PASTORAL JOURNEY
TO MADAGASCAR, LA RÉUNION,
ZAMBIA AND MALAWI
WELCOME CEREMONY IN ZAMBIA
ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II
International Airport of Lusaka Tuesday, 2 May 1989
Mr President, Distinguished Members of the Government of Zambia, My Brother Bishops, Brothers and Sisters in Christ, Dear Friends,
1. By God’s grace I have the joy of standing on Zambian soil and greeting each
one of you – a greeting which I extend to all the people of Zambia. I thank you
for coming to meet me at the beginning of my pastoral visit. Already I sense the
hospitality for which Zambians are well known. I feel I am among friends. And I
wish you to know that I come among you as a friend, a friend of Africa, a friend
of Zambia. May these days of my visit strengthen the already close bonds of
friendship between us.
I have for a long time wished to come to Zambia! I thank Your Excellency
President Kaunda for your oft-repeated invitation, and I am happy that in this
way I can return the visits which you have made to the Vatican.
My deep gratitude goes also to the Catholic bishops of Zambia who have invited
me to visit them and their people at the beginning of the celebrations marking
the centenary of the Catholic Church in this country.
2. Zambia is a young nation with a young population – a country which
twenty-five years ago achieved its independence in a peaceful way. Many of you
remember those historic days of 1964. Rightly, you cherish your independence and
freedom, and you are engaged in the great task of building Zambia into a united,
harmonious and just society, a true home for all its people.
I wish to express my encouragement to the Government and all the citizens of
Zambia in your efforts to make this land a place of authentic freedom,
brotherhood and mutual solidarity – a nation where your children can grow up and
live in dignity and in the freedom worthy of the children of God.
3. In coming to your country as the Successor of the Apostle Peter, I look upon
my visit as a time of intense spiritual communion with the Zambian Catholic
community. I wish to pray with my brothers and sisters in the faith. I will seek
to confirm them in the hope that is ours in the Lord Jesus Christ. I shall
endeavour to speak the message of God’s infinite love for them and for all
people without distinction.
I am pleased that the bishops have chosen as the theme for the centenary
celebrations of the Church’s presence here: “Growing together in Christ our
Hope, as truly African Christians”. In this way the celebration will remind us
of the past in order to gather our energies for the future, a future which is
filled with hope The centenary brings to mind one of the first missionaries,
famous for his faith and zeal, Father Joseph Dupont, and his White Father
companions who arrived here in 1891. The Church is grateful to God for the men
and women who have served here since then, bearing witness to Christ’s message
of love and reconciliation. The vitality of the Church in Zambia today is the
sign that they were indeed God’s fellow workers, and through their labours you
have become God’s field, God’s building (Cfr. 1Cor. 3, 9).
4. I greet the leaders and representatives of the other Christian Churches and
Ecclesial Communities who are graciously here to welcome me. I have come to join
all Christians in praising God for the growth of faith, hope and love in so many
hearts since the Good News was first proclaimed here. I look forward to
celebrating with you the common faith we share through God’s love which has been
poured forth into our hearts through the Holy Spirit (Cfr. Rom. 5, 5). May this be a time of
openness to the mystery of God’s will for the Church and people of Zambia.
To the followers of other religious traditions and to all people of good will I
extend the hand of friendship and peace. I thank all of you for your welcome.
5. My dear friends: at the beginning of this pastoral visit, I implore God’s
abundant gifts on Zambia. I am aware that events in this region in recent years,
and world events beyond your control which affect all developing countries, have
brought economic and social difficulties in their wake. You are being challenged
not to lose trust in the ideals which inspire your public policies and which
consist in recognizing the equal dignity of all human beings without
discrimination based on tribe, race, colour or creed. The difficulties of the
present must not lead to a lessening of your commitment to protect and promote
each individual’s rights.
As a leading country in Africa, you are being strongly challenged to build a
society of harmonious relations between people of every racial group. This, and
your continuing efforts to promote a constructive dialogue by the parties
involved, must be your response to the unacceptable system of apartheid. Racism
stands condemned, but it is not enough to condemn. Conditions must be fostered
which enable fear to be banished and reconciliation to be achieved. And since
people from other parts of Africa are being forced to flee their homelands
because of hunger or conflict, you are being challenged to a great effort of
solidarity with the many refugees who have knocked at your door for food and
shelter. While you offer them generous hospitality, I trust that you will not be
left alone in the task of caring for them, and that the international community
will give the needed assistance to these suffering peoples.
6. Mr President, dear friends: the Church and the State are different in their
nature and purpose, but they serve the same people. In their commitment to
defending the natural dignity of every man, woman and child created in God’s
image, the Church and State in Zambia share a wide range of concerns and
effectively collaborate for the common good. Mr President, I am aware that on
many occasions you have publicly expressed your appreciation of the contribution
which the Church in this country is making to the advancement of the Zambian
people, especially in the field of education, health care and human development.
This, together with the existence of friendly relations between your nation and
the Holy See, is a source of great satisfaction. Today, in Lusaka, I express my
gratitude for this state of affairs.
Mr President, may God continue to bless you and your collaborators.
My prayer today is that the Lord will fulfil for Zambia what he promises in the
words of the Psalm:
“I will greatly bless her produce I will fill her poor with bread. I will clothe her priests with salvation and her people shall ring out their
joy” (Ps. 131, 15-16). May God abundantly bless Zambia!
© Copyright 1989 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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