Philippine Asian News Today Vol 21 No 7 | Page 25

April 1 - 15, 2019 PHILIPPINE ASIAN NEWS TODAY RELIGIOUS Conversion requires a resolve to sin no more Pope Francis Sunday emphasized the need for people to have a firm resolve to change their lives when they ask for forgiveness of their sins. “Every true conversion is aimed at a new future, at a new life, a beautiful life, a life free from sin, a generous life,” the pope said April 7. And people are not afraid to ask Jesus for forgiveness, “because He opens the door to this new life.” Lent, Francis pointed out, is a time when Catholics are called to recognize their sinfulness and to ask God for forgiveness. “And forgiveness, in turn, as it reconciles us and gives us peace, makes us begin a renewed story.” Pope Francis, in his Angelus address, reflected on the Gospel passage of the woman caught in adultery. The scribes and Pharisees, he said, try to trap Jesus by catching him going against the law, which says the woman should be stoned. The scribes and Pharisees “are closed in the bottlenecks of legalism and want to lock up the Son of God in their perspective of judgment and condemnation,” the pope said. “But He did not come into the world to judge and condemn, but to save and offer people a new life.” This episode contrasts two different attitudes, he underlined: The scribes and Pharisees “want to condemn the woman, because they feel they are the guardians of the Law and of its faithful application. Instead, Jesus wants to save her, because he personifies the mercy of God who, by forgiving redeems, reconciles, and renews.” Francis noted that Jesus’ reaction to this “test” is to remain in silence, bending down to write in the dirt, as if to recall that the only Judge and Legislator is God, “who has written the Law in stone.” And then Jesus says: “Let the one among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.” With these words he appeals to the consciences of the scribes and Pharisees, reminding them of their own sinfulness, Pope Francis said. Jesus continues to write in the dirt, and when he looks up, they have all left – only “misery and mercy” remain between him and the woman, he said, quoting St. Augustine. Jesus then invites the woman to “Go, and from now on do not sin anymore.” “And so, Jesus opens a new road before her, created by mercy, a road that requires her commitment not to sin anymore,” the pope said, noting that “it is also an invitation that applies to each of us. When Jesus forgives us, he always opens a new way to move forward.” Speaking badly of others is one thing which makes people like the scribes and Pharisees, throwing stones, he stated. “This scene also invites each of us to become aware that we are sinners,” he said, “and to let fall from our hands the stones of denigration and condemnation, of gossip, which at times we would like to hurl against others.” Invoking the Virgin Mary, he concluded by asking for her help in witnessing “to all the merciful love of God who, in Jesus, forgives 25 us and makes our existence new, always offering us new possibilities.” ( H . Brockhaus, CNA) From influencers to cyborgs, Pope Francis has tech advice for young people Discussing current digital trends, from “influencers” to cyborgs to “zap- ping,” Pope Francis’ recent apostolic letter to young people contains both buzzwords and moral advice for Mil- lenial and iGen digital natives. “The life that Jesus gives us is a love story, a life history that wants to blend with ours and sink roots in the soil of our own lives. That life is not a salvation up ‘in the cloud’ and waiting to be downloaded, a new ‘app’ to be discovered, or a technique of men- tal self-improvement,” Pope Francis wrote in his apostolic exhortation Christus Vivit (Christ is Alive) pub- lished April 2. The 50-page letter, addressed to “all Christian young people,” seeks to address the “highly digitalized cul- ture” that young adults are immersed in today. He insisted that young people today must “find ways to pass from virtual contact to good and healthy communication.” Otherwise, youth can be left feel- ing “rootless” living in a “virtual world,” which can be “a world of loneliness and of self-invention,” Pope Francis wrote. “The collapse of fundamental certainties, fostered by today’s media culture, creates a deep sense of or- phan hood to which we must respond by creating an attractive and fraternal environment where others can live with a sense of purpose,” he advised. Pope Francis cautioned that “on- line relationships can become inhu- man” because “digital spaces blind us to the vulnerability of another human being and prevent us from our own self-reflection.” He pointed to the example of por- nography, which he said distorts a young person’s perception of human sexuality. “Technology used in this way cre- ates a delusional parallel reality that ignores human dignity,” Francis con- tinued. However, Francis cautioned that the way that “many platforms work of- ten ends up favouring encounter be- tween persons who think alike, shield- ing them from debate.” “The proliferation of fake news is the expression of a culture that has lost its sense of truth and bends the facts to suit particular interests,” he said, which foments “prejudice and hate.” “The reputation of individuals is put in jeopardy through summary trials conducted online. The Church and her pastors are not exempt from this phenomenon.” Beyond social media, Pope Fran- cis also addressed other technological developments that influence young people today. “Advances in the sciences and in biomedical technologies have power- fully influenced perceptions about the body, leading to the idea that it is open to unlimited modification,” he said. “The capacity to intervene in DNA, the possibility of inserting artificial ele- ments into organisms (cyborgs) and the development of the neurosciences WWW.PHILIPPINEASIANNEWSTODAY.COM represent a great resource, but at the same time they raise serious anthro- pological and ethical questions.” Twenty-five-year-old Laphidil Op- pong Twumasi, one of the 36 “youth auditors” in the Synod of Bishops on young people, the faith, and vocation- al discernment last October, said that she was surprised to discover terms like “influencer” and “zapping” in an official document of the Church. “It is easy to understand and is not lost in archaisms,” Twumasi said at a Vatican press conference for the document’s release. “I must say that there was an effort and a willingness to hear and to really listen to us,” she said. While warning of the technology’s potential pitfalls, the pope has also embraced social media and technolo- gy himself. The pope’s Twitter handle, @Pontifex, has 18 million followers. Pope Francis recently launched a new app, Click to Pray, which con- nects smartphone users with a global network to share prayer intentions.