The most profound of messages

A Pope from the ends of the earth has chosen to visit one of the poorest parts of the world at a critical moment.

Dec 04, 2015

By Christopher Lamb
A Pope from the ends of the earth has chosen to visit one of the poorest parts of the world at a critical moment. As world leaders gather in the major western capital of Paris to try to hammer out a deal on protecting the environment, Francis chose to deliver a message to them from Nairobi.

It would, he explained, be a catastrophe if those gathered at the United Nations summit could not confront the effects of climate change.

This is mainly because it impacts the developing world the most. In Africa, the disputes over, and plundering of, natural resources are at the heart of some of the continent’s bloody conflicts. In the Central African Republic, which he  visited last Sunday, Nov 29, much of the fighting is over access to the country’s oil and minerals.

“This patrimony of Africa, and of all mankind, is constantly exposed to the risk of destruction caused by human selfishness of every type and by the abuse of situations of poverty and exclusion,” the Pope said.

As Francis explained in Laudato Si’, his encyclical on the environment, care for the planet goes hand in hand with building a fairer world that no longer excludes large groups of people.

In his speech at the UN office in Nairobi, he said he hoped Paris could come up with a “transformational” agreement which “targets three complex and interdependent goals: lessening the impact of climate change, fighting poverty, and ensuring respect for human dignity.”

The decision to deliver this message from Africa is also in line with the prophetic character of this papacy focussed on the marginalised and the excluded. It was the Pope, after all, who travelled to Lampedusa off the coast of southern Italy to highlight the plight of migrants months before their plight became global news.

Africa is increasingly important on the world stage, with its youthful populations and growing economies. It is the place from which many migrants are coming to Europe and is witnessing terrorism from Islamic extremists and violence between religions.

Yet while a globalised world faces common difficulties, power is still in the hands of the few. The Pope has pointed out that no country can act independently and in his address to the UN office in Nairobi on Nov 26 said a problem arises when independence becomes a “synonym for domination, or the subjection of some to the interests of others, of the powerless to the powerful.” Coming to Africa as Western leaders gather is a message by the Pope that power in the world needs to be more evenly and fairly balanced.

Finally, while Africa is increasingly important to the world, it is also due to play a bigger role in the Church worldwide.  According to Pew Research, there are more than 170 million Catholics living in sub-saharan Africa, with the number of Christians expected to double between 2010 and 2050.

In the Central African Republic, the Pope opened the Holy Door of Bangui Cathedral and anticipated the Jubilee Year of Mercy. This will happen before any holy door is officially opened in Rome or the Vatican.

This demonstrates that Francis wants this Year of Mercy to make a concrete difference to peoples’ lives. Both these messages — on climate change and on mercy — show Francis’ approach from the peripheries to the centre. That the poorest and the marginalised can teach the powerful and that the Church should be on the side of the former.

So perhaps, we should not be surprised by his moves in Africa. It is what we have come to expect from this Pope.--The Tablet

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