Charity begins at home, but must not stop there, pope says

IMAGE: CNS photo/Angelo Carconi, EPA

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Charity is an essential sign of
Christian faith, one that is learned in family relationships and must spread
from there, Pope Francis told leaders and volunteers from Italy’s diocesan
Catholic charities.

“The cradle and the home” of Catholic charity is
the family, the pope said April 21 during a meeting with about 700 delegates to
a convention of diocesan Caritas operations.

The same “merciful love” that family members give
and receive must be extended to “accompany, discern and integrate
situations of fragility” found outside the family home, he said.

Catholic charity must be concrete and local — something
families are particularly good at, especially when they work together, the pope
said. But in responding to the needs of the poor and fragile, attention also
should be paid to the root causes of the suffering and to legislation that
makes the problems worse or that could be a solution.

Most of all, Pope Francis told the diocesan Caritas workers,
their job is to ensure that every single Catholic recognizes he or she has a
personal obligation to engage in charity as a witness of Christian faith and a
sign that the entire Catholic community is the body of Christ reaching out to
those in need.

The pope recognized “global challenges that sow fear,
inequality, financial speculation — even on food — environmental degradation
and wars.”

To face those challenges, he said, people need help learning
how to have “respectful and fraternal encounters” with people from
other cultures and religions and a “passion for dialogue” and
reconciliation when differences arise.

In connection with the national convention, Caritas Italy
released a report saying that as of April 15, Catholic parishes and religious institutes
have welcomed 22,044 asylum-seeking refugees. The total is about one-fifth of
all the asylum-seekers in Italy.

Pope Francis asked the local Caritas workers to continue to
be close to the migrants and refugees. While governments need to come up with
more “organic policies” for dealing with the influx of those fleeing
violence in the Middle East or violence and extreme poverty in Africa,
Christians can and should do more to promote the integration of newcomers,
helping them learn the language and local customs, he said. But they also
should help people recognize that newcomers also are “a richness and a
resource” for their host countries.

With help from the Holy Spirit, he said, Catholics
increasingly can find better ways “to respond to the Lord, who comes to us
in the faces and stories of our most needy sisters and brothers. He stands at
the door of our hearts and our communities waiting for someone to respond to
his discreet but insistent knocking.”

The poor, the pope said, are awaiting “the charity,
that is the merciful caress of the Lord through the hand of his church. It is a
caress that expresses the tenderness and closeness of the Father.”

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Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden.

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