Pope draws half million to outdoor Mass in Ecuador
The first pope from Latin America made an impassioned plea to fulfil the "social debt" toward families as he addressed more than 600,000 people in a park in Guayaquil, Ecuador's largest city
By Reuters, 8:52PM BST 06 Jul 2015, Source
Pope Francis said Mass for more than half a million Ecuadoreans on Monday and hinted he wanted a major Vatican gathering this year to find ways to reach out to Catholics who feel excluded by the Church.
On the first full day of a three-nation "homecoming" trip to South America, the Argentine-born pontiff was in Ecuador's second city Guayaquil, a steamy port sometimes referred to as the world's "banana capital," given its bustling fruit trade.
In line with his simple style, he rode into the city in a small silver Fiat marked for the occasion with Vatican City number plates â "SCV 1" â standing for Stato della Citta del Vaticano or State of Vatican City.
Tens of thousands of people lined the route from the airport, at times rushing police to touch the car and throw flower petals before it.
His eyes often squinting in the sun, Pope Francis switched to an open jeep when he reached the sprawling Mass site and rode though the crowd, which authorities estimated at more than 650,000 people.
"I've come to this spiritual encounter to ask the pope to heal me because I have cancer," said Franklin Borbor, 48, who despite his illness travelled more than five hours to find his place in the park.
The 78-year-old pope wove his homily around the theme of the family, which will be the subject of a month-long synod, or gathering of bishops, at the Vatican in October.
The meeting is expected to discuss ways to reach out to Catholics who have divorced and remarried outside the Church. Under current Church rules, they are prohibited from receiving communion unless they abstain from sexual relations.
The gathering is also due to discuss how the Church should reach out to homosexual Catholics.
Conservative bishops are against any changes regarding the divorced and remarried and at a preparatory meeting last year they botched conciliatory language on the pastoral care of gay couples.
The Pope said the synod "would consider concrete solutions to the many difficult and significant challenges facing families in our time."
He asked for prayers for the synod "so that God can take even what might seem to us impure, scandalous or threatening and turn it ... into a miracle. The family today is in need of a miracle."
Asked about the passage, the Vatican spokesman said the pope was not referring to specific controversies but that he wanted the synod to find ways "to help people move from a situation of sin to a situation of grace."
In his homily, he also called for a rekindling of family values and solidarity with the elderly, the abandoned and the unemployed.
"How many of our adolescents and young people sense that (love and happiness) are no longer found in their homes? How many women, sad and lonely, wonder when love left, when it slipped away from their lives? How many elderly people feel left out of family celebrations, cast aside and longing each day for a little love?" he said.
He said the family was the "best social capital" and could not be replaced by other institutions.
After the mass, Pope Francis was due to go to a Jesuit-run school to visit an old friend he has not seen in three decades, the cigar-smoking Rev. Francisco Cortes.
When he was a seminary director in Argentina, Pope Francis, then Father Jorge Bergoglio, would send seminarians to the school to study theology with Cortes, now a diminutive 91-year-old Spaniard affectionately known as "Father Paquito."
The pope's visit to Guayaquil took on extra significance for Ecuador, and its leftist President Rafael Correa, given it has been the epicentre of anti-government protests for weeks.
The Pope was to hold talks with Mr Correa later on Monday.
Thousands have been taking to the streets in Guayaquil and elsewhere to protest tax changes and what they see as state authoritarianism. Correa says the reforms will only affect the super-wealthy and accuses his foes of seeking a coup d'etat.
Protest leaders have called a moratorium during the pope's visit, and Francis used his arrival speech on Sunday to call for dialogue and respect for differences.
"We're excited about this visit despite the conflict that Ecuador is going through right now," said Juan Campuzano, a 45-year-old secondary schoolteacher in Guayaquil.
"Hopefully everything will work out in an orderly manner and this visit will be productive in restoring faith and love."
After Ecuador, the Pope heads to Bolivia and Paraguay on a tour encompassing three of the region's poorest and smallest countries. The pope visited Brazil for a youth festival in 2013 but that was to substitute for predecessor Benedict after his sudden resignation.