Every nation has a right to distinguish between genuine refugees and economic migrants who do not share that nation’s culture, Cardinal Robert Sarah has said.
Speaking at the Europa Christi conference in Poland, the African cardinal noted that the country refused to accept the “logic” of migrant redistribution that “some people want to impose”.
In comments reported by the Polish magazine Gość Niedzielny, Cardinal Sarah said that while every migrant was a human being who must be respected, the situation became more complex if they were of another culture or religion and imperilled the good of the nation.
World leaders could not question the “right of every nation to distinguish between a political or religious refugee” who is forced to flee their own land, and “the economic migrant who wants to change his place of residence” without adapting to the new culture in which he lives, the cardinal said.
“The ideology of liberal individualism promotes a mixing that is designed to erode the natural borders of homelands and cultures, and leads to a post-national and one-dimensional world where the only things that matter are consumption and production,” Cardinal Sarah said.
Echoing Pope Francis, the cardinal said that European nations must accept part of the responsibility if they have destabilised the countries that migrants are travelling from – though this did not mean changing themselves through mass immigration.
Cardinal Sarah also lamented the secularisation of Europe, saying the continent had been in an unprecedented civilisation crisis for the last two centuries, beginning with Friedrich Nietzsche’s words “God is dead, and we have killed him”.
“Europe has since then been in an ongoing crisis caused by atheistic and other ideologies, and is now plunging into nihilism,” he said.
Cardinal Sarah said that after the collapse of the Soviet Union, when many nations regained freedom and democracy, Europe seemed to have entered a more positive era.
However, the European Union decided not to revert to the continent’s Christian roots, but instead built its institutions on abstractions such as the free market and individualist human rights, he said. That was a mistake, because all laws should be based on the concept of God-given human dignity.
“Europe, built on faith in Christ, cut off from its Christian roots, is in a period of quiet apostasy,” he said.
Irish Catholics plan mass rosary prayer along coastline
Catholics in Ireland are planning to hold a mass rosary prayer around the country’s coastline as next year’s abortion referendum approaches.
The Rosary on the Coast for Life and Faith will take place on Sunday, November 26, the feast of Christ the King. Organisers were inspired by the recent Rosary at the Borders in Poland.
“Our island is in the midst of a catastrophic loss of Catholic faith, especially among the young,” the organisers said on Facebook. “Ireland, North and South, is facing an immediate threat to the protection of our unborn babies.”
The Republic of Ireland will hold a referendum next year on whether to repeal the Eighth Amendment to its constitution, which guarantees the rights of the unborn child.
Northern Ireland also faces having its own pro-life laws undermined by the British Government, which plans to pay for Northern Irish women to have abortions in England.
Explaining the timing of the event, the organisers noted that Ireland was the “first country in the world to be consecrated to Christ the King”, in 1930. “Acknowledging Christ as King has relevance for the spiritual, social, cultural, legal and political life of Ireland,” they said.
Pope’s choir revives lost classics
The Sistine Chapel choir has released an album for Advent and Christmas featuring the opera star Cecilia Bartoli.
The 16-track CD, Veni Domine: Advent and Christmas at the Sistine Chapel, also includes three Renaissance-era compositions unearthed from the Vatican Library archives that have never been performed in modern times.
The proceeds of the album – the choir’s fourth – will go to the poor through the Pope’s charities.
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