IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring
By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Be ready
with the spiritual weapon of faith because the biggest battle facing the Swiss
Guard today is fighting the devil and worldly vices, Pope Francis told the
guard’s members.
The Swiss Guards’ colorful and
valuable presence at the service of the pope and Vatican City State “is an
occasion to grow as courageous ‘soldiers of Christ'” and be witnesses of
holiness to countless tourists and visitors, he said.
The pope held a private audience
with the Swiss Guard, including 40 new recruits and their family members, the
morning of May 6, the day of the guard’s annual swearing-in ceremony.
New recruits pledge to
“faithfully, loyally and honorably” serve and protect the pontiff
and, if necessary, sacrifice their lives for him.
The colorful induction ceremony
is held May 6 every year to mark the date in 1527 when 147 Swiss Guards lost
their lives defending Pope Clement VII in the Sack of Rome. Only 42 guards
survived. Holding the ceremony on the anniversary is meant to remind new guards
of the seriousness of their commitment.
Pope Francis told the guard that
“today you are not called to this heroic offering of one’s physical life,
but to another sacrifice that is no less arduous: that is, to serve the power
of faith.”
Faith is an effective shield
against the different “forces and powers of this earth and above all
(against) he who is ‘the prince of this world,’ the ‘father of lies,’ who
prowls around ‘like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour,'” the
pope said.
“You are called to be
strong and valiant, sustained by faith in Christ and his word of
salvation,” he said.
That way tourists and pilgrims,
too, will be inspired when they see in the Swiss Guard this combination of
“poise, precision and competent professionalism, also generous Christian
witness and holiness of life,” the pope said. “May this be your
primary concern.”
Today, the 110 Swiss soldiers
are responsible for guarding all entrances into Vatican City State as well as
keeping watch over the pope and his residence in the Domus Sanctae Marthae.
They also provide security and ceremonial services during liturgical events and
visits of heads of state and other dignitaries to the Vatican.
At the swearing-in ceremony in
the Vatican’s St. Damasus courtyard, the corps’ commander, Col. Christoph Graf,
told the new recruits that when it comes to human resource management, the best
and most successful guidance comes from the Bible and its emphasis on humility,
honesty, compassion and loving one’s neighbor.
Also, a “superior” or
leader is only credible and successful if he or she acts as a role model,
living the way he or she demands others live, Col. Graf said.
“Whoever wants to lead with
success must first learn to love people,” he said.
During a ceremony May 5 honoring
the guards who died during the brutal “Sack of Rome” in 1527, Col.
Graf highlighted the numerous forms of violence at work in the world today,
like the civil war in Syria, famine in the Horn of Africa, Nigeria and Yemen,
unsafe passage for refugees as well as euthanasia and abortion, which has
become so “normal” that it “unfortunately is silently accepted
by the majority of people, even by us Christians.”
Because of selfishness, a thirst
for power and ideological, political, economic and personal interests,
“many innocent people are forced to lose their lives,” he said, even
though the world possesses the means necessary to stop all these “mass
deaths, this indescribable suffering.”
“Where is the voice of us Christians? It
can’t be that the only one to speak out publicly about these situations is the
Holy Father,” he said.
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