• Peace remains an urgent task in today’s world, where so many peoples are scarred by war and conflict, Pope Francis said on Wednesday in a meeting with the World Conference of Religions for Peace.

    “Peace is both a divine gift and a human achievement,” the pope said. “This is why believers of all religions are called to implore peace and to intercede for it.”

    The organization was inaugurated in 1970, with a World Conference on Religion and Peace in Kyoto, Japan. Since then, it has held an international assembly of religious leaders every 5-6 years.

    In 1994, Pope St. John Paul opened the 6th World Assembly in the Vatican, where he said interreligious dialogue “helps us to understand one another as religious men and women, and enables us to respect our differences, without abstaining from affirming clearly and unequivocally what we believe to be the true way to salvation.”

    In his meeting on Wednesday morning, Francis also expressed his appreciation for the work of the organization, telling the delegation that religions are bound by their very nature to promote peace through justice, fraternity, disarmament and care for creation.

    Francis said religions “have a specific and unique role to play” in promoting peace, noting “their spiritual and moral resources.”

    Please find below the full text of the Pope’s message for the World Conference of Religions for
    Peace:

    Dear Friends,

    I offer you a warm welcome and I am grateful for your visit. I thank Cardinal Tauran for his
    kind presentation.

    Peace remains an urgent task in today’s world, where so many peoples are scarred by war and conflict. Peace is both a divine gift and a human achievement. This is why believers of all religions are called to implore peace and to intercede for it. All men and women of good will, particularly those in positions of responsibility, are summoned to work for peace with their hearts, minds and hands. For peace has to be “crafted”. In this effort, peacemaking and the pursuit of justice go together.

    The religions, with their spiritual and moral resources, have a specific and unique role to play in building peace. They cannot be neutral, much less ambiguous, where peace is concerned.

    Those who engage in acts of violence, or try to justify them in the name of religion, gravely offend God, who is peace and the source of peace, and has left in human beings a reflection of his wisdom, power and beauty.

    I express my esteem and appreciation for the work of “Religions for Peace”. You provide a valuable service to both religion and peace, for the religions are bound by their very nature to promote peace through justice, fraternity, disarmament and care for creation.

    There is a need for a common and cooperative effort on the part of the religions in promoting an integral ecology. The Bible helps us in this regard by reminding us of the Creator, who “saw all that he had made, and it was very good” (Gen 1:31). The religions have the wherewithal to further a moral covenant that can promote respect for the dignity of the human person and care for creation.

    Thanks be to God, in various parts of the world we have any number of good examples of the power of interreligious cooperation to oppose violent conflicts, to advance sustainable development and to protect the earth. Let us continue along this path! We trust in the Almighty’s help and in the good will of believers and so many others.

    May God bless you and make your commitment to peace bear rich fruit!

    Source: Crux