“Without ‘if’s’ and ‘but’s’,” the Holy Father pleaded with South Sudanese leaders to say, “No more bloodshed, no more conflicts, no more violence and mutual recriminations about who is responsible for it, no more leaving your people a thirst for peace. No more destruction: It is time to build! Leave the time of war behind and let a time of peace dawn!” Cardinal Czerny recalled.
Credit: Sudan Catholic Bishops’ Conference (SCBC)
He went on to recall the prayer of the Holy Father that his Ecumenical Peace Pilgrimage “be for everyone an occasion to revive hope, not only for the government, but for everyone.”
In his prayer for the Pilgrimage, Pope Francis implored for the South Sudanese to “understand that the time has come to stop being carried along by the tainted waters of hatred, tribalism, regionalism and ethnic differences,” Cardinal Czerny recalled during his February 4 homily at St. Theresa’s Cathedral of Juba Archdiocese.
The Cardinal, who founded and directed the African Jesuit AIDS Network (AJAN) also reflected on the Readings of the Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time.
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Credit: Sudan Catholic Bishops’ Conference (SCBC)
He challenged the people of God in South Sudan to practice compassion in prioritizing the needs of others in the example of Jesus, who demonstrated a “deep sensitivity to people in need”, portrayed in his “miraculous healing of Peter’s mother-in-law who was sick with fever”, the Cardinal said.
“The healing ministry of Jesus has special meaning for this country, which for decades has experienced vicious cycles of conflict and violence and the hardship and suffering they cause,” he noted.
The Vatican Cardinal continued, “Like Job in the first reading, many of you can say, ‘I have been assigned months of misery, and troubled nights have been allotted to me. I am filled with restlessness until the dawn.’”
Credit: Ginaba Lino/Juba/South Sudan
“Now Jesus, desiring your well-being and your service, is constantly reaching out to take you and your people by the hand and lift you up again,” Cardinal Czerny said February 4.
He is also scheduled to travel to South Sudan’s Malakal Diocese, where he is to visit Renk, an “outreach point” in the Northeastern part of South Sudan for those fleeing violence in Sudan’s capital city, Khartoum.
While in South Sudan, Cardinal Czerny is also expected to “bless a boat”, which Caritas South Sudan will be using to transport migrants and refugees along the Nile River from Renk.
Credit: Ginaba Lino/Juba/South Sudan
On February 8, he is scheduled to preside over Holy Mass at a Malakal Catholic Church dedicated in honor of St. Josephine Bakhita, the Sudanese-born saint, who is the patron saint of victims of modern slavery and human trafficking.
During the February 8 Holy Mass, the Prefect of the DPIHD is to lead the people of God at St. Josephine Bakhita Church in Malakal in marking the tenth annual World Day of Prayer and Reflection against Human Trafficking, whose theme is, “Journeying in Dignity. Listen. Dream. Act”.
Credit: Ginaba Lino/Juba/South Sudan
In a January 31 interview, the Vatican Cardinal told ACI Africa that he was scheduled to ordain three Deacons in the Catholic Diocese of Malakal.
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