and sorrows of the hardships and triumphs that are a part of human life,” he said.

  • May God hear Pope’s prayer on Nigeria

    Pope Francis’ Christmas Day informal intervention in strife in Nigeria, specifically the apparently religious war by Islamic fundamentalists under the banner of Boko Haram, should be cause for deep reflection by the presidency, which does not seem to be winning. It is noteworthy that the Goodluck Jonathan administration extended emergency rule in the troubled Northeastern states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe by another six months with no end to the destructive conflict in sight. There are indications that the insurgents have reviewed their strategy in a counter move to the government’s approach, and their recent devastating penetration of military facilities demonstrated that they were not about to surrender or concede defeat.

    So, when the new Vicar of Christ, elected on March 13, in his first “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and world) message on the theme of peace, called for dialogue to resolve the violence, he was understandably speaking as a priest and perhaps without a clear understanding of the basic issues. It is certainly difficult to imagine a compromise on the part of the rebels, who have escalated hostilities since 2009 and callously terrorised the people with a view to imposing an Islamic theocracy, which amounts to an unacceptable contradiction of the secularity emphasised by the country’s constitution. How do you talk with closed-minded desperadoes who refuse to co-exist with others outside their own faith?

    Ironically, the Roman Catholic leader, who preached a homily of harmony to tens of thousands of the faithful from the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, represented a symbol of the very religion that Boko Haram considers anathema and deserving of destruction, to go by its consistent attacks on churches. It is interesting that with particular reference to the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians, and the crisis in Nigeria, Syria, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Iraq, the chief of the 1.2 billion-member Church said, “God is peace; let us ask him to help us to be peacemakers each day, in our life, in our families, in our cities and nations, in the whole world.”

    Of course, the Pope’s recommendation of dialogue in connection with the Nigerian conflict is not novel; various other voices from different quarters have before now suggested that the government should pursue the path of negotiation and lay down arms. However, there is no doubt that, on account of his immense stature and moral influence, the Pope’s verbal mediation has not only further publicised the clash internationally, it has also reinforced the need for government to critically re-evaluate its road map to peace. It is a development that demands a high degree of strategic creativity, especially in the light of the fact that the prolonged fighting continues to arrest progress in the affected areas.

    It is intriguing that the government has been unable to crush the rebellion through the force of weapons, which makes the Pope’s wisdom attractive. However, apart from the rigid resistance of the militants to dialogue, there is the inevitable possibility that such accommodation may set a counter-productive precedence, which could be exploited by others. The situation places the administration in a tight spot, but it will need to do something anyway and expeditiously too.

    It is clear that the world is watching and waiting to see how answers will be provided to the problem, and what answers. The Pope’s supplication for peace brings to mind the poetic construction of Alfred Lord Tennyson, who wrote, “More things are wrought by prayer than this world dreams of.” In this context, it is optimistic to dream of a New Year that will bring an end to terror in the land. May God hear the Pope’s prayer!

     

     

     

  • Pope to make first Christmas speech

    Pope Francis is set to make his first Christmas address as pontiff in front of thousands of pilgrims in St Peter’s Square in the Vatican, BBC reports.

    The Argentine pope is expected to tackle themes such as global poverty, which he has focused on since taking over from Benedict in March this year.

    Last year Benedict used his Christmas address to call for peace in Syria.

    Christians around the world are celebrating Christmas, which marks the birth of Jesus Christ in Bethlehem.

    On Tuesday evening thousands gathered in Bethlehem’s Manger Square for Christmas Eve celebrations.

    The nearby Church of the Nativity sits on the spot where Jesus is said to have been born.

    BBC says it was the biggest crowd to attend the event in years.

    Latin Patriarch Archbishop Fouad Twal, the most senior Roman Catholic cleric in the Holy Land, called on the crowd to be “brothers with each other.”

    Pope Francis celebrated his first Christmas Eve Mass since becoming pontiff at St Peter’s Basilica.

    In a short homily, Francis said that every Christian can choose between darkness and light, between love and hate.

     

  • Pope Francis is Time’s person of the year

    Pope Francis is Time’s person of the year

    Being the earthly leader of the Catholic Church has its perks. Among them: You’re a 50/50 bet to be Time magazine’s Person of the Year at some point.

    Pope Francis, the secret-alms-giving, random-faithful-calling, non-homosexuality-judging new pontiff from Argentina, is the magazine’s choice for 2013, edging out runners-up Edward Snowden and Edith Windsor.

    He becomes the third pope in 51 years to hold the title. Reformer John XXIII was 1962’s POY (then still the Man of the Year, actually) and John Paul II got the nod in 1994. Not recognized during that span were Popes Paul XI VI and his successor, John Paul I, and Francis’s predecessor, Benedict XVI.

    Francis’s reformist tendencies could make him a somewhat controversial choice, but Snowden, the former NSA contractor whose leaks about the agency’s far-reaching surveillance efforts have been dominating headlines for months, would have been far more controversial.

    In an email interview, Snowden tells Time’s Michael Scherer that — unlike, say, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — he acted responsibly. “There have of course been some stories where my calculation of what is not public interest differs from that of reporters, but it is for this precise reason that publication decisions were entrusted to journalists and their editors,” he said. “I recognise I have clear biases influencing my judgment.

  • Pope Francis says Mandela will inspire generations

    Hope Francis yesterday paid tribute to Nelson Mandela’s struggle to forge a just South Africa, praising the anti-apartheid hero’s commitment to non-violence, reconciliation and truth.

    “I pray that the late president’s example will inspire generations of South Africans to put justice and the common good at the forefront of their political aspirations,” Francis said in a telegram to South African President Jacob Zuma. The pontiff praised “the steadfast commitment shown by Nelson Mandela in promoting the human dignity of all the nation’s citizens and in forging a new South Africa built on the firm foundations of non-violence, reconciliation and truth.”

    The death of South Africa’s first black president, aged 95, spurred an outpouring of sorrow from political leaders and ordinary people for the passing of one of the world’s most celebrated statesmen.

  • Of Pope Francis and Nigerian politics  

    SIR: There are some interesting coincidences between Spain and Nigeria in respect of Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Ibrahim Babangida, Muhammadu Buhari and Sanusi Lamido Sanusi; All Muslims. Spain used to be a Muslim Country.

    Pope Francis is a Jesuit meaning he belongs to the Society of Jesus founded by Ignatius of Loyola. Pope Francis was head of the Jesuits in Argentina.”On the morning of the 15th of August, 1534, in the chapel of church of Saint Peter, at Montmartre, Loyola and his six companions, of whom only one was a priest, met and took upon themselves the solemn vows of their lifelong work”. Babangida was born August 17 1941. Babangida was given the Argentinean name MARADONA by the Nigerian Press. Pope Francis was born December 17 1936 and Muhammadu Buhari December 17 1942.  The Pope is a Head of state and Buhari ex Head of state.  Pope Francis is austere and Buhari is known to be stern. July 31 is known as Saint Ignatius of Loyola Day and Central Bank Governor tipped as a possible Presidential candidate like Buhari was born on July 31, 1961.

    The registration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) was accepted on July 31 2013 by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Ignatius of Loyola was born in Northern Spain in 1491. He was a soldier. Ibrahim Babangida was born in Northern Nigeria in 1941 also a soldier. 1491 could be said to be a rearrangement of 1941

    Babangida is an ex General of the Nigerian Armed forces and Ignatius a Superior General of the Catholic Church.

    Ignatius took up arms for the Duke of Najera. Broke his leg and injured another was known to limp, had surgery and spent a long time recovering after being taken home by French Soldiers. Babangida fought in the Nigerian Civil war. Sustained a leg injury, known to limp, had surgery and spent a long time recovering in a Hospital in France Najera sounds like Nigeria Najera is associated with the river Najerilla. Nigeria is associated with the river Niger.

    Ignatius lived in the Castle of Loyola in Spain

    Babangida lives in a Mansion in Minna, Niger State.

    July 31 is known as the feast of Saint Ignatius of Loyola. Ignatius of Loyola died July 31, 1556. On July 31, 1991 Babangida declared open the Executive Chamber of the Presidential Villa (where maters of state are deliberated). Interestingly, Raymond Dokpesi, the director of the then Babangida presidential campaign organisation is an old Boy of Loyola College Ibadan.

     

    •Augustine Togonu-Bickersteth,

    London, England

  • Popes to be declared saints next year

    Popes to be declared saints next year

    The late Pope John Paul II and Pope John XXIII will be declared saints on 27 April 2014.

    BBC quoted Pope Francis as saying on Monday.

    Details later…

     

  • Salvation on earth: Two  exemplary paradigms (1)

    Salvation on earth: Two exemplary paradigms (1)

    The Argentines are having a ball. This column sees no reason why they shouldn’t. In Diego Amanda Maradona and Lionel Messi, they have two of the greatest footballers that the world has ever produced. The mesmerising Messi is currently the world’s best footballer, and like the prodigious Maradona at his prime, he could waltz or blitz his way through a battalion of defenders with the ease and facility of a goldfish in water. The sheer ecstasy of watching these two is the ultimate in orgiastic visual pleasure.

    But there are even more profound reasons why the Argentines should feel cool with themselves. The Catholic world has just elected its first ever Argentine Pope. Ninety five per cent of Argentines may be devout Catholic, but before now moving the headship of the papacy to the pampas or the whole of Latin America for that matter appeared a long shot in the dark. Now it has happened.

    In addition to this is the economic and political transformation going on in Argentina . Slowly but quite discernibly, Argentina is turning the political and economic corner. In recent decades, Argentines could only live on the glory of the country’s golden age in the last quarter of the nineteenth century leading to early twentieth century. Decades of brutal military misrule and grinding economic misfortune had sapped the energy and confidence of the people.

    It is also perhaps wondrously and intriguingly symbolic that Margaret Thatcher, Argentina’s greatest modern tormentor, should choose to answer the final call at the very moment of Argentinean revival and renaissance. The boulevards of Buenos Aires flared up in jubilation and ululation as the news broke that the nemesis of the nation had joined her ancestors. Famously libeled as a nation of Italians who speak Spanish but think they are English living in Paris, the Argentines appear to be finally rediscovering themselves.

    But it is not just the Argentines who are headed for a starry ascent. Virtually the entire continent of South America seemed to be witnessing a continental rebirth and rejuvenation. From Panama to Peru, an entire continent is being shaken and dragged off its rutted and gutted grooves of complacency and sloth. Leading the pack is Brazil which in a decade has lifted more than 50 million people out of poverty into middle class self-sufficiency.

    Brazil’s dramatic economic transformation and looming ascendancy as a global power have won grudging respect and concession from the USA. Brazil’s president, a pragmatic disciple of the iconic Lula, has been invited for a full state visit to America, the first time in about two decades that a Brazilian leader is being accorded such a honour by the US.

    The entire world is watching the developments in Latin America with curiosity and bated breath. This prodigious human emancipation and stunning optimisation of humanity’s capacity for self-transformation is not the result of a sudden religious conversion or the benevolence of some ancient Aztec or Inca god or goddess. Neither is it as a result of a slavish and sterile imitation and uncreative adaptation of other people’s culture. It is a tribute to the power of visionary and original ideas to re-engineer human society.

    Anywhere in the ancient and modern world where human society has taken a huge leap forward, we can be sure that some original and transformative ideas are behind the stunning advancement on behalf of all humanity. This was what happened with ancient forms of writing in ancient Egypt and old Babylon, the idea of democracy and revolutionary warfare in the Greek and Roman empires, seafaring in Ancient China, the concept of nation-state in the Iberian peninsula, the Industrial Revolution in England, modern philosophy in France, modern warfare in Germany and the revolutionary refinement of the nation-state paradigm in the US.

    We can add modern exemplars like Singapore which broke the binary spatial distinction between the First and Third worlds through the brilliant ideas of one exceptional individual and of course the new experiment in the brotherhood of all humanity irrespective of race and religion in post-apartheid South Africa which owes its inspiration to the humane intellectual genius of a man called Nelson Mandela.

    As armies of contending ideas wage relentless battle, all that is solid often melts into thin air. The ideas that finally lifted the Dark Age for Europe came from the Muslim world in its most visionary period and in particular from the conquest of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks which led to the exodus of philosophers, thinkers, writers and other cutting-edge contrarians to mainland Europe. In their dark and devious schema, Western historians and intellectuals often project the Dark Age as a period of global human degeneration. But this is not so. It is a clever attempt to foist a unique European fiasco on the rest of the world.

    By the beginning of the tenth century, the Chinese nation was arguably the leading human society. Its sea-going vessels were described as huge clouds in the sky as a result of the size and sophistication of their masts. Extant artifacts in the Mombasa Museum in modern day Kenya suggest that Chinese sailors had visited the place around the sixth and seventh centuries. But it was around the tenth century that a vicious power struggle lasting for centuries broke out between the mandarinate and the Imperial Chinese feudal court.

    At the very period when China should have opened itself to receive fresh ideas from the rest of the world, it closed itself off. A long period of national decline ensued. Chinese eyes finally opened when the British, from about eight thousand miles away, seized Hong Kong. The Japanese Imperial Army added insult to injury when it invaded and subjected the Chinese to atrocious cruelties. The Boxers’ Uprising was a protest against national humiliation as well as an incipient rebellion against the feudal order. The turmoil eventuated in the Chinese Revolution.

    We must now return to our original quarry. Why is it that Latin America is experiencing an economic and political resurgence and rejuvenation while African countries, with the exception of a notable few, are gripped by stark stasis and collective retrogression? We need to establish two historical theses. First is that the religious standing and spiritual state of any society is a reflection of its intellectual stage and mental development and not the other way round. Except in moments of revolutionary crisis, all religions rely on the power of faith rather than the power of ideas. Just stick to your belief system and forget about fancy stuff which may be the handiwork of Lucifer. Unfortunately as Norman Mailer, the rogue American novelist and thinker, famously posited, there may be some devils working for God.

    See where Martin Luther and the discovery of printing dragged the old Church? And see where the Latin American Liberation theologists were dragging the whole concept of salvation before the Imperial Catholic church pulled the plug in a brilliant intellectual counter-insurgency coordinated by the inevitable and cannily cerebral Cardinal Ratzinger, the first modern Pope on pension.

    The second thesis is so simple and self-evident that it amounts to an intellectual scandal when it escapes our intellectuals. It is that the mode of conquest and colonial rationalisation also conditions and in the last instance determines the fate of human emancipation from the ravages of colonialism. Colonisation also has its rich and dark ironies. The first wave of Iberian modernity which allowed the Portuguese and the Spaniards to seize the South American continent was merely a dress rehearsal for the full blown Euro-American modernity that was to follow.

    So is it that while the Iberians could match the later day colonial masters in the department of colonial cruelty and physical coercion, they were mere toddlers when it came to intellectual sophistication and sheer capacity for psychological intimidation. For example, the Spaniards relied on raw firepower and epochal physical cruelty in their conquest and subjugation of the old Indian empires. At that point in time, only superior technology in armaments separated the two civilisations. In fact the Incas were ahead in terms of social order even though they practiced human sacrifice on a Fordist scale.

    But neither the Spaniards nor the Portuguese could come up with the sociological cum philosophical intimidation behind the French concept of the colonial subject as an “evolué”, or the intellectual coercion behind Lord Lugard’s infamous “dual mandate” which forcibly steamrolled the economy of the colonised into the metropolitan orbit in a crude rehearsal of modern globalisation. And this is not discounting the intellectually ordered millennial messianism that informs the very notion of American Exceptionalism.

    With this background in mind, one can now see why it was easier for the Latin Americans to overcome the contradictions of Iberian colonisation. Raw physical conquests often beget raw physical resistance. It is easier to acquire knowledge of firearms than to acquire the firearms of modern knowledge in a context of unequal exchange. The Iberian conquest spawned several armed rebellions which began almost immediately and became the bloody trademark of the continent for the next 300 years and still counting. In the process, the people developed a heroic culture of militant self-belief and zero tolerance for tyrannical rule.

    We can also see why intellectual subjugation is the worst and most deadly form of conquest. It leads directly to spiritual, economic, cultural and political enslavement. With his old religion gone, his culture subverted, his traditional institutions decimated, his modes of knowledge production devastated, the African , unlike the Chinese, the Japanese and the Indians, requires a complete makeover to even minimally function. But even to achieve this requires that he must first overcome the massive inferiority complex engendered by centuries of intellectual slavery in which he has been made to realise that he is surplus to the requirement of humanity. It is akin to being faced by a circular firing squad.

    The foregoing also explains why Latin America has thrown up an original riposte to Roman Catholic orthodoxy in the form of Liberation Theology while Nigeria and Africa have come up with an even more showy and stagy version of American prosperity preaching. Both are variants of Liberation theories. But while Liberation Theology preaches individual striving on behalf of communal salvation which is achievable in this world through relentless struggle, Pentecostal/Prosperity doctrine preaches individual salvation through self-liberation from want and poverty which is also achievable in this world through the cultivation of the right attitude. Both have their uses and points of convergence and divergence.

    With due respect, the Pentecostal theory of human liberation cannot begin to compare in classical erudition, intellectual rigour and sheer philosophical élan with Liberation Theology. But that is neither here nor there. Both have their practical values and ideological efficacy. While Liberation Theology is in strategic alliance with insurgent groups hoping to bring down unjust and tyrannical states in Latin America, the Pentecostal Church, at least in Nigeria, appears to be in alliance with a delinquent state which it helps to maintain order and stability by transferring to itself part of the state function of providing solace and succour to its citizens. For the fanatical adherents, this is not just an opiate but the oxygen of life itself. Needless to add that it is also an anti-revolutionary carbon monoxide.

    This column does not pretend to enjoy a monopoly of wisdom. It remains an interactive session in which readers are encouraged to talk back. Since this is a very weighty matter which involves the destiny of the Black race, readers are invited to ventilate their views before the matter is brought to conclusion in a few weeks’ time.