All posts by Kumangatulu Ae Nutu

Fr Giorgio Licini General Secretary of the PNGSI CBC challenges Australia’s position on refugees, climate change

The general secretary of the Papua New Guinea Catholic Bishops Conference is taking Australia to task over its offshore detention centres and its attitude to climate change.

While Australia has plans to reconnect with the Pacific, Giorgio Licini says Australia’s arrogance and its refusal to listen to its near neighbours will leave it isolated.

Don Wiseman spoke with Fr Licini who elaborated on his comment that Australia needs to “lead through kindness” on refugees and the climate crisis.

ADVOCACY FOR THE PEOPLE OF POMIO: IMPLEMENTING LAUDATO SI’ – THE SINGKAI LECTURE

Archbishop Francesco Panfilo, SDB with Seminarians of the Catholic Theology Institute, Bomana outside of Port Moresby on Friday 5th July 2019.

Dear Fathers, Brothers, Sisters, ladies and gentlemen, thank you for the invitation to give the “Singkai Lecture” for this year. This will give me the opportunity to clarify the role of the Archdiocese of Rabaul on the issue of the Sigite Mukus Oil Palm Project, taking place at West Pomio.

I would like to start by quoting the Encyclical letter, Laudato Si, of Pope Francis. He wrote:

“For indigenous communities land is not a commodity but rather a gift from God and from their ancestors who rest there, a sacred space with which they need to interact if they are to maintain their identities and values” (LS 146),”

Indigenous people extract their subsistence (their livelihood) from the land. To the Melanesian people land means life. This means that it must be cared for and protected. This is why Pope Francis asks the question: “What kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us?” (LS 160) We are required to be good stewards and to leave behind us an inhabitable planet for future generations that will enable them to live in a manner which ensures the welfare of all members of a community.
“For indigenous communities land is not a commodity but rather a gift from God and from their ancestors who rest there, a sacred space with which they need to interact if they are to maintain their identities and values” (LS 146).”

Indigenous people extract their subsistence (their livelihood) from the land. To the Melanesian people land means life. This means that it must be cared for and protected. This is why Pope Francis asks the question: “What kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us?” (LS 160) We are required to be good stewards and to leave behind us an inhabitable planet for future generations that will enable them to live in a manner which ensures the welfare of all members of a community. This is why Pope Francis states that when establishing a project some crucial questions need to be asked: Why is the project taking place? What will it accomplish? Where is the project located? Who will benefit from the project? What are the risks? What are the costs? Who will pay these costs and how? (L S 185) Laudato Si emphasizes the fact that the Church is not opposed to development. However, as Pope Francis says, when planning a project, which has environmental implications: “a consensus should always be reached between the different stakeholders who can offer a variety of approaches, solutions and alternatives. The local people have a special place at the table; they are concerned about their own future and that of their children, and can consider goals transcending immediate economic interest” (Laudato Si 185). The points made by Pope Francis in Laudato Si are fully in accord with the National Goals and Directive Principles contained in the Constitution of Papua New Guinea, especially the Second National Goal and Directive Principle, namely: equality and participation. This National Goal and Directive Principle emphasizes the need for:

 

  • An equitable distribution of incomes and other benefits of development among individuals and throughout all part of the country (section 3);
  • Equal access to the different governmental services and the equalization of these services (subsection 4);
  • People being able to become involved in projects and businesses, which will both be beneficial to themselves and contribute to the common good of the community and the country.

The overall goal is for every citizen to actively participate in the political, economic, social, religious and cultural life of the country. Unfortunately these goals and principles, along with the processes through which they should be implemented, have not been followed with the Sigite-Mukus Oil Palm project in West Pomio. And I am sure that this did not happen in most of the Special Agriculture Business Leases (SABL) around the country.

What is a SABL?

It was in 1979 when the Special Agriculture Business Lease, also known as a lease-lease-back scheme, was created. By leasing the land to the Government a formal title could be granted for the land. This could then be leased back to the land owners and could be used as collateral for a bank loan or as the basis for sub-leasing the land to a third party for development purposes. The sub leasing to a third party was supposed to enable customary land to be developed and utilized for commercial purposes. By leasing it to a third party the concept of the SABL or lease-lease-back scheme was supposed to have the following advantages:

  1. It would provide some financial assistance to customary landowners;
  2. It would allow some development to occur on the vast amounts of customary land which would in turn benefit the economy;
  3. It would bring infrastructure development and other services to remote areas.

The Sigite Mukus Oil Palm Project is being undertaken by Gilford Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of Rimbunan Hijau (RH). The Project covers a large area of 55,400 hectares, broken into four blocks which are owned by four (4) respective Local Land Owner Companies (LCO) as follows:

  • Pomata Investments Ltd; (15,000 hectares);
  • Ralopal Investments Ltd; (11,300 hectares);
  • Nakiura Investments Ltd; (16,100 hectares);
  • Unung-Sigite Investments Ltd. (13,000 hectares).

The manner in which the agreement was entered into was unconscionable. This means that the local people were forced to sign the agreements without being given a proper explanation of the agreement and its consequences and without being encouraged to seek independent legal advice. The results are contracts whose terms and conditions favor Rimbunan Hijau to the detriment of the land owners. This has had a number of very negative consequences. One of these is environmental devastation. Another is the decimation of sacred sites. I made my first visit to West Pomio during Christmas of 2010, when I was the Coadjutor Archbishop of Rabaul. At that time the Oil Palm project was about to start.  In 2013, during one of my pastoral visits to the communities of the Pomio Deanery, individuals and groups of people repeatedly asked me to support them, to speak on behalf of the people with no voice.  It must be stated clearly that in this particular case, the Church did not have any other interest than to bring peace and unity among the people, genuine development for West Pomio, and the common good of all. The main reason for getting involved was because there was tension and deep division within the Christian community in West Pomio, even within family units. There were some acts of violence, although they were contained and this must be attributed to the kind nature of the people of West Pomio and to the Christian values they have imbibed. I felt it was my duty as Bishop to try my very best to unite the people. We succeeded in bringing together the directors of the various landowners’ groups who signed the SABL and the rest of the people. In the process I discovered things that I could not imagine. For example, I realized that the sub lease agreement negotiated under the SABL is very unjust to the customary landowners. No less than the former Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, Hon. Peter O’Neil, on presenting the Commission of Inquiry’s reports to Parliament on September 2013, said that these reports revealed a shocking trend of mismanagement and corruption at all stages of the SABL process and there needed to be change. And he stated: “We will no longer watch on as foreign owned companies come in and con our landowners, chop down our forests and then take the proceeds offshore … For too long landowners have been taken advantage of and had their land stolen from under them” [Post Courier, 20.09.2013]. I have been accused of “deceit and of abusing my right as missionary by engaging in sensitive landowner issues”. There is no doubt that the issues at hand are indeed sensitive! So sensitive in fact, that no decent person should allow these things to happen.  Some people may ask: “Is this the job of the Bishop. Is this the job of a Religious Worker”? I did ask myself these questions and I did ask the people why they asked me to speak up for them. I told them: “Why don’t you ask your political leaders”? They responded: “We don’t trust our leaders. We know that the Church will not abandon us”.  Can a Bishop look the other way? Can a Religious Worker pretend that these injustices are not happening? To advocate for the vulnerable and powerless, which is the situation of the people of West Pomio, is a Gospel mandate, just as it is to educate the young and care for sick people. It is the duty of every religious worker and of every Christian for that matter, to give effect to the teachings of Christ in word and action.  Of course, there are risks. There could be a price to pay. As you might know, the Administrator of the Archdiocese of Rabaul, Mr. Douglas Tennent, was deported in June 2017, because of his involvement in advising me and helping the landowners of West Pomio. Of course, one wonders why those who expose these evil and unjust practices should be deported, while those who commit them are not! I must admit that I knew nothing about the SABL and I wonder whether you, who are listening to me now, know what the “Special Agricultural Business Lease” is all about. I learned as I continued my work of mediation. Some light came to me, when at Makaen the chairman of Memalo Holding, Mr. John Parulrea, and some directors agreed to meet with members of the community. During that meeting, mentioned was made of the need of a new lease agreement, because the present one was considered unjust and unfair to the people.  At that time – towards the end of 2014 – Mr. Doug Tennent had just taken up the task of Administrator of the Archdiocese and since he has been a lecturer of law at UPNG, I proposed that he would give me and the community legal advice.  Then on the 24th May, 2015 Pope Francis published his Encyclical Letter “Laudato S’” on the care of our common home. I felt that, as a Bishop, it was necessary to respond to the Encyclical Letter in a very concrete and practical way:

  1. Disposing of the land, especially of large plantations;
  2. Starting a housing project for low income earners;
  3. Helping achieve a broad consensus in the Sigite Mukus Palm Oil Project in West Pomio”.

As for the third point, on the second half of the year 2015, we started asking the people what they considered wrong in the Sub-lease agreements and what they wanted included in the proposed new lease agreement. Mr. Doug, relying on the input of the people, came up with a document that was presented to people at Makaen and then explained. A team went from ward to ward in order to get a consensus about the document. We know we have a broad consensus. The document was submitted to Rimbunan Hijau. On 31st May, 2016, Mr. Doug Tennent and I came to Port Moresby and had a meeting with a high level delegation of RH. To be honest, I was impressed by the attention given to all the points of our submission, so much so, that Doug and I came out of the meeting convinced that RH was open to re-negotiate a new lease agreement. As time passed, we were reminded by RH that the present sub-lease agreement is a legally binding document. We never denied that. We know that it is a legal document. The question is: is it fair? Is it moral? What the landowners were asking was a re-negotiation for a new lease agreement that is fair and just for all: for the developer as well as for the landowners. The great majority of the people of West Pomio were not and are not asking for the Sigite Mukus Oil Palm Project to stop; rather they are asking, through the Archdiocese of Rabaul, for a new Lease Agreement that is fair and just, one that respects the environment and that provides the delivery of services to the communities.  This has been my and the Archdiocese’s position from day one and we have not changed that. Not only have we never refused to dialogue, but we asked the other party to come to the negotiating table. On the other hand, for a roundtable discussion to bring lasting fruits it needs three things:

  1. We must all seek the truth. Lies will lead us nowhere.
  2. There has to be transparency.
  3. There should be no intimidation and bribes.

On June 2017, Mr. Doug Tennent was deported. The accusation against him was: “the blatant abuse of the conditions of his Religious Worker visa, by engaging in sensitive landowners issues”. I wish to make some comments about some of these “sensitive landowner issues”.

  1. The sub-lease agreement negotiated under the SABL is very unjust to the customary landowners and people did not know it; even those who signed the agreement did not know. For example, people were unaware that the sub-lease agreement is for 60 years, with the option to renew it for the remaining term of the State Lease (another 40 years). The question is that the option for the extension is in the hands of Gilford Ltd and not of the landowners. On Friday, 16 June, 2017, The National newspaper published an article on the press conference held in Moresby on Thursday 15 June; the article stated: “The landowners said the sub-lease agreements with the developer were due for review only in 2020 and this was conveyed to Tennent and the Archbishop of Rabaul, Francesco Panfilo, in May last year”. It is true that the message was conveyed to me and Doug. However, nothing was said about our response to this, which is, that what is going to be reviewed in 2020 is not the sub-lease agreement itself, which was signed on 29 November 2010 and expires on 29 November 2070, but the rental fees. In other words, the sub-lease agreement is not up for review in 2020. In all our written or oral statements beside, we never used the word “review”; we always stated categorically that what people want is the re-negotiation of a new lease agreement. Regarding the unjust nature of the sub-lease agreement, it is not just the people of Pomio that say that the existing SABLs are unjust and unfair. Already in 2014, the National Executive Council (NEC) by NEC decision # 184/2014 implemented the Commission of Inquiry into the SABLs Report by declaring all Special Agriculture Business Leases around the country illegal. Obviously this decision affects also the Pomio SABL. Gilford Ltd, therefore, must cooperate and be willing to re-negotiate the Agreement.
  2. Inadequate rental payments that are given for the land and the failures to pay rent at all for land for the last two years. For your information, the initial amount that was to be paid as rent to landowners under the lease agreement was the incredibly low fee of K1.00, one Kina per year, per hectare! This was later amended to K1.40 per hectare, per year. There are other rental fees, such as the rental for the land planted with oil palm, which is K13.00 per hectare per year. There are different years when a review of these rental fees will happen.
  3. The use of coercive means to apply pressure to get landowners to sign Consent Forms for concession areas.
  4. Failure to inform the people about the volume of logs that are annually being exported from the project area. And failure to pay different and proper royalty rates for different species of timber. Do people know how many m3 of logs were exported since 2011 to 2016? Do people know the value in Kina of the timber exported from 2011 to the end of 2016? According to the agreement, landowners should receive K10:00 for every cubic meter of logs exported. But how could they claim if they don’t know how many cubic meters of logs were exported?
  5. The Societe’ Generale de Surveillance (SGS), based at Port Moresby, has these figures and I wish to share them here for everybody’s knowledge:
  • 2011               36,675 m3       K 7,377,544.83
  • 2012                100,195 m3     K 18,158,739.24
  • 2013               219,889 m3     K 44,814,602.71
  • 2014                339,383 m3     K 86,146,749.87
  • 2015                162,270 m3     K 40,795,468.97
  • 2016                402,343 m3     K 116,034,436.75
  • Total m3          1,260,755        K 313,327,542.27

The issue of environmental devastation and the failure to respect sacred sites.

After six years, there are no significant changes in social and community services. he Company boasts about the roads and the sea port at Drina. The Archdiocese of Rabaul has never denied that there are now roads linking the villages, as well as an operational harbor at Drina as a result of the timber project. Of course, thousands and thousands of trees have been cut down, transported and shipped overseas and so the roads and the port had to be built, but where did the money come from? Who really paid for them? What else is there to boast about?

The action of the police who stay at the camp sites.The Archdiocese of Rabaul brought this to the attention of the Ombudsman Commission and I went personally to meet the PC Regional and the PC Provincial Commanders. They visited the area, together with other 4 officers. During those days I was also in the area for my Lenten Patrol. I was very happy about their visit. But I was dismayed when I came to know that during their three days visit they were the guests of the Company. When I asked people whether they were able to let the PC Commanders know what was going on, they told me: “How could we; they were the guests of Mok”.  As mentioned, on 31st May, 2016, Mr. Doug Tennent and I met a team of RH to discuss our proposal for an eventual renegotiation of the agreement and sub-lease agreements. After several months, since RH did not respond to our request, on 25th November 2016, the Landowners’ Groups, Pomata, Ralopal, and Nakiura, with the help of the Archdiocese of Rabaul, filed legal proceedings against RH.  Why? There were two main reasons: To obtain a court order for MEDIATION and to beat the 6 years statutory limitation period, otherwise no one would be able to bring RH to court after the 6 years elapsed.  From March 26th– 27th 2018, a Mediation was conducted at Kokopo to address the issues relating to the Sigite Mukus Oil Palm Project in West Pomio. The Mediation was conducted by External Accredited Mediator, Craig Jones. There were positive results from the mediation; for example: Gilford Limited and the Landowners’ Companies agreed to renegotiate the current project development agreement and sub-lease Agreement in 2020. This mediated arrangement opens the door to effectively address all of the issues, concerns, and tensions that relate to the project. It allows both parties to negotiate on equal terms and enables the Land owners to take the lead in proposing the Terms and Conditions of the new Agreements based on equity, justice, sustainability and with an emphasis on the need for environment awareness and protection. Unfortunately we met stiff resistance on the part of RH (Gilford Limited); and there was no much cooperation. And so, on 1st March 2019, a second mediation meeting was held at Port Moresby. The reason for the meeting related to concerns that RH and its agents were not complying with the terms of the mediation settlement. In particular, there were issues of trying to derail the election process, not respecting Conservation sites and not insuring that correct information was distributed about the mediation. In this second mediation it was agreed that Gilford Limited would communicate with the Landowners with respect and:

  • will only deal with the Land Owner Company directors with respect to the project;
  • will respect and maintain conservation areas as per agreements and law
  • Will assist in the completion of the Governance processes.

It was also agreed that the parties will not interfere with any Land Owner Company governance processes. This is important. Much concern has been raised about interference. It is important that the elections are undertaken openly and people can freely chose the people that they want as a director based on correct information. It is planned that once the Board of Directors have been finalized there will be, in July, two meetings with Gilford: one concerning the issues of Pomata, Ralopal and Nakiura. The other will concern the issue of Unung Sigite.  There are a number of issues such as outstanding rental and royalty payments and accountability for payments made. Also we need to be moving toward the negotiation of the new development and sub-lease agreements in 2020. In this regard we are in the process of undertaking the work necessary for the Environmental Impact Assessment.

The way forward

It has been and continues to be a very difficult exercise. One of the big challenges is the tactics of the company and its unethical influence on the land owners. We are encouraged by the Marape – David Government’s commitment to “take back PNG”. A way forward would be for government to oblige RH and all large companies, associated with the SABL and other issues concerning land and resources, to renegotiate the existing agreements.

The approach taken by the Archdiocese of Rabaul is to oblige all large companies – foreign and local – for a complete renegotiation of the agreements, based on justice and according to the following points:

  • That there has to be fair rental payment for the land;
  • That there has to be fair royalties for the Oil Palm;
  • That the environmental devastation is addressed;
  • That policies are put in place to ensure sound environmental practices;
  • That there is proper dialogue between the land owners and the companies with regards to the project and the landowners concerns are listened to;
  • That sacred sites are respected;
  • That there is an appropriate contribution to sustainable community services by the company;
  • That there are provisions to ensure that the contract is implemented.

Another approach is writing a small booklet, both in English and Tok Pisin, to assist and guide land landowners when encountering such difficulties. In fact, one of the issues which is of great concern is the manner in which local land owners can be manipulated and exploited by foreign companies, even big local companies into entering into agreements with regards to land. Hopefully such a booklet will help people to become informed by the situation.

Conclusion

During the deportation of Mr. Doug Tennent, in a press conference organized by RH, it was claimed that the Archbishop and Mr. Tennent continue to “propagate divisions among the landowners and landowner company directors”. The Archbishop and Mr. Tennent were accused “of deceit”, because they “are not advocating for the landowners”, but rather “they are out to permanently stop the desires and aspirations for development” of landowners.  I wish to assure all of you present here, and I want to reassure all the people of Pomio that we are not asking for the Sigite Mukus Oil Palm Project to stop; my only wish is to see the people of Pomio not only united among themselves, but also reconciled. And I will continue to do everything I can to do so. That’s why I am convinced that drafting a new lease agreement that is fair and just to all could be the first step towards genuine unity and reconciliation. Unfortunately, the strategy of “divide people in order to rule” is commonly practiced by greedy and powerful economic groups who want to enrich themselves at all cost. The strategy of the Church, however, is “unite people in order to serve” the common good of all.  Land is a wonderful gift of God. It is our “common home”; it should bring people together, instead is tearing people apart because of greed and pride. The Church has the duty to help people consider themselves as stewards of the land rather than the owners of the land. As believers, we should not look at the land from the point of view of our tribe or clan, but from the point of view of God who gave the land to all of us, his children. “Jesus reminded us that we have God as our common Father and that this makes us brothers and sisters” (LS 228) after all God is the “nambawan papa graun”, because this land and all its resources were in place even before the various groups of people came here. We must help people to work together cooperatively and in harmony. The motto of the Archdiocese of Rabaul is: Ut Unum Sint”“That they may be one”. The motto for our work with Sigite-Mukus is: “wanpela tingting, wanpela nek, wanpela wokabaut”; “one mind, one voice, one journey”. We would like to be true to this as we move forward together over the next twelve months.  For this reason I appeal to everyone to put aside personal interests and think about the good of all, especially of our children. What kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us? The Church does not have any other interest than “to encourage an honest and open dialogue so that particular interests or ideologies will not prejudice the common good” (LS 188) (Pastoral Letter 7).

The Story of Blessed Peter Torot, Catechist and Martyr of PNG

PETER TOROT
Feast Day: July 7
Beatified: January 17, 1995
Venerated: April 2, 1993

Peter ToRot was born in 1912 in a village named Rakunai in what is today Papua New Guinea. The region had for some time been visited by Christian missionaries, but Peter’s father, Angelo To Puia, who was chief of the village, and his mother, Maria la Tumul, were baptized as adults and were among the first Catholics in the country.
Peter was one of six children, and from an early age he was very interested in his faith.

Because of this, he was trained to be a catechist, a teacher of religion. So when Peter was 18 he became a student at St. Paul’s Mission School. He was a very good student and became a catechist within three years, the youngest of all the catechists in Papua New Guinea. He worked with the people of Rakunai and was known to be an excellent teacher. Peter always carried a Bible with him and knew much of it by heart. In 1936 he married Paula la Varpit, a Catholic from a nearby village. They had three children, but only his daughter, Rufina, survived past childhood.
World War II changed the lives of the people of Papua New Guinea forever. The Japanese forces occupied the island nation, and all missionaries were imprisoned. This left Peter as the only spiritual leader of all Catholics in the area. He provided prayer services, instruction, the Eucharist and Baptism, and helped the poor. He built a church for Catholics from tree branches, the only material available. When people were afraid, he reminded them that God was with them.
In 1942, the Japanese forbade all Christian worship and any type of religious gatherings, even those in homes. They wanted the local chieftains to cooperate with them and tried to push the tribes back to their pre-Christian forms of life, including such practices as having several wives. Peter’s older brother supported this. But Peter did not, and when he became loud in his protests and was known to hold Catholic prayer services in caves, he was seen as a problem for the Japanese. In 1945 he was arrested and sentenced to several months in prison.
But the Japanese leaders had no intention of allowing Peter to leave prison, because his catechetical work and the support people had for him was too dangerous to their cause. At one point he told his visiting wife and mother that a Japanese doctor had been called to give him medicine, even though he had not been sick, and he believed he would be killed. He told his family that he would die for the Church.
He was praying when men came for him. Witnesses say he was given a drink and an injection, and his mouth was covered. The next morning, Japanese authorities acted very surprised to find Peter To Rot dead. But marks on his body and other signs made it clear he had not died of natural causes.
He was given a chief’s funeral in the Catholic cemetery, but the funeral was held in silence because people feared the Japanese. From the day of his funeral, he was seen as a martyr for the Catholic faith.
On January 17, 1995, Pope John Paul II visited Papua New Guinea to celebrate the beatification of Peter To Rot.

Source

HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS during Holy Mass on the Solemnity of Pentecost (9 June 2019)

Pentecost arrived, for the disciples, after fifty days of uncertainty.  True, Jesus had risen.  Overjoyed, they had seen him, listened to his words and even shared a meal with him.  Yet they had not overcome their doubts and fears: they met behind closed doors (cf. Jn 20:19.26), uncertain about the future and not ready to proclaim the risen Lord.  Then the Holy Spirit comes and their worries disappear.  Now the apostles show themselves fearless, even before those sent to arrest them.  Previously, they had been worried about saving their lives; now they are unafraid of dying.  Earlier, they had huddled in the Upper Room; now they go forth to preach to every nation.  Before the ascension of Jesus, they waited for God’s kingdom to come to them (cf. Acts 1:6); now they are filled with zeal to travel to unknown lands.  Before, they had almost never spoken in public, and when they did, they had often blundered, as when Peter denied Jesus; now they speak with parrhesia to everyone.  The disciples’ journey seemed to have reached the end of the line, when suddenly they were rejuvenated by the Spirit.  Overwhelmed with uncertainty, when they thought everything was over, they were transformed by a joy that gave them a new birth.  The Holy Spirit did this.  The Spirit is far from being an abstract reality: he is the Person who is most concrete and close, the one who changes our lives.  How does he do this?  Let us consider the Apostles.  The Holy Spirit did not make things easier for them, he didn’t work spectacular miracles, he didn’t take away their difficulties and their opponents.  Rather, the Spirit brought into the lives of the disciples a harmony that had been lacking, his own harmony, for he is harmony.

Harmony within human beings.  Deep down, in their hearts, the disciples needed to be changed. Their story teaches us that even seeing the Risen Lord is not enough, unless we welcome him into our hearts.  It is no use knowing that the Risen One is alive, unless we too live as risen ones.  It is the Spirit who makes Jesus live within us; he raises us up from within. That is why when Jesus appears to his disciples, he repeats the words, “Peace be with you!” (Jn 20:19.21), and bestows the Spirit.  That is what peace really is, the peace bestowed on the Apostles.  That peace does not have to do with resolving outward problems – God does not spare his disciples from tribulation and persecution.  Rather, it has to do with receiving the Holy Spirit.  The peace bestowed on the apostles, the peace that does not bring freedom from problems but in problems, is offered to each of us.  Filled with his peace, our hearts are like a deep sea, which remains peaceful, even when its surface is swept by waves.  It is a harmony so profound that it can even turn persecutions into blessings.  Yet how often we choose to remain on the surface!  Rather than seeking the Spirit, we try to keep afloat, thinking that everything will improve once this or that problem is over, once I no longer see that person, once things get better.  But to do so is to stay on the surface: when one problem goes away, another arrives, and once more we grow anxious and ill at ease.  Avoiding those who do not think as we do will not bring serenity.  Resolving momentary problems will not bring peace.  What makes a difference is the peace of Jesus, the harmony of the Spirit.

 At today’s frenzied pace of life, harmony seems swept aside.  Pulled in a thousand directions, we run the risk of nervous exhaustion and so we react badly to everything.  Then we look for the quick fix, popping one pill after another to keep going, one thrill after another to feel alive.  But more than anything else, we need the Spirit: he brings order to our frenzy.  The Spirit is peace in the midst of restlessness, confidence in the midst of discouragement, joy in sadness, youth in aging, courage in the hour of trial.  Amid the stormy currents of life, he lowers the anchor of hope.  As Saint Paul tells us today, the Spirit keeps us from falling back into fear, for he makes us realize that we are beloved children (cf. Rom 8:15).  He is the Consoler, who brings us the tender love of God.  Without the Spirit, our Christian life unravels, lacking the love that brings everything together.  Without the Spirit, Jesus remains a personage from the past; with the Spirit, he is a person alive in our own time.  Without the Spirit, Scripture is a dead letter; with the Spirit it is a word of life.  A Christianity without the Spirit is joyless moralism; with the Spirit, it is life.

The Holy Spirit does not bring only harmony within us but also among us.  He makes us Church, building different parts into one harmonious edifice.  Saint Paul explains this well when, speaking of the Church, he often repeats a single word, “variety”: varieties of gifts, varieties of services, varieties of activities” (1 Cor 12:4-6).  We differ in the variety of our qualities and gifts.  The Holy Spirit distributes them creatively, so that they are not all identical.   On the basis of this variety, he builds unity.  From the beginning of creation, he has done this.  Because he is a specialist in changing chaos into cosmos, in creating harmony.  He is a specialist in creating diversity, enrichment, individuality.  He is the creator of this diversity and, at the same time, the one who brings harmony and gives unity to diversity.  He alone can do these two things.

In today’s world, lack of harmony has led to stark divisions.  There are those who have too much and those who have nothing, those who want to live to a hundred and those who cannot even be born.  In the age of the computer, distances are increasing: the more we use the social media, the less social we are becoming.  We need the Spirit of unity to regenerate us as Church, as God’s People and as a human family.  May he regenerate us!  There is always a temptation to build “nests”, to cling to our little group, to the things and people we like, to resist all contamination.  It is only a small step from a nest to a sect, even within the Church.  How many times do we define our identity in opposition to someone or something!  The Holy Spirit, on the other hand, brings together those who were distant, unites those far off, brings home those who were scattered.  He blends different tonalities in a single harmony, because before all else he sees goodness.  He looks at individuals before looking at their mistakes, at persons before their actions.  The Spirit shapes the Church and the world as a place of sons and daughters, brothers and sisters.   These nouns come before any adjectives.  Nowadays it is fashionable to hurl adjectives and, sadly, even insults.  It could be said that we are living in a culture of adjectives that forgets about the nouns that name the reality of things.  But also a culture of the insult as the first reaction to any opinion that I do not share.  Later we come to realize that this is harmful, to those insulted but also to those who insult.  Repaying evil for evil, passing from victims to aggressors, is no way to go through life.  Those who live by the Spirit, however, bring peace where there is discord, concord where there is conflict.  Those who are spiritual repay evil with good.  They respond to arrogance with meekness, to malice with goodness, to shouting with silence, to gossip with prayer, to defeatism with encouragement.

To be spiritual, to savour the harmony of the Spirit, we need to adopt his way of seeing things.  Then everything changes: with the Spirit, the Church is the holy People of God, mission is not proselytism but the spread of joy, as others become our brothers and sisters, all loved by the same Father.  Without the Spirit, though, the Church becomes an organization, her mission becomes propaganda, her communion an exertion.  Many Churches spend time making pastoral plans, discussing any number of things.  That seems to be the road to unity, but it is not the way of the Spirit; it is the road to division.  The Spirit is the first and last need of the Church (cf. Saint Paul VI, General Audience, 29 November 1972).  He “comes where he is loved, where he is invited, where he is expected” (Saint Bonaventure, Sermon for the Fourth Sunday after Easter). 

Brothers and sisters, let us daily implore the gift of the Spirit.  Holy Spirit, harmony of God, you who turn fear into trust and self-centredness into self-gift, come to us.  Grant us the joy of the resurrection and perennially young hearts.  Holy Spirit, our harmony, you who make of us one body, pour forth your peace upon the Church and our world.  Holy Spirit, make us builders of concord, sowers of goodness, apostles of hope.

HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS during Holy Mass on the Solemnity of Pentecost (9 June 2019)

The 11th Pastoral Letter of His Grace Archbishop Francesco Panfilo, sdb

PASTORAL LETTER 11
I am writing this Pastoral Letter on Holy Saturday, in between hours of confessions and rehearsals for the great Paschal Vigil that celebrates the glorious resurrection of Jesus.
In these past weeks I have celebrated the Chrism Mass both at Pomio, on 11th April, and at Vunapope, on 18th April. In both celebrations there was a very large participation of people and this was very encouraging, especially for us priests, because we felt supported and help by our Catholic faithful.
In these days, too, I was very much impressed by the participation of people to the Mass of the Last Supper, as well as to the Way of the Cross on Good Friday morning, and the Veneration of the Cross in the afternoon. I am aware that the same participation of people was experienced by all our priests in their respective parishes.
But the reason for writing this Pastoral Letter is because in these days I have come across a letter that St. John Paul II wrote to the priests of the world in 2004. In that letter St. John Paul II reminded the priests of the world of the link that exists between the Eucharist and the priesthood, a link which began in the Upper Room, that Holy Thursday, when Jesus gathered his apostles to celebrate the Passover meal: these two Sacraments were born together and they will be together until the end of the world. At the Last Supper, priesthood was born: Priests were born from the Eucharist. “There can be no Eucharist without the priesthood, just as there can be no priesthood without the Eucharist”. The ordained ministry enables the priest to act in persona Christi. This is an extraordinary reality and we are overwhelmed by the humility by which God “stoops” in order to unite himself with us!
St. John Paul II wrote: “If we feel moved before the Christmas crib, when we contemplate the Incarnation of the Word, what must we feel before the altar where, by the poor hands of the priest, Christ makes his Sacrifice present in time? We can only fall to our knees and silently adore this supreme mystery of faith … The Eucharist is a mystery of faith, yet the priesthood itself is also a mystery of faith. At the beginning of his public life, the Messiah called the Twelve, appointed them ‘to be with him’ and sent them out on mission. At the Last Supper, this “being with” Jesus on the part of the Apostles reached its culmination. By celebrating the Passover meal and instituting the Eucharist, the divine Master brought their vocation to its fulfilment. By saying ‘Do this in memory of me’, he put a Eucharistic seal on their mission. Quite rightly, then, the Christian people give thanks to God for the gift of the Eucharist and the priesthood”.
Promotion for Priestly Vocations!
From the Upper Room Christ continues to seek and call. Unfortunately the number of priests, even here in our Archdiocese of Rabaul where, thanks be to God, we have a good number of vocations, is never sufficient to meet the demands of evangelization and the pastoral care of the faithful. For this reason I ask all the Catholic faithful of the Archdiocese to pray and work actively to promote vocations so that priests will never be lacking in the Church.
In his letter St. John Paul II was calling on Priests to be the first ones responsible in the pastoral promotion of priestly vocations, ready to help all those whom Christ wishes to associate to his priesthood to respond generously to his call.
He proposed two things to the priests: Personal fidelity of priests and care for altar servers!
• Personal fidelity of priests is indispensable. St. John Paul II wrote: “What counts is our personal commitment to Christ, our love for the Eucharist, our fervour in celebrating it, our devotion in adoring it and our zeal in offering it to our brothers and sisters, especially to the sick. Jesus the High Priest wishes to count on our active cooperation. Priests in love with the Eucharist are capable of communicating to children and young people that “Eucharistic amazement”. Generally these are the priests who lead them to the path of the priesthood, as the history of our own vocations might easily show.
• With this Pastoral Letter, therefore, I ask all our priests to show special care for altar servers, who represent a kind of “garden” of priestly vocations. The group of altar servers can be given a valuable experience of Christian education and become a kind of pre-seminary. Although the Archdiocese, following the Instruction Redemptionis Sacramentum of Pope Benedict XVI, allows girls or women to service at the altar, the practice of having boys as altar servers should not only be preserved but introduced where it does not exists. Priests should help the parish, as a family made up of families, to look upon the altar servers as their own children, like “olive shoots around the table” of Jesus Christ, the Bread of Life.

A Tabernacle in Every Catholic Community!

In these past days of prayers and reflection, especially during the Holy Thursday, I thought about all my predeccessors and how much they must have wished to see that the Sacrifice of the Mass could be celebrated in every community. That wish or dream remained for them and it remains for me too “our long-range objective”. For this reason, I encourage the faithful to continue praying for vocations, so that the Lord of the harvest may send labourers into his harvest, so that one day all our Catholic communities could have the Mass, at least every Sunday. In the mean time, we will do everything “to ensure that the Sacrifice of the Mass is made available as often as possible to the faithful who are regularly deprived of it” (Dies Domini, 53).

Instead “our short-range objective” is to provide a tabernacle in every catholic community where the Eucharist is preserved and distributed during the “Sunday liturgy without a priest”.

But in order to have a tabernacle in every Catholic Community, we need:

• To deepen our faith in the Eucharist and in the real presence of the Lord, through a systematic and organic catechesis.

For this, I encourage the Priests, the Consecrated men and women, and in particular the Catechists, to provide catechetical instruction to people on the eucharistic mystery and to do all they can to safeguard the sacred dignity of the Eucharist. It is important, for example, to instruct the faithful with regards to the indispensable conditions for the reception of Holy Communion so as to avoid two extremes: people who could receive Holy Communion and do not, and people who receive it and should not. I believe that in our Catholic communities there are people who could participate in Eucharistic Communion and do not, even though they have no serious sin on their conscience as obstacle. Is it because they feel unworthy or because they lack a kind on interior willingness, a lack of Eucharistic “hunger” and “thirst”? Is it a sign of lack of adequate sensitivity towards the great Sacrament of love and lack of understanding of its nature?

We need to instruct well our faithful, beginning with the children, to encourage them to receive Jesus in Holy Communion as frequently as possible. Our Pastoral Guideliens states clearly that First Holy Communion can given to children who are in Grade 3 or 4, while Confirmation to those who are in Grade 7 or 8.

• To give importance to the Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.

Our faith in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist will lead us to give importance to the Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. I have visited almost all our Catholic communities and I have seen how, in many of them, the Chapel occupies a very central place in the villages. How easy it would be for people to visit the Blessed Sacrament! And how beautiful it would be if in every chapel some people were to come together once a week for a holy hour of Adoration in front of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament! I am thinking, for example, of Friday. It is the day when Jesus suffered and died for us; it is the day on which we remember, in a special way, the Sacred Heart of Jesus. There is no better way of expressing our devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus than to celebrate the Eucharist and, for those who cannot do so, to gather together in adoration in front of the Blessed Sacrament, drawing from his infinite love for us the strength and power to live worthy Christian lives.

While thanking Jesus for his great gift, let us plead with him not to let us go spiritually hungry for lack of priests. Let us implore him to keep our seminarians and priests free from evil. Jesus will feel twice as happy when our own sons will be the ones to feed us with the Holy Eucharist.

Readings for the 5th Sunday of Easter


The first reading is taken from Acts 14:21-27. Last week we heard of St. Paul’s experiences at Antioch in Piscidia during his first missionary journey. Their visit had ended on a sour note as Paul and Barnabas were expelled. The reading ended with “the two shook the dust from their feet in protest and went on to Iconium. Their disciples knew only how to be filled with joy and the Holy Spirit”. Today we hear of the conclusion of this first missionary journey where Paul and Barnabas retrace their steps back through Antioch in Piscidia on their way back to Antioch in Syria where they had begun their journey.

The second reading is from the Book of Revelation 21:1-5a. For the past three weeks we have had as our second reading an account of John’s privileged vision of the heavenly liturgy where he has seen the eternal sacrifice being offered to God the Father by His Son, The New and Eternal High priest and sacrifice. We have heard also the prayers being offered by the faithful. We now go to the end of John’s account as he describes the Heavenly Jerusalem. It was Jesus’ mission to go to the earthly Jerusalem to offer His sacrifice — this shows us the path that we must follow to reach the Heavenly Jerusalem so that we can dwell with Him there forever.

The Gospel is from John 13:31-33a, 34-35.We are disciples, followers of Christ, but how many of us would pass the test that Christ himself lays down for deciding who are his true followers? The word “charity” unfortunately has come to have a very restricted meaning in our present-day vocabulary. It signifies giving an alms, a gift of money to a needy person. This is but a very small part of the true charity, true love of neighbor which Christ made the distinguishing mark of the true Christian. He who truly loves his neighbor must be interested, first and foremost, in those things which concern that neighbor’s most important purpose in life, his eternal salvation.

Here is where so many good Christians fail in true charity. Effective interest in missionary activity is a case in point. Practical help in parochial matters, taking part in the various societies which are intended to build up and strengthen the faith and the devotion of the members of the parish is another obligation of true charity. So many seem to think it is no concern of theirs but it is. Advising and encouraging, with true Christian kindness, a neighbor who is beginning to grow lax in his attendance to his Christian duties, or who is forming habits or alliances which, if unchecked, will bring misery and suffering to his family, and scandal to the neighborhood, and even the possibility of his own eternal destruction, is also an exercise of real Christian charity.

There are thousands of broken homes today which would not be broken if there was true charity in those homes not only in the heart of the offender but in the hearts of the offended. There are thousands in jails and in hospitals of rehabilitation today who would not be there if their families and neighbors fulfilled their obligation of Christian charity. There are many, far too many, lapsed Catholics in the world today, who would not have lapsed had true charity been practised by their relatives and neighbors. And, last but not least, there are millions of people who have remained outside the Church of Christ because the hall-mark of charity which Christ said was its distinguishing mark was tarnished or invisible. Each one of us could, with great profit, spend a few moments today looking into ourselves and comparing our thoughts and our words and our actions with the thoughts, words and actions of love which Christ expects from his followers.

It is never too late to mend. Begin today to take a true Christian interest in the spiritual fate of your family and neighbors. Where words have already failed perhaps, try prayer and example. The grace of God will cooperate with your sincere, charitable effort.

Excepted from The Sunday Readings, Fr. Kevin O’Sullivan, O.F.M.

Sharing Catholic Faith based articles, news and information with the Pomio Catholic Deanery of the Archdiocese of Rabaul, East New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea.

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