ZE090109
ZENIT
The World Seen From Rome
Daily dispatch - January 09, 2009
VATICAN DOSSIER
Cardinal: Family Pillar of Mexican Society
A Million Expected for Family Meeting
Cardinal Discounts "Tension" Over Gaza Comment
Seminarians Not Considered Endangered Species
WORLD FEATURES
Bush Saddened at Death of Father Neuhaus
Bishops Head to Holy Land in Support
Voting a Duty, South African Prelate Affirms
NEWS BRIEFS
Aid Groups Urge Look at Rights Violations in Gaza
Denver Prelate: Church Wants "Orderly Immigration"
Caritas Asks $7M to Keep Zimbabwe From Starving
Agnostic Ad Reported for Breach of Standards
CLASSIFIED ADS
BOOK: "The Audience Suite of the Papal Apartments" by Mons. Romeo Panciroli
DVD: "John Paul II - The Pope Who Made History" - Collector's Edition 5 DVDs
Cardinal: Family Pillar of Mexican Society
Presents VI World Meeting of FamiliesVATICAN CITY, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Even though the institution of the family is experiencing a crisis all around the globe, it remains a pillar of Mexican society, according to the president of the Pontifical Council of the Family.
Cardinal Ennio Antonelli commented today on the status of the family in Mexico ahead of the VI World Meeting of Families, which will take place Jan. 14-18 in the nation's capital.
The meeting, which has as its theme "The Family as Educator in Human and Christian Virtues," will be attended by some 30 cardinals, 200 bishops and delegations of families from all continents.
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Pope's secretary of state, will attend as the Pope's legate and will preside at the closing Mass, to be held at the Marian shrine of the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
In presenting the meeting at a press conference in the Vatican, Cardinal Antonelli said that in Mexico the "family remains the principal institution of aid and solidarity."
"Abortion, divorce, euthanasia, questions associated with bioethics, though far removed from popular culture and practices, are also penetrating the mentality of Mexicans," he continued.
Speaking of the situation of families in general, he said, "Families today have to face [...] the challenge of an individualistic and consumerist culture." He noted the added challenge of the "absence of shared values."
The Italian prelate also said that young people are often "misguided and parents unmotivated."
Cardinal Antonelli also spoke of the need to educate children in the faith, and that belief isn't something "one automatically inherits."
He also spoke of the family as a place to cultivate "virtue and the experience of feeling loved." In the family, the cardinal explained, one learns "the sense of solidarity, of the dignity of the person, of loyalty, of cooperation." He called family a "laboratory of civil coexistence."
"Unfortunately," Cardinal Antonelli added, "we have a mistaken concept of freedom, which is understood as self-sufficient autonomy."
He explained that with this "misguided mentality, laws often are passed -- without broad social consensus and under the influence of small but active pressure groups, highly ideological and with large economic resources -- that enable and facilitate abortion, rapid divorce and euthanasia."
The cardinal said that the "Church is making great efforts of evangelization, supporting Christian families in their values and encouraging a wide-ranging strategy to promote and defend life from conception to natural death."
"Thanks be to God," Cardinal Antonelli said, "over the last few years numerous initiatives, both ecclesial and civil, have come into being at the service of the family."
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A Million Expected for Family Meeting
International Encounter to Be Held in MexicoVATICAN CITY, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- More than a million people are expected to participated in the VI World Meeting of Families, to be held next week in Mexico City.
Cardinal Ennio Antonelli presented the Jan. 14-18 encounter today at a press conference in the Vatican. Some 30 cardinals, 200 bishops and delegations of families will attend the meeting, which has as its theme "The Family as Educator in Human and Christian Virtues."
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Pope's secretary of state, will attend as the Pope's legate and will preside at the closing Mass, to be held at the Marian shrine of the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Benedict XVI will be deliver two messages to the international meeting of families via video. One will be shown at the celebration of the family on Saturday, Jan. 17, and the second will be delivered live at the end of the closing Mass on Sunday, Jan. 18.
Preceding the main celebrations will be a theological pastoral congress, which expects some 8,000 participants. The congress will focus on three main points: family relationships and family values; the family and sexuality; and the educational vocation of the family.
More than a million are expected to attend the weekend celebrations, which will take place at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
On Saturday, Jan. 17, the rosary will be prayed and families from Africa, Asia, America, Europe and Oceania will present their testimonies. On Sunday, Jan. 18, Cardinal Bertone will preside at the closing Mass.
Cardinal Antonelli also mentioned the "Family Mosaic" that has been prepared for the meeting, formed of thousands of photographs of families from all over the world arranged to create the image of Benedict XVI.
He also noted that a national competition entitled "A letter to my child" has also been organized, "which will be presented to Benedict XVI as evidence of the profound values and dignity of Mexican mothers."
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On the Net:
http://www.emf2009.com
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Cardinal Discounts "Tension" Over Gaza Comment
Affirms That War Zone Is Contrary to Human DignityROME, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Cardinal Renato Martino says his comment Wednesday that compared the Gaza Strip to a "big concentration camp" cannot be interpreted as anti-Israeli, after certain Jewish leaders protested the reference.
Some media reports said the cardinal, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, and his comparison could have compromised Benedict XVI's trip to the Holy Land planned for May. Commentators agree, however, that that trip is perhaps already on shaky ground, considering the continuing bloodshed in the area.
But Cardinal Martino told the Italian daily "La Repubblica," which first reported the comparison, that the situation in the Gaza Strip is indeed "horrible," and "contrary to human dignity."
He said to journalist Marco Politi, "I say that the conditions people are living in there should be looked at: surrounded by a wall that is difficult to cross, in conditions contrary to human dignity. What is happening during these days is horrible. But when I speak, may people take into account the whole of what I say."
The cardinal affirmed that both sides are "guilty" and that it is "necessary to separate them, like two fighting siblings are separated," and make them "sit down to negotiate."
"Hamas missiles are not confetti," he continued. "I condemn them. Israel certainly has the right to defend itself and Hamas should take that into account. But what can be said when so many children are killed, when U.N. schools are bombed, while possessing the technology that allows one to make out an ant on the ground?"
"If Israel wants to live in peace, it needs to make peace with the rest," Cardinal Martino contended. On the other hand, "Hamas does not represent all the Palestinians. I do not defend Hamas: If they want a house, if they want a Palestinian state, they should understand that the path they've begun is wrong."
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Seminarians Not Considered Endangered Species
Future Focolare Priests Gather at Castel GandolfoROME, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Seminarians aren't a type of endangered species, explained a Vatican aide, citing that the number of seminarians worldwide rose from 50,000 some decades ago, to 72,000 today.
This was one of the main points offered by theologian Hubertus Blaumeiser, an assessor of the Vatican Congregation for Catholic Education, during the 5th International Encounter of seminarians from the Focolare Movement. The meeting was held at Castel Gandolfo earlier this month.
Blaumeiser noted the significant rise in the number of seminarians in Latin America, Africa and Asia, while acknowledging the marked decrease in their number in Europe.
He was speaking to some 500 seminarians during the conference, which had the theme "There Is a Path: The Challenge of Human Relationships." The talks centered on the human and spiritual formation of the seminarians to better serve relationships among the faithful.
Blaumeiser affirmed that "to be a priest no longer offers a privileged position, but rather demands a counter-cultural choice, a deeper decision for God."
For his part, Andreas Tapken, psychologist and rector of a seminary of Munster, Germany, cautioned against the risk of living celibacy as "repressed affectivity" or a "reduced way of life." On the contrary, he said, the priestly vocation should "respond to the expectations of a society ever more closed in privacy, in an individualism that isolates in solitude and makes us incapable of opening ourselves to the discovery of the other."
"Priests," he said, "are celibates, not old bachelors."
Whole person
The prefect of the Congregation for Catholic Education, Cardinal Zenon Grocholewski, gave the homily at the closing Mass of the conference. He stated that priests are called to "construct a web of relationships interwoven by evangelical love -- above all the relationship with Christ, with the bishop and with other priests, with the entire community of faithful, in short, with the whole of humanity."
Cardinal Grocholewski, citing Focolare Founder Chiara Lubich, invited the seminarians to "make their own the sorrows of the world, like Jesus did on the cross, who with the cry of abandonment, united men with God and among themselves."
For her part, María Voce, president of the Focolare Movement, invited the students to live, "each in their own environment, the art of loving, inspiring many living cells, such that in the seminaries, in the theology faculties, in the parishes, or wherever, the living presence of Christ is noticed."
Voce urged the seminarians to form a "net of unity," the same proposal offered by Lubich 40 years ago, which gave rise to Focolare's priestly branch.
"With the spirit of unity, young seminarians will not only save their vocations, but will arouse during the period of the seminary an irradiation of unity such that they will attract many other youth," she said.
The conference concluded with an encounter with Benedict XVI in St. Peter's Square for the praying of the midday Angelus. The Pope offered the seminarians his blessing on their journey.
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Bush Saddened at Death of Father Neuhaus
Funeral Set for Tuesday in New YorkBy Karna Swanson
NEW YORK, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- In a message sent on the occasion of the death of Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, President George Bush called the founder of the religion magazine First Things an "inspirational leader" and a "dear friend."
Father Neuhaus, a prominent theologian and prolific writer, died Thursday in New York of complications from cancer. He was 72.Bush said in his message that he and his wife Laura were both "saddened" by the death of Father Neuhaus. The president called him "an inspirational leader, admired theologian, and accomplished author who devoted his life to the service of the Almighty and to the betterment of our world."
"He was also a dear friend, and I have treasured his wise counsel and guidance," Bush added.
Many Catholic leaders, especially those working to promote the dignity of life, echoed the president's comments.
Christ Slattery, president of Expectant Mother Care and leading pro-life activist, called Father Neuhaus "the most influential Roman Catholic in the United States."
"He was a profound thinker and writer and spokesman for the truths of the Catholic faith," Slattery said in comments to ZENIT. "He was a long-standing civil rights leader, intellectual, and a fierce pro-life advocate who cannot be replaced and will be sorely missed.
A loss for all
Carl Anderson, the supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus, called the death of Father Neuhaus “a great loss for people of every faith.”
“Father Neuhaus was a passionate and effective advocate for preserving an honored place for religion in the life of the nation, and one of the most accomplished Catholic intellectuals of our time,” Anderson said on the Web page of the Knights of Columbus.
He added, “Few men have made as great a contribution at a pivotal time our history as Father Richard John Neuhaus."
William May, senior fellow of the Culture of Life Foundation, praised Father Neuhaus for his "profoundly Christian" writings.
"Long before he became a Catholic I learned much from his writings, so profoundly Christian in nature and challenging philosophically and theologically," said May. "He thoroughly knew the modern, post-Christian mind and the tragic capitulation of many Christian theologians, Protestant and Catholic both, to a secularized Christianity that had lost its bearings."
"His courage and brilliance in showing the relevance to authentic Christian thought in the market place inspired many," he added.
Burial
Joseph Bottum, the editor of First Things, announced that a funeral Mass for Father Neuhaus will be celebrated at the Church of the Immaculate Conception in New York on Tuesday at 10 a.m.
A Christian wake service in the form of a Vigil for the Deceased will be celebrated at the Church of the Immaculate Conception on Monday evening at 7:30 p.m.
Richard John Neuhaus was born May 14, 1936, in Pembroke, Ontario. He was one of eight children, and his father was a Lutheran minister.
Neuhaus himself was ordained a minister around 1960. Later, he moved to the United States where he became a naturalized citizen.
In 1990, Neuhaus founded First Things, a journal published by the Institute on Religion and Public Life.
He was received into the Catholic Church on Sept. 8, 1990. A year later Cardinal John O'Connor (1920-2000), the then archbishop of New York, ordained him as a priest.
Father Neuhaus authored several books, including "The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America" (1984), "The Catholic Moment: The Paradox of the Church in the Postmodern World" (1987), and "Catholic Matters: Confusion, Controversy, and the Splendor of Truth" (2006).
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Bishops Head to Holy Land in Support
Liverpool Prelate Condemns ViolenceBETHLEHEM, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- At the head of a group of bishops arriving today in Bethlehem, the archbishop of Liverpool is affirming that violence is evil, and especially when it blocks humanitarian relief.
Archbishop Patrick Kelly affirmed this in a statement this week regarding the Israeli attack on Gaza, as the annual trip of the Holy Land Coordination was preparing to get under way. The coordination group, including bishops from Canada, England and Wales, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Spain, Switzerland and the United States, will be in the Middle East through next Thursday.
In Archbishop Kelly's statement, he acknowledged that the current conflict in the Gaza Strip "has deep roots, but the priority now must be the immediate end to all violence."
"Violence is evil especially when it blocks humanitarian relief desperately needed. Because the roots are so deep and complex this outburst of violence cries out for such wise and courageous leadership that justice for all those for whom the Holy Land is home is achieved, so that all violence is relegated to the past and peace shall be secured for generations to come," he said.
The archbishop, just as the Pope has done previously, particularly mentioned the plight of the Catholic parish in Gaza, led by Father Manuel Musallem.
"The people, religious sisters and parish priest, Father Manuel, need our prayers as they struggle to witness to the gospel of peace," Archbishop Kelly said. "I join with the Holy Father and the leaders of the Church in the Holy Land in their prayer for the dead, the injured, the broken hearted, those who mourn and live night and day in fear."
The Coordination of Episcopal Conferences in Support of the Church in the Holy Land was set up in Jerusalem in 1998 at the request of the Holy See. It is organized by the bishops' conference of England and Wales. Last year, the Pope's secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, renewed the mandate and thanked the Holy Land Coordination for its work in supporting the Church in the Holy Land.
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Voting a Duty, South African Prelate Affirms
Urges Christians to Get Informed About CandidatesJOHANNESBURG, South Africa, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Getting informed about the candidates and voting freely are Christian responsibilities and serious obligations, says the president of the South African episcopal conference.
Archbishop Buti Tlhagale of Johannesburg affirmed this in a pastoral letter to prepare for the nation's upcoming elections, which must be held by April, though no date has been set.
In the November letter, "South Africa: A Living Democracy," the archbishop affirmed that for "democracy to live, we all need to participate."
"For Christian voters," he said, "voting expresses our love and concern for our country and for the common good of all who live in South Africa. Each vote will affect the lives of every individual and group in the country."
This year's vote will be the fourth multiracial election since the 1994 end of apartheid. The African National Congress, the party of Nelson Mandela, has dominated since '94. However, that party has been the focus of various political tensions over recent months, including the sacking of former President Thabo Mbeki.
Educated decision
Archbishop Tlhagale insisted that responsible voting means getting informed.
"You must ask the question of yourself and of political parties if the policies and practices of a particular party are or will be good for the whole country," he wrote.
And on a continent plagued by recent contested elections that erupted in violence, the prelate also cautioned against "politically motivated hate speech, intimidation, violence and disruption," saying these "kill democracy."
"For a democracy to live, we must tolerate the different views of others," he said. "A wide range of ideas and policies help us to see what might be best for our country and people. This will help us choose what is best for the common good of all. Not to respect the views of others and their right to support the party of their choice is un-Christian and undemocratic. Violence or the threat of violence toward those who differ from us or to parties other than the one you support is un-Christian and undemocratic."
The archbishop urged voters to consider candidates, not voting for a party "just because you voted for it before or because your father or grandmother votes for it."
Finally, Archbishop Tlhagale urged South Africans to pray for peace and guidance as the election nears.
"Remember how the St. Francis Prayer for Peace, prayed every day by individuals in many communities, supported our struggle for democracy," he said. "Praying this prayer would be a powerful reminder of our responsibility to be instruments of peace. Pray from now until the election that all people who will vote will allow the Holy Spirit to guide their choice."
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Aid Groups Urge Look at Rights Violations in Gaza
U.N. Puts Aid Efforts on Hold for 2nd DayGENEVA, Switzerland, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- A coalition of Catholic groups is urging the United Nations to investigate violations of international law committed by both sides in the Gaza-Israel conflict.
In a statement today from Caritas Internationalis, the aid organization reported that in conjunction with Dominicans for Justice and Peace, International Young Catholic Students on Peace-Building, and Pax Romana, they wrote to the Geneva-based U.N. Human Rights Council appealing for an investigation.
The joint statement urges all parties to protect the lives of civilians and to enforce international humanitarian law and international human rights law.
"We are calling on the Human Rights Council to investigate and to assess the human rights violations and the humanitarian situation in Gaza and Israel," said Father Robert Vitillo, the leader of the Caritas international delegation in Geneva. "We are calling on Israel to end indiscriminate collective punishment of the civilian population in Gaza and stop their excessive use of force. We are urging Hamas to end their unlawful rocket attacks on civilians in Israel."
They further urged international cooperation in ensuring the protection of civilian populations in Gaza and Israel, especially the most vulnerable, in accordance with international law.
The Catholic organizations, like the United Nations itself, are calling for an immediate ceasefire to get humanitarian relief into Gaza and to protect human life. The United Nations put aid deliveries to Gaza on hold for a second day due to safety concerns after an aid truck driver was killed Thursday by Israeli fire.
Caritas spokesman Patrick Nicholson explained to ZENIT that while Caritas has not suspend its aid efforts, it and other agencies depend on the United Nations to get aid through to the areas in need.
Neither Israel nor Hamas are respecting a call made by the U.N. on Thursday night for an immediate ceasefire. News reports put the Palestinian death toll of the two-week conflict at 777, half of whom are civilians.
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Denver Prelate: Church Wants "Orderly Immigration"
Addresses Issue During National Migration WeekDENVER, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Church is in favor of "orderly immigration" and immigration reform, the archbishop of Denver is affirming during National Migration Week.
Archbishop Charles Chaput discussed the annual celebration, which ends Saturday, in an address published Wednesday on the archdiocese's Web site.
He noted that the immigration issue "was a hot topic before the elections, yet during the campaign season it was barely debated."
"I hope that it will become a matter of great and fervent discussion during the next congress," the prelate said. "This is a matter of justice to both U.S. citizens and to immigrants.
"Our Church stands on the side of orderly immigration and is in favor of comprehensive immigration reform so our borders are protected and all people are respected. Both of those principles are very important for a Catholic understanding of migration, which is ultimately rooted in the Christian belief that we are all migrants in search of our heavenly homeland."
The archbishop, himself of Native American heritage, noted how important immigration has been for the United States.
"Most of us are the children, grandchildren or great-grandchildren of immigrants," he said. "And so it has been a part of our country's richness that people come here with many gifts from many different places. […] It is important for us to recognize that immigration has made our country prosperous. I don't speak of economic prosperity but of the cultural wealth that our diversity brings.
"America is a country of immigrants. Our heritage and our Christian faith demand that we look for a just solution to the problems of our immigration system today."
Archbishop Chaput spoke out against reactions "of hostility" toward immigrants.
"We must understand that our country has a duty to protect its borders; a duty to welcome those who migrate legally," he contended, "and a responsibility to fairly address the inadequacies of immigration laws and policies that have allowed millions of unauthorized, yet hardworking, honest immigrants to risk living and working in the shadows of our society."
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Caritas Asks $7M to Keep Zimbabwe From Starving
Half of Population Surviving on AidHARARE, Zimbabwe, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The international Caritas organization is launching a $7 million campaign following reports that people in nine of every 10 Zimbabwe homes are going hungry.
The organization estimates that half of Zimbabwe's population -- 5 million of the nation's 10 million people -- are relying on food aid for survival. With its appeal, Caritas plans to provide aid for about a quarter of a million of them.
The agency explained that the situation of starvation has been made worse by a growing cholera epidemic, which has taken the lives of 1,700 people, with 36,000 more cases reported.
Caritas' plan is to provide monthly food rations to 164,000 people, get a midday meal to 88,800 school children, and give farming training in 4,600 homes. Caritas will give 16,000 homes access to clean water and provide 5,000 people with basic health care.
Caritas Internationalis Secretary-General Lesley-Anne Knight said, "People will die in Zimbabwe unless they receive urgent humanitarian assistance. At least 5 million people need food aid but many more are going hungry. The high mortality from cholera indicates an extreme international emergency.
"Caritas will provide food aid to a quarter of a million of the most vulnerable people through this appeal. We will also provide homes with clean water to prevent the spread of cholera. The people of Zimbabwe desperately need our solidarity during this human tragedy."
Deaths from starvation have already been reported and Caritas expects the situation to worsen as the hungry season peaks from January to March. Caritas has reported 200 cases of children fainting at school due to lack of food.
The Caritas appeal will target the most vulnerable people in Zimbabwe such as women- and child-headed households, children, the sick and the elderly.
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On the Net:
Donations to Caritas: www.caritas.org/services/donate_now.html
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Agnostic Ad Reported for Breach of Standards
Consumers Want Evidence to Back Claim on God's ExistenceLONDON, JAN. 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- A Christian group in Great Britain is claiming that advertising standards have been breached by an agnostic ad campaign there, and they want authorities to put a stop to it.
An ad appearing on London metro trains and some 800 buses in England claims: "There's probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life." Stephen Green, national director of Christian Voice, has reported the ad to the Advertising Standards Authority, which oversees all advertising and has codes requiring substantiation and truthfulness.
According to ASA codes, advertisements are not allowed to mislead consumers, so advertisers must hold evidence to prove the claims they make about their products or services before an ad appears.
Green was reported as saying that he believes the ad breaks the codes, "unless the advertisers hold evidence that God probably does not exist."
The director of Christian Voice contended that the agnostic ad also does not qualify for the ASA's "matters of opinion" exclusion, given that it does not attribute the statement about God's existence to any person or source. This, he said, is in contrast with many previous Christian campaigns, which propose as a matter of fact, statements such as "Jesus said, 'I am the way, the truth and the life; no one comes to the Father but by me.'"
Green concluded: "No matter what the ASA decides in our own case, they have to investigate and take action against the bus ads with their statement that there is probably no God, presented […] without a shred of supporting evidence."
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DVD: "John Paul II - The Pope Who Made History" - Collector's Edition 5 DVDs
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