Category: Natural Disasters

  • MIL-OSI Europe: EU paves the way for investments in Timor-Leste’s water, waste, and forestry sectors, boosting the country’s sustainable development

    Source: European Investment Bank

    EIB

    • The EU-funded programme has supported the Government of Timor-Leste in identifying and preparing potential investment projects.
    • These projects have been identified in the sectors of forestry, water supply, and waste management, and were presented today as ready for financing, with a total investment need of approximately €260 million.
    • EIB Global is ready to assess these projects for financing.

     The European Union Delegation to Timor-Leste and the European Investment Bank (EIB Global) have worked closely with the Government of Timor-Leste to prepare investment projects aimed at improving the country’s infrastructure and fostering sustainable development. The three proposals resulting from this collaboration focus on water supply, solid waste management, and forestry, and are now ready to be transformed into tangible investments.

    The three projects include a commercial forestry initiative in the municipalities of Covalima and Bobonaro, a national solid waste management project including a health waste management component, and a water supply project for selected municipalities. The forestry project aims to transform underutilised state lands, generating essential resources like firewood and timber, while creating thousands of jobs for local communities. The national waste management project introduces solutions for the safe and efficient management of waste thus reducing significantly the pollution discharged into the environment. The water supply project focuses on improving access to clean water in key municipalities, addressing both urban and rural needs for better sanitation and reliable water sources. Together these initiatives require a total investment of about €260 million.

    The preparation of the three investment projects was made possible through the Project Preparation and Implementation Programme (PPIP), which concluded today with the final Steering Committee meeting where these projects were presented. Managed by EIB Global, the PPIP was supported by a €5 million budget, including €4.75 million in technical assistance from the EU and €250,000 from the Cotonou Partnership Agreement.

    The final Steering Committee meeting was chaired by H.E. the Minister for Planning and Strategic Investments, Gastão Francisco de Sousa, and attended by representatives from the Government of Timor-Leste, EIB Global, the EU Delegation to Timor-Leste, and other stakeholders.

    The Ambassador to the European Union Delegation to Timor-Leste, Mr Marc Fiedrich said: “If converted into a loan, the Project Preparation and Implementation Programme opens a new era of cooperation. Until today, our support, although significant in terms of funds, consisted of limited instruments: grants, technical assistance, and budget support. With this programme, we add loans and guarantees, and maybe later private investments. This is the new trend of cooperation promoted by the EU, the innovative Global Gateway strategy that may become the norm in the near future.”

    The Vice-President of the European Investment Bank Ambroise Fayolle said: “Alongside our EU partners on the ground, we have been supporting the Government of Timor-Leste in identifying and preparing investment projects. By focusing on strategic sectors such as forestry, water supply, and waste management, these initiatives will not only address immediate community needs but also lay the groundwork for sustainable economic growth. We look forward to turning these project proposals into tangible investments. As the EU’s financial arm, the EIB stands ready to provide the necessary financial support to make these projects a reality, in line with the EU’s Global Gateway strategy.”

    His Excellency the Minister for Planning and Strategic Investments, Gastão Francisco de Sousa said: “All three projects have the potential to make significant and long-term contributions to Timor-Leste’s development, and to improved rural and urban environments. The projects comply with and support our national development objectives for their respective sectors.” He emphasised the role of the Ministry of Planning and Strategic Investments in facilitating and coordinating efforts across the sectors.

    His Excellency the Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Forestry, Marcos da Cruz said: “I would like to thank the EIB, the EU Delegation and COWI for the design of the Timor-Leste Commercial Forestry Project. We welcome this innovative approach to the development of commercial forestry in Timor-Leste, using currently unproductive land. In addition, the project is expected to provide jobs for people living in the target areas, re-green vulnerable areas, increase incomes from forest products, and increase Government’s income.”

    His Excellency the Minister of State Administration, Tomás do Rosário Cabral said: “We are grateful for the European Investment Bank’s support for waste management projects. Providing adequate and affordable waste services to the entire population is of great concern for the Government. It will improve public health and is much needed for protecting the terrestrial and marine environment. Specifically, better healthcare risk waste management is urgently needed. In this respect, the EIB project proposal provides a modern, efficient, and sustainable solution that should be implemented as soon as possible.”

    Background information:

    Project Preparation and Implementation Programme (PPIP) is an EU-funded and EIB-managed project designed to assist the Government of Timor-Leste in the identifying, preparing and implementing projects that are technically sound, financially viable, and environmentally and socially responsible, and are ready for investments. The programme has identified potential projects in the three sectors — water, solid waste management and forestry — by conducting prefeasibility studies for six projects and completing three feasibility studies. Investment projects in forestry and solid waste are now ready for the Government of Timor-Leste to request loan from the EIB and EU grant funding, should they choose to move forward with these initiatives.

    Steering Committee of the Project Preparation and Implementation Programme is chaired by the Ministry for Planning and Strategic Investments. The committee also includes representatives from several key government entities of Timor-Leste, such as by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of State Administration, the Ministry of Public Works, the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Forestry and Bee Timor-Leste public utility company.

    The European Union (EU) is a unique economic and political union between 27 European countries that cover much of the continent together. In Timor-Leste, the EU is the second largest donor of development aid (grant funding). The EU is committed to supporting Timor-Leste’s 2011-2030 Strategic Development plan, which aims to transform Timor-Leste into an upper-middle-income country by 2030 based on rapid, inclusive growth enabling it to improve infrastructure, worker skills, education, training and health systems, and combat poverty and malnutrition. The EU assistance focuses on green and sustainable economic recovery and development, rural development, good governance for sustainable development and gender equality.

    The European Investment Bank (EIB) is the long-term financing institution of the European Union owned by its Member States. EIB Global is the EIB’s specialised arm devoted to increasing the impact of international partnerships and development finance outside the European Union. EIB Global is a key partner of the EU Global Gateway strategy, and is designed to foster strong, focused partnerships within Team Europe, alongside fellow development finance institutions and civil society. EIB Global brings the EIB closer to local people, companies and institutions through our offices across the world.

    Global Gateway is the European Union’s strategy to reduce the worldwide investment gap, boost smart, clean and secure connections in the digital, energy and transport sectors, and strengthen health, education and research systems. The Global Gateway strategy embodies a Team Europe approach that brings together the European Union, EU Member States and European development finance institutions. It aims to mobilise up to €300 billion in public and private investments between 2021 and 2027, creating essential links rather than dependencies, and closing the global investment gap.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Devastating forest fires in Attica – E-001519/2024(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    1. The EU Solidarity Fund (EUSF)[1] can only be activated at the request of Greece which has a deadline of 12 weeks as from when the first damage occurred, demonstrating that the total direct damage exceeds the thresholds specified in Article 2 Regulation (EC) No 2012/2002. It may cover the costs of emergency and recovery operations by the public authorities. Private damage is not eligible. So far, Greece has not requested EUSF assistance for this disaster.

    2. Overall , more than EUR 2 billion are planned under Cohesion Policy to support the prevention and management of fire risk. These investments target the reduction of the vulnerability of more than 130 million people to wildfire risk, particularly in regions with higher risk of wildfire exposure. The 2021-2027 Cohesion Policy programmes for Greece include allocations for addressing fire risk prevention and management actions, with a total public funding of EUR 421 million. Under shared management, Greece decides how to deploy these funds, in line with the applicable regulatory framework, and the objectives and priorities set up in the above-mentioned programmes.

    3. Regarding the organisation and functioning of firefighting services, the Commission refers to the reply to written question 000020/2024 of 28 February 2024[2].

    • [1] Council Regulation (EC) No 2012/2002 of 11 November 2002 establishing the European Union Solidarity Fund (OJ L 311, 14.11.2002, p. 3) as amended by Regulation (EU) No 661/2014 of the European Parliament and the Council of 15 May 2014 (OJ L 189, 27.6.2014, p. 143) and by Regulation (EU) 2020/461 of the European Parliament and the Council of 30 March 2020 (OJ L 99, 31.3.2020, p. 9).
    • [2] https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/E-9-2024-000020-ASW_EN.html
    Last updated: 24 October 2024

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Lebanon Support Conference 2024: Minister Falconer intervention

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    The Minister for the Middle East attended the Lebanon Support Conference in Paris on 24 October 2024 to reiterate calls for a ceasefire in Lebanon.

    The situation in Lebanon is worsening daily, and civilian casualties are mounting.

    The risks of further escalation cannot be overstated. We cannot let Lebanon become another Gaza.

    This is why today the UK repeats our call for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Lebanese Hizballah.

    Let us not forget that this conflict started when Hizballah launched rockets at northern Israel, forcing the Israelis to flee their homes.

    The UK stands with Israel and recognises its right of self defence in the face of unlawful Iranian attacks.

    Iran must immediately halt those attacks, and stand down its proxies.

    Meanwhile, we are working with the Lebanese Armed Forces, the sole legitimate defender of that state, to support security and stability.

    I am pleased to be joined today by one of our most senior military officers, Air Marshal Harvey Smyth, who leads our work to support the Lebanese Armed Forces. We stand ready to do more.

    We are also committing £15 million to respond to the humanitarian emergency in Lebanon, supporting food, medicine and clean water.

    Many generous British citizens are now donating to the Disasters Emergency Committee appeal for Gaza, Lebanon and the wider region – my government will now pledge to match that generosity up to £10 million.

    The aid workers striving to alleviate suffering in Lebanon must be able to carry out their duties in safety – including UN workers, who have a vital role to play in resolving armed conflict and mitigating its impact.

    Britain condemns all threats to the security of UNIFIL.

    We call on all parties engaged in this conflict to take all necessary precautions to avoid civilian deaths and injuries and protect essential infrastructure.

    Before I conclude, let me reflect briefly on the wider crisis in the region.

    Following the death of the terrorist leader Yahya Sinwar, it is time for a new chapter in Gaza.

    We reiterate our call for an immediate ceasefire, the release of all hostages, and an increase in humanitarian aid.

    We must focus all our efforts on stopping this cycle of violence.

    A political solution consistent with 1701 is the only answer – and the only way to secure a stable future for those on both sides of the Blue Line.

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 24 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: California joins federal partners to enhance flood protection and wildlife habitat in Sacramento River Basin

    Source: US State of California 2

    Oct 23, 2024

    What you need to know: State and federal partners today signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to boost cooperation on multi-benefit water projects in the Sacramento River Basin. 

    SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today highlighted a new agreement between state and federal partners to enhance collaboration on floodplain projects in the Sacramento River Basin that bolster flood protection and habitat for fish and wildlife.
     
    The MOU furthers state-federal coordination on the planning, design and implementation of multi-benefit floodplain projects in the Sacramento River Basin that increase flood protection, restore habitat and ecosystems, improve groundwater recharge and water supply reliability, and sustain farming and managed wetland operations. The agreement is backed by the Floodplain Forward Coalition comprised of landowners, irrigation districts, and higher education and conservation groups.

    “As California grapples with more extreme cycles of wet and dry, it’s more important than ever that we leverage our common interests to meet the needs of our communities, wildlife and economy. This state-federal partnership with support from wide-ranging stakeholders demonstrates the kind of collaborative solutions that can safeguard our communities, wildlife, businesses and water supplies in the face of climate impacts.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    The MOU was signed today in Sacramento by representatives from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, California Natural Resources Agency, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, California Department of Food and Agriculture, California Department of Water Resources, and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.
     
    Sacramento Valley bypasses are natural overflow areas that are critical to protecting farms, cities and communities from floodwaters. The lowlands also serve as essential habitat for many fish, birds and wildlife, including Chinook salmon, that have historically relied on the basin’s floodplains for food and habitat during their migrations.
     
    More information on the MOU can be found here.

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  • MIL-OSI USA: CHP recovers more than 2,000 stolen vehicles in Oakland since February

    Source: US State of California 2

    Oct 23, 2024

    What you need to know: California Highway Patrol officers conducted blitz operations this weekend, targeting sideshows that led to 22 arrests and the seizure of 36 vehicles. These actions are part of the state’s ongoing enforcement surge in the region, in partnership with the city, which has resulted in 1,125 arrests, and the seizure of 2,213 stolen vehicles and 110 illegal guns since February 2024. 

    OAKLAND – The California Highway Patrol cracked down on sideshows in Oakland this weekend as part of Governor Newsom’s enforcement surge to improve public safety in Alameda County and the East Bay. This week, CHP responded to and subsequently conducted investigations arising from multiple sideshows in the region, arresting 22 individuals and seizing 36 vehicles.

    Governor Newsom launched the CHP operation in February in partnership with the City of Oakland, in response to increased public safety needs in the region, including organized retail theft and sideshows. He then again quadrupled the shifts of CHP officers in Alameda County in July to provide CHP support to the city seven days per week. The most recent surge in officers has led to a 57% increase in arrests, a 44% increase in stolen vehicles recovered, and a 188% increase in guns seized compared to the previous three-month period.

    This builds on CHP’s ongoing work in the region, which has led to the arrest of 1,125 suspects, the seizure of 2,123 stolen vehicles, and the seizure of 110 illegal firearms since February.

    “California has provided robust investments to support the Oakland community by cracking down on crime and uplifting programs that help prevent it. Our recent work in Oakland should send a strong message that lawlessness and crime will not be tolerated in our state. I thank our CHP officers for their work on the ground to help make the East Bay safer for all its residents.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    According to the California Department of Justice’s most recent verified data, unlike most communities in California, crime spiked considerably in Alameda County last year. Alameda County had the highest homicide, violent crime, and property crime rates of California’s 10 largest counties in 2023. While new verified data will not be available until next year, local reporting indicates that crime appears to be going down in 2024.

     In July, Governor Newsom announced the state was ramping up efforts to crack down on crime in the East Bay by increasing the deployment of CHP officers in Oakland, quadrupling the number of CHP officer shifts over four months to help local agencies target organized crime, sideshows, carjacking, and other criminal activity seven days a week.

    In just the three months since Governor Newsom announced the deployment of additional officers to the area, CHP has made 524 arrests and seized 920 stolen vehicles, and taken 52 firearms off the street. 

    Technology to investigate illegal sideshows

    As part of this work, California installed a network of cameras on state highways, completed in September. The new cameras, announced by Governor Newsom in April, improve vehicle identification, allowing law enforcement agencies to search for vehicles suspected to be linked to crimes and receive real-time alerts about their movement. These cameras have contributed to multiple investigations of sideshows in the area, including the following operations:

    On October 20 at approximately 3:15 a.m., a CHP airplane observed a sideshow in progress at the intersection of 98th Avenue and Edes Avenue in Oakland. A vehicle was identified as a participant, and when an enforcement stop was attempted, the suspect fled from the officers. With constant aerial surveillance and assistance from cameras near the sideshow, ground units safely pursued the suspect and successfully arrested two individuals for attempting to evade law enforcement and impounded the vehicle for 30 days.

    CHP video footage of sideshow on 98th and Edes Avenue 

    CHP video footage of arrest of individual after pursuit on the Bay Bridge

    • Later that evening, at approximately 9:30 p.m., a CHP helicopter observed a sideshow in progress on West Grand Avenue under I-880 in Oakland. Spectators were shining laser lights at the law enforcement aircraft, and upon breaking up the sideshow, 14 individuals were arrested for being spectators at a sideshow and six vehicles were towed.

    Today, CHP conducted investigations into the recent sideshows, issuing a number of search warrants that will result in the seizure of additional vehicles owned by participants and spectators of the sideshows that occurred over the weekend.
     

    “The dedicated men and women of the CHP are working tirelessly to combat crime, improve public safety, and hold sideshow participants accountable for their reckless actions,” said CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee. “We remain committed to ensuring the streets of Oakland are safer for everyone, and we will continue to use every tool at our disposal to uphold the law and protect our residents.”

    Stronger enforcement. Serious penalties. Real consequences.

    Recently, the Governor signed into law a bipartisan package of bills to impose stricter penalties, increase accountability, and strengthen law enforcement’s ability to combat sideshows and deter illegal activities such as drifting, street racing, and blocking intersections. The new laws expand vehicle impoundment authority for law enforcement, including for spectators and those aiding in illegal speed contests and sideshows, standardize terminology for “sideshows” and “street takeovers” statewide, and target reckless driving activities on highways and parking lots.

    The Governor also recently signed into law the most significant bipartisan legislation to crack down on property crime in modern California. Building on the state’s robust laws and record public safety funding, these bipartisan bills establish tough new penalties for repeat offenders, provide additional tools for felony prosecutions, and crack down on serial shoplifters, retail thieves, and auto burglars. 

    Supporting and investing in Oakland 

    In March, the Governor released Caltrans’ 10-Point Action Plan to support the city’s efforts to improve street safety and beautification. The comprehensive plan outlines actionable steps the state is taking to further support the city through blight abatement efforts, homeless encampment resolutions, community outreach initiatives, employment opportunities, and other beautification and safety efforts. A detailed overview of the state’s investments in Oakland and Alameda County is available here.

    California has invested in violence intervention and prevention efforts in the city — including through CalVIP, which provides funding for cities and community-based organizations with the goal of reducing violence in the city and adjacent areas. The state has also expanded opportunities for youth by transforming Oakland’s schools into community schools, mandating and funding after-school programs, awarding Oakland grants for youth coaches, establishing targeted college and career savings accounts, and providing tuition-free community college for students at Oakland community colleges. 

    Videos above may be attributed to the California Highway Patrol. 

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  • MIL-OSI: Valley National Bancorp Announces Third Quarter 2024 Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, Oct. 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Valley National Bancorp (NASDAQ:VLY), the holding company for Valley National Bank, today reported net income for the third quarter 2024 of $97.9 million, or $0.18 per diluted common share, as compared to the second quarter 2024 net income of $70.4 million, or $0.13 per diluted common share, and net income of $141.3 million, or $0.27 per diluted common share, for the third quarter 2023. Excluding all non-core income and charges, our adjusted net income (a non-GAAP measure) was $96.8 million, or $0.18 per diluted common share, for the third quarter 2024, $71.6 million, or $0.13 per diluted common share, for the second quarter 2024, and $136.4 million, or $0.26 per diluted common share, for the third quarter 2023. See further details below, including a reconciliation of our non-GAAP adjusted net income, in the “Consolidated Financial Highlights” tables.

    Ira Robbins, CEO, commented, “The third quarter’s financial results highlight the significant progress that we continue to make towards achieving our strategic balance sheet goals. On October 23, 2024, we entered into an agreement to sell performing commercial real estate loans expected to total over $800 million at a very modest discount of approximately 1 percent to a single investor. This economically compelling transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter 2024 and reflects the strength and desirability of our commercial real estate portfolio. We have executed on a variety of strategic transactions this year that have notably strengthened our balance sheet and enhanced our financial flexibility.”

    Mr. Robbins continued, “This quarter’s results also indicated the early stages of normalized profitability which we expect will accelerate as we enter 2025. Net interest income and non-interest income both improved meaningfully from the second quarter 2024, and our operating expenses were well-controlled and effectively unchanged on a year-over-year basis. While recent weather events weighed on the sequential provision improvement that we anticipated, our pre-provision earnings continued to improve during the third quarter and could set the stage for more stable results in the near future. And most importantly, our thoughts are with those affected by the recent hurricanes in our Florida markets and the other areas in the southeast. We are strongly committed to supporting our associates, clients and communities throughout the rebuilding and recovery process.”

    Key financial highlights for the third quarter 2024:

    • Net Interest Income and Margin: Net interest income on a tax equivalent basis of $411.8 million for the third quarter 2024 increased $8.8 million compared to the second quarter 2024 and decreased $1.8 million as compared to the third quarter 2023. Our net interest margin on a tax equivalent basis also increased by 2 basis points to 2.86 percent in the third quarter 2024 as compared to 2.84 percent for the second quarter 2024. The increases from the second quarter 2024 were mostly due to continued yield expansion on average loans and additional interest income and higher yields from targeted growth within our available for sale securities portfolio. See the “Net Interest Income and Margin” section below for more details.
    • Loan Portfolio: Total loans decreased $956.4 million, or 7.6 percent on an annualized basis, to $49.4 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 mostly due to the transfer of performing commercial real estate loans totaling $823.1 million, net of unearned fees, to loans held for sale at September 30, 2024 and normal repayment activity mainly within the commercial real estate non-owner occupied and multi-family loans, as we continue to actively reduce these loan categories. Our commercial and industrial loans grew $320.1 million, or 13.5 percent on an annualized basis, to $9.8 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 due to solid organic growth during the third quarter 2024. Residential mortgage and total consumer loans also increased modestly during the third quarter 2024. See the “Loans” section below for more details.
    • Deposits: Actual ending balances for deposits increased $283.8 million to $50.4 billion at September 30, 2024 as compared to $50.1 billion at June 30, 2024 mainly due to higher period-end direct commercial customer money market and non-interest bearing deposits, partially offset by a decline in time deposits. See the “Deposits” section below for more details.
    • Allowance and Provision for Credit Losses for Loans: The allowance for credit losses for loans totaled $564.7 million and $532.5 million at September 30, 2024 and June 30, 2024, respectively, representing 1.14 percent and 1.06 percent of total loans at each respective date. During the third quarter 2024, we recorded a provision for credit losses for loans of $75.0 million as compared to $82.1 million and $9.1 million for the second quarter 2024 and third quarter 2023, respectively. The third quarter 2024 provision reflects, among other factors, increased quantitative reserves allocated to commercial real estate loans, significant commercial and industrial loan growth and $8.0 million of qualitative reserves related to the estimated impact of Hurricane Helene, which hit Florida in late September 2024.
    • Credit Quality: Non-accrual loans totaled $296.3 million, or 0.60 percent of total loans at September 30, 2024 as compared to $303.3 million, or 0.60 percent of total loans at June 30, 2024. Total accruing past due loans (i.e., loans past due 30 days or more and still accruing interest) increased to 0.35 percent of total loans at September 30, 2024 as compared to 0.14 percent at June 30, 2024 largely due to two well-secured commercial real estate loans at various stages of expected collection within the early stage delinquency categories. Net loan charge-offs totaled $42.9 million for the third quarter 2024 as compared to $36.8 million and $5.5 million for the second quarter 2024 and third quarter 2023, respectively. The loan charge-offs in the third quarter 2024 included partial charge-offs totaling a combined $30.1 million related to two commercial real estate loan relationships. See the “Credit Quality” section below for more details.
    • Non-Interest Income: Non-interest income increased $9.5 million to $60.7 million for the third quarter 2024 as compared to the second quarter 2024 mainly due to increases in other income; wealth management and trust fees; and service charges on deposits totaling $11.2 million, $2.0 million, and $1.6 million, respectively. The increases in the aforementioned categories were partially offset by a $5.8 million mark to market loss (recorded within net losses on sales of loans) associated with the performing commercial real estate loans transferred to loans held for sale at September 30, 2024, as well as lower swap fees related to commercial loan transactions (within capital market fees) and insurance commissions. The increase in other income was mostly the result of income from litigation settlements totaling $7.3 million for the third quarter 2024.
    • Non-Interest Expense: Non-interest expense decreased $8.0 million to $269.5 million for the third quarter 2024 as compared to the second quarter 2024 largely due to a $6.2 million decrease in technology, furniture and equipment expense and a $3.8 million decrease in professional and legal expenses, partially offset by higher net occupancy expense during the third quarter 2024.
    • Efficiency Ratio: Our efficiency ratio was 56.13 percent for the third quarter 2024 as compared to 59.62 percent and 56.72 percent for the second quarter 2024 and third quarter 2023, respectively. See the “Consolidated Financial Highlights” tables below for additional information regarding our non-GAAP measures.
    • Performance Ratios: Annualized return on average assets (ROA), shareholders’ equity (ROE) and tangible ROE were 0.63 percent, 5.70 percent and 8.06 percent for the third quarter 2024, respectively. Annualized ROA, ROE, and tangible ROE, adjusted for non-core income and charges, were 0.62 percent, 5.64 percent and 7.97 percent for the third quarter 2024, respectively. See the “Consolidated Financial Highlights” tables below for additional information regarding our non-GAAP measures.

    Net Interest Income and Margin

    Net interest income on a tax equivalent basis of $411.8 million for the third quarter 2024 increased $8.8 million compared to the second quarter 2024 and decreased $1.8 million as compared to the third quarter 2023. Interest income on a tax equivalent basis increased $27.1 million to $861.9 million for the third quarter 2024 as compared to the second quarter 2024. The increase was mostly due to higher yields on both new loan originations and adjustable rate loans, as well as higher yields and additional interest income from targeted purchases of taxable investments within the available for sale securities portfolio during the second and third quarter 2024. Total interest expense increased $18.3 million to $450.1 million for the third quarter 2024 as compared to the second quarter 2024 mainly due to an increase in average time deposit balances coupled with higher costs on most interest bearing deposit products. See the “Deposits” and “Other Borrowings” sections below for more details.

    Net interest margin on a tax equivalent basis of 2.86 percent for the third quarter 2024 increased by 2 basis points from 2.84 percent for the second quarter 2024 and decreased 5 basis points from 2.91 percent for the third quarter 2023. The increase as compared to the second quarter 2024 was largely driven by the higher yield on average interest earning assets largely offset by an increase in the cost of average interest bearing liabilities. The yield on average interest earning assets increased by 10 basis points to 5.98 percent on a linked quarter basis largely due to higher yielding investment purchases and new loan originations during the second and third quarter 2024. The overall cost of average interest bearing liabilities increased 7 basis points to 4.22 percent for the third quarter 2024 as compared to the second quarter 2024 largely due to higher interest rates on deposits. Our cost of total average deposits was 3.25 percent for the third quarter 2024 as compared to 3.18 percent and 2.94 percent for the second quarter 2024 and the third quarter 2023, respectively.

    Loans, Deposits and Other Borrowings

    Loans. Total loans decreased $956.4 million, or 7.6 percent on an annualized basis, to $49.4 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024. Commercial and industrial loans grew by $320.1 million , or 13.5 percent on an annualized basis, to $9.8 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 largely due to our continued strategic focus on the expansion of new loan production within this category. Total commercial real estate (including construction) loans decreased $1.4 billion to $30.4 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024. This decline was primarily driven by the transfer of $823.1 million of commercial real estate loans, net of unearned loan fees, from the loans held for investment portfolio to loans held for sale as of September 30, 2024. In addition, we remained highly selective on new originations and projects in an effort to reduce commercial real estate loan concentrations, mainly within the non-owner occupied and multifamily loan categories. Automobile loan balances increased by $60.9 million, or 13.8 percent on an annualized basis, to $1.8 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 mainly due to continued consumer demand generated by our indirect auto dealer network and low prepayment activity within the portfolio. Other consumer loans decreased $42.4 million, or 15.3 percent on an annualized basis, to $1.1 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 primarily due to the negative impact of the high level of market interest rates on the demand and usage of collateralized personal lines of credit.

    Deposits. Actual ending balances for deposits increased $283.8 million to $50.4 billion at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 mainly due to an increase of $358.3 million in savings, NOW and money market deposits and an increase of $36.0 million in non-interest bearing deposits, partially offset by a decrease of $110.5 million in time deposits. Non-interest bearing deposit and savings, NOW and money market deposit balances increased at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 mostly due to increases in national specialized deposits and higher direct commercial customer deposit accounts. Total indirect customer deposits (including both brokered money market and time deposits) totaled $9.1 billion in both September 30, 2024 and June 30, 2024. Non-interest bearing deposits; savings, NOW and money market deposits; and time deposits represented approximately 22 percent, 50 percent and 28 percent of total deposits as of September 30, 2024, respectively, as compared to 22 percent, 49 percent and 29 percent of total deposits as of June 30, 2024, respectively.

    Other Borrowings. Short-term borrowings, consisting of securities sold under agreements to repurchase, decreased $5.5 million to $58.3 million at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024. Long-term borrowings totaled $3.3 billion at September 30, 2024 and also remained relatively unchanged as compared to June 30, 2024.

    Credit Quality

    Hurricanes Helene and Milton. In the early stages of the fourth quarter 2024, the credit quality of our Florida loan portfolio has remained resilient in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, which hit Florida in late September 2024, and Hurricane Milton, which made landfall on October 9, 2024. At this time, there have been relatively few loan concessions (mostly in the form of loan payment deferrals up to 90 days) for distressed borrowers impacted by the hurricanes. However, we continue to assess the impact of the hurricanes on our Florida client base and, where appropriate, we will work constructively with individual borrowers.

    Non-Performing Assets (NPAs). Total NPAs, consisting of non-accrual loans, other real estate owned (OREO) and other repossessed assets, decreased $7.8 million to $305.1 million at September 30, 2024 as compared to June 30, 2024. Non-accrual loans decreased $7.0 million to $296.3 million at September 30, 2024 as compared to $303.3 million at June 30, 2024. Non-accrual construction and commercial real estate loans decreased $20.7 million and $9.3 million to $24.7 million and $113.8 million, respectively, at September 30, 2024 as compared to June 30, 2024 mainly due to loan payoffs during the third quarter 2024. The decreases in these loan categories were partially offset by two new non-accrual commercial and industrial loans totaling $19.0 million, as well as moderate increases in non-accrual residential mortgage and consumer loans at September 30, 2024. OREO decreased $887 thousand at September 30, 2024 from June 30, 2024 mostly due to the sale of one commercial property, which resulted in the recognition of an immaterial loss for the third quarter 2024.

    Accruing Past Due Loans. Total accruing past due loans (i.e., loans past due 30 days or more and still accruing interest) increased $102.3 million to $174.7 million, or 0.35 percent of total loans, at September 30, 2024 as compared to $72.4 million, or 0.14 percent of total loans at June 30, 2024. Loans 30 to 59 days past due increased $69.1 million to $115.1 million at September 30, 2024 as compared to June 30, 2024 mainly due to a $74.5 million increase in commercial real estate loans, partially offset by a $7.0 million decline in consumer loan delinquencies. The increase in commercial real estate loans 30 to 59 days past due was mostly due to one new delinquent loan totaling $40.9 million, which is expected to be fully repaid, subject to the borrower’s pending sale of certain collateral, as well as a few other new loan delinquencies. Loans 60 to 89 days past due increased $42.9 million to $54.8 million at September 30, 2024 as compared to June 30, 2024 mostly due to one well-secured commercial real estate loan totaling $43.9 million currently in the process of loan modification. Loans 90 days or more past due and still accruing interest decreased $9.7 million to $4.8 million at September 30, 2024 as compared to June 30, 2024 largely due to one $4.0 million construction loan that was fully repaid and one $4.2 million commercial real estate loan that migrated from this past due category to non-accrual loans during the third quarter 2024. All loans 90 days or more past due and still accruing interest are well-secured and in the process of collection.

    Allowance for Credit Losses for Loans and Unfunded Commitments. The following table summarizes the allocation of the allowance for credit losses to loan categories and the allocation as a percentage of each loan category at September 30, 2024, June 30, 2024 and September 30, 2023:

        September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   September 30, 2023
            Allocation       Allocation       Allocation
            as a % of       as a % of       as a % of
        Allowance   Loan   Allowance   Loan   Allowance   Loan
      Allocation   Category   Allocation   Category   Allocation   Category
      ($ in thousands)
    Loan Category:                      
    Commercial and industrial loans $ 166,365   1.70 %   $ 149,243   1.57 %   $ 133,988   1.44 %
    Commercial real estate loans:                      
      Commercial real estate   249,608   0.93       246,316   0.87       191,562   0.68  
      Construction   59,420   1.70       54,777   1.54       53,485   1.40  
    Total commercial real estate loans   309,028   1.02       301,093   0.95       245,047   0.77  
    Residential mortgage loans   51,545   0.91       47,697   0.85       44,621   0.80  
    Consumer loans:                      
      Home equity   3,303   0.57       3,077   0.54       3,689   0.67  
      Auto and other consumer   18,086   0.63       18,200   0.63       14,830   0.52  
    Total consumer loans   21,389   0.62       21,277   0.62       18,519   0.55  
    Allowance for loan losses   548,327   1.11       519,310   1.03       442,175   0.88  
    Allowance for unfunded credit commitments   16,344         13,231         20,170    
    Total allowance for credit losses for loans $ 564,671       $ 532,541       $ 462,345    
    Allowance for credit losses for loans as a % total loans     1.14 %       1.06 %       0.92 %
                                 

    Our loan portfolio, totaling $49.4 billion at September 30, 2024, had net loan charge-offs totaling $42.9 million for the third quarter 2024 as compared to $36.8 million and $5.5 million for the second quarter 2024 and the third quarter 2023, respectively. Total gross loan charge-offs in the third quarter 2024 included partial charge-offs totaling $30.1 million related to two non-performing commercial real estate loan relationships that had combined specific reserves of $25.9 million within the allowance for loan losses at June 30, 2024.

    The allowance for credit losses for loans, comprised of our allowance for loan losses and unfunded credit commitments, as a percentage of total loans was 1.14 percent at September 30, 2024, 1.06 percent at June 30, 2024, and 0.92 percent at September 30, 2023. For the third quarter 2024, the provision for credit losses for loans totaled $75.0 million as compared to $82.1 million and $9.1 million for the second quarter 2024 and third quarter 2023, respectively. The provision for credit losses remained somewhat elevated for the third quarter 2024 largely due to higher quantitative reserves allocated to commercial real estate loans, commercial and industrial loan growth and $8.0 million of qualitative reserves related to the estimated impact of Hurricane Helene.

    The allowance for unfunded credit commitments increased to $16.3 million at September 30, 2024 from $13.2 million at June 30, 2024 mainly due to increases in both non-cancellable construction commitments and commercial and industrial standby letters of credit.

    As previously noted, we are currently evaluating the impact of Hurricane Milton, and we also continue to evaluate any further impact of Hurricane Helene, on our loan portfolio. While not anticipated based on information currently available, Hurricane Milton and unexpected losses from Hurricane Helene could result in a significant increase to the current hurricane related reserves within the allowance, loan charge-offs and our provision for the fourth quarter 2024.

    Capital Adequacy

    Valley’s total risk-based capital, common equity Tier 1 capital, Tier 1 capital and Tier 1 leverage capital ratios were 12.56 percent, 9.57 percent, 10.29 percent and 8.40 percent, respectively, at September 30, 2024 as compared to 12.18 percent, 9.55 percent, 9.99 percent and 8.19 percent, respectively, at June 30, 2024. The increases in the total risk-based capital, Tier 1 capital and Tier 1 leverage ratios as compared to June 30, 2024 were largely due to Valley’s issuance of 6.0 million shares of its 8.250 percent Fixed-Rate Reset Non-Cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock, Series C on August 5, 2024. Net proceeds to Valley after deducting underwriting discounts, commissions and offering expenses were approximately $144.7 million.

    Investor Conference Call

    Valley will host a conference call with investors and the financial community at 11:00 AM (ET) today to discuss the third quarter 2024 earnings and related matters. Interested parties should preregister using this link: https://register.vevent.com/register to receive the dial-in number and a personal PIN, which are required to access the conference call. The teleconference will also be webcast live: https://edge.media-server.com and archived on Valley’s website through Monday, December 2, 2024. Investor presentation materials will be made available prior to the conference call at www.valley.com.

    About Valley

    As the principal subsidiary of Valley National Bancorp, Valley National Bank is a regional bank with over $62 billion in assets. Valley is committed to giving people and businesses the power to succeed. Valley operates many convenient branch locations and commercial banking offices across New Jersey, New York, Florida, Alabama, California and Illinois, and is committed to providing the most convenient service, the latest innovations and an experienced and knowledgeable team dedicated to meeting customer needs. Helping communities grow and prosper is the heart of Valley’s corporate citizenship philosophy. To learn more about Valley, go to www.valley.com or call our Customer Care Center at 800-522-4100.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    The foregoing contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are not historical facts and include expressions about management’s confidence and strategies and management’s expectations about our business, new and existing programs and products, acquisitions, relationships, opportunities, taxation, technology, market conditions and economic expectations. These statements may be identified by such forward-looking terminology as “intend,” “should,” “expect,” “believe,” “view,” “opportunity,” “allow,” “continues,” “reflects,” “would,” “could,” “typically,” “usually,” “anticipate,” “may,” “estimate,” “outlook,” “project” or similar statements or variations of such terms. Such forward-looking statements involve certain risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from such forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to:

    • the impact of market interest rates and monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. federal government and its agencies in connection with the prolonged inflationary pressures, which could have a material adverse effect on our clients, our business, our employees, and our ability to provide services to our customers;
    • the impact of unfavorable macroeconomic conditions or downturns, including an actual or threatened U.S. government shutdown, debt default or rating downgrade, instability or volatility in financial markets, unanticipated loan delinquencies, loss of collateral, decreased service revenues, increased business disruptions or failures, reductions in employment, and other potential negative effects on our business, employees or clients caused by factors outside of our control, such as the outcome of the 2024 U.S. presidential election, geopolitical instabilities or events (including the Israel-Hamas war and the escalation and regional expansion thereof); natural and other disasters (including severe weather events, such as Hurricanes Helene and Milton); health emergencies; acts of terrorism; or other external events;
    • the impact of potential instability within the U.S. financial sector in the aftermath of the banking failures in 2023 and continued volatility thereafter, including the possibility of a run on deposits by a coordinated deposit base, and the impact of the actual or perceived soundness, or concerns about the creditworthiness of other financial institutions, including any resulting disruption within the financial markets, increased expenses, including Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insurance assessments, or adverse impact on our stock price, deposits or our ability to borrow or raise capital;
    • the impact of negative public opinion regarding Valley or banks in general that damages our reputation and adversely impacts business and revenues;
    • changes in the statutes, regulations, policy, or enforcement priorities of the federal bank regulatory agencies;
    • the loss of or decrease in lower-cost funding sources within our deposit base;
    • damage verdicts or settlements or restrictions related to existing or potential class action litigation or individual litigation arising from claims of violations of laws or regulations, contractual claims, breach of fiduciary responsibility, negligence, fraud, environmental laws, patent, trademark or other intellectual property infringement, misappropriation or other violation, employment related claims, and other matters;
    • a prolonged downturn and contraction in the economy, as well as an unexpected decline in commercial real estate values collateralizing a significant portion of our loan portfolio;
    • higher or lower than expected income tax expense or tax rates, including increases or decreases resulting from changes in uncertain tax position liabilities, tax laws, regulations, and case law;
    • the inability to grow customer deposits to keep pace with loan growth;
    • a material change in our allowance for credit losses under CECL due to forecasted economic conditions and/or unexpected credit deterioration in our loan and investment portfolios;
    • the need to supplement debt or equity capital to maintain or exceed internal capital thresholds;
    • changes in our business, strategy, market conditions or other factors that may negatively impact the estimated fair value of our goodwill and other intangible assets and result in future impairment charges;
    • greater than expected technology related costs due to, among other factors, prolonged or failed implementations, additional project staffing and obsolescence caused by continuous and rapid market innovations;
    • cyberattacks, ransomware attacks, computer viruses, malware or other cybersecurity incidents that may breach the security of our websites or other systems or networks to obtain unauthorized access to personal, confidential, proprietary or sensitive information, destroy data, disable or degrade service, or sabotage our systems or networks;
    • results of examinations by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Federal Reserve Bank, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and other regulatory authorities, including the possibility that any such regulatory authority may, among other things, require us to increase our allowance for credit losses, write-down assets, reimburse customers, change the way we do business, or limit or eliminate certain other banking activities;
    • application of the OCC heightened regulatory standards for certain large insured national banks, and the expenses we will incur to develop policies, programs, and systems that comply with the enhanced standards applicable to us;
    • our inability or determination not to pay dividends at current levels, or at all, because of inadequate earnings, regulatory restrictions or limitations, changes in our capital requirements, or a decision to increase capital by retaining more earnings;
    • unanticipated loan delinquencies, loss of collateral, decreased service revenues, and other potential negative effects on our business caused by severe weather, pandemics or other public health crises, acts of terrorism or other external events;
    • our ability to successfully execute our business plan and strategic initiatives; and
    • unexpected significant declines in the loan portfolio due to the lack of economic expansion, increased competition, large prepayments, risk mitigation strategies, changes in regulatory lending guidance or other factors.

    A detailed discussion of factors that could affect our results is included in our SEC filings, including Item 1A. “Risk Factors” of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023.

    We undertake no duty to update any forward-looking statement to conform the statement to actual results or changes in our expectations, except as required by law. Although we believe that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, we cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements.

    -Tables to Follow-

    VALLEY NATIONAL BANCORP
    CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

    SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

      Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
      September 30,   June 30,   September 30,   September 30,
    ($ in thousands, except for share data and stock price) 2024   2024   2023   2024   2023
    FINANCIAL DATA:                  
    Net interest income – FTE(1) $ 411,812     $ 402,984     $ 413,657     $ 1,209,643     $ 1,272,390  
    Net interest income $ 410,498     $ 401,685     $ 412,418     $ 1,205,731     $ 1,268,203  
    Non-interest income   60,671       51,213       58,664       173,299       173,038  
    Total revenue   471,169       452,898       471,082       1,379,030       1,441,241  
    Non-interest expense   269,471       277,497       267,133       827,278       822,270  
    Pre-provision net revenue   201,698       175,401       203,949       551,752       618,971  
    Provision for credit losses   75,024       82,070       9,117       202,294       29,604  
    Income tax expense   28,818       22,907       53,486       84,898       162,410  
    Net income   97,856       70,424       141,346       264,560       426,957  
    Dividends on preferred stock   6,117       4,108       4,127       14,344       12,031  
    Net income available to common shareholders $ 91,739     $ 66,316     $ 137,219     $ 250,216     $ 414,926  
    Weighted average number of common shares outstanding:                  
    Basic   509,227,538       509,141,252       507,650,668       508,904,353       507,580,197  
    Diluted   511,342,932       510,338,502       509,256,599       510,713,205       509,204,051  
    Per common share data:                  
    Basic earnings $ 0.18     $ 0.13     $ 0.27     $ 0.49     $ 0.82  
    Diluted earnings   0.18       0.13       0.27       0.49       0.81  
    Cash dividends declared   0.11       0.11       0.11       0.33       0.33  
    Closing stock price – high   9.34       8.02       10.30       10.80       12.59  
    Closing stock price – low   6.58       6.52       7.63       6.52       6.59  
    FINANCIAL RATIOS:                  
    Net interest margin   2.85 %     2.83 %     2.90 %     2.82 %     2.99 %
    Net interest margin – FTE(1)   2.86       2.84       2.91       2.83       3.00  
    Annualized return on average assets   0.63       0.46       0.92       0.57       0.93  
    Annualized return on avg. shareholders’ equity   5.70       4.17       8.56       5.20       8.72  
    NON-GAAP FINANCIAL DATA AND RATIOS:(2)                  
    Basic earnings per share, as adjusted $ 0.18     $ 0.13     $ 0.26     $ 0.50     $ 0.84  
    Diluted earnings per share, as adjusted   0.18       0.13       0.26       0.50       0.84  
    Annualized return on average assets, as adjusted   0.62 %     0.47 %     0.89 %     0.58 %     0.96 %
    Annualized return on average shareholders’ equity, as adjusted   5.64       4.24       8.26       5.27       8.94  
    Annualized return on avg. tangible shareholders’ equity   8.06       5.95       12.39       7.40       12.71  
    Annualized return on average tangible shareholders’ equity, as adjusted   7.97       6.05       11.95       7.50       13.04  
    Efficiency ratio   56.13       59.62       56.72       58.26       55.34  
                       
    AVERAGE BALANCE SHEET ITEMS:                  
    Assets $ 62,242,022     $ 61,518,639     $ 61,391,688     $ 61,674,588     $ 61,050,973  
    Interest earning assets   57,651,650       56,772,950       56,802,565       57,016,790       56,510,997  
    Loans   50,126,963       50,020,901       50,019,414       50,131,468       49,120,153  
    Interest bearing liabilities   42,656,956       41,576,344       40,829,078       41,932,616       39,802,966  
    Deposits   50,409,234       49,383,209       49,848,446       49,459,617       48,165,152  
    Shareholders’ equity   6,862,555       6,753,981       6,605,786       6,781,022       6,531,424  
                                           
      As Of
    BALANCE SHEET ITEMS: September 30,   June 30,   March 31,   December   September 30,
    (In thousands) 2024   2024   2024   2023   2023
    Assets $ 62,092,332     $ 62,058,974     $ 61,000,188     $ 60,934,974     $ 61,183,352  
    Total loans   49,355,319       50,311,702       49,922,042       50,210,295       50,097,519  
    Deposits   50,395,966       50,112,177       49,077,946       49,242,829       49,885,314  
    Shareholders’ equity   6,972,380       6,737,737       6,727,139       6,701,391       6,627,299  
                       
    LOANS:                  
    (In thousands)                  
    Commercial and industrial $ 9,799,287     $ 9,479,147     $ 9,104,193     $ 9,230,543     $ 9,274,630  
    Commercial real estate:                  
    Non-owner occupied   12,647,649       13,710,015       14,962,851       15,078,464       14,741,668  
    Multifamily   8,612,936       8,976,264       8,818,263       8,860,219       8,863,529  
    Owner occupied   5,654,147       5,536,844       4,367,839       4,304,556       4,435,853  
    Construction   3,487,464       3,545,723       3,556,511       3,726,808       3,833,269  
    Total commercial real estate   30,402,196       31,768,846       31,705,464       31,970,047       31,874,319  
    Residential mortgage   5,684,079       5,627,113       5,618,355       5,569,010       5,562,665  
    Consumer:                  
    Home equity   581,181       566,467       564,083       559,152       548,918  
    Automobile   1,823,738       1,762,852       1,700,508       1,620,389       1,585,987  
    Other consumer   1,064,838       1,107,277       1,229,439       1,261,154       1,251,000  
    Total consumer loans   3,469,757       3,436,596       3,494,030       3,440,695       3,385,905  
    Total loans $ 49,355,319     $ 50,311,702     $ 49,922,042     $ 50,210,295     $ 50,097,519  
                       
    CAPITAL RATIOS:                  
    Book value per common share $ 13.00     $ 12.82     $ 12.81     $ 12.79     $ 12.64  
    Tangible book value per common share(2)   9.06       8.87       8.84       8.79       8.63  
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets(2)   7.68 %     7.52 %     7.62 %     7.58 %     7.40 %
    Tier 1 leverage capital   8.40       8.19       8.20       8.16       8.08  
    Common equity tier 1 capital   9.57       9.55       9.34       9.29       9.21  
    Tier 1 risk-based capital   10.29       9.99       9.78       9.72       9.64  
    Total risk-based capital   12.56       12.18       11.88       11.76       11.68  
                                           
      Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
    ALLOWANCE FOR CREDIT LOSSES: September 30,   June 30,   September 30,   September 30,
    ($ in thousands) 2024   2024   2023   2024   2023
    Allowance for credit losses for loans                  
    Beginning balance $ 532,541     $ 487,269     $ 458,676     $ 465,550     $ 483,255  
    Impact of the adoption of ASU No. 2022-02                           (1,368 )
    Beginning balance, adjusted   532,541       487,269       458,676       465,550       481,887  
    Loans charged-off:                  
    Commercial and industrial   (7,501 )     (14,721 )     (7,487 )     (36,515 )     (37,399 )
    Commercial real estate   (33,292 )     (22,144 )     (255 )     (56,640 )     (2,320 )
    Construction   (4,831 )     (212 )           (12,637 )     (9,906 )
    Residential mortgage               (20 )           (169 )
    Total consumer   (2,597 )     (1,262 )     (1,156 )     (5,668 )     (3,024 )
    Total loans charged-off   (48,221 )     (38,339 )     (8,918 )     (111,460 )     (52,818 )
    Charged-off loans recovered:                  
    Commercial and industrial   3,162       742       3,043       4,586       6,615  
    Commercial real estate   66       150       5       457       33  
    Construction   1,535                   1,535        
    Residential mortgage   29       5       30       59       186  
    Total consumer   521       603       362       1,521       1,513  
    Total loans recovered   5,313       1,500       3,440       8,158       8,347  
    Total net charge-offs   (42,908 )     (36,839 )     (5,478 )     (103,302 )     (44,471 )
    Provision for credit losses for loans   75,038       82,111       9,147       202,423       24,929  
    Ending balance $ 564,671     $ 532,541     $ 462,345     $ 564,671     $ 462,345  
    Components of allowance for credit losses for loans:                  
    Allowance for loan losses $ 548,327     $ 519,310     $ 442,175     $ 548,327     $ 442,175  
    Allowance for unfunded credit commitments   16,344       13,231       20,170       16,344       20,170  
    Allowance for credit losses for loans $ 564,671     $ 532,541     $ 462,345     $ 564,671     $ 462,345  
    Components of provision for credit losses for loans:                  
    Provision for credit losses for loans $ 71,925     $ 86,901     $ 11,221     $ 205,549     $ 29,359  
    Provision (credit) for unfunded credit commitments   3,113       (4,790 )     (2,074 )     (3,126 )     (4,430 )
    Total provision for credit losses for loans $ 75,038     $ 82,111     $ 9,147     $ 202,423     $ 24,929  
    Annualized ratio of total net charge-offs to total average loans   0.34 %     0.29 %     0.04 %     0.27 %     0.12 %
    Allowance for credit losses for loans as a % of total loans   1.14 %     1.06 %     0.92 %     1.14 %     0.92 %
                                           
      As Of
    ASSET QUALITY: September 30,   June 30,   March 31,   December 31,   September 30,
    ($ in thousands) 2024   2024   2024   2023   2023
    Accruing past due loans:                  
    30 to 59 days past due:                  
    Commercial and industrial $ 4,537     $ 5,086     $ 6,202     $ 9,307     $ 10,687  
    Commercial real estate   76,370       1,879       5,791       3,008       8,053  
    Residential mortgage   19,549       17,389       20,819       26,345       13,159  
    Total consumer   14,672       21,639       14,032       20,554       15,509  
    Total 30 to 59 days past due   115,128       45,993       46,844       59,214       47,408  
    60 to 89 days past due:                  
    Commercial and industrial   1,238       1,621       2,665       5,095       5,720  
    Commercial real estate   43,926             3,720       1,257       2,620  
    Residential mortgage   6,892       6,632       5,970       8,200       9,710  
    Total consumer   2,732       3,671       1,834       4,715       1,720  
    Total 60 to 89 days past due   54,788       11,924       14,189       19,267       19,770  
    90 or more days past due:                  
    Commercial and industrial   1,786       2,739       5,750       5,579       6,629  
    Commercial real estate         4,242                    
    Construction         3,990       3,990       3,990       3,990  
    Residential mortgage   1,931       2,609       2,884       2,488       1,348  
    Total consumer   1,063       898       731       1,088       391  
    Total 90 or more days past due   4,780       14,478       13,355       13,145       12,358  
    Total accruing past due loans $ 174,696     $ 72,395     $ 74,388     $ 91,626     $ 79,536  
    Non-accrual loans:                  
    Commercial and industrial $ 120,575     $ 102,942     $ 102,399     $ 99,912     $ 87,655  
    Commercial real estate   113,752       123,011       100,052       99,739       83,338  
    Construction   24,657       45,380       51,842       60,851       62,788  
    Residential mortgage   33,075       28,322       28,561       26,986       21,614  
    Total consumer   4,260       3,624       4,438       4,383       3,545  
    Total non-accrual loans   296,319       303,279       287,292       291,871       258,940  
    Other real estate owned (OREO)   7,172       8,059       88       71       71  
    Other repossessed assets   1,611       1,607       1,393       1,444       1,314  
    Total non-performing assets $ 305,102     $ 312,945     $ 288,773     $ 293,386     $ 260,325  
    Total non-accrual loans as a % of loans   0.60 %     0.60 %     0.58 %     0.58 %     0.52 %
    Total accruing past due and non-accrual loans as a % of loans   0.95       0.75       0.72       0.76       0.68  
    Allowance for losses on loans as a % of non-accrual loans   185.05       171.23       163.33       152.83       170.76  
                                           

    NOTES TO SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

    (1)   Net interest income and net interest margin are presented on a tax equivalent basis using a 21 percent federal tax rate. Valley believes that this presentation provides comparability of net interest income and net interest margin arising from both taxable and tax-exempt sources and is consistent with industry practice and SEC rules.  
    (2)   Non-GAAP Reconciliations. This press release contains certain supplemental financial information, described in the Notes below, which has been determined by methods other than U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”) that management uses in its analysis of Valley’s performance. The Company believes that the non-GAAP financial measures provide useful supplemental information to both management and investors in understanding Valley’s underlying operational performance, business and performance trends, and may facilitate comparisons of our current and prior performance with the performance of others in the financial services industry. Management utilizes these measures for internal planning, forecasting and analysis purposes. Management believes that Valley’s presentation and discussion of this supplemental information, together with the accompanying reconciliations to the GAAP financial measures, also allows investors to view performance in a manner similar to management. These non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for or superior to financial measures calculated in accordance with U.S. GAAP. These non-GAAP financial measures may also be calculated differently from similar measures disclosed by other companies.  
           
    Non-GAAP Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures
     
      Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
      September 30,   June 30,   September 30,   September 30,
    ($ in thousands, except for share data) 2024   2024   2023   2024   2023
    Adjusted net income available to common shareholders (non-GAAP):                  
    Net income, as reported (GAAP) $ 97,856     $ 70,424     $ 141,346     $ 264,560     $ 426,957  
    Add: FDIC Special assessment (a)         1,363             8,757        
    Add: Losses on available for sale and held to maturity debt securities, net (b)   1       4       443       12       476  
    Add: Restructuring charge (c)         334       (675 )     954       10,507  
    Add: Mark to market loss on commercial real estate loans transferred to loans held for sale (d)   5,794                   5,794        
    Add: Provision for credit losses for available for sale securities (e)                           5,000  
    Add: Merger related expenses (f)                           4,133  
    Less: Litigation settlements (g)   (7,334 )                 (7,334 )      
    Less: Gain on sale of commercial premium finance lending division (h)                     (3,629 )      
    Less: Net gains on sales of office buildings (h)               (6,721 )           (6,721 )
    Total non-GAAP adjustments to net income   (1,539 )     1,701       (6,953 )     4,554       13,395  
    Income tax adjustments related to non-GAAP adjustments (i)   437       (482 )     1,970       (1,269 )     (2,378 )
    Net income, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 96,754     $ 71,643     $ 136,363     $ 267,845     $ 437,974  
    Dividends on preferred stock   6,117       4,108       4,127       14,344       12,031  
    Net income available to common shareholders, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 90,637     $ 67,535     $ 132,236     $ 253,501     $ 425,943  
    __________                  
    (a) Included in the FDIC insurance expense.
    (b) Included in gains (losses) on securities transactions, net.
    (c) Represents severance expense related to workforce reductions within salary and employee benefits expense.
    (d) Included in (losses) gains on sales of loans, net.
    (e) Included in provision for credit losses for available for sale and held to maturity securities (tax disallowed).
    (f) Included in salary and employee benefits expense during the first quarter 2023.
    (g) Represents recoveries from legal settlements included in other income.
    (h) Included in gains (losses) on sales of assets, net within non-interest income.
    (i) Calculated using the appropriate blended statutory tax rate for the applicable period.
     
    Adjusted per common share data (non-GAAP):                  
    Net income available to common shareholders, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 90,637     $ 67,535     $ 132,236     $ 253,501     $ 425,943  
    Average number of shares outstanding   509,227,538       509,141,252       507,650,668       508,904,353       507,580,197  
    Basic earnings, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 0.18     $ 0.13     $ 0.26     $ 0.50     $ 0.84  
    Average number of diluted shares outstanding   511,342,932       510,338,502       509,256,599       510,713,205       509,204,051  
    Diluted earnings, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 0.18     $ 0.13     $ 0.26     $ 0.50     $ 0.84  
    Adjusted annualized return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (non-GAAP):                  
    Net income, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 96,754     $ 71,643     $ 136,363     $ 267,845     $ 437,974  
    Average shareholders’ equity $ 6,862,555     $ 6,753,981     $ 6,605,786     $ 6,781,022     $ 6,531,424  
    Less: Average goodwill and other intangible assets   2,008,692       2,016,766       2,042,486       2,016,790       2,051,727  
    Average tangible shareholders’ equity $ 4,853,863     $ 4,737,215     $ 4,563,300     $ 4,764,232     $ 4,479,697  
    Annualized return on average tangible shareholders’ equity, as adjusted (non-GAAP)   7.97 %     6.05 %     11.95 %     7.50 %     13.04 %
                                           
    Non-GAAP Reconciliations to GAAP Financial Measures (Continued)
     
      Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
      September 30,   June 30,   September 30,   September 30,
    ($ in thousands, except for share data) 2024   2024   2023   2024   2023
    Adjusted annualized return on average assets (non-GAAP):                  
    Net income, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 96,754     $ 71,643     $ 136,363     $ 267,845     $ 437,974  
    Average assets $ 62,242,022     $ 61,518,639     $ 61,391,688     $ 61,674,588     $ 61,050,973  
    Annualized return on average assets, as adjusted (non-GAAP)   0.62 %     0.47 %     0.89 %     0.58 %     0.96 %
    Adjusted annualized return on average shareholders’ equity (non-GAAP):                  
    Net income, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 96,754     $ 71,643     $ 136,363     $ 267,845     $ 437,974  
    Average shareholders’ equity $ 6,862,555     $ 6,753,981     $ 6,605,786     $ 6,781,022     $ 6,531,424  
    Annualized return on average shareholders’ equity, as adjusted (non-GAAP)   5.64 %     4.24 %     8.26 %     5.27 %     8.94 %
    Annualized return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (non-GAAP):                  
    Net income, as reported (GAAP) $ 97,856     $ 70,424     $ 141,346     $ 264,560     $ 426,957  
    Average shareholders’ equity $ 6,862,555     $ 6,753,981     $ 6,605,786     $ 6,781,022     $ 6,531,424  
    Less: Average goodwill and other intangible assets   2,008,692       2,016,766       2,042,486       2,016,790       2,051,727  
    Average tangible shareholders’ equity $ 4,853,863     $ 4,737,215     $ 4,563,300     $ 4,764,232     $ 4,479,697  
    Annualized return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (non-GAAP)   8.06 %     5.95 %     12.39 %     7.40 %     12.71 %
    Efficiency ratio (non-GAAP):                  
    Non-interest expense, as reported (GAAP) $ 269,471     $ 277,497     $ 267,133     $ 827,278     $ 822,270  
    Less: FDIC Special assessment (pre-tax)         1,363             8,757        
    Less: Restructuring charge (pre-tax)         334       (675 )     954       10,507  
    Less: Merger-related expenses (pre-tax)                           4,133  
    Less: Amortization of tax credit investments (pre-tax)   5,853       5,791       4,191       17,206       13,462  
    Non-interest expense, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 263,618     $ 270,009     $ 263,617     $ 800,361     $ 794,168  
    Net interest income, as reported (GAAP)   410,498       401,685       412,418       1,205,731       1,268,203  
    Non-interest income, as reported (GAAP)   60,671       51,213       58,664       173,299       173,038  
    Add: Losses on available for sale and held to maturity securities transactions, net (pre-tax)   1       4       443       12       476  
    Add: Mark-to-market loss on commercial real estate loans transferred to loans held for sale (pre-tax)   5,794                   5,794        
    Less: Litigation settlements (pre-tax)   (7,334 )                 (7,334 )      
    Less: Gain on sale of premium finance division (pre-tax)                     (3,629 )      
    Less: Net gains on sales of office buildings (pre-tax)               (6,721 )           (6,721 )
    Non-interest income, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 59,132     $ 51,217     $ 52,386     $ 168,142     $ 166,793  
    Gross operating income, as adjusted (non-GAAP) $ 469,630     $ 452,902     $ 464,804     $ 1,373,873     $ 1,434,996  
    Efficiency ratio (non-GAAP)   56.13 %     59.62 %     56.72 %     58.26 %     55.34 %
                                           
      As of
      September 30,   June 30,   March 31,   December 31,   September 30,
    ($ in thousands, except for share data) 2024   2024   2024   2023   2023
    Tangible book value per common share (non-GAAP):                  
    Common shares outstanding   509,252,936       509,205,014       508,893,059       507,709,927       507,660,742  
    Shareholders’ equity (GAAP) $ 6,972,380     $ 6,737,737     $ 6,727,139     $ 6,701,391     $ 6,627,299  
    Less: Preferred stock   354,345       209,691       209,691       209,691       209,691  
    Less: Goodwill and other intangible assets   2,004,414       2,012,580       2,020,405       2,029,267       2,038,202  
    Tangible common shareholders’ equity (non-GAAP) $ 4,613,621     $ 4,515,466     $ 4,497,043     $ 4,462,433     $ 4,379,406  
    Tangible book value per common share (non-GAAP) $ 9.06     $ 8.87     $ 8.84     $ 8.79     $ 8.63  
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets (non-GAAP):                  
    Tangible common shareholders’ equity (non-GAAP) $ 4,613,621     $ 4,515,466     $ 4,497,043     $ 4,462,433     $ 4,379,406  
    Total assets (GAAP)   62,092,332       62,058,974       61,000,188       60,934,974       61,183,352  
    Less: Goodwill and other intangible assets   2,004,414       2,012,580       2,020,405       2,029,267       2,038,202  
    Tangible assets (non-GAAP) $ 60,087,918     $ 60,046,394     $ 58,979,783     $ 58,905,707     $ 59,145,150  
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets (non-GAAP)   7.68 %     7.52 %     7.62 %     7.58 %     7.40 %
                                           

    VALLEY NATIONAL BANCORP
    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
    (in thousands, except for share data)

      September 30,   December 31,
      2024   2023
      (Unaudited)    
    Assets      
    Cash and due from banks $ 511,945     $ 284,090  
    Interest bearing deposits with banks   527,960       607,135  
    Investment securities:      
    Equity securities   73,071       64,464  
    Trading debt securities   3,996       3,973  
    Available for sale debt securities   2,602,260       1,296,576  
    Held to maturity debt securities (net of allowance for credit losses of $1,076 at September 30, 2024 and $1,205 at December 31, 2023)   3,573,960       3,739,208  
    Total investment securities   6,253,287       5,104,221  
    Loans held for sale (includes fair value of $17,153 at September 30, 2024 and $20,640 at December 31, 2023 for loans originated for sale)   843,201       30,640  
    Loans   49,355,319       50,210,295  
    Less: Allowance for loan losses   (548,327 )     (446,080 )
    Net loans   48,806,992       49,764,215  
    Premises and equipment, net   356,649       381,081  
    Lease right of use assets   335,032       343,461  
    Bank owned life insurance   730,081       723,799  
    Accrued interest receivable   250,131       245,498  
    Goodwill   1,868,936       1,868,936  
    Other intangible assets, net   135,478       160,331  
    Other assets   1,472,640       1,421,567  
    Total Assets $ 62,092,332     $ 60,934,974  
    Liabilities      
    Deposits:      
    Non-interest bearing $ 11,153,754     $ 11,539,483  
    Interest bearing:      
    Savings, NOW and money market   25,069,405       24,526,622  
    Time   14,172,807       13,176,724  
    Total deposits   50,395,966       49,242,829  
    Short-term borrowings   58,268       917,834  
    Long-term borrowings   3,274,340       2,328,375  
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   57,368       57,108  
    Lease liabilities   394,971       403,781  
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities   939,039       1,283,656  
    Total Liabilities   55,119,952       54,233,583  
    Shareholders’ Equity      
    Preferred stock, no par value; 50,000,000 authorized shares:      
    Series A (4,600,000 shares issued at September 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023)   111,590       111,590  
    Series B (4,000,000 shares issued at September 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023)   98,101       98,101  
    Series C (6,000,000 shares issued at September 30, 2024)   144,654        
    Common stock (no par value, authorized 650,000,000 shares; issued 509,252,936 shares at September 30, 2024 and 507,896,910 shares at December 31, 2023)   178,661       178,187  
    Surplus   5,002,718       4,989,989  
    Retained earnings   1,551,428       1,471,371  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss   (114,772 )     (146,456 )
    Treasury stock, at cost (186,983 common shares at December 31, 2023)         (1,391 )
    Total Shareholders’ Equity   6,972,380       6,701,391  
    Total Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity $ 62,092,332     $ 60,934,974  
                   

    VALLEY NATIONAL BANCORP
    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME (Unaudited)
    (in thousands, except for share data)

      Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
      September 30,   June 30,   September 30,   September 30,
      2024   2024   2023   2024   2023
    Interest Income                  
    Interest and fees on loans $ 786,680     $ 770,964     $ 753,638     $ 2,329,197     $ 2,124,036
    Interest and dividends on investment securities:                  
    Taxable   49,700       40,460       32,383       125,957       96,591
    Tax-exempt   4,855       4,799       4,585       14,450       15,485
    Dividends   5,929       6,341       5,299       19,098       18,001
    Interest on federal funds sold and other short-term investments   13,385       10,902       17,113       33,969       66,594
    Total interest income   860,549       833,466       813,018       2,522,671       2,320,707
    Interest Expense                  
    Interest on deposits:                  
    Savings, NOW and money market   235,371       231,597       201,916       699,474       517,524
    Time   174,741       160,442       164,336       486,248       370,398
    Interest on short-term borrowings   451       691       5,189       21,754       89,345
    Interest on long-term borrowings and junior subordinated debentures   39,488       39,051       29,159       109,464       75,237
    Total interest expense   450,051       431,781       400,600       1,316,940       1,052,504
    Net Interest Income   410,498       401,685       412,418       1,205,731       1,268,203
    (Credit) provision for credit losses for available for sale and held to maturity securities   (14 )     (41 )     (30 )     (129 )     4,675
    Provision for credit losses for loans   75,038       82,111       9,147       202,423       24,929
    Net Interest Income After Provision for Credit Losses   335,474       319,615       403,301       1,003,437       1,238,599
    Non-Interest Income                  
    Wealth management and trust fees   15,125       13,136       11,417       46,191       32,180
    Insurance commissions   2,880       3,958       2,336       9,089       7,895
    Capital markets   6,347       7,779       7,141       19,796       35,000
    Service charges on deposit accounts   12,826       11,212       10,952       35,287       31,970
    Gains (losses) on securities transactions, net   47       3       (398 )     99       197
    Fees from loan servicing   3,443       2,691       2,681       9,322       8,054
    (Losses) gains on sales of loans, net   (3,644 )     884       2,023       (1,142 )     3,752
    Gains (losses) on sales of assets, net   55       (2 )     6,653       3,747       6,938
    Bank owned life insurance   5,387       4,545       2,709       13,167       7,736
    Other   18,205       7,007       13,150       37,743       39,316
    Total non-interest income   60,671       51,213       58,664       173,299       173,038
    Non-Interest Expense                  
    Salary and employee benefits expense   138,832       140,815       137,292       421,478       431,872
    Net occupancy expense   26,973       24,252       24,675       75,548       73,880
    Technology, furniture and equipment expense   28,962       35,203       37,320       99,627       106,304
    FDIC insurance assessment   14,792       14,446       7,946       47,474       27,527
    Amortization of other intangible assets   8,692       8,568       9,741       26,672       30,072
    Professional and legal fees   14,118       17,938       17,109       48,521       55,329
    Amortization of tax credit investments   5,853       5,791       4,191       17,206       13,462
    Other   31,249       30,484       28,859       90,752       83,824
    Total non-interest expense   269,471       277,497       267,133       827,278       822,270
    Income Before Income Taxes   126,674       93,331       194,832       349,458       589,367
    Income tax expense   28,818       22,907       53,486       84,898       162,410
    Net Income   97,856       70,424       141,346       264,560       426,957
    Dividends on preferred stock   6,117       4,108       4,127       14,344       12,031
    Net Income Available to Common Shareholders $ 91,739     $ 66,316     $ 137,219     $ 250,216     $ 414,926
                                         

    VALLEY NATIONAL BANCORP
    Quarterly Analysis of Average Assets, Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity and
    Net Interest Income on a Tax Equivalent Basis

      Three Months Ended
      September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   September 30, 2023
      Average       Avg.   Average       Avg.   Average       Avg.
    ($ in thousands) Balance   Interest   Rate   Balance   Interest   Rate   Balance   Interest   Rate
    Assets                                  
    Interest earning assets:                              
    Loans (1)(2) $ 50,126,963   $ 786,704     6.28 %   $ 50,020,901   $ 770,987     6.17 %   $ 50,019,414   $ 753,662     6.03 %
    Taxable investments (3)   5,977,211     55,629     3.72       5,379,101     46,801     3.48       4,915,778     37,682     3.07  
    Tax-exempt investments (1)(3)   573,059     6,145     4.29       575,272     6,075     4.22       620,439     5,800     3.74  
    Interest bearing deposits with banks   974,417     13,385     5.49       797,676     10,902     5.47       1,246,934     17,113     5.49  
    Total interest earning assets   57,651,650     861,863     5.98       56,772,950     834,765     5.88       56,802,565     814,257     5.73  
    Other assets   4,590,372             4,745,689             4,589,123        
    Total assets $ 62,242,022           $ 61,518,639           $ 61,391,688        
    Liabilities and shareholders’ equity                                  
    Interest bearing liabilities:                                  
    Savings, NOW and money market deposits $ 25,017,504   $ 235,371     3.76 %   $ 24,848,266   $ 231,597     3.73 %   $ 23,016,737   $ 201,916     3.51 %
    Time deposits   14,233,209     174,741     4.91       13,311,381     160,442     4.82       14,880,311     164,336     4.42  
    Short-term borrowings   81,251     451     2.22       97,502     691     2.83       436,518     5,189     4.75  
    Long-term borrowings (4)   3,324,992     39,488     4.75       3,319,195     39,051     4.71       2,495,512     29,159     4.67  
    Total interest bearing liabilities   42,656,956     450,051     4.22       41,576,344     431,781     4.15       40,829,078     400,600     3.92  
    Non-interest bearing deposits   11,158,521             11,223,562             11,951,398        
    Other liabilities   1,563,990             1,964,752             2,005,426        
    Shareholders’ equity   6,862,555             6,753,981             6,605,786        
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity $ 62,242,022           $ 61,518,639           $ 61,391,688        
                                       
    Net interest income/interest rate spread (5)     $ 411,812     1.76 %       $ 402,984     1.73 %       $ 413,657     1.81 %
    Tax equivalent adjustment       (1,314 )             (1,299 )             (1,239 )    
    Net interest income, as reported     $ 410,498             $ 401,685             $ 412,418      
    Net interest margin (6)         2.85             2.83             2.90  
    Tax equivalent effect         0.01             0.01             0.01  
    Net interest margin on a fully tax equivalent basis (6)         2.86 %           2.84 %           2.91 %

    _________

    (1) Interest income is presented on a tax equivalent basis using a 21 percent federal tax rate.
    (2) Loans are stated net of unearned income and include non-accrual loans.
    (3) The yield for securities that are classified as available for sale is based on the average historical amortized cost.
    (4) Includes junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts which are presented separately on the consolidated statements of condition.
    (5) Interest rate spread represents the difference between the average yield on interest earning assets and the average cost of interest bearing liabilities and is presented on a fully tax equivalent basis.
    (6) Net interest income as a percentage of total average interest earning assets.
       

    SHAREHOLDERS RELATIONS
    Requests for copies of reports and/or other inquiries should be directed to Tina Zarkadas, Assistant Vice President, Shareholder Relations Specialist, Valley National Bancorp, 70 Speedwell Avenue, Morristown, New Jersey, 07960, by telephone at (973) 305-3380, by fax at (973) 305-1364 or by e-mail at tzarkadas@valley.com.

    Contact:   Michael D. Hagedorn
        Senior Executive Vice President and
        Chief Financial Officer
        973-872-4885

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Encyclical Letter “Dilexit nos” of the Holy Father Francis on the human and divine love of the heart of Jesus Christ

    Source: The Holy See

    Encyclical Letter “Dilexit nos” of the Holy Father Francis on the human and divine love of the heart of Jesus Christ, 24.10.2024
    ENCYCLICAL LETTER
    DILEXIT NOS
    OF THE HOLY FATHER
    FRANCIS
    ON THE HUMAN AND DIVINE LOVE
    OF THE HEART OF JESUS CHRIST
    1. HE LOVED US”, Saint Paul says of Christ (cf.Rom8:37), in order to make us realize that nothing can ever “separate us” from that love (Rom8:39).Paul could say this with certainty because Jesus himself had told his disciples, “I have loved you” (Jn15:9, 12).Even now, the Lord says to us, “I have called you friends” (Jn15:15).His open heart has gone before us and waits for us, unconditionally, asking only to offer us his love and friendship.For “he loved us first” (cf.1 Jn4:10).Because of Jesus, “we have come to know and believe in the love that God has for us” (1 Jn4:16).
    CHAPTER ONE
    THE IMPORTANCE OF THE HEART
    2. The symbol of the heart has often been used to express the love of Jesus Christ.Some have questioned whether this symbol is still meaningful today.Yet living as we do in an age of superficiality, rushing frenetically from one thing to another without really knowing why, and ending up as insatiable consumers and slaves to the mechanisms of a market unconcerned about the deeper meaning of our lives, all of us need to rediscover the importance of the heart.[1]
    WHAT DO WE MEAN BY “THE HEART”?
    3. In classical Greek, the wordkardíadenotes the inmost part of human beings, animals and plants.For Homer, it indicates not only the centre of the body, but also the human soul and spirit.In the Iliad, thoughts and feelings proceed from the heart and are closely bound one to another.[2]The heart appears as the locus of desire and the place where important decisions take shape.[3]In Plato, the heart serves, as it were, to unite the rational and instinctive aspects of the person, since the impulses of both the higher faculties and the passions were thought to pass through the veins that converge in the heart.[4]From ancient times, then, there has been an appreciation of the fact that human beings are not simply a sum of different skills, but a unity of body and soul with a coordinating centre that provides a backdrop of meaning and direction to all that a person experiences.
    4. The Bible tells us that, “the Word of God is living and active… it is able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Heb4:12).In this way, it speaks to us of the heart as a core that lies hidden bene ath all outward appearances, even beneath the superficial thoughts that can lead us astray.The disciples of Emmaus, on their mysterious journey in the company of the risen Christ, experienced a moment of anguish, confusion, despair and disappointment.Yet, beyond and in spite of this, something was happening deep within them: “Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road?” (Lk 24:32).
    5. The heart is also the locus of sincerity, where deceit and disguise have no place.It usually indicates our true intentions, what we really think, believe and desire, the “secrets” that we tell no one: in a word, the naked truth about ourselves.It is the part of us that is neither appearance or illusion, but is instead authentic, real, entirely “who we are”.That is why Samson, who kept from Delilah the secret of his strength, was asked by her, “How can you say, ‘I love you’, when your heart is not with me?” (Judg16:15).Only when Samson opened his heart to her, did she realize “that he had told her his whole secret” (Judg16:18).
    6. This interior reality of each person is frequently concealed behind a great deal of “foliage”, which makes it difficult for us not only to understand ourselves, but even more to know others: “The heart is devious above all else; it is perverse, who can understand it?” (Jer17:9).We can understand, then, the advice of the Book of Proverbs: “Keep your heart with all vigilance, for from it flow the springs of life; put away from you crooked speech” (4:23-24).Mere appearances, dishonesty and deception harm and pervert the heart.Despite our every attempt to appear as something we are not, our heart is the ultimate judge, not of what we show or hide from others, but of who we truly are.It is the basis for any sound life project; nothing worthwhile can be undertaken apart from the heart.False appearances and untruths ultimately leave us empty-handed.
    7. As an illustration of this, I would repeat a story I have already told on another occasion.“For the carnival, when we were children, my grandmother would make a pastry using a very thin batter.When she dropped the strips of batter into the oil, they would expand, but then, when we bit into them, they were empty inside.In the dialect we spoke, those cookies were called ‘lies’…My grandmother explained why: ‘Like lies, they look big, but are empty inside; they are false, unreal’”.[5]
    8. Instead of running after superficial satisfactions and playing a role for the benefit of others, we would do better to think about the really important questions in life.Who am I, really?What am I looking for?What direction do I want to give to my life, my decisions and my actions?Why and for what purpose am I in this world?How do I want to look back on my life once it ends?What meaning do I want to give to all my experiences?Who do I want to be for others?Who am I for God?All these questions lead us back to the heart.
    RETURNING TO THE HEART
    9. In this “liquid” world of ours, we need to start speaking once more about the heart and thinking about this place where every person, of every class and condition, creates a synthesis, where they encounter the radical source of their strengths, convictions, passions and decisions.Yet, we find ourselves immersed in societies of serial consumers who live from day to day, dominated by the hectic pace and bombarded by technology, lacking in the patience needed to engage in the processes that an interior life by its very nature requires.In contemporary society, people “risk losing their centre, the centre of their very selves”.[6]“Indeed, the men and women of our time often find themselves confused and torn apart, almost bereft of an inner principle that can create unity and harmony in their lives and actions.Models of behaviour that, sadly, are now widespread exaggerate our rational-technological dimension or, on the contrary, that of our instincts”.[7]No room is left for the heart.
    10. The issues raised by today’s liquid society are much discussed, but this depreciation of the deep core of our humanity – the heart – has a much longer history.We find it already present in Hellenic and pre-Christian rationalism, in post-Christian idealism and in materialism in its various guises.The heart has been ignored in anthropology, and the great philosophical tradition finds it a foreign notion, preferring other concepts such as reason, will or freedom.The very meaning of the term is imprecise and hard to situate within our human experience.Perhaps this is due to the difficulty of treating it as a “clear and distinct idea”, or because it entails the question of self-understanding, where the deepest part of us is also that which is least known.Even encountering others does not necessarily prove to be a way of encountering ourselves, inasmuch as our thought patterns are dominated by an unhealthy individualism.Many people feel safer constructing their systems of thought in the more readily controllable domain of intelligence and will.The failure to make room for the heart, as distinct from our human powers and passions viewed in isolation from one another, has resulted in a stunting of the idea of a personal centre, in which love, in the end, is the one reality that can unify all the others.
    11. If we devalue the heart, we also devalue what it means to speak from the heart, to act with the heart, to cultivate and heal the heart.If we fail to appreciate the specificity of the heart, we miss the messages that the mind alone cannot communicate; we miss out on the richness of our encounters with others; we miss out on poetry.We also lose track of history and our own past, since our real personal history is built with the heart.At the end of our lives, that alone will matter.
    12. It must be said, then, that we have a heart, a heart that coexists with other hearts that help to make it a “Thou”.Since we cannot develop this theme at length, we will take a character from one of Dostoevsky’s novels, Nikolai Stavrogin.[8]Romano Guardini argues that Stavrogin is the very embodiment of evil, because his chief trait is his heartlessness: “Stavrogin has no heart, hence his mind is cold and empty and his body sunken in bestial sloth and sensuality.He has no heart, hence he can draw close to no one and no one can ever truly draw close to him.For only the heart creates intimacy, true closeness between two persons.Only the heart is able to welcome and offer hospitality.Intimacy is the proper activity and the domain of the heart.Stavrogin is always infinitely distant, even from himself, because a man can enter into himself only with the heart, not with the mind.It is not in a man’s power to enter into his own interiority with the mind.Hence, if the heart is not alive, man remains a stranger to himself”.[9]
    13. All our actions need to be put under the “political rule” of the heart.In this way, our aggressiveness and obsessive desires will find rest in the greater good that the heart proposes and in the power of the heart to resist evil.The mind and the will are put at the service of the greater good by sensing and savouring truths, rather than seeking to master them as the sciences tend to do.The will desires the greater good that the heart recognizes, while the imagination and emotions are themselves guided by the beating of the heart.
    14. It could be said, then, that I am my heart, for my heart is what sets me apart, shapes my spiritual identity and puts me in communion with other people.The algorithms operating in the digital world show that our thoughts and will are much more “uniform” than we had previously thought.They are easily predictable and thus capable of being manipulated.That is not the case with the heart.
    15. The word “heart” proves its value for philosophy and theology in their efforts to reach an integral synthesis.Nor can its meaning be exhausted by biology, psychology, anthropology or any other science.It is one of those primordial words that “describe realities belonging to man precisely in so far as he is one whole (as a corporeo-spiritual person)”.[10]It follows that biologists are not being more “realistic” when they discuss the heart, since they see only one aspect of it; the whole is not less real, but even more real.Nor can abstract language ever acquire the same concrete and integrative meaning.The word “heart” evokes the inmost core of our person, and thus it enables us to understand ourselves in our integrity and not merely under one isolated aspect.
    16. This unique power of the heart also helps us to understand why, when we grasp a reality with our heart, we know it better and more fully.This inevitably leads us to the love of which the heart is capable, for “the inmost core of reality is love”.[11]For Heidegger, as interpreted by one contemporary thinker, philosophy does not begin with a simple concept or certainty, but with a shock: “Thought must be provoked before it begins to work with concepts or while it works with them.Without deep emotion, thought cannot begin.The first mental image would thus be goose bumps.What first stirs one to think and question is deep emotion.Philosophy always takes place in a basic mood (Stimmung)”.[12]That is where the heart comes in, since it “houses the states of mind and functions as a ‘keeper of the state of mind’.The ‘heart’ listens in a non-metaphoric way to ‘the silent voice’ of being, allowing itself to be tempered and determined by it”.[13]
    THE HEART UNITES THE FRAGMENTS
    17. At the same time, the heart makes all authentic bonding possible, since a relationship not shaped by the heart is incapable of overcoming the fragmentation caused by individualism.Two monads may approach one another, but they will never truly connect.A society dominated by narcissism and self-centredness will increasingly become “heartless”.This will lead in turn to the “loss of desire”, since as other persons disappear from the horizon we find ourselves trapped within walls of our own making, no longer capable of healthy relationships.[14]As a result, we also become incapable of openness to God.As Heidegger puts it, to be open to the divine we need to build a “guest house”.[15]
    18. We see, then, that in the heart of each person there is a mysterious connection between self-knowledge and openness to others, between the encounter with one’s personal uniqueness and the willingness to give oneself to others.We become ourselves only to the extent that we acquire the ability to acknowledge others, while only those who can acknowledge and accept themselves are then able to encounter others.
    19. The heart is also capable of unifying and harmonizing our personal history, which may seem hopelessly fragmented, yet is the place where everything can make sense.The Gospel tells us this in speaking of Our Lady, who saw things with the heart.She was able to dialogue with the things she experienced by pondering them in her heart, treasuring their memory and viewing them in a greater perspective.The best expression of how the heart thinks is found in the two passages in Saint Luke’s Gospel that speak to us of how Mary “treasured (synetérei) all these things and pondered (symbállousa) them in her heart” (cf.Lk2:19 and 51).The Greek verbsymbállein, “ponder”, evokes the image of putting two things together (“symbols”) in one’s mind and reflecting on them, in a dialogue with oneself.In Luke 2:51, the verb used isdietérei, which has the sense of “keep”.What Mary “kept” was not only her memory of what she had seen and heard, but also those aspects of it that she did not yet understand; these nonetheless remained present and alive in her memory, waiting to be “put together” in her heart.
    20. In this age of artificial intelligence, we cannot forget that poetry and love are necessary to save our humanity.No algorithm will ever be able to capture, for example, the nostalgia that all of us feel, whatever our age, and wherever we live, when we recall how we first used a fork to seal the edges of the pies that we helped our mothers or grandmothers to make at home. It was a moment of culinary apprenticeship, somewhere between child-play and adulthood, when we first felt responsible for working and helping one another.Along with the fork, I could also mention thousands of other little things that are a precious part of everyone’s life: a smile we elicited by telling a joke, a picture we sketched in the light of a window, the first game of soccer we played with a rag ball, the worms we collected in a shoebox, a flower we pressed in the pages of a book, our concern for a fledgling bird fallen from its nest, a wish we made in plucking a daisy.All these little things, ordinary in themselves yet extraordinary for us, can never be captured by algorithms.The fork, the joke, the window, the ball, the shoebox, the book, the bird, the flower: all of these live on as precious memories “kept” deep in our heart.
    21. This profound core, present in every man and woman, is not that of the soul, but of the entire person in his or her unique psychosomatic identity.Everything finds its unity in the heart, which can be the dwelling-place of love in all its spiritual, psychic and even physical dimensions.In a word, if love reigns in our heart, we become, in a complete and luminous way, the persons we are meant to be, for every human being is created above all else for love.In the deepest fibre of our being, we were made to love and to be loved.
    22. For this reason, when we witness the outbreak of new wars, with the complicity, tolerance or indifference of other countries, or petty power struggles over partisan interests, we may be tempted to conclude that our world is losing its heart.We need only to see and listen to the elderly women – from both sides – who are at the mercy of these devastating conflicts.It is heart-breaking to see them mourning for their murdered grandchildren, or longing to die themselves after losing the homes where they spent their entire lives.Those women, who were often pillars of strength and resilience amid life’s difficulties and hardships, now, at the end of their days, are experiencing, in place of a well-earned rest, only anguish, fear and outrage.Casting the blame on others does not resolve these shameful and tragic situations.To see these elderly women weep, and not feel that this is something intolerable, is a sign of a world that has grown heartless.
    23. Whenever a person thinks, questions and reflects on his or her true identity, strives to understand the deeper questions of life and to seek God, or experiences the thrill of catching a glimpse of truth, it leads to the realization that our fulfilment as human beings is found in love.In loving, we sense that we come to know the purpose and goal of our existence in this world.Everything comes together in a state of coherence and harmony.It follows that, in contemplating the meaning of our lives, perhaps the most decisive question we can ask is, “Do I have a heart?”
    FIRE
    24. All that we have said has implications for the spiritual life.For example, the theology underlying the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius Loyola is based on “affection” (affectus).The structure of the Exercises assumes a firm and heartfelt desire to “rearrange” one’s life, a desire that in turn provides the strength and the wherewithal to achieve that goal.The rules and the compositions of place that Ignatius furnishes are in the service of something much more important, namely, the mystery of the human heart.Michel de Certeau shows how the “movements” of which Ignatius speaks are the “inbreaking” of God’s desire and the desire of our own heart amid the orderly progression of the meditations.Something unexpected and hitherto unknown starts to speak in our heart, breaking through our superficial knowledge and calling it into question.This is the start of a new process of “setting our life in order”, beginning with the heart.It is not about intellectual concepts that need to be put into practice in our daily lives, as if affectivity and practice were merely the effects of – and dependent upon – the data of knowledge.[16]
    25. Where the thinking of the philosopher halts, there the heart of the believer presses on in love and adoration, in pleading for forgiveness and in willingness to serve in whatever place the Lord allows us to choose, in order to follow in his footsteps.At that point, we realize that in God’s eyes we are a “Thou”, and for that very reason we can be an “I”.Indeed, only the Lord offers to treat each one of us as a “Thou”, always and forever.Accepting his friendship is a matter of the heart; it is what constitutes us as persons in the fullest sense of that word.
    26. Saint Bonaventure tells us that in the end we should not pray for light, but for “raging fire”.[17]He teaches that, “faith is in the intellect, in such a way as to provoke affection.In this sense, for example, the knowledge that Christ died for us does not remain knowledge, but necessarily becomes affection, love”.[18]Along the same lines, Saint John Henry Newman took as his motto the phraseCor ad cor loquitur, since, beyond all our thoughts and ideas, the Lord saves us by speaking to our hearts from his Sacred Heart.This realization led him, the distinguished intellectual, to recognize that his deepest encounter with himself and with the Lord came not from his reading or reflection, but from his prayerful dialogue, heart to heart, with Christ, alive and present.It was in the Eucharist that Newman encountered the living heart of Jesus, capable of setting us free, giving meaning to each moment of our lives, and bestowing true peace: “O most Sacred, most loving Heart of Jesus, Thou art concealed in the Holy Eucharist, and Thou beatest for us still…I worship Thee then with all my best love and awe, with my fervent affection, with my most subdued, most resolved will.O my God, when Thou dost condescend to suffer me to receive Thee, to eat and drink Thee, and Thou for a while takest up Thy abode within me, O make my heart beat with Thy Heart.Purify it of all that is earthly, all that is proud and sensual, all that is hard and cruel, of all perversity, of all disorder, of all deadness.So fill it with Thee, that neither the events of the day nor the circumstances of the time may have power to ruffle it, but that in Thy love and Thy fear it may have peace”.[19]
    27. Before the heart of Jesus, living and present, our mind, enlightened by the Spirit, grows in the understanding of his words and our will is moved to put them into practice.This could easily remain on the level of a kind of self-reliant moralism.Hearing and tasting the Lord, and paying him due honour, however, is a matter of the heart. Only the heart is capable of setting our other powers and passions, and our entire person, in a stance of reverence and loving obedience before the Lord.
    THE WORLD CAN CHANGE, BEGINNING WITH THE HEART
    28. It is only by starting from the heart that our communities will succeed in uniting and reconciling differing minds and wills, so that the Spirit can guide us in unity as brothers and sisters.Reconciliation and peace are also born of the heart.The heart of Christ is “ecstasy”, openness, gift and encounter.In that heart, we learn to relate to one another in wholesome and happy ways, and to build up in this world God’s kingdom of love and justice.Our hearts, united with the heart of Christ, are capable of working this social miracle.
    29. Taking the heart seriously, then, has consequences for society as a whole.The Second Vatican Council teaches that, “every one of us needs a change of heart; we must set our gaze on the whole world and look to those tasks we can all perform together in order to bring about the betterment of our race”.[20]For “the imbalances affecting the world today are in fact a symptom of a deeper imbalance rooted in the human heart”.[21]In pondering the tragedies afflicting our world, the Council urges us to return to the heart.It explains that human beings “by their interior life, transcend the entire material universe; they experience this deep interiority when they enter into their own heart, where God, who probes the heart, awaits them, and where they decide their own destiny in the sight of God”.[22]
    30. This in no way implies an undue reliance on our own abilities.Let us never forget that our hearts are not self-sufficient, but frail and wounded.They possess an ontological dignity, yet at the same time must seek an ever more dignified life.[23]The Second Vatican Council points out that “the ferment of the Gospel has aroused and continues to arouse in human hearts an unquenchable thirst for human dignity”.[24]Yet to live in accordance with this dignity, it is not enough to know the Gospel or to carry out mechanically its demands.We need the help of God’s love.Let us turn, then, to the heart of Christ, that core of his being, which is a blazing furnace of divine and human love and the most sublime fulfilment to which humanity can aspire.There, in that heart, we truly come at last to know ourselves and we learn how to love.
    31. In the end, that Sacred Heart is the unifying principle of all reality, since “Christ is the heart of the world, and the paschal mystery of his death and resurrection is the centre of history, which, because of him, is a history of salvation”.[25]All creatures “are moving forward with us and through us towards a common point of arrival, which is God, in that transcendent fullness where the risen Christ embraces and illumines all things”.[26]In the presence of the heart of Christ, I once more ask the Lord to have mercy on this suffering world in which he chose to dwell as one of us.May he pour out the treasures of his light and love, so that our world, which presses forward despite wars, socio-economic disparities and uses of technology that threaten our humanity, may regain the most important and necessary thing of all: its heart.
    CHAPTER TWO
    ACTIONS AND WORDS OF LOVE
    32. The heart of Christ, as the symbol of the deepest and most personal source of his love for us, is the very core of the initial preaching of the Gospel.It stands at the origin of our faith, as the wellspring that refreshes and enlivens our Christian beliefs.
    ACTIONS THAT REFLECT THE HEART
    33. Christ showed the depth of his love for us not by lengthy explanations but by concrete actions.By examining his interactions with others, we can come to realize how he treats each one of us, even though at times this may be difficult to see.Let us now turn to the place where our faith can encounter this truth: the word of God.
    34. The Gospel tells us that Jesus “came to his own” (cf.Jn1:11).Those words refer to us, for the Lord does not treat us as strangers but as a possession that he watches over and cherishes.He treats us truly as “his own”.This does not mean that we are his slaves, something that he himself denies: “I do not call you servants” (Jn15:15).Rather, it refers to the sense of mutual belonging typical of friends.Jesus came to meet us, bridging all distances; he became as close to us as the simplest, everyday realities of our lives.Indeed, he has another name, “Emmanuel”, which means “God with us”, God as part of our lives, God as living in our midst.The Son of God became incarnate and “emptied himself, taking the form of a slave” (Phil2:7).
    35. This becomes clear when we see Jesus at work.He seeks people out, approaches them, ever open to an encounter with them.We see it when he stops to converse with the Samaritan woman at the well where she went to draw water (cf.Jn4:5-7).We see it when, in the darkness of night, he meets Nicodemus, who feared to be seen in his presence (cf.Jn3:1-2).We marvel when he allows his feet to be washed by a prostitute (cf.Lk7:36-50), when he says to the woman caught in adultery, “Neither do I condemn you” (Jn8:11), or again when he chides the disciples for their indifference and quietly asks the blind man on the roadside, “What do you want me to do for you?” (Mk10:51).Christ shows that God is closeness, compassion and tender love.
    36. Whenever Jesus healed someone, he preferred to do it, not from a distance but in close proximity: “He stretched out his hand and touched him” (Mt8:3).“He touched her hand” (Mt8:15).“He touched their eyes” (Mt9:29).Once he even stopped to cure a deaf man with his own saliva (cf.Mk7:33), as a mother would do, so that people would not think of him as removed from their lives.“The Lord knows the fine science of the caress.In his compassion, God does not love us with words; he comes forth to meet us and, by his closeness, he shows us the depth of his tender love”.[27]
    37. If we find it hard to trust others because we have been hurt by lies, injuries and disappointments, the Lord whispers in our ear: “Take heart, son!” (Mt9:2), “Take heart, daughter!” (Mt9:22).He encourages us to overcome our fear and to realize that, with him at our side, we have nothing to lose.To Peter, in his fright, “Jesus immediately reached out his hand and caught him”, saying, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?” (Mt14:31).Nor should you be afraid.Let him draw near and sit at your side.There may be many people we distrust, but not him.Do not hesitate because of your sins.Keep in mind that many sinners “came and sat with him” (Mt9:10), yet Jesus was scandalized by none of them.It was the religious élite that complained and treated him as “a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners” (Mt11:19).When the Pharisees criticized him for his closeness to people deemed base or sinful, Jesus replied, “I desire mercy, not sacrifice” (Mt9:13).
    38. That same Jesus is now waiting for you to give him the chance to bring light to your life, to raise you up and to fill you with his strength.Before his death, he assured his disciples, “I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you.In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me” (Jn14:18-19).Jesus always finds a way to be present in your life, so that you can encounter him.
    JESUS’ GAZE
    39. The Gospel tells us that a rich man came up to Jesus, full of idealism yet lacking in the strength needed to change his life.Jesus then “looked at him” (Mk10:21).Can you imagine that moment, that encounter between his eyes and those of Jesus?If Jesus calls you and summons you for a mission, he first looks at you, plumbs the depths of your heart and, knowing everything about you, fixes his gaze upon you.So it was when, “as he walked by the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers… and as he went from there, he saw two other brothers” (Mt4:18, 21).
    40. Many a page of the Gospel illustrates how attentive Jesus was to individuals and above all to their problems and needs.We are told that, “when he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless” (Mt9:36).Whenever we feel that everyone ignores us, that no one cares what becomes of us, that we are of no importance to anyone, he remains concerned for us.To Nathanael, standing apart and busy about his own affairs, he could say, “I saw you under the fig tree before Philip called you” (Jn1:48).
    41. Precisely out of concern for us, Jesus knows every one of our good intentions and small acts of charity.The Gospel tells us that once he “saw a poor widow put in two small copper coins” in the Temple treasury (Lk21:2) and immediately brought it to the attention of his disciples.Jesus thus appreciates the good that he sees in us. When the centurion approached him with complete confidence, “Jesus listened to him and was amazed” (Mt8:10).How reassuring it is to know that, even if others are not aware of our good intentions or actions, Jesus sees them and regards them highly.
    42. In his humanity, Jesus learned this from Mary, his mother.Our Lady carefully pondered the things she had experienced; she “treasured them… in her heart” (Lk2:19, 51) and, with Saint Joseph, she taught Jesus from his earliest years to be attentive in this same way.
    JESUS’ WORDS
    43. Although the Scriptures preserve Jesus’ words, ever alive and timely, there are moments when he speaks to us inwardly, calls us and leads us to a better place.That better place is his heart.There he invites us to find fresh strength and peace: “Come to me, all who are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest” (Mt11:28).In this sense, he could say to his disciples, “Abide in me” (Jn15:4).
    44. Jesus’ words show that his holiness did not exclude deep emotions.On various occasions, he demonstrated a love that was both passionate and compassionate.He could be deeply moved and grieved, even to the point of shedding tears.It is clear that Jesus was not indifferent to the daily cares and concerns of people, such as their weariness or hunger: “I have compassion for this crowd… they have nothing to eat… they will faint on the way, and some of them have come from a great distance” (Mk8:2-3).
    45. The Gospel makes no secret of Jesus’ love for Jerusalem: “As he came near and saw the city, he wept over it” (Lk19:41).He then voiced the deepest desire of his heart: “If you had only recognized on this day the things that make for peace” (Lk19:42).The evangelists, while at times showing him in his power and glory, also portray his profound emotions in the face of death and the grief felt by his friends.Before recounting how Jesus, standing before the tomb of Lazarus, “began to weep” (Jn11:35), the Gospel observes that, “Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus” (Jn11:5) and that, seeing Mary and those who were with her weeping, “he was greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved” (Jn11:33).The Gospel account leaves no doubt that his tears were genuine, the sign of inner turmoil.Nor do the Gospels attempt to conceal Jesus’ anguish over his impending violent death at the hands of those whom he had loved so greatly: he “began to be distressed and agitated” (Mk14:33), even to the point of crying out, “I am deeply grieved, even to death” (Mk14:34).This inner turmoil finds its most powerful expression in his cry from the cross: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mk15:34).
    46. At first glance, all this may smack of pious sentimentalism.Yet it is supremely serious and of decisive importance, and finds its most sublime expression in Christ crucified.The cross is Jesus’ most eloquent word of love.A word that is not shallow, sentimental or merely edifying.It is love, sheer love.That is why Saint Paul, struggling to find the right words to describe his relationship with Christ, could speak of “the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me” (Gal2:20).This was Paul’s deepest conviction: the knowledge that he was loved.Christ’s self-offering on the cross became the driving force in Paul’s life, yet it only made sense to him because he knew that something even greater lay behind it: the fact that “he loved me”.At a time when many were seeking salvation, prosperity or security elsewhere, Paul, moved by the Spirit, was able to see farther and to marvel at the greatest and most essential thing of all: “Christ loved me”.
    47. Now, after considering Christ and seeing how his actions and words grant us insight into his heart, let us turn to the Church’s reflection on the holy mystery of the Lord’s Sacred Heart.
    CHAPTER THREE
    THIS IS THE HEART THAT HAS LOVED SO GREATLY
    48. Devotion to the heart of Christ is not the veneration of a single organ apart from the Person of Jesus.What we contemplate and adore is the whole Jesus Christ, the Son of God made man, represented by an image that accentuates his heart.That heart of flesh is seen as the privileged sign of the inmost being of the incarnate Son and his love, both divine and human.More than any other part of his body, the heart of Jesus is “the natural sign and symbol of his boundless love”.[28]
    WORSHIPING CHRIST
    49. It is essential to realize that our relationship to the Person of Jesus Christ is one of friendship and adoration, drawn by the love represented under the image of his heart.We venerate that image, yet our worship is directed solely to the living Christ, in his divinity and his plenary humanity, so that we may be embraced by his human and divine love.
    50. Whatever the image employed, it is clear that the living heart of Christ – not its representation – is the object of our worship, for it is part of his holy risen body, which is inseparable from the Son of God who assumed that body forever.We worship it because it is “the heart of the Person of the Word, to whom it is inseparably united”.[29]Nor do we worship it for its own sake, but because with this heart the incarnate Son is alive, loves us and receives our love in return.Any act of love or worship of his heart is thus “really and truly given to Christ himself”,[30]since it spontaneously refers back to him and is “a symbol and a tender image of the infinite love of Jesus Christ”.[31]
    51. For this reason, it should never be imagined that this devotion may distract or separate us from Jesus and his love.In a natural and direct way, it points us to him and to him alone, who calls us to a precious friendship marked by dialogue, affection, trust and adoration.The Christ we see depicted with a pierced and burning heart is the same Christ who, for love of us, was born in Bethlehem, passed through Galilee healing the sick, embracing sinners and showing mercy.The same Christ who loved us to the very end, opening wide his arms on the cross, who then rose from the dead and now lives among us in glory.
    VENERATING HIS IMAGE
    52. While the image of Christ and his heart is not in itself an object of worship, neither is it simply one among many other possible images.It was not devised at a desk or designed by an artist; it is “no imaginary symbol, but a real symbol which represents the centre, the source from which salvation flowed for all humanity”.[32]
    53. Universal human experience has made the image of the heart something unique.Indeed, throughout history and in different parts of the world, it has become a symbol of personal intimacy, affection, emotional attachment and capacity for love.Transcending all scientific explanations, a hand placed on the heart of a friend expresses special affection: when two persons fall in love and draw close to one another, their hearts beat faster; when we are abandoned or deceived by someone we love, our hearts sink.So too, when we want to say something deeply personal, we often say that we are speaking “from the heart”.The language of poetry reflects the power of these experiences.In the course of history, the heart has taken on unique symbolic value that is more than merely conventional.
    54. It is understandable, then, that the Church has chosen the image of the heart to represent the human and divine love of Jesus Christ and the inmost core of his Person.Yet, while the depiction of a heart afire may be an eloquent symbol of the burning love of Jesus Christ, it is important that this heart not be represented apart from him.In this way, his summons to a personal relationship of encounter and dialogue will become all the more meaningful.[33]The venerable image portraying Christ holding out his loving heart also shows him looking directly at us, inviting us to encounter, dialogue and trust; it shows his strong hands capable of supporting us and his lips that speak personally to each of us.
    55. The heart, too, has the advantage of being immediately recognizable as the profound unifying centre of the body, an expression of the totality of the person, unlike other individual organs.As a part that stands for the whole, we could easily misinterpret it, were we to contemplate it apart from the Lord himself.The image of the heart should lead us to contemplate Christ in all the beauty and richness of his humanity and divinity.
    56. Whatever particular aesthetic qualities we may ascribe to various portrayals of Christ’s heart when we pray before them, it is not the case that “something is sought from them or that blind trust is put in images as once was done by the Gentiles”.Rather, “through these images that we kiss, and before which we kneel and uncover our heads, we are adoring Christ”.[34]
    57. Certain of these representations may indeed strike us as tasteless and not particularly conducive to affection or prayer.Yet this is of little importance, since they are only invitations to prayer, and, to cite an Eastern proverb, we should not limit our gaze to the finger that points us to the moon.Whereas the Eucharist is a real presence to be worshiped, sacred images, albeit blessed, point beyond themselves, inviting us to lift up our hearts and to unite them to the heart of the living Christ.The image we venerate thus serves as a summons to make room for an encounter with Christ, and to worship him in whatever way we wish to picture him.Standing before the image, we stand before Christ, and in his presence, “love pauses, contemplates mystery, and enjoys it in silence”.[35]
    58. At the same time, we must never forget that the image of the heart speaks to us of the flesh and of earthly realities.In this way, it points us to the God who wished to become one of us, a part of our history, and a companion on our earthly journey.A more abstract or stylized form of devotion would not necessarily be more faithful to the Gospel, for in this eloquent and tangible sign we see how God willed to reveal himself and to draw close to us.
    A LOVE THAT IS TANGIBLE
    59. On the other hand, love and the human heart do not always go together, since hatred, indifference and selfishness can also reign in our hearts.Yet we cannot attain our fulfilment as human beings unless we open our hearts to others; only through love do we become fully ourselves.The deepest part of us, created for love, will fulfil God’s plan only if we learn to love.And the heart is the symbol of that love.
    60. The eternal Son of God, in his utter transcendence, chose to love each of us with a human heart.His human emotions became the sacrament of that infinite and endless love.His heart, then, is not merely a symbol for some disembodied spiritual truth.In gazing upon the Lord’s heart, we contemplate a physical reality, his human flesh, which enables him to possess genuine human emotions and feelings, like ourselves, albeit fully transformed by his divine love.Our devotion must ascend to the infinite love of the Person of the Son of God, yet we need to keep in mind that his divine love is inseparable from his human love.The image of his heart of flesh helps us to do precisely this.
    61. Since the heart continues to be seen in the popular mind as the affective centre of each human being, it remains the best means of signifying the divine love of Christ, united forever and inseparably to his wholly human love.Pius XII observed that the Gospel, in referring to the love of Christ’s heart, speaks “not only of divine charity but also human affection”.Indeed, “the heart of Jesus Christ, hypostatically united to the divine Person of the Word, beyond doubt throbbed with love and every other tender affection”.[36]
    62. The Fathers of the Church, opposing those who denied or downplayed the true humanity of Christ, insisted on the concrete and tangible reality of the Lord’s human affections.Saint Basil emphasized that the Lord’s incarnation was not something fanciful, and that “the Lord possessed our natural affections”.[37]Saint John Chrysostom pointed to an example: “Had he not possessed our nature, he would not have experienced sadness from time to time”.[38]Saint Ambrose stated that “in taking a soul, he took on the passions of the soul”.[39]For Saint Augustine, our human affections, which Christ assumed, are now open to the life of grace: “The Lord Jesus assumed these affections of our human weakness, as he did the flesh of our human weakness, not out of necessity, but consciously and freely…lest any who feel grief and sorrow amid the trials of life should think themselves separated from his grace”.[40]Finally, Saint John Damascene viewed the genuine affections shown by Christ in his humanity as proof that he assumed our nature in its entirety in order to redeem and transform it in its entirety: Christ, then, assumed all that is part of human nature, so that all might be sanctified.[41]
    63. Here, we can benefit from the thoughts of a theologian who maintains that, “due to the influence of Greek thought, theology long relegated the body and feelings to the world of the pre-human or sub-human or potentially inhuman; yet what theology did not resolve in theory, spirituality resolved in practice.This, together with popular piety, preserved the relationship with the corporal, psychological and historical reality of Jesus.The Stations of the Cross, devotion to Christ’s wounds, his Precious Blood and his Sacred Heart, and a variety of Eucharist devotions… all bridged the gaps in theology by nourishing our hearts and imagination, our tender love for Christ, our hope and memory, our desires and feelings.Reason and logic took other directions”.[42]
    A THREEFOLD LOVE
    64. Nor do we remain only on the level of the Lord’s human feelings, beautiful and moving as they are.In contemplating Christ’s heart we also see how, in his fine and noble sentiments, his kindness and gentleness and his signs of genuine human affection, the deeper truth of his infinite divine love is revealed.In the words of Benedict XVI, “from the infinite horizon of his love, God wished to enter into the limits of human history and the human condition.He took on a body and a heart.Thus, we can contemplate and encounter the infinite in the finite, the invisible and ineffable mystery in the human heart of Jesus the Nazarene”.[43]
    65. The image of the Lord’s heart speaks to us in fact of a threefold love.First, we contemplate his infinite divine love.Then our thoughts turn to the spiritual dimension of his humanity, in which the heart is “the symbol of that most ardent love which, infused into his soul, enriches his human will”.Finally, “it is a symbol also of his sensible love”.[44]
    66. These three loves are not separate, parallel or disconnected, but together act and find expression in a constant and vital unity.For “by faith, through which we believe that the human and divine nature were united in the Person of Christ, we can see the closest bonds between the tender love of the physical heart of Jesus and the twofold spiritual love, namely human and divine”.[45]
    67. Entering into the heart of Christ, we feel loved by a human heart filled with affections and emotions like our own.Jesus’ human will freely chooses to love us, and that spiritual love is flooded with grace and charity.When we plunge into the depths of his heart, we find ourselves overwhelmed by the immense glory of his infinite love as the eternal Son, which we can no longer separate from his human love.It is precisely in his human love, and not apart from it, that we encounter his divine love: we discover “the infinite in the finite”.[46]
    68. It is the constant and unequivocal teaching of the Church that our worship of Christ’s person is undivided, inseparably embracing both his divine and his human natures.From ancient times, the Church has taught that we are to “adore one and the same Christ, the Son of God and of man, consisting of and in two inseparable and undivided natures”.[47]And we do so “with one act of adoration… inasmuch as the Word became flesh”.[48]Christ is in no way “worshipped in two natures, whereby two acts of worship are introduced”; instead, we venerate “by one act of worship God the Word made flesh, together with his own flesh”.[49]
    69. Saint John of the Cross sought to explain that in mystical experience the infinite love of the risen Christ is not perceived as alien to our lives.The infinite in some way “condescends” to enable us, through the open heart of Christ, to experience an encounter of truly reciprocal love, for “it is indeed credible that a bird of lowly flight can capture the royal eagle of the heights, if this eagle descends with the desire of being captured”.[50]He also explains that the Bridegroom, “beholding that the bride is wounded with love for him, because of her moan he too is wounded with love for her.Among lovers, the wound of one is the wound of both”.[51]John of the Cross regards the image of Christ’s pierced side as an invitation to full union with the Lord.Christ is the wounded stag, wounded when we fail to let ourselves be touched by his love, who descends to the streams of water to quench his thirst and is comforted whenever we turn to him:
    “Return, dove!
    The wounded stag
    is in sight on the hill,
    cooled by the breeze of your flight”.[52]
    TRINITARIAN PERSPECTIVES
    70. Devotion to the heart of Jesus, as a direct contemplation of the Lord that draws us into union with him, is clearly Christological in nature.We see this in the Letter to the Hebrews, which urges us to “run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus” (12:2).At the same time, we need to realize that Jesus speaks of himself as the way to the Father: “I am the way…No one comes to the Father except through me” (Jn14:6).Jesus wants to bring us to the Father.That is why, from the very beginning, the Church’s preaching does not end with Jesus, but with the Father.As source and fullness, the Father is ultimately the one to be glorified.[53]
    71. If we turn, for example, to the Letter to the Ephesians, we can see clearly how our worship is directed to the Father: “I bow my knees before the Father” (3:14).There is “one God and Father of all, who is above all and through all and in all” (4:6).“Give thanks to God the Father at all times and for everything” (5:20).It is the Father “for whom we exist” (1 Cor8:6).In this sense, Saint John Paul II could say that, “the whole of the Christian life is like a greatpilgrimage to the house of the Father”.[54]This too was the experience of Saint Ignatius of Antioch on his path to martyrdom: “In me there is left no spark of desire for mundane things, but only a murmur of living water that whispers within me, ‘Come to the Father’”.[55]
    72. The Father is, before all else, the Father of Jesus Christ: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ”(Eph1:3).He is “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory” (Eph1:17).When the Son became man, all the hopes and aspirations of his human heart were directed towards the Father.If we consider the way Christ spoke of the Father, we can grasp the love and affection that his human heart felt for him, this complete and constant orientation towards him.[56]Jesus’ life among us was a journey of response to the constant call of his human heart to come to the Father.[57]
    73. We know that the Aramaic word Jesus used to address the Father was “Abba”, an intimate and familiar term that some found disconcerting (cf.Jn5:18).It is how he addressed the Father in expressing his anguish at his impending death: “Abba,Father, for you all things are possible; remove this cup from me; yet, not what I want, but what you want” (Mk14:36).Jesus knew well that he had always been loved by the Father: “You loved me before the foundation of the world” (Jn17:24).In his human heart, he had rejoiced at hearing the Father say to him: “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased” (Mk1:11).
    74. The Fourth Gospel tells us that the eternal Son was always “close to the Father’s heart” (Jn1:18).[58]Saint Irenaeus thus declares that “the Son of God was with the Father from the beginning”.[59]Origen, for his part, maintains that the Son perseveres “in uninterrupted contemplation of the depths of the Father”.[60]When the Son took flesh, he spent entire nights conversing with his beloved Father on the mountaintop (cf.Lk6:12).He told us, “I must be in my Father’s house” (Lk2:49).We see too how he expressed his praise: “Jesus rejoiced in the Holy Spirit and said, ‘I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth’ (Lk10:21).His last words, full of trust, were, “Father, into your hands I commend my spirit” (Lk23:46).
    75. Let us now turn to the Holy Spirit, whose fire fills the heart of Christ.As Saint John Paul II once said, Christ’s heart is “the Holy Spirit’s masterpiece”.[61]This is more than simply a past event, for even now “the heart of Christ is alive with the action of the Holy Spirit, to whom Jesus attributed the inspiration of his mission (cf.Lk4:18;Is61:1) and whose sending he had promised at the Last Supper.It is the Spirit who enables us to grasp the richness of the sign of Christ’s pierced side, from which the Church has sprung (cf.Sacrosanctum Concilium, 5)”.[62]In a word, “only the Holy Spirit can open up before us the fullness of the ‘inner man’, which is found in the heart of Christ.He alone can cause our human hearts to draw strength from that fullness, step by step”.[63]
    76. If we seek to delve more deeply into the mysterious working of the Spirit, we learn that he groans within us, saying “Abba!”Indeed,“the proof that you are children is that God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, ‘Abba! Father!’” (Gal4:6).For “the Spirit bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God” (Rom8:16).The Holy Spirit at work in Christ’s human heart draws him unceasingly to the Father.When the Spirit unites us to the sentiments of Christ through grace, he makes us sharers in the Son’s relationship to the Father, whereby we receive “a spirit of adoption through which we cry out, ‘Abba! Father!’” (Rom8:15).
    77.Our relationship with the heart of Christ is thus changed, thanks to the prompting of the Spirit who guides us to the Father, the source of life and the ultimate wellspring of grace.Christ does not expect us simply to remain in him.His love is “the revelation of the Father’s mercy”,[64]and his desire is that, impelled by the Spirit welling up from his heart, we should ascend to the Father “with him and in him”.We give glory to the Father “through” Christ,[65]“with” Christ,[66]and “in” Christ.[67]Saint John Paul II taught that, “the Saviour’s heart invites us to return to the Father’s love, which is the source of every authentic love”.[68]This is precisely what the Holy Spirit, who comes to us through the heart of Christ, seeks to nurture in our hearts.For this reason, the liturgy, through the enlivening work of the Spirit, always addresses the Father from the risen heart of Christ.
    RECENT TEACHINGS OF THE MAGISTERIUM
    78.In numerous ways, Christ’s heart has always been present in the history of Christian spirituality.In the Scriptures and in the early centuries of the Church’s life, it appeared under the image of the Lord’s wounded side, as a fountain of grace and a summons to a deep and loving encounter.In this same guise, it has reappeared in the writings of numerous saints, past and present.In recent centuries, this spirituality has gradually taken on the specific form of devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
    79. A number of my Predecessors have spoken in various ways about the heart of Christ and exhorted us to unite ourselves to it.At the end of the nineteenth century, Leo XIII encouraged us to consecrate ourselves to the Sacred Heart, thus uniting our call to union with Christ and our wonder before the magnificence of his infinite love.[69]Some thirty years later, Pius XI presented this devotion as a “summa” of the experience of Christian faith.[70]Pius XII went on to declare that adoration of the Sacred Heart expresses in an outstanding way, as a sublime synthesis, the worship we owe to Jesus Christ.[71]
    80. More recently, Saint John Paul II presented the growth of this devotion in recent centuries as a response to the rise of rigorist and disembodied forms of spirituality that neglected the richness of the Lord’s mercy.At the same time, he saw it as a timely summons to resist attempts to create a world that leaves no room for God.“Devotion to the Sacred Heart, as it developed in Europe two centuries ago, under the impulse of the mystical experiences of Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque, was aresponse to Jansenist rigor, which ended up disregarding God’s infinite mercy…The men and women of the third millennium need the heart of Christin order to know God and to know themselves; they need it to build the civilization of love”.[72]
    81. Benedict XVI asked us to recognize in the heart of Christ an intimate and daily presence in our lives: “Every person needs a ‘centre’ for his or her own life, a source of truth and goodness to draw upon in the events, situations and struggles of daily existence.All of us, when we pause in silence, need to feel not only the beating of our own heart, but deeper still, the beating of a trustworthy presence, perceptible with faith’s senses and yet much more real: the presence of Christ, the heart of the world”.[73]
    FURTHER REFLECTIONS AND RELEVANCE FOR OUR TIMES
    82. The expressive and symbolic image of Christ’s heart is not the only means granted us by the Holy Spirit for encountering the love of Christ, yet it is, as we have seen, an especially privileged one.Even so, it constantly needs to be enriched, deepened and renewed through meditation, the reading of the Gospel and growth in spiritual maturity.Pius XII made it clear that the Church does not claim that, “we must contemplate and adore in the heart of Jesus a ‘formal’ image, that is, a perfect and absolute sign of his divine love, for the essence of this love can in no way be adequately expressed by any created image whatsoever”.[74]
    83. Devotion to Christ’s heart is essential for our Christian life to the extent that it expresses our openness in faith and adoration to the mystery of the Lord’s divine and human love.In this sense, we can once more affirm that the Sacred Heart is a synthesis of the Gospel.[75]We need to remember that the visions or mystical showings related by certain saints who passionately encouraged devotion to Christ’s heart are not something that the faithful are obliged to believe as if they were the word of God.[76]Nonetheless, they are rich sources of encouragement and can prove greatly beneficial, even if no one need feel forced to follow them should they not prove helpful on his or her own spiritual journey.At the same time, however, we should be mindful that, as Pius XII pointed out, this devotion cannot be said “to owe its origin to private revelations”.[77]
    84. The promotion of Eucharistic communion on the first Friday of each month, for example, sent a powerful message at a time when many people had stopped receiving communion because they were no longer confident of God’s mercy and forgiveness and regarded communion as a kind of reward for the perfect.In the context of Jansenism, the spread of this practice proved immensely beneficial, since it led to a clearer realization that in the Eucharist the merciful and ever-present love of the heart of Christ invites us to union with him.It can also be said that this practice can prove similarly beneficial in our own time, for a different reason.Amid the frenetic pace of today’s world and our obsession with free time, consumption and diversion, cell phones and social media, we forget to nourish our lives with the strength of the Eucharist.
    85. While no one should feel obliged to spend an hour in adoration each Thursday, the practice ought surely to be recommended.When we carry it out with devotion, in union with many of our brothers and sisters and discover in the Eucharist the immense love of the heart of Christ, we “adore, together with the Church, the sign and manifestation of the divine love that went so far as to love, through the heart of the incarnate Word, the human race”.[78]
    86. Many Jansenists found this difficult to comprehend, for they looked askance on all that was human, affective and corporeal, and so viewed this devotion as distancing us from pure worship of the Most High God.Pius XII described as “false mysticism”[79]the elitist attitude of those groups that saw God as so sublime, separate and distant that they regarded affective expressions of popular piety as dangerous and in need of ecclesiastical oversight.
    87. It could be argued that today, in place of Jansenism, we find ourselves before a powerful wave of secularization that seeks to build a world free of God.In our societies, we are also seeing a proliferation of varied forms of religiosity that have nothing to do with a personal relationship with the God of love, but are new manifestations of a disembodied spirituality.I must warn that within the Church too, a baneful Jansenist dualism has re-emerged in new forms.This has gained renewed strength in recent decades, but it is a recrudescence of that Gnosticism which proved so great a spiritual threat in the early centuries of Christianity because it refused to acknowledge the reality of “the salvation of the flesh”.For this reason, I turn my gaze to the heart of Christ and I invite all of us to renew our devotion to it.I hope this will also appeal to today’s sensitivities and thus help us to confront the dualisms, old and new, to which this devotion offers an effective response.
    88. I would add that the heart of Christ also frees us from another kind of dualism found in communities and pastors excessively caught up in external activities, structural reforms that have little to do with the Gospel, obsessive reorganization plans, worldly projects, secular ways of thinking and mandatory programmes.The result is often a Christianity stripped of the tender consolations of faith, the joy of serving others, the fervour of personal commitment to mission, the beauty of knowing Christ and the profound gratitude born of the friendship he offers and the ultimate meaning he gives to our lives.This too is the expression of an illusory and disembodied otherworldliness.
    89. Once we succumb to these attitudes, so widespread in our day, we tend to lose all desire to be cured of them.This leads me to propose to the whole Church renewed reflection on the love of Christ represented in his Sacred Heart.For there we find the whole Gospel, a synthesis of the truths of our faith, all that we adore and seek in faith, all that responds to our deepest needs.
    90. As we contemplate the heart of Christ, the incarnate synthesis of the Gospel, we can, following the example of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus, “place heartfelt trust not in ourselves but in the infinite mercy of a God who loves us unconditionally and has already given us everything in the cross of Jesus Christ”.[80]Therese was able to do this because she had discovered in the heart of Christ that God is love: “To me he has granted his infinite mercy, and through it I contemplate and adore the other divine perfections”.[81]That is why a popular prayer, directed like an arrow towards the heart of Christ, says simply: “Jesus, I trust in you”.[82]No other words are needed.
    91. In the following chapters, we will emphasize two essential aspects that contemporary devotion to the Sacred Heart needs to combine, so that it can continue to nourish us and bring us closer to the Gospel: personal spiritual experience and communal missionary commitment.
    CHAPTER FOUR
    A LOVE THAT GIVES ITSELF AS DRINK
    92. Let us now return to the Scriptures, the inspired texts where, above all, we encounter God’s revelation.There, and in the Church’s living Tradition, we hear what the Lord has wished to tell us in the course of history.By reading several texts from the Old and the New Testaments, we will gain insight into the word of God that has guided the great spiritual pilgrimage of his people down the ages.
    A GOD WHO THIRSTS FOR LOVE
    93. The Bible shows that the people that journeyed through the desert and yearned for freedom received the promise of an abundance of life-giving water: “With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation” (Is12:3).The messianic prophecies gradually coalesced around the imagery of purifying water: “I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and you shall be clean… a new spirit I will put within you” (Ezek36:25-26).This water would bestow on God’s people the fullness of life, like a fountain flowing from the Temple and bringing a wealth of life and salvation in its wake.“I saw on the bank of the river a great many trees on the one side and on the other… and wherever that river goes, every living creature will live… and when that river enters the sea, its waters will become fresh; everything will live where the river goes” (Ezek47:7-9).
    94. The Jewish festival of Booths (Sukkot), which recalls the forty-year sojourn of Israel in the desert, gradually adopted the symbolism of water as a central element.It included a rite of offering water each morning, which became most solemn on the final day of the festival, when a great procession took place towards the Temple, the altar was circled seven times and the water was offered to God amid loud cries of joy.[83]
    95. The dawn of the messianic era was described as a fountain springing up for the people: “I will pour out a spirit of compassion and supplication on the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and they shall look on him whom they have pierced…On that day, a fountain shall be opened for the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, to cleanse them from sin and impurity” (Zech12:10; 13:1).
    96. One who is pierced, a flowing fountain, the outpouring of a spirit of compassion and supplication: the first Christians inevitably considered these promises fulfilled in the pierced side of Christ, the wellspring of new life.In the Gospel of John, we contemplate that fulfilment.From Jesus’ wounded side, the water of the Spirit poured forth: “One of the soldiers pierced his side with a spear, and at once blood and water flowed out” (Jn19:34).The evangelist then recalls the prophecy that had spoken of a fountain opened in Jerusalem and the pierced one (Jn19:37; cf.Zech12:10).The open fountain is the wounded side of Christ.
    97. Earlier, John’s Gospel had spoken of this event, when on “the last day of the festival” (Jn7:37), Jesus cried out to the people celebrating the great procession: “Let anyone who is thirsty come to me and drink… out of his heart shall flow rivers of living water” (Jn7:37-38).For this to be accomplished, however, it was necessary for Jesus’ “hour” to come, for he “was not yet glorified” (Jn7:39).That fulfilment was to come on the cross, in the blood and water that flowed from the Lord’s side.
    98. The Book of Revelation takes up the prophecies of the pierced one and the fountain: “every eye will see him, even those who pierced him” (Rev1:7); “Let everyone who is thirsty come; let anyone who wishes take the water of life as a gift” (Rev22:17).
    99. The pierced side of Jesus is the source of the love that God had shown for his people in countless ways.Let us now recall some of his words:
    “Because you are precious in my sight and honoured, I love you” (Is43:4).
    “Can a woman forget her nursing child, or show no compassion for the child of her womb?Even if these may forget, yet I will not forget you.See, I have inscribed you on the palms of my hands” (Is49:15-16).
    “For the mountains may depart, and the hills be removed, but my steadfast love shall not depart from you, and my covenant of peace shall not be removed” (Is54:10).
    “I have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore I have continued my faithfulness to you” (Jer31:3).
    “The Lord, your God, is in your midst, a warrior who gives you victory; he will rejoice over you with gladness, he will renew you in his love; he will exult over you with loud singing” (Zeph3:17).
    100.The prophet Hosea goes so far as to speak of the heart of God, who “led them with cords of human kindness, with bands of love” (Hos11:4).When that love was spurned, the Lord could say, “My heart is stirred within me; my compassion grows warm and tender (Hos11:8).God’s merciful love always triumphs (cf.Hos11:9), and it was to find its most sublime expression in Christ, his definitive Word of love.
    101.The pierced heart of Christ embodies all God’s declarations of love present in the Scriptures.That love is no mere matter of words; rather, the open side of his Son is a source of life for those whom he loves, the fount that quenches the thirst of his people.As Saint John Paul II pointed out, “the essential elements of devotion [to the Sacred Heart] belong in a permanent fashion to the spirituality of the Church throughout her history; for since the beginning, the Church has looked to the heart of Christ pierced on the Cross”.[84]
    ECHOES OF THE WORD IN HISTORY
    102.Let us consider some of the ways that, in the history of the Christian faith, these prophecies were understood to have been fulfilled.Various Fathers of the Church, especially those in Asia Minor, spoke of the wounded side of Jesus as the source of the water of the Holy Spirit: the word, its grace and the sacraments that communicate it.The courage of the martyrs is born of “the heavenly fount of living waters flowing from the side of Christ”[85]or, in the version of Rufinus, “the heavenly and eternal streams that flow from the heart of Christ”.[86]We believers, reborn in the Spirit, emerge from the cleft in the rock; “we have come forth from the heart of Christ”.[87]His wounded side, understood as his heart, filled with the Holy Spirit, comes to us as a flood of living water. “The fount of the Spirit is entirely in Christ”.[88]Yet the Spirit whom we have received does not distance us from the risen Lord, but fills us with his presence, for by drinking of the Spirit we drink of the same Christ.In the words of Saint Ambrose: “Drink of Christ, for he is the rock that pours forth a flood of water.Drink of Christ, for he is the source of life.Drink of Christ, for he is the river whose streams gladden the city of God.Drink of Christ, for he is our peace.Drink of Christ, for from his side flows living water”.[89]
    103.Saint Augustine opened the way to devotion to the Sacred Heart as the locus of our personal encounter with the Lord.For Augustine, Christ’s wounded side is not only the source of grace and the sacraments, but also the symbol of our intimate union with Christ, the setting of an encounter of love.There we find the source of the most precious wisdom of all, which is knowledge of him.In effect, Augustine writes that John, the beloved disciple, reclining on Jesus’ bosom at the Last Supper, drew near to the secret place of wisdom.[90]Here we have no merely intellectual contemplation of an abstract theological truth.As Saint Jerome explains, a person capable of contemplation “does not delight in the beauty of that stream of water, but drinks of the living water flowing from the side of the Lord”.[91]
    104.Saint Bernard takes up the symbolism of the pierced side of the Lord and understands it explicitly as a revelation and outpouring of all of the love of his heart.Through that wound, Christ opens his heart to us and enables us to appropriate the boundless mystery of his love and mercy: “I take from the bowels of the Lord what is lacking to me, for his bowels overflow with mercy through the holes through which they stream.Those who crucified him pierced his hands and feet, they pierced his side with a lance.And through those holes I can taste wild honey and oil from the rocks of flint, that is, I can taste and see that the Lord is good…A lance passed through his soul even to the region of his heart.No longer is he unable to take pity on my weakness.The wounds inflicted on his body have disclosed to us the secrets of his heart; they enable us to contemplate the great mystery of his compassion”.[92]
    105.This theme reappears especially in William of Saint-Thierry, who invites us to enter into the heart of Jesus, who feeds us from his own breast.[93]This is not surprising if we recall that for William, “the art of arts is the art of love…Love is awakened by the Creator of nature, and is a power of the soul that leads it, as if by its natural gravity, to its proper place and end”.[94]That proper place, where love reigns in fullness, is the heart of Christ: “Lord, where do you lead those whom you embrace and clasp to your heart?Your heart, Jesus, is the sweet manna of your divinity that you hold within the golden jar of your soul (cf.Heb9:4), and that surpasses all knowledge.Happy those who, having plunged into those depths, have been hidden by you in the recess of your heart”.[95]
    106.Saint Bonaventure unites these two spiritual currents.He presents the heart of Christ as the source of the sacraments and of grace, and urges that our contemplation of that heart become a relationship between friends, a personal encounter of love.
    107.Bonaventure makes us appreciate first the beauty of the grace and the sacraments flowing from the fountain of life that is the wounded side of the Lord.“In order that from the side of Christ sleeping on the cross, the Church might be formed and the Scripture fulfilled that says: ‘They shall look upon him whom they pierced’, one of the soldiers struck him with a lance and opened his side.This was permitted by divine Providence so that, in the blood and water flowing from that wound, the price of our salvation might flow from the hidden wellspring of his heart, enabling the Church’s sacraments to confer the life of grace and thus to be, for those who live in Christ, like a cup filled from the living fount springing up to life eternal”.[96]
    108.Bonaventure then asks us to take another step, in order that our access to grace not be seen as a kind of magic or neo-platonic emanation, but rather as a direct relationship with Christ, a dwelling in his heart, so that whoever drinks from that source becomes a friend of Christ, a loving heart.“Rise up, then, O soul who are a friend of Christ, and be the dove that nests in the cleft in the rock; be the sparrow that finds a home and constantly watches over it; be the turtledove that hides the offspring of its chaste love in that most holy cleft”.[97]
    THE SPREAD OF DEVOTION TO THE HEART OF CHRIST
    109.Gradually, the wounded side of Christ, as the abode of his love and the wellspring of the life of grace, began to be associated with his heart, especially in monastic life.We know that in the course of history, devotion to the heart of Christ was not always expressed in the same way, and that its modern developments, related to a variety of spiritual experiences, cannot be directly derived from the mediaeval forms, much less the biblical forms in which we glimpse the seeds of that devotion.This notwithstanding, the Church today rejects nothing of the good that the Holy Spirit has bestowed on us down the centuries, for she knows that it will always be possible to discern a clearer and deeper meaning in certain aspects of that devotion, and to gain new insights over the course of time.
    110.A number of holy women, in recounting their experiences of encounter with Christ, have spoken of resting in the heart of the Lord as the source of life and interior peace.This was the case with Saints Lutgarde and Mechtilde of Hackeborn, Saint Angela of Foligno and Dame Julian of Norwich, to mention only a few.Saint Gertrude of Helfta, a Cistercian nun, tells of a time in prayer when she reclined her head on the heart of Christ and heard its beating.In a dialogue with Saint John the Evangelist, she asked him why he had not described in his Gospel what he experienced when he did the same.Gertrude concludes that “the sweet sound of those heartbeats has been reserved for modern times, so that, hearing them, our aging and lukewarm world may be renewed in the love of God”.[98]Might we think that this is indeed a message for our own times, a summons to realize how our world has indeed “grown old”, and needs to perceive anew the message of Christ’s love?Saint Gertrude and Saint Mechtilde have been considered among “the most intimate confidants of the Sacred Heart”.[99]
    111.The Carthusians, encouraged above all by Ludolph of Saxony, found in devotion to the Sacred Heart a means of growth in affection and closeness to Christ.All who enter through the wound of his heart are inflamed with love.Saint Catherine of Siena wrote that the Lord’s sufferings are impossible for us to comprehend, but the open heart of Christ enables us to have a lively personal encounter with his boundless love.“I wished to reveal to you the secret of my heart, allowing you to see it open, so that you can understand that I have loved you so much more than I could have proved to you by the suffering that I once endured”.[100]
    112.Devotion to the heart of Christ slowly passed beyond the walls of the monasteries to enrich the spirituality of saintly teachers, preachers and founders of religious congregations, who then spread it to the farthest reaches of the earth.[101]
    113.Particularly significant was the initiative taken by Saint John Eudes, who, “after preaching with his confrères a fervent mission in Rennes, convinced the bishop of that diocese to approve the celebration of the feast of the Adorable Heart of our Lord Jesus Christ.This was the first time that such a feast was officially authorized in the Church.Following this, between the years 1670 and 1671, the bishops of Coutances, Evreux, Bayeux, Lisieux and Rouen authorized the celebration of the feast for their respective dioceses”.[102]
    SAINT FRANCIS DE SALES
    114.In modern times, mention should be made of the important contribution of Saint Francis de Sales.Francis frequently contemplated Christ’s open heart, which invites us to dwell therein, in a personal relationship of love that sheds light on the mysteries of his life.In his writings, the saintly Doctor of the Church opposes a rigorous morality and a legalistic piety by presenting the heart of Jesus as a summons to complete trust in the mysterious working of his grace.We see this expressed in his letter to Saint Jane Francis de Chantal: “I am certain that we will remain no longer in ourselves… but dwell forever in the Lord’s wounded side, for apart from him not only can we do nothing, but even if we were able, we would lack the desire to do anything”.[103]
    115.For Francis de Sales, true devotion had nothing to do with superstition or perfunctory piety, since it entails a personal relationship in which each of us feels uniquely and individually known and loved by Christ.“This most adorable and lovable heart of our Master, burning with the love which he professes to us, [is] a heart on which all our names are written…Surely it is a source of profound consolation to know that we are loved so deeply by our Lord, who constantly carries us in his heart”.[104]With the image of our names written on the heart of Christ, Saint Francis sought to express the extent to which Christ’s love for each of us is not something abstract and generic, but utterly personal, enabling each believer to feel known and respected for who he or she is.“How lovely is this heaven, in which the Lord is its sun and his breast a fountain of love from which the blessed drink to their heart’s content!Each of us can look therein and see our name carved in letters of love, which true love alone can read and true love has written.Dear God!And what too, beloved daughter, of our loved ones?Surely they will be there too; for even if our hearts have no love, they nonetheless possess a desire for love and the beginnings of love”.[105]
    116.Francis saw this experience of Christ’s love as essential to the spiritual life, indeed one of the great truths of faith: “Yes, my beloved daughter, he thinks of you and not only, but even the smallest hair of your head: this is an article of faith and in no way must it be doubted”.[106]It follows that the believer becomes capable of complete abandonment in the heart of Christ, in which he or she finds repose, comfort and strength: “Oh God!What happiness to be thus embraced and to recline in the bosom of the Saviour.Remain thus, beloved daughter, and like another little one, Saint John, while others are tasting different kinds of food at the table of the Lord, lay your head, your soul and your spirit, in a gesture of utter trust, on the loving bosom of this dear Lord”.[107]“I hope that you are resting in the cleft of the turtledove and in the pierced side of our beloved Saviour…How good is this Lord, my beloved daughter!How loving is his Heart!Let us remain here, in this holy abode”.[108]
    117.At the same time, faithful to his teaching on the sanctification of ordinary life, Francis proposes that this experience take place in the midst of the activities, tasks and obligations of our daily existence.“You asked me how souls that are attracted in prayer to this holy simplicity, to this perfect abandonment in God, should conduct themselves in all their actions?I would reply that, not only in prayer, but also in the conduct of everyday life they should advance always in the spirit of simplicity, abandoning and completely surrendering their soul, their actions and their accomplishments to God’s will.And to do so with a love marked by perfect and absolute trust, abandoning themselves to grace and to the care of the eternal love that divine Providence feels for them”.[109]
    118.For this reason, when looking for a symbol to convey his vision of spiritual life, Francis de Sales concluded: “I have thought, dear Mother, if you agree, that we should take as our emblem a single heart pierced by two arrows, the whole enclosed in a crown of thorns”.[110]
    A NEW DECLARATION OF LOVE
    119.Under the salutary influence of this Salesian spirituality, the events of Paray-le-Monial took place at the end of the seventeenth century.Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque reported a remarkable series of apparitions of Christ between the end of December 1673 and June of 1675.Fundamental to these was a declaration of love that stood out in the first apparition.Jesus said: “My divine Heart is so inflamed with love for men, and for you in particular, that, no longer able to contain in itself the flames of its ardent charity, it must pour them out through you and be manifested to them, in order to enrich them with its precious treasures which I now reveal to you”.[111]
    120.Saint Margaret Mary’s account is powerful and deeply moving: “He revealed to me the wonders of his love and the inexplicable secrets of his Sacred Heart which he had hitherto kept hidden from me, until he opened it to me for the first time, in such a striking and sensible manner that he left me no room for doubt”.[112]In subsequent appearances, that consoling message was reiterated: “He revealed to me the ineffable wonders of his pure love and to what extremes it had led him to love mankind”.[113]
    121.This powerful realization of the love of Jesus Christ bequeathed to us by Saint Margaret Mary can spur us to greater union with him.We need not feel obliged to accept or appropriate every detail of her spiritual experience, in which, as often happens, God’s intervention combines with human elements related to the individual’s own desires, concerns and interior images.[114]Such experiences must always be interpreted in the light of the Gospel and the rich spiritual tradition of the Church, even as we acknowledge the good they accomplish in many of our brothers and sisters.In this way, we can recognize the gifts of the Holy Spirit present in those experiences of faith and love.More important than any individual detail is the core of the message handed on to us, which can be summed up in the words heard by Saint Margaret Mary: “This is the heart that so loved human beings that it has spared nothing, even to emptying and consuming itself in order to show them its love”.[115]
    122.This apparition, then, invites us to grow in our encounter with Christ, putting our trust completely in his love, until we attain full and definitive union with him.“It is necessary that the divine heart of Jesus in some way replace our own; that he alone live and work in us and for us; that his will… work absolutely and without any resistance on our part; and finally that its affections, thoughts and desires take the place of our own, especially his love, so that he is loved in himself and for our sakes.And so, this lovable heart being our all in all, we can say with Saint Paul that we no longer live our own lives, but it is he who lives within us”.[116]
    123.In the first message that Saint Margaret Mary received, this invitation was expressed in vivid, fervent and loving terms.“He asked for my heart, which I asked him to take, which he did and then placed myself in his own adorable heart, from which he made me see mine like a little atom consumed in the fiery furnace of his own”.[117]
    124.At another point, we see that the one who gives himself to us is the risen and glorified Christ, full of life and light.If indeed, at different times, he spoke of the suffering that he endured for our sake and of the ingratitude with which it is met, what we see here are not so much his blood and painful wounds, but rather the light and fire of the Lord of life.The wounds of the passion have not disappeared, but are now transfigured.Here we see the paschal mystery in all its splendour: “Once, when the Blessed Sacrament was exposed, Jesus appeared, resplendent in glory, with his five wounds that appeared as so many suns blazing forth from his sacred humanity, but above all from his adorable breast, which seemed a fiery furnace.Opening his robe, he revealed his most loving and lovable heart, which was the living source of those flames.Then it was that I discovered the ineffable wonders of his pure love, with which he loves men to the utmost, yet receives from them only ingratitude and indifference”.[118]
    SAINT CLAUDE DE LA COLOMBIÈRE
    125.When Saint Claude de La Colombière learned of the experiences of Saint Margaret Mary, he immediately undertook her defence and began to spread word of the apparitions.Saint Claude played a special role in developing the understanding of devotion to the Sacred Heart and its meaning in the light of the Gospel.
    126.Some of the language of Saint Margaret Mary, if poorly understood, might suggest undue trust in our personal sacrifices and offerings.Saint Claude insists that contemplation of the heart of Jesus, when authentic, does not provoke self-complacency or a vain confidence in our own experiences or human efforts, but rather an ineffable abandonment in Christ that fills our life with peace, security and decision.He expressed this absolute confidence most eloquently in a celebrated prayer:
    “My God, I am so convinced that you keep watch over those who hope in you, and that we can want for nothing when we look for all in you, that I am resolved in the future to live free from every care and to turn all my anxieties over to you…I shall never lose my hope.I shall keep it to the last moment of my life; and at that moment all the demons in hell will strive to tear it from me…Others may look for happiness from their wealth or their talents; others may rest on the innocence of their life, or the severity of their penance, or the amount of their alms, or the fervour of their prayers.As for me, Lord, all my confidence is confidence itself.This confidence has never deceived anyone…I am sure, therefore, that I shall be eternally happy, since I firmly hope to be, and because it is from you, O God, that I hope for it”.[119]
    127.In a note of January 1677, after mentioning the assurance he felt regarding his mission, Claude continued: “I have come to know that God wanted me to serve him by obtaining the fulfilment of his desires regarding the devotion that he suggested to a person to whom he communicates in confidence, and for whose sake he has desired to make use of my weakness.I have already used it to help several persons”.[120]
    128.It should be recognized that the spirituality of Blessed Claude de La Colombière resulted in a fine synthesis of the profound and moving spiritual experience of Saint Margaret Mary and the vivid and concrete form of contemplation found in the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius Loyola.At the beginning of the third week of the Exercises, Claude reflected:“Two things have moved me in a striking way.First, the attitude of Christ towards those who sought to arrest him.His heart is full of bitter sorrow; every violent passion is unleashed against him and all nature is in turmoil, yet amid all this confusion, all these temptations, his heart remains firmly directed to God.He does not hesitate to take the part that virtue and the highest virtue suggested to him.Second, the attitude of that same heart towards Judas who betrayed him, the apostles who cravenly abandoned him, the priests and the others responsible for the persecution he suffered; none of these things was able to arouse in him the slightest sentiment of hatred or indignation.I present myself anew to this heart free of anger, free of bitterness, filled instead with genuine compassion towards its enemies”.[121]
    SAINT CHARLES DE FOUCAULD AND SAINT THERESE OF THE CHILD JESUS
    129.Saint Charles de Foucauld and Saint Therese of the Child Jesus, without intending to, reshaped certain aspects of devotion to the heart of Christ and thus helped us understand it in an even more evangelical spirit.Let us now examine how this devotion found expression in their lives.In the following chapter, we will return to them, in order to illustrate the distinctively missionary dimension that each of them brought to the devotion.
    Iesus Caritas
    130.In Louye, Charles de Foucauld was accustomed to visit the Blessed Sacrament with his cousin, Marie de Bondy.One day she showed him an image of the Sacred Heart.[122]His cousin played a fundamental role in Charles’s conversion, as he himself acknowledged: “Since God has made you the first instrument of his mercies towards me, from you everything else began.Had you not converted me, brought me to Jesus and taught me little by little, letter by letter, all that is holy and good, where would I be today?”[123]What Marie awakened in him was an intense awareness of the love of Jesus.That was the essential thing, and centred on devotion to the heart of Jesus, in which he encountered unbounded mercy: “Let us trust in the infinite mercy of the one whose heart you led me to know”.[124]
    131.Later, his spiritual director, Father Henri Huvelin, helped Charles to deepen his understanding of the inestimable mystery of “this blessed heart of which you spoke to me so often”.[125]On 6 June 1889, Charles consecrated himself to the Sacred Heart, in which he found a love without limits.He told Christ, “You have bestowed on me so many benefits, that it would appear ingratitude towards your heart not to believe that it is disposed to bestow on me every good, however great, and that your love and your generosity are boundless”.[126]He was to become a hermit “under the name of the heart of Jesus”.[127]
    132.On 17 May 1906, the same day in which Brother Charles, alone, could no longer celebrate Mass, he wrote of his promise “to let the heart of Jesus live in me, so that it is no longer I who live, but the heart of Jesus that lives in me, as he lived in Nazareth”.[128]His friendship with Jesus, heart to heart, was anything but a privatized piety.It inspired the austere life he led in Nazareth, born of a desire to imitate Christ and to be conformed to him.His loving devotion to the heart of Jesus had a concrete effect on his style of life, and his Nazareth was nourished by his personal relationship with the heart of Christ.
    Saint Therese of the Child Jesus
    133.Like Saint Charles de Foucauld, Saint Therese of the Child Jesus was influenced by the great renewal of devotion that swept nineteenth-century France.Father Almire Pichon, the spiritual director of her family, was seen as a devoted apostle of the Sacred Heart.One of her sisters took as her name in religion “Sister Marie of the Sacred Heart”, and the monastery that Therese entered was dedicated to the Sacred Heart.Her devotion nonetheless took on certain distinctive traits with regard to the customary piety of that age.
    134.When Therese was fifteen, she could speak of Jesus as the one “whose heart beats in unison with my own”.[129]Two years later, speaking of the image of Christ’s heart crowned with thorns, she wrote in a letter: “You know that I myself do not see the Sacred Heart as everyone else.I think that the Heart of my Spouse is mine alone, just as mine is his alone, and I speak to him then in the solitude of this delightful heart to heart, while waiting to contemplate him one day face to face”.[130]
    135.In one of her poems, Therese voiced the meaning of her devotion, which had to do more with friendship and assurance than with trust in her sacrifices:
    “I need a heart burning with tenderness,
    Who will be my support forever,
    Who loves everything in me, even my weakness…
    And who never leaves me day or night…
    I must have a God who takes on my nature,
    And becomes my brother and is able to suffer! …
    Ah! I know well, all our righteousness
    Is worthless in your sight…
    So I, for my purgatory,
    Choose your burning love, O heart of my God!”[131]
    136.Perhaps the most important text for understanding the devotion of Therese to the heart of Christ is a letter that she wrote three months before her death to her friend Maurice Bellière.“When I see Mary Magdalene walking up before the many guests, washing with her tears the feet of her adored Master, whom she is touching for the first time, I feel that her hearthas understood the abysses of love and mercy of the heart of Jesus, and, sinner though she is, this heart of love was disposed not only to pardon her but to lavish on her the blessings of his divine intimacy, to lift her to the highest summits of contemplation.Ah! dear little Brother, ever since I have been given the grace to understand also the love of the heart of Jesus, I admit that it has expelled all fear from my heart.The remembrance of my faults humbles me, draws me never to depend on my strength which is only weakness, but this remembrance speaks to me of mercy and love even more”.[132]
    137.Those moralizers who want to keep a tight rein on God’s mercy and grace might claim that Therese could say this because she was a saint, but a simple person could not say the same.In that way, they excise from the spirituality of Saint Therese its wonderful originality, which reflects the heart of the Gospel.Sadly, in certain Christian circles we often encounter this attempt to fit the Holy Spirit into a certain preconceived pattern in a way that enables them to keep everything under their supervision.Yet this astute Doctor of the Church reduces them to silence and directly contradicts their reductive view in these clear words: “If I had committed all possible crimes, I would always have the same confidence; I feel that this whole multitude of offenses would be like a drop of water thrown into a fiery furnace”.[133]
    138.To Sister Marie, who praised her generous love of God, prepared even to embrace martyrdom, Therese responded at length in a letter that is one of the great milestones in the history of spirituality.This page ought to be read a thousand times over for its depth, clarity and beauty.There, Therese helps her sister, “Marie of the Sacred Heart”, to avoid focusing this devotion on suffering, since some had presented reparation primarily in terms of accumulating sacrifices and good works.Therese, for her part, presents confidence as the greatest and best offering, pleasing to the heart of Christ: “My desires of martyrdom are nothing; they are not what give me the unlimited confidence that I feel in my heart.They are, to tell the truth, the spiritual riches that render one unjust, when one rests in them with complacence and one believes that they are something great…what pleases [Jesus] is that he sees me loving my littleness and my poverty, the blind hope that I have in his mercy…That is my only treasure…If you want to feel joy, to have an attraction for suffering, it is your consolation that you are seeking…Understand that to be his victim of love, the weaker one is, without desires or virtues, the more suited one is for the workings of this consuming and transforming Love…Oh!How I would like to be able to make you understand what I feel! …It is confidence and nothing but confidence that must lead us to Love”.[134]
    139.In many of her writings, Therese speaks of her struggle with forms of spirituality overly focused on human effort, on individual merit, on offering sacrifices and carrying out certain acts in order to “win heaven”.For her, “merit does not consist in doing or in giving much, but rather in receiving”.[135]Let us read once again some of these deeply meaningful texts where she emphasizes this and presents it as a simple and rapid means of taking hold of the Lord “by his heart”.
    140.To her sister Léonie she writes, “I assure you that God is much better than you believe.He is content with a glance, a sigh of love…As for me, I find perfection very easy to practise because I have understood it is a matter of taking hold of Jesus by his heart…Look at a little child who has just annoyed his mother… If he comes to her, holding out his little arms, smiling and saying: ‘Kiss me, I will not do it again’, will his mother be able not to press him to her heart tenderly and forget his childish mischief?However, she knows her dear little one will do it again on the next occasion, but this does not matter; if he takes her again by her heart, he will not be punished”.[136]
    141.So too, in a letter to Father Adolphe Roulland she writes, “[M]y way is all confidence and love.I do not understand souls who fear a friend so tender.At times, when I am reading certain spiritual treatises in which perfection is shown through a thousand obstacles, surrounded by a crowd of illusions, my poor little mind quickly tires; I close the learned book that is breaking my head and drying up my heart, and I take up Holy Scripture.Then all seems luminous to me; a single word uncovers for my soul infinite horizons, perfection seems simple to me.I see that it is sufficient to recognize one’s nothingness and to abandon oneself like a child into God’s arms”.[137]
    142.In yet another letter, she relates this to the love shown by a parent: “I do not believe that the heart of [a] father could resist the filial confidence of his child, whose sincerity and love he knows.He realizes, however, that more than once his son will fall into the same faults, but he is prepared to pardon him always, if his son always takes him by his heart”.[138]
    RESONANCES WITHIN THE SOCIETY OF JESUS
    143.We have seen how Saint Claude de La Colombière combined the spiritual experience of Saint Margaret Mary with the aim of the Spiritual Exercises.I believe that the place of the Sacred Heart in the history of the Society of Jesus merits a few brief words.
    144.The spirituality of the Society of Jesus has always proposed an “interior knowledge of the Lord in order to love and follow him more fully”.[139]Saint Ignatius invites us in his Spiritual Exercises to place ourselves before the Gospel that tells us that, “[Christ’s] side was pierced by the lance and blood and water flowed forth”.[140]When retreatants contemplate the wounded side of the crucified Lord, Ignatius suggests that they enter into the heart of Christ.Thus we have a way to enlarge our own hearts, recommended by one who was a “master of affections”, to use the words of Saint Peter Faber in one of his letters to Saint Ignatius.[141]Father Juan Alfonso de Polanco echoed that same expression in his biography of Saint Ignatius: “He [Cardinal Gasparo Contarini] realized that in Father Ignatius he had encountered a master of affections”.[142]The colloquies that Saint Ignatius proposed are an essential part of this training of the heart, for in them we sense and savour with the heart a Gospel message and converse about it with the Lord.Saint Ignatius tells us that we can share our concerns with the Lord and seek his counsel.Anyone who follows the Exercises can readily see that they involve a dialogue, heart to heart.
    145.Saint Ignatius brings his contemplations to a crescendo at the foot of the cross and invites the retreatant to ask the crucified Lord with great affection, “as one friend to another, as a servant to his master”, what he or she must do for him.[143]The progression of the Exercises culminates in the “Contemplation to Attain Love”, which gives rise to thanksgiving and the offering of one’s “memory, understanding and will” to the heart which is the fount and origin of every good thing.[144]This interior contemplation is not the fruit of our understanding and effort, but is to be implored as a gift.
    146.This same experience inspired the great succession of Jesuit priests who spoke explicitly of the heart of Jesus: Saint Francis Borgia, Saint Peter Faber, Saint Alphonsus Rodriguez, Father Álvarez de Paz, Father Vincent Carafa, Father Kasper Drużbicki and countless others.In 1883, the Jesuits declared that, “the Society of Jesus accepts and receives with an overflowing spirit of joy and gratitude the most agreeable duty entrusted to it by our Lord Jesus Christ to practise, promote and propagate devotion to his divine heart”.[145]In September 1871, Father Pieter Jan Beckx consecrated the Society to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and, as a sign that it remains an outstanding element in the life of the Society, Father Pedro Arrupe renewed that consecration in 1972, with a conviction that he explained in these words: “I therefore wish to say to the Society something about which I feel I cannot remain silent.From my novitiate on, I have always been convinced that what we call devotion to the Sacred Heart contains a symbolic expression of what is most profound in Ignatian spirituality, and of an extraordinary efficacy –ultra quam speraverint– both for its own perfection and for its apostolic fruitfulness.I continue to have this same conviction…In this devotion I encounter one of the deepest sources of my interior life”.[146]
    147.When Saint John Paul II urged “all the members of the Society to be even more zealous in promoting this devotion, which corresponds more than ever to the expectations of our time”, he did so because he recognized the profound connection between devotion to the heart of Christ and Ignatian spirituality.For “the desire to ‘know the Lord intimately’ and to ‘have a conversation’ with him, heart to heart, is characteristic of the Ignatian spiritual and apostolic dynamism, thanks to the Spiritual Exercises, and this dynamism is wholly at the service of the love of the heart of God”.[147]
    A BROAD CURRENT OF THE INTERIOR LIFE
    148.Devotion to the heart of Christ reappears in the spiritual journey of many saints, all quite different from each other; in every one of them, the devotion takes on new hues.Saint Vincent de Paul, for example, used to say that what God desires is the heart: “God asks primarily for our heart – our heart – and that is what counts.How is it that a man who has no wealth will have greater merit than someone who has great possessions that he gives up?Because the one who has nothing does it with greater love; and that is what God especially wants…”[148]This means allowing one’s heart to be united to that of Christ.“What blessing should a Sister not hope for from God if she does her utmost to put her heart in the state of being united with the heart of our Lord!”[149]
    149.At times, we may be tempted to consider this mystery of love as an admirable relic from the past, a fine spirituality suited to other times.Yet we need to remind ourselves constantly that, as a saintly missionary once said, “this divine heart, which let itself be pierced by an enemy’s lance in order to pour forth through that sacred wound the sacraments by which the Church was formed, has never ceased to love”.[150]More recent saints, like Saint Pius of Pietrelcina, Saint Teresa of Calcutta and many others, have spoken with deep devotion of the heart of Christ.Here I would also mention the experiences of Saint Faustina Kowalska, which re-propose devotion to the heart of Christ by greatly emphasizing the glorious life of the risen Lord and his divine mercy.Inspired by her experiences and the spiritual legacy of Saint Józef Sebastian Pelczar (1842-1924),[151]Saint John Paul II intimately linked his reflections on divine mercy with devotion to the heart of Christ: “The Church seems in a singular way to profess the mercy of God and to venerate it when she directs herself to the heart of Christ.In fact, it is precisely this drawing close to Christ in the mystery of his heart which enables us to dwell on this point of the revelation of the merciful love of the Father, a revelation that constituted the central content of the messianic mission of the Son of Man”.[152]Saint John Paul also spoke of the Sacred Heart in very personal terms, acknowledging that, “it has spoken to me ever since my youth”.[153]
    150.The enduring relevance of devotion to the heart of Christ is especially evident in the work of evangelization and education carried out by the numerous male and female religious congregations whose origins were marked by this profoundly Christological devotion.Mentioning all of them by name would be an endless undertaking. Let us simply consider two examples taken at random: “The Founder [Saint Daniel Comboni] discovered in the mystery of the heart of Jesus the source of strength for his missionary commitment”.[154]“Caught up as we are in the desires of the heart of Jesus, we want people to grow in dignity, as human beings and as children of God.Our starting point is the Gospel, with all that it demands from us of love, forgiveness and justice, and of solidarity with those who are poor and rejected by the world”.[155]So too, the many shrines worldwide that are consecrated to the heart of Christ continue to be an impressive source of renewal in prayer and spiritual fervour.To all those who in any way are associated with these spaces of faith and charity I send my paternal blessing.
    THE DEVOTION OF CONSOLATION
    151.The wound in Christ’s side, the wellspring of living water, remains open in the risen body of the Saviour.The deep wound inflicted by the lance and the wounds of the crown of thorns that customarily appear in representations of the Sacred Heart are an inseparable part of this devotion, in which we contemplate the love of Christ who offered himself in sacrifice to the very end.The heart of the risen Lord preserves the signs of that complete self-surrender, which entailed intense sufferings for our sake.It is natural, then, that the faithful should wish to respond not only to this immense outpouring of love, but also to the suffering that the Lord chose to endure for the sake of that love.
    With Jesus on the cross
    152.It is fitting to recover one particular aspect of the spirituality that has accompanied devotion to the heart of Christ, namely, the interior desire to offer consolation to that heart.Here I will not discuss the practice of “reparation”, which I deem better suited to the social dimension of this devotion to be discussed in the next chapter.I would like instead to concentrate on the desire often felt in the hearts of the faithful who lovingly contemplate the mystery of Christ’s passion and experience it as a mystery which is not only recollected but becomes present to us by grace, or better, allows us to be mystically present at the moment of our redemption.If we truly love the Lord, how could we not desire to console him?
    153.Pope Pius XI wished to ground this particular devotion in the realization that the mystery of our redemption by Christ’s passion transcends, by God’s grace, all boundaries of time and space.On the cross, Jesus offered himself for all sins, including those yet to be committed, including our own sins.In the same way, the acts we now offer for his consolation, also transcending time, touch his wounded heart.“If, because of our sins too, as yet in the future but already foreseen, the soul of Jesus became sorrowful unto death, it cannot be doubted that at the same time he derived some solace from our reparation, likewise foreseen, at the moment when ‘there appeared to him an angel from heaven’ (Lk22:43), in order that his heart, oppressed with weariness and anguish, might find consolation.And so even now, in a wondrous yet true manner, we can and ought to console that Most Sacred Heart, which is continually wounded by the sins of thankless men”.[156]
    Reasons of the heart
    154.It might appear to some that this aspect of devotion to the Sacred Heart lacks a firm theological basis, yet the heart has its reasons.Here thesensus fideliumperceives something mysterious, beyond our human logic, and realizes that the passion of Christ is not merely an event of the past, but one in which we can share through faith.Meditation on Christ’s self-offering on the cross involves, for Christian piety, something much more than mere remembrance.This conviction has a solid theological grounding.[157]We can also add the recognition of our own sins, which Jesus took upon his bruised shoulders, and our inadequacy in the face of that timeless love, which is always infinitely greater.
    155.We may also question how we can pray to the Lord of life, risen from the dead and reigning in glory, while at the same time comforting him in the midst of his sufferings.Here we need to realize that his risen heart preserves its wound as a constant memory, and that the working of grace makes possible an experience that is not restricted to a single moment of the past.In pondering this, we find ourselves invited to take a mystical path that transcends our mental limitations yet remains firmly grounded in the word of God.Pope Pius XI makes this clear: “How can these acts of reparation offer solace now, when Christ is already reigning in the beatitude of heaven?To this question, we may answer in the words of Saint Augustine, which are very apposite here – ‘Give me the one who loves, and he will understand what I say’.Anyone possessed of great love for God, and who looks back to the past, can dwell in meditation on Christ, and see him labouring for man, sorrowing, suffering the greatest hardships, ‘for us men and for our salvation’, well-nigh worn out with sadness, with anguish, nay ‘bruised for our sins’ (Is53:5), and bringing us healing by those very bruises.The more the faithful ponder all these things the more clearly they see that the sins of mankind, whenever they were committed, were the reason why Christ was delivered up to death”.[158]
    156.Those words of Pius XI merit serious consideration.When Scripture states that believers who fail to live in accordance with their faith “are crucifying again the Son of God” (Heb6:6), or when Paul, offering his sufferings for the sake of others, says that, “in my flesh I am completing what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions” (Col1:24), or again, when Christ in his passion prays not only for his disciples at that time, but also for “those who will believe in me through their word” (Jn17:20), all these statements challenge our usual way of thinking.They show us that it is not possible to sever the past completely from the present, however difficult our minds find this to grasp.The Gospel, in all its richness, was written not only for our prayerful meditation, but also to enable us to experience its reality in our works of love and in our interior life.This is certainly the case with regard to the mystery of Christ’s death and resurrection.The temporal distinctions that our minds employ appear incapable of embracing the fullness of this experience of faith, which is the basis both of our union with Christ in his suffering and of the strength, consolation and friendship that we enjoy with him in his risen life.
    157.We see, then, the unity of the paschal mystery in these two inseparable and mutually enriching aspects.The one mystery, present by grace in both these dimensions, ensures that whenever we offer some suffering of our own to Christ for his consolation, that suffering is illuminated and transfigured in the paschal light of his love.We share in this mystery in our own life because Christ himself first chose to share in that life.He wished to experience first, as Head, what he would then experience in his Body, the Church: both our wounds and our consolations.When we live in God’s grace, this mutual sharing becomes for us a spiritual experience.In a word, the risen Lord, by the working of his grace, mysteriously unites us to his passion.The hearts of the faithful, who experience the joy of the resurrection, yet at the same time desire to share in the Lord’s passion, understand this.They desire to share in his sufferings by offering him the sufferings, the struggles, the disappointments and the fears that are part of their own lives.Nor do they experience this as isolated individuals, since their sufferings are also a participation in the suffering of the mystical Body of Christ, the holy pilgrim People of God, which shares in the passion of Christ in every time and place.The devotion of consolation, then, is in no way ahistorical or abstract; it becomes flesh and blood in the Church’s pilgrimage through history.
    Compunction
    158.The natural desire to console Christ, which begins with our sorrow in contemplating what he endured for us, grows with the honest acknowledgment of our bad habits, compulsions, attachments, weak faith, vain goals and, together with our actual sins, the failure of our hearts to respond to the Lord’s love and his plan for our lives.This experience proves purifying, for love needs the purification of tears that, in the end, leave us more desirous of God and less obsessed with ourselves.
    159.In this way, we see that the deeper our desire to console the Lord, the deeper will be our sincere sense of “compunction”.Compunction is “not a feeling of guilt that makes us discouraged or obsessed with our unworthiness, but a beneficial ‘piercing’ that purifies and heals the heart.Once we acknowledge our sin, our hearts can be opened to the working of the Holy Spirit, the source of living water that wells up within us and brings tears to our eyes…This does not mean weeping in self-pity, as we are so often tempted to do…To shed tears of compunction means seriously to repent of grieving God by our sins; recognizing that we always remain in God’s debt…Just as drops of water can wear down a stone, so tears can slowly soften hardened hearts.Here we see the miracle of sorrow, that ‘salutary sorrow’ which brings great peace…Compunction, then, is not our work but a grace and, as such, it must be sought in prayer.”[159]It means, “asking for sorrow in company with Christ in his sorrow, for anguish with Christ in his anguish, for tears and a deep sense of pain at the great pains that Christ endured for my sake”.[160]
    160.I ask, then, that no one make light of the fervent devotion of the holy faithful people of God, which in its popular piety seeks to console Christ.I also encourage everyone to consider whether there might be greater reasonableness, truth and wisdom in certain demonstrations of love that seek to console the Lord than in the cold, distant, calculated and nominal acts of love that are at times practised by those who claim to possess a more reflective, sophisticated and mature faith.
    Consoled ourselves in order to console others
    161.In contemplating the heart of Christ and his self-surrender even to death, we ourselves find great consolation.The grief that we feel in our hearts gives way to complete trust and, in the end, what endures is gratitude, tenderness, peace; what endures is Christ’s love reigning in our lives.Compunction, then, “is not a source of anxiety but of healing for the soul, since it acts as a balm on the wounds of sin, preparing us to receive the caress of the Lord”.[161]Our sufferings are joined to the suffering of Christ on the cross.If we believe that grace can bridge every distance, this means that Christ by his sufferings united himself to the sufferings of his disciples in every time and place.In this way, whenever we endure suffering, we can also experience the interior consolation of knowing that Christ suffers with us.In seeking to console him, we will find ourselves consoled.
    162.At some point, however, in our contemplation, we should likewise hear the urgent plea of the Lord: “Comfort, comfort my people!” (Is40:1).As Saint Paul tells us, God offers us consolation “so that we may be able to console those who are in any affliction, with the consolation by which we ourselves are consoled by God” (2 Cor1:4).
    163.This then challenges us to seek a deeper understanding of the communitarian, social and missionary dimension of all authentic devotion to the heart of Christ.For even as Christ’s heart leads us to the Father, it sends us forth to our brothers and sisters.In the fruits of service, fraternity and mission that the heart of Christ inspires in our lives, the will of the Father is fulfilled.In this way, we come full circle: “My Father is glorified by this, that you bear much fruit” (Jn15:8).
    CHAPTER FIVE
    LOVE FOR LOVE
    164.In the spiritual experiences of Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque, we encounter, along with an ardent declaration of love for Jesus Christ, a profoundly personal and challenging invitation to entrust our lives to the Lord.The knowledge that we are loved, and our complete confidence in that love, in no way lessens our desire to respond generously, despite our frailty and our many shortcomings.
    A LAMENT AND A REQUEST
    165.Beginning with his second great apparition to Saint Margaret Mary, Jesus spoke of the sadness he feels because his great love for humanity receives in exchange “nothing but ingratitude and indifference”, “coldness and contempt”.And this, he added, “is more grievous to me than all that I endured in my Passion”.[162]
    166.Jesus spoke of his thirst for love and revealed that his heart is not indifferent to the way we respond to that thirst.In his words, “I thirst, but with a thirst so ardent to be loved by men in the Most Blessed Sacrament, that this thirst consumes me; and I have not encountered anyone who makes an effort, according to my desire, to quench my thirst, giving back a return for my love”.[163]Jesus asks for love.Once the faithful heart realizes this, its spontaneous response is one of love, not a desire to multiply sacrifices or simply discharge a burdensome duty: “I received from my God excessive graces of his love, and I felt moved by the desire to respond to some of them and to respond with love for love”.[164]As my Predecessor Leo XIII pointed out, through the image of his Sacred Heart, the love of Christ “moves us to return love for love”.[165]
    EXTENDING CHRIST’S LOVE TO OUR BROTHERS AND SISTERS
    167.We need once more to take up the word of God and to realize, in doing so, that our best response to the love of Christ’s heart is to love our brothers and sisters.There is no greater way for us to return love for love.The Scriptures make this patently clear:
    “Just as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me” (Mt25:40).
    “For the whole law is summed up in a single commandment: ‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself’” (Gal5:14).
    “We know that we have passed from death to life because we love one another. Whoever does not love abides in death” (1Jn3:14).
    “Those who do not love a brother or sister whom they have seen, cannot love God whom they have not seen” (1 Jn4:20).
    168.Love for our brothers and sisters is not simply the fruit of our own efforts; it demands the transformation of our selfish hearts.This realization gave rise to the oft-repeated prayer: “Jesus, make our hearts more like your own”.Saint Paul, for his part, urged his hearers to pray not for the strength to do good works, but “to have the same mind among you that was in Christ Jesus” (Phil2:5).
    169.We need to remember that in the Roman Empire many of the poor, foreigners and others who lived on the fringes of society met with respect, affection and care from Christians.This explains why the apostate emperor Julian, in one of his letters, acknowledged that one reason why Christians were respected and imitated was the assistance they gave the poor and strangers, who were ordinarily ignored and treated with contempt.For Julian, it was intolerable that the Christians whom he despised, “in addition to feeding their own, also feed our poor and needy, who receive no help from us”.[166]The emperor thus insisted on the need to create charitable institutions to compete with those of the Christians and thus gain the respect of society: “There should be instituted in each city many accommodations so that the immigrants may enjoy our philanthropy… and make the Greeks accustomed to such works of generosity”.[167]Julian did not achieve his objective, no doubt because underlying those works there was nothing comparable to the Christian charity that respected the unique dignity of each person.
    170.By associating with the lowest ranks of society (cf.Mt25:31-46), “Jesusbrought the great novelty of recognizing the dignity of every person, especially those who were considered ‘unworthy’.This new principle in human history – which emphasizes that individuals are even more ‘worthy’ of our respect and love when they are weak, scorned, or suffering, even to the point of losing the human ‘figure’ – has changed the face of the world.It has given life to institutions that take care of those who find themselves in disadvantaged conditions, such as abandoned infants, orphans, the elderly who are left without assistance, the mentally ill, people with incurable diseases or severe deformities, and those living on the streets”.[168]
    171.In contemplating the pierced heart of the Lord, who “took our infirmities and bore our diseases” (Mt8:17), we too are inspired to be more attentive to the sufferings and needs of others, and confirmed in our efforts to share in his work of liberation as instruments for the spread of his love.[169]As we meditate on Christ’s self-offering for the sake of all, we are naturally led to ask why we too should not be ready to give our lives for others: “We know love by this, that he laid down his life for us – and that we ought to lay down our lives for one another” (1 Jn3:16).
    ECHOES IN THE HISTORY OF SPIRITUALITY
    172.This bond between devotion to the heart of Jesus and commitment to our brothers and sisters has been a constant in the history of Christian spirituality.Let us consider a few examples.
    Being a fountain from which others can drink
    173.Starting with Origen, various Fathers of the Church reflected on the words of John 7:38 – “out of his heart shall flow rivers of living water” – which refer to those who, having drunk of Christ, put their faith in him.Our union with Christ is meant not only to satisfy our own thirst, but also to make us springs of living water for others.Origen wrote that Christ fulfils his promise by making fountains of fresh water well up within us: “The human soul, made in the image of God, can itself contain and pour forth wells, fountains and rivers”.[170]
    174.Saint Ambrose recommended drinking deeply of Christ, “in order that the spring of water welling up to eternal life may overflow in you”.[171]Marius Victorinus was convinced that the Holy Spirit has given of himself in such abundance that, “whoever receives him becomes a heart that pours forth rivers of living water”.[172]Saint Augustine saw this stream flowing from the believer as benevolence.[173]Saint Thomas Aquinas thus maintained that whenever someone “hastens to share various gifts of grace received from God, living water flows from his heart”.[174]
    175.Although “the sacrifice offered on the cross in loving obedience renders most abundant and infinite satisfaction for the sins of mankind”,[175]the Church, born of the heart of Christ, prolongs and bestows, in every time and place, the fruits of that one redemptive passion, which lead men and women to direct union with the Lord.
    176.In the heart of the Church, the mediation of Mary, as our intercessor and mother, can only be understood as “a sharing in the one source, which is the mediation of Christ himself”,[176]the sole Redeemer.For this reason, “the Church does not hesitate to profess the subordinate role of Mary”.[177]Devotion to the heart of Mary in no way detracts from the sole worship due the heart of Christ, but rather increases it: “Mary’s function as mother of humanity in no way obscures or diminishes this unique mediation of Christ, but rather shows its power”.[178]Thanks to the abundant graces streaming from the open side of Christ, in different ways the Church, the Virgin Mary and all believers become themselves streams of living water.In this way, Christ displays his glory in and through our littleness.
    Fraternity and mysticism
    177.Saint Bernard, in exhorting us to union with the heart of Christ, draws upon the richness of this devotion to call for a conversion grounded in love.Bernard believed that our affections, enslaved by pleasures, may nonetheless be transformed and set free, not by blind obedience to a commandment but rather in response to the delectable love of Christ.Evil is overcome by good, conquered by the flowering of love: “Love the Lord your God with the full and deep affection of all your heart; love him with your mind wholly alert and intent; love him with all your strength, so much so that you would not even fear to die for love of him…Your affection for the Lord Jesus should be both sweet and intimate, to oppose the sweet enticements of the sensual life.Sweetness conquers sweetness, as one nail drives out another”.[179]
    178.Saint Francis de Sales was particularly taken by Jesus’ words, “Learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart” (Mt11:29).Even in the most simple and ordinary things, he said, we can “steal” the Lord’s heart.“Those who would serve him acceptably must give heed not only to lofty and important matters, but to things mean and little, since by both alike we may win his heart and love…I mean the acts of daily forbearance, the headache, the toothache, the heavy cold; the tiresome peculiarities of a husband or wife, the broken glass, the loss of a ring, a handkerchief, a glove; the sneer of a neighbour; the effort of going to bed early in order to rise early for prayer or communion, the little shyness some people feel in openly performing religious duties… Be sure that all these sufferings, small as they are, if accepted lovingly, are most pleasing to God’s goodness”.[180]Ultimately, however, our response to the love of the heart of Christ is manifested in love of our neighbour: “a love that is firm, constant, steady, unconcerned with trivial matters or people’s station in life, not subject to changes or animosity…Our Lord loves us unceasingly, puts up with so many of our defects and our flaws.Precisely because of this, we must do the same with our brothers and sisters, never tiring of putting up with them”.[181]
    179.Saint Charles de Foucauld sought to imitate Jesus by living and acting as he did, in a constant effort to do what Jesus would have done in his place.Only by being conformed to the sentiments of the heart of Christ could he fully achieve this goal.Here too we find the idea of “love for love”.In his words, “I desire sufferings in order to return love for love, to imitate him… to enter into his work, to offer myself with him, the nothingness that I am, as a sacrifice, as a victim, for the sanctification of men”.[182]The desire to bring the love of Jesus to others, his missionary outreach to the poorest and most forgotten of our world, led him to take as his emblem the words, “Iesus-Caritas”, with the symbol of the heart of Christ surmounted by a cross.[183]Nor was this a light decision: “With all my strength I try to show and prove to these poor lost brethren that our religion is all charity, all fraternity, and that its emblem is a heart”.[184]He wanted to settle with other brothers “in Morocco, in the name of the heart of Jesus”.[185]In this way, their evangelizing work could radiate outwards: “Charity has to radiate from our fraternities, as it radiates from the heart of Jesus”.[186]This desire gradually made him a “universal brother”.Allowing himself to be shaped by the heart of Christ, he sought to shelter the whole of suffering humanity in his fraternal heart: “Our heart, like that of Jesus, must embrace all men and women”.[187]“The love of the heart of Jesus for men and women, the love that he demonstrated in his passion, this is what we need to have for all human beings”.[188]
    180.Father Henri Huvelin, the spiritual director of Saint Charles de Foucauld, observed that, “when our Lord dwells in a heart, he gives it such sentiments, and this heart reaches out to the least of our brothers and sisters.Such was the heart of Saint Vincent de Paul…When our Lord lives in the soul of a priest, he makes him reach out to the poor”.[189]It is important to realize that the apostolic zeal of Saint Vincent, as Father Huvelin describes it, was also nurtured by devotion to the heart of Christ.Saint Vincent urged his confreres to “find in the heart of our Lord a word of consolation for the poor sick person”.[190]If that word is to be convincing, our own heart must first have been changed by the love and tenderness of the heart of Christ.Saint Vincent often reiterated this conviction in his homilies and counsels, and it became a notable feature of the Constitutions of his Congregation: “We should make a great effort to learn the following lesson, also taught by Christ: ‘Learn from me, for I am gentle and humble of heart’.We should remember that he himself said that by gentleness we inherit the earth.If we act on this, we will win people over so that they will turn to the Lord.That will not happen if we treat people harshly or sharply”.[191]
    REPARATION: BUILDING ON THE RUINS
    181.All that has been said thus far enables us to understand in the light of God’s word the proper meaning of the “reparation” to the heart of Christ that the Lord expects us, with the help of his grace, to “offer”.The question has been much discussed, but Saint John Paul II has given us a clear response that can guide Christians today towards a spirit of reparation more closely attuned to the Gospels.
    The social significance of reparation to the heart of Christ
    182.Saint John Paul explained that by entrusting ourselves together to the heart of Christ, “over the ruins accumulated by hatred and violence, the greatly desired civilization of love, the Kingdom of the heart of Christ, can be built”.This clearly requires that we “unite filial love for God and love of neighbour”, and indeed this is “the true reparation asked by the heart of the Saviour”.[192]In union with Christ, amid the ruins we have left in this world by our sins, we are called to build a new civilization of love.That is what it means to make reparation as the heart of Christ would have us do.Amid the devastation wrought by evil, the heart of Christ desires that we cooperate with him in restoring goodness and beauty to our world.
    183.All sin harms the Church and society; as a result, “every sin can undoubtedly be considered as a social sin” and this is especially true for those sins that “by their very matter constitute a direct attack on one’s neighbour”.[193]Saint John Paul II explained that the repetition of these sins against others often consolidates a “structure of sin” that has an effect on the development of peoples.[194]Frequently, this is part of a dominant mind-set that considers normal or reasonable what is merely selfishness and indifference.This then gives rise to social alienation: “A society is alienated if its forms of social organization, production and consumption make it more difficult to offer the gift of self and to establish solidarity between people”.[195]It is not only a moral norm that leads us to expose and resist these alienated social structures and to support efforts within society to restore and consolidate the common good.Rather, it is our “conversion of heart” that “imposes the obligation”[196]to repair these structures.It is our response to the love of the heart of Jesus, which teaches us to love in turn.
    184.Precisely because evangelical reparation possesses this vital social dimension, our acts of love, service and reconciliation, in order to be truly reparative, need to be inspired, motivated and empowered by Christ.Saint John Paul II also observed that “to build the civilization of love”,[197]our world today needs the heart of Christ.Christian reparation cannot be understood simply as a congeries of external works, however indispensable and at times admirable they may be.These need a “mystique”, a soul, a meaning that grants them strength, drive and tireless creativity.They need the life, the fire and the light that radiate from the heart of Christ.
    Mending wounded hearts
    185.Nor is a merely outward reparation sufficient, either for our world or for the heart of Christ.If each of us considers his or her own sins and their effect on others, we will realize that repairing the harm done to this world also calls for a desire to mend wounded hearts where the deepest harm was done, and the hurt is most painful.
    186.A spirit of reparation thus “leads us to hope that every wound can be healed, however deep it may be.Complete reparation may at times seem impossible, such as when goods or loved ones are definitively lost, or when certain situations have become irremediable.Yet the intention to make amends, and to do so in a concrete way, is essential for the process of reconciliation and a return to peace of heart”.[198]
    The beauty of asking forgiveness
    187.Good intentions are not enough.There has to be an inward desire that finds expression in our outward actions.“Reparation, if it is to be Christian, to touch the offended person’s heart and not be a simple act of commutative justice, presupposes two demanding things:acknowledging our guiltandasking forgiveness…It is from the honest acknowledgment of the wrong done to our brother or sister, and from the profound and sincere realization that love has been compromised, that the desire to make amends arises”.[199]
    188.We should never think that acknowledging our sins before others is somehow demeaning or offensive to our human dignity.On the contrary, it demands that we stop deceiving ourselves and acknowledge our past for what it is, marred by sin, especially in those cases when we caused hurt to our brothers and sisters.“Self-accusation is part of Christian wisdom…It is pleasing to the Lord, because the Lord accepts a contrite heart”.[200]
    189.Part of this spirit of reparation is the custom of asking forgiveness from our brothers and sisters, which demonstrates great nobility amid our human weakness.Asking forgiveness is a means of healing relationships, for it “re-opens dialogue and manifests the will to re-establish the bond of fraternal charity…It touches the heart of our brother or sister, brings consolation and inspires acceptance of the forgiveness requested. Even if the irreparable cannot be completely repaired, love can always be reborn, making the hurt bearable”.[201]
    190.A heart capable of compunction will grow in fraternity and solidarity.Otherwise, “we regress and grow old within”, whereas when “our prayer becomes simpler and deeper, grounded in adoration and wonder in the presence of God, we grow and mature.We become less attached to ourselves and more attached to Christ.Made poor in spirit, we draw closer to the poor, those who are dearest to God”.[202]This leads to a true spirit of reparation, for “those who feel compunction of heart increasingly feel themselves brothers and sisters to all the sinners of the world; renouncing their airs of superiority and harsh judgments, they are filled with a burning desire to show love and make reparation”.[203]The sense of solidarity born of compunction also enables reconciliation to take place.The person who is capable of compunction, “rather than feeling anger and scandal at the failings of our brothers and sisters, weeps for their sins.There occurs a sort of reversal, where the natural tendency to be indulgent with ourselves and inflexible with others is overturned and, by God’s grace, we become strict with ourselves and merciful towards others”.[204]
    REPARATION: AN EXTENSION OF THE HEART OF CHRIST
    191.There is another, complementary, approach to reparation, which allows us to set it in an even more direct relationship with the heart of Christ, without excluding the aspect of concrete commitment to our brothers and sisters.
    192.Elsewhere I have suggested that, “God has in some way sought to limit himself in such a way that many of the things we think of as evils, dangers or sources of suffering, are in reality part of the pains of childbirth which he uses to draw us into the act of cooperation with the Creator”.[205]This cooperation on our part can allow the power and the love of God to expand in our lives and in the world, whereas our refusal or indifference can prevent it.Several passages of the Bible express this metaphorically, as when the Lord cries out, “If only you would return to me, O Israel!” (cf.Jer4:1).Or when, confronted with rejection by his people, he says, “My heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender” (Hos11:8).
    193.Even though it is not possible to speak of new suffering on the part of the glorified Lord,“the paschal mystery of Christ… and all that Christ is – all that he did and suffered for all men – participates in the divine eternity, and so transcends all times while being made present in them all”.[206]We can say that he has allowed the expansive glory of his resurrection to be limited and the diffusion of his immense and burning love to be contained, in order to leave room for our free cooperation with his heart.Our rejection of his love erects a barrier to that gracious gift, whereas our trusting acceptance of it opens a space, a channel enabling it to pour into our hearts.Our rejection or indifference limits the effects of his power and the fruitfulness of his love in us.If he does not encounter openness and confidence in me, his love is deprived – because he himself has willed it – of its extension, unique and unrepeatable, in my life and in this world, where he calls me to make him present.Again, this does not stem from any weakness on his part but rather from his infinite freedom, his mysterious power and his perfect love for each of us.When God’s power is revealed in the weakness of our human freedom, “only faith can discern it”.[207]
    194.Saint Margaret Mary recounted that, in one of Christ’s appearances, he spoke of his heart’s passionate love for us, telling her that, “unable to contain the flames of his burning charity, he must spread them abroad”.[208]Since the Lord, who can do all things, desired in his divine freedom to require our cooperation, reparation can be understood as our removal of the obstacles we place before the expansion of Christ’s love in the world by our lack of trust, gratitude and self-sacrifice.
    An Oblation to Love
    195.To help us reflect more deeply on this mystery, we can turn once more to the luminous spirituality of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus.Therese was aware that in certain quarters an extreme form of reparation had developed, based on a willingness to offer oneself in sacrifice for others, and to become in some sense a “lightning rod” for the chastisements of divine justice.In her words, “I thought about the souls who offer themselves as victims of God’s justice in order to turn away the punishments reserved to sinners, drawing them upon themselves”.[209]However, as great and generous as such an offering might appear, she did not find it overly appealing: “I was far from feeling attracted to making it”.[210]So great an emphasis on God’s justice might eventually lead to the notion that Christ’s sacrifice was somehow incomplete or only partly efficacious, or that his mercy was not sufficiently powerful.
    196.With her great spiritual insight, Saint Therese discovered that we can offer ourselves in another way, without the need to satisfy divine justice but by allowing the Lord’s infinite love to spread freely: “O my God!Is your disdained love going to remain closed up within your heart?It seems to me that if you were to find souls offering themselves as victims of holocaust to your love, you would consume them rapidly; it seems to me, too, that you would be happy not to hold back the waves of infinite tenderness within you”.[211]
    197.While nothing need be added to the one redemptive sacrifice of Christ, it remains true that our free refusal can prevent the heart of Christ from spreading the “waves of his infinite tenderness” in this world.Again, this is because the Lord wishes to respect our freedom.More than divine justice, it was the fact that Christ’s love might be refused that troubled the heart of Saint Therese, because for her, God’s justice is understood only in the light of his love.As we have seen, she contemplated all God’s perfections through his mercy, and thus saw them transfigured and resplendent with love.In her words, “even his justice (and perhaps this even more so than the others) seems to me clothed in love”.[212]
    198.This was the origin of her Act of Oblation, not to God’s justice but to his merciful love.“I offer myself as a victim of holocaust to your merciful love, asking you to consume me incessantly, allowing the waves of infinite tenderness shut up within you to overflow into my soul, and that thus I may become a martyr of your love”.[213]It is important to realize that, for Therese, this was not only about allowing the heart of Christ to fill her heart, through her complete trust, with the beauty of his love, but also about letting that love, through her life, spread to others and thus transform the world.Again, in her words, “In the heart of the Church, my Mother, I shall be love… and thus my dream will be realized”.[214]The two aspects were inseparably united.
    199.The Lord accepted her oblation.We see that shortly thereafter she stated that she felt an intense love for others and maintained that it came from the heart of Christ, prolonged through her.So she told her sister Léonie: “I love you a thousand times more tenderly than ordinary sisters love each other, for I can love you with the heart of our celestial spouse”.[215]Later, to Maurice Bellière she wrote, “How I would like to make you understand the tenderness of the heart of Jesus, what he expects from you!”[216]
    Integrity and Harmony
    200.Sisters and brothers, I propose that we develop this means of reparation, which is, in a word, to offer the heart of Christ a new possibility of spreading in this world the flames of his ardent and gracious love.While it remains true that reparation entails the desire to “render compensation for the injuries inflicted on uncreated Love, whether by negligence or grave offense”,[217]the most fitting way to do this is for our love to offer the Lord a possibility of spreading, in amends for all those occasions when his love has been rejected or refused.This involves more than simply the “consolation” of Christ of which we spoke in the previous chapter; it finds expression in acts of fraternal love by which we heal the wounds of the Church and of the world.In this way, we offer the healing power of the heart of Christ new ways of expressing itself.
    201.The sacrifices and sufferings required by these acts of love of neighbour unite us to the passion of Christ.In this way, “by that mystic crucifixion of which the Apostle speaks, we shall receive the abundant fruits of its propitiation and expiation, for ourselves and for others”.[218]Christ alone saves us by his offering on the cross; he alone redeems us, for “there is one God; there is also one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all” (1Tim2:5-6).The reparation that we offer is a freely accepted participation in his redeeming love and his one sacrifice.We thus complete in our flesh “what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church” (Col1:24); and Christ himself prolongs through us the effects of his complete and loving self-oblation.
    202.Often, our sufferings have to do with our own wounded ego.The humility of the heart of Christ points us towards the path of abasement.God chose to come to us in condescension and littleness.The Old Testament had already shown us, with a variety of metaphors, a God who enters into the heart of history and allows himself to be rejected by his people.Christ’s love was shown amid the daily life of his people, begging, as it were, for a response, as if asking permission to manifest his glory.Yet “perhaps only once did the Lord Jesus refer to his own heart, in his own words.And he stresses this sole feature: ‘gentleness and lowliness’, as if to say that only in this way does he wish to win us to himself”.[219]When he said, “Learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart” (Mt11:29), he showed us that “to make himself known, he needs our littleness, our self-abasement”.[220]
    203.In what we have said, it is important to note several inseparable aspects.Acts of love of neighbour, with the renunciation, self-denial, suffering and effort that they entail, can only be such when they are nourished by Christ’s own love.He enables us to love as he loved, and in this way he loves and serves others through us.He humbles himself to show his love through our actions, yet even in our slightest works of mercy, his heart is glorified and displays all its grandeur.Once our hearts welcome the love of Christ in complete trust, and enable its fire to spread in our lives, we become capable of loving others as Christ did, in humility and closeness to all.In this way, Christ satisfies his thirst and gloriously spreads the flames of his ardent and gracious love in us and through us.How can we fail to see the magnificent harmony present in all this?
    204.Finally, in order to appreciate this devotion in all of its richness, it is necessary to add, in the light of what we have said about its Trinitarian dimension, that the reparation made by Christ in his humanity is offered to the Father through the working of the Holy Spirit in each of us.Consequently, the reparation we offer to the heart of Christ is directed ultimately to the Father, who is pleased to see us united to Christ whenever we offer ourselves through him, with him and in him.
    BRINGING LOVE TO THE WORLD
    205.The Christian message is attractive when experienced and expressed in its totality: not simply as a refuge for pious thoughts or an occasion for impressive ceremonies.What kind of worship would we give to Christ if we were to rest content with an individual relationship with him and show no interest in relieving the sufferings of others or helping them to live a better life?Would it please the heart that so loved us, if we were to bask in a private religious experience while ignoring its implications for the society in which we live?Let us be honest and accept the word of God in its fullness.On the other hand, our work as Christians for the betterment of society should not obscure its religious inspiration, for that, in the end, would be to seek less for our brothers and sisters than what God desires to give them.For this reason, we should conclude this chapter by recalling the missionary dimension of our love for the heart of Christ.
    206.Saint John Paul II spoke of the social dimension of devotion to the heart of Christ, but also about “reparation, which is apostolic cooperation in the salvation of the world”.[221]Consecration to the heart of Christ is thus “to be seen in relation to the Church’s missionary activity, since it responds to the desire of Jesus’ heart to spread throughout the world, through the members of his Body, his complete commitment to the Kingdom”.[222]As a result, “through the witness of Christians, love will be poured into human hearts, to build up the body of Christ which is the Church, and to build a society of justice, peace and fraternity”.[223]
    207.The flames of love of the Sacred Heart of Jesus also expand through the Church’s missionary outreach, which proclaims the message of God’s love revealed in Christ.Saint Vincent de Paul put this nicely when he invited his disciples to pray to the Lord for “this spirit, this heart that causes us to go everywhere, this heart of the Son of God, the heart of our Lord, that disposes us to go as he went…he sends us, like [the apostles], to bring fire everywhere”.[224]
    208.Saint Paul VI, addressing religious Congregations dedicated to the spread of devotion to the Sacred Heart, made the following observation.“There can be no doubt that pastoral commitment and missionary zeal will fan into flame, if priests and laity alike, in their desire to spread the glory of God, contemplate the example of eternal love that Christ has shown us, and direct their efforts to make all men and women sharers in the unfathomable riches of Christ”.[225]As we contemplate the Sacred Heart, mission becomes a matter of love.For the greatest danger in mission is that, amid all the things we say and do, we fail to bring about a joyful encounter with the love of Christ who embraces us and saves us.
    209.Mission, as a radiation of the love of the heart of Christ, requires missionaries who are themselves in love and who, enthralled by Christ, feel bound to share this love that has changed their lives.They are impatient when time is wasted discussing secondary questions or concentrating on truths and rules, because their greatest concern is to share what they have experienced.They want others to perceive the goodness and beauty of the Beloved through their efforts, however inadequate they may be.Is that not the case with any lover?We can take as an example the words with which Dante Alighieri sought to express this logic of love:
    “Io dico che, pensando al suo valore
    amor si dolce si mi si fa sentire,
    che s’io allora non perdessi ardire
    farei parlando innamorar la gente”.[226]
    210.To be able to speak of Christ, by witness or by word, in such a way that others seek to love him, is the greatest desire of every missionary of souls.This dynamism of love has nothing to do with proselytism; the words of a lover do not disturb others, they do not make demands or oblige, they only lead others to marvel at such love.With immense respect for their freedom and dignity, the lover simply waits for them to inquire about the love that has filled his or her life with such great joy.
    211.Christ asks you never to be ashamed to tell others, with all due discretion and respect, about your friendship with him.He asks that you dare to tell others how good and beautiful it is that you found him.“Everyone who acknowledges me before others, I also will acknowledge before my Father in heaven” (Mt10:32).For a heart that loves, this is not a duty but an irrepressible need: “Woe to me if I do not proclaim the Gospel!” (1 Cor9:16).“Within me there is something like a burning fire shut up in my bones; I am weary with holding it in, and I cannot” (Jer20:9).
    In communion of service
    212.We should not think of this mission of sharing Christ as something only between Jesus and me.Mission is experienced in fellowship with our communities and with the whole Church.If we turn aside from the community, we will be turning aside from Jesus.If we turn our back on the community, our friendship with Jesus will grow cold.This is a fact, and we must never forget it.Love for the brothers and sisters of our communities – religious, parochial, diocesan and others – is a kind of fuel that feeds our friendship with Jesus.Our acts of love for our brothers and sisters in community may well be the best and, at times, the only way that we can witness to others our love for Jesus Christ.He himself said, “By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another” (Jn13:35).
    213.This love then becomes service within the community.I never tire of repeating that Jesus told us this in the clearest terms possible: “Just as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me” (Mt25:40).He now asks you to meet him there, in every one of our brothers and sisters, and especially in the poor, the despised and the abandoned members of society.What a beautiful encounter that can be!
    214.If we are concerned with helping others, this in no way means that we are turning away from Jesus.Rather, we are encountering him in another way.Whenever we try to help and care for another person, Jesus is at our side.We should never forget that, when he sent his disciples on mission, “the Lord worked with them” (Mk16:20).He is always there, always at work, sharing our efforts to do good.In a mysterious way, his love becomes present through our service.He speaks to the world in a language that at times has no need of words.
    215.Jesus is calling you and sending you forth to spread goodness in our world.His call is one of service, a summons to do good, perhaps as a physician, a mother, a teacher or a priest.Wherever you may be, you can hear his call and realize that he is sending you forth to carry out that mission.He himself told us, “I am sending you out” (Lk10:3).It is part of our being friends with him.For this friendship to mature, however, it is up to you to let him send you forth on a mission in this world, and to carry it out confidently, generously, freely and fearlessly.If you stay trapped in your own comfort zone, you will never really find security; doubts and fears, sorrow and anxiety will always loom on the horizon.Those who do not carry out their mission on this earth will find not happiness, but disappointment.Never forget that Jesus is at your side at every step of the way.He will not cast you into the abyss, or leave you to your own devices.He will always be there to encourage and accompany you.He has promised, and he will do it: “For I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Mt28:20).
    216.In your own way, you too must be a missionary, like the apostles and the first disciples of Jesus, who went forth to proclaim the love of God, to tell others that Christ is alive and worth knowing.Saint Therese experienced this as an essential part of her oblation to merciful Love: “I wanted to give my Beloved to drink and I felt myself consumed with a thirst for souls”.[227]That is your mission as well.Each of us must carry it out in his or her own way; you will come to see how you can be a missionary.Jesus deserves no less.If you accept the challenge, he will enlighten you, accompany you and strengthen you, and you will have an enriching experience that will bring you much happiness.It is not important whether you see immediate results; leave that to the Lord who works in the secret of our hearts.Keep experiencing the joy born of our efforts to share the love of Christ with others.
    CONCLUSION
    217.The present document can help us see that the teaching of the social EncyclicalsLaudato Si’andFratelli Tuttiis not unrelated to our encounter with the love of Jesus Christ.For it is by drinking of that same love that we become capable of forging bonds of fraternity, of recognizing the dignity of each human being, and of working together to care for our common home.
    218.In a world where everything is bought and sold, people’s sense of their worth appears increasingly to depend on what they can accumulate with the power of money.We are constantly being pushed to keep buying, consuming and distracting ourselves, held captive to a demeaning system that prevents us from looking beyond our immediate and petty needs.The love of Christ has no place in this perverse mechanism, yet only that love can set us free from a mad pursuit that no longer has room for a gratuitous love.Christ’s love can give a heart to our world and revive love wherever we think that the ability to love has been definitively lost.
    219.The Church also needs that love, lest the love of Christ be replaced with outdated structures and concerns, excessive attachment to our own ideas and opinions, and fanaticism in any number of forms, which end up taking the place of the gratuitous love of God that liberates, enlivens, brings joy to the heart and builds communities.The wounded side of Christ continues to pour forth that stream which is never exhausted, never passes away, but offers itself time and time again to all those who wish to love as he did.For his love alone can bring about a new humanity.
    220.I ask our Lord Jesus Christ to grant that his Sacred Heart may continue to pour forth the streams of living water that can heal the hurt we have caused, strengthen our ability to love and serve others, and inspire us to journey together towards a just, solidary and fraternal world.Until that day when we will rejoice in celebrating together the banquet of the heavenly kingdom in the presence of the risen Lord, who harmonizes all our differences in the light that radiates perpetually from his open heart.May he be blessed forever.
    Given in Rome, at Saint Peter’s, on 24 October of the year 2024, the twelfth of my Pontificate.
    FRANCIS
    ______________________________
    [1]Many of the reflections in this first chapter were inspired by the unpublished writings of the late Father Diego Fares, S.J.May the Lord grant him eternal rest.
    [2]Cf. HOMER,Iliad, XXI, 441.
    [3]Cf.Iliad, X, 244.
    [4]Cf. PLATO,Timaeus, 65 c-d; 70.
    [5]Homily at Morning Mass in Domus Sanctae Marthae, 14 October 2016:L’Osservatore Romano, 15 October 2016, p. 8.
    [6]SAINT JOHN PAUL II,Angelus, 2 July 2000:L’Osservatore Romano, 3-4 July 2000, p. 4.
    [7]ID.,Catechesis, 8 June 1994:L’Osservatore Romano, 9 June 1994, p. 5.
    [8]The Demons(1873).
    [9]ROMANO GUARDINI,Religiöse Gestalten in Dostojewskijs Werk, Mainz/Paderborn, 1989, pp. 236ff.
    [10]KARL RAHNER,“Some Theses for a Theology of Devotion to the Sacred Heart”, inTheological Investigations, vol. III, Baltimore-London, 1967, p. 332.
    [11]Ibid., p. 333.
    [12]BYUNG-CHUL HAN,Heideggers Herz.Zum Begriff der Stimmung bei Martin Heidegger, München, 1996, p. 39.
    [13]Ibid., p. 60; cf. p. 176.
    [14]Cf. ID.,Agonie des Eros, Berlin, 2012.
    [15]Cf. MARTIN HEIDEGGER,Erläuterungen zu Hölderlins Dichtung, Frankfürt a. M., 1981, p. 120.
    [16]Cf. MICHEL DE CERTEAU,L’espace du désir ou le «fondement» des Exercises Spirituels:Christus77 (1973), pp. 118-128.
    [17]Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, VII, 6.
    [18]ID.,Proemium in I Sent.,q. 3.
    [19]SAINT JOHN HENRY NEWMAN,Meditations and Devotions, London, 1912, Part III [XVI], par. 3, pp. 573-574.
    [20]Pastoral ConstitutionGaudium et Spes, 82.
    [21]Ibid., 10.
    [22]Ibid., 14.
    [23]Cf.DICASTERY FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, DeclarationDignitas Infinita(2 April 2024), 8.Cf.L’Osservatore Romano, 8 April 2024.
    [24]Pastoral ConstitutionGaudium et Spes, 26.
    [25]SAINT JOHN PAUL II,Angelus, 28 June 1998:L’Osservatore Romano, 30 June-1 July 1998, p. 7.
    [26]Encyclical LetterLaudato Si’(24 May 2015),83: AAS 107 (2015), 880.
    [27]Homily at Morning Mass in Domus Sanctae Marthae, 7 June 2013:L’Osservatore Romano, 8 June 2013, p. 8.
    [28]PIUS XII, Encyclical LetterHaurietis Aquas(15 May 1956), I: AAS 48 (1956), 316.
    [29]PIUS VI, ConstitutionAuctorem Fidei(28 August 1794), 63: DH 2663.
    [30]LEO XIII,Encyclical LetterAnnum Sacrum(25 May 1899): ASS 31 (1898-1899), 649.
    [31]Ibid:“Inest in Sacro Corde symbolum et expressa imago infinitæ Iesu Christi caritatis”.
    [32]Angelus, 9 June 2013:L’Osservatore Romano, 10-11 June 2013, p. 8.
    [33]We canthus understand why the Church has forbidden placing on the altar representations of the heart of Jesus or Mary alone (cf. Response of the Congregation of Sacred Rites to the Reverend Charles Lecoq, P.S.S., 5 April 1879:Decreta Authentica Congregationis Sacrorum Rituum ex Actis ejusdem Collecta, vol. III, 107-108, n. 3492).Outside the liturgy, “for private devotion” (ibid.), the symbolism of a heart can be used as a teaching aid, an aesthetic figure or an emblem that invites one to meditate on the love of Christ, but this risks taking the heart as an object of adoration or spiritual dialogue apart from the Person of Christ.On 31 March 1887, the Congregation gave another, similar response (ibid., 187, n. 3673).
    [34]ECUMENICAL COUNCIL OF TRENT, Session XXV, DecreeMandat Sancta Synodus(3 December 1563): DH 1823.
    [35]FIFTH GENERAL CONFERENCE OF THE LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN BISHOPS,Aparecida Document(29 June 2007), n. 259.
    [36]Encyclical LetterHaurietis Aquas(15 May 1956), I: AAS 48 (1956), 323-324.
    [37]Ep. 261, 3: PG 32, 972.
    [38]In Io. homil.63, 2: PG 59, 350.
    [39]De fide ad Gratianum, II, 7, 56: PL 16, 594 (ed. 1880).
    [40]Enarr. in Ps. 87, 3: PL 37, 1111.
    [41]Cf.De fide orth. 3, 6, 20: PG 94, 1006, 1081.
    [42]OLEGARIO GONZÁLEZ DE CARDEDAL,La entraña del cristianismo, Salamanca, 2010, 70-71.
    [43]Angelus, 1 June 2008:L’Osservatore Romano, 2-3 June 2008, p. 1.
    [44]PIUS XII, Encyclical LetterHaurietis Aquas(15 May 1956), II: AAS 48 (1956), 327-328.
    [45]Ibid.: AAS 48 (1956), 343-344.
    [46]BENEDICT XVI,Angelus, 1 June 2008:L’Osservatore Romano, 2-3 June 2008, p. 1.
    [47]VIGILIUS,ConstitutionInter Innumeras Sollicitudines(14 May 553):DH 420.
    [48]ECUMENICAL COUNCIL OF EPHESUS,Anathemas of Cyril of Alexandria, 8: DH 259.
    [49]SECOND ECUMENICAL COUNCIL OF CONSTANTINOPLE, Session VIII (2 June 553), Canon 9: DH 431.
    [50]SAINT JOHN OF THE CROSS,Spiritual Canticle, red.A, Stanza 22, 4.
    [51]Ibid., Stanza 12, 8.
    [52]Ibid., Stanza 12, 1.
    [53]“There is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist” (1 Cor8:6).“To our God and Father be glory forever and ever. Amen”(Phil4:20).“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and the God of all consolation”(2 Cor1:3).
    [54]Apostolic LetterTertio Millennio Adveniente(10 November 1994), 49: AAS 87 (1995), 35.
    [55]Ad Rom., 7: PG 5, 694.
    [56]“That the world may know that I love the Father” (Jn14:31); “The Father and I are one” (Jn10:30); “I am in the Father and the Father is in me” (Jn14:10).
    [57]“Iam going to the Father” (pros ton Patéra:Jn16:28).“I am coming to you” (pros se:Jn17:11).
    [58]“eis ton kolpon tou Patrós”.
    [59]Adv. Haer., III, 18, 1: PG 7, 932.
    [60]In Joh.II, 2: PG 14, 110.
    [61]Angelus, 23 June 2002:L’Osservatore Romano, 24-25 June 2002, p. 1.
    [62]SAINT JOHN PAUL II,Message on the Hundredth Anniversary of the Consecration of the Human Race to the Divine Heart of Jesus, Warsaw, 11 June 1999, Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, 3:L’Osservatore Romano, 12 June 1999, p. 5.
    [63]ID.,Angelus, 8 June 1986:L’Osservatore Romano, 9-10 June 1986, p. 5
    [64]Homily, Visit to the Gemelli Hospital and to the Faculty of Medicine of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, 27 June 2014:L’Osservatore Romano, 29 June 2014, p. 7.
    [65]Eph1:5, 7; 2:18; 3:12.
    [66]Eph2:5, 6; 4:15.
    [67]Eph1:3, 4, 6, 7, 11, 13, 15; 2:10, 13, 21, 22; 3:6, 11, 21.
    [68]Message on the Hundredth Anniversary of the Consecration of the Human Race to the Divine Heart of Jesus, Warsaw, 11 June 1999, Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, 2:L’Osservatore Romano, 12 June 1999, p. 5.
    [69]“Since there is in the Sacred Heart a symbol and the express image of the infinite love of Jesus Christ that moves us to love one another, it is fit and proper that we should consecrate ourselves to his most Sacred Heart – an act that is nothing else than an offering and a binding of oneself to Jesus Christ, for whatever honour, veneration and love is given to this divine Heart is really and truly given to Christ himself…And now, today, behold another blessed and heavenly token is offered to our sight – the most Sacred Heart of Jesus, with a cross rising from it and shining forth with dazzling splendour amidst flames of love.In that Sacred Heart all our hopes should be placed, and from it the salvation of men is to be confidently besought” (Encyclical LetterAnnum Sacrum[25 May 1899]: ASS 31 [1898-1899], 649, 651).
    [70]“For is not the sum of all religion and therefore the pattern of more perfect life, contained in that most auspicious sign and in the form of piety that follows from it inasmuch as it more readily leads the minds of men to an intimate knowledge of Christ our Lord, and more efficaciously moves their hearts to love him more vehemently and to imitate him more closely?”(Encyclical LetterMiserentissimus Redemptor[8 May 1928]: AAS 20 [1928], 167).
    [71]“For it is perfectly clear that this devotion, if we examine its proper nature, is a most excellent act of religion, inasmuch as it demands the full and absolute determination of surrendering and consecrating oneself to the love of the divine Redeemer whose wounded heart is the living sign and symbol of that love…In it, we can contemplate not only the symbol, but also, as it were, the synthesis of the whole mystery of our redemption…Christ expressly and repeatedly pointed to his heart as the symbol by which men are drawn to recognize and acknowledge his love, and at the same time constituted it as the sign and pledge of his mercy and his grace for the needs of the Church in our time” (Encyclical LetterHaurietis Aquas[15 May 1956], Proemium, III, IV: AAS 48 [1956], 311, 336, 340).
    [72]Catechesis, 8 June 1994, 2:L’Osservatore Romano, 9 June 1994, p. 5.
    [73]Angelus, 1 June 2008:L’Osservatore Romano, 2-3 June 2008, p. 1.
    [74]Encyclical LetterHaurietis Aquas(15 May 1956), IV: AAS 48 (1956), 344.
    [75]Cf.ibid.: AAS 48 (1956), 336.
    [76]“The value of private revelations is essentially different from that of the one public revelation: the latter demands faith…A private revelation… is a help which is proffered, but its use is not obligatory” (BENEDICT XVI, Apostolic ExhortationVerbum Domini[30 September 2010], 14: AAS 102 [2010]), 696).
    [77]Encyclical LetterHaurietis Aquas(15 May 1956), IV: AAS 48 (1956), 340.
    [78]Ibid.: AAS 48 (1956), 344.
    [79]Ibid.
    [80]Apostolic ExhortationC’est la Confiance(15 October 2023), 20:L’Osservatore Romano, 16 October 2023.
    [81]SAINT THERESE OF THE CHILD JESUS,Autobiography, Ms A, 83v°.
    [82]SAINT MARIA FAUSTINA KOWALSKA,Diary, 47 (22 February 1931),Marian Press, Stockbridge, 2011, p. 46.
    [83]Mishnah Sukkah, IV, 5, 9.
    [84]Letter to the Superior General of the Society of Jesus, Paray-le-Monial (France), 5 October 1986:L’Osservatore Romano, 7 October 1986, p. IX.
    [85]Acta Martyrum Lugdunensium, in EUSEBIUS OF CAESARIA,Historia Ecclesiastica, V, 1: PG 20, 418.
    [86]RUFINUS, V, 1, 22, in GCS,EusebiusII, 1, p. 411, 13ff.
    [87]SAINT JUSTIN,Dial.135,3: PG 6, 787
    [88]NOVATIAN,De Trinitate, 29: PL 3, 994; cf. SAINT GREGORY OF ELVIRA,Tractatus Origenis de libris Sanctarum Scripturarum, XX, 12: CSSL 69, 144.
    [89]Expl. Ps.1:33: PL 14, 983-984.
    [90]Cf.Tract. in Ioannem61, 6: PL 35, 1801.
    [91]Ep. ad Rufinum, 3, 4.3: PL 22, 334.
    [92]Sermones in Cant.61, 4: PL 183, 1072.
    [93]Expositio altera super Cantica Canticorum, c. 1: PL 180, 487.
    [94]WILLIAM OF SAINT-THIERRY,De natura et dignitate amoris, 1: PL 184, 379.
    [95]ID.,Meditivae Orationes, 8, 6: PL 180, 230.
    [96]SAINT BONAVENTURE,Lignum Vitae.De mysterio passionis, 30.
    [97]Ibid., 47.
    [98]Legatus divinae pietatis, IV, 4, 4: SCh 255, 66.
    [99]LÉON DEHON,Directoire spirituel des prêtres su Sacré Cœur de Jésus, Turnhout, 1936, II, ch. VII, n. 141.
    [100]Dialogue on Divine Providence, LXXV: FIORILLI M.-CARAMELLA S., eds., Bari, 1928, 144.
    [101]Cf., for example, ANGELUS WALZ,De veneratione divini cordis Iesu in Ordine Praedicatorum, Pontificium Institutum Angelicum, Rome, 1937.
    [102]RAFAEL GARCÍA HERREROS, Vida de San Juan Eudes, Bogotá, 1943, 42.
    [103]SAINT FRANCIS DE SALES,Letter to Jane Frances de Chantal, 24 April 1610.
    [104]Sermon forthe Second Sunday of Lent, 20 February 1622.
    [105]Letter to Jane Frances de Chantal, Solemnity of the Ascension, 1612.
    [106]Letter to Marie Aimée de Blonay, 18 February 1618.
    [107]Letter to Jane Frances de Chantal, late November 1609.
    [108]Letter to Jane Frances de Chantal, ca. 25 February 1610.
    [109]Entretien XIV, on religious simplicity and prudence.
    [110]Letter to Jane Frances de Chantal,10 June 1611.
    [111]SAINT MARGARET MARY ALACOQUE,Autobiography, n. 53.
    [112]Ibid.
    [113]Ibid., n. 55.
    [114]Cf. DICASTERY FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH,Norms for Proceeding in the Discernment of Alleged Supernatural Phenomena, 17 May 2024, I, A, 12.
    [115]SAINT MARGARET MARY ALACOQUE,Autobiography, n. 92.
    [116]Letter to Sœur de la Barge, 22 October 1689.
    [117]Autobiography, n. 53.
    [118]Ibid., n. 55.
    [119]Sermon on Trust in God, inŒuvres du R.P de La Colombière, t. 5, Perisse, Lyon, 1854, p. 100.
    [120]Spiritual Exercises in London, 1-8 February 1677, inŒuvres du R.P de La Colombière, t. 7, Seguin, Avignon, 1832, p. 93.
    [121]Spiritual Exercises in Lyon, October-November 1674, ibid., p. 45.
    [122]SAINT CHARLES DE FOUCAULD,Letter to Madame de Bondy, 27 April 1897.
    [123]Letter to Madame de Bondy, 28 April 1901.Cf.Letter to Madame de Bondy, 5 April 1909: “Through you I came to know the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, the benedictions and the Sacred Heart”.
    [124]Letter to Madame de Bondy, 7 April 1890.
    [125]Letter to l’Abbé Huvelin, 27 June 1892.
    [126]SAINT CHARLES DE FOUCAULD,Méditations sur l’Ancien Testament (1896-1897), XXX, 1-21.
    [127]ID.,Letter to l’Abbé Huvelin, 16 May 1900.
    [128]ID.,Diary, 17 May 1906.
    [129]Letter 67 to Mme. Guérin, 18 November 1888.
    [130]Letter 122 to Céline, 14 October 1890.
    [131]Poem 23, “To the Sacred Heart of Jesus”, June or October 1895.
    [132]Letter 247 to l’Abbé Maurice Bellière, 21 June 1897.
    [133]Last Conversations. Yellow Notebook, 11 July 1897, 6.
    [134]Letter 197 to Sister Marie of the Sacred Heart, 17 September 1896.This does not mean that Therese did not offer sacrifices, sorrows and troubles as a way of associating herself with the suffering of Christ, but that, in the end, she was concerned not to give these offerings an importance they did not have.
    [135]Letter 142 to Céline, 6 July 1893.
    [136]Letter 191 to Léonie, 12 July 1896.
    [137]Letter 226 to Father Roulland, 9 May 1897.
    [138]Letter 258 to l’Abbé Maurice Bellière, 18 July 1897.
    [139]Cf. SAINT IGNATIUS LOYOLA,Spiritual Exercises, 104.
    [140]Ibid., 297.
    [141]Cf.Letter to Ignatius Loyola, 23 January 1541.
    [142]De Vita P. Ignatii et Societatis Iesu initiis, ch. 8.96.
    [143]Spiritual Exercises, 54.
    [144]Ibid., 230ff.
    [145]THIRTY-THIRD GENERAL CONGREGATION OF THE SOCIETY OF JESUS, Decree 46, 1:Institutum Societatis Iesu, 2, Florence, 1893, 511.
    [146]In Him Alone is Our Hope. Texts on the Heart of Christ, St. Louis, 1984.
    [147]Letter to the Superior General of the Society of Jesus, Paray-le-Monial, 5 October 1986:L’Osservatore Romano, 6 October 1986, p. 7.
    [148]Conference to Priests, “Poverty”, 13 August 1655.
    [149]Conference to the Daughters of Charity, “Mortification, Correspondence, Meals and Journeys (Common Rules,art. 24-27), 9 December 1657.
    [150]SAINT DANIELE COMBONI,Gli scritti,Bologna, 1991, 998 (n. 3324).
    [151]Homily at the Mass of Canonization, 18 May 2003:L’Osservatore Romano, 19-20 May 2003, p. 6.
    [152]SAINT JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical LetterDives in Misericordia(30 November 1980), 1: AAS 72 (1980), 1219.
    [153]ID.,Catechesis, 20 June 1979:L’Osservatore Romano, 22 June 1979, 1.
    [154]COMBONIAN MISSIONARIES OF THE HEART OF JESUS,Rule of Life, 3.
    [155]SOCIETY OF THE SACRED HEART,Constitutions of 1982, 7.
    [156]Encyclical LetterMiserentissimus Redemptor(8 May 1928): AAS 20 (1928), 174.
    [157]The believer’s act of faith has as its object not simply the doctrine proposed, but also union with Christ himself in the reality of his divine life (cf. SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS,Summa Theologiae, II-II, q. 1, a. 2, ad 2; q. 4, a. 1).
    [158]PIUS XI, Encyclical LetterMiserentissimus Redemptor(8 May 1928): AAS 20 (1928), 174.
    [159]Homily at the Chrism Mass, 28 March 2024:L’Osservatore Romano, 28 March 2024, p. 2.
    [160]SAINT IGNATIUS LOYOLA,Spiritual Exercises, 203.
    [161]Homily at the Chrism Mass, 28 March 2024:L’Osservatore Romano, 28 March 2024, p. 2.
    [162]SAINT MARGARET MARY ALACOQUE,Autobiography, n. 55.
    [163]Letter 133 to Father Croiset.
    [164]Autobiography, n. 92.
    [165]Encyclical LetterAnnum Sacrum(25 May 1899): ASS 31 (1898-1899), 649.
    [166]IULIANUS IMP.,Ep. XLIX ad Arsacium Pontificem Galatiae, Mainz, 1828, 90-91.
    [167]Ibid.
    [168]DICASTERY FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, DeclarationDignitas Infinita(2 April 2024), 19:L’Osservatore Romano, 8 April 2024.
    [169]Cf. BENEDICT XVI,Letter to the Superior General of the Society of Jesus on the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Encyclical“Haurietis Aquas”(15 May 2006): AAS 98 (2006), 461.
    [170]In Num. homil.12, 1: PG 12, 657.
    [171]Epist. 29, 24: PL 16, 1060.
    [172]Adv.Arium1, 8: PL 8, 1044.
    [173]Tract. in Joannem32, 4: PL 35, 1643.
    [174]Expos. in Ev. S. Joannis, cap. VII, lectio 5.
    [175]PIUS XII, Encyclical LetterHaurietis Aquas, 15 May 1956: AAS 48 (1956), 321.
    [176]SAINT JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical LetterRedemptoris Mater(25 March 1987), 38: AAS 79 (1987), 411.
    [177]SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic ConstitutionLumen Gentium, 62.
    [178]Ibid., 60.
    [179]Sermones super Cant.,XX, 4: PL 183, 869.
    [180]Introduction to the Devout Life, Part III, xxxv.
    [181]Sermon for the XVII Sunday after Pentecost.
    [182]Écrits spirituels, Paris 1947, 67.
    [183]After 19 March 1902, all his letters begin with the wordsJesus Caritasseparated by a heart surmounted by the cross.
    [184]Letter to l’Abbé Huvelin, 15 July 1904.
    [185]Letter to Dom Martin, 25 January 1903.
    [186]Cited in RENÉVOILLAUME, Les fraternités du Père de Foucauld, Paris, 1946, 173.
    [187]Méditations des saints Évangiles sur les passages relatifs à quinze vertus, Nazareth, 1897-1898,Charité(Mt13:3), 60.
    [188]Ibid.,Charité(Mt22:1), 90.
    [189]H. HUVELIN,Quelques directeurs d’âmes au XVII siècle, Paris, 1911, 97.
    [190]Conference, “Service of the Sick and Care of One’s own Health”, 11 November 1657.
    [191]Common Rules of the Congregation of the Mission, 17 May 1658, c. 2, 6.
    [192]Letter to the Superior General of the Society of Jesus, Paray-le-Monial, 5 October 1986:L’Osservatore Romano, 6 October 1986, p. 7.
    [193]SAINT JOHN PAUL II, Post-Synodal Apostolic ExhortationReconciliatio et Paenitentia(2 December 1984), 16: AAS 77 (1985), 215.
    [194]Cf. Encyclical LetterSollicitudo Rei Socialis(30 December 1987), 36: AAS 80 (1988), 561-562.
    [195]Encyclical LetterCentesimus Annus(1 May 1991), 41: AAS 83 (1991), 844-845.
    [196]Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1888.
    [197]Catechesis, 8 June 1994, 2:L’Osservatore Romano, 4 May 1994, p. 5.
    [198]Address to the Participants in the International Colloquium “Réparer L’Irréparable”, on the 350thAnniversary of the Apparitions of Jesus in Paray-le-Monial, 4 May 2024:L’Osservatore Romano, 4 May 2024, p. 12.
    [199]Ibid.
    [200]Homily at Morning Mass in Domus Sanctae Marthae, 6 March 2018:L’Osservatore Romano, 5-6 March 2018, p. 8.
    [201]Address to the Participants in the International Colloquium “Réparer L’Irréparable”, on the 350thAnniversary of the Apparitions of Jesus in Paray-le-Monial, 4 May 2024:L’Osservatore Romano, 4 May 2024, p. 12.
    [202]Homily at the Chrism Mass, 28 March 2024:L’Osservatore Romano, 28 March 2024, p. 2.
    [203]Ibid.
    [204]Ibid.
    [205]Encyclical LetterLaudato Si’(24 May 2015), 80: AAS 107 (2015), 879.
    [206]Catechism of the Catholic Church, No. 1085.
    [207]Ibid., No. 268.
    [208]Autobiography, n. 53.
    [209]Ms A, 84r.
    [210]Ibid.
    [211]Ibid.
    [212]Ms A, 83v.; cf.Letter 226 to Father Roulland, 9 May 1897.
    [213]Act of Oblation to Merciful Love, 9 June 1895, 2r-2v.
    [214]Ms B, 3v.
    [215]Letter 186 to Léonie,11 April 1896.
    [216]Letter 258 to l’Abbé Bellière, 18 July 1897.
    [217]Cf. PIUS XI, Encyclical LetterMiserentissimus Redemptor, 8 May 1928: AAS 20 (1928), 169.
    [218]Ibid.: AAS 20 (1928), 172.
    [219]SAINT JOHN PAUL II, Catechesis, 20 June 1979:L’Osservatore Romano, 22 June 1979, p. 1.
    [220]Homily at Mass in Domus Sanctae Marthae, 27 June 2014:L’Osservatore Romano, 28 June 2014, p. 8.
    [221]Message for the Centenary of the Consecration of the Human Race to the Divine Heart of Jesus, Warsaw, 11 June 1999, Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.L’Osservatore Romano, 12 June 1999, p. 5.
    [222]Ibid.
    [223]Letter to the Archbishop of Lyon on the occasion of the Pilgrimage of Paray-le-Monial for the Centenary of the Consecration of the Human Race to the Divine Heart of Jesus, 4 June 1999:L’Osservatore Romano, 12 June 1999, p. 4.
    [224]Conference,“Repetition of Prayer”, 22 August 1655.
    [225]LetterDiserti interpretes(25 May 1965), 4:Enchiridion della Vita Consacrata, Bologna-Milano, 2001, n. 3809.
    [226]Vita NuovaXIX, 5-6: “I declare that, in thinking of its worth, love so sweet makes me feel that, if my courage did not fail me, I would speak out and make everyone else fall in love”.
    [227] Ms A, 45v.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s remarks to the 16th BRICS Summit [as delivered]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
     
    I am grateful to participate in the 16th BRICS Summit. 
     
    Collectively, your countries represent nearly half of the world’s population.
     
    And I salute your valuable commitment and support for international problem-solving as clearly reflected in your theme this year.
     
    But no single group and no single country can act alone or in isolation.
     
    It takes a community of nations, working as one global family, to address global challenges.
     
    Challenges like the rising number of conflicts.
     
    The devastation of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss…
     
    Rising inequalities and lingering poverty and hunger…
     
    A debt crisis that threatens to smother plans for the future of many vulnerable countries… 
     
    The fact that fewer than one-fifth of the Sustainable Development Goals are on-track…
     
    A growing digital divide, and a lack of guardrails for artificial intelligence and other frontier technologies…
     
    And a lack of representation and voice for developing countries at global decision-making tables. From the Security Council to the Bretton-Woods institution and beyond. This must change.
     
    September’s Summit of the Future offered a roadmap for strengthening multilateralism, and advancing peace, sustainable development and human rights.
     
    I see four areas for action.
     
    First — finance.
     
    Today’s international financial system is not offering many vulnerable countries the safety net or level of support they need.
     
    The Pact for the Future calls for accelerating reform of the international financial architecture that is outdated, ineffective and unfair.
     
    And it includes a commitment to move forward with an SDG Stimulus to change the business model to substantially increase the lending capacity of Multilateral Development Banks to developing countries.
     
    To recycle more Special Drawing Rights…
     
    To restructure loans for countries drowning in debt…
     
    And to mobilize more international and domestic resources, public and private, for vital investments in developing countries.
     
    Next year’s Conference on Financing for Development and the Summit on Social Development are two milestones to carry these efforts forward.
     
    We must also recognize the importance of South-South cooperation.
     
    It doesn’t replace the commitments and obligations of developed countries.
     
    But it is providing a growing contribution to supporting developing countries in overcoming obstacles to reaching the SDGs. 
     
    Second — climate.
     
    Every country has committed to limit temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
     
    That requires dramatic action to reduce emissions now — with the G20 in the lead.
     
    COP29 is just weeks away. 
     
    That starts the clock for countries to produce new Nationally Determined Contributions plans with 2035 targets that are aligned with the 1.5 degree goal.
     
    COP29 must deliver an ambitious and credible outcome on the new climate finance goal.
     
    Developed countries must also keep promises to double adaptation finance, and ensure meaningful contributions to the Loss and Damage Fund, which was not the case when it was created.
     
    Third — technology.
     
    Every country must be able to access the benefits of technology.
     
    The Global Digital Compact commits to enhanced global cooperation and capacity-building.
     
    It includes the first truly universal agreement on the international governance of Artificial Intelligence to give every country a seat at the AI table.
     
    It calls for an independent international Scientific Panel on AI and initiating a global dialogue on its governance within the United Nations with the participations of all countries.
     
    And it requests options for innovative financing for AI capacity-building in developing countries.
     
    And fourth — peace.
     
    We must strengthen and update the machinery of peace.
     
    This includes reforms to make the United Nations Security Council reflective of today’s world.
     
    The Pact for the Future includes important steps on disarmament — including the first multilateral agreement on nuclear disarmament in more than a decade — and steps that address the weaponization of outer space and the use of lethal autonomous weapons.
     
    Across the board, we need peace.
     
    We need peace in Gaza with an immediate cease-fire, the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages, the effective delivery of humanitarian aid without obstacles, and we need to make irreversible progress to end the occupation and establish the two state solution, as it was recently reaffirmed once again by a UN General Assembly resolution.
     
    We need peace in Lebanon with an immediate cessation of hostilities, moving to the full implementation of Security Council resolution 1701. 

    We need peace in Ukraine. A just peace in line with the UN Charter, international law and General Assembly resolutions.
     
    We need peace in Sudan, with all parties silencing their guns and committing to a path towards sustainable peace.
     
    Those were the messages I have delivered to the High-Level segment of the General Assembly in September in New York. Unfortunately, they remain valid here and now.
     
    Everywhere, we must uphold the values of the UN Charter, the rule of law, and the principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence of all States. 
     
    Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
     
    The Summit of the Future charted a course to strengthen multilateralism for global development and security.
     
    Now we must turn words into deeds and we believe BRICS can play a very important role in this direction.
     
    Thank you.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Minister Joly to participate in ministerial conference on Lebanon in Paris, France

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    The conference will focus on three objectives: reaffirming the need for a diplomatic solution to the Israel-Hezbollah conflict in accordance with the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701, mobilizing the international community to address the urgent needs for protection and emergency relief for the Lebanese people and exploring strategies to enhance support for Lebanon’s institutions, including the Lebanese Armed Forces, which play a crucial role in ensuring the country’s internal stability.

    October 24, 2024 – Ottawa, Ontario – Global Affairs Canada

    Today, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs, announced that she will participate at the International Conference in Support of Lebanon’s People and Sovereignty, taking place in Paris, France today.

    The conference will focus on three objectives: reaffirming the need for a diplomatic solution to the Israel-Hezbollah conflict in accordance with the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1701, mobilizing the international community to address the urgent needs for protection and emergency relief for the Lebanese people and exploring strategies to enhance support for Lebanon’s institutions, including the Lebanese Armed Forces, which play a crucial role in ensuring the country’s internal stability.

    Minister Joly will engage with her counterparts to create space for a diplomatic solution along the Blue Line and help shore up humanitarian assistance to support the needs of the Lebanese people.

    “I look forward to engaging with my counterparts and other senior officials in Paris as we work toward securing an immediate ceasefire. Canada continues to be steadfast in our commitment to peace and the de-escalation of tensions. Families in Southern Lebanon and Northern Israel must be able to safely return to their homes.”

    – Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group Conducts Second Multi-Large Deck Event with Italian ITS Cavour CSG

    Source: United States Naval Central Command

    U.S. CENTRAL COMMAND AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY —

    The Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group (CSG) conducted a Multi-Large Deck Event (MLDE) with the Italian Navy’s ITS Cavour CSG, Oct. 18.

    MLDE provide the ships and aircrafts of the two naval forces, comprised of more than 7,500 U.S. and Italian Sailors and Marines, an opportunity to advance interoperability by carrying out integrated planning and coordination, communications, cross-deck leadership exchanges, a fast-roping exercise, and an air defense exercise to strengthen combined maritime operations and combat readiness.

    “The opportunity to exercise our interoperability with our Cavour CSG counterparts for a second time in our deployment, highlights our strategic advantage inherent to our network of strong alliances,” said Rear Adm. Adan Cruz, commander, Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 3. “We have seized every opportunity to fly and sail with our Italian counterparts to deepen our combined operational capacity anywhere in international waters.”  

    During the event, Rear Adm. Giancarlo Ciappina, commander, Cavour Carrier Strike Group, hosted Cruz, aboard the ITS Cavour for a visit focused on building relationships.

    “We are proud to work once again alongside Lincoln Carrier Strike Group, after almost two months from our first interaction in the Pacific Ocean,” said Ciappina. “[It] has represented another precious opportunity to train together and to exchange experiences and knowledge, highlighting the versatility and flexibility of Navies operating on a global scale, wherever a presence is required to keep maritime lines of communication open and safe to strengthen our bonds and to enhance levels of cooperation with commitment to security.”

    This marks the second time the Abraham Lincoln CSG participated in an MLDE with the Italian Navy during the 2024 deployment. The previous event in August marked the first-ever MLDE between U.S. and Italian Navies in the Indo-Pacific.

    Participating ships in the MLDE included Nimitz-Class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), Integrated Air and Missile Defense Commander (IAMDC) USS Frank E. Petersen, Jr. (DDG 121), Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers USS O’Kane (DDG 77) & USS Michael Murphy (DDG 111), assigned to Destroyer Squadron 21, Italian aircraft carrier ITS Cavour (CVH 550), Italian Frigate ITS Alpino (F 594), and Italian Multipurpose Combat Ship Raimondo Montecuccoli (P 432).

    Participating aircraft included MH-60S and MH-60R Sea Hawks, F/A-18E & F Super Hornets, E/A-18G Growlers, F-35C Lightning II, and E-2D Hawkeye, all assigned to Carrier Air Wing 9; and Italian F-35B Lightning II and AV-8B Harrier II assigned to Cavour CSG.

    Cruz and Ciappina conducted a conditions check via virtual teleconference prior to the commencement to ensure all participants were ready, Oct. 17. The exercise started with personnel exchanges where key Abraham Lincoln CSG leadership toured Cavour and Italian officers toured the USS Abraham Lincoln.  USS O’Kane and ITS Raimondo Montecuccoli conducted a joint live-fire exercise, while the embarked U.S. explosive ordnance disposal team conducted a subject matter expert exchange and fast rope exercise with Italian counterparts. The event concluded with a complex air defense exercise involving both CSG’s tactical aircraft.

    “It is an honor to once again have the opportunity to work jointly with our NATO Allies,” said Cruz. “I am grateful to Rear Adm. Ciappina and his entire crew of the ITS Cavour for their gracious hospitality aboard their ship. I am also grateful to continue training and operating together to drive interoperability forward.”

    Ciappina responded with his reflection on the MLDE.

    “I am very grateful to Adm. Cruz and to the whole crew of ABE CSG for their great effort and professionalism continuously shown during these challenging times for peace and international stability and that clearly confirm their strong commitment towards own common values, which are shared within the allied and partner Navies on a global scale,” concluded Ciappina.

    The Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group stands ready to successfully conduct any mission essential to U.S. National security, spanning combat operations to integrated maritime operations with our allies and partners to maritime security and stability in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility. It also operates postured to deliver unfaltering maritime force to deter, defend, and if necessary, defeat coercive behavior from those who seek to challenge the rules-based international order.

    The Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group consists of USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), embarked staffs of Carrier Strike Group (CSG) Three and Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 21, squadrons of Carrier Air Wing (CVW) Nine, IAMDC USS Frank E. Petersen Jr. (DDG 121), and USS O’Kane (DDG 77), USS Spruance (DDG 111), and USS Michael Murphy (DDG 112).

    CVW-9 consists of an F-35C squadron, the “Black Knights” of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 314; three F/A-18E/F Super Hornet squadrons, the “Tophatters” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 14; “Black Aces” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 41, the “Vigilantes” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 151; “Wizards” of Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 133, operating the EA-18G Growler; “Wallbangers” of Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 117, operating the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye; “Chargers” of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron (HSC) 14 operating the MH-60S Sea Hawk; and “Raptors” of Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 71, operating the MH-60R Sea Hawk.

    For more news from CSG-3, http://www.dvidshub.net/unit/USSAL-CVN72#

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Secretary-General’s remarks to the 16th BRICS Summit [as delivered]

    Source: United Nations – English

    xcellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
     
    I am grateful to participate in the 16th BRICS Summit. 
     
    Collectively, your countries represent nearly half of the world’s population.
     
    And I salute your valuable commitment and support for international problem-solving as clearly reflected in your theme this year.
     
    But no single group and no single country can act alone or in isolation.
     
    It takes a community of nations, working as one global family, to address global challenges.
     
    Challenges like the rising number of conflicts.
     
    The devastation of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss…
     
    Rising inequalities and lingering poverty and hunger…
     
    A debt crisis that threatens to smother plans for the future of many vulnerable countries… 
     
    The fact that fewer than one-fifth of the Sustainable Development Goals are on-track…
     
    A growing digital divide, and a lack of guardrails for artificial intelligence and other frontier technologies…
     
    And a lack of representation and voice for developing countries at global decision-making tables. From the Security Council to the Bretton-Woods institution and beyond. This must change.
     
    September’s Summit of the Future offered a roadmap for strengthening multilateralism, and advancing peace, sustainable development and human rights.
     
    I see four areas for action.
     
    First — finance.
     
    Today’s international financial system is not offering many vulnerable countries the safety net or level of support they need.
     
    The Pact for the Future calls for accelerating reform of the international financial architecture that is outdated, ineffective and unfair.
     
    And it includes a commitment to move forward with an SDG Stimulus to change the business model to substantially increase the lending capacity of Multilateral Development Banks to developing countries.
     
    To recycle more Special Drawing Rights…
     
    To restructure loans for countries drowning in debt…
     
    And to mobilize more international and domestic resources, public and private, for vital investments in developing countries.
     
    Next year’s Conference on Financing for Development and the Summit on Social Development are two milestones to carry these efforts forward.
     
    We must also recognize the importance of South-South cooperation.
     
    It doesn’t replace the commitments and obligations of developed countries.
     
    But it is providing a growing contribution to supporting developing countries in overcoming obstacles to reaching the SDGs. 
     
    Second — climate.
     
    Every country has committed to limit temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
     
    That requires dramatic action to reduce emissions now — with the G20 in the lead.
     
    COP29 is just weeks away. 
     
    That starts the clock for countries to produce new Nationally Determined Contributions plans with 2035 targets that are aligned with the 1.5 degree goal.
     
    COP29 must deliver an ambitious and credible outcome on the new climate finance goal.
     
    Developed countries must also keep promises to double adaptation finance, and ensure meaningful contributions to the Loss and Damage Fund, which was not the case when it was created.
     
    Third — technology.
     
    Every country must be able to access the benefits of technology.
     
    The Global Digital Compact commits to enhanced global cooperation and capacity-building.
     
    It includes the first truly universal agreement on the international governance of Artificial Intelligence to give every country a seat at the AI table.
     
    It calls for an independent international Scientific Panel on AI and initiating a global dialogue on its governance within the United Nations with the participations of all countries.
     
    And it requests options for innovative financing for AI capacity-building in developing countries.
     
    And fourth — peace.
     
    We must strengthen and update the machinery of peace.
     
    This includes reforms to make the United Nations Security Council reflective of today’s world.
     
    The Pact for the Future includes important steps on disarmament — including the first multilateral agreement on nuclear disarmament in more than a decade — and steps that address the weaponization of outer space and the use of lethal autonomous weapons.
     
    Across the board, we need peace.
     
    We need peace in Gaza with an immediate cease-fire, the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages, the effective delivery of humanitarian aid without obstacles, and we need to make irreversible progress to end the occupation and establish the two state solution, as it was recently reaffirmed once again by a UN General Assembly resolution.
     
    We need peace in Lebanon with an immediate cessation of hostilities, moving to the full implementation of Security Council resolution 1701. 

    We need peace in Ukraine. A just peace in line with the UN Charter, international law and General Assembly resolutions.
     
    We need peace in Sudan, with all parties silencing their guns and committing to a path towards sustainable peace.
     
    Those were the messages I have delivered to the High-Level segment of the General Assembly in September in New York. Unfortunately, they remain valid here and now.
     
    Everywhere, we must uphold the values of the UN Charter, the rule of law, and the principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence of all States. 
     
    Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
     
    The Summit of the Future charted a course to strengthen multilateralism for global development and security.
     
    Now we must turn words into deeds and we believe BRICS can play a very important role in this direction.
     
    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI China: Innovation and quality propel global confidence in Chinese products

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    GUANGZHOU, Oct. 24 — After walking more than 10,000 steps through the exhibition halls of the 136th Canton Fair, officially known as the China Import and Export Fair, U.S. buyer Kristen Palacio sat comfortably in an armchair for a much-needed rest.

    The chair was so comfortable that she was reluctant to get up for another walk. Anji Longwin Furniture Co., Ltd showcased the armchairs. Yuan Fengyi, senior business manager at Longwin, noted that the American and European markets account for over 90 percent of the company’s sales.

    Having attended the Canton Fair for ten years, Yuan has met numerous buyers from around the world, forging close ties with major partners like e-commerce giant Amazon and retail leader Walmart.

    “We are committed to upgrading our factory for greater efficiency and strengthening quality control to better meet the demands of the U.S. and European markets,” Yuan said, adding that the company also focuses heavily on design, which helps their products stand out in an increasingly competitive market.

    As the second phase of the Canton Fair kicked off on Wednesday, international buyers flooded the exhibition hall in search of innovative ideas and products. Under the awnings and pergolas produced by Zhejiang Hooeasy Technology Co., Ltd., eager buyers inquired about prices and sizes for their new orders.

    Excited by his findings, Frans Davelaar, a buyer from Aruba in the southern Caribbean, stood in front of the booth for over 15 minutes. He noted that the products have great market potential, given the hot and humid climate of Caribbean countries like Aruba.

    “Awnings and pergolas originated in Europe, where they are used to provide shade from strong sunlight. As a Chinese company, we’ve enhanced these products with innovative ideas and superior quality,” said Li Tao, an export manager at Hooeasy.

    The latest products showcased by Hooeasy can be integrated with Amazon’s Alexa and Apple’s HomeKit through their proprietary app, Tuya Smart, allowing users to control the opening and closing of the awnings and pergolas via smartphone.

    Li added that over the past two decades at the Canton Fair, Hooeasy’s booth has moved from the exhibition hall’s edge to a central location, reflecting the company’s growing influence and market share. The company has also established design teams in France and Germany to offer customized products tailored to the European market.

    In another exhibition hall at the Canton Fair, U.S. buyer Rob Mons carried a backpack filled with leaflets, brochures, and samples. He attended the fair to source innovative, well-priced seasonal festival products.

    “It’s my first time at the fair, and I’ve already found some suppliers for the upcoming seasons. These products are new and very interesting, probably the most unique items we’ve seen,” Mons said.

    Regarding business in the U.S., Mons believes Chinese products will continue to hold a significant market share despite the trade tensions between the two countries.

    “I hope business will run more smoothly, because we need these fine products to make kids happy and enjoy the festivals,” he added.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI: HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc. Announces Financial Results for the Third Quarter of the Year Ending December 31, 2024 and an Increase in the Quarterly Dividend

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ASHEVILLE, N.C., Oct. 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc. (NASDAQ: HTBI) (“Company”), the holding company of HomeTrust Bank (“Bank”), today announced preliminary net income for the third quarter of the year ending December 31, 2024 and an increase in its quarterly cash dividend.

    For the quarter ended September 30, 2024 compared to the quarter ended June 30, 2024:

    • net income was $13.1 million compared to $12.4 million;
    • diluted earnings per share (“EPS”) were $0.76 compared to $0.73;
    • annualized return on assets (“ROA”) was 1.17% compared to 1.13%;
    • annualized return on equity (“ROE”) was 9.76% compared to 9.58%;
    • net interest margin was 4.00% compared to 4.08%;
    • provision for credit losses was $3.0 million compared to $4.3 million; and
    • quarterly cash dividends continued at $0.11 per share totaling $1.9 million for both periods.

    For the nine months ended September 30, 2024 compared to the nine months ended September 30, 2023:

    • net income was $40.6 million compared to $36.6 million;
    • diluted EPS were $2.37 compared to $2.18;
    • annualized ROA was 1.22% compared to 1.15%;
    • annualized ROE was 10.39% compared to 10.56%;
    • net interest margin was 4.03% compared to 4.29%;
    • provision for credit losses was $8.4 million compared to $11.7 million;
    • tax-free death benefit proceeds from life insurance were $1.1 million for both periods; and
    • cash dividends of $0.33 per share totaling $5.6 million compared to $0.30 per share totaling $5.1 million.

    Results for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 include the impact of the merger of Quantum Capital Corp. (“Quantum”) into the Company effective February 12, 2023. The addition of Quantum contributed total assets of $656.7 million, including loans of $561.9 million, and $570.6 million of deposits, all reflecting the impact of purchase accounting adjustments. Merger-related expenses of $4.7 million were recognized during the nine months ended September 30, 2023, while a $5.3 million provision for credit losses was recognized during the same period to establish allowances for credit losses on both Quantum’s loan portfolio and off-balance-sheet credit exposure.

    The Company also announced today that its Board of Directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.12 per common share, reflecting a $0.01, or 9.0%, increase over the previous quarter’s dividend. This is the sixth increase of the quarterly dividend since the Company initiated cash dividends in November 2018. The dividend is payable on November 27, 2024 to shareholders of record as of the close of business on November 14, 2024.

    “We are pleased to report another quarter of strong financial results,” said Hunter Westbrook, President and Chief Executive Officer. “We maintained our top quartile net interest margin, our ninth straight quarter at 4.00% or more. In addition, noninterest income and expense were both in line with prior quarters. Our provision for credit losses of $3.0 million included an additional $2.2 million as a reserve build for the potential impact of Hurricane Helene upon our loan portfolio. We have begun working with our loan customers on payment deferrals of up to six months, and although we aren’t currently aware of any collectability issues, we will continue assessing the impact of the storm upon our customer base.

    “As you know, many of the communities we serve were affected by this storm, impacting both our employees and customers. I’d first like to thank our employees who have assisted in maintaining bank operations while also tending to their personal and familial responsibilities. It has been amazing to watch the teamwork, collaboration and personal sacrifice across all areas of the Bank as we remained functionally operational throughout the storm, including our electronic banking services and online operations. Currently, all of our banking locations are open with most of the affected areas in our markets recovering well and operating close to normal. As for our customers in the affected areas, it will take time to assess, react and recover from Hurricane Helene. We are committed to working with them to provide the banking support needed for their businesses and homes.

    “Lastly, I am thankful for the Company’s financial strength and geographic diversification which we have built over the last decade, with respect to both our employees and customer base, which provides the foundation to overcome unforeseen events such as this storm. We remain optimistic as we work together to continue the recovery.”

    WEBSITE: WWW.HTB.COM

    Comparison of Results of Operations for the Three Months Ended September 30, 2024 and June 30, 2024
    Net Income.  Net income totaled $13.1 million, or $0.76 per diluted share, for the three months ended September 30, 2024 compared to $12.4 million, or $0.73 per diluted share, for the three months ended June 30, 2024, an increase of $694,000, or 5.6%. Results for the three months ended September 30, 2024 were positively impacted by a decrease of $1.3 million in the provision for credit losses. Details of the changes in the various components of net income are further discussed below.

    Net Interest Income.  The following table presents the distribution of average assets, liabilities and equity, as well as interest income earned on average interest-earning assets and interest expense paid on average interest-bearing liabilities. All average balances are daily average balances. Nonaccruing loans have been included in the table as loans carrying a zero yield.

      Three Months Ended
      September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024
    (Dollars in thousands) Average
    Balance
    Outstanding
      Interest
    Earned /
    Paid
      Yield /
    Rate
      Average
    Balance
    Outstanding
      Interest
    Earned /
    Paid
      Yield /
    Rate
    Assets                      
    Interest-earning assets                      
    Loans receivable(1) $ 3,899,460     $ 63,305   6.46 %   $ 3,885,222     $ 62,161   6.43 %
    Debt securities available for sale   140,246       1,616   4.58       134,334       1,495   4.48  
    Other interest-earning assets(2)   144,931       1,728   4.74       140,376       1,758   5.04  
    Total interest-earning assets   4,184,637       66,649   6.34       4,159,932       65,414   6.32  
    Other assets   264,579               266,983          
    Total assets $ 4,449,216             $ 4,426,915          
    Liabilities and equity                      
    Interest-bearing liabilities                      
    Interest-bearing checking accounts $ 548,024     $ 1,278   0.93 %   $ 586,396     $ 1,445   0.99 %
    Money market accounts   1,335,798       10,757   3.20       1,298,177       10,221   3.17  
    Savings accounts   182,618       40   0.09       188,028       41   0.09  
    Certificate accounts   1,012,765       11,617   4.56       902,864       9,976   4.44  
    Total interest-bearing deposits   3,079,205       23,692   3.06       2,975,465       21,683   2.93  
    Junior subordinated debt   10,079       235   9.28       10,054       234   9.36  
    Borrowings   40,399       648   6.38       87,315       1,331   6.13  
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   3,129,683       24,575   3.12       3,072,834       23,248   3.04  
    Noninterest-bearing deposits   719,710               769,016          
    Other liabilities   65,097               63,503          
    Total liabilities   3,914,490               3,905,353          
    Stockholders’ equity   534,726               521,562          
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 4,449,216             $ 4,426,915          
    Net earning assets $ 1,054,954             $ 1,087,098          
    Average interest-earning assets to average interest-bearing liabilities   133.71 %             135.38 %        
    Non-tax-equivalent                      
    Net interest income     $ 42,074           $ 42,166    
    Interest rate spread         3.22 %           3.28 %
    Net interest margin(3)         4.00 %           4.08 %
    Tax-equivalent(4)                      
    Net interest income     $ 42,442           $ 42,520    
    Interest rate spread         3.25 %           3.32 %
    Net interest margin(3)         4.03 %           4.11 %

    (1)  Average loans receivable balances include loans held for sale and nonaccruing loans.
    (2)  Average other interest-earning assets consist of FRB stock, FHLB stock, SBIC investments and deposits in other banks.
    (3)  Net interest income divided by average interest-earning assets.
    (4)  Tax-equivalent results include adjustments to interest income of $368 and $354 for the three months ended September 30, 2024 and June 30, 2024, respectively, calculated based on a combined federal and state tax rate of 24%.

    Total interest and dividend income for the three months ended September 30, 2024 increased $1.2 million, or 1.9%, compared to the three months ended June 30, 2024, which was driven by a $1.1 million, or 1.8%, increase in loan interest income primarily due to the difference in the number of days in each quarter. Accretion income on acquired loans of $640,000 and $678,000 was recognized during the same periods, respectively, and was included in interest income on loans.

    Total interest expense for the three months ended September 30, 2024 increased $1.3 million, or 5.7%, compared to the three months ended June 30, 2024. The increase was primarily the result of increases in the average balances of money market and certificate accounts, partially offset by a decline in average borrowings outstanding.

    The following table shows the effects that changes in average balances (volume), including the difference in the number of days in the periods compared, and average interest rates (rate) had on the interest earned on interest-earning assets and interest paid on interest-bearing liabilities:

      Increase / (Decrease)
    Due to
      Total
    Increase /
    (Decrease)
    (Dollars in thousands) Volume   Rate  
    Interest-earning assets          
    Loans receivable $ 916     $ 228     $ 1,144  
    Debt securities available for sale   83       38       121  
    Other interest-earning assets   76       (106 )     (30 )
    Total interest-earning assets   1,075       160       1,235  
    Interest-bearing liabilities          
    Interest-bearing checking accounts   (81 )     (86 )     (167 )
    Money market accounts   413       123       536  
    Savings accounts   (1 )           (1 )
    Certificate accounts   1,341       300       1,641  
    Junior subordinated debt   3       (2 )     1  
    Borrowings   (708 )     25       (683 )
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   967       360       1,327  
    Decrease in net interest income         $ (92 )


    Provision for Credit Losses.
      The provision for credit losses is the amount of expense that, based on our judgment, is required to maintain the allowance for credit losses (“ACL”) at an appropriate level under the current expected credit losses model.

    The following table presents a breakdown of the components of the provision for credit losses:

      Three Months Ended      
    (Dollars in thousands) September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   $ Change   % Change
    Provision for credit losses                
    Loans $ 2,990     $ 4,300     $ (1,310 )   (30 )%
    Off-balance-sheet credit exposure   (15 )     (40 )     25     63  
    Total provision for credit losses $ 2,975     $ 4,260     $ (1,285 )   (30 )%

    For the quarter ended September 30, 2024, the “loans” portion of the provision for credit losses was the result of the following, offset by net charge-offs of $4.1 million during the quarter:

    • $0.4 million benefit driven by changes in the loan mix.
    • $1.2 million provision due to changes in the projected economic forecast, specifically the national unemployment rate, and changes in qualitative adjustments. Included in this change was the addition of a $2.2 million qualitative allocation for the potential impact of Hurricane Helene upon our loan portfolio.
    • $1.9 million decrease in specific reserves on individually evaluated loans as we charged-off specific reserves which had previously been established.

    For the quarter ended June 30, 2024, the “loans” portion of the provision for credit losses was the result of the following, in addition to net charge-offs of $2.6 million during the quarter:

    • $0.1 million provision driven by changes in the loan mix.
    • $0.4 million benefit due to changes in the projected economic forecast and changes in qualitative adjustments.
    • $2.0 million increase in specific reserves on individually evaluated loans which was proportional to the increase in the associated loan balances which increased from $8.3 million to $16.3 million quarter-over-quarter, concentrated in the equipment finance and SBA portfolios.

    For the quarters ended September 30, 2024 and June 30, 2024, the amounts recorded for off-balance-sheet credit exposure were the result of changes in the balance of loan commitments, loan mix and projected economic forecast as outlined above.

    Noninterest Income.  Noninterest income for the three months ended September 30, 2024 increased $169,000, or 2.1%, when compared to the quarter ended June 30, 2024. Changes in the components of noninterest income are discussed below:

      Three Months Ended    
    (Dollars in thousands) September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   $ Change   % Change
    Noninterest income              
    Service charges and fees on deposit accounts $ 2,336     $ 2,354     $ (18 )   (1 )%
    Loan income and fees   684       647       37     6  
    Gain on sale of loans held for sale   1,900       1,828       72     4  
    Bank owned life insurance (“BOLI”) income   828       807       21     3  
    Operating lease income   1,637       1,591       46     3  
    Other   897       886       11     1  
    Total noninterest income $ 8,282     $ 8,113     $ 169     2 %
                                 
    • Gain on sale of loans held for sale: The increase was primarily driven by residential mortgage loans sold during the period. There were $21.7 million of residential mortgage loans originated for sale which were sold during the current quarter with gains of $479,000 compared to $21.3 million sold with gains of $351,000 in the prior quarter, with the improvement in profitability due to movement in interest rates. There were $54.6 million of HELOCs sold for a gain of $414,000 compared to $32.9 million sold with gains of $457,000 in the prior quarter. There were $12.9 million in sales of the guaranteed portion of SBA commercial loans with gains of $1.0 million for the quarter compared to $12.7 million sold and gains of $1.1 million for the prior quarter. Our hedging of mandatory commitments on the residential mortgage loan pipeline resulted in a gain of $18,000 for the quarter ended September 30, 2024 versus a loss of $58,000 for the quarter ended June 30, 2024.

    Noninterest Expense.  Noninterest expense for the three months ended September 30, 2024 increased $375,000, or 1.2%, when compared to the three months ended June 30, 2024. Changes in the components of noninterest expense are discussed below:

      Three Months Ended    
    (Dollars in thousands) September 30, 2024   June 30, 2024   $ Change   % Change
    Noninterest expense              
    Salaries and employee benefits $ 17,082     $ 16,608     $ 474     3 %
    Occupancy expense, net   2,436       2,419       17     1  
    Computer services   3,192       3,116       76     2  
    Telephone, postage and supplies   547       580       (33 )   (6 )
    Marketing and advertising   408       606       (198 )   (33 )
    Deposit insurance premiums   589       531       58     11  
    Core deposit intangible amortization   567       567            
    Other   5,764       5,783       (19 )    
    Total noninterest expense $ 30,585     $ 30,210     $ 375     1 %
                                 
    • Salaries and employee benefits: The quarter-over-quarter increase was primarily the result of executive pay increases effective this quarter and additional stock incentive expense associated with the vesting of performance-based equity awards.
    • Marketing and advertising: The decrease in expense was the result of both differences in the timing of when expenses were incurred quarter-over-quarter as well as a reduction in traditional media advertising (print, billboards, etc.) in favor of digital platforms at lower costs.

    Income Taxes.  The amount of income tax expense is influenced by the amount of pre-tax income, tax-exempt income, changes in the statutory rate and the effect of changes in valuation allowances maintained against deferred tax benefits. The effective tax rates for the three months ended September 30, 2024 and June 30, 2024 were 21.9% and 21.4%, respectively.

    Comparison of Results of Operations for the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024 and September 30, 2023
    Net Income.  Net income totaled $40.6 million, or $2.37 per diluted share, for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 compared to $36.6 million, or $2.18 per diluted share, for the nine months ended September 30, 2023, an increase of $4.0 million, or 11.0%. The results for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 were positively impacted by a decrease of $3.3 million in the provision for credit losses, a $1.4 million increase in noninterest income, and a $2.6 million decrease in noninterest expense, partially offset by a $2.0 million decrease in net interest income and a $1.3 million increase in income tax expense. Details of the changes in the various components of net income are further discussed below.

    Net Interest Income.  The following table presents the distribution of average assets, liabilities and equity, as well as interest income earned on average interest-earning assets and interest expense paid on average interest-bearing liabilities. All average balances are daily average balances. Nonaccruing loans have been included in the table as loans carrying a zero yield.

      Nine Months Ended
      September 30, 2024   September 30, 2023
    (Dollars in thousands) Average
    Balance
    Outstanding
      Interest
    Earned /
    Paid
      Yield /
    Rate
      Average
    Balance
    Outstanding
      Interest
    Earned /
    Paid
      Yield /
    Rate
    Assets                      
    Interest-earning assets                      
    Loans receivable(1) $ 3,883,040     $ 185,418   6.38 %   $ 3,684,518     $ 162,526   5.90 %
    Debt securities available for sale   133,779       4,424   4.42       155,884       3,780   3.24  
    Other interest-earning assets(2)   138,956       5,576   5.36       137,065       5,356   5.22  
    Total interest-earning assets   4,155,775       195,418   6.28       3,977,467       171,662   5.77  
    Other assets   276,516               266,867          
    Total assets $ 4,432,291             $ 4,244,334          
    Liabilities and equity                      
    Interest-bearing liabilities                      
    Interest-bearing checking accounts $ 574,954     $ 4,149   0.96 %   $ 627,200     $ 3,241   0.69 %
    Money market accounts   1,305,217       30,642   3.14       1,206,119       18,604   2.06  
    Savings accounts   187,447       124   0.09       218,683       143   0.09  
    Certificate accounts   934,702       30,778   4.40       649,755       14,967   3.08  
    Total interest-bearing deposits   3,002,320       65,693   2.92       2,701,757       36,955   1.83  
    Junior subordinated debt   10,054       705   9.37       8,428       563   8.93  
    Borrowings   76,823       3,550   6.17       158,965       6,634   5.58  
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   3,089,197       69,948   3.02       2,869,150       44,152   2.06  
    Noninterest-bearing deposits   766,110               857,315          
    Other liabilities   55,217               54,513          
    Total liabilities   3,910,524               3,780,978          
    Stockholders’ equity   521,767               463,356          
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 4,432,291             $ 4,244,334          
    Net earning assets $ 1,066,578             $ 1,108,317          
    Average interest-earning assets to average interest-bearing liabilities   134.53 %             138.63 %        
    Non-tax-equivalent                      
    Net interest income     $ 125,470           $ 127,510    
    Interest rate spread         3.26 %           3.71 %
    Net interest margin(3)         4.03 %           4.29 %
    Tax-equivalent                      
    Net interest income     $ 126,542           $ 128,413    
    Interest rate spread         3.30 %           3.74 %
    Net interest margin(3)         4.07 %           4.32 %

    (1)  Average loans receivable balances include loans held for sale and nonaccruing loans.
    (2)  Average other interest-earning assets consist of FRB stock, FHLB stock, SBIC investments and deposits in other banks.
    (3)  Net interest income divided by average interest-earning assets.
    (4)  Tax-equivalent results include adjustments to interest income of $1,072 and $903 for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 and September 30, 2023, respectively, calculated based on a combined federal and state tax rate of 24%.

    Total interest and dividend income for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 increased $23.8 million, or 13.8%, compared to the nine months ended September 30, 2023, which was driven by a $22.9 million, or 14.1%, increase in interest income on loans. Accretion income on acquired loans of $2.0 million and $1.7 million was recognized during the same periods, respectively, and was included in interest income on loans. The overall increase in average yield on interest-earning assets was the result of both higher average balances and rising interest rates.

    Total interest expense for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 increased $25.8 million, or 58.4%, compared to the nine months ended September 30, 2023. The change was primarily the result of increases in the cost of funds across all funding sources driven by higher market interest rates and increases in the average balances of money market and certificate accounts, partially offset by a decline in average borrowings outstanding.

    The following table shows the effects that changes in average balances (volume), including the difference in the number of days in the periods compared, and average interest rates (rate) had on the interest earned on interest-earning assets and interest paid on interest-bearing liabilities:

      Increase / (Decrease)
    Due to
      Total
    Increase /
    (Decrease)
    (Dollars in thousands) Volume   Rate  
    Interest-earning assets          
    Loans receivable $ 8,927     $ 13,965     $ 22,892  
    Debt securities available for sale   (532 )     1,176       644  
    Other interest-earning assets   79       141       220  
    Total interest-earning assets   8,474       15,282       23,756  
    Interest-bearing liabilities          
    Interest-bearing checking accounts   (266 )     1,174       908  
    Money market accounts   1,557       10,481       12,038  
    Savings accounts   (20 )     1       (19 )
    Certificate accounts   6,592       9,219       15,811  
    Junior subordinated debt   109       33       142  
    Borrowings   (3,425 )     341       (3,084 )
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   4,547       21,249       25,796  
    Decrease in net interest income         $ (2,040 )

    Provision for Credit Losses.  The following table presents a breakdown of the components of the provision for credit losses:

      Nine Months Ended      
    (Dollars in thousands) September 30, 2024   September 30, 2023   $ Change   % Change
    Provision for credit losses                
    Loans $ 8,435     $ 12,120     $ (3,685 )   (30 )%
    Off-balance-sheet credit exposure   (35 )     (385 )     350     91  
    Total provision for credit losses $ 8,400     $ 11,735     $ (3,335 )   (28 )%

    For the nine months ended September 30, 2024, the “loans” portion of the provision for credit losses was the result of net charge-offs of $8.9 million during the period, partially offset by a $0.4 million benefit due to changes in the loan mix.

    For the nine months ended September 30, 2023, the “loans” portion of the provision for credit losses was the result of the following, in addition to net charge-offs of $3.9 million during the period:

    • $4.9 million provision to establish an allowance on Quantum’s loan portfolio.
    • $3.0 million provision due to changes in the projected economic forecast, specifically the national unemployment rate, and changes in qualitative adjustments.
    • $0.3 million increase in specific reserves on individually evaluated credits.

    For the nine months ended September 30, 2024 and September 30, 2023, the amounts recorded for off-balance-sheet credit exposure were the result of changes in the balance of loan commitments, loan mix and projected economic forecast as outlined above.

    Noninterest Income.  Noninterest income for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 increased $1.4 million, or 5.8%, when compared to the same period last year. Changes in the components of noninterest income are discussed below:

      Nine Months Ended    
    (Dollars in thousands) September 30, 2024   September 30, 2023   $ Change   % Change
    Noninterest income              
    Service charges and fees on deposit accounts $ 6,839     $ 6,967     $ (128 )   (2 )%
    Loan income and fees   2,009       1,913       96     5  
    Gain on sale of loans held for sale   5,185       4,213       972     23  
    BOLI income   3,470       2,844       626     22  
    Operating lease income   5,087       4,515       572     13  
    Gain (loss) on sale of premises and equipment   (9 )     982       (991 )   (101 )
    Other   2,625       2,391       234     10  
    Total noninterest income $ 25,206     $ 23,825     $ 1,381     6 %
                                 
    • Gain on sale of loans held for sale: The increase in the gain on sale of loans held for sale was primarily driven by residential mortgage and SBA loans sold during the period. During the nine months ended September 30, 2024, there were $58.3 million of residential mortgage loans originated for sale which were sold with gains of $1.1 million compared to $48.7 million sold with gains of $633,000 for the corresponding period in the prior year, with the improvement in profitability due to movement in interest rates. There were $38.5 million of sales of the guaranteed portion of SBA commercial loans with gains of $3.1 million compared to $41.1 million sold and gains of $2.6 million for the corresponding period in the prior year. There were $95.4 million of HELOCs sold during the current period for a gain of $887,000 compared to $66.4 million sold and gains of $552,000 for the corresponding period in the prior year. Our hedging of mandatory commitments on the residential mortgage loan pipeline resulted in a gain of $15,000 for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 versus a gain of $426,000 for the nine months ended September 30, 2023.
    • BOLI income: The increase was due to higher yielding policies as a result of restructuring the portfolio at the end of the prior calendar year.
    • Operating lease income: The increase in operating lease income was the result of $1.7 million in additional contractual earnings on a higher average outstanding balance of the associated contracts, partially offset by losses incurred on previously leased equipment, where we recognized a net loss of $1.3 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 versus a net loss of $210,000 in the same period last year.
    • Gain (loss) on sale of premises and equipment: During the nine months ended September 30, 2023, two properties were sold for a combined gain of $982,000. No material disposal activity occurred during the nine months ended September 30, 2024.

    Noninterest Expense.  Noninterest expense for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 decreased $2.6 million, or 2.8%, when compared to the same period last year. Changes in the components of noninterest expense are discussed below:

      Nine Months Ended    
    (Dollars in thousands) September 30, 2024   September 30, 2023   $ Change   % Change
    Noninterest expense              
    Salaries and employee benefits $ 50,666     $ 49,436     $ 1,230     2 %
    Occupancy expense, net   7,292       7,556       (264 )   (3 )
    Computer services   9,396       9,386       10      
    Telephone, postage and supplies   1,712       1,942       (230 )   (12 )
    Marketing and advertising   1,659       1,555       104     7  
    Deposit insurance premiums   1,674       1,878       (204 )   (11 )
    Core deposit intangible amortization   1,896       2,324       (428 )   (18 )
    Merger-related expenses         4,741       (4,741 )   (100 )
    Other   16,364       14,490       1,874     13  
    Total noninterest expense $ 90,659     $ 93,308     $ (2,649 )   (3 )%
                               
    • Salaries and employee benefits: The increase was primarily the result of pay increases, partially offset by reductions in incentive pay.
    • Core deposit intangible amortization: The intangible recorded associated with the Quantum merger is being amortized on an accelerated basis, so the rate of amortization slowed year-over-year.
    • Merger-related expenses: The prior period included expenses associated with the Company’s merger with Quantum. No such expenses were incurred in the nine months ended September 30, 2024.
    • Other: The increase period-over-period was primarily driven by $1.7 million of additional depreciation expense on equipment subject to operating leases.

    Income Taxes. The amount of income tax expense is influenced by the amount of pre-tax income, tax-exempt income, changes in the statutory rate and the effect of changes in valuation allowances maintained against deferred tax benefits. The effective tax rates for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 and September 30, 2023 were 21.3% and 21.0%, respectively.

    Balance Sheet Review
    Total assets decreased by $35.3 million to $4.6 billion and total liabilities decreased by $75.5 million to $4.1 billion, respectively, at September 30, 2024 as compared to December 31, 2023. The majority of these changes were the result of an increase in deposits, which, combined with the collection of BOLI redemption proceeds and cash and cash equivalents, were used to fund growth in loans and pay down borrowings.

    Stockholders’ equity increased $40.1 million to $540.0 million at September 30, 2024 as compared to December 31, 2023. Activity within stockholders’ equity included $40.6 million in net income and $4.5 million in stock-based compensation and stock option exercises, partially offset by $5.6 million in cash dividends declared. In addition, the improvement in the accumulated other comprehensive income was driven by a $1.6 million reduction of the unrealized loss on available for sale securities as a result of a decrease in market interest rates.

    As of September 30, 2024, the Bank was considered “well capitalized” in accordance with its regulatory capital guidelines and exceeded all regulatory capital requirements.

    Asset Quality
    The ACL on loans was $48.1 million, or 1.30% of total loans, at September 30, 2024 compared to $48.6 million, or 1.34% of total loans, at December 31, 2023. The drivers of this change are discussed in the “Comparison of Results of Operations for the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024 and September 30, 2023 – Provision for Credit Losses” section above.

    Net loan charge-offs totaled $8.9 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2024 compared to $3.9 million for the same period last year. As discussed in previous quarters, the increase in net charge-offs has been concentrated in our equipment finance portfolio, primarily smaller over-the-road truck loans, with net charge-offs of $5.1 million during the nine months ended September 30, 2024. In response, during the first quarter of calendar year 2024 the Company elected to cease further originations within the transportation sector of equipment finance loans. In spite of the increase, annualized net charge-offs as a percentage of average assets for the loan portfolio as a whole were 0.31% for the nine months ended September 30, 2024, in line with the Company’s historical experience, as compared to 0.14% for the nine months ended September 30, 2023.

    Nonperforming assets, made up of nonaccrual loans and repossessed assets, increased by $10.4 million, or 54.0%, to $29.8 million, or 0.64% of total assets, at September 30, 2024 compared to $19.3 million, or 0.41% of total assets, at December 31, 2023. Consistent with the change in net charge-offs, equipment finance loans made up the largest portion of nonperforming assets at $8.5 million and $6.5 million, respectively, at these same dates. In addition, owner occupied commercial real estate totaled $7.2 million and $912,000, respectively, at these same dates. These increases were mainly the result of a $3.1 million medical equipment relationship and $5.1 million owner occupied commercial real estate (OO CRE) relationship; however, in both cases losses are not currently anticipated. The ratio of nonperforming loans to total loans was 0.78% at September 30, 2024 compared to 0.53% at December 31, 2023.

    The ratio of classified assets to total assets increased to 0.99% at September 30, 2024 from 0.90% at December 31, 2023 as classified assets increased $4.1 million, or 9.8%, to $46.1 million at September 30, 2024 compared to $42.0 million at December 31, 2023. The largest portfolios of classified assets at September 30, 2024 included $11.7 million of non-owner occupied commercial real estate loans, $8.4 million of equipment finance loans, $7.1 million of SBA loans, $6.0 million of 1-4 family residential real estate loans, and $6.0 million of OO CRE loans.

    About HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc.
    HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc. is the holding company for the Bank. As of September 30, 2024, the Company had assets of $4.6 billion. The Bank, founded in 1926, is a North Carolina state chartered, community-focused financial institution committed to providing value added relationship banking with over 30 locations as well as online/mobile channels. Locations include: North Carolina (the Asheville metropolitan area, the “Piedmont” region, Charlotte and Raleigh/Cary), South Carolina (Greenville and Charleston), East Tennessee (Kingsport/Johnson City, Knoxville and Morristown), Southwest Virginia (the Roanoke Valley) and Georgia (Greater Atlanta).

    Forward-Looking Statements
    This press release includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are not statements of historical fact, but instead are based on certain assumptions including statements with respect to the Company’s beliefs, plans, objectives, goals, expectations, assumptions and statements about future economic performance and projections of financial items. These forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results anticipated or implied by forward-looking statements. The factors that could result in material differentiation include, but are not limited to, the impact of bank failures or adverse developments involving other banks and related negative press about the banking industry in general on investor and depositor sentiment; the remaining effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on general economic and financial market conditions and on public health, both nationally and in the Company’s market areas; natural disasters, including the effects of Hurricane Helene; expected revenues, cost savings, synergies and other benefits from merger and acquisition activities might not be realized to the extent anticipated, within the anticipated time frames, or at all, costs or difficulties relating to integration matters, including but not limited to customer and employee retention, might be greater than expected, and goodwill impairment charges might be incurred; increased competitive pressures among financial services companies; changes in the interest rate environment; changes in general economic conditions, both nationally and in our market areas; legislative and regulatory changes; and the effects of inflation, a potential recession, and other factors described in the Company’s latest Annual Report on Form 10-K and Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and other documents filed with or furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission – which are available on the Company’s website at www.htb.com and on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Any of the forward-looking statements that the Company makes in this press release or in the documents the Company files with or furnishes to the SEC are based upon management’s beliefs and assumptions at the time they are made and may turn out to be wrong because of inaccurate assumptions, the factors described above or other factors that management cannot foresee. The Company does not undertake, and specifically disclaims any obligation, to revise any forward-looking statements to reflect the occurrence of anticipated or unanticipated events or circumstances after the date of such statements.

    Consolidated Balance Sheets (Unaudited)

    (Dollars in thousands) September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      December 31,
    2023
    (1)
      September 30,
    2023
    Assets                  
    Cash $ 18,980     $ 18,382     $ 16,134     $ 18,307     $ 18,090  
    Interest-bearing deposits   274,497       275,808       364,359       328,833       306,924  
    Cash and cash equivalents   293,477       294,190       380,493       347,140       325,014  
    Certificates of deposit in other banks   29,290       32,131       33,625       34,722       35,380  
    Debt securities available for sale, at fair value   140,552       134,135       120,807       126,950       134,348  
    FHLB and FRB stock   18,384       19,637       13,691       18,393       19,612  
    SBIC investments, at cost   15,489       15,462       14,568       13,789       14,586  
    Loans held for sale, at fair value   2,968       1,614       2,764       3,359       4,616  
    Loans held for sale, at the lower of cost or fair value   189,722       224,976       220,699       198,433       200,834  
    Total loans, net of deferred loan fees and costs   3,698,892       3,701,454       3,648,152       3,640,022       3,659,914  
    Allowance for credit losses – loans   (48,131 )     (49,223 )     (47,502 )     (48,641 )     (47,417 )
    Loans, net   3,650,761       3,652,231       3,600,650       3,591,381       3,612,497  
    Premises and equipment, net   69,603       69,880       70,588       70,937       72,463  
    Accrued interest receivable   17,523       18,412       16,944       16,902       16,513  
    Deferred income taxes, net   10,100       10,512       11,222       11,796       9,569  
    BOLI   90,021       89,176       88,369       88,257       106,059  
    Goodwill   34,111       34,111       34,111       34,111       34,111  
    Core deposit intangibles, net   7,162       7,730       8,297       9,059       9,918  
    Other assets   68,130       66,667       67,183       107,404       56,477  
    Total assets $ 4,637,293     $ 4,670,864     $ 4,684,011     $ 4,672,633     $ 4,651,997  
    Liabilities and stockholders’ equity                  
    Liabilities                  
    Deposits $ 3,761,588     $ 3,707,779     $ 3,799,807     $ 3,661,373     $ 3,640,961  
    Junior subordinated debt   10,096       10,070       10,045       10,021       9,995  
    Borrowings   260,013       364,513       291,513       433,763       452,263  
    Other liabilities   65,592       64,874       69,473       67,583       64,367  
    Total liabilities   4,097,289       4,147,236       4,170,838       4,172,740       4,167,586  
    Stockholders’ equity                  
    Preferred stock, $0.01 par value, 10,000,000 shares authorized, none issued or outstanding                            
    Common stock, $0.01 par value, 60,000,000 shares authorized(2)   175       175       175       174       174  
    Additional paid in capital   175,495       172,907       172,919       172,366       171,663  
    Retained earnings   368,383       357,147       346,598       333,401       321,799  
    Unearned Employee Stock Ownership Plan (“ESOP”) shares   (4,099 )     (4,232 )     (4,364 )     (4,497 )     (4,629 )
    Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)   50       (2,369 )     (2,155 )     (1,551 )     (4,596 )
    Total stockholders’ equity   540,004       523,628       513,173       499,893       484,411  
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 4,637,293     $ 4,670,864     $ 4,684,011     $ 4,672,633     $ 4,651,997  

    (1)  Derived from audited financial statements.
    (2)  Shares of common stock issued and outstanding were 17,514,922 at September 30, 2024; 17,437,326 at June 30, 2024; 17,444,787 at March 31, 2024; 17,387,069 at December 31, 2023; and 17,380,307 at September 30, 2023.

    Consolidated Statements of Income (Unaudited)

      Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
    (Dollars in thousands) September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2023
    Interest and dividend income              
    Loans $ 63,305     $ 62,161     $ 185,418     $ 162,526  
    Debt securities available for sale   1,616       1,495       4,424       3,780  
    Other investments and interest-bearing deposits   1,728       1,758       5,576       5,356  
    Total interest and dividend income   66,649       65,414       195,418       171,662  
    Interest expense              
    Deposits   23,692       21,683       65,693       36,955  
    Junior subordinated debt   235       234       705       563  
    Borrowings   648       1,331       3,550       6,634  
    Total interest expense   24,575       23,248       69,948       44,152  
    Net interest income   42,074       42,166       125,470       127,510  
    Provision for credit losses   2,975       4,260       8,400       11,735  
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   39,099       37,906       117,070       115,775  
    Noninterest income              
    Service charges and fees on deposit accounts   2,336       2,354       6,839       6,967  
    Loan income and fees   684       647       2,009       1,913  
    Gain on sale of loans held for sale   1,900       1,828       5,185       4,213  
    BOLI income   828       807       3,470       2,844  
    Operating lease income   1,637       1,591       5,087       4,515  
    Gain (loss) on sale of premises and equipment               (9 )     982  
    Other   897       886       2,625       2,391  
    Total noninterest income   8,282       8,113       25,206       23,825  
    Noninterest expense              
    Salaries and employee benefits   17,082       16,608       50,666       49,436  
    Occupancy expense, net   2,436       2,419       7,292       7,556  
    Computer services   3,192       3,116       9,396       9,386  
    Telephone, postage and supplies   547       580       1,712       1,942  
    Marketing and advertising   408       606       1,659       1,555  
    Deposit insurance premiums   589       531       1,674       1,878  
    Core deposit intangible amortization   567       567       1,896       2,324  
    Merger-related expenses                     4,741  
    Other   5,764       5,783       16,364       14,490  
    Total noninterest expense   30,585       30,210       90,659       93,308  
    Income before income taxes   16,796       15,809       51,617       46,292  
    Income tax expense   3,684       3,391       11,020       9,712  
    Net income $ 13,112     $ 12,418     $ 40,597     $ 36,580  

    Per Share Data

        Three Months Ended    Nine Months Ended
        September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2023
    Net income per common share(1)                
    Basic   $ 0.77     $ 0.73     $ 2.38     $ 2.19  
    Diluted   $ 0.76     $ 0.73     $ 2.37     $ 2.18  
    Average shares outstanding                
    Basic     16,931,793       16,883,028       16,891,619       16,532,335  
    Diluted     17,027,824       16,904,098       16,938,328       16,553,319  
    Book value per share at end of period   $ 30.83     $ 30.03     $ 30.83     $ 27.87  
    Tangible book value per share at end of period(2)   $ 28.57     $ 27.73     $ 28.57     $ 25.47  
    Cash dividends declared per common share   $ 0.11     $ 0.11     $ 0.33     $ 0.30  
    Total shares outstanding at end of period     17,514,922       17,437,326       17,514,922       17,380,307  

    (1)  Basic and diluted net income per common share have been prepared in accordance with the two-class method.
    (2)  See Non-GAAP reconciliations below for adjustments.

    Selected Financial Ratios and Other Data

      Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2023
    Performance ratios(1)          
    Return on assets (ratio of net income to average total assets) 1.17 %   1.13 %   1.22 %   1.15 %
    Return on equity (ratio of net income to average equity) 9.76     9.58     10.39     10.56  
    Yield on earning assets 6.34     6.32     6.28     5.77  
    Rate paid on interest-bearing liabilities 3.12     3.04     3.02     2.06  
    Average interest rate spread 3.22     3.28     3.26     3.71  
    Net interest margin(2) 4.00     4.08     4.03     4.29  
    Average interest-earning assets to average interest-bearing liabilities 133.71     135.38     134.53     138.63  
    Noninterest expense to average total assets 2.73     2.74     2.73     2.94  
    Efficiency ratio 60.74     60.08     60.17     61.66  
    Efficiency ratio – adjusted(3) 60.30     59.66     60.19     58.98  

    (1)  Ratios are annualized where appropriate.
    (2)  Net interest income divided by average interest-earning assets.
    (3)  See Non-GAAP reconciliations below for adjustments.

      At or For the Three Months Ended
      September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      December 31,
    2023
      September 30,
    2023
    Asset quality ratios                  
    Nonperforming assets to total assets(1) 0.64 %   0.54 %   0.43 %   0.41 %   0.25 %
    Nonperforming loans to total loans(1) 0.78     0.68     0.55     0.53     0.32  
    Total classified assets to total assets 0.99     0.91     0.80     0.90     0.76  
    Allowance for credit losses to nonperforming loans(1) 166.51     194.80     235.18     251.60     400.41  
    Allowance for credit losses to total loans 1.30     1.33     1.30     1.34     1.30  
    Net charge-offs to average loans (annualized) 0.42     0.27     0.24     0.29     0.27  
    Capital ratios                  
    Equity to total assets at end of period 11.64 %   11.21 %   10.96 %   10.70 %   10.41 %
    Tangible equity to total tangible assets(2) 10.88     10.44     10.18     9.91     9.60  
    Average equity to average assets 12.02     11.78     11.51     11.03     10.84  

    (1)  Nonperforming assets include nonaccruing loans and repossessed assets. There were no accruing loans more than 90 days past due at the dates indicated. At September 30, 2024, $8.7 million, or 30.4%, of nonaccruing loans were current on their loan payments as of that date.
    (2)  See Non-GAAP reconciliations below for adjustments.

    Loans

    (Dollars in thousands) September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      December 31,
    2023
      September 30,
    2023
    Commercial real estate loans                  
    Construction and land development $ 300,905     $ 316,050     $ 304,727     $ 305,269     $ 352,143  
    Commercial real estate – owner occupied   544,689       545,631       532,547       536,545       526,534  
    Commercial real estate – non-owner occupied   881,340       892,653       881,143       875,694       880,348  
    Multifamily   114,155       92,292       89,692       88,623       83,430  
    Total commercial real estate loans   1,841,089       1,846,626       1,808,109       1,806,131       1,842,455  
    Commercial loans                  
    Commercial and industrial   286,809       266,136       243,732       237,255       237,366  
    Equipment finance   443,033       461,010       462,649       465,573       470,387  
    Municipal leases   158,560       152,509       151,894       150,292       147,821  
    Total commercial loans   888,402       879,655       858,275       853,120       855,574  
    Residential real estate loans                  
    Construction and land development   63,016       70,679       85,840       96,646       103,381  
    One-to-four family   627,845       621,196       605,570       584,405       560,399  
    HELOCs   194,909       188,465       184,274       185,878       185,289  
    Total residential real estate loans   885,770       880,340       875,684       866,929       849,069  
    Consumer loans   83,631       94,833       106,084       113,842       112,816  
    Total loans, net of deferred loan fees and costs   3,698,892       3,701,454       3,648,152       3,640,022       3,659,914  
    Allowance for credit losses – loans   (48,131 )     (49,223 )     (47,502 )     (48,641 )     (47,417 )
    Loans, net $ 3,650,761     $ 3,652,231     $ 3,600,650     $ 3,591,381     $ 3,612,497  

    Deposits

    (Dollars in thousands) September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      December 31,
    2023
      September 30,
    2023
    Core deposits                  
    Noninterest-bearing accounts $ 684,501     $ 683,346     $ 773,901     $ 784,950     $ 827,362  
    NOW accounts   534,517       561,789       600,561       591,270       602,804  
    Money market accounts   1,345,289       1,311,940       1,308,467       1,246,807       1,195,482  
    Savings accounts   179,762       185,499       191,302       194,486       202,971  
    Total core deposits   2,744,069       2,742,574       2,874,231       2,817,513       2,828,619  
    Certificates of deposit   1,017,519       965,205       925,576       843,860       812,342  
    Total $ 3,761,588     $ 3,707,779     $ 3,799,807     $ 3,661,373     $ 3,640,961  

    Non-GAAP Reconciliations
    In addition to results presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles utilized in the United States (“GAAP”), this earnings release contains certain non-GAAP financial measures, which include: the efficiency ratio, tangible book value, tangible book value per share and the tangible equity to tangible assets ratio. The Company believes these non-GAAP financial measures and ratios as presented are useful for both investors and management to understand the effects of certain items and provide an alternative view of its performance over time and in comparison to its competitors. These non-GAAP measures have inherent limitations, are not required to be uniformly applied and are not audited. They should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for total stockholders’ equity or operating results determined in accordance with GAAP. These non-GAAP measures may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other companies.

    Set forth below is a reconciliation to GAAP of the Company’s efficiency ratio:

        Three Months Ended   Nine Months Ended
    (Dollars in thousands)   September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
      September 30,
    2023
    Noninterest expense   $ 30,585     $ 30,210     $ 90,659     $ 93,308  
    Less: merger expense                       4,741  
    Noninterest expense – adjusted   $ 30,585     $ 30,210     $ 90,659     $ 88,567  
                     
    Net interest income   $ 42,074     $ 42,166     $ 125,470     $ 127,510  
    Plus: tax-equivalent adjustment     368       354       1,072       903  
    Plus: noninterest income     8,282       8,113       25,206       23,825  
    Less: BOLI death benefit proceeds in excess of cash surrender value                 1,143       1,092  
    Less: loss (gain) on sale of premises and equipment                 (9 )     982  
    Net interest income plus noninterest income – adjusted   $ 50,724     $ 50,633     $ 150,614     $ 150,164  
    Efficiency ratio   60.74 %   60.08 %   60.17 %   61.66 %
    Efficiency ratio – adjusted   60.30 %   59.66 %   60.19 %   58.98 %
                             

    Set forth below is a reconciliation to GAAP of tangible book value and tangible book value per share:

        As of
    (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)   September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      December 31,
    2023
      September 30,
    2023
    Total stockholders’ equity   $ 540,004     $ 523,628     $ 513,173     $ 499,893     $ 484,411  
    Less: goodwill, core deposit intangibles, net of taxes     39,626       40,063       40,500       41,086       41,748  
    Tangible book value   $ 500,378     $ 483,565     $ 472,673     $ 458,807     $ 442,663  
    Common shares outstanding     17,514,922       17,437,326       17,444,787       17,387,069       17,380,307  
    Book value per share   $ 30.83     $ 30.03     $ 29.42     $ 28.75     $ 27.87  
    Tangible book value per share   $ 28.57     $ 27.73     $ 27.10     $ 26.39     $ 25.47  

    Set forth below is a reconciliation to GAAP of tangible equity to tangible assets:

        As of
    (Dollars in thousands)   September 30,
    2024
      June 30,
    2024
      March 31,
    2024
      December 31,
    2023
      September 30,
    2023
    Tangible equity(1)   $ 500,378     $ 483,565     $ 472,673     $ 458,807     $ 442,663  
    Total assets     4,637,293       4,670,864       4,684,011       4,672,633       4,651,997  
    Less: goodwill, core deposit intangibles, net of taxes     39,626       40,063       40,500       41,086       41,748  
    Total tangible assets   $ 4,597,667     $ 4,630,801     $ 4,643,511     $ 4,631,547     $ 4,610,249  
    Tangible equity to tangible assets   10.88 %   10.44 %   10.18 %   9.91 %   9.60 %

    (1)  Tangible equity (or tangible book value) is equal to total stockholders’ equity less goodwill and core deposit intangibles, net of related deferred tax liabilities.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Jackery Introduces Solar Generator 5000 Plus – “Most Trusted Whole-Home Backup Power”

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    FREMONT, Calif., Oct. 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Jackery, a global leader of innovative solar generators and green off-grid energy solutions, has launched its newest and most advanced product yet – the Jackery Solar Generator 5000 Plus. Powerful, portable and compact, the 5000 Plus is the lightest generator in its class and ensures people will stay connected, powered and secure, even in the most difficult and unexpected circumstances.

    “Safety, sustainability and convenience are at the forefront of every solar generator we produce, and the 5000 Plus delivers at every turn,” said Jack Sun, CEO of Jackery. “Whether you need to power your entire home during an outage or emergency, need additional power while embracing outdoor living or reliable everyday power, the 5000 Plus provides the performance, safety and convenience that people need.”        

    With LFP battery cells, the 5000 Plus offers 4,000 life cycles, ensuring long-term reliability. It operates quietly and requires no maintenance, making it a better option for indoor use compared to traditional gas generators, especially during extreme weather conditions. The UPS feature allows for instantaneous switching to backup power during an outage, ensuring sensitive equipment like computers and other essential devices keep running without interruption and with zero downtime.

    When paired with Jackery’s Smart Transfer Switch (STS), a single 5000 Plus delivers up to 7200W of power. And, when connected to a second unit, users can get up to 14400W, making it more than sufficient to power a home in the most unpredictable situation. When equipped with all modular extensions and add-ons available, the full 5000 Plus ecosystem capability reaches an impressive 60kWh – enough power to sustain the average American household necessities for up to several days (based on an average daily usage of 30kWh/day).

    The modular design of the 5000 Plus ensures users can extend power capacity to fit their individual needs. This flexibility also offers users complete control over the power usage, capacity, spending, and savings, making it a truly personalized backup power solution. The Jackery 5000 Plus not only meets 120V load demands, but can also power 240V appliances, such as dryers, water pumps, ovens, and high-power electric tools. It is also capable of recharging RVs and electric vehicles.

    The 5000 Plus is also equipped with dual-voltage solar charging, meaning that the system can recharge through a high voltage rooftop solar system and with Jackery’s portable solar panels. The 5000 Plus is compatible with most solar panels that use an MC4 connector, supporting up to 4000W of charging power for fast and efficient recharging. Compatible with up to six Jackery SolarSaga 200W portable solar panels or two new Jackery SolarSaga 500W portable solar panels, it is an eco-friendly, cost-saving solution for long-term use.

    For added convenience, users can utilize smart app control to activate UPS mode, schedule charging, and more. This convenient app control also provides quick access to the 5000 Plus’s status with easy-to-set charge/discharge parameters and modes.

    Further, the 5000 Plus is built to last, with fireproof, shockproof and IPX4 water-resistant certifications. Combined with Jackery’s 5+2 year warranty, the 5000 Plus is an investment in safety, sustainability, and convenience, ensuring long-term peace of mind.

    Jackery is dedicated to developing reliable technology and offers the industry’s exclusive ChargeShield 2.0 and Class B standard, providing up to 62 layers of protection for charging, discharging, and battery management systems (BMS). The Company’s AI-driven variable speed charging technology ensures dependable power usage every time.

    Whether for emergencies, off-grid living, or reliable everyday power, the 5000 Plus delivers the performance, safety, and ease that people need and have come to rely on from Jackery’s solar generators.

    Finally, while designed with whole-home backup in mind, the 5000 Plus is also perfect for off-grid living and grid arbitrage, offering features like peak shaving and valley lifting to balance energy consumption, reduce energy bills, and alleviate pressure on the grid. Whether you need power for an off-grid cabin, RV, job site, or even film production, the 5000 Plus is the perfect green-energy solution.

    For more information on Jackery, the 5000 Plus and other products, please visit www.jackery.com. Be sure to follow Jackery on social media at @JackeryUSA for the latest updates in real time.

    ABOUT JACKERY
    Founded in California in 2012, Jackery is the world’s leading provider of innovative solar generators and off-grid green energy solutions. As a global top-selling solar generator brand, Jackery is driven by its mission to “Bring Green Energy to All.” By integrating with Geneverse in 2024, Jackery has expanded its product offerings and is able to deliver a comprehensive range of energy solutions, from portable solar generators for outdoor use to whole-home backup systems, furthering its commitment to making green energy accessible for all. Jackery has consistently fulfilled its social responsibility on a global scale, maintaining long-term partnerships with global public welfare organizations such as WWF, NFF, and IRC. Through these collaborations, Jackery continues to contribute to global sustainable development and other public welfare initiatives, reinforcing its dedication to creating a greener, more sustainable future.

    MEDIA CONTACTS
    ICR
    jackery@icrinc.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/910a7380-9682-4ba7-acd6-8c69fba4e929

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: Tiny airborne particles within air pollution could be a silent killer – new study uncovers hidden risks and reveals who’s most at risk in New York state

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Shao Lin, Professor of Public Health, University at Albany, State University of New York

    Ultrafine particles stem from a variety of natural and human-made sources, including vehicle exhaust. Joe Raedle/Getty Images

    Long-term high ultrafine particle concentrations in New York state neighborhoods are linked to higher numbers of deaths. That is the key finding of our new research, published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials.

    Our study shows that high levels of ultrafine particles in the atmosphere over long periods of time are significantly associated with increased non-accidental deaths, particularly from cardiovascular and respiratory diseases.

    Ultrafine particles are aerosols less than 0.1 micrometers, or 100 nanometers, in diameter — about one-thousandth the width of a human hair. Due to their tiny size, they can be easily inhaled into the distal branches of lungs, quickly absorbed into the bloodstream and even pass through organ barriers.

    We also found that certain underserved populations, including Hispanics, non-Hispanic Black people, children under 5, older adults and non-New York City residents, are more susceptible to the adverse effects of ultrafine particles. The disparities our study uncovered underscore the necessity for public health agencies to focus on and protect high-risk populations.

    We quantified the long-term health impacts of exposure to these pollutants by combining mortality data from vital records in New York state and using a model that tracks how particles move and change through the air.

    Because ultrafine particles are so small, they are difficult to study, and more research is needed to determine how unsafe they are.

    Why it matters

    Air pollution is now ranked the second-leading risk factor for death, accounting for about 8.1 million deaths globally and about 600,000 deaths in the United States in 2021.

    Most air pollution standards and regulations have been focused on larger particulate matter, such as PM2.5 – which includes organic compounds and metal particulates – and PM10, a category that includes dust, pollen and mold.

    In comparison, ultrafine particles are typically much greater in number and have a much larger surface area-to-volume ratio, allowing them to carry substantial amounts of hazardous metals and organic compounds. Furthermore, because of their smaller size, ultrafine particles can follow the air flow and get deep into the lungs when inhaled. These unique characteristics make ultrafine particles particularly dangerous, leading to a range of adverse health problems.

    Despite this understanding, ultrafine particles remain largely unregulated, while larger particulates are regulated under the National Ambient Air Quality Standards.

    Due to their unique characteristics, ultrafine particles require additional, tailored attention.

    Ultrafine particles, not shown, are about one-thousandth the width of a human hair.
    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

    Ultrafine particles stem from both natural sources and human activity – primarily from combustion processes such as motor vehicles, power plants, wood burning and wildfires. A large share of ultrafine particles is created by chemical reactions in the atmosphere involving acidic gases from fossil fuel burning and ammonia from farming and residential wastes.

    As cities continue to expand and urban populations grow, people’s exposure to these harmful particles is likely to increase. Both PM2.5 and ultrafine particles come from similar sources and can also form through chemical reactions in the atmosphere, but their trends diverge.

    PM2.5 mass has been declining in many places, including New York, thanks to air quality regulations. However, recent research suggests that ultrafine particle numbers are not going down and have been increasing since 2017.

    What still isn’t known

    There are currently no large-scale monitoring sites in the U.S. dedicated to tracking ultrafine particles in the environment. This limits the ability of researchers like us to comprehend the extent of ultrafine particle exposure and its impact on public health.

    What’s more, the exact biological mechanisms through which ultrafine particles cause harm are not yet fully understood. Increasing research evidence suggests that ultrafine particles can affect heart function, causing hardening of arteries, lung inflammation and systemic inflammation.

    There have been few prior studies looking at death rates related to ultrafine particle exposure by demographics and seasonality. By understanding which groups are most vulnerable to ultrafine particle exposure, interventions can be more effectively tailored to lower the risks and protect those who are disproportionately affected. Our study, which is funded by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, helps fill in these critical knowledge gaps.

    The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Tiny airborne particles within air pollution could be a silent killer – new study uncovers hidden risks and reveals who’s most at risk in New York state – https://theconversation.com/tiny-airborne-particles-within-air-pollution-could-be-a-silent-killer-new-study-uncovers-hidden-risks-and-reveals-whos-most-at-risk-in-new-york-state-236299

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Proof that immigrants fuel the US economy is found in the billions they send back home

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Ernesto Castañeda, Professor, American University

    Migrant workers pick strawberries during harvest south of San Francisco, Calif. Visions of America/Joe Sohm/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

    Donald Trump has vowed to deport millions of immigrants if he is elected to a second term, claiming that, among other things, foreign-born workers take jobs from others. His running mate JD Vance has echoed those anti-immigrant views.

    Researchers, however, generally agree that massive deportations would hurt the U.S. economy, perhaps even triggering a recession.

    Social scientists and analysts tend to concur that immigration — both documented and undocumented — spurs economic growth. But it is almost impossible to calculate directly how much immigrants contribute to the economy. That’s because we don’t know the earnings of every immigrant worker in the United States.

    We do, however, have a good idea of how much they send back to their home countries – more than US$81 billion in 2022, according to the World Bank. And we can use this figure to indirectly calculate the total economic value of immigrant labor in the U.S.

    Economic contributions are likely underestimated

    I conducted a study with researchers at the Center for Latin American and Latino Studies and the Immigration Lab at American University to quantify how much immigrants contribute to the U.S. economy based on their remittances, or money sent back home.

    Several studies indicate that remittances constitute 17.5% of immigrants’ income.

    Given that, we estimate that the immigrants who remitted in 2022 had take-home wages of over $466 billion. Assuming their take-home wages are around 21% of the economic value of what they produce for the businesses they work for – like workers in similar entry-level jobs in restaurants and construction – then immigrants added a total of $2.2 trillion to the U.S. economy yearly.

    That is about 8% of the gross domestic product of the United States and close to the entire GDP of Canada in 2022 – the world’s ninth-largest economy.

    Immigration strengthens the US

    Beyond its sheer value, this figure tells us something important about immigrant labor: The main beneficiaries of immigrant labor are the U.S. economy and society.

    The $81 billion that immigrants sent home in 2022 is a tiny fraction of their total economic value of $2.2 trillion. The vast majority of immigrant wages and productivity – 96% – stayed in the United States.

    Remittances from the U.S. represent a substantial income source for the people who receive them. But they do not represent a siphoning of U.S. dollars, as Trump has implied when he called remittances “welfare” for people in other countries and suggested taxing them to pay for the construction of a border wall.

    The economic contributions of U.S. immigrants are likely to be even more substantial than what we calculate.

    For one thing, the World Bank’s estimate of immigrant remittances is probably an undercount, since many immigrants send money abroad with people traveling to their home countries.

    In prior research, my colleagues and I have also found that some groups of immigrants are less likely to remit than others.

    One is white-collar professionals – immigrants with careers in banking, science, technology and education, for example. Unlike many undocumented immigrants, white-collar professionals typically have visas that allow them to bring their families with them, so they do not need to send money abroad to cover their household expenses back home.

    Immigrants who have been working in the country for decades and have more family in the country also tend to send remittances less often.

    Both of these groups have higher earnings, and their specialized contributions are not included in our $2.2 trillion estimate.

    A Somali business owner stocks her store in Lewiston, Maine.
    Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call

    Additionally, our estimates do not account for the economic growth stimulated by immigrants when they spend money in the U.S., creating demand, generating jobs and starting businesses that hire immigrants and locals.

    For example, we calculate the contributions of Salvadoran immigrants and their children alone added roughly $223 billion to the U.S. economy in 2023. That’s about 1% of the country’s entire GDP.

    Considering that the U.S. economy grew by about 2% in 2022 and 2023, that’s a substantial sum.

    These figures are a reminder that the financial success of the U.S. relies on immigrants and their labor.

    Ernesto Castañeda does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Proof that immigrants fuel the US economy is found in the billions they send back home – https://theconversation.com/proof-that-immigrants-fuel-the-us-economy-is-found-in-the-billions-they-send-back-home-227542

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: NAVIFOR Officer Provides Critical Relief to Asheville Following Hurricane Helene’s Impact

    Source: United States Navy

    With a background shaped by multiple deployments in challenging environments, McQueen was well-prepared for the devastation he encountered. His experience taught him to remain focused under pressure, prioritize critical tasks, and, above all, keep pushing the mission forward. He quickly organized supplies and departed Norfolk for Asheville, making stops to pick up additional equipment and resources along the way.

    Brock felt a deep sense of urgency as he headed to North Carolina after receiving a call from his family about the devastation in his childhood town. Upon arriving in Asheville, he immediately recognized the severity of the situation and saw the path of devastation Helene had left firsthand. His brother, a member of the local firefighting team, had already been on the front lines of the relief effort. McQueen saw an opportunity to help not only his family but the wider community, where his leadership and problem-solving skills were quickly put to use. “When I saw the state of things, I knew I had to jump in,” McQueen said. “Helping my family was a priority, but this was about the whole community coming together.”

    Reporting to the Volunteer Fire Department in Fairview, a Buncombe County community just outside of Asheville, McQueen’s military training in logistics and coordination proved invaluable.

    For six days, McQueen was fully immersed in the recovery effort. His military training became an indispensable asset to the local response teams, who relied on his expertise to organize and conduct welfare checks across the region. Working alongside firefighters, law enforcement, and emergency medical personnel, McQueen assisted with the search and rescue of residents that were unaccounted for after floodwaters damaged multiple neighborhoods, ensuring no one was left behind.

    McQueen’s ability to communicate effectively with the local community played a key role in dispelling misinformation and ensuring the right resources went to those in need. His attention to detail, honed by years of military service, helped him identify discrepancies in reports and correct false information spreading through the area.

    One of his most significant contributions was turning a small UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) project into a highly effective data collection asset. He spearheaded the integration of UAV operators from different departments, ensuring their platforms worked together seamlessly.

    “Seeing how quickly the UAV team became a critical tool for recovery was rewarding,” McQueen reflected. “It was just an idea at first, but everyone came together to make it work.”

    The result was a vital resource for first responders—real-time aerial mapping of damaged homes, infrastructure, and roadways. His efforts also led to the discovery of missing persons and damaged areas that had gone unnoticed.

    A local fire chief noted that Lt. Cmdr. McQueen’s involvement was transformative for the team. He handled complex tasks that enabled the personnel to focus on other emergency responses, and his leadership provided the additional support needed to navigate those critical days.

    Yet, despite his success, McQueen understood that the road to recovery was far from over. “The community came together after the storm, which was amazing to see,” he said. “But I know that the hard work doesn’t end when the relief trucks leave. It’s going to take a long time to rebuild.”

    McQueen’s warfighter resiliency and the mental toughness developed through multiple deployments enabled him to remain focused on the daily challenges of the relief effort, keeping the mission on track. His training and experience, combined with a deep sense of duty to his family and community, made a lasting impact on the Fairview Community as it began the long process of recovery from Hurricane Helene.

    As Lt. Cmdr. McQueen packed up and prepared to leave Asheville on the seventh day, a mix of emotions weighed on him. Driving out of the storm-ravaged town, he glanced at the landscape one last time—the uprooted trees, battered homes, and streets still lined with debris. The devastation was still everywhere, and the work was far from finished. He had done everything he could in the short time he had, but as he started the long drive back to Virginia, he couldn’t help but feel a pull to stay longer, to continue helping the community that had welcomed him so warmly.

    “Disaster doesn’t discriminate,” McQueen said. “It hits everyone, and when it does, all we can do is come together to lift each other up. I’m just grateful I could play a part in that.”

    As he crossed the state line back into Virginia, McQueen’s thoughts turned to his own family. He knew they needed him, too, especially with his upcoming Permanent Change of Station (PCS) looming. His role as a father and husband couldn’t be put on hold, even for a crisis like this one. Still, he found solace in the fact that he had made a meaningful impact, and that others would carry on the work he had started.

    “It was tough to leave,” McQueen admitted. “But I felt like I’d done all I could for now. I just hope the efforts we started there will continue.”

    For more information on NAVIFOR, visit the command Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/NavalInformationForces/ or the public web page at https://www.navifor.usff.navy.mil.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Prof. Howard Wilson to lead science and technology for STEP

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    UK Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd announces the appointment of Professor Howard Wilson as Director of Science and Technology for STEP.

    Professor Howard Wilson – Image Credit: ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

    UK Industrial Fusion Solutions Ltd (UKIFS) is delighted to announce the appointment of Professor Howard Wilson as Director of Science and Technology, helping to lead STEP (Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production), a pioneering programme to deliver the UK’s first prototype fusion energy plant.

    An internationally renowned expert in fusion science, Howard brings extensive experience and expertise to the role and will become the first UKIFS Executive Committee member based at West Burton in Nottinghamshire, a former coal-fired power station site where the prototype plant will be built.

    Over the past 18 months, Howard has been the Fusion Pilot Plant Research & Development Lead at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the United States; prior to this he was based at the University of York where he founded the York Plasma Institute and the Fusion Centre for Doctoral Training.

    As Director of Science and Technology, Howard will oversee development of the plasma solution for STEP and will lead on the requirements for technology demonstration, both physical and digital, ensuring that modelling, simulation and testing tackles the specific challenges refined through the evolving whole plant design. He will work together with Chris Waldon (Chief Engineer) and Debbie Kempton (Director of Engineering Programme) in a triumvirate that will plan and ensure viable technologies, in an integrated plant design, that is developed and delivered in a robust way.

    Paul Methven, CEO of UK Industrial Fusion Solutions and Senior Responsible Owner for STEP, said: “As we embark on the second phase of the programme, Howard will be key in leading the development critical technologies for STEP, supporting the development of the fully integrated plant design. His impressive track record of fusion research and delivery will help to deliver the UK’s prototype fusion energy plant alongside the development of a fusion industry.”

    The appointment marks a return to the STEP programme for Howard – he became the first Programme Director for STEP from 2019 to 2020 following a secondment to the UK Atomic Energy Authority as Research Director in 2017.

    Howard has served on numerous international programme reviews and committees, including the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP), and chaired the International Tokamak Physics Activity (ITPA) in Pedestal and Edge Physics in support of ITER from 2008 to 2011. He has been a member of EUROfusion’s Science and Technology Advisory Committee (STAC) (2022-2023) and currently serves on the U.S. Department of Energy Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee.

    STEP is the UK’s flagship fusion programme that will demonstrate both a technical and industrial pathway towards commercial realisation, supporting the clean, safe, and sustainable energy over the long term.

    UKIFS is a wholly owned subsidiary of UK Atomic Energy Authority Group and will be responsible for the delivery of STEP from later this year. The programme aims to create future opportunities for suppliers ranging from whole plant integrators to critical system manufacturers that can design and deliver future plants worldwide in addition to benefitting the communities that surround West Burton.

    Fusion can be thought of as the opposite of fission – combining lighter atoms rather than splitting heavier ones. It is based on the same processes that power the sun and stars and has potential to provide safe, sustainable and low-carbon energy for generations to come.

    For further information about STEP, visit: https://step.ukaea.uk/

    Below shows a computer generated concept of STEP’s Tokamak.

    Image credit: United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority

    For further information, contact: communications@step.ukaea.uk

    Updates to this page

    Published 24 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gov. Kemp: TMC Transformers to Bring 110 Jobs, New Manufacturing Facility To Burke County

    Source: US State of Georgia

    Atlanta, GA – Governor Brian P. Kemp today announced that TMC Transformers USA Inc. (TMC), an international dry-type transformers manufacturer for a wide range of industrial applications, will expand its footprint in Georgia by investing more than $15.3 million over the next five years in a new manufacturing facility in Waynesboro, creating at least 110 new jobs in Burke County.

    “When we lead economic missions overseas and meet with companies like TMC, we do so to bring more opportunities back to hardworking Georgians, and so job creators like them can build a strong foundation alongside communities like Waynesboro,” said Governor Brian Kemp. “TMC’s decision to create over 100 well-paying jobs in Burke County comes at a critical time, and we look forward to their impact as that region of our state continues to recover and rebuild following the recent hurricanes.”

    TMC is a multinational company focused on design and production of medium and low voltage dry-type cast resin and VPI transformers. The company, which counts more than 500 employees and commercial offices in Europe, America, and East Asia, established its first U.S. production plant at the beginning of 2023 in Burke County.

    “Combining our expertise in the dry-type transformer industry with the needs of the U.S. market for accessible, reliable, and sustainable energy, the launch of the new plant highlights TMC’s strategic plans for substantial growth in North America,” said Cristiano Palladini, President of TMC USA. “We’re excited that Waynesboro will become a welcoming base for us. Georgia provides strong foundations for our business with its strategic position, the full support from Burke County and the Georgia delegation who share a business-oriented vision, and its community of hardworking and skilled Georgians in line with our needs.”

    TMC’s new facility at the Burke County Industrial Park in Waynesboro highlights its commitment to strengthening the company’s presence and investment in the United States. Operations in Burke County have already started at the company’s first facility, and the new plant is expected to be operational at the beginning of 2026. TMC is now hiring for roles in management, administrative staff, production technicians, operators, testers, sales, and quality control. Hiring will continue over the next few years as the project continues to ramp up. Interested individuals can learn more about careers with TMC at tmctransformers.us.  

    “The Development Authority of Burke County is pleased to have TMC Transformers make Waynesboro their permanent home,” said Austin Stacy, Executive Director of the Development Authority of Burke County. “Their decision to locate here is a true testament to the readiness and strong workforce that Burke County possesses. TMC’s core principles replicate our community’s values, and we look forward to continuing our work together to make Burke County a better place.”

    Senior Regional Project Manager Adela Kelley represented the Georgia Department of Economic Development (GDEcD) Global Commerce team on this competitive project in partnership with the Development Authority of Burke County.

    “After meeting with TMC’s leadership in Italy, we were truly impressed by their warmth, hospitality, and enthusiasm for their decision to invest in Georgia,” said GDEcD Commissioner Pat Wilson. “The transformers TMC will manufacture in Burke County are critical in addressing energy infrastructure needs for the state and the nation. TMC is just the type of company we aim to attract to Georgia: a long-term partner committed to strengthening our communities, economy, and industry ecosystems.”

    For over a century, Georgia has fostered healthy industry practices, encouraged collaboration and innovation, and positioned itself as a leader in developing and harnessing emerging technologies for evolving industries.

    The State of Georgia has had continuous representation in Europe since 1973. Italy is a top 15 trade partner for Georgia, with $3.4 billion in total trade moving between the state’s ports and Italy in 2023. Italy was also in the list of top 10 sources for international investment in Fiscal Year 2023, and Italian companies have invested more than $411 million in Georgia since 2010 through projects with state involvement.

    About TMC Transformers

    TMC Transformers USA Inc. is a leading provider of innovative and high-quality transformer solutions, dedicated to serving the energy needs of industries across North America. With a commitment to excellence and sustainability, TMC specializes in the design, manufacturing, and distribution of dry-type cast resin and VPI transformers. Its products are engineered to meet the highest standards of performance, reliability, and efficiency, ensuring optimal energy management for a wide range of applications, including utilities, data centers, semiconductors manufacturing, railways, marine and offshore, mining, and oil and gas. For more information, please visit tmctransformers.us or contact [email protected].

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gov. Justice announces success of Operation October Sky, seizure of meth, fentanyl, heroin, dangerous weapons

    Source: US State of West Virginia

    CHARLESTON, WV —  Gov. Jim Justice announced today the successful outcome of Operation October Sky, an aggressive initiative to combat the ongoing drug crisis in West Virginia. This operation resulted in significant drug seizures and numerous arrests. 

    During the week-long operation, which ran from October 7-14, over 30 law enforcement agencies across West Virginia seized more than 28 pounds of methamphetamine, nearly half a pound of fentanyl, and 18 fentanyl pills, alongside other dangerous substances such as heroin and cocaine. 

    The operation led to 70 felony arrests and 176 misdemeanor arrests, as well as the confiscation of 30 firearms—comprising 15 handguns and 14 rifles—and over $31,000 in cash linked to illegal drug activities.

    “I am incredibly proud of our teams who pulled the rope together for Operation October Sky,” Gov. Justice said. “Thankfully, we were able to help clean up many of our streets. However, the bottom line is that we’ve suffered terrible consequences because of the loose restrictions at our southern border. We can’t ignore how this serious issue fuels the drug epidemic and the absolute chaos we’re facing all across this nation. But, we will not stand for it here in West Virginia. We will continue to tackle these challenges head-on. We owe a huge thank you to the West Virginia State Police and all our law enforcement agencies for their fantastic job in keeping our streets safe from this terrible epidemic. If this is what we can do in a week, think about what we can accomplish in a year? We need to continue pushing for these kinds of crackdowns.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: “Language is the key to understanding the soul of a country”

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: State University Higher School of Economics – State University Higher School of Economics –

    Photo: freepic.com

    21 countries and 52 universities open their doors every semester to HSE students participating in the international academic mobility program. In the fall semester of this year, Sofia Malyukova, a third-year student of the bachelor’s program, went to study at the Ca’Foscari State University (Venice, Italy) under the academic mobility program.Foreign languages and intercultural communication» Foreign language schools National Research University Higher School of Economics.

    Her training in Ca’Foscari, whose rich history spans over 150 years, will last for two modules: from September 2024 to February 2025.

    Why Italy and the University of Venice

    — I have dreamed of studying in Italy since the 10th grade, and today, thanks to the HSE School of Foreign Languages, my dream has come true. I chose the Ca’Foscari University of Venice thanks to the positive feedback from students of our educational program who had already studied in Venice and were absolutely delighted with this university. In addition, the process of creating a curriculum turned out to be quite easy, since Ca’Foscari offers an extensive list of subjects for international students.

    Studying at the HSE School of Foreign Languages

    — I studied Italian from the age of 14 with a teacher, outside the school curriculum, because I was always attracted by the culture and history of Italy, and language is the key to understanding the soul of the country. Now my level of Italian is C1-C2, which allows me not only to communicate freely at the university, but also to feel confident outside of it.

    Having entered the first year of the bachelor’s degree program at the School of Foreign Languages (SFL) of the National Research University Higher School of Economics, I decided to choose French as my second foreign language because I wanted to learn another language from scratch. And I continue to intensively develop my Italian skills thanks to the variety of extracurricular activities of the HSE School of Foreign Languages related to Italian: I take part in annual International scientific and practical conference for students and postgraduates “Lingua e cultura italiana: soft power in the XXI century”, and also help with the preparation of events for the Italian Club of the HSE University School of Economics.

    Educational program at the University of Venice

    — The program for this semester is intense. I will study English and French, the theory of the first foreign language, the theory of teaching a foreign language, intercultural communication. Mobility at Ca’Foscari University will certainly bring me new unique experience for my future career. This university is one of the strongest in the field of linguistics. Here I will be able to expand my knowledge in a unique intercultural academic environment and learn how cultural differences affect corporate interaction, which is especially important for my specialization “Intercultural Corporate Communication”, which I will begin studying this academic year.

    Life in a city of contrasts

    — Venice certainly made a strong impression on me right away. It is a city that seems like a fairy tale and almost unreal, especially when you see it for the first time. Walking along narrow streets, crossing numerous bridges, you understand that every corner here breathes history. Venice is a city of contrasts. On the one hand, it is a tourist center, which is felt most strongly in the city center. But once you turn aside, go deeper into lesser-known neighborhoods, you find yourself in quiet, almost deserted places, where it seems that time has stopped.

    Of course, at first we had to get used to the absence of familiar streets, avenues and cars. Instead, locals travel by water trams (vaporetto), which is very convenient and fast.

    As for the climate, there is very high humidity, which is especially noticeable during the rainy season (usually late October and February). On rainy days, the streets can be slightly flooded, a phenomenon called “high water” (aqua alta), and then you have to go around the streets next to the canals. So living on the water is not only romantic, but also difficult. On the other hand, it has its charm: Venice is surrounded by water, and you always feel it.

    When I was choosing a place to live, I wanted to live not in Venice itself, but on the mainland, where there are more amenities for living. That’s why I found an apartment in the small town of Mestre, 15 minutes from Venice. These cities are connected by regular buses and trains, so there are no problems with transportation.

    And for students in Venice, there is a special transport card that allows you to move around Venice and the nearby cities (Mestre and Marghera) by bus, tram and vaporetto. Some campuses of Ca’Foscari University are located near vaporetto stops, so students also actively use this transport. However, in Italy there are often strikes during which employees of the transport industry do not work, so you have to plan your routes in advance.

    Ca’Foscari is like home

    — Studying at the University of Venice is an unforgettable experience due to the intercultural exchange, as students from all over the world study here. Among my friends there are not only Italians, but also guys from Japan, Korea, Turkey, America, Great Britain, Russia.

    All foreign students are treated very kindly, including by teachers who value foreign students very much and are always ready to help. All Italians are very hospitable and open, so I immediately felt at home among them.

    At the university, classes usually start early in the morning, but some subjects can be held in the evening, depending on the course. The class lasts for an hour and a half, which is universal for all Italian universities. In addition to classes at the Italian university, I take some compulsory subjects of my educational program at the National Research University Higher School of Economics online.

    Overall, my workload here is distributed very conveniently, thanks to which I have time to devote to additional education, my hobbies and travel around Italy. For example, I have already managed to visit seven cities: Rome, Milan, Florence, Verona, Peschiera del Garda, Padua and Treviso.

    As for the canteen, the university has one, but not all campuses. For example, some campuses are just classrooms in historical buildings, where there is no canteen. Moreover, breaks between classes last only 15 minutes, so it is best to take a snack from home to avoid standing in line at the canteen. I cook at home most often, but I also like to try different dishes of Italian cuisine. Sometimes we get together with foreign friends at Italians, cook pasta together and chat, exchanging impressions and telling each other about our cultures.

    Studying here is a unique cultural experience that I will definitely not forget. Venice teaches you not to rush, to enjoy the moment and the beauty around you. There is a special magic in Venice that cannot be explained in words, but can only be felt by seeing the city with your own eyes.

    Advice for those who want to take part in academic mobility

    — First of all, it was necessary to draw up an individual curriculum and coordinate it with the educational office. I chose the subjects that I would study in Italy and transfer upon my return. Therefore, it is very important that the content of the curriculum corresponds to the subjects studied at that time in our educational program at the School of Foreign Languages of the National Research University Higher School of Economics.

    The motivation letter was also an important document, as it was where I could explain how the opportunity to participate in the mobility program was connected with my academic and career goals and why my candidacy should be selected. The motivation letter is the only opportunity to “talk” to the admission committee, so it is very important to talk about your experience, personal qualities and plans for the future. Do not be afraid to fully disclose your achievements and show your desire for new heights!

    In addition to the motivation letter, letters of recommendation from teachers play a significant role. In my experience, it is important that they reflect various aspects of your activities. For example, I attached recommendations that covered not only my academic successes, but also extracurricular achievements (active participation in the life of the HSE School of Foreign Languages and the HSE School of Foreign Languages Italian Club, experience of volunteering at Olympiads and working as a teaching assistant).

    My main advice is to start preparing for the competition in advance and carefully work through each document. Approach this process as responsibly as possible and keep in mind that the commission pays attention not only to your academic achievements, but also to how you show yourself outside of your studies. Show your activity and interests, tell how the academic mobility program is connected with your plans for the future, and then your chances of successfully passing the selection will increase significantly.

    And of course, don’t be afraid of anything. Follow your dream, dare and be sure that getting the coveted letter that you have passed the competitive selection for the academic mobility program is quite possible. Good luck!

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s video message to the Virtual Launch of the UNEP Emissions Gap Report

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Download the video: https://s3.amazonaws.com/downloads2.unmultimedia.org/public/video/evergr…

    The message of today’s Emissions Gap report is clear:

    We are teetering on a planetary tight rope.

    Either leaders bridge the emissions gap, or we plunge headlong into climate disaster – with the poorest and most vulnerable suffering the most.

    This report shows annual greenhouse gas emissions at an all-time high – rising 1.3 per cent last year.  They must fall 9 per cent each year to 2030 to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius and avoid the very worst of climate change.

    Current policies are taking us towards a catastrophic 3.1 degrees Celsius temperature rise by the end of the century.

    As this report rightly puts it, people and planet cannot afford more hot air.

    The emissions gap is not an abstract notion.  There is a direct link between increasing emissions and increasingly frequent and intense climate disasters. 

    Around the world, people are paying a terrible price.

    Record emissions mean record sea temperatures supercharging monster hurricanes;

    Record heat is turning forests into tinder boxes and cities into saunas;
     
    Record rains are resulting in biblical floods.

    Today’s report shows affordable, existing technologies can achieve the emissions reductions we need to 2030 and 2035 to meet the 1.5 degree limit.

    But only with a surge in ambition and support.

    The upcoming United Nations climate conference – COP29 – must drive progress in two ways. 

    First, COP29 starts the clock for countries to deliver new national climate action plans – or NDCs – by next year. 

    Governments have agreed to align these plans with 1.5 degrees.

    That means they must drive down all greenhouse gas emissions and cover the whole economy – pushing progress in every sector.

    And they must wean us off our fossil fuel addiction: showing how governments will phase them out – fast and fairly; and contributing to global goals to accelerate renewables rollout and halt and reverse deforestation.

    The largest economies – the G20 members, responsible for around 80 per cent of all emissions – must lead. I urge first-movers to come forward.

    Second, finance will be front and centre at COP29. 

    Developing countries urgently need serious support to accelerate the transition to clean energy and deal with the violent weather they are already facing. 

    COP29 must agree a new finance goal that unlocks the trillions of dollars they need. And provides confidence it will be delivered.

    We know the price of climate inaction is far greater.

    This would require a significant increase in concessional public finance, that can be complemented by innovative sources, such as fossil fuel extraction levies.

    The COP29 outcome must also send clear signals, to drive action on debt relief and reform of the Multilateral Development Banks to make them bigger and bolder.

    Today’s Emissions Gap report is clear: we’re playing with fire; but there can be no more playing for time.

    We’re out of time.

    Closing the emissions gap means closing the ambition gap, the implementation gap, and the finance gap.

    Starting at COP29.

    Thank you.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Statement on United Nations Day

    Source: Government of Canada News

    “Today we mark 79 years since the United Nations was founded based on peace, equality and the rule of law. Eight decades later, Canada firmly believes that the United Nations is still the only global institution capable of addressing the challenges of our time. There’s no alternative that brings together nations of all sizes on an equal footing to collectively address the complex issues we are all facing…”

    October 24, 2024 – Ottawa, Ontario – Global Affairs Canada 

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today issued the following statement:

    “Today we mark 79 years since the United Nations was founded based on peace, equality and the rule of law. Eight decades later, Canada firmly believes that the United Nations is still the only global institution capable of addressing the challenges of our time. There’s no alternative that brings together nations of all sizes on an equal footing to collectively address the complex issues we are all facing.

    “We need this unique and essential forum more than ever. This year, we have seen the most armed conflicts since the United Nation’s inception. They have displaced millions, with women and girls often bearing the brunt of the violence and instability they bring. Climate change has led to more frequent and severe weather events, including flooding and droughts, and contributed to rising levels of extreme poverty, inequality and instability. In a rapidly changing world, the United Nations is critical in driving global solutions.

    “Canada is a key contributor to the United Nations and its sixth-largest donor. Our contributions are numerous and varied. We champion efforts to speed up the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals [SDGs], with our prime minister serving as co-chair of the SDG Advocates. We firmly support sustainable development and climate change initiatives and strongly advocate for human rights and gender equality.

    “At the recent United Nations General Assembly, Canada reiterated that countries around the world are faced with a choice. We can choose a world where rules can be broken by the powerful, bringing us back to darker times of tension and conflict. Or we can choose a world that upholds human rights, opportunities for all, peace and prosperity—bringing us to a world where people solve problems by working together.

    “Canada remains committed to ensuring that the United Nations continues to be a force for good in the world. We are actively working with partners so that the organization remains fit for purpose now and in the future. This means a United Nations that embodies the principles on which it is founded. This should be reflected in the top leadership which is why Canada calls for the next secretary-general to be a woman and for countries intending to put forward candidates to give due consideration to women candidates.

    “As we look ahead, Canada is committed to working with the United Nations and its member states to consolidate the gains in gender equality made to date and to confront efforts to reverse the progress made on existing rights and principles and stifle further needed progress. Together, we will work toward a strong, effective United Nations as a pillar of the rules-based international system.”

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: St. Louis area state parks and historic sites host fun fall activities

    Source: US State of Missouri

    JEFFERSON CITY, MO, OCT. 18, 2024 – Fall fun abounds at Missouri state parks and historic sites. From Halloween hikes to spooktacular events, there’s something for everyone!

    Friday, Oct. 18 at 6:30 p.m. – Halloween Night Hike at Mastodon State Historic Site.
    Celebrate Halloween with a family-friendly night hike at Mastodon State Historic Site! Participants will cover some non-spooky Halloween topics. Don’t worry – no jump scares here! Meet at the start of the Spring Branch Trail, located in the picnic area at 1800 Seckman Road in Imperial. From there, participants will hike the 0.8-mile loop, featuring an accessible packed gravel surface. Those attending are invited to wear a non-scary, family friendly Halloween costume. Costume or not, you should come dressed for the weather and wear sturdy closed-toe shoes and bring a flashlight. Space is limited and registration is required. To register, call or text 636-215-9784 or visit icampmo.com.

    Saturday, Oct. 19, 9 a.m. – 9 p.m. – Spooktacular Halloween at Meramec State Park.
    Meramec State Park is hosting its annual Spooktacular Halloween event on Saturday, Oct. 19. Join the park team for a coloring contest, a scavenger hunt, pumpkin carving, trick-or-treating, a movie and more! This will be held in the park campground at 115 Meramec Park Drive in Sullivan. The event is free, open to the public and registration is not required.

    Saturday, Oct. 19, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. – International Archaeology Day at Mastodon State Historic Site.
    Celebrate International Archaeology Day at Mastodon State Historic Site. All the free interpretive programs will be accessible from the museum parking lot at 1050 Charles J. Becker Drive in Imperial.

    Registration is required for the Archaeological Evidence program, but not for the afternoon programs. Starting at 10 a.m. in the museum auditorium, visitors can learn about archaeological evidence with a hands-on program. Participants will learn how to order evidence and how to sort facts from inferences and opinions. They will also have the opportunity to interpret a mock archaeology site. This program is designed for families with elementary-aged children, but all are welcome. Space is limited and registration is required and can be done by calling or texting 636-215-9784. At 1 p.m., guests can discover archaeological sites around the world in this interpreter-led presentation, “Archaeology Around the World.” From 3 – 4 p.m., try your hand at the ancient hunting technique of atlatl throwing. In the event of rain or other inclement weather, this program will be canceled.

    Saturday, Oct. 19, noon – 3 p.m. – Bones, Graveyards and Burials at First Missouri State Capitol State Historic Site.
    The leaves are falling, winds are howling, and ghostly spirits are calling in St. Charles, Missouri. It’s the perfectly creepy, chilly time of year to join the First Missouri State Capitol State Historic Site team and archaeologist for an eerie program exploring mysterious customs and the stranger side of burials. So, come learn about the interestingly spooky secrets beneath your feet and beyond! Presenters will cover topics ranging from specific challenges archaeologists face when they come across a burial, to the difference between a graveyard and a cemetery, to the history of the expression “saved by the bell.” Throughout the program, they will discuss local burials and archaeological digs that occurred right here in St. Charles. Members of the Archaeological Institute of America will also be on hand providing programs in honor of International Archaeology Day. Join the free program in the backyard of the historic site located at 200 S. Main St. in St. Charles.

    Monday, Oct. 21, 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. – Homeschool Hour: Outdoor Literature at Mastodon State Historic Site.
    Homeschoolers are invited to join the team at Mastodon State Historic Site for fun, educational activities. Each Homeschool Hour has two time slots, with the 10 a.m. slot for all ages, while the 1 p.m. slot is strictly for homeschoolers ages 10 and up and includes more advanced activities. Registration is required and space is limited. To register, call 636-464-2976 or visit icampmo.com (morning session) or icampmo.com (afternoon session). The majority of this session will take place outside, so dress appropriately. Mastodon State Historic Site is located at 1050 Charles J. Becker Drive in Imperial.

    Thursday, Oct. 24 at 10 a.m. – Toddler Thursdays at Mastodon State Historic Site.
    Come learn, create and play at Mastodon State Historic Site. Designed for toddlers and their grown-ups, Toddler Thursdays focus on different topics and include activities and a craft. Join the team in the museum auditorium at 1050 Charles J. Becker Drive.

    Thursday, Oct. 24 at 10 a.m. – St. Francois Adventure School: Bugs at St. Francois State Park.
    Our world is full of fascinating bugs. Homeschoolers and their adults are invited to join the park naturalists to get an up-close look at some of our tiny friends that have six, eight or more legs! The day begins at 9:45 a.m. with check-in at the campground amphitheater, followed by the first portion of the program at 10 a.m. After a discussion on the diverse world of insects, spiders and other arthropods, we will head out on Swimming Deer Trail to see if we can get a bug bingo. Students ages 5-8 will have a 0.25-mile hike while students ages 9-14 will have a 2-mile hike. Each child must be accompanied by a parent or guardian at all times, especially on the trail. Strollers will not be allowed on the trail. Registration is required and space is limited. To register, call 573-358-2173 or visit icampmo.com (ages 5-8) or icampmo.com (ages 9-14). St. Francois State Park is located at 8920 U.S. Highway 67 N. in Bonne Terre.

    Saturday, Oct. 26 and Sunday, Oct. 27, 10 a.m. – 10 a.m. – Babler’s Halloween Weekend at Dr. Edmund A. Babler Memorial State Park.
    This event is free, open to the public and registration is not required. Dr. Edmund A. Babler Memorial State Park is located at 800 Guy Park Drive in Wildwood.

    The weekend schedule follows:

    Saturday, Oct. 26
    10 a.m. – Wile E. Coyote – Speed on over to the park to learn about Missouri’s wiliest mammals yet: coyotes. Meet at the visitor center at 10 a.m.
    2 p.m. – Slither Me Timbers – Slither on over to meet one of Babler’s resident snakes and learn more about snakes, including how they are beneficial to you. Meet at the visitor center.
    4-8 p.m. – Babler’s Howl-oween – Trick-or-treating will be at the visitor center.
    8 p.m. – Camper Judging – Any camper who wants to participate in the Halloween decorating contest will be rated by a panel of judges. Judging starts at 8 p.m.

    Sunday, Oct. 27
    10 a.m. – Batty Business – Join an interpreter in learning about Missouri’s only flying mammals. Meet at the visitor center.

    Saturday, Oct. 26, 5-8 p.m. – St. Francois Halloween at St. Francois State Park.
    Everyone is invited to partake in some Halloween fun at the St. Francois State Park campground at 8920 U.S. Highway 67 N in Bonne Terre, Missouri. From 5-6 p.m., there will be a costume contest. The costume contest photo booth will run from 5-6 p.m. at the campground amphitheater stage, so stop by and get entered in the contest. There will be five categories: 0-3 years old, 4-7 years old, 8-12 years old, 13 years and older, and best group costume. Please keep the costumes family-friendly. From 6:30-8 p.m., trick-or-treating is open to the general public and will take place in the park campground. Driving through the campground will not be permitted during these hours. Participating campsites will be given a Halloween placard to post. Campers are responsible for providing their own candy to hand out and trick-or-treaters should bring a flashlight and bag for candy. At 8 p.m., the best decorated campsite award will be presented.

    Saturday, Oct. 26, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. – Rural Heritage Day at Felix Vallé House State Historic Site.
    Join the fun at Ste. Genevieve’s annual Rural Heritage Day. This festival celebrates rural Ste. Genevieve and features activities that allow participants to explore the area’s cultural history. Activities include free self-guided tours of the Felix Vallé House at 198 Merchant St. in Ste. Genevieve as well as live demonstrations and hands-on activities in the Shaw House courtyard. This is a communitywide event with multiple locations in downtown Ste. Genevieve hosting public programs.

    Saturday, Oct. 26, 2 – 8 p.m. – Halloween Hootenanny at Washington State Park.
    Come out to Washington State Park, located at 13041 State Highway 104 in De Soto, for the park’s annual Halloween Hootenanny.

    This year’s event schedule is as follows:

    2 p.m. – Web Master: Nature’s Greatest Artist – Join the park team at the amphitheater for a closer look at the life of an arachnid. Journey through the different species and have a closer look at Missouri spiders.
    4 p.m. – Haunted Happenings – Meet in front of the showerhouse, where you can sit back, relax and enjoy popcorn around the campfire as the park team shares spooky stories.
    6 p.m. – Masks and Mayhem – Campers and non-campers alike are invited to dress up and meet at Campsite #2, and trick or treat their way around the campground loop. Registered campers are also invited to participate in the campsite decorating contest.

    For detailed information on any of these activities, please visit mostateparks.com/events. For more information on state parks and historic sites, visit mostateparks.com. Missouri State Parks is a division of the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Final Defendant Pleads Guilty, Three Others Sentenced in Upstate Meth Trafficking Case

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    SPARTANBURG, S.C. — Three members of an Upstate drug ring have been sentenced to federal prison and the final member has pleaded guilty for their role in a methamphetamine trafficking conspiracy.

    Richard Brian Walker, 49, of Chesnee, was sentenced to 270 months’ imprisonment. Walker additionally pled guilty to possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, possession of a short-barreled rifle, and possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime. 

    Rebecca Elizabeth Whitesides, 54, of Mooresboro, N.C., 120 months’ imprisonment. Whitesides also pled guilty to money laundering. 

    Amanda Gail Tuck, 45, of Chesnee, was sentenced to 70 months’ imprisonment.

    The final defendant Jeffrey Michael Wilson, 54, of Commerce, Georgia pled guilty to conspiracy to traffic methamphetamine and to possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine. Wilson was convicted in a prior federal methamphetamine conspiracy case in 2000.

    Evidence presented to the court showed that on Jan. 18, 2023, Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office deputies pulled over Whitesides on I-85 and searched her car, finding almost two kilograms of methamphetamine. Investigation into her bank accounts demonstrated that she was assisting others to conceal payments for drug proceeds.

    On Feb. 22, 2023, Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office was conducting surveillance on Walker’s home and observed Wilson’s car arrive and leave. Law enforcement conducted a traffic stop on Wilson, locating more than 5,800 grams of methamphetamine and a loaded semi-automatic pistol with 19 rounds. Over the course of the conspiracy, Wilson was responsible for trafficking 50 kilograms of methamphetamine with Walker.

    A search warrant was also executed on Walker’s residence and storage building that day, and investigators located over 500 grams of methamphetamine and 85 grams of fentanyl, a loaded pistol, a rifle, and an unmarked short-barreled AR-15 style rifle, commonly referred to as a “ghost gun.” Tuck was also located on the premises.

    Only a month later, on March 24, 2023, Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office deputies pulled over Tuck and located almost a kilogram of her methamphetamine in a U-Haul truck.

    United States District Judge Donald C. Coggins sentenced the defendants and accepted Wilson’s guilty plea.  The court ordered each sentence to be followed by a term of supervised release. Judge Coggins will sentence Wilson at a later date. The maximum penalty for the offense is life imprisonment. There is no parole in the federal system.

    This prosecution is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) investigation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level drug traffickers, money launderers, gangs, and transnational criminal organizations that threaten the United States by using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach that leverages the strengths of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies against criminal networks. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.

    This case was investigated by Homeland Security Investigations, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, South Carolina Department of Corrections Office of the Inspector General, Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office, Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office, Greenville County Sheriff’s Office, and Greenville County Multi-Jurisdictional Drug Enforcement Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jamie Schoen is prosecuting the case.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: New Orleans Man Sentenced to 82 Months for Federal Weapons Offense

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA – RONALD TAYLOR (“TAYLOR”), age 31, of New Orleans, was sentenced on October 1, 2024 to 82 months imprisonment, 3 years of supervised release, and a $100 mandatory special assessment fee, announced United States Attorney Duane A. Evans.  TAYLOR previously pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 922(g)(1) and 924(a)(8).

    According to court documents, on August 31, 2023, the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office stopped a stolen vehicle, after receiving notification via the “Flock System” that the vehicle had been reported stolen two days prior in a carjacking in Harris County, Texas.  TAYLOR, the driver, was accompanied by his fiancé and his three-year-old daughter.  The officers conducted a vehicle inventory search prior to towing and processing the vehicle and, located three loaded firearms and ammunition inside.  TAYLOR admitted that all three firearms were his.

    TAYLOR knowingly possessed these firearms despite his status as a prohibited person, having already been convicted of three prior felonies, including one for being a felon in possession of a firearm. 

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone.  On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

    The case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.  This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Christine Calogero of the General Crimes Unit.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Tahlequah Resident Sentenced For Federal Firearm Crime

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    MUSKOGEE, OKLAHOMA – The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Oklahoma announced that Charles Edward Ketcher, Jr., age 33, of Tahlequah, Oklahoma, was sentenced to 15 months in prison for illegally possessing a firearm.

    The charges arose from an investigation by the Adair County Sheriff’s Office and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

    On March 15, 2024, Ketcher pleaded guilty to one count of Felon in Possession of a Firearm.  According to investigators, on October 14, 2023, Ketcher was captured on a surveillance camera carrying a rifle.  At the time Ketcher possessed the rifle, he knew he had previously been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone.  On May 26, 2021, the department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

    The Honorable Ronald A. White, Chief District Judge in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, presided over the hearing.   Ketcher was remanded into the custody of the U.S. Marshal pending transportation to a designated United States Bureau of Prisons facility to serve a non-paroleable sentence of incarceration.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael E. Robinson represented the United States at the sentencing hearing.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: How Elon Musk has become a powerful figure in US politics

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Thomas Gift, Associate Professor and Director of the Centre on US Politics, UCL

    Elon Musk, whose company SpaceX recently made history by catching a Starship rocket booster as it careened back to Earth, wants you to vote for Donald Trump for many reasons. That includes not just what Trump will do here on this planet, but also for what he’ll achieve that’s outside this world. “Vote for @real DonaldTrump,” Musk recently tweeted, “if you want humanity to be a spacefaring civilization”.

    Back inside the Earth’s orbit, the CEO of Tesla and X, and one of the richest men in the world, makes an odd foil for Democrats. In a parallel universe, his work in commercial space flights, inventing the most advanced electric cars on the planet, advocacy for sustainable energy, and long record of voting “100 percent Dem until a few years ago” would seem make him a hero of the left. Instead, Musk has taken on the role of comic book supervillain whose full-throated support for Trump has turned him into a pariah among progressives.

    Musk purports to be baffled by the backlash, since he insists that nothing that he represents is particularly controversial. He considers himself a political “moderate” who, in backing Trump, is simply standing up for common-sense, middle-of-the-road positions: belief in free speech, deference to the US Constitution, and the right of countries to control their borders. “I’ve been told at times that they are like right-wing values,” Musk said. “These are the fundamental values that made America what it is today.”

    Of course, Musk knows better. In between burning the midnight oil at his multiple corporate enterprises, Musk finds the time to tweet dozens of times a day, often trolling critics, heralding Trump, and only rarely apologising for outlandish, crass, conspiracy-laden and sometimes even false posts. Musk has acknowledged that some of his tweets are “extremely dumb”, though he refuses to apply a filter.

    In describing Musk, one journalist fretted what could happen when “the world’s richest man runs a communications platform in a truly vengeful, dictatorial way … to promote extreme right-wing agendas and to punish what he calls brain-poisoned liberals”.

    Elon Musk owns SpaceX.

    Musk’s power lies in his willingness to say just about anything — backstopped by his ownership of part of the internet’s de facto public square. In a now-deleted tweet, Musk pondered sarcastically that “no one is trying to assassinate” Kamala Harris or Joe Biden. Outside of X, Musk admits he’s been “trashing Kamala nonstop” and that, if Harris wins, he’s “fucked”.

    Throwing money and power around

    Musk is a Maga convert. In 2022, the same year that he bought Twitter and reinstated Trump’s privileges, Musk said that it was “time for Trump to hang up his hat & sail into the sunset”. Pulling no punches, Trump once called Musk “another bullshit artist”.

    Musk claims to have supported Democrats in recent elections, including Joe Biden in 2020. In July of this year, however, Musk announced that he was endorsing Trump, in large part because of how the former president’s reacted after an assassination attempt on his life. “This is a man who has courage under fire!” Musk said.

    Musk represents a new crop of politically charged billionaires who aren’t content to stay on their mega-yachts, and instead want to throw their money — and power — around in support of conservative causes.

    Yet unlike others to whom he’s often compared — such as Bill Ackman, the CEO of hedge fund Pershing Square, and Peter Thiel, co-creator of PayPal — no one has gone “all in” for Trump like Musk.

    Earlier this month, Musk invested US$75 million (£57.8 million) of his own money to create the pro-Trump America Political Action Committee (Pac). (A Pac raises money for a political candidate.) The Pac has offered registered voters in Pennsylvania US$100 (and the chance to win US$1 million) if they sign a petition “in support of free speech and the right to bear arms”.

    While critics have called the move illegal, pointing to federal election law that bars paying “or offer[ing] to pay … for registration to vote or for voting”. Musk insists there’s a loophole: he isn’t technically tying his giveaways to voting – and the US Justice Department has said this could violate federal electoral law.

    Musk has changed his short-term residency to mobilise support for Trump. As of October, Musk has hunkered down in Pennsylvania, the swing state he calls the “linchpin” in the 2024 US election, where his campaigning has included giving a surprise speech for Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania – where there was previously an assassination attempt on Trump.

    Musk has painted doomsday scenarios of what could happen if the election doesn’t turn out how he likes. In a just-released interview with former Fox News journalist Tucker Carlson, Musk surmised that “if Trump doesn’t win this election, it’s the last election we’re going to have”. The comment comes as Republicans have pilloried Democrats’ dialled-up rhetoric that democracy is “at stake” in 2024.

    Beyond the election, there’s more than speculation that Musk could be tapped for a role in a potential Trump 2.0 administration. He’s openly campaigned to serve as the new head of a department for government efficiency. Trump has already announced that, if elected, Musk will direct a task force to conduct a “complete financial and performance audit of the entire federal government” and offer “recommendations for drastic reforms”.

    True to form, Musk promises that his public service won’t stop at the edge of Earth’s outer orbit. “Washington DC has become an ever-increasing ocean of brake pedals stopping progress,” he says. “Let’s change those brake pedals to accelerators, so we can get great things done in America and become a spacefaring civilization!” One thing’s for sure: Musk’s politics are, quite literally, out of this world.

    Thomas Gift does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. How Elon Musk has become a powerful figure in US politics – https://theconversation.com/how-elon-musk-has-become-a-powerful-figure-in-us-politics-242034

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Secretary-General’s video message to the Virtual Launch of the UNEP Emissions Gap Report

    Source: United Nations – English

    ownload the video: https://s3.amazonaws.com/downloads2.unmultimedia.org/public/video/evergr…

    The message of today’s Emissions Gap report is clear:

    We are teetering on a planetary tight rope.

    Either leaders bridge the emissions gap, or we plunge headlong into climate disaster – with the poorest and most vulnerable suffering the most.

    This report shows annual greenhouse gas emissions at an all-time high – rising 1.3 per cent last year.  They must fall 9 per cent each year to 2030 to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius and avoid the very worst of climate change.

    Current policies are taking us towards a catastrophic 3.1 degrees Celsius temperature rise by the end of the century.

    As this report rightly puts it, people and planet cannot afford more hot air.

    The emissions gap is not an abstract notion.  There is a direct link between increasing emissions and increasingly frequent and intense climate disasters. 

    Around the world, people are paying a terrible price.

    Record emissions mean record sea temperatures supercharging monster hurricanes;

    Record heat is turning forests into tinder boxes and cities into saunas;
     
    Record rains are resulting in biblical floods.

    Today’s report shows affordable, existing technologies can achieve the emissions reductions we need to 2030 and 2035 to meet the 1.5 degree limit.

    But only with a surge in ambition and support.

    The upcoming United Nations climate conference – COP29 – must drive progress in two ways. 

    First, COP29 starts the clock for countries to deliver new national climate action plans – or NDCs – by next year. 

    Governments have agreed to align these plans with 1.5 degrees.

    That means they must drive down all greenhouse gas emissions and cover the whole economy – pushing progress in every sector.

    And they must wean us off our fossil fuel addiction: showing how governments will phase them out – fast and fairly; and contributing to global goals to accelerate renewables rollout and halt and reverse deforestation.

    The largest economies – the G20 members, responsible for around 80 per cent of all emissions – must lead. I urge first-movers to come forward.

    Second, finance will be front and centre at COP29. 

    Developing countries urgently need serious support to accelerate the transition to clean energy and deal with the violent weather they are already facing. 

    COP29 must agree a new finance goal that unlocks the trillions of dollars they need. And provides confidence it will be delivered.

    We know the price of climate inaction is far greater.

    This would require a significant increase in concessional public finance, that can be complemented by innovative sources, such as fossil fuel extraction levies.

    The COP29 outcome must also send clear signals, to drive action on debt relief and reform of the Multilateral Development Banks to make them bigger and bolder.

    Today’s Emissions Gap report is clear: we’re playing with fire; but there can be no more playing for time.

    We’re out of time.

    Closing the emissions gap means closing the ambition gap, the implementation gap, and the finance gap.

    Starting at COP29.

    Thank you.
     

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cassidy Releases Critical Report Outlining National Flood Insurance Program Crisis, Urges Congress to Act

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy

    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) today released a new report detailing the current state of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and the issues that led to skyrocketing premiums for millions of homeowners. The report explains the historical developments that led NFIP to this moment, key findings following a thorough examination of the crisis, and next steps Washington must take.
    “This report confirms what Louisiana homeowners already know—the National Flood Insurance Program is broken,” said Dr. Cassidy. “We must understand the problem to properly diagnose it and address it. This report clearly lays out why flood insurance premiums are out of control, but also why there is reason to hope.”
    For over 50 years, Americans have relied on the NFIP for affordable flood insurance to protect them in case of a natural disaster or major flood. NFIP is often the only flood insurance option for many communities. However, skyrocketing insurance premiums caused by FEMA’s new risk assessment program, Risk Rating 2.0, have left many Louisianans with no way to protect their families and homes. Cassidy’s report found that Risk Rating 2.0 makes flood insurance unaffordable, puts the entire program at financial risk, and runs contrary to Congressional intent. 
    Click here to read the full report and here to read the one-pager.
    Background
    In January, the U.S. Senate Banking Committee held a hearing on NFIP at the request of Cassidy. The hearing highlighted the urgent need for Congress to act and featured a Louisiana witness. Cassidy also participated in a roundtable hosted by GNO, Inc. and the Coalition for Sustainable Flood Insurance before introducing the bill to hear from community leaders and advocates on the issue.
    Cassidy traveled St. Bernard Parish last year to talk with residents about their flood insurance premiums, resulting in the second episode of his series Bill on the Hill.
    Over the last several months, Cassidy has delivered a series of speeches on the Senate floor calling for action on NFIP. Most recently, he demanded that Congress reauthorize and reform the program just before its authorization expired at the end of the fiscal year on September 30th.

    MIL OSI USA News