Tuesday, September 30, 2008

United States Bishops Weigh In On Financial Crisis

Gregory Mussmacher, God Bless!!

US Bishops Offer 5 Keys to End Financial Crisis Urge Responsibility for Choices Made WASHINGTON, D.C., SEPT. 29, 2008 (Zenit.org).-

As Congress goes back to the drawing board to consider the nation's finances after today's failed bailout vote, the country's bishops have their own list of principles they hope will be taken into account. In a letter sent to government leaders Friday, Bishop William Murphy of Rockville Centre, New York, chairman of the episcopal conference's Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, urged a consideration of five key principles when considering how to bail out the nation's failing economy. He first promised that the bishops are praying for the situation, which he called "both terribly disturbing and enormously complicated." Then, acknowledging that "my brother bishops and I do not bring technical expertise to these complicated matters," he affirmed that "our faith and moral principles can help guide the search for just and effective responses to the economic turmoil threatening our people." The first key Bishop Murphy encouraged was taking into account the "human and moral dimensions" of the crisis. "Economic arrangements, structures and remedies should have as a fundamental purpose safeguarding human life and dignity," he affirmed. The prelate said a "scandalous search for excessive economic rewards," which gets to the point of exacerbating the vulnerable, is an example of "an economic ethic that places economic gain above all other values." "This ignores the impact of economic decisions on the lives of real people as well as the ethical dimension of the choices we make and the moral responsibility we have for their effect on people," Bishop Murphy wrote. Second, the New York bishop called for "responsibility and accountability." "Clearly, effective measures are required which address and alter the behaviors, practices and misjudgments that led to this crisis. [] Those who directly contributed to this crisis or profited from it should not be rewarded or escape accountability for the harm they have done," he said. Meeting needs The prelate next recalled that in any case, the market will always have "advantages and limitations." "[T]here are human needs which find no place on the market," Bishop Murphy said. "It is a strict duty of justice and truth not to allow fundamental human needs to remain unsatisfied." In this regard, he called for a "renewal of instruments of monitoring and correction within economic institutions and the financial industry as well as effective public regulation and protection to the extent this may be clearly necessary." "Solidarity and the common good" is the fourth principle the prelate encouraged. "The principle of solidarity reminds us that we are in this together and warns us that concern for narrow interests alone can make things worse," he explained. "The principle of solidarity commits us to the pursuit of the common good, not the search for partisan gain or economic advantage." Finally, Bishop Murphy recommended recalling the principle of subsidiarity. "Subsidiarity places a responsibility on the private actors and institutions to accept their own obligations," he said. "If they do not do so, then the larger entities, including the government, will have to step in to do what private institutions will have failed to do." The bishop concluded recalling words from the encyclical "Centesimus Annus": "Our Catholic tradition calls for a society of work, enterprise and participation which is not directed against the market, but demands that the market be appropriately controlled by the forces of society and by the state to assure that the basic needs of the whole society are satisfied. "These words of John Paul II should be adopted as a standard for all those who carry this responsibility for our nation, the world and the common good of all." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23752?l=englishSphere: Related Content

Monday, September 29, 2008

John Paul I Seen As Teacher of Humility

Gregory Mussmacher, God Bless!!
John Paul I Seen As Teacher of Humility Benedict XVI Remembers Pope's Spiritual Legacy CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Although Pope John Paul II was Pontiff for only 33 days, he left a great spiritual legacy, says Benedict XVI. The Pope said this as he reflected on the readings from today's liturgy before praying the Angelus with the crowds gathered in the courtyard of the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo. He noted that the Gospel parable proposed by the liturgy "teaches us that humility is essential for welcoming the gift of salvation." The parable -- from Matthew -- speaks of two sons who were asked by their father to do some work in his vineyard. One of the two sons said yes, but did not go; the other refused, but then changed his mind and went. "With this parable Jesus emphasizes his predilection for sinners who convert," said the Holy Father. The Pontiff added that the reading from the Letter to the Philippians also calls for humility. "Do nothing out of selfishness or vainglory," St. Paul wrote, "but humbly regard others as superior to you." "Reflecting on these biblical texts," he said, "I immediately thought of Pope John Paul I, the 30th anniversary of whose death is today." Benedict XVI noted that John Paul I -- known as the "smiling Pope" -- had as his motto "Humilitas": "a single word that synthesizes what is essential in Christian life and indicates the indispensable virtue of those who are called to the service of authority in the Church." The essential virtue The Holy Father noted that his successor, who died 33 days after being elected Pope in 1978, had said in one of his four general audiences: "I will just recommend one virtue so dear to the Lord. He said, 'Learn from me who am meek and humble of heart.' Even if you have done great things, say: 'We are useless servants.' Alternatively, the tendency in all of us is rather the contrary: to show off." "Humility can be considered his spiritual legacy," said the German Pontiff. "His simplicity," continued the Pope, "was a vehicle of a solid and rich teaching that, thanks to the gift of an exceptional memory and great culture, he adorned with numerous references to ecclesiastical and secular writers." Benedict XVI called John Paul I "an incomparable catechist." "We must feel small before God," John Paul I had said. "I am not ashamed to feel like a child before his mother; one believes in one's mother; I believe in the Lord, in what he has revealed to me." Benedict XVI commented: "These words display the whole breadth of his faith. "As we thank God for having given him to the Church and to the world, let us treasure his example, exerting ourselves to cultivate his humility, which made him capable of talking to everyone, especially the little and so-called distant." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23742?l=english


Sister Faustina's Confessor Remembered Pontiff Comments on Father Sopocko CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Benedict XVI remembered the priest who was instrumental in helping St. Faustina Kowalska write her diary and communicate to the world her spiritual experiences. In greeting Polish pilgrims today after praying the Angelus with the crowds gathered in the courtyard of the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo, the Pope turned his thoughts to the faithful gathered in Bialystok, Poland, for the beatification of Father Michal Sopocko, confessor and spiritual director of St. Faustina Kowalska.Father Sopocko (1888-1975) was also the founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of Merciful Jesus and the lay institute of Divine Mercy. He was born in Juszewszczyna, near the region of Vilnius (which at that time was in Poland, but is now in Lithuania). "At his suggestion," Benedict XVI said, "[Sister Faustina] described her mystical experiences and apparitions of merciful Jesus in her well known 'Diary.'" And also "thanks to his efforts," the Pope added, "the image with the words 'Jesus, I trust in you,' was painted and transmitted to the world." The image of the merciful Jesus is the work of Eugeniusz Kazimirowski, a Polish artist to whom Father Sopocko entrusted the task of reproducing what Sr. Faustina described in her diary. "This Servant of God became known as a zealous priest, teacher and promoter of the Divine Mercy devotion," the Pontiff said. The Holy Father noted that his predecessor, Pope John Paul II, had "entrusted the world to Divine Mercy." Benedict XVI repeated John Paul II's words to the pilgrims gathered at the papal summer residence: "May God, who is rich in mercy, bless you!" Family life Archbishop Angelo Amato, prefect of the Congregation for Saints' Causes, was sent by Benedict XVI to be his representative at today's beatification Mass in the square of the Church of Divine Mercy in Bialystok. Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz, the archbishop of Krakow, delivered the homily during the Eucharistic celebration. According to Vatican Radio, Archbishop Amato invited all to follow the teaching of the Polish priest, especially in family relationships. "In families," the archbishop said, "there is need for mercy every day; every day the wife must be compassionate with her husband and vice-versa, continually reconfirming their reciprocal fidelity." "Every day parents must be magnanimous in forgiving their children," he said, "in experiencing their disobedience and their mistakes. But children too must be patient with their parents." Everyone, the prelate explained, in the family, at work, in society, everywhere and always, "can exercise mercy, forgiveness, understanding: our society needs honest, good, generous, compassionate citizens." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23746?l=english


Benedict XVI to Return to Vatican CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Benedict XVI will return to the Vatican this week, concluding his stay at the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo. The Pope made this announcement after praying the Angelus with the crowds gathered in the courtyard of the apostolic palace in the Italian town, located just 19 miles to the south of Rome. "Summer has come to an end and I will return to the Vatican the day after tomorrow," the Pontiff said. He has been residing in the Castel Gandolfo since July 2. "I thank the Lord for all the gifts he has bestowed upon me during this time," the Pontiff said. "I think especially of World Youth Day in Sydney, the period of rest in Bressanone, the visit to Sardinia and the apostolic trip to Paris and Lourdes; and I think of the possibility of sojourning here in this house, where I am better able to rest and work during the hottest months." Before leaving he directed an affectionate greeting to the community of Castel Gandolfo, with a heartfelt thank you to the bishop, the mayor and the various police departments." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23743?l=english


Pope: Religious Liberty Is a Win-Win Situation Receives in Audience New Envoy From Czech Republic CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


When the Church is allowed the freedom to exercise its ministry, which includes the right to own the material goods it needs, everybody wins, says Benedict XVI. The Pope said this Saturday upon receiving the credentials of the new Czech envoy to the Holy See, Pavel Vosalik. The audience took place at the Papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo. "Hope is indeed the timeless message which the Church offers to every generation, and it prompts her to participate in the global task of forging bonds of peace and goodwill among all peoples," the Holy Father said in his introduction. "She does this in a special way by her diplomatic activity, through which she extols the dignity of persons as destined for a life of communion with God and with one another," he added Noting that the Czech Republic will hold the presidency of the Council of the European Union in 2009, the Pontiff said "new avenues of influence will soon open" for the Czech Republic. "Your nation," he said, "bolstered by the sense of solidarity that enabled her to emerge courageously from the collapse of totalitarianism, also desires to contribute to the welfare of the human family by enhancing international cooperation in the struggle against violence, hunger, poverty and other social ills." Benedict XVI affirmed that "human happiness and well-being cannot be achieved through structures alone or by any single stratum of social or political life." Working together He explained: "The realization of a genuine culture worthy of man's noble vocation requires the harmonious cooperation of families, ecclesial communities, schools, businesses, community organizations and governmental institutions. "Far from being ends in themselves, these entities are organized structures intended for the service of all, and are integrally connected to one another in the pursuit of the common good. "For this reason, all of society benefits when the Church is afforded the right to exercise stewardship over the material and spiritual goods required for her ministry." The Pope acknowledged "signs of progress" in the Czech Republic, but said more is still to be done. He cited the positive resolution of issues regarding ecclesiastical property, and said he hoped the process will "move forward with honesty, fairness, and a genuine recognition of the Church's ability to contribute to the welfare of the republic." The Holy Father also mentioned his concern for the future of St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague, "which stands as a living witness to the rich cultural and religious heritage of your land, and testifies to the harmonious coexistence of Church and state." The Church in the Czech Republic has been embroiled in dispute for the last 16 years over ownership of the Gothic cathedral, which dates back to the 14th century, and adjacent buildings. The government currently holds control of the building. Genuine solidarity "By its very nature, the Gospel urges people of faith to offer themselves in loving service to their brothers and sisters without distinction and without counting the cost," continued Benedict XVI. "Love is the outward manifestation of the faith that sustains the community of believers and empowers them to be signs of hope for the world." He gave as an example the work of Caritas in the country: "The coordination between Caritas Czech Republic and the governmental Ministries of Health, Labor and Social Affairs demonstrates the potential fruits that can result from close collaboration between State and Church agencies. "I would emphasize here the enormous formative potential for young people, whose participation in such initiatives teaches them that genuine solidarity does not merely consist in supplying material goods but in making a gift of oneself." More than 10.2 million people reside in the Czech Republic, 26% of whom said they considered themselves Catholic in a 2001 census. Some 59% said they were unaffiliated with any religion, 2.1% said they were Protestant, and the remainder were either unspecific or claimed "other." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23741?l=english


Can't the World Do More for the Poor? Father Lombardi Analyzes Economic Crises VATICAN CITY, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


If huge steps can be taken to save the most developed economies from crisis, why can't more be done for poorer countries, asks a Vatican spokesman. Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Vatican press office, posed this question as he analyzed the urgent needs of the global economy on the last episode of the weekly Vatican Television program "Octava Dies." "The economic commitments that were suddenly taken on to salvage the American financial system, and by connection the international financial system, are of impressive dimensions," he said. On Sunday, U.S. Congressional leaders and the White House agreed to a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry -- the largest in the country's history. Father Lombardi noted that the effort to save the most developed economies from crisis is much greater than all international economic aid effort combined. "Without denying the urgency of this crisis, there is a question that naturally poses itself," Father Lombardi said. "Can't we and mustn't we do more to save the economies and promote the development of the poorest countries?" The Vatican spokesman noted that we ought not forget "that the necessary resources to help the poorest are much less in comparison to the worldwide military expenditures and the expenditures of the rich to satisfy non-primary needs." "These reflections may seem obvious and even ingenuous, but in reality they are essential in a long-term vision of the general interests of humanity, that looks to peaceful and fair development for the benefit of all," he said. Father Lombardi concluded his remarks with a quote from Benedict XVI's Sept. 21 Angelus address: "Such a commitment, while demanding sacrifices in these moments of worldwide economic difficulties, will not be without important benefits for the development of nations who are in need of help and for the peace and well-being of the entire planet." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23744?l=english


Repressing Religion US Releases Annual Survey on Religious Freedom By Father John Flynn, LC ROME, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Many people still suffer religious persecution, according to the annual report from the U.S. Department of State. On Sept. 19 the "2008 Annual Report on International Religious Freedom," was presented to the public by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The report, which covers the 12-month period up to June 30, 2008, started by noting in its introduction that this year marks the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. For the United States it is also the 10th anniversary of the International Religious Freedom Act, a bill that has brought with it greater attention to religious freedom from the U.S. government. The report's publication comes as the lack of religious freedom in some countries has received widespread attention. China is one country in the news and according to the Department of State the government's repression of religious freedom intensified in some regions, including in Tibetan areas and in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR). The report also noted that unregistered Protestant religious groups in Beijing experienced intensified harassment from government authorities in the lead up to the 2008 Summer Olympic Games. "Underground" Catholic clergy also faced repression, the report observed, in large part due to their avowed loyalty to the Vatican. As well, authorities in Shanghai implemented measures to prevent Catholic pilgrims from visiting the Marian Shrine of Sheshan during May. The Catholic Patriotic Association reports that 5.3 million persons worship in its churches. But according to the report, it is estimated that there are an additional 12 million or more persons who worship in unregistered Catholic churches that do not affiliate with the government association. Praying for the Pope Although there continue to be conflicts between the Chinese government and the Vatican, particularly over the nomination of bishops, the report commented that the distinction between the Catholic Patriotic Association and the unregistered Catholic Church has become less clear over time. In some official Catholic churches, clerics led prayers for the Pope, and pictures of the Pope were displayed, the report noted. Chinese authorities also restrict religion through restrictions on funding and clergy, the report explained. Even though the government has authorized funding to build new places of worship for registered venues, the number of temples, churches and mosques has not kept pace with growth in the number of worshippers. In addition, in general there is a severe shortage of trained clergy for both registered and unregistered religious groups. India is another country where religious persecution has been in the headlines in recent weeks and the Department of State's report contains ample information on the situation. Some Indian state governments enacted and amended "anti-conversion" laws. In addition, police and enforcement agencies often did not act swiftly to effectively counter communal attacks, including attacks against religious minorities. Extremists The report did affirm that the vast majority of persons from the religious groups in India live in peaceful coexistence. At the same time it acknowledged the existence of episodes of serious conflict. While the law system generally provides remedy for violations of religious freedom, it was not enforced rigorously or effectively in many cases pertaining to religiously oriented violence, the report noted. As a result, despite government efforts to foster communal harmony, some extremists continued to view ineffective investigation and prosecution of attacks on religious minorities, particularly at the state and local level, as a signal that they could commit such violence with impunity, the report commented. Hindu extremists attacked Christian villagers and churches in the Kandhamal district over the last Christmas holidays. Approximately 100 churches and Christian institutions were damaged, 700 Christian homes were destroyed causing villagers to flee to nearby forests, and 22 Christian-owned businesses were affected. The report also observed that according to some nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) communal violence against religious minorities is part of a larger Hindu nationalist agenda and corresponds with ongoing state electoral politics. According to the 2001 government census, Hindus constitute 80.5% of the population, Muslims 13.4%, Christians 2.3%, Sikhs 1.8%, and others, including Buddhists, Jains, Parsis (Zoroastrians), Jews, and Baha'is, 1.1%. The report commented that local authorities arrested numerous Christians under state-level "anti-conversion" laws for allegedly engaging in conversions by force, allurement or fraud Hindu nationalist organizations frequently alleged that Christian missionaries lured low-caste Hindus with offers of free education and health care; they equated such actions with forced conversions. Christians responded, according to the report, by saying that low-caste Hindus converted of their own free will and that efforts by Hindu groups to "reconvert" these new Christians to Hinduism were themselves accompanied by offers of remuneration, and thus fraudulent. Some improvements Vietnam is another country where recent press reports have highlighted problems with a lack of religious freedom. However, according to the report by the State Department, respect for religious freedom and practice continued to improve during the past year. The Catholic Church, various Protestant congregations, and other smaller religious groups reported that their ability to gather and worship improved, according to the State Department. The Catholic Church also reported that the government approved the establishment of one additional Catholic seminary. The report cited estimates suggesting that more than half of the population is at least nominally Buddhist. The Catholic Church accounts for 8%-10% of the population. There are an estimated 8 million Catholics in the country, according to the Department of State, although government statistics place the number at 5.9 million. The Catholic Church operates 7 seminaries, with more than 1,000 students enrolled, as well as a new special training program for "older" students. The report commented, however, that local authorities must approve students for enrollment in a seminary, and again prior to their ordination as priests. Moreover, the report added, the Church considers that the number of students being ordained remains insufficient to support the growing Catholic population and indicated it would like to open additional seminaries and enroll new students more frequently. Restrictions remain In past days numerous reports of conflicts between the Catholic Church and the Vietnamese government over properties confiscated by authorities prompted an intervention by the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom. A Sept. 24 press release said that the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom "respectfully differs with the U.S. State Department's decision to remove Vietnam from its list of 'Countries of Particular Concern' in 2006." "Vietnam continues to demonstrate a disturbing disregard for fundamental human rights, with police violence against protesters at peaceful vigils at properties formerly owned by the Catholic Church of Vietnam, the drawn-out imprisonment and house arrest of numerous religious freedom advocates," the press release noted. It went on to describe how peaceful vigils organized by Catholics to protest the confiscation of Church properties have resulted in the arrest of a number of protesters and even the use of physical force by police. "The Commission calls for Vietnam to be re-designated as one of the world's worst violators of religious freedom for its continuing systematic and egregious violations of religious freedom and other human rights," the statement conclude. As Cardinal Oswald Gracias of India just repeated this week, "Religious liberty is the first of liberties." These recent episodes of religious persecution provide a graphic reminder of the need to keep pressure on governments to guarantee the freedom of religion. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23738?l=english


Bishop Calls on Catholics to Stop Dozing Urges Laity to Get Involved in Politics By Antonio Gaspari ASSISI, Italy, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Catholics need to wake up when it comes to politics, and stop leaving "God in the pew," says a Vatican aide. Bishop Giampaolo Crepaldi, secretary of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, said this today when he addressed a conference organized by Retinopera, a network of Italian organizations that promote the Church's social teachings. The meeting, under way in Assisi, is reflecting on the idea of the common good and, according to its organizers, seeks "to consider development understood as a moral question." Bishop Crepaldi said Benedict XVI's call in Cagliari, Sardinia, earlier this month for "the birth of a new generation of Christians involved in society and politics" was addressed to the Christian communities "who, as far as the formation new generations involved in society and politics is concerned, seem to be falling asleep." The bishop explained the need for Catholic laity involved in politics in the context of the "the idea, perhaps unexpressed, that secularization is an unstoppable process, a kind of 'destiny' of the West if not the entire planet." "Secularization, as God's ejection from the world to the point that he ceases to speak to it, is not the destiny of modernity," the bishop remarked. The prelate noted this is precisely "the principal challenge" that Pope John Paul II faced, and that Benedict XVI is currently confronting. "We must confidently join them as real protagonists, and not see ourselves as tired bit players in a script recited by others." Instrument The 61-year-old bishop emphasized that "the social teaching of the Church is an instrument of evangelization and education in the faith." He warned of the effects of pluralism "on our communities, even on the unity of faith, unity in regard to the foundations of culture, on the sense of ecclesial belonging, on fidelity to [the Church's] pastors." Bishop Crepaldi pointed out that "when it is claimed that Christ is only useful, but not indispensable, for man's understanding of himself and finding truly human solutions to development," and when we "support certain forms of pluralism without truth," then "we have gone beyond the bounds of legitimacy." He reaffirmed that "God cannot be left in the pew" and that religion and faith "must not be excluded from public life or used only for limited pragmatic goals." "Secularist ideology is not neutral," he warned, "but rather imposes an absolute vision." "Presenting a world without God is not synonymous with scientificity, objectivity, evaluative equanimity," the bishop said, adding that "those who decide to remove the crucifixes" are not "neutral," but "want a public space without crucifixes." "If God disappears from the public square," Bishop Crepaldi said, "our capacity to recognize the natural order, purpose and the 'good' begins to disappear." To avoid these dangers and renew the Christian community, the secretary for the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace indicated the urgency of a basic formation, beginning with the social teachings of the Church. He urged learning and teaching the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church: "This Compendium is often cited but little read, it is celebrated on many occasions, that is, 'occasionally,' but never seriously adopted." Silence In regard to the political and social involvement of Catholics, Bishop Crepaldi noted: "Sometimes they censor themselves preventatively when they must enter and work in the public arena [] believing that this arena cannot permit references to faith and religion. "But it is precisely in this way that God disappears from the public square. Silently. By omission." Touching on the immediate challenge, the archbishop called for an end to "identity repression" and for the support of "conscientious objection." In this context he cited several examples: "Catholic agencies in the United Kingdom who are fighting for their right not to participate in adoptions by homosexual couples, which have been permitted by law"; "doctors and health workers who ask to be able to object not only to traditional abortion but new abortifacient drugs"; "civil authorities who refuse to register homosexual couples in the registries provided by the laws that recognize them in various ways." To defeat future challenges, individual resistance will not be enough, the prelate observed. In this respect he voice his agreement with Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, archbishop of Genoa, who has said that the Church is "of the people." "Being 'of the people,'" Bishop Crepaldi explained, "is not just a sociological datum; it is a theological datum that has to do with the Church's relationship to the world. [] And it is precisely from the development of this dimension that the new generation that Benedict XVI called for in Cagliari can be born." A rebirth, he said, that he doubted could succeed "without more conscious and integrated use of the Church's social teaching." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23745?l=english


On John Paul I "Humility Can Be Considered His Spiritual Legacy" CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave before praying the Angelus with the crowds gathered in the courtyard of the papal summer residence of Castel Gandolfo. * * * Dear Brothers and Sisters! Today the liturgy proposes to us the Gospel parable of the two sons whom the father sent out to work in his vineyard. One of them immediately says yes, but then does not go; the other at first refuses, but then, repenting, follows his father's wishes. With this parable Jesus emphasizes his predilection for sinners who convert, and he teaches us that humility is essential for welcoming the gift of salvation. St. Paul, too, in the passage from the Letter to the Philippians that we meditate on today, calls for humility. "Do nothing out of selfishness or vainglory," he writes, "but humbly regard others as superior to you" (Philippians 2:3). These are Christ's own sentiments, he who laid aside divine glory for love of us, became man and lowered himself even to dying on the cross (cf. Philippians 2:5-8). The Greek verb that is used here, "ekenôsen," literally means that he "emptied himself" and places the profound humility and infinite love of Jesus, the humble Servant par excellence, in a clear light. Reflecting on these biblical texts, I immediately thought of Pope John Paul I, the 30th anniversary of whose death is today. He chose Charles Borromeo's motto as his own episcopal motto: "Humilitas": a single word that synthesizes what is essential in Christian life and indicates the indispensable virtue of those who are called to the service of authority in the Church. In one of the four general audiences of his very brief pontificate he said, among other things, in that tone that distinguished him: "I will just recommend one virtue so dear to the Lord. He said, 'Learn from me who am meek and humble of heart.' Even if you have done great things, say: 'We are useless servants.' Alternatively, the tendency in all of us is rather the contrary: to show off" (General Audience of Sept. 6, 1978). Humility can be considered his spiritual legacy. Because of this virtue of his, 33 days were enough for Pope Luciani to enter into the hearts of the people. In his speeches he used examples taken from concrete life, from his memories of family life and from popular wisdom. His simplicity was a vehicle of a solid and rich teaching that, thanks to the gift of an exceptional memory and great culture, he adorned with numerous references to ecclesiastical and secular writers. He was thus an incomparable catechist, in the line of Pius X, his fellow countryman and predecessor in the See of St. Mark and then in the see of St. Peter. "We must feel small before God," he said in the same audience. And added: "I am not ashamed to feel like a child before his mother; one believes in one's mother; I believe in the Lord, in what he has revealed to me." These words display the whole breadth of his faith. As we thank God for having given him to the Church and to the world, let us treasure his example, exerting ourselves to cultivate his humility, which made him capable of talking to everyone, especially the little and so-called distant. For these intentions let us call upon Mary Most Holy, humble handmaiden of the Lord. [After the Angelus, the Holy Father greeted the pilgrims in several languages. In Italian, he said:] Summer has come to an end and I will return to the Vatican the day after tomorrow. I thank the Lord for all the gifts he has bestowed upon me during this time. I think especially of World Youth Day in Sydney, the period of rest in Bressanone, the visit to Sardinia and the apostolic trip to Paris and Lourdes; and I think of the possibility of sojourning here in this house, where I am better able to rest and work during the hottest months. An affectionate greeting to the community of Castel Gandolfo, with a heartfelt thank you to the bishop, the mayor and the various police departments. Thanks to everyone and goodbye! [In English, he said:] I offer a warm welcome to the English-speaking visitors gathered for this Angelus prayer. My special greeting goes to the students from Aquinas College in Australia and to the members of the Fatima pilgrimage from the Philippines. In today's Gospel, the Lord asks us to reflect whether we are obedient to the Father in word alone, or truly committed to following his will in our daily lives. May his words inspire in us a spirit of genuine conversion and an ever more generous commitment to the spread of the Gospel. Upon you and your families I cordially invoke God's blessings of wisdom, joy and peace! [Speaking again in Italian, he said:] As I offer best wishes to the students who have just begun the academic year, I express appreciation for the "Making Me Study is Good for Everyone" campaign of the St. Vincent de Paul Society. In the spirit of St. Vincent, whom we celebrated in yesterday's liturgy, this initiative is proposed to prevent the poverty of illiteracy. I wish everyone a good month of October, month of the Holy Rosary, during which, if it pleases God, I will go on pilgrimage to the shrine of Our Lady at Pompei on Sunday, Oct. 19. Have a good Sunday! [Translation by Joseph G. Trabbic] email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23740?l=english


Pope's Address to New Czech Ambassador "Gospel Urges People of Faith to Offer Themselves in Loving Service" CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, SEPT. 28, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Here is the address Benedict XVI gave Saturday upon receiving the credentials of the new Czech envoy to the Holy See, Pavel Vosalik. The audience took place at Castel Gandolfo. * * * Mr Ambassador, I am pleased to receive you today as you present the Letters of Credence accrediting you as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Czech Republic. I am grateful for your kind words as you begin the mission entrusted to you by your Government. Please express my respectful greetings to His Excellency, Mr Václav Klaus, President of the Republic, assuring him of my prayers for the well-being of all the people of your Country. Mr Ambassador, I appreciate the emphasis you have placed on the influence of Christianity on the rich cultural heritage of your nation, and particularly the role that the Gospel played in bringing hope to the Czech people in times of oppression. Hope is indeed the timeless message which the Church offers to every generation, and it prompts her to participate in the global task of forging bonds of peace and goodwill among all peoples. She does this in a special way by her diplomatic activity, through which she extols the dignity of persons as destined for a life of communion with God and with one another. Your nation, bolstered by the sense of solidarity that enabled her to emerge courageously from the collapse of totalitarianism, also desires to contribute to the welfare of the human family by enhancing international cooperation in the struggle against violence, hunger, poverty and other social ills. New avenues of influence will soon open for your country as it prepares to assume the Presidency of the Council of the European Union next year. I am confident that by setting clear goals and facilitating the involvement of all member States, the distinct honour of presiding over the Council for a six-month term will permit the Czech Republic to exercise strong leadership in the shared endeavour of combining unity and diversity, national sovereignty and joint activity, and economic progress and social justice across the continent. The Church is well aware of the many challenges facing Europe precisely at a time when its nations aspire to build a more stable international community for future generations. To move forward, its leaders are called to recognize that human happiness and well-being cannot be achieved through structures alone or by any single stratum of social or political life (cf. "Spe Salvi," 24). The realization of a genuine culture worthy of man's noble vocation requires the harmonious cooperation of families, ecclesial communities, schools, businesses, community organizations and governmental institutions. Far from being ends in themselves, these entities are organized structures intended for the service of all, and are integrally connected to one another in the pursuit of the common good (cf. "Centesimus Annus," 13). For this reason, all of society benefits when the Church is afforded the right to exercise stewardship over the material and spiritual goods required for her ministry (cf. "Gaudium et Spes," 88). In your nation, there are signs of progress in this area, but there is more to be done. I am confident that the special Commissions set up by your Government and Parliament for resolving outstanding issues regarding ecclesiastical property will move forward with honesty, fairness, and a genuine recognition of the Church's ability to contribute to the welfare of the Republic. In particular, I hope that such considerations will be kept in clear view while a solution is sought concerning the future of the Cathedral in Prague, which stands as a living witness to the rich cultural and religious heritage of your land, and testifies to the harmonious coexistence of Church and State. By its very nature, the Gospel urges people of faith to offer themselves in loving service to their brothers and sisters without distinction and without counting the cost (cf. Lk 10:25-37). Love is the outward manifestation of the faith that sustains the community of believers and empowers them to be signs of hope for the world (cf. Jn 13:35). An example of this visible charity shines through the work of Caritas, whose members engage daily in a wide range of social services in your country. This is especially evident in the service it offers on behalf of expectant mothers, the homeless, the disabled, and the imprisoned. The coordination between Caritas Czech Republic and the governmental Ministries of Health, Labour and Social Affairs demonstrates the potential fruits that can result from close collaboration between State and Church agencies (cf. Deus Caritas Est, 30). I would emphasize here the enormous formative potential for young people, whose participation in such initiatives teaches them that genuine solidarity does not merely consist in supplying material goods but in making a gift of oneself (cf. Lk 17:33). Moreover, as the Czech Republic searches to expand ways of participating in the task of shaping a more cohesive and cooperative international community, we should not forget the many Czech citizens already serving abroad in long-term development and aid projects under the auspices of Caritas and other humanitarian organizations. I heartily encourage their efforts and commend the generosity of all your fellow citizens who creatively seek ways to serve the common good both within your nation and across the globe. Before closing, Your Excellency, allow me to express my sincere condolences to you and your fellow citizens upon the tragic death of Mr Ivo Žd'árek, Ambassador of the Czech Republic to Pakistan, who was among the victims killed in the recent attack in Islamabad. I pray daily for an end to such acts of aggression, and I encourage all those engaged in diplomatic service to dedicate themselves ever more keenly to facilitating peace and ensuring security throughout the world. As you begin your service, Mr Ambassador, I extend cordial wishes that the important mission entrusted to you will be fruitful. Please know that the offices of the Roman Curia are eager to assist you in the fulfilment of your duties. Asking you kindly to assure the people of the Czech Republic of my prayers and esteem, I invoke upon them an abundance of divine blessings and entrust them to the loving providence of Almighty God. © Copyright 2008 -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23739?l=english
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Friday, September 26, 2008

Pope Affirms Catholic Schooling Is a Right

Gregory Mussmacher, God Bless!!
Catholic Schooling Is a Right, Says Pope Affirms It Contributes to Common Good of Society CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Catholic schools are a concrete manifestation of the right to freedom of education, says Benedict XVI. The Pope expressed this conviction today during an address in the apostolic palace at Castel Gandolfo to representatives of Italian Catholic educational centers, who are taking part in a meeting organized by the Italian episcopal conference's Center of Studies for Catholic Schools. "The Catholic school is an expression of the right of all citizens to freedom of education, and the corresponding duty of solidarity in the building of civil society," said the Pope, quoting a document of the Italian episcopate. "To be chosen and appreciated, it is necessary that the Catholic school be recognized for its pedagogical purpose; it is necessary to have a full awareness not only of its ecclesial identity and cultural endeavor, but also of its civil significance," he explained. This "must not be considered as the defense of a particular interest, but as a precious contribution to the building of the common good of the whole society." In this connection, the Pontiff called for equality between state and Catholic schools, "which will give parents the freedom to choose the school they desire." "It has become evident that recourse to Catholic schools in some regions of Italy is growing, compared to the preceding decade, despite the fact that difficult and even critical situations persist," he noted. The Catholic school has an important role, Benedict XVI concluded, as it is the instrument of the "Church's salvific mission" in which "the close union is achieved between the proclamation of the faith and the promotion of man." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23711?l=english


Funds for Bailout But Not Development? Holy See Asks Why Money Can't Be Found for Aid NEW YORK, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The Holy See is asking why it is possible to find funds to bailout a broken financial system, but finding fewer resources to invest in the development of all regions of the world seems impossible. This was a "pressing question" raised today at the United Nations by Archbishop Celestino Migliore, permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations, at a high-level event on the millennium development goals. The MDGs, established in 2000, were supposed to be fulfilled by 2015. They include commitments to address huger, lack of education, inequality, child and maternal health, environmental damage and HIV/AIDS. At current rates of progress, the goals will not be reached. But, Archbishop Migliore affirmed, "the achievement of these goals is closely interrelated with respect for human rights. While the goals are ultimately political commitments, the human rights inherent in each goal make achieving them a social and moral responsibility." "We are lagging behind in honoring our word, and more importantly, the people of the world who look to us for leadership, are running out of hope and trust," the prelate said. Still possible Archbishop Migliore noted that progress has been made and some of the least developed countries have seen marked improvements. "Nonetheless, the recent high rate of economic growth in many LDCs [least developed countries] has not contributed sufficiently to tackling the situation of generalized poverty," he said. "The LDCs remain behind and are in serious delay for attaining the goals as set out in the Millennium Declaration, and in some cases reaching the goals may prove impossible." Still, the Holy See representative affirmed: "The MDGs will be achieved if their attainment becomes a priority for all states." To make this happen, he called for a "new culture of human relations marked by a fraternal vision of the world, a culture based upon the moral imperative of recognizing the unity of humankind and the practical imperative of giving a contribution to peace and the well-being of all." Plenty of funds Archbishop Migliore noted that "money and resources that the LDCs need in terms of direct aid, financial assistance and trade advantages are meager compared to the world-wide military expenses or the total expenses of non-primary necessities of populations in more developed countries." In that context, the archbishop raised a question: "In these days we are witnessing a debate on an economic rescue aimed at resolving a crisis that risks disrupting the economy of the most developed countries and leaving thousands and thousands of families without work. "This rescue of enormous proportions, which amounts to many times the whole of international aid, cannot but raise a pressing question. How are we able to find funds to save a broken financial system yet remain unable to find the resources necessary to invest in the development of all regions of the world, beginning with the most destitute?" Focused The archbishop also called on the United Nations to stay focused on the priorities. "With only seven years remaining until the end of the MDGs campaign, it is important that we focus upon the goals in the Millennium Declaration which were agreed upon by our Heads of State," he said. "To debate and create new targets, such as those on sexual and reproductive health, risks introducing practices and policies detrimental to human dignity and sustainable development, distracting our focus from the original goals and diverting the necessary resources from the more basic and urgent needs. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23718?l=english


Colombia Seeks Legalizing Murder, Says Bioethicist Explains Contradictions in Euthanasia Legislation By Jesús Colina ROME, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Colombia's draft law on euthanasia and assisted suicide would introduce "legal murder," which is a "juridical contradiction," warns an internationally renowned Catholic expert in bioethics. Legionary of Christ Father Ramón Lucas Lucas, professor of bioethics at Rome's European University and founding member of the Bioethics Observatory of the Catholic University of Colombia, expressed his concern about the proposal. On Sept. 17, in the first of four debates, the Senate's First Commission approved the draft "to regulate the practices of euthanasia and assisted suicide in Colombia." The proposal, which initially did not receive much attention, has in recent weeks become part of the national debate, given the opposition of representatives of the Church and a growing awareness of the grave dangers it implies, as pointed out by Father Lucas Lucas. The priest highlighted the dangers in a course on bioethics for the clergy of the Archdiocese of Bogota and the network of neighboring dioceses, which he gave Sept. 8-10, and in a course for professors of the Catholic University of Colombia, which took place Sept. 10-12. Juridical contradiction According to the bioethicist, the Colombian draft law "is legal murder and a juridical contradiction," as it allows the elimination of "'useless old people,' terminal patients and, in certain cases, the appropriation of their goods." In a reflection shared with ZENIT, Father Lucas Lucas explained that "even if masked with pretty words -- 'dignified death,' 'gentle death,' 'no suffering,' 'respect of dignity' -- it is a real crime." He explained: "There is no doubt in the scientific, moral, political and religious realms about the fact that when medicine cannot offer a cure, what it must do is alleviate the suffering and pain of patients, not do away with them. The remedy for sickness is not to kill the patient, not even if he requests it." "The patient does not desire death, what he desires is an end to suffering. That is why one can and must administer all kinds of palliatives of pain, including those that can indirectly accelerate death, but without the intention of killing the patient, as are those whose primary action is analgesic, and the secondary and unwanted effect is to accelerate death. Opposed to this, the voluntary and direct elimination of the patient is euthanasia." Therapeutic aggression Continuing with his analysis, the priest explained that "what is licit, and in addition, an ethical and social duty, is to avoid therapeutic aggression, which is described as the use of disproportionate and no longer useful means for the patient." "That is, one can remove or pass up all those measures that for the patient are now disproportionate and useless, which prolong his agony more than offer him elements for improvement," he explained. "What can never be done, out of respect for his person, is to deny or deprive him of the means proportionate to him according to the situation and health care level of the country at the time." Father Lucas Lucas, author of the best-seller "Bioethics for All," translated into some 10 languages (including Korean and Ukrainian), said that "euthanasia is a mortal attack on the dignity of the human person, on which the Colombian state is based as expressed in the Constitution." "It is always a crime, also when it is practiced for merciful ends and at the request of the patient," he stressed. "The principal expression of respect for a person's dignity, is not only respect for his autonomy -- the decision he makes -- but also respect for the objective good contained in that decision, or avoidance of the objective evil contained in the decision." Possible victims According to the priest, "a democratic and social state has the duty to protect the poorest and the needy, such as the handicapped, the elderly and terminally ill patients. When the state, instead of protecting the weakest, gives legal cover to their death, it is automatically transformed into a totalitarian state, the foundations of coexistence are broken, and a society of death arises." Professor Lucas Lucas recalled that the legalization of euthanasia in Holland has created an acute social problem because confidence in hospitals has been lost and it has motivated the elderly not to seek treatment, given the fear that they will be given a lethal injection. Because of this, the NPV organization has been founded, which has close to 100,000 members, who carry a card saying that they do not want to be checked into a hospital. The statutory draft law of the Colombian Senate would give shelter to many "other barbarities, not only ethical but also economic and social, for example, a car might be purchased with the insurance funds of the person euthanized," assured the philosopher. He explained: "Behind [the phrase] 'so that he won't suffer' might be hidden a 'because he bothers me' [...] I would like to remove the burden.' There might also be the case of desperate patients who, although everything reasonable has been done for them, think that euthanasia is being applied to them." "Moreover, it would push social policies to extreme positions that do violence to the conscience of many Colombians. Conscientious objection on the part of the doctors can thus be erased from the existing normative when it comes to deciding on the end of a life. The statutory draft law does not provide for such conscientious objection and doctors would see themselves punished if they do not adhere to governmental mandates." Undignified death Father Lucas Lucas said dignified death is not being killed, but receiving support and care. "Patients need to see they are well treated, esteemed and supported. I have never seen a patient in a terminal situation who does not hold on to life with all his might. His eyes have never looked at me with contempt for therapeutic work and support," he said. Moreover and above all, the patient needs motivation in his pain, the priest continued. "Acceptance of pain is a mature attitude in face of a sickness that cannot be overcome, or a death that comes inexorably toward you. One who suffers thus can also fulfill himself and live his own personal dignity. Motivated sacrifices are gladly made. One who loves does not suffer and if he suffers he loves the suffering that love secures for him." "To call euthanasia a dignified death is a deception," Father Lucas Lucas stressed. "There can be no dignity in the elimination of a human life. What is worthy is life, love, acceptance and support. Elimination, rejection, abandonment is not dignity, but masked egoism." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23717?l=english


Caritas Leader Urges UN to Use Imagination Asks Them to Conceive a World Not Divided Into 1st, 3rd NEW YORK, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The cardinal-president of Caritas Internationalis says a lack of political leadership is keeping the millennium development goals delayed, and he urged the United Nations to imagine a planet without divisions into First and Third World.Cardinal Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga addressed the United Nations today, having been invited along with five others by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to a summit on development and climate change. The cardinal urged the world leaders to make "courageous decisions and fulfill past promises," so as to achieve the development goals by the original deadline of 2015. He blamed the delay in progress on "a lack of political leadership." But the cardinal said the reasons for this failure are not due only to questions of money, effective aid, or commerce, but rather of confidence, given the need to "imagine a world that is no longer divided into First and Third." "We need to imagine a world in which the needless deaths of nearly 10 million children a year are an abomination that cannot be tolerated," he affirmed. "We need to be able to imagine ourselves not in the 'Third World' and a 'First World' but in one world in which our duties to the poor are shared." Greenhouse The cardinal also made an urgent appeal to industrialized nations to lower toxic emissions. Climate change is negatively affecting the progress of developing countries, the Honduran prelate lamented. "We are witnessing the creation of a world in which the greed of a few is leaving the majority on the margins of history," he said. He offered the example of his own country, where mining companies have exploited the earth and contaminated it. In statements on Vatican Radio, Cardinal Rodríguez Maradiaga said he hoped that concrete steps would be taken to reduce poverty by 2015, adding, however, that what is most necessary "is that the United Nations consider that without development, the millennium's goals will not be achieved." "It is necessary to allocate greater resources to development and, at the same time, developing countries must be strongly committed to the fight against corruption," he contended. In this connection, the cardinal added that the Church's mission "is to continue to sensitize peoples through social doctrine, as Paul VI said in 'Populorum Progressio,' that development is the new name of peace; without development, peace will not be achieved in the world." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23715?l=english


Mary Unites Christians, Cardinal Tells Anglicans Ecumenical Pilgrimage to Lourdes Called a Miracle By Inmaculada ÁlvarezLOURDES, France, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Devotion to the Virgin Mary has an essential role in ecumenical dialogue and the journey to full and visible unity among Christians, says the president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity. Cardinal Walter Kasper affirmed this Wednesday when he presided over an ecumenical celebration in Lourdes, where Anglicans and Catholics had joined on pilgrimage. Anglican Archbishop Rowan Williams of Canterbury gave the homily at the event. The pilgrimage began at the Anglican shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham in England. "Lourdes is known for its miracles," Cardinal Kasper said. "Who would have imagined, only 20 or 30 years ago, that Catholics and Anglicans would go on pilgrimage and pray together? "For those who are familiar with the debates and controversies of the past on Mary, between Catholics and non-Catholic Christians, for those who know the reservations of the non-Catholic world toward Marian pilgrimage sites, for all these people, today's unprecedented event is a miracle." The cardinal contended that, in fact, Mary is an essential part of the ecumenical movement, though this topic "is neither common nor obvious among ecumenists." History Cardinal Kasper noted that Marian devotion is fully shared with the Orthodox Church. But, he continued, "Marian devotion also existed at the time of the Reformation." "Luther fervently venerated Mary during his whole life, professing her, with the ancient creeds and Councils of the Church of the first millennium, as Virgin and Mother of God," he explained. "He was only critical of some practices, which he considered abuses and exaggerations. The same happened with the English reformers." Cardinal Kasper clarified that the rejection of Marian doctrines actually took place during the Enlightenment, "in a spirit known as 'Mariological minimalism.'" Nevertheless, the Vatican official affirmed, thanks to "a renewed reading and meditation of sacred Scripture, we observe a slow but decisive change." In this regard, he mentioned several joint statements of Catholics and Lutherans that point in this direction. "Mary is not absent but present in ecumenical dialogue," he continued. "Churches have made progress in their approach on the doctrine of Our Lady. Our Lady no longer divides us, but reconciles and unites us in Christ her Son." Present tensions Cardinal Kasper expressed the hope that Our Lady would help Catholics and Anglicans overcome recently heightened tensions in dialogue. The Anglican Communion has moved closer to the episcopal ordination of women and it faces dissent within the communion regarding the ordination of practicing homosexuals. The cardinal said the pilgrimage "can be considered as a positive and encouraging sign of hope, even a small miracle." "There is reason to hope that Our Lady will help us overcome the present difficulties in our relations, so that with the help of God we will be able to continue our common ecumenical pilgrimage," he continued. Cardinal Kasper referred to Mary as model of the Church, chosen by God from all eternity. He also noted the issue of salvation by divine grace and not by ones' own merits, clarifying that this is a point that no longer divides Christians. Led to the cross The Vatican official asserted that division among Christians arises "because our love and faith have weakened." "Every time that the thinking of the world and its parameters stain the Church, the unity of the Church is endangered," he said. But Mary, who he called an "example of a disciple," does not lead toward "what pleases everyone, but to the foot of the cross," he said. "Hence, let us take her as example, and in this way we will take steps forward in our ecumenical pilgrimage." Finally, Cardinal Kasper referred to the question of the veneration of the Virgin and the saints, an issue that "still causes difficulties" among Protestants and Anglicans. "However," he affirmed, "as any mother would intercede for her children, and as every mother, after her death would intercede in heaven and from heaven, Mary also accompanies the Church on her pilgrimage," also "on the road toward unity." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23714?l=english


Rabbi to Address Synod VATICAN CITY, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The rabbi who will address the upcoming synod of bishops says the invitation to participate in the meeting is a message of love.Shear Yashuv Cohen, chief rabbi of Haifa and co-chairman of the Jewish-Catholic bilateral commission, will be a "fraternal delegate" at the 12th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. The Oct. 5-26 synod will focus on the theme "The Word of God in the Life and Mission of the Church." The rabbi will participate on Oct. 7, leading a discussion on the Hebrew Scriptures. "It is an invitation that implies a message of love, coexistence and peace, and I see in it a sort of declaration according to which the Church attempts to continue the policy and doctrine of John Paul II," commented Cohen, in statements reported by Vatican Radio. The rabbi acknowledged that he accepted the invitation with "some trepidation." Riccardo Di Segni, chief rabbi of Rome, called Cohen's participation in the synod "an important gesture." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23712?l=english


"Humanae Vitae": A Compelling Argument Mormon Physician Comments on Paul VI's Encyclical By Robert Conkling ROME, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


For a non-Catholic, Pope Paul VI's encyclical "Humanae Vitae" is not important because it is the Church speaking, but rather because it offers a compelling argument, says Mormon physician Dr. Joe Stanford.Stanford, a family physician and a researcher in the Creighton Model FertilityCare system and NaPro Technology, was a speaker at the 27th annual meeting of the American Academy of FertilityCare Professionals, held this summer in Rome. Stanford, a professor in the department of family and preventive medicine at the University of Utah, spoke to ZENIT about his take on "Humanae Vitae," as well as the role faith plays in his medical practice. Q: Have you read "Humanae Vitae"? Stanford: Yes. I first read "Humanae Vitae" in 1991 and several times since then. I think it is an inspired document. I think it captures fundamental aspects of human nature. He [Pope Paul VI] really hits the nail on the head regarding the dark side of contraception, sterilization and abortion and their effects on society. Although I do not think divorce, promiscuity, teen pregnancy are exclusively the result of contraception, I also think these are not unrelated to contraception. I think contraception is a heavy part of the fuel behind the sexual revolution and many of the problems in society we are facing. I think "Humanae Vitae" is basically a prophetic statement. Q: If more physicians read "Humanae Vitae," do you think their approach to women or the problems married couples face might be different? Stanford: Yes, but a qualified yes. I think you have to read "Humanae Vitae" with an open mind, which really means with an open heart. You have to be willing to really consider what Pope Paul VI says and not just judge it. In medical training, the culture is so steeped with acceptance of standard medical practices, that to question it is very difficult. And I do not mean just difficult from a peer pressure point of view, although that is part of the difficulty. But it is difficult to even come around to a different way of thinking when you have always been immersed in one way of thinking. I am not Catholic, so for me it was not an issue of reading the document because it was the Church speaking. It became an issue because many of the Catholic physicians I have come to know and respect -- [Dr.] Tom Hilgers being one of them -- and who have become moral mentors for me in medicine -- told me "Humanae Vitae" was a moral guide in their life. So I wanted to know what the document said and what it means. So, for me it was not an ecclesiastically binding document. If you are not Catholic, you might be inclined to think "this is for Catholics." Having said that, if you really consider "Humanae Vitae" on its own merits, I think Pope Paul VI really does make a compelling argument that can penetrate the heart and can make a difference. Q: Is it fair to say then that faith plays a part in how you practice medicine? Stanford: It definitely does. It is how I see people. I see patients as children of God. That is my faith. And I see my duty to them to be the best, most compassionate and skilled physician I can be, while still respecting patients' views. Part of my faith, too, is to respect where patients' are coming from and not demand that they see things my way. Most of my patients now come to me because they want the perspective I provide. That is a real joy. But I still see patients who do not share my views and come to me and we have to negotiate. I have to inform them where my moral boundaries are -- for example, that I will not prescribe oral contraceptives -- but without judging them. I respect their ability to make their own choices, but I have to tell them I have certain parameters and boundaries that I operate within. So, yes, faith is integral to how I practice. It does not mean that I tell patients, "This is my faith and you have to see it my way." I inform them who I am and that this is the reason for what I do. Q: There is a medical ethic in vogue today which, if followed, would have physicians believe they must check their faith at the door of their office, examining room or in their teaching. Is this a contradiction to who you then become as a physician? Stanford: Absolutely. In the end it does not work. It is sort of a myth to say you can check who you are at the door of the examining room, to sort of become a sort of blank slate. Ultimately, you have some values. When I talk to colleagues about this they say I cannot impose my judgments on patients. In one sense I agree with that. But in another sense, it does not mean that I do whatever patients want. An example I reply with is what if someone comes in and states, "Doctor, I need morphine and I want you to prescribe that to me." Of course you do not just do it, because there is an assessment required as to whether it is appropriate. Usually when asked in that way one is predisposed to think it may not be appropriate and for good reason. It is no different with any other medicine. You have to make a judgment. The important distinction is that you are not judging the person or telling him or her what to believe. As a physician we have to always decide what we think is in the patient's best interest, within the moral boundaries we set for ourselves, which we describe to patients. In reality, every physician actually does that whether they acknowledge this or not. Unfortunately, some physicians relax those boundaries and compromise who they are. But they are still presenting somebody they really are in the examination room. There is no such thing as a physician like a vending machine, because people do not walk in to see a doctor, press a button and out comes what they want. Physicians are professionals. You have boundaries and you have to define what those boundaries are and make judgments appropriately. Q: You are a researcher with an interest in natural family planning, specifically focusing on the Creighton Model FertilityCare system and NaPro Technology. Is it unusual to have physicians like yourself challenging standard medical approaches to couples' reproductive potential? Stanford: That is a very good question. I think to some extent it has always happened. There have always been free thinkers out there who are guided by their own moral compass and try to do what is right for the patient, for good medicine and for good moral medicine. In some sense this is not new. What is different with respect to NFP, FertilityCare and NaPro Technology is an attempt to bring in the service of systematic science in an ethical-moral framework. That is a marriage I think makes sense. A lot of people may disagree. But I think it makes immanent sense. What we are trying to develop is a cadre of practicing physicians and scientists who will actually do science within that ethical framework. To make sure that what we are doing is the best we can do and not just do what we have read in a journal or figured out ourselves and tried on some patients. We go that far but then we test it further with our colleagues and use data to evaluate whether what we are doing really is the best way. We then might ask is there another angle we have not thought of? So, a systematic way allows for two tracks: One is getting many physicians together who are interested in this area of medicine and trying to make it work. That is relatively new, but not completely new. Other groups have done that. What is relatively unique is trying to make this as scientific and systematic as possible. We want to create science that is better than the mainstream medicine and science. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23713?l=english


America's Future in Rome North American College Nears Capacity By Elizabeth Lev ROME, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The return of the seminarians invariably signals the arrival of Roman fall. Nowhere else in the world does the Church seem as vibrant, youthful and energetic than Rome at the end of September, when fresh faces in Roman collars fill the streets, striding purposefully across town toward their classes.A large number of these future priests are Americans hailing from dioceses across the 50 states. This stronghold of the hope for the Church in America sits above the right shoulder of St. Peter's Basilica, the Pontifical North American college. This fall, the North American College seems to stand even taller as it welcomes a record number of first-year seminarians, 61 "new men." The total number of 208 students will bring the seminary close to its capacity. The students live on the premises although they walk into town every day to attend classes at the Jesuit Gregorian University or the Dominican University of the Angelicum. The College is situated on the Janiculum Hill just a step away from the Bambin Gesu, Italy's foremost children's hospital. Also next door is the Vatican bus park, a bustling tourist hub constructed during the Great Jubilee 2000. In the midst of all this hubbub, the NAC offers a pleasant oasis of tranquility, prayer and study. Blessed Pius IX, despite his many domestic hardships during the unification of Italy, demonstrated his pastoral concern for the Church in the United States when he proposed the idea of a seminary in Rome for the formation of American priests. Rome, the Holy Father felt, could teach these young men about the universality of the Church, the long history and tradition of Christianity and the magisterium of the successor of St. Peter. To expedite this plan, the Pope donated the first piece of land for the college. On Dec. 8, 1859, the first home of the North American College was inaugurated in Casa Santa Maria on Via Dell'Umiltà, near the Trevi fountain, and dedicated to the Immaculate Conception. After the unification of Italy, the Italian state attempted to confiscate the Casa Santa Maria as it had done with all the other Church holdings. Only the intervention of the U.S. president Chester Arthur at the instigation of the American bishops saved the property. By the end of World War II, vocations in the United States had increased to the point where the Casa Santa Maria could not accommodate the seminarians, so the North American College moved into the Villa Gabrielli park. The new premises, which enjoy the status of being extra-territorial property of Vatican City State, were inaugurated on Dec. 8, 1952, by Pope Pius XII in person. Oasis in the city The NAC's building structure was designed by Count Enrico Pietro Galeazzi in a refreshingly modern style intended to exploit the qualities of clean air and nature on the site. While simple and austere, wide corridors and large windows allow for light and fresh breezes and courtyards offer the serenity of nature for prayer. The core of the structure was a series of chapels placed one on top of the other. The lowest level contained the crypt chapel, while the second was arranged with a score of little side altars where the priests would learn to celebrate their first Masses. Count Galeazzi chose to be buried in this chapel where he would be surrounded by the prayers of the young seminarians. The uppermost chapel is dedicated to the Immaculate Conception. The lofty space boasts a mélange of modern styles, a sort of universality in artistic expression. From stone reliefs illustrating the sacraments framing the altar in an updated Romanesque to the stained glass windows and expressionistic renderings of Old and New Testament stories along the nave, the chapel encompasses traditional church decoration in contemporary style. The chapel is dominated by a mosaic of the Immaculate Conception designed by Count Galeazzi. He featured the Blessed Mother standing upon a crescent moon with her right hand raised in blessing and her left holding a globe surmounting the cross. Angels fly above her raising lilies and a crown, while below her stand Sts. Gregory the Great, Francis de Paul, Jean-Baptiste-Marie Vianney and Pius X. Like the art of the chapel, the saints represent faith and devotion over the centuries of the Church. Leaving a mark I visited the College with a priest who had lived there as a seminarian in his youth and was now participating the in the Continuing Theological Education program, which is also based in the same building. His love for the place of his priestly formation and his vivid memory of the art and architecture of the building show what an impact a seminary can have in a priest's life. The first thing he brought me to see was a stunning mosaic, which had once graced the entryway to the complex. Designed for the inauguration of the new premises in 1953, the work represents the former residence of the seminarians, the Casa Santa Maria. The work was deigned by Nello Ena, a successful Italian architect, and executed by Vatican Mosiac laboratory. Composed of bright and colorful tiles and enlivened by splashes of gold, the mosaic superimposes the myriad of buildings that made up the Casa Santa Maria in a sort of collage. A pretty medieval brick bell tower flecked with shimmering bells hovers above a classical shrine with an image of the Virgin. Arcaded porticos, honorific columns and ancient ruins all patterned together give an idea of the dense layers of history that make up Rome and the Church. This lovely work of art was a gift of Claire Boothe Luce, herself a remarkable mosaic of gifts and accomplishments. She started as a model/actress before turning to writing. A brilliant author, several of her plays won critical acclaim. Upon her marriage to Henry Luce, publisher of Time and Life magazine, Claire Boothe Luce turned to journalism. From there it was a short step to politics. Claire Boothe Luce famously converted to Catholicism in 1946 and wrote of her conversion in a series of articles for McCall magazine. In 1953, she became the U.S. Ambassador to Italy. One her first acts upon her arrival was to commission the mosaic as a gift to seminarians for their new residence. Through the bright faces of our future priests, the modern engagement with ancient tradition and the myriad of backgrounds and histories of the people, the North American College presents all the good that the United States has to offer. * * * Elizabeth Lev teaches Christian art and architecture at Duquesne University's Italian campus. She can be reached at lizlev@zenit.org. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23710?l=english


Holy See on Millennium Goals "People Are Running Out of Hope and Trust" NEW YORK, SEPT. 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Here is the text of the address delivered today by Archbishop Celestino Migliore, permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations, at the U.N. high-level event on the millennium development goals.* * * Mr President, When in the year 2000 the leaders of the world convened in this hall, they took up the commitment to fight extreme poverty by setting specific goals to address hunger, education, inequality, child and maternal health, environmental damage and HIV/AIDS by 2015. This great responsibility was assumed out of international solidarity as well as in the name of human rights. It is, therefore, not a mere coincidence that our meeting is taking place in the same year that we celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. A precise relationship exists, in fact, among the Millennium Development Goals as set forth in the UN Millennium Declaration and human rights. What is more, they have in common the objective to preserve and protect human dignity. In addition, the achievement of these goals is closely interrelated with respect for human rights. While the goals are ultimately political commitments, the human rights inherent in each goal make achieving them a social and moral responsibility. It is with this sense of responsibility that the world is reunited today at the highest level of representation to take stock of the situation. The Secretary-General's Report rightly acknowledges the progress which has been achieved across the spectrum, but it also sounds a strong alarm as the delivery on commitments made by member States remains deficient. Areas such as official development aid, trade, debt relief, assistance for capacity development, access to new technologies and essential medicines continue to fall behind our commitments and our words of support. We are lagging behind in honouring our word, and more importantly, the people of the world who look to us for leadership, are running out of hope and trust. The last eight years have shown that with international, national and local commitment many nations are now more economically independent. Some developing countries have become middle income countries and middle income countries are on the brink of turning into highly developed economies. Several Least Developed Countries have made remarkable progress with some of the MDGs, for example, the elimination of extreme poverty and the achievement of universal access to education. Nonetheless, the recent high rate of economic growth in many LDCs has not contributed sufficiently to tackling the situation of generalized poverty. The LDCs remain behind and are in serious delay for attaining the goals as set out in the Millennium Declaration, and in some cases reaching the goals may prove impossible. A failure in attaining the MDGs in the LDCs and other poor countries would mean a moral failure of the whole international community and have political and economic consequences even beyond the geographic boundaries of the LDCs. It is therefore important that this forum be a moment of reflection on communal responsibility. The MDGs will be achieved if their attainment becomes a priority for all States. Above all, we need to foment a new culture of human relations marked by a fraternal vision of the world, a culture based upon the moral imperative of recognizing the unity of humankind and the practical imperative of giving a contribution to peace and the well-being of all. The money and resources that the LDCs need in terms of direct aid, financial assistance and trade advantages are meager compared to the world-wide military expenses or the total expenses of non-primary necessities of populations in more developed countries. The fact that various LDCs with rather limited resources are obtaining important results should inspire the international community. The effectiveness of civil society, including religious organizations serving poorer populations, is the practical proof of the possibility to achieve the goals by 2015 or in the proximate successive years. Civil society and faith-based organizations remain indispensable actors in the delivery of vital goods and services, and greater efforts should be made to allow them access to populations in need. After all, these organizations are often capable of serving the needs of the most destitute and underprivileged. The Holy See and its affiliated organizations are committed to providing humanitarian as well as development assistance around the world. Mr President, With only seven years remaining until the end of the MDGs campaign, it is important that we focus upon the goals in the Millennium Declaration which were agreed upon by our Heads of State. To debate and create new targets, such as those on sexual and reproductive health, risks introducing practices and policies detrimental to human dignity and sustainable development, distracting our focus from the original goals and diverting the necessary resources from the more basic and urgent needs. In these days we are witnessing a debate on an economic rescue aimed at resolving a crisis that risks disrupting the economy of the most developed countries and leaving thousands and thousands of families without work. This rescue of enormous proportions, which amounts to many times the whole of international aid, cannot but raise a pressing question. How are we able to find funds to save a broken financial system yet remain unable to find the resources necessary to invest in the development of all regions of the world, beginning with the most destitute? For this reason, the globalization of solidarity through the prompt achievement of the MDGs established by the Millennium Declaration is a crucial moral obligation of the international community. It is also a great and most effective means of giving stability to the global economy and assuring the prosperity and enjoyment of human rights for all. Thank you, Mr President. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23716?l=english
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Thursday, September 25, 2008

Daily Prayers

Gregory Mussmacher, God Bless!!



Hail Mary

Hail Mary, full of grace.
Our Lord is with thee.
Blessed art thou among women,
and blessed is the fruit of thy womb,Jesus.
Holy Mary, Mother of God,
pray for us sinners,
now and at the hour of our death.
Amen.

Our Father
Our Father, Who art in heaven
Hallowed be Thy Name;
Thy kingdom come,Thy will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread,
and forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against us;
and lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil.
Amen.
The Apostles Creed
I believe in God,the Father Almighty,
Creator of Heaven and earth.
I believe in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day, He rose again.
He ascended to Heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit,the Holy Catholic Church,the communion of saints,the forgiveness of
sins,the resurrection of the body,and life everlasting.
Amen
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Apostle Paul Is No Inventor of Christianity, Says Pope

Gregory Mussmacher, God Bless!!

Paul Is No Inventor of Christianity, Says Pope Notes Apostle's Faithful Transmission of Tradition VATICAN CITY, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The importance that Paul gave in his letters to sacred Tradition proves false the claim the Apostle invented Christianity, says Benedict XVI.The Pope affirmed this today during the general audience in St. Peter's Square, which he dedicated to a continuation of his series of catecheses on St. Paul. Some 15,000 people gathered for the audience, including several groups from Eastern Europe and Oceania. The Holy Father spoke about St. Paul's relationships with the Twelve, which he said were "always marked by profound respect and by the frankness that in Paul stemmed from the defense of the truth of the Gospel." He particularly stressed the relationship with Peter, noting that the Apostle to the Gentiles stayed with the first Pope for 15 days to learn about Christ's earthly life. During Paul's time with the Twelve, the Pontiff explained, he received teaching on central elements of the Christian tradition. He then transmits this Tradition faithfully. Benedict XVI particularly noted passages from Paul's First Letter to the Corinthians where the Apostle explains the Christian faith on the Eucharist and the Resurrection. "The words of Jesus in the Last Supper really are for Paul the center of the life of the Church," the Pope explained. And the "other text, on the Resurrection, transmits to us again the same formula of fidelity," he continued. "The importance that [Paul] bestows on the living Tradition of the Church, which she transmits to her communities, demonstrates how mistaken is the view of those who attribute to Paul the invention of Christianity," the Holy Father contended. "Before proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ, he encountered him on the road to Damascus, and met him in the Church, observing his life in the Twelve, and in those who had followed him on the roads of Galilee. [...] "The mission received on the part of the Risen One in order to evangelize the Gentiles must be confirmed and guaranteed by those who gave him and Barnabas their right hand, in sign of approval of their apostolate and evangelization, and of acceptance in the one communion of the Church of Christ." The Pontiff concluded by affirming that faith is born from an experience of the risen Christ. "The more we try to follow in the footsteps of Jesus of Nazareth on the roads of Galilee, so much the more will we understand that he has taken charge of our humanity, sharing in everything except sin," he said. "Our faith is not born from a myth or an idea, but from an encounter with the Risen One, in the life of the Church." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23708?l=english


Pontiff Greets Students From Conflict Zones VATICAN CITY, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Benedict XVI told a group of university students from areas of conflict that he hopes they can contribute to a culture of peaceful coexistence.The Pope said this today when he greeted students from the Associazione "Rondine Cittadella della Pace" (the Swallow City of Peace Association) of Arezzo. Some of the youth were from Georgia and Russia. They were on the front row of today's general audience, accompanied by the founder of the association, Franco Vaccari, and two bishops from the region where they study. The Holy Father told them that he hopes "this encounter contributes to reinforce an adequate culture of pacific coexistence among people and to promote understanding and reconciliation." The youth arrived in Arezzo in June to receive a university education and to try to overcome sufferings from war. The association was established in 1997 to promote dialogue and peace through the experience of shared university life. It welcomes students from the Balkans, the former Soviet Union, the Middle East and Africa. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23706?l=english


Cardinal Bertone Book to Be Presented in Moscow ROME, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The Moscow presentation of a book written by Benedict XVI's secretary of state is being considered a "historic event."Written in Italian and Russian, "L'Etica del Bene Comune nel Pensiero Sociale della Chiesa (The Ethics of the Common Good in the Social Thought of the Church), by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, will be presented in Moscow on Friday. The volume was published Tuesday by Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Metropolitan Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad, the president of the Department of External Affairs of the Moscow Patriarchate, wrote the prologue. Editor Pierluca Azzaro described the work as a "manifesto for concrete common action based on a shared principle: Spiritual and material well-being sustain one another or fall together. At the root of conflicts and injustices that run the risk of disintegrating the community is an essentially atheist, materialist and egoistic vision of man." The presentation will take place in the context of a round table on economics and Christianity at the 5th Anniversary Convention of the Russian International Studies Association. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23702?l=english


Prayer Day Called to Defeat Aussie Abortion Bill Melbourne Prelate Says Measure Is Unprecedented Attack MELBOURNE, Australia, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The archbishop of Melbourne has declared a Day of Intercession in an attempt to stop the Abortion Law Reform Bill from being passed and put into effect as early as next month.Archbishop Denis Hart released a pastoral letter last week regarding the bill, which passed the Legislative Assembly on Sept. 11. "Make no mistake about it," he said, "the bill goes beyond codifying current clinical practice, as its proponents claim, and will set an unfortunate precedent which other states may follow. The archbishop's letter includes a list of consequences of the bill, some of which violate the right to conscientious objection. For example, it "compels a pharmacist or nurse employed or engaged in a public or private hospital or day-procedure center, if directed in writing by a doctor, to administer or to supply a drug to cause an abortion to a female who is more than 24 weeks pregnant." It also "imposes a legal obligation on doctors and nurses, notwithstanding their conscientious objection, to perform an abortion on a female in an emergency where it is deemed that the abortion is necessary to preserve the life of the pregnant woman." Archbishop Hart said the bill "is seriously flawed as much by what it omits as by what it contains." He lamented that it fails to ban partial-birth abortions, to include informed consent provision, or "to safeguard the health of women by permitting abortions to be performed by doctors who have no qualifications or training in obstetrics." Freedom of religion The archbishop of Melbourne called the bill "an unprecedented attack on the freedom to hold and exercise fundamental religious beliefs." He explained: "It makes a mockery of the Victorian Charter of Human Rights and the Equal Opportunity Act in that it requires health professionals with a conscientious objection to abortion to refer patients seeking an abortion to other health professionals who do not have such objections. It also requires health professionals with a conscientious objection to abortion to perform an abortion in whatever is deemed an emergency. [...] "As one commentator has put it, it is an insidious irony that this coercion of conscience is being carried out in the name of choice. Parliamentarians are being afforded the opportunity to exercise their consciences to remove the right of health professionals to exercise theirs." Archbishop Hart also warned that the bill would put Catholic hospitals in a "vulnerable position." "Catholic hospitals will not perform abortions and will not provide referrals for the purpose of abortion," he affirmed. "If this provision is passed it will be an outrageous attack on our service to the community and contrary to Catholic ethical codes. [...] This bill poses a real threat to the continued existence of Catholic hospitals. [...] This is a significant issue for the community at large having regard to the fact that Catholic hospitals account for approximately one third of all births and are seen by many as their hospitals of choice." Discounting the Church The prelate further expressed his dismay that the "Victorian Law Reform Commission created a false dichotomy in relation to conscientious objections, a dichotomy between 'adequate justification' and 'mere prejudice.' This was subsequently relied upon in debate in the Legislative Assembly. The position of the Church is postulated as 'mere prejudice' and without 'adequate justification.'" Archbishop Hart questioned how 2,000 years of consistent teaching could be classified as "mere prejudice." "The argument itself smacks of prejudice, is a direct attack on religious expression and unworthy of a place in a contemporary mature state which values diversity of thought," he stated. Finally, the prelate announced that Sunday, Oct. 5, would be a Day of Intercession dedicated to the defeat of the bill. He invited the faithful not only to join in the day of prayer, but also to contact the members of the Legislative Council to express their pro-life concerns. --- --- --- On the Net: Archbishop Hart's letter: http://www.cam.org.au/abortion/pastoral-letter-and-day-of-intercession.html/ email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23709?l=english


Cardinal: Anti-Christian Violence Disgracing India Says People of All Creeds Are Horrified MUMBAI, India, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


The ongoing anti-Christian violence in India is a "disgrace" and horrifying to people of good will in India, regardless of their religious beliefs, says the archbishop of Bombay. Cardinal Oswald Gracias called the campaign against Christians by Hindu extremists "inexplicable," a "disgrace" and "madness," reported L'Osservatore Romano on Tuesday. "All persons of good will in India, whether Christians, Hindus or Muslims, are horrified and astonished by the diabolical hunt of Christians to kill them and destroy their homes and churches," he said. "We must not give in to the temptation to resignation, and even less so to that of vengeance. In the end, it won't be fundamentalism that prevails. Prayer, including for those who hate us, is our main weapon."Though India has often been the home of Hindu-Christian tension, a wave of escalated violence began in late August after the murder of a Hindu leader. Since then several Christians have been killed, churches and properties have been burned, and thousands of Christians have fled their homes. Despite the current situation, the cardinal explained that India "is a great country in which many hopes have been placed: I have always thought of it this way and I was moved when the Pope repeated it to me personally at the moment he created me cardinal in November of last year." Cardinal Gracias added that this hope is supported in an important way by interreligious dialogue, which he called necessary to give "hope to India and the whole world." "Religious liberty is the first of liberties," he said. "Only genuine interreligious dialogue will allow for the elimination of any possible cause of tension or disagreement between religious and ethnic groups in India. "Dialogue is vital, essential. The Church has never ceased to promote it -- a dialogue that must not be impoverished by syncretism, but must develop in mutual respect." In this connection, the cardinal said the Church "will continue to be on the side of the poor and the sick without looking to see if they are Hindus, Muslims or Christians. It will reaffirm the right to life for all: It is terrible that newborns are killed if they are female." Catholics "pray and work so that the problems that are making us suffer so much are pulled up by the roots, so that all Indians may be united, without distinction, in justice. We have a clear objective: that no one goes to bed hungry, that no dignity is offended, that no right is denied to minorities, including religious liberty, and that no poor person is abandoned," he concluded. Death threats Nevertheless, Cardinal Gracias expressed concern about the inaction of local authorities in regions where persecution has been unleashed, despite the support to Christians shown by the national government. In this connection, the bishops have addressed Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on several occasions to request his help. At present, Archbishop Raphael Cheenath of Cuttack-Bhubaneswar (the diocese most affected by the violence) is hoping to be received, along with a delegation of Catholic clergy. Archbishop Cheenath, who was on a trip when the persecution broke out, has not been able to return home because he has received death threats from extremists. "Last week I received a chilling letter in which Hindu groups threatened me, saying 'blood for blood, life for life.' They say in the letter that I will be killed if I return to Orissa," he explained to the press service of the Italian episcopal conference. Two days ago, the bishop's residence was stoned. The prelate added he did not trust the local government, "which failed when the moment arrived to protect the lives of Christians in the districts of Kandhamal and Sambalpur." For his part, Archbishop Bernard Moras of Bangalore made public a communiqué through the SAR news agency, in which he "firmly condemned" the wave of violence that his diocese is enduring, especially "the profanation of the churches and Eucharistic species" in several parishes last Sunday. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23707?l=english


Patriarch Lauds Catholic Magazine in Russian MOSCOW, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Russian Orthodox Patriarch Alexy II says he is very pleased with the publication of a Russian edition of the Catholic magazine "30 Days." In a letter to its director, former Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church said he is "very happy to see that this authoritative monthly, published in seven languages, now also has a Russian edition." "This special issue contains rich material on the history, cultural and present-day life of Russia and the Russian Orthodox Church," the patriarch noted. He added that he is certain this initiative will promote "a fruitful dialogue between the patriarchate of Moscow and the Roman Catholic Church." The special Russian issue of "30 Days" was produced in collaboration with Moscow's World Public Forum "Dialogue of Civilizations" and is titled "The Faith of Russia, the Unity of the Church." email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23703?l=english


80 Years of Ministering to College Students St. John's Catholic Newman Center Opens New Doors By Karna SwansonCHAMPAIGN, Illinois, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


September means back-to-school, and for many young people attending colleges and universities across the country, that means returning to their "home-away-from-home." For 80 years, that home for Catholic students attending the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has been St. John's Catholic Newman Center. The largest Newman Center of its kind and the only Newman Center to offer residential housing, the center has served some 70,000 students. Earlier this month St. John's marked it's 80th anniversary by opening a new residential facility that includes 127,000 square feet of student living quarters, study and social lounges, computer labs, and a dining area. ZENIT spoke with Father Gregory Ketcham, the center's chaplain, who oversaw the $40 million expansion. He discusses the mission of St. John's Catholic Newman Center, and reflects on what's to come during the center's next 80 years. Q: Parents sending their children to college worry if their sons/daughters will come home with their faith intact. What does the Newman Center on the University of Illinois campus do to assure that they do? Father Ketcham: There's certainly no "magic potion" we can give young people to make sure they don't fall away from the Church. In fact, we're not really interested in helping students merely keep their faith intact; at Newman, our greatest desire is to see students deepen their understanding and commitment to the mission of the Church, to grow in faith, hope and charity. Toward that end, we primarily invest our energy into three venues of outreach: 1. Our retreat program, "Koinonia," led by students for students four times each year; 2. FOCUS (Fellowship of Catholic University Students), whose missionaries train students to evangelize their peers; 3. Faithful liturgical celebrations whereby students learn to pray with the Church and experience the beauty of our relationship with Christ. We enjoy the great blessing of being able to offer academic credit courses in Catholicism. Kenneth Howell, director of our Center's Institute of Catholic Thought, teaches two courses each year -- Introduction to Catholicism (Fall) and Modern Catholic Thought (Spring) -- through the University's Religious Studies department. In addition to being the only residential Newman Center in the country, we are especially privileged to have seven priests and two Franciscan sisters attached to our community. Spiritual direction is simply a part of life for many of our students. Q: What are the particular challenges of young people who attend public universities with a Newman Center as opposed to those youth who attend a Catholic university? Father Ketcham: It could be misleading to paint either educational path with a single brush -- for instance, one finds faculty who directly challenge belief in the Church's teachings at both Catholic and secular institutions. The same questions apply to each, and should be asked by any student evaluating his/her school choices: Is this Newman Center/university faithful to the magisterium? Does it encourage prayer? Do the priests celebrate the liturgy as they ought? Can I find honest, faithful answers to difficult moral and doctrinal questions? Will I be invited into an authentic community? That said, I believe the difference lies in what's outside. By and large, the test for the effectiveness of a faithful Catholic university's formation program lies on the other side of graduation, while on a large secular campus like ours, students fairly regularly find their faith challenged -- sometimes attacked -- in the classroom, while their moral fortitude is tested by student activities and the "party scene." Q: Cardinal Francis George, archbishop of Chicago, called the Newman Center on the University of Illinois campus "one of the most important apostolates" in Illinois. Do you agree? Father Ketcham: Wholeheartedly, yes. We at Newman have both the privilege and the grave responsibility to contribute to the renewal of culture from the ground up, by introducing tomorrow's fathers, mothers, priests, sisters and professionals of all varieties to Jesus Christ and his Church. The college years are a crucial turning point in the lives of young people: "Where sin abounds, grace abounds all the more." Just as there are serious temptations of all sorts on a large secular campus, there are great possibilities for sanctity. We really believe we have a special opportunity to lead all the students involved in our program to greater depths of belief, to greater union with Christ, and thus to have them develop the desire to share their faith wherever they find themselves through the rest of their lives. Q: Newman Hall has one of the highest retention rates and grade point averages for its residents among all university housing. Why do you think that is? Father Ketcham: I believe those two numbers echo the tone we try to set in the hall. It's a question of students' priorities -- we have a number of residents who chose Newman Hall precisely because of its Catholicity, which shows an ability to set the right priorities, and necessarily spills over into the academic sphere. Students who get involved in the communal life of the center find lifelong friends, not just drinking buddies. Meaningful relationships are what young people long for most, so they gravitate toward places where they can find others of like mind. The students also respond well to our reminders that their current vocation is to seek holiness as students. Q: What are the specific challenges and positive aspects of ministering to the youth of today? Father Ketcham: I think in many ways the problem is the solution -- young people are hungry for real connection, for concrete answers to deeply felt questions, for direction in life. It's unfortunate that most Catholic young people have not received a great deal of coherent catechesis, but this "millennial" generation is marked by openness to matters of faith. In a word, they are teachable. As I alluded to earlier, there are all sorts of challenges to living as a Christian on today's secular campuses. There's an almost ritualized approach to "fun" -- drinking to excess, "hooking up," etc. There are also courses wherein students find their most deeply held values directly contradicted. One of the great rewards of my job is seeing students wrestle with these obstacles and overcome them. I have a front-row seat for watching students experience conversion and embrace their vocations. I'm fully convinced that a number of these young people won't simply remain "Catholic" as they venture out into the world, but will seriously embrace the "great commission" as their personal mission in life. Q: What do you hope will be the fruits of this 80th year of ministry at the University of Illinois? Father Ketcham: I hope that we are able to set the stage for another 80 years on campus. Moreover, I hope that with the addition of some 300 souls to our community -- due to our recent expansion -- we see more of what we've seen over the years: more souls encountering the living God in word and sacrament, and responding to that encounter by giving themselves over to his will. email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23705?l=english


40 Days Revive Hope for Life (Part 2) Interview With National Campaign Director David Bereit FREDERICKSBURG, Virginia, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


It's time the American people begin to put their trust less in politics and more in God, says pro-life activist David Bereit.Bereit is the national campaign director of 40 Days for Life, a campaign he says has inspired hope that a culture of life is possible in the United States and all over the world. The campaign begins today, and will unite pro-life advocates all over the country, and three cities in Canada, to pray, fast and work together through Nov. 2, the Sunday that precedes the U.S. election day. In Part 2 of this interview with ZENIT, Bereit talks about the campaign's success stories from past years and his hope that this year will be a turning point for building a culture of life. Part 1 was published Tuesday. Q: What explanation do you give for why 40 Days for Life is growing and spreading so quickly to so many new cities? Bereit: Number one it is because of prayer. It is because of the Holy Spirit. That is my strongest of convictions. In second place it is because of the amazing people that God has called to be a part of this effort. I have heard some of the most incredible stories of people who have never been involved in pro-life work before they heard about this campaign. They got involved, launched local campaigns, mobilized hundreds of people, saved dozens of lives, and really turned the tide in their communities. We have seen two abortion facilities go out of business following 40 Days for Life campaigns. We know of five abortion-clinic workers who have left the abortion industry, telling the 40 Days for Life volunteers that it was because of them and their prayers. Q: Why did you decide to make this next program, beginning today and ending Nov. 2, coincide with the national elections? How important do you think the abortion issue is in these elections? Bereit: Well, the campaign dates were the same that we used last year, because they worked very well, but we also felt that there was certainly no coincidence that the 40 days lead up to the Sunday immediately preceding the national election in America. We believe this is a crucial time here in our nation. This is the year, 2008, when the death toll from abortion has crossed the 50 million mark. This is the year when the abortion provider, Planned Parenthood, crossed the billion dollar mark in revenues, over $336 million of that coming from American taxpayers. After 35 years, if abortion was a good thing, it would be settled in the minds of people. But we have recognized that abortion has not been a good thing. It has not done any good for women, and it has certainly been destructive to the lives of the 50 million children that have been lost. There is no more important time in our nation's history than right now for people to pray, to fast, and to put their faith into action. We will be able to do big, big things, because we have a big, big God who can do all things. We took a tour of the capital recently. We got the opportunity to get down on the floor of the House of Representatives chamber. There, up on the wall, above where the Speaker of the House sits, it says in big letters "In God We Trust." And I thought, one of the problems we have had these last 35 years of legalized abortion in America, is that we have put our trust in everything else but that. We have put our trust in who resides in the White House. We have put our trust in who is walking the halls of Congress. We have put our trust in who are the black-robed judges sitting on the United States Supreme Court. We have put our trust in the state legislatures. We put our trust in politics. This year we must recognize the importance of that statement "In God We Trust," and we must return our faith there. He is the only one who will never let us down. I really believe from the bottom of my heart that this year is going to mark the beginning of the end of abortion, and I think we are already starting to see that play out all across the nation. I see it in the eyes of the people. I see them putting their work into action. I see them in position now all across the country. I am amazed. I have never seen it like this before. Last year we had some really good things happening. Reports around the country showed that people were going to planning meetings, and they had 15 or 20 people getting involved. By comparison, this year I went to three different planning meetings in Nebraska, and at these three meetings there were 500 people. These people were on fire and they were ready to do things. I am seeing planning, intensity, and work like I have never seen. It gives me enormous hope. Q: Are you expecting any specific results from this campaign? Bereit: The most important result we hope for is that each of us who are involved grow in holiness during the campaign. That is more important than any immediate result. Yes, we hope and pray that we will see many children's lives saved. Nationally, thus far in the previous two campaigns we have reports of 514 children saved, and we want to see many more children saved. Yes, we want to see many people spared from making a decision for abortion. Yes, we want to see a lot of post-abortion healing happen. But most importantly we want our nation to turn back to God, and that is going to start through each one of us. It will begin through our faithfulness, through our personal growth in holiness. Personally, I have never had the degree of spiritual growth like I experienced during my first 40 Days for Life. Q: What are some ways that people can join in the 40 Days for Life effort? Bereit: The first thing I would tell anybody would be to get down on their knees and begin to pray. Pray about what role God has for you in this effort. Certainly for many people it will be to join in the prayer and fasting from today to Nov. 2. For many people it will be to participate in the vigil campaign in 179 cities throughout the country. On our Web site we have a list of all the locations where the vigils will be held, and people can go there, they can find the location nearest to them, they can get the information, and they can come out to the vigil. Maybe it will be one hour a day for the 40 days, the equivalent of a workweek, and they can have the opportunity to save lives. Maybe it will be once a week. Maybe it will be just once during the 40 days. They can go and be there in prayer in the place where there is so little hope, at an abortion facility or Planned Parenthood office, to be a beacon of light in the darkness there. Another thing is that people can discern if God is calling them to be a part of spreading the pro-life message through personal outreach. Maybe it will start with talking with their friends, or family members, people at their parish, people throughout their diocese, people they work with, people they go to school with or that their children go to school with, and inviting people to join together in this effort during these 40 days. On our Web site we have a section where people can sign up for the daily e-mail updates and devotionals during the 40 days. We have national leaders such as Father Frank Pavone and other clergy, other national pro-life leaders, who will be sending out a daily devotional with a Scripture reflection and a call to action for people during the 40 days. We have heard so many great reports from people that tell us it is such an inspiration to know that their intentions are being united with others around the country. For those people who are in a city that does not have an organized campaign this fall, they may discern that God is leading them to lead a campaign down the road. We are very likely to do another campaign again next Lenten season, and one again next fall. Q: What message would you like to give to people who are interested in participating in this campaign? Bereit: The main thought that keeps coming back to me as I work with people during this campaign, is that years from now in the history books, there is going to be a chapter about abortion, and about how this great injustice ultimately ended. As with every great injustice, such as segregation or slavery, or any other injustice in America and throughout the world, all of them eventually fell or will fall. Abortion will eventually fall. When it does, and when the history books are written, our children and our grandchildren are going to be reading about how abortion ended. I believe that they are going to be reading about the year 2008 and how this year was the beginning of the end of abortion. And we will have to answer to them what we did or did not do during this crucial time in American history. I believe that the faithful, God's people, who are willing to pray and fast, who are willing to hold peaceful vigil, who are willing to spread the pro-life message, and do anything they can to speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, I believe that we will be able to tell our children and grandchildren, "I did everything that I could possibly do. I was willing to do the things that needed to be done in order to end abortion." It is the legacy that we are going to be known for. People will look back at us and will measure us by how we met this great evil, this great injustice. Abortion will be in the history books. The question is what role will we have played in bringing it down? That's the message I really want to get across to people. Ultimately of course, we live with the desire that when we each arrive in our heavenly home, we want to eventually hear those words, "Well done, good and faithful servant." --- --- --- On the Net: 40 Days for Life: http://www.40daysforlife.com/about.cfm/ Part 1 of this interview: http://www.zenit.org/article-23696?l=English/ email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23701?l=english


On Paul and the Other Apostles "He Insists on Fidelity to What He Himself Has Received" VATICAN CITY, SEPT. 24, 2008 (Zenit.org).-


Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI delivered during today's general audience in St. Peter's Square.The Holy Father continued today the cycle of catecheses dedicated to the figure and thought of St. Paul. * * * Dear Brothers and Sisters, Today I would like to speak about the relationship between St. Paul and the apostles who preceded him in the following of Jesus. These relationships were always marked by profound respect and by the frankness that in Paul stemmed from the defense of the truth of the Gospel. Although he was practically a contemporary of Jesus of Nazareth, he never had the opportunity to meet him during his public life. Because of this, after the dazzling light on the road to Damascus, he saw the need to consult the first disciples of the Master, who had been chosen by [Christ] to take the Gospel to the ends of the earth. In the Letter to the Galatians, Paul elaborates an important report on the contacts maintained with some of the Twelve: above all with Peter, who had been chosen as Cephas, Aramaic word that means rock, on which the Church was built (cf. Galatians 1:18), with James, the "Lord's brother" (cf. Galatians 1:19), and with John (cf. Galatians 2:9). Paul does not hesitate to acknowledge them as the "pillars" of the Church. Particularly significant is the meeting with Cephas (Peter), which took place in Jerusalem. Paul stayed with him for 15 days to "consult him" (cf. Galatians 1:19), that is, to be informed on the earthly life of the Risen One, who had "seized" him on the road to Damascus and was changing his life radically: from persecutor of the Church of God he became evangelizer of faith in the crucified Messiah and Son of God, which in the past he had tried to destroy (cf. Galatians 1:23). What type of information did Paul obtain on Jesus in the three years after the encounter of Damascus? In the First Letter to the Corinthians we find two passages, which Paul had learned in Jerusalem and which had been formulated as central elements of the Christian tradition, the constitutive tradition. He transmits them verbally, exactly as he has received them, with a very solemn formula: "I delivered to you ... what I also received." He insists, therefore, on fidelity to what he himself has received and transmits faithfully to the new Christians. They are constitutive elements and concern the Eucharist and the Resurrection. They are texts already formulated in the [decade of] the 30s. Thus we come to the death, burial in the heart of the earth and resurrection of Jesus (cf. 1 Corinthians 15:3-4). Let's take one at a time: the words of Jesus in the Last Supper (cf. 1 Corinthians 11:23-25) really are for Paul the center of the life of the Church. The Church is built from this center, being in this way herself. In addition to this Eucharistic center, from which the Church is always reborn -- also for all Paul's theology, for all his thought -- these words have a notable impact on Paul's personal relationship with Jesus. On one hand, they attest that the Eucharist illumines the curse of the cross, changing it into a blessing (Galatians 3:13-14), and on the other, they explain the breadth of the very death and resurrection of Jesus. In his letters, the "for you" of the institution becomes the "for me" (Galatians 2:20), personalized, knowing that in that "you" he himself was known and loved by Jesus and, on the other hand, "for all" (2 Corinthians 5:L14): this "for you" becomes "for me" and "for the Church" (Ephesians 5:25), that is, also "for all" of the expiatory sacrifice of the cross (cf. Romans 3:25). By and in the Eucharist, the Church is built and recognizes herself as "Body of Christ" (1 Corinthians 12:27), nourished every day by the strength of the Spirit of the Risen One. The other text, on the Resurrection, transmits to us again the same formula of fidelity. St. Paul wrote: "For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the Twelve" (1 Corinthians 15:3-5). Also in this tradition transmitted to Paul he again mentions the expression "for our sins," which underlines the gift that Jesus has made of himself to the Father, to deliver us from sin and death. From this gift of himself, Paul draws the most moving and fascinating expressions of our relationship with Christ: "For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God (2 Corinthians 5:21). "For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich (2 Corinthians 8:9). It is worthwhile to recall the commentary with which the then Augustinian monk Martin Luther accompanied these paradoxical expressions of Paul: "This is the grandiose mystery of divine grace toward sinners: by an admirable exchange our sins no longer are ours, but Christ's, and the righteousness of Christ is no longer Christ's but ours" (Commentary on the Psalms from 1513-1515). And so we have been saved. In the original kerygma -- proclamation -- transmitted from mouth to mouth, it is worth pointing out the use of the verb "has risen," instead of "rose" which would have been more logical, in continuity with "died" and "was buried." The verbal form "has risen" has been chosen to underline that Christ's resurrection affects up to the present the existence of believers: We can translate it as "has risen and continues to be alive" in the Eucharist and in the Church. Thus all the Scriptures attest to the death and resurrection of Christ, because -- as Hugh of Saint Victor wrote -- "the whole of divine Scripture constitutes only one book, and this book is Christ, because the whole of Scripture speaks of Christ and finds its fulfillment in Christ" (De Arca Noe, 2, 8). If St. Ambrose of Milan can say that "in Scripture we read Christ," it is because the Church of the origins has reread all Israel's Scriptures starting from and returning to Christ. The enumeration of the Risen One's apparitions to Cephas, to the Twelve, to more than 500 brethren, and to James closes with the reference to the personal apparition received by Paul on the road to Damascus: "Last of all, as to one untimely born, he appeared also to me" (1 Corinthians 15:8). Because he had persecuted the Church of God, he expresses in this confession his unworthiness to be considered an apostle, at the same level as those who preceded him: but God's grace has not been in vain in him (1 Corinthians 15:10). Hence, the boastful affirmation of divine grace unites Paul with the first witnesses of Christ's resurrection. "Whether then it was I or they, so we preach and so you have believed" (1 Corinthians 15:11). The identity and unity of the proclamation of the Gospel is important: both they and I preach the same faith, the same Gospel of Jesus Christ dead and risen who gives himself in the most holy Eucharist. The importance that he bestows on the living Tradition of the Church, which she transmits to her communities, demonstrates how mistaken is the view of those who attribute to Paul the invention of Christianity: Before proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ, he encountered him on the road to Damascus, and met him in the Church, observing his life in the Twelve, and in those who had followed him on the roads of Galilee. In the next catecheses we will have the opportunity to go more profoundly into the contributions that Paul has made to the Church of the origins; however, the mission received on the part of the Risen One in order to evangelize the Gentiles must be confirmed and guaranteed by those who gave him and Barnabas their right hand, in sign of approval of their apostolate and evangelization, and of acceptance in the one communion of the Church of Christ (cf. Galatians 2:9). We understand, therefore, that the expression -- "[f]rom now on, therefore, we regard no one from a human point of view; even though we once regarded Christ from a human point of view, we regard him thus no longer" (2 Corinthians 5:16) -- does not mean that his earthly life has little relevance for our maturing in the faith, but that from the moment of the Resurrection, our way of relating to him changes. He is, at the same time, the Son of God, "who was descended from David according to the flesh and designated Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead," as St. Paul recalls at the beginning of the Letter to the Romans (1:3-4). The more we try to follow in the footsteps of Jesus of Nazareth on the roads of Galilee, so much the more will we understand that he has taken charge of our humanity, sharing in everything except sin. Our faith is not born from a myth or an idea, but from an encounter with the Risen One, in the life of the Church. [Translation by ZENIT] [At the end of the audience, Benedict XVI greeted pilgrims in several languages. In English, he said:] Dear Brothers and Sisters, In today's catechesis we turn again to the life of Saint Paul and consider his relationship with the Twelve Apostles. In his letter to the Galatians, Paul speaks of his visits to Jerusalem where he consulted Peter, James and John, reputed to be the "pillars" of the Church. Paul's mission to the Gentiles needed to be confirmed and guaranteed by those who had been disciples of Jesus during his earthly life, and they offered to him and to Barnabas the right hand of fellowship. Paul passed on the living tradition that he had received: the words of Jesus at the Last Supper, his death and resurrection, and his appearances to Peter and to the Twelve. Paul emphasizes that Jesus died "for our sins", he offered himself to the Father in order to deliver us from sin and death. And now that Jesus has risen from the dead, he is living in his Church and in the Eucharist, where we continue to encounter him. Just as Paul's teaching is rooted in his experience on the road to Damascus, and in his knowledge of Christ acquired through the Church, so too our faith is grounded, not on myths or pious legends, but on the words and deeds of Jesus of Nazareth, and on our encounter with the risen Lord, present in the life of his Church. I offer a warm welcome to all the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors here today, including the choir from New Zealand and the groups from Britain and Ireland, Scandinavia, Africa, Australia and the Far East. I greet in particular the new students from the Venerable English College and the priests from Ireland who are taking part in a renewal course. May your pilgrimage renew your faith in Christ present in his Church, after the example of the Apostle Saint Paul. May God bless you all! Copyright 2008 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana email this article: http://www.zenit.org/article-23704?l=english
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