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JOHN PAUL II
JUBILEE OF THE ARMED FORCES AND THE POLICE
ANGELUS
Sunday, 19 November 2000
At the end of this Jubilee celebration, dear Members of the Armed
Forces and the Police, my thoughts turn in particular to your relatives.
In the Book of the Acts of the Apostles, an account is given of St Peter's visit
to the centurion Cornelius, "a devout man who feared God with all his household"
(Acts 10: 2). He accepted the proclamation of Christ's Gospel by Peter,
to whom he gave hospitality for several days, and received Baptism together with
his family members. Thus the first pagans to be baptized by Peter were members
of a soldier's family. It is significant to remember this today, in the context
of your Jubilee.
It is not easy to be a soldier's family, because even the hardships of his
mission must be shared. Yet the family is the principal support of each one of
you, committed to defending peace and life. One defends what one loves and where
does one learn to love peace and life if not in the family? Therefore, dear
families, feel fully involved in this mission and collaborate in safeguarding
justice and peace.
2. On this day when you have come to make a Jubilee act with your families, I
cordially greet you all, members of the armed forces and of the police of
Belgium, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Croatia, France, Luxembourg, Romania,
Slovenia, Canada, the Netherlands and Slovakia. May this important time be an
opportunity for you to strengthen your mission in order to continue the
important service you carry out, attentive to the needs of all your compatriots,
to build an ever more peaceful and fraternal society! I hail your sense of
responsibility, efforts and commitments, and pray with you for all who died or
were injured while carrying out their activities. With my Apostolic Blessing!
I greet the English-speaking participants in this Jubilee celebration for
Members of the Armed Forces and Police, especially those from Australia, Canada,
Great Britain, Ireland, Korea, Malawi, the Philippines and the United States of
America. A particular greeting also goes to the representatives of the
peace-keeping force in the Balkans, made up of military personnel from 38
countries.
The work and sacrifice of all of you help to ensure the peace and security of
individuals and societies. I pray that you yourselves will always be kept safe
as you fulfil your professional duties, and that the divine gifts of wisdom and
strength will ever accompany you in the service of your own countries and of
your fellow men and women. Upon you and your families, I invoke the grace and
peace of our Lord Jesus Christ.
I extend a warm greeting to the German-speaking soldiers and police. Welcome to
the Eternal City, soldiers and police from Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the
Czech Republic, Slovenia and Hungary. Your work is in the front line at the
service of security and peace. Carry out this duty with high responsibility and
sensitivity! May God's Blessing accompany you on the way of peace.
I now extend a greeting to the soldiers and police forces of Argentina, Chile,
Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Paraguay, Peru, Spain, Bolivia, Guatemala, the
Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Costa Rica, Mexico and Panama. I encourage you to
collaborate generously in the honourable task of establishing peace, cooperation
and coexistence among all peoples. May God bless you in your family and
professional life so that you may give proof of adherence to Christ and his
Church. Thank you very much.
I greet the soldiers and members of the forces of public security from Brazil,
Mozambique and Portugal, imploring divine wisdom on your noble missions so that,
despite the risk, you will be able to transmit peace and confidence to your
close relatives and fellow citizens.
I cordially greet the representatives of the Polish army and police force
present here. This Jubilee meeting with the soldiers of the whole world is an
event that shows in a particular way how the army does not necessarily have to
be the protagonist of the tragic events of war but can and must be the protector
and messenger of peace. I pray that the difficult service of the army and the
police for the protection of the security of people and nations may always be
distinguished by deep sensitivity to suffering and to the needs of the weakest,
and that it may be rewarded by the gratitude of societies and by God's blessing.
3. At this time of profound communion, enriched with the Jubilee grace, I would
like to raise my prayer to the Lord for your many colleagues who have died in
these years during various missions of peace and in the defence of law and
order. May their sacrifice not have been in vain! May their hidden and silent
witness be an encouragement to everyone not to be resigned to injustice, but to
conquer evil with good! May God welcome them into his kingdom of peace and grant
serenity and comfort to their families and to all their loved ones.
Let us entrust to the motherly intercession of Mary Most Holy our intense and
prayerful invocation for the living and the dead.
© Copyright 2000 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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