20.12.2019 Views

Angelus News | December 20, 2019 | Vol. 4 No. 43

Pope Francis visits the Nativity scene in St. Peter’s Square after leading vespers on New Year’s Eve at the Vatican in 2016. This Advent, the pope took the unusual step of writing to Catholics about the importance of setting up and displaying a crèche or Nativity scene, not only at home but also in “the workplace, schools, hospitals, prisons, and town squares.” On Page 10, Mike Aquilina explains how its medieval, Franciscan roots illustrate why the crèche is much more than just a traditional Christmas decoration.

Pope Francis visits the Nativity scene in St. Peter’s Square after leading vespers on New Year’s Eve at the Vatican in 2016. This Advent, the pope took the unusual step of writing to Catholics about the importance of setting up and displaying a crèche or Nativity scene, not only at home but also in “the workplace, schools, hospitals, prisons, and town squares.” On Page 10, Mike Aquilina explains how its medieval, Franciscan roots illustrate why the crèche is much more than just a traditional Christmas decoration.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

The red pope’s top mission<br />

Why his new promotion could make Cardinal Luis Tagle a pivotal<br />

player in the Vatican’s relationship with China<br />

BY JOHN L. ALLEN JR. / ANGELUS<br />

Philippine Cardinal Luis Antonio Gokim Tagle of Manila points to a photo of his maternal grandfather, who emigrated from China to the Philippines. During<br />

a Vatican news conference May 23, the cardinal added the photo of his “Lolo Kim” to the mosaic made of the faces of migrants, world leaders, and Caritas<br />

staff members from around the world.<br />

ROBERT DUNCAN/CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE<br />

ROME — In the abstract, one<br />

could make the argument that<br />

the emergence of China as a<br />

global superpower, and how it chooses<br />

to exercise its expanding political<br />

and economic influence, is the most<br />

important geopolitical drama of the<br />

21st century.<br />

If China is the world’s most crucial<br />

new “hard power,” the Vatican remains<br />

its most influential “soft power,” meaning<br />

the premier voice of conscience<br />

on the global stage and the lone entity<br />

recognized as a state under international<br />

law with no real national interests to<br />

defend.<br />

The evolving relationship between<br />

Rome and Beijing, therefore, could be<br />

part of the century’s most important<br />

strategic storyline.<br />

In that drama, a potentially important<br />

new player is now set to enter the stage.<br />

On Dec. 9, Pope Francis named<br />

62-year-old Cardinal Luis Antonio<br />

Gokim Tagle of Manila in the Philippines<br />

as the new prefect of the Congregation<br />

for the Evangelization of<br />

Peoples (a position commonly referred<br />

to as “the red pope”), the Vatican’s primary<br />

missionary department, which is<br />

16 • ANGELUS • <strong>December</strong> <strong>20</strong>, <strong>20</strong>19

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!