Saturday, May 9, 2009

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ZENIT

The World Seen From Rome

Daily dispatch - May 09, 2009


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POPE IN THE HOLY LAND
Benedict XVI Reiterates Church's Link to Jews
Pontiff Promotes Clear Thinking in Holy Land
Pope Protests Shooing Religion From Public Sphere
Holy Father Speaks Up For Iraqi Christians
Pope Voices Esteem for Churches in the East

WORLD FEATURES
Papal Visit Boosts "We Who've Been Here 2,000 Years"
Pope Follows Moses' Footsteps, Shares His Mission

DOCUMENTS
Papal Homily at Vespers in Jordan
Pope's Address Upon Visiting Mosque
Papal Speech After Blessing University Cornerstone
Papal Address at Mount Nebo

Pope in the HOLY LAND

Benedict XVI Reiterates Church's Link to Jews

Papal Pilgrimage Begins Overlooking the Promised Land

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is affirming the continued unity of Christians and Jews in the ancient practice of pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

The Pope visited the Basilica of the Moses Memorial at Mount Nebo today, commencing his weeklong Holy Land pilgrimage. Tradition holds that it was here that God showed Moses the Promised Land after 40 years of wandering in the desert.

"It is appropriate that my pilgrimage should begin on this mountain, where Moses contemplated the Promised Land from afar," the Pontiff said. "Moses gazed upon the Promised Land from afar, at the end of his earthly pilgrimage. His example reminds us that we too are part of the ageless pilgrimage of God's people through history."

"From the earliest times," the Holy Father continued, "Christians have come on pilgrimage to the sites linked to the history of the Chosen People, the events of Christ's life and the nascent Church."

"This great tradition," he added, "which my present pilgrimage is meant to continue and confirm, is grounded in the desire to see, to touch, and to savor in prayer and contemplation the places blessed by the physical presence of our Savior, his Blessed Mother, the apostles and the first disciples who saw him risen from the dead."

"The ancient tradition of pilgrimage to the holy places also reminds us of the inseparable bond between the Church and the Jewish people," the Pontiff explained. "From the beginning, the Church in these lands has commemorated in her liturgy the great figures of the Patriarchs and Prophets, as a sign of her profound appreciation of the unity of the two Testaments."

"May our encounter today," the Pope concluded, "inspire in us a renewed love for the canon of sacred Scripture and a desire to overcome all obstacles to the reconciliation of Christians and Jews in mutual respect and cooperation in the service of that peace to which the word of God calls us!"

New Moses

Father José Rodrígez Carballo, General Minister of the Franciscans living in the Holy Land, who welcomed the Holy Father, said, "You are not alone on this journey. We want to accompany you, or rather follow you, just as once the people of Israel followed Moses and were led by him."

"Today," he continued, "we still feel as though we are in the desert and we need someone who leads us to the Lord, someone who helps us get to know him as a provident and compassionate Father, as Our Lord Jesus Christ revealed him to us."

"Your Holiness, we entrust ourselves to you on this pilgrimage," the Franciscan priest declared. "Take our pleas to the Lord and address us again with that Word, which is the only one that can give us salvation."

In his remarks, the Holy Father thanked in particular Father Carballo and the Franciscan friars who minister to the Holy Land pilgrims for "their age-old presence in these lands, their joyful fidelity to the charism of St. Francis, and their generous concern for the spiritual and material welfare of the local Christian communities and the countless pilgrims who visit the Holy Land each year."

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On ZENIT's Web page:

Text of Pontiff's address: www.zenit.org/article-25836?l=english


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Pontiff Promotes Clear Thinking in Holy Land

Says Muslims, Christians Should Cultivate "Potential of Human Reason"

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- After just one full day in the Holy Land, Benedict XVI has already repeatedly promoted a good use of human reason, saying today that this is a common challenge for Christians and Muslims.

The Pope arrived in Jordan on Friday for what he has called a weeklong "pilgrimage of peace." His first stop at a holy site brought him this morning to Mount Nebo, where Moses saw the Promised Land. He took advantage of the occasion to reiterate the Church's link with the Jewish people.

After leaving the Basilica of the Moses Memorial, the Holy Father traveled to nearby Madaba, where he blessed the cornerstone of a university being built by the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem. From there, he was off to the King Hussein bin Talal Mosque and the adjacent Hashemite Museum. He subsequently met with and addressed Muslim religious leaders.

In his discourse, he pointed to the use of human reason as common ground for collaboration between Muslims and Christians.

"Distinguished friends, today I wish to refer to a task which I have addressed on a number of occasions and which I firmly believe Christians and Muslims can embrace, particularly through our respective contributions to learning and scholarship, and public service. That task is the challenge to cultivate for the good, in the context of faith and truth, the vast potential of human reason," Benedict XVI said.

He explained further: "Christians in fact describe God, among other ways, as creative Reason, which orders and guides the world. And God endows us with the capacity to participate in his reason and thus to act in accordance with what is good.

"Muslims worship God, the Creator of Heaven and Earth, who has spoken to humanity. And as believers in the one God we know that human reason is itself God's gift and that it soars to its highest plane when suffused with the light of God's truth.

"In fact, when human reason humbly allows itself to be purified by faith, it is far from weakened; rather, it is strengthened to resist presumption and to reach beyond its own limitations."

The Pope said that in this way, human reason can thus pursue the service of mankind, "giving expression to our deepest common aspirations and extending, rather than manipulating or confining, public debate."

Religion's contribution

Benedict XVI stated that following a religion in this vein, "far from narrowing our minds -- widens the horizon of human understanding."

And, he contended, "it protects civil society from the excesses of the unbridled ego which tend to absolutize the finite and eclipse the infinite; it ensures that freedom is exercised hand in hand with truth, and it adorns culture with insights concerning all that is true, good and beautiful."

This understanding of reason poses a challenge for Christians and Muslims, he said, urging them to leave aside particular interests "in order to embrace the profound satisfaction of serving the common good, even at personal cost."

"And we are reminded that because it is our common human dignity which gives rise to universal human rights, they hold equally for every man and woman, irrespective of his or her religious, social or ethnic group," he added. "In this regard, we must note that the right of religious freedom extends beyond the question of worship and includes the right -- especially of minorities -- to fair access to the employment market and other spheres of civic life."

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On ZENIT's Web page:

Full text of Pope's address: www.zenit.org/article-25838?l=english


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Pope Protests Shooing Religion From Public Sphere

Urges Muslims, Christians to Fidelity as Believers Face Being Silenced

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Religion can be corrupted, says Benedict XVI, but it is actually a manipulation of religion, sometimes for political reasons, that leads to tension and division.

The Pope spoke of true religiosity today, the first full day of his weeklong pilgrimage to the Holy Land, during his stops at both the University of Madaba and the King Hussein bin Talal Mosque.

The Holy Father arrived in the Middle East on Friday and will visit not only Jordan, but also Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

This morning he blessed the cornerstone of the University of Madaba, being constructed by the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem. There, he acknowledged, "Religion, of course, like science and technology, philosophy and all expressions of our search for truth, can be corrupted. Religion is disfigured when pressed into the service of ignorance or prejudice, contempt, violence and abuse."

He said that when his happens, it is not only a perversion of religion, but a perversion of human freedom itself, a "narrowing and blindness of the mind."

But, the Pontiff affirmed, "such an outcome is not inevitable. Indeed, when we promote education, we proclaim our confidence in the gift of freedom. The human heart can be hardened by the limits of its environment, by interests and passions. But every person is also called to wisdom and integrity, to the basic and all-important choice of good over evil, truth over dishonesty, and can be assisted in this task."

Faithful worshippers

Later, at Jordan's state mosque -- the second mosque he's visited as Pope -- Benedict XVI again defended true religion.

He said that it is a cause for concern that there is growing insistence that religion fails to be a "builder of unity and harmony, an expression of communion between persons and with God."

"Indeed," the Pope lamented, "some assert that religion is necessarily a cause of division in our world; and so they argue that the less attention given to religion in the public sphere the better."

But, while acknowledging "the contradiction of tensions and divisions between the followers of different religious traditions," the Pontiff affirmed: "is it not also the case that often it is the ideological manipulation of religion, sometimes for political ends, that is the real catalyst for tension and division, and at times even violence in society?"

"In the face of this situation, where the opponents of religion seek not simply to silence its voice but to replace it with their own, the need for believers to be true to their principles and beliefs is felt all the more keenly," he said. "Muslims and Christians, precisely because of the burden of our common history so often marked by misunderstanding, must today strive to be known and recognized as worshippers of God faithful to prayer, eager to uphold and live by the Almighty's decrees, merciful and compassionate, consistent in bearing witness to all that is true and good, and ever mindful of the common origin and dignity of all human persons, who remain at the apex of God's creative design for the world and for history."

Muslim thanks

Prince Ghazi Bin Talal thanked the Holy Father for stopping at the mosque: "This gesture is all the more remarkable, given the fact that this visit to Jordan by Your Holiness is primarily a spiritual pilgrimage to the Christian Holy Land, and in particular to the site of the baptism of Jesus Christ. [...] And yet Your Holiness has made time, in your intense and tiring schedule, tiring for a man of any age, for this visit to the King Hussein mosque, in order to honor Muslims."

The prince was the organizer of the "Common Word" message, sent by 138 Muslim scholars in response to turmoil over a misunderstanding of a 2006 speech the Holy Father gave in Regensburg.

In the face of misunderstandings, the Jordanian official asserted that Muslims have the task of explaining Mohammed's example, "above all, with deeds of virtue, charity, and piety and goodwill."

And he offered Jordan as an example of a place where people of different religions coexist in peace. He particularly highlighted the role of Christians in Jordan, saying they "have always not only defended Jordan but have also tirelessly and patriotically helped to build Jordan, playing leading roles in the fields of education, health, commerce, tourism, agriculture, science, culture, and many other fields. All this is to say, then, that whilst Your Holiness may believe them to be your fellow Christians, we know them to be our fellow Jordanians. And they are as much a part of this country as the land itself."

"We hope that this unique Jordanian spirit of interfaith harmony, benevolence and mutual respect, will serve as an example to the whole world," the prince added, lamenting places where "Muslim minorities are hard-pressed by Christian majorities, as well as [...] where the opposite is the case."

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On ZENIT's Web page:

Full text of Pope's address at university: www.zenit.org/article-25837?l=english
Full text of Pope's address at mosque: www.zenit.org/article-25838?l=english


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Holy Father Speaks Up For Iraqi Christians

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Before concluding a visit to Jordan's state mosque today, Benedict XVI spoke up in defense of Christians in neighboring Iraq.

The Pope went to the King Hussein bin Talal Mosque today, on his first full day of a weeklong pilgrimage to the Holy Land. He subsequently addressed Muslim religious leaders and other religious and civil dignitaries.

At the end of his discourse, the Holy Father offered a special greeting to His Beatitude Emmanuel III Delly, patriarch of Baghdad.

"His presence brings to mind the people of neighboring Iraq, many of whom have found welcome refuge here in Jordan," the Pontiff said. "The international community's efforts to promote peace and reconciliation, together with those of the local leaders, must continue in order to bear fruit in the lives of Iraqis."

Benedict XVI expressed gratitude for those who are helping to "deepen trust" and rebuild the war-torn nation.

"And once again," he continued, "I urge diplomats and the international community they represent together with local political and religious leaders to do everything possible to ensure the ancient Christian community of that noble land its fundamental right to peaceful coexistence with their fellow citizens."

It is estimated that some 20,000 Iraqi Christians are finding refuge in Jordan.


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Pope Voices Esteem for Churches in the East

Affirms Traditions Are to Be Treasured

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Eastern Churches offer a treasure of avenues to bring others to Christ through their ancient living traditions, says Benedict XVI.

In a homily delivered today at the celebration of Vespers in the Greek-Melkite Cathedral of St. George, the Pope addressed leaders of Catholic Churches in the Near East.

Among those present were Gregorios III Laham, the Greek Melkite Patriarch from Damascus, Emeritus Archbishop Georges El-Murr and Archbishop Yasser Ayyach of Petra and Philadelphia, and leaders from the Maronite, Syrian, Armenian, Chaldean and Latin Churches. Archbishop Benediktos Tsikoras of the Greek Orthodox Church was also in attendance.

The Holy Father expressed his sincere thanks for the "opportunity to pray with you and to experience something of the richness of our liturgical traditions."

"The Church herself is a pilgrim people and thus, through the centuries, has been marked by determinant historical events and pervading cultural epochs," the Pope remarked. "Sadly, some of these have included times of theological dispute or periods of repression."

"Others, however, have been moments of reconciliation -- marvelously strengthening the communion of the Church -- and times of rich cultural revival, to which Eastern Christians have contributed so greatly," he continued.

"Particular Churches," the Pope explained, "within the universal Church attest to the dynamism of her earthly journey and manifest to all members of the faithful a treasure of spiritual, liturgical, and ecclesiastical traditions which point to God's universal goodness and his will, seen throughout history, to draw all into his divine life."

"The ancient living treasure of the traditions of the Eastern Churches enriches the universal Church and could never be understood simply as objects to be passively preserved," added the Pontiff. "All Christians are called to respond actively to the Lord's mandate -- as St. George did in dramatic ways according to popular record -- to bring others to know and love him."

The Holy Father closed the event by expressing "sentiments of great respect for all of you gathered with me this evening in worship," and his gratitude for their prayers and the assurance of his own prayers for those entrusted to their pastoral care.

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On ZENIT's Web page:

Full text of Pope's address: www.zenit.org/article-25839?l=english


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WORLD FEATURES

Papal Visit Boosts "We Who've Been Here 2,000 Years"

Jordanian Christian Tour Guide Welcomes Pilgrim Pope

By Mercedes de la Torre

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI's visit to Jordan is enabling Catholics in the country to relish in their identity as "Arabs, Jordanians and Christians," says Nader Twal, a Christian tour guide.

Twal spoke with ZENIT today -- in fluent Italian gained from seven years studying in Rome -- about the presence of Jordan's high-profile pilgrim. The Pope arrived to the Holy Land on Friday for a weeklong pilgrimage that will also bring him to Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

Twal was born in Madaba, where the Pontiff went today to bless the cornerstone of a university being constructed by the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem. In fact, he's from the same parish as His Beatitude Fouad Twal, patriarch of Jerusalem, with whom he also shares a last name.

The tour guide called the papal trip a decisive support for the Christians of the nation.

"The Christians who work in public administration can go to the Mass with the Pope this Sunday, though for them it is a workday," he explained. "This is a government decision to promote Christians getting together to share.

"This decision from the government reinforces what we say about living together [in Jordan]: Here there truly is respect among Christians and Muslims."

The Holy Father will celebrate Mass on Sunday at the Amman International Stadium.

Twal reflected on the importance of the Pope's visit for Christians, a tiny minority in the majority Sunni Muslim nation.

"I, as a Christian, always say that I am Arabic, Jordanian and Christian," he explained. "We Christians make up 3% [of the population of Jordan], Catholic are 1.5%. We see in this visit a support for the presence of Christians, we who've been here 2,000 years.

"The visit is also important because it has brought about the meeting of the Pope with the king and queen, with the leaders of the Muslims, and this is decisive to speak about existing together, about human elements, not dogmatic ones: themes that affect this region of the Middle East, which is always in conflict."

According to Twal, who is accustomed to presenting the biblical richness of Jordan, when the Pope goes Sunday to the banks of the River Jordan where Christ was baptized, it will be one of the most symbolic moments for the future of Christianity in Jordan. The Holy Father will be blessing the cornerstones for two churches to be built there, one for Latin-rite Catholics and the other for Greek-Melkites.

"Unfortunately, this site that is found at the origin of the Christian faith is still forgotten, even by the Church," Twal lamented. "The [Pope's] blessing is a gesture that calls attention, as it will be followed by the 1,300 journalists covering this trip: a call to the Church of all the world. A visit to Jordan should be an important part of pilgrimages to the Holy Land."


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Pope Follows Moses' Footsteps, Shares His Mission

Father Atuire Reflects on 1st Stop of Papal Holy Land Pilgrimage

By Mercedes de la Torre

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Popes share the same mission that Moses had: to lead people toward God, reflected a Vatican aide today as he commented on Benedict XVI's first full day in the Holy Land.

Father Caesar Atuire, the delegate administrator of Opera Romana Pellegrinaggi, spoke with ZENIT about the Pope's trip, under way in Jordan. The Holy Father made his first stop at a biblical site this morning, visiting the Basilica of the Moses Memorial on Mount Nebo. Tradition holds that at this spot, God showed Moses the Promised Land.

Father Atuire, who is accompanying the Pontiff during his weeklong pilgrimage to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories, reflected on why Benedict XVI chose to start his pilgrimage on this mountain, which rises some 800 meters (2,625 feet) above sea level and offers a view of the Jordan Valley, Jericho, and on days clearer than today, Jerusalem.

"Each pope is like a Moses who goes leading the people toward the encounter with God," he said, recalling that the ultimate goal of every pilgrimage is to meet God. In the case of the Bishop of Rome, he added, the entire Christian people journeys beside him, as do the members of the press following him from stop to stop.

The place where Moses died is the privileged gate to the Holy Land, Father Atuire contended. "Every pilgrim that sets off toward Jerusalem, following the footsteps of the people of Israel who walked in the desert for 40 years, in beginning with Mount Nebo, completes the same itinerary in search of the city of God and the land that God has promised."

Mosque visit

In the light of the visit to Mount Nebo, Father Atuire reflected on another of Benedict XVI's stops today: the King Hussein bin Talal Mosque. This is the second mosque the Pope has visited in his four plus years as Pontiff. The first was during his 2006 trip to Turkey.

With this gesture, the priest suggested, the Pope "highlights a reality that is common to every religion. We as believers in some way have a challenge facing each one of us: We live in a world that is ever more secularized."

The Holy Father's visit to the mosque, Father Atuire added, also manifests again his openness to followers of other religions.

"The Pope," he said, "is a man who is open to an encounter with others, without fears, without prejudices, so that together we can do something to improve this world."


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DOCUMENTS

Papal Homily at Vespers in Jordan

"The Church Herself Is a Pilgrim People"

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the homily Benedict XVI delivered today at the celebration of Vespers in the Greek-Melkite Cathedral of St. George in Amman.

* * *

 

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

It is a great joy for me to celebrate Vespers with you this evening in the Greek-Melkite Cathedral of Saint George. I warmly greet His Beatitude Gregorios III Laham, the Greek Melkite Patriarch, who has joined us from Damascus, Emeritus Archbishop Georges El-Murr and His Excellency Yaser Ayyach, Archbishop of Petra and Philadelphia, whom I thank for his kind words of welcome which I gladly reciprocate with sentiments of respect. I also greet the leaders of the other Catholic Churches present in the East - Maronite, Syrian, Armenian, Chaldean and Latin - as well as Archbishop Benediktos Tsikoras of the Greek Orthodox Church. To all of you and to the priests, Sisters and Brothers, seminarians and lay faithful gathered here this evening I express my sincere thanks for giving me this opportunity to pray with you and to experience something of the richness of our liturgical traditions.

The Church herself is a pilgrim people and thus, through the centuries, has been marked by determinant historical events and pervading cultural epochs. Sadly, some of these have included times of theological dispute or periods of repression. Others, however, have been moments of reconciliation - marvellously strengthening the communion of the Church - and times of rich cultural revival, to which Eastern Christians have contributed so greatly. Particular Churches within the universal Church attest to the dynamism of her earthly journey and manifest to all members of the faithful a treasure of spiritual, liturgical, and ecclesiastical traditions which point to God's universal goodness and his will, seen throughout history, to draw all into his divine life.

The ancient living treasure of the traditions of the Eastern Churches enriches the universal Church and could never be understood simply as objects to be passively preserved. All Christians are called to respond actively to the Lord's mandate - as Saint George did in dramatic ways according to popular record - to bring others to know and love him. In fact the vicissitudes of history have strengthened the members of particular Churches to embrace this task with vigor and to engage resolutely with the pastoral realities of today. Most of you trace ancient links to the Patriarchate of Antioch, and your communities are thus rooted here in the Near East. And, just as two thousand years ago it was in Antioch that the disciples were first called Christians, so also today, as small minorities in scattered communities across these lands, you too are recognized as followers of the Lord. The public face of your Christian faith is certainly not restricted to the spiritual solicitude you bear for one another and your people, essential though that is. Rather, your many works of universal charity extend to all Jordanians - Muslims and those of other religions - and also to the large numbers of refugees whom this Kingdom so generously welcomes.

Dear brothers and sisters, the first Psalm (103) we prayed this evening presents us with glorious images of God the bountiful Creator, actively present in his creation, providing life with abundant goodness and wise order, ever ready to renew the face of the earth! The Epistle reading we have just heard, however, paints a different picture. It warns us, not in a threatening way, but realistically, of the need to stay alert, to be aware of the forces of evil at work creating darkness in our world (cf. Eph 6:10-20). Some might be tempted to think this a contradiction; yet reflecting on our ordinary human experience we recognize spiritual struggle, we acknowledge the daily need to move into Christ's light, to choose life, to seek truth. Indeed, this rhythm - turning away from evil and girding ourselves with the Lord's strength - is what we celebrate at every Baptism, the gateway to Christian life, the first step along the way of the Lord's disciples. Recalling Christ's baptism by John in the waters of the Jordan, the assembled pray that the one to be baptized will be rescued from the kingdom of darkness and brought into the splendour of God's kingdom of light, and so receive the gift of new life.

This dynamic movement from death to newness of life, from darkness to light, from despair to hope, that we experience so dramatically during the Triduum, and is celebrated with great joy in the season of Easter, ensures that the Church herself remains young. She is alive because Christ is alive, truly risen. Vivified by the presence of the Spirit, she reaches out every day, drawing men and women to the living Lord. Dear Bishops, priests, Brothers and Sisters, dear lay faithful, our respective roles of service and mission within the Church are the tireless response of a pilgrim people. Your liturgies, ecclesiastical discipline and spiritual heritage are a living witness to your unfolding tradition. You amplify the echo of the first Gospel proclamation, you render fresh the ancient memories of the works of the Lord, you make present his saving graces and you diffuse anew the first glimmers of the Easter light and the flickering flames of Pentecost.

In this way, imitating Christ and the Old Testament patriarchs and prophets, we set out to lead people from the desert towards the place of life, towards the Lord who gives us life in abundance. This marks all your apostolic works, the variety and calibre of which are greatly appreciated. From kindergartens to places of higher education, from orphanages to homes for the elderly, from work with refugees to a music academy, medical clinics and hospitals, interreligious dialogue and cultural initiatives, your presence in this society is a marvellous sign of the hope that defines us as Christian.

That hope reaches far beyond the confines of our own Christian communities. So often you find that the families of other religions, with whom you work and offer your service of universal charity, hold concerns and worries that cross religious and cultural boundaries. This is especially noticeable in regard to the hopes and aspirations of parents for their children. What parent or person of good will could not be troubled by the negative influences so pervasive in our globalized world, including the destructive elements within the entertainment industry which so callously exploit the innocence and sensibility of the vulnerable and the young? Yet, with your eyes firmly fixed on Christ, the light who dispels all evil, restores lost innocence, and humbles earthly pride, you will sustain a magnificent vision of hope for all those you meet and serve.

May I conclude with a special word of encouragement to those present who are in formation for the priesthood and religious life. Guided by the light of the Risen Lord, inflamed with his hope, and vested with his truth and love, your witness will bring abundant blessings to those whom you meet along the way. Indeed the same holds for all young Christian Jordanians: do not be afraid to make your own wise, measured and respectful contribution to the public life of the Kingdom. The authentic voice of faith will always bring integrity, justice, compassion and peace!

Dear friends, with sentiments of great respect for all of you gathered with me this evening in worship, I again thank you for your prayers for my ministry as the Successor of Peter and I assure you and all those entrusted to your pastoral care of a remembrance in my own daily prayer.


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Pope's Address Upon Visiting Mosque

"Ideological Manipulation of Religion ... Is the Real Catalyst for Tension and Division"

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the discourse Benedict XVI gave today after he visited the King Hussein bin Talal Mosque and the adjacent Hashemite Museum and subsequently met with Muslim religious leaders.

* * *

 

Your Royal Highness,

Your Excellencies,

Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen,

It is a source of great joy for me to meet with you this morning in this magnificent setting. I wish to thank Prince Ghazi Bin Muhammed Bin Talal for his kind words of welcome. Your Royal Highness's numerous initiatives to promote inter-religious and inter-cultural dialogue and exchanges are appreciated by the people of the Hashemite Kingdom and they are widely respected by the international community. I know that these efforts receive the active support of other members of the Royal Family as well as the nation's government, and find ample resonance in the many initiatives of collaboration among Jordanians. For all this, I wish to express my own heartfelt admiration.

Places of worship, like this splendid Al-Hussein Bin Talal mosque named after the revered late King, stand out like jewels across the earth's surface. From the ancient to the modern, the magnificent to the humble, they all point to the divine, to the Transcendent One, to the Almighty. And through the centuries these sanctuaries have drawn men and women into their sacred space to pause, to pray, to acknowledge the presence of the Almighty, and to recognize that we are all his creatures.

For this reason we cannot fail to be concerned that today, with increasing insistency, some maintain that religion fails in its claim to be, by nature, a builder of unity and harmony, an expression of communion between persons and with God. Indeed some assert that religion is necessarily a cause of division in our world; and so they argue that the less attention given to religion in the public sphere the better. Certainly, the contradiction of tensions and divisions between the followers of different religious traditions, sadly, cannot be denied. However, is it not also the case that often it is the ideological manipulation of religion, sometimes for political ends, that is the real catalyst for tension and division, and at times even violence in society? In the face of this situation, where the opponents of religion seek not simply to silence its voice but to replace it with their own, the need for believers to be true to their principles and beliefs is felt all the more keenly. Muslims and Christians, precisely because of the burden of our common history so often marked by misunderstanding, must today strive to be known and recognized as worshippers of God faithful to prayer, eager to uphold and live by the Almighty's decrees, merciful and compassionate, consistent in bearing witness to all that is true and good, and ever mindful of the common origin and dignity of all human persons, who remain at the apex of God's creative design for the world and for history.

The resolve of Jordanian educators and religious and civic leaders to ensure that the public face of religion reflects its true nature is praiseworthy. The example of individuals and communities, together with the provision of courses and programmes, manifest the constructive contribution of religion to the educational, cultural, social and other charitable sectors of your civic society. Some of this spirit I have been able to sample at first hand. Yesterday, I experienced the renowned educational and rehabilitation work of the Our Lady of Peace Centre where Christians and Muslims are transforming the lives of entire families, by assisting them to ensure that their disabled children take up their rightful place in society. Earlier this morning, I blessed the foundation stone of Madaba University where young Muslim and Christian adults will side by side receive the benefits of a tertiary education, enabling them to contribute justly to the social and economic development of their nation. Of great merit too are the numerous initiatives of inter-religious dialogue supported by the Royal Family and the diplomatic community and sometimes undertaken in conjunction with the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue. These include the ongoing work of the Royal Institutes for Inter-faith studies and for Islamic Thought, theAmman Message of 2004, the Amman Interfaith Message of 2005, and the more recent Common Word letter which echoed a theme consonant with my first encyclical: the unbreakable bond between love of God and love of neighbour, and the fundamental contradiction of resorting to violence or exclusion in the name of God (cf. Deus Caritas Est, 16).

Such initiatives clearly lead to greater reciprocal knowledge, and they foster a growing respect both for what we hold in common and for what we understand differently. Thus, they should prompt Christians and Muslims to probe even more deeply the essential relationship between God and his world so that together we may strive to ensure that society resonates in harmony with the divine order. In this regard, the co-operation found here in Jordan sets an encouraging and persuasive example for the region, and indeed the world, of the positive, creative contribution which religion can and must make to civic society.

Distinguished friends, today I wish to refer to a task which I have addressed on a number of occasions and which I firmly believe Christians and Muslims can embrace, particularly through our respective contributions to learning and scholarship, and public service. That task is the challenge to cultivate for the good, in the context of faith and truth, the vast potential of human reason. Christians in fact describe God, among other ways, as creative Reason, which orders and guides the world. And God endows us with the capacity to participate in his reason and thus to act in accordance with what is good. Muslims worship God, the Creator of Heaven and Earth, who has spoken to humanity. And as believers in the one God we know that human reason is itself God's gift and that it soars to its highest plane when suffused with the light of God's truth. In fact, when human reason humbly allows itself to be purified by faith, it is far from weakened; rather, it is strengthened to resist presumption and to reach beyond its own limitations. In this way, human reason is emboldened to pursue its noble purpose of serving mankind, giving expression to our deepest common aspirations and extending, rather than manipulating or confining, public debate. Thus, genuine adherence to religion - far from narrowing our minds - widens the horizon of human understanding. It protects civil society from the excesses of the unbridled ego which tend to absolutize the finite and eclipse the infinite; it ensures that freedom is exercised hand in hand with truth, and it adorns culture with insights concerning all that is true, good and beautiful.

This understanding of reason, which continually draws the human mind beyond itself in the quest for the Absolute, poses a challenge; it contains a sense of both hope and caution. Together, Christians and Muslims are impelled to seek all that is just and right. We are bound to step beyond our particular interests and to encourage others, civil servants and leaders in particular, to do likewise in order to embrace the profound satisfaction of serving the common good, even at personal cost. And we are reminded that because it is our common human dignity which gives rise to universal human rights, they hold equally for every man and woman, irrespective of his or her religious, social or ethnic group. In this regard, we must note that the right of religious freedom extends beyond the question of worship and includes the right - especially of minorities - to fair access to the employment market and other spheres of civic life.

Before I leave you this morning I would like to acknowledge in a special way the presence among us of His Beatitude Emmanuel III Delly, Patriarch of Baghdad, whom I greet most warmly. His presence brings to mind the people of neighbouring Iraq many of whom have found welcome refuge here in Jordan. The international community's efforts to promote peace and reconciliation, together with those of the local leaders, must continue in order to bear fruit in the lives of Iraqis. I wish to express my appreciation for all those who are assisting in the endeavors to deepen trust and to rebuild the institutions and infrastructure essential to the well-being of that society. And once again, I urge diplomats and the international community they represent together with local political and religious leaders to do everything possible to ensure the ancient Christian community of that noble land its fundamental right to peaceful coexistence with their fellow citizens.

Distinguished friends, I trust that the sentiments I have expressed today will leave us with renewed hope for the future. Our love and duty before the Almighty is expressed not only in our worship but also in our love and concern for children and young people - your families - and for all Jordanians. It is for them that you labor and it is they who motivate you to place the good of every human person at the heart of institutions, laws and the workings of society. May reason, ennobled and humbled by the grandeur of God's truth, continue to shape the life and institutions of this nation, in order that families may flourish and that all may live in peace, contributing to and drawing upon the culture that unifies this great Kingdom!


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Papal Speech After Blessing University Cornerstone

"Belief in God Does Not Suppress the Search for Truth"

MADABA, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the discourse Benedict XVI gave today when he blessed the cornerstone of the University of Madaba of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

* * *

 

Dear Brother Bishops,

Dear friends,

It is for me a great joy to bless this foundation stone of the University of Madaba. I thank His Beatitude Archbishop Fouad Twal, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, for his kind words of welcome. I wish to extend a special greeting of recognition to His Beatitude, Emeritus Patriarch Michel Sabbah, to whose initiative and efforts, together with those of Bishop Salim Sayegh, this new institution owes so much. I also greet the civil authorities, the Bishops, priests, religious and faithful and all who accompany us for this important ceremony.

The Kingdom of Jordan has rightly given priority to the task of extending and improving education. I am aware that in this noble mission Her Majesty Queen Rania is especially active and her commitment is an inspiration to many. As I pay tribute to the efforts of so many people of good will committed to education, I note with satisfaction the competent and expert participation of Christian institutions, especially Catholic and Orthodox, in this overall effort. It is against this background that the Catholic Church, with the support of the Jordanian authorities, has sought to further university education in this country and elsewhere. This present initiative also responds to the request of many families who, pleased with the formation received in schools run by religious authorities, are demanding an analogous option at the university level.

I commend the promoters of this new institution for their courageous confidence in good education as a stepping-stone for personal development and for peace and progress in the region. In this context the University of Madaba will surely keep in mind three important objectives. By developing the talents and noble attitudes of successive generations of students, it will prepare them to serve the wider community and raise its living standards. By transmitting knowledge and instilling in students a love of truth, it will greatly enhance their adherence to sound values and their personal freedom. Finally, this same intellectual formation will sharpen their critical skills, dispel ignorance and prejudice, and assist in breaking the spell cast by ideologies old and new. The result of this process will be a university that is not only a platform for consolidating adherence to truth and to the values of a given culture, but a place of understanding and dialogue. While assimilating their own heritage, young Jordanians and other students from the region will be led to a deeper knowledge of human cultural achievements, will be enriched by other viewpoints, and formed in comprehension, tolerance and peace.

This "broader" education is what one expects from institutions of higher learning and from their cultural milieu, be it secular or religious. In fact, belief in God does not suppress the search for truth; on the contrary it encourages it. Saint Paul exhorted the early Christians to open their minds to "all that is true, all that is noble, all that is good and pure, all that we love and honor, all that is considered excellent or worthy of praise" (Phil 4:8). Religion, of course, like science and technology, philosophy and all expressions of our search for truth, can be corrupted. Religion is disfigured when pressed into the service of ignorance or prejudice, contempt, violence and abuse. In this case we see not only a perversion of religion but also a corruption of human freedom, a narrowing and blindness of the mind. Clearly, such an outcome is not inevitable. Indeed, when we promote education, we proclaim our confidence in the gift of freedom. The human heart can be hardened by the limits of its environment, by interests and passions. But every person is also called to wisdom and integrity, to the basic and all-important choice of good over evil, truth over dishonesty, and can be assisted in this task.

The call to moral integrity is perceived by the genuinely religious person, since the God of truth and love and beauty cannot be served in any other way. Mature belief in God serves greatly to guide the acquisition and proper application of knowledge. Science and technology offer extraordinary benefits to society and have greatly improved the quality of life of many human beings. Undoubtedly this is one of the hopes of those who are promoting this University, whose motto is Sapientia et Scientia. At the same time the sciences have their limitations. They cannot answer all the questions about man and his existence. Indeed the human person, his place and purpose in the universe cannot be contained within the confines of science. "Humanity's intellectual nature finds its perfection ultimately in wisdom, which gently draws the human mind to seek and to love what is true and good" (cf. Gaudium et Spes, 15). The use of scientific knowledge needs the guiding light of ethical wisdom. Such is the wisdom that inspired the Hippocratic Oath, the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Geneva Convention and other laudable international codes of conduct. Hence religious and ethical wisdom, by answering questions of meaning and value, play a central role in professional formation. And consequently, those universities where the quest for truth goes hand in hand with the search for what is good and noble, offer an indispensable service to society.

With these thoughts in mind, I encourage in a special way the Christian students of Jordan and the neighboring regions, to dedicate themselves responsibly to a proper professional and moral formation. You are called to be builders of a just and peaceful society composed of peoples of various religious and ethnic backgrounds. These realities - I wish to stress once more - must lead, not to division, but to mutual enrichment. The mission and the vocation of the University of Madaba is precisely to help you participate more fully in this noble task.

Dear friends, I wish to renew my congratulations to the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem and my encouragement to all who have taken this project to heart, together with those who are already engaged in the educational apostolate in this nation. May the Lord bless you and sustain you. I pray that your dreams may soon come true, that you may see generations of qualified men and women Christian, Muslim and of other religions, taking their place in society, equipped with professional skills, knowledgeable in their field, and educated in the values of wisdom, integrity, tolerance and peace. Upon you and upon all the future students and staff of this University and their families, I invoke Almighty God's abundant blessings!


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Papal Address at Mount Nebo

"Like Moses, We Too Have Been Called by Name"

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 9, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the discourse Benedict XVI gave today when he visited the Basilica of the Moses Memorial at Mount Nebo. Tradition holds that at this spot, God showed Moses the Promised Land.

* * *

 

Father Minister General,

Father Custos,

Dear Friends,

In this holy place, consecrated by the memory of Moses, I greet all of you with affection in our Lord Jesus Christ. I thank Father José Rodríguez Carballo for his warm words of welcome. I also take this occasion to renew my gratitude, and that of the whole Church, to the Friars Minor of the Custody for their age-old presence in these lands, their joyful fidelity to the charism of Saint Francis, and their generous concern for the spiritual and material welfare of the local Christian communities and the countless pilgrims who visit the Holy Land each year. Here I wish to remember also, with particular gratitude, the late Father Michele Piccirillo, who devoted his life to the study of Christian antiquity and is buried in this shrine which was so dear to him.

It is appropriate that my pilgrimage should begin on this mountain, where Moses contemplated the Promised Land from afar. The magnificent prospect which opens up from the esplanade of this shrine invites us to ponder how that prophetic vision mysteriously embraced the great plan of salvation which God had prepared for his People. For it was in the valley of the Jordan which stretches out below us that, in the fullness of time, John the Baptist would come to prepare the way of the Lord. It was in the waters of the River Jordan that Jesus, after his baptism by John, would be revealed as the beloved Son of the Father and, anointed by the Holy Spirit, would inaugurate his public ministry. And it was from the Jordan that the Gospel would first go forth in Christ's own preaching and miracles, and then, after his resurrection and the descent of the Spirit at Pentecost, be brought by his disciples to the very ends of the earth.

Here, on the heights of Mount Nebo, the memory of Moses invites us to "lift up our eyes" to embrace with gratitude not only God's mighty works in the past, but also to look with faith and hope to the future which he holds out to us and to our world. Like Moses, we too have been called by name, invited to undertake a daily exodus from sin and slavery towards life and freedom, and given an unshakeable promise to guide our journey. In the waters of Baptism, we have passed from the slavery of sin to new life and hope. In the communion of the Church, Christ's Body, we look forward to the vision of the heavenly city, the new Jerusalem, where God will be all in all. From this holy mountain Moses directs our gaze on high, to the fulfilment of all God's promises in Christ.

Moses gazed upon the Promised Land from afar, at the end of his earthly pilgrimage. His example reminds us that we too are part of the ageless pilgrimage of God's people through history. In the footsteps of the prophets, the apostles and the saints, we are called to walk with the Lord, to carry on his mission, to bear witness to the Gospel of God's universal love and mercy. We are called to welcome the coming of Christ's Kingdom by our charity, our service to the poor, and our efforts to be a leaven of reconciliation, forgiveness and peace in the world around us. We know that, like Moses, we may not see the complete fulfilment of God's plan in our lifetime. Yet we trust that, by doing our small part, in fidelity to the vocation each of us has received, we will help to make straight the paths of the Lord and welcome the dawn of his Kingdom. And we know that the God who revealed his name to Moses as a pledge that he would always be at our side (cf. Ex 3:14) will give us the strength to persevere in joyful hope even amid suffering, trial and tribulation.

From the earliest times, Christians have come on pilgrimage to the sites linked to the history of the Chosen People, the events of Christ's life and the nascent Church. This great tradition, which my present pilgrimage is meant to continue and confirm, is grounded in the desire to see, to touch, and to savor in prayer and contemplation the places blessed by the physical presence of our Savior, his Blessed Mother, the apostles and the first disciples who saw him risen from the dead. Here, in the footsteps of the countless pilgrims who have preceded us in every century, we are challenged to appreciate more fully the gift of our faith and to grow in that communion which transcends every limit of language, race and culture.

The ancient tradition of pilgrimage to the holy places also reminds us of the inseparable bond between the Church and the Jewish people. From the beginning, the Church in these lands has commemorated in her liturgy the great figures of the Patriarchs and Prophets, as a sign of her profound appreciation of the unity of the two Testaments. May our encounter today inspire in us a renewed love for the canon of Sacred Scripture and a desire to overcome all obstacles to the reconciliation of Christians and Jews in mutual respect and cooperation in the service of that peace to which the word of God calls us!

Dear friends, gathered in this holy place, let us now raise our eyes and our hearts to the Father. As we prepare to pray the prayer which Jesus taught us, let us beg him to hasten the coming of his Kingdom so that we may see the fulfilment of his saving plan, and experience, with Saint Francis and all those pilgrims who have gone before us marked with the sign of faith, the gift of untold peace - pax et bonum - which awaits us in the heavenly Jerusalem.


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Friday, May 8, 2009

ZE090508

ZENIT

The World Seen From Rome

Daily dispatch - May 08, 2009


Donation Campaign 2009 -- Looking for the 8,400 ...

If we divide our annual fund-raising goal of $420,000 by the 150,000 ZENIT's English-edition private readers, the amount for each one a year is about $2.80 -- about the price of three or four daily newspapers !

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POPE IN THE HOLY LAND
Pope Praises Religious Freedom in Jordan
Pontiff Defends Role of Disabled in Society

VATICAN DOSSIER
Pontiff Urges Romania Churches to Work Together
Aid Agency Leader Named to Cor Unum Council

WORLD FEATURES
Day 1 of Pope's Pilgrimage Seen as Success
US Prelate Urges Patriotism in Sacramental Life
Aid Worker Asks If Pope Can Give Too Much Hope

NEWS BRIEFS
Cardinal Talks to Colombia Rebels, Hopes for Peace
Neocatechumenal Way Founder Awarded Doctorate
Caritas Worker Killed in Sri Lanka "Safe" Zone

DOCUMENTS
Papal Press Conference en Route to Jordan
Papal Address Upon Arrival in Amman
Pope's Address at Regina Pacis Center



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Pope in the HOLY LAND

Pope Praises Religious Freedom in Jordan

Starts Mideast Trip Reiterating He's Come as a Pilgrim

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI praised a climate of religious freedom in Jordan that is enabling Christians to build a church at the site where tradition holds that Jesus was baptized.

The Pope expressed this today when he arrived in Jordan for the first leg of his weeklong Holy Land pilgrimage. He was greeted at the Queen Alia di Amman airport by the king and queen of Jordan, Abdullah II and Rania.

"I come to Jordan as a pilgrim," the Holy Father affirmed, "to venerate holy places that have played such an important part in some of the key events of Biblical history."

The Pontiff will visit Mount Nebo, where Moses led the Israelites to within sight of the Promised Land, and Bethany, where John the Baptist preached about Jesus and baptized him in the River Jordan.

Muslim relations

In his first discourse of his Middle East trip, Benedict XVI expressed his "deep respect for the Muslim community." And he praised King Abdullah II for efforts in "promoting a better understanding of the virtues proclaimed by Islam."

Referring to the king's "Amman Message" and "Amman Interfaith Message," the Pope said that "these worthy initiatives have achieved much good in furthering an alliance of civilizations between the West and the Muslim world, confounding the predictions of those who consider violence and conflict inevitable."

He also lauded Jordan for supporting efforts to finding a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and for accepting refugees from Iraq.

Regarding religious freedom in Jordan, which the Pope said is characterized by the "opportunity that Jordan's Catholic community enjoys to build public places of worship," the Holy Father reminded that it is a "fundamental human right."

He said that it is his "fervent hope and prayer that respect for the inalienable rights and dignity of every man and woman will come to be increasingly affirmed and defended, not only throughout the Middle East, but in every part of the world."

Jordan is only about 6% Christian, and the majority of those are Greek Orthodox. The Sunni Muslim population of the nation is about 92%.

Benedict XVI concluded expressing his hope that his pilgrimage, "and indeed all the initiatives designed to foster good relations between Christians and Muslims, will help us to grow in love for the Almighty and Merciful God, and in fraternal love for one another."

For his part, King Abdullah told the Pope, "We welcome your commitment to dispel the misconceptions and divisions that have harmed relations between Christians and Muslims."


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Pontiff Defends Role of Disabled in Society

Says Faith Can Help to "Imagine Life as God Does"

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is defending the contribution made to society by those with disabilities, choosing as his first stop during his weeklong Holy Land pilgrimage a home for mentally or physically handicapped youth.

The Pope visited the Regina Pacis center in Amman today, just an hour after his official welcome to Jordan by the nation's King Abdullah II and Queen Rania.

The center was founded in 2004 by the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem and offers not only medical attention but also formation and education to disabled youth, both Christian and Muslim.

Bishop Selim Sayegh, Latin patriarchal vicar of Jordan and the center's founder, together with the youth, the nursing staff and volunteers, the Comboni religious women who run the center, and retired Patriarch Michel Sabbah welcomed the Holy Father to the site. His Beatitude Patriarch Fouad Twal offered words of welcome.

In a festive encounter celebrated in the center's chapel, the Pontiff recognized that these disabled youth have been led to Regina Pacis by journeys "marked by suffering or trial."

"Some of you struggle courageously with disabilities, others of you have endured rejection, and some of you are drawn to this place of peace simply for encouragement and support," he said. "It is a great joy for me to be with you."

The Pope lauded the "center's great success in promoting the rightful place of the disabled in society and in ensuring that suitable training and opportunities are provided to facilitate such integration."

Meaning and purpose

Benedict XVI offered a reflection on the mystery of suffering as he spoke with the disabled youngsters and their caregivers.

"At times it is difficult to find a reason for what appears only as an obstacle to be overcome or even as pain -- physical or emotional -- to be endured," he said. "Yet faith and understanding help us to see a horizon beyond our own selves in order to imagine life as God does. God's unconditional love, which gives life to every human individual, points to a meaning and purpose for all human life."

The Holy Father confided that being with the youth was a blessing for him personally: "I wish to say that standing in your midst I draw strength from God."

"Your experience of trials, your witness to compassion, and your determination to overcome the obstacles you encounter, encourage me in the belief that suffering can bring about change for the good," he said. "In our own trials, and standing alongside others in their struggles, we glimpse the essence of our humanity, we become, as it were, more human.

"And we come to learn that, on another plane, even hearts hardened by cynicism or injustice or unwillingness to forgive are never beyond the reach of God, can always be opened to a new way of being, a vision of peace."

Coming with hope

Upon his arrival, Benedict XVI was welcomed by a group of youth who improvised a small Arabic festival with songs and greetings. A priest with a megaphone led them with Arabic slogans and the refrain "Benvenuto, Benedetto" (Welcome, Benedict). Jordanian and Vatican flags waved as the Holy Father entered the church amid shouts of "Be-ne-det-to."

When he reached the altar, the Bishop of Rome knelt to pray and those inside fell silent. After his address, he personally greeted many of those present. Applause broke out when a pair of youth put the "keffiyeh" on the Holy Father -- the typical red and white headdress worn by many Arab men.

During his discourse, the Pope again reiterated his intention for coming to the Holy Land: "Friends, unlike the pilgrims of old, I do not come bearing gifts or offerings. I come simply with an intention, a hope: to pray for the precious gift of unity and peace, most specifically for the Middle East. Peace for individuals, for parents and children, for communities, peace for Jerusalem, for the Holy Land, for the region, peace for the entire human family; the lasting peace born of justice, integrity and compassion, the peace that arises from humility, forgiveness and the profound desire to live in harmony as one."

Before leaving, the Pontiff entrusted the youth with a special task: "I exhort you all to pray every day for our world. And today I want to ask you to take up a specific task: Please pray for me every day of my pilgrimage; for my own spiritual renewal in the Lord, and for the conversion of hearts to God's way of forgiveness and solidarity so that my hope -- our hope -- for unity and peace in the world will bear abundant fruit."


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VATICAN DOSSIER

Pontiff Urges Romania Churches to Work Together

Echoes John Paul II's Prayer for Christian Unity

VATICAN CITY, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is expressing the hope that by drawing on the teachings of Pope John Paul II, believers will unite to reinforce Christian values in modern society.

The Pope stated this in a message to Archbishop Ioan Robu of Bucharest, Romania, on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of Pope John Paul II's May 7-9 visit to that country.

The message was delivered by Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, secretary for Vatican relations with states and the Pontiff's special envoy for the celebrations surrounding this event promoted by the Catholic Church in Romania, the Romanian Orthodox Church and the state.

The Holy Father stated that this event "brings together the Catholic and Orthodox faithful of that country which, for its geographical location and its long history, for its culture and its traditions, has a unique ecumenical vocation inscribed in its very roots."

He expressed the hope that "believers in Christ will not only treasure the memory of those unforgettable days, but that, drawing from the teaching of my venerated predecessor John Paul II, they will commit themselves to seeking courageous ways to face together the great challenges of our time."

"I am thinking particularly of the defense of human life at every stage, protection of the family, respect for creation and promotion of the common good," he added.

"Furthermore," Benedict XVI affirmed, "making the wishes of the beloved John Paul II my own, I invite people to pray that, as soon as possible, we may achieve the full fraternal communion of all Christians, both of the West and the East."


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Aid Agency Leader Named to Cor Unum Council

VATICAN CITY, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Pope's secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, appointed the president of Aid to the Church in Need, Father Joaquín Alliende, to the Pontifical Council Cor Unum.

The aid agency announced today the appointment of the Chilean priest, who is a member of the Schonstatt Fathers.

He became president last October of the agency, which gives pastoral support to the Church in some 140 countries.

Father Alliende participated as an advisor in the last three general assemblies of the Latin American bishops' conference. He is involved with the World Council of Churches in Geneva, and belongs to theological commissions in various countries.

The priest met recently with the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, Patriarch Kirill, as part of his particular program to promote interreligious dialogue with the Russian Orthodox Church through the aid agency.

Before becoming president, he was involved with the agency as an advisor on theological issues and an international ecclesiastical assistant.


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WORLD FEATURES

Day 1 of Pope's Pilgrimage Seen as Success

Vatican Aide Reflects on Pontiff's Idea of Peace for Region

By Mercedes de la Torre

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is in the Holy Land as a self-defined "pilgrim of peace," but he hopes to bring the region more than an absence of conflict, says a Vatican aide following the weeklong pilgrimage.

Father Caesar Atuire, the delegate administrator of Opera Romana Pellegrinaggi, spoke with ZENIT about the Pope's trip, which began today in Jordan.

The Opera Romana Pellegrinaggi is the Vatican institution whose mission is to evangelize through pastoral tourism and the ministry of pilgrimage.

This trip is important, Father Atuire said, "because he is arriving in a moment in which this land is trying to find a way of living in peace among the various peoples and the Pope truly arrives as a pilgrim of peace."

"He arrives to call all those peoples who believe in the one God to this innate vocation that God has wanted to give to man, so we can seek peace in God and in respect for each other," the priest said.

"The prophet Isaiah presents the Messiah as 'the Prince of Peace,' he who is going to bring peace to the earth. And this is what we truly want: peace. The peace we seek is the biblical 'Shalom,' -- it is not just a question of leaving aside conflict in the sense of wars. We are seeking a deeper peace, meaning man living in harmony with God, with himself, and with others. This is a gift of God and it must be asked for in prayer. We can't obtain it only through political negotiations," he added.

Father Atuire affirmed: "This trip has begun very well with a lot of serenity -- because as always, before all of the Pope's trips, there are a lot of worries, there is a lot of conflict that some people want to stir up. But what we have seen is that the Pope has arrived truly as a messenger of peace.

"He has been welcomed by the people, by the Muslims, by the king who is Muslim, by his family. And he has also wanted to begin his visit visiting the poor, society's most marginalized, and I think this has given a very good start to this trip."


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US Prelate Urges Patriotism in Sacramental Life

Calls Notre Dame's Honor of Obama the Greatest Scandal

WASHINGTON, D.C., MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Archbishop Raymond Burke is encouraging Catholics to practice patriotism within the Church, drawing strength from the sacraments to fuel efforts to transform the country.

The prelate, head of the Supreme Court of the Apostolic Signature and former archbishop of St. Louis, affirmed this today at the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C.

He stated that "the most treasured gift which we as citizens of the United States of America can offer to our country is a faithful Catholic life."

The archbishop continued: "It is the gift which, even though it has often been misunderstood, has brought great strength to our nation, from the time of its founding. Today more than ever, our nation is in need of Catholics who know their faith deeply and express their faith, with integrity, by their daily living."

He noted that it is God who gives us, in the Church, "the grace to practice patriotism as a fundamental expression of the bond of charity which we have, in him, with our fellow citizens."

Though there has been a lot of political language focusing on "change" recently, Archbishop Burke affirmed, "the change which brings hope can only be the renewal of our nation in the divine love which respects the inviolable dignity of every human life, from the moment of its inception to the moment of natural death, and which creates and gives growth to new human life through the love of man and woman in marriage."

"Any hope which is incoherent with the great hope is truly illusory and can never bring forth justice and its fruit, peace, for our nation and world," he added.

Not alone

The prelate acknowledged, "In the battle for the protection of the right to life and for the safeguarding of the integrity of marriage and the family in our nation, we are easily tempted to give way to discouragement."

He continued: "And it would be right to do so, if the outcome of the battle depended upon us alone. But it does not.

"Christ is with us always in the Church and, in a particular way, in the struggle to restore the respect for the right to life of all of our brothers and sisters, especially those who are helpless and who have the first title to our care, and to safeguard the integrity of marriage and the family."

The archbishop urged his listeners: "If we are serious about our patriotic duty, then we must pray every day for our leaders, especially our president, and our nation."

He also encouraged a more fervent practice of "fasting and abstinence for the conversion of our lives and the transformation of our society."

"At every Mass, we should offer special prayers for our nation and her leaders, in order that the culture of death may be overcome and a civilization of love may be steadfastly advanced," Archbishop Burke urged.

He added: "All Catholics throughout the nation should take part in Eucharistic adoration and in the praying of the rosary for the restoration of the respect for human life and for the safeguarding of the integrity of the family."

Universities

The prelate emphasized, "In a culture marked by widespread and grave confusion and error about the most fundamental teachings of the moral law, our Catholic schools and universities must be beacons of truth and right conduct."

He stated that the "granting of an honorary doctorate at Notre Dame University to our president who is as aggressively advancing an anti-life and anti-family agenda is a source of the gravest scandal."

The archbishop explained: "In a culture which embraces an agenda of death, Catholics and Catholic institutions are necessarily counter-cultural.

"If we as individuals or our Catholic institutions are not willing to accept the burdens and the suffering necessarily involved in calling our culture to reform, then we are not worthy of the name Catholic."

"Let us not give way to discouragement in our exercise of patriotism but rather be confident of the essential contribution which our Catholic faith makes to the life of our nation," the prelate said.

He concluded, "May the courage and strength which comes to us from the Sacred Heart of Jesus enlighten our minds to see more clearly the gravity of the situation of our nation and inflame our hearts to do our part to transform the life of our nation, in accord with the natural moral law, that is, with what is just and serves the good of all."


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Aid Worker Asks If Pope Can Give Too Much Hope

Describes Environment As Papal Holy Land Visit Begins

KOENIGSTEIN, Germany, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI's visit to the Holy Land is inspiring a lot of hope, even perhaps too much, says a regional specialist of Aid to the Church in Need.

Marie-Ange Siebrecht, one of the aid agency's experts on the Middle East, affirmed this Sunday after returning from a trip to Israel and the Palestinian Territories, the organization reported.

She described the environment of preparation for the Pope's Holy Land visit, which began today. She reported: "Naturally, the Christians are delighted that the Holy Father is coming and there are many posters, for example, announcing the papal visit.

"In Nazareth they are even building a sort of amphitheatre, where the Pope will be celebrating Holy Mass with the people. In Bethlehem too they have already erected something -- in the refugee camp of Aida, which the Pope will also be visiting.

Siebrecht added that "the local people are continuing to work confidently and are looking forward to a successful trip."

She noted that not every Christian will have the opportunity to see the Pontiff, especially the people of Gaza and Bethlehem. Many people, she said, "will not get permission to attend the big Masses in Nazareth and Jerusalem."

The aid worker observed that during her visit, she saw and heard many people expressing hope "for a great deal from this papal visit, possibly even too much." She added, "For the Pope certainly won't be able to solve all their problems."

She continued: "In reality the Pope can only demonstrate goodwill and endeavor to talk to political and Church leaders. But I know from my own experience how difficult this is in Israel.

"In any case, he is coming above all as a pilgrim to the Holy Land. He wants to say to people, 'I am with you!'

"But what can he really hope to achieve with regard to the bigger picture? He will hardly be able to tear down this terrible wall through his visit, or even resolve the problems that exist between the Vatican and the state of Israel. But it is already an important sign that he is coming at all."

Living conditions

The specialist described certain areas that she visited: "I was in Galilee, where the situation of the Christians compared to that in the West Bank, in other words the area around Bethlehem, is much better of course. Nonetheless, these people too count as second-class citizens in Israel, that is, they don't have the same freedom that other Israelis have.

"They can't travel in the same way that other Israeli citizens can. Despite this, there are still around 73,000 Eastern-rite Catholics in Galilee -- not exactly a small number!

"And the communities are very lively. People here are committed to keeping their communities alive. That was something that struck me especially favorably."

Siebrecht noted that the region around Bethlehem in the West Bank has the "worst problems." She explained: "The people here are living as though in a prison, because of the wall. They can't go in, they can't get out.

"They feel like prisoners, and that is exactly what they are. The whole problem is especially hard for young Christian couples.

"For example, one young man had an [identification] card for Jerusalem and was able to work there. But his wife was not allowed to leave Bethlehem to go and live with him, while he for his part was not allowed to go to Bethlehem.

"The result of this situation, of course, is that everyone tries to get round it with false papers. These people are all living in the fear that they might one evening be unable to return home at all, or that their family members might be unable to return from work or from visiting people.

"It is really very difficult for the Christians in the region around Bethlehem -- it is a gigantic weight on the shoulders of these people.

"We Europeans, when we visit the Holy Land, we don't understand this and don't notice it either. We can travel everywhere, and the journey from Bethlehem to Jerusalem is no more than a step for foreigners. But for the Palestinians -- and most of the Christians in the Holy Land are Palestinians -- it is an immense problem."

She underlined the hope that the Pope will address the problem of the conditions of life for Christians.

The aid worker appealed for prayers for the Holy Land Christians, especially during the papal visit. She noted that "prayer is the most important thing of all that we can contribute from afar."

She called for visitors to the Holy Land to not only visit the holy places, but also the "living stones."

"For the people here are overjoyed when they see that other Christians are close to them in their sorrows and their joys," she explained. "For despite all the obstacles, these are all very much living communities."


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NEWS BRIEFS

Cardinal Talks to Colombia Rebels, Hopes for Peace

BOGOTA, Colombia, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Cardinal Darío Castrillón Hoyos says he has talked with rebels in Colombia and thinks they are willing to seek solutions to the conflict in the South American country.

Cardinal Castrillón Hoyos, president of the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei and a Colombian, said he has spoken by telephone with members of the National Liberation Army (ELN) and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). He affirmed that he saw in them a "will to be open," RCN Radio reported.

"We have spoken as Colombians and as Christians," he said. "This week I have spoken by phone [with them]. Despite all the difficulties, despite being still in warlike activities, there is also a will to be open, the same [will] that I have found in the president (Álvaro Uribe)."

"The moment arrived for reason to be above weapons and for weapons to defend reason. ... I very much hope for peace in Colombia," the prelate continued, adding that he is trusting there will be a move toward "sincere, true dialogue about concrete things."

"There will always be actions that we don't understand, many actions that we deplore, even that from the perspective of Catholic morality, we reject," Cardinal Castrillón Hoyos said. "But these actions do not totally hide the panorama of hope and the horizon of peace."


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Neocatechumenal Way Founder Awarded Doctorate

John Paul II Institute Honors Argüello

ROME, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family is awarding an honorary doctorate to Kiko Argüello, one of the initiators of the Neocatechumenal Way.

The institute, situated at Rome's Lateran University with other locations around the world, announced that on May 13 it will invest as doctors "Honoris Causa" both the Spanish founder, Francisco (Kiko) Argüello, and an Italian sociology professor, Pierpaolo Donati.

A statement from the institute notes that the contributions of both men to the field of family studies are valued as "authoritative references for its own teaching and research work."

The institute underlined "the strong commitment of the Neocatechumenal Way on family issues" by its emphasis on "the experience of the 'domestic celebration' with which it sends families on a mission."

It also pointed out the value of the lay group's "promotion, together with other ecclesiastical organizations, of major initiatives in support of the family," especially the "Family Day in Italy and the 2007 Feast of the Holy Family in Madrid."

Donati, the other doctorate recipient, is a professor from the University of Bologna, and was named by the institute as "one of the top experts in the world of family sociology."

The institute stated that Donati has made a valuable contribution to building "a humanistic sociology that distances itself from all forms of scientific reductionism and cultural relativism," with a particular criticism of the functionalist and Marxist approaches.

It added, "From this [arises] the idea of relational sociology," Donati's "original and fruitful creation: from this perspective, the family is not a simple sum of individuals or an organic body, but a set of vital relations."


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Caritas Worker Killed in Sri Lanka "Safe" Zone

JAFFNA, Sri Lanka, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- A Caritas worker was killed this week in the "safe zone" where Sri Lankan government forces have cornered the Tamil Tiger rebels.

"Raj" Anthonipillai Uthayaraj, 26, died as a result of the fighting in Mullivaikal, in the "No Fire" zone where civilians have taken refuge from the conflict, Caritas reported Wednesday.

The organization's secretary general, Lesley-Anne Knight, said, "This is a dreadful loss for Raj's family, friends and Caritas."

Although tens of thousands of people sought safety in this zone at the north of the island, the rebel forces were pushed back into the same region, and consequently the fighting pursued the civilians.

Knight stated, "It further emphasizes the need for people caught up in this conflict to reach safety and have the basic things they need."

An estimated 190,000 civilians have been able to escape the zone into government refugee camps.

Two weeks ago, the local Caritas director, Father T. R. Vasanthaseelan, was seriously injured in the zone.

The national director, Father Damien Fernando, asserted: "There must be an end to this war or more lives will be lost. Aid workers and civilians alike must receive genuine protection."

He added that Caritas will continue helping people and seeking a lasting solution for peace in the country.


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DOCUMENTS

Papal Press Conference en Route to Jordan

"We Are Not a Political Power, But Rather a Spiritual Force"

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the unofficial transcript of the press conference Benedict XVI gave today aboard the papal plane en route to Amman, Jordan, on the first leg of his Holy Land trip.

* * *

Father Lombardi: Your Holiness, we thank you for granting us an encounter with you at the beginning of a trip that is so important and difficult. Among other things, you have given us as well the opportunity to wish you a good trip and to tell you that we will collaborate in disseminating the message that you wish to give. As is habitual, the questions we now ask are the result of a collection of questions posed by all the colleagues here present. I ask them for logistical reasons, but they are in reality the fruit of team work.

Your Holiness, this trip takes place at very delicate moment for the Middle East: There are strong tensions -- during the Gaza crisis it was speculated that you would not make this trip. At the same time, a few days after your trip, the political leaders of Israel and the Palestinian Authority will meet with [U.S.] President [Barack] Obama. Do you think that you could contribute to the peace process that now seems to be running aground?

Benedict XVI: Good morning! Before all else, I would like to thank you all for the work you have done, and I wish you all a good trip, a good pilgrimage, and a good return.

Regarding the question, certainly I intend to contribute to peace, but not as an individual, but in the name of the Catholic Church, of the Holy See. We are not a political power, but rather a spiritual force, and this spiritual force is a reality that can contribute to the progress of the peace process.

I see [a contribution to be made on] three levels: As believers, we are convinced that prayer is a true force. It opens the world to God: We are convinced that God listens and that he can act in history. I think that if millions of people -- believers -- would pray, it could really be a force that could influence and contribute to the advancement of peace.

Second point: We try to help in the formation of consciences. The conscience is the capacity of mankind to perceive the truth, but particular interests often block this capacity. And it is a big job to liberate from these interests, to open more to the truth, to the true values: It is a duty of the Church to help one to know the true criteria, the true values, and to liberate ourselves from particular interests.

And thus, the third point, let us draw reason in as well -- precisely this is it: precisely because we are not a political party, perhaps too we can more easily, with the light of faith, see the true criteria, help bring an understanding of what contributes to peace and speak to reason, to support the truly reasonable positions. And this we have already done, and we want to do so now and in the future.

Father Lombardi: Thank you, Your Holiness.

Second question: As a theologian, you have reflected in particular on the common roots that unite Christians and Jews. How is it possible that, despite the efforts of dialogue, misunderstandings often occur? How do you see the future of dialogue between the two communities?

Benedict XVI: The important thing is that in reality we have the same roots, the same Books of the Old Testament that are -- as much for the Jews as for us -- the Book of Revelation. But naturally, after 2,000 years of living a distinct history, even a separate one, the fact that misunderstandings arise shouldn't be a surprise. Traditions of interpretation, language, and thinking have been formed that are very distinct, we could say a "semantic cosmos" that is very distinct, in such a way that the same word for both traditions signifies different things. And with the use of these words that, in the course of history have taken on different meanings, obviously misunderstandings are born.

We should do everything to learn the language of the other, and it seems to me that we have made great progress. Today we have the possibility of the youth, of the future professors of theology, who can study in Jerusalem, in the Hebrew university, and the Jews have academic contact with us: In this way an encounter of the distinct "semantic cosmos" is made possible.

We learn mutually and we advance on the path of true dialogue, we learn from one another and I am sure and convinced that we are making progress. And this would also help peace, and what is more, reciprocal love.

Father Lombardi: Your Holiness, in this journey you have two essential dimensions of interreligious dialogue, with Islam and with Jews. Is there a common message that has to do with the three religions that make reference to Abraham?

Benedict XVI: Certainly there exists a common message, and there will be an occasion to present it and, despite the difference of origins, we have common roots, because, as I have said, Christianity is born of the Old Testament, and the writings of the New Testament wouldn't exist without the Old, because it refers permanently to Scripture, that is to say, to the Old Testament.

Islam was also born in an environment where Judaism and various branches of Christianity, Judeo-Christianity, Antiochian-Byzantine-Christianity were present, and all these circumstances are reflected in the tradition of the Quran. In this way we have much in common from our origins, in the faith in the one God. For that, it is important on one hand to maintain dialogue with the two parts -- with the Jews and with Islam -- and as well a trilateral dialogue.

I myself have cofounded a foundation for the dialogue between the three religions where figures such as Metropolitain Damaskinos and the chief rabbi of France, René-Samuel Sirat, etc. gathered. This foundation also published an edition of the books of the three religions: the Quran, the New Testament and the Old Testament. For this reason the trilateral dialogue should go forward, it is very important for peace, and as well for living one's own religion well.

Father Lombardi: A last question. Your Holiness, you have often mentioned the problem of the decline of the Christians in the Middle East, and also in particular in the Holy Land. It is a phenomenon with various reasons of a political, economic and social character. What can be done to help the Christians in the region? What contribution do you hope to give with your trip? Is there hope for these Christians in the future? Do you have a particular message as well for the Christians of Gaza that will come to see you in Bethlehem?

Benedict XVI: Certainly there is hope, because now is a moment, as you have said, that is difficult, but also a moment of hope, of a new start, of a new impulse in the path toward peace, and we want to encourage the Christians in the Holy Land, and in all of the Middle East, to stay, to give their contribution to the countries of their origins: They are important components of life in these regions.

Specifically the Church, beyond words of encouragement, has schools and hospitals. In this sense we have a very concrete presence. Our schools form a generation that will have the possibility to be present in public life. We are creating the Catholic University in Jordan, it seems to me this is a great place where the youth -- both Muslims and Christians -- meet, learn together, where a Christian elite is formed that is prepared specifically to work for peace.

But generally, our schools are very important opportunities to open up a future for Christians, and the hospitals show our presence. Furthermore, there are many Christian associations that help Christians in various ways, and with specific help they encourage them to stay. In this way I hope that Christians are able to find the value, the humility, the patience to stay in these countries, to offer their contribution to their nation's future.

Father Lombardi: Thank you, Your Holiness, with these answers you have helped to set the tone for our trip from a spiritual point of view, and from a cultural point of view. I repeat the wishes, also on behalf of all the colleagues here present, and on behalf of those flying now to the Holy Land to help with the media end of this trip, for the success of this difficult mission. Have a good trip and, good work as well to all our colleagues.

[Transcription by Vatican Radio, Translation by ZENIT]


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Papal Address Upon Arrival in Amman

"I Come to Jordan as a Pilgrim"

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 8, 2009(Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the address Benedict XVI gave today upon his arrival to the Queen Alia di Amman airport in Jordan. He was welcomed by the king and queen of Jordan, Abdullah II and Rania.

* * *

Your Majesties,

Your Excellencies,

Dear Brother Bishops,

Dear Friends,

It is with joy that I greet all of you here present, as I begin my first visit to the Middle East since my election to the Apostolic See, and I am pleased to set foot upon the soil of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, a land so rich in history, home to so many ancient civilizations, and deeply imbued with religious significance for Jews, Christians and Muslims. I thank His Majesty King Abdullah II for his kind words of welcome, and I offer my particular congratulations in this year that marks the tenth anniversary of his accession to the throne. In greeting His Majesty, I extend heartfelt good wishes to all members of the Royal Family and the Government, and to all the people of the Kingdom. I greet the Bishops here present, especially those with pastoral responsibilities in Jordan. I look forward to celebrating the liturgy at Saint George's Cathedral tomorrow evening and at the International Stadium on Sunday together with you, dear Bishops, and so many of the faithful entrusted to your care.

I come to Jordan as a pilgrim, to venerate holy places that have played such an important part in some of the key events of Biblical history. At Mount Nebo, Moses led his people to within sight of the land that would become their home, and here he died and was laid to rest. At Bethany beyond the Jordan, John the Baptist preached and bore witness to Jesus, whom he baptized in the waters of the river that gives this land its name. In the coming days I shall visit both these holy places, and I shall have the joy of blessing the foundation stones of churches that are to be built at the traditional site of the Lord's Baptism. The opportunity that Jordan's Catholic community enjoys to build public places of worship is a sign of this country's respect for religion, and on their behalf I want to say how much this openness is appreciated. Religious freedom is, of course, a fundamental human right, and it is my fervent hope and prayer that respect for the inalienable rights and dignity of every man and woman will come to be increasingly affirmed and defended, not only throughout the Middle East, but in every part of the world.

My visit to Jordan gives me a welcome opportunity to speak of my deep respect for the Muslim community, and to pay tribute to the leadership shown by His Majesty the King in promoting a better understanding of the virtues proclaimed by Islam. Now that some years have passed since the publication of the Amman Message and the Amman Interfaith Message, we can say that these worthy initiatives have achieved much good in furthering an alliance of civilizations between the West and the Muslim world, confounding the predictions of those who consider violence and conflict inevitable. Indeed the Kingdom of Jordan has long been at the forefront of initiatives to promote peace in the Middle East and throughout the world, encouraging inter-religious dialogue, supporting efforts to find a just solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, welcoming refugees from neighboring Iraq, and seeking to curb extremism. I cannot let this opportunity pass without calling to mind the pioneering efforts for peace in the region made by the late King Hussein. How fitting that my meeting tomorrow with Muslim religious leaders, the diplomatic corps and University rectors should take place in the mosque that bears his name. May his commitment to the resolution of the region's conflicts continue to bear fruit in efforts to promote lasting peace and true justice for all who live in the Middle East.

Dear Friends, at the Seminar held in Rome last autumn by the Catholic-Muslim Forum, the participants examined the central role played in our respective religious traditions by the commandment of love. I hope very much that this visit, and indeed all the initiatives designed to foster good relations between Christians and Muslims, will help us to grow in love for the Almighty and Merciful God, and in fraternal love for one another. Thank you for your welcome. Thank you for your attention. May God grant Your Majesties happiness and long life! May he bless Jordan with prosperity and peace!


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Pope's Address at Regina Pacis Center

"Even Hearts Hardened by ... Unwillingness to Forgive Are Never Beyond the Reach of God"

AMMAN, Jordan, MAY 8, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the discourse Benedict XVI gave today at the Regina Pacis center in Jordan.

* * *

Your Beatitudes,

Your Excellencies,

Dear Friends,

I am very happy to be here with you this afternoon, and to greet each of you and your family members, wherever they may be. I thank His Beatitude Patriarch Fouad Twal for his kind words of welcome and in a special way I wish to acknowledge the presence among us of Bishop Selim Sayegh, whose vision and labours for this Centre, together with those of His Beatitude Patriarch Emeritus Michel Sabbah, are today honored through the blessing of the new extensions which has just taken place. I also wish to greet with great affection the Central Committee members, the Comboni Sisters and the dedicated lay staff, including those who work in the Centre's many community branches and units. Your reputation for outstanding professional competence, compassionate care and resolute promotion of the rightful place in society of those with special needs is well known here and throughout the Kingdom. To the young people present, I thank you for your moving welcome. It is a great joy for me to be with you.

As you know, my visit to the Our Lady of Peace Centre here in Amman is the first stop along my journey of pilgrimage. Like countless pilgrims before me it is now my turn to satisfy that profound wish to touch, to draw solace from and to venerate the places where Jesus lived, the places which were made holy by his presence. Since apostolic times, Jerusalem has been the primary place of pilgrimage for Christians, but earlier still, in the ancient Near East, Semitic peoples built sacred shrines in order to mark and commemorate a divine presence or action. And ordinary people would travel to these centres carrying a portion of the fruits of their land and livestock to offer in homage and thanksgiving.

Dear friends, every one of us is a pilgrim. We are all drawn forward, with purpose, along God's path. Naturally, then, we tend to look back on life - sometimes with regrets or hurts, often with thanksgiving and appreciation - and we also look ahead - sometimes with trepidation or anxiety, but always with expectation and hope, knowing too that there are others who encourage us along the way. I know that the journeys that have led many of you to the "Regina Pacis" Centre have been marked by suffering or trial. Some of you struggle courageously with disabilities, others of you have endured rejection, and some of you are drawn to this place of peace simply for encouragement and support. Of particular importance, I know, is the Centre's great success in promoting the rightful place of the disabled in society and in ensuring that suitable training and opportunities are provided to facilitate such integration. For this foresight and determination you all deserve great praise and encouragement!

At times it is difficult to find a reason for what appears only as an obstacle to be overcome or even as pain - physical or emotional - to be endured. Yet faith and understanding help us to see a horizon beyond our own selves in order to imagine life as God does. God's unconditional love, which gives life to every human individual, points to a meaning and purpose for all human life. His is a saving love (cf. Jn 12:32). As Christians profess, it is through the Cross that Jesus in fact draws us into eternal life, and in so doing indicates to us the way ahead - the way of hope which guides every step we take along the way, so that we too become bearers of that hope and charity for others.

Friends, unlike the pilgrims of old, I do not come bearing gifts or offerings. I come simply with an intention, a hope: to pray for the precious gift of unity and peace, most specifically for the Middle East. Peace for individuals, for parents and children, for communities, peace for Jerusalem, for the Holy Land, for the region, peace for the entire human family; the lasting peace born of justice, integrity and compassion, the peace that arises from humility, forgiveness and the profound desire to live in harmony as one.

Prayer is hope in action. And in fact true reason is contained in prayer: we come into loving contact with the one God, the universal Creator, and in so doing we come to realize the futility of human divisions and prejudices and we sense the wondrous possibilities that open up before us when our hearts are converted to God's truth, to his design for each of us and our world.

Dear young friends, to you in particular I wish to say that standing in your midst I draw strength from God. Your experience of trials, your witness to compassion, and your determination to overcome the obstacles you encounter, encourage me in the belief that suffering can bring about change for the good. In our own trials, and standing alongside others in their struggles, we glimpse the essence of our humanity, we become, as it were, more human. And we come to learn that, on another plane, even hearts hardened by cynicism or injustice or unwillingness to forgive are never beyond the reach of God, can always be opened to a new way of being, a vision of peace.

I exhort you all to pray every day for our world. And today I want to ask you to take up a specific task: please pray for me every day of my pilgrimage; for my own spiritual renewal in the Lord, and for the conversion of hearts to God's way of forgiveness and solidarity so that my hope - our hope - for unity and peace in the world will bear abundant fruit.

May God bless each of you and your families, and the teachers, caregivers, administrators and benefactors of this Centre and may Our Lady, Queen of Peace, protect you and guide you along the pilgrim way of her Son, the Good Shepherd.


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Thursday, May 7, 2009

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The World Seen From Rome

Daily dispatch - May 07, 2009


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VATICAN DOSSIER
Pope Welcomes 32 New Swiss Guards
El Salvador President Visits Pontiff
Jesuit Named to Congregation for Eastern Churches
Number of Diocesan Priests Going Up

WORLD FEATURES
Wanted: Documented Pius XII Defense
Notre Dame Honor for Obama Seen as Mistake

NEWS BRIEFS
Stamps Mark Pontiff's Holy Land Trip
Madrid Launches World Youth Day Logo Contest
Neocatechumenal Way Accompanies Pope to Holy Land
Coadjutor Takes Leadership of Winona Diocese

INTERVIEW
Pope Visits Mideast as Brother of Muslims, Jews

ROME NOTES
Human Rights in Jeopardy; Bankers' Blunders

DOCUMENTS
Pope's Address to Italian Earthquake Victims
Papal Homily at Canonization Mass

VATICAN DOSSIER

Pope Welcomes 32 New Swiss Guards

Says They Serve More Than the Roman Pontiff

VATICAN CITY, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI welcomed 32 new recruits to the Swiss Guard, telling them their service to the Pope extends to all of Rome and even the universal Church.

The Holy Father spoke to the new guardsmen today in German, French and Italian. They were sworn in Wednesday before the Pontiff's secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, in a traditional May 6 ceremony that memorializes the day in 1527 when 147 guardsmen lost their life defending Pope Clement VII during Charles V's sack of Rome.

Benedict XVI described the Swiss Guard's fields of service as a series of concentric circles, saying that their work is not just linked to the person of the Pope, but extends to the city of Rome, and the universal Church represented by "the tombs of Peter and Paul, the heart of the Catholic Church."

"The Catholic Church is international," he said, "but in its multiplicity it is with all one sole Church, which is expressed in the confession of faith itself and which is concretely united to Peter and his Successor, the Pope."

"This is a very important experience that the Church wants to give you, so that you make it your own and communicate it to others," the Pontiff added. "The experience that with faith in Jesus and in his love for men, worlds that are so different can also become one sole thing, creating in this way bridges of peace and solidarity among peoples."

The Guard was founded in 1506 and has 110 soldiers and a captain, currently Daniel Rudolf Anring.


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El Salvador President Visits Pontiff

VATICAN CITY, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI and the president of El Salvador discussed today the Central American nation's fight against organized crime.

This was one of the themes touched upon when Elías Antonio Saca González visited the Pope in the Vatican. The president went on to meet with the Holy Father's secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone.

According to a statement from the Holy See: "In the course of the cordial discussions, attention focused on various questions concerning internal issues and the current international situation noting, among other things, the country's commitment to promoting cooperation in the area of trade, to the struggle against organized crime, to the field of education and emigration, and to social promotion.

"Finally, the good relations between Church and state were highlighted, and the hope expressed that they may grow stronger in order to favor spiritual progress, pacification and national development."

The El Salvadorian president is set to leave office June 1.

He was accompanied today, his third time at the Vatican, by his wife, Ana Ligia de Saca, and a 12-person entourage.

Close to 60% of El Salvador's more than 7 million citizens are Catholic.


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Jesuit Named to Congregation for Eastern Churches

VATICAN CITY, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI appointed Jesuit Father Cyril Vasil as secretary of the Congregation for Eastern Churches, and is raising him to the dignity of archbishop.

The Vatican press office announced today that the rector of the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome will collaborate with Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, currently the prefect of the congregation that oversees the Eastern Rite Churches.

Cyril Vasil was born in 1965 in Kosice, Slovakia, and was ordained a priest in 1987. He entered the Jesuit order in 1990, and made his solemn profession in 2001.

Father Vasil completed a doctorate in canon law at the Pontifical Oriental Institute in 1994, and was elected rector of the institution in 2007.

He has been a consultant for the Congregation for Eastern Churches as well as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Travelers.

He has authored numerous books and articles, and collaborates with Vatican Radio.


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Number of Diocesan Priests Going Up

Newest Edition of Statistical Yearbook Released

By Patricia Navas

VATICAN CITY, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The number of diocesan priests has grown in recent years, unlike the number of priests in religious congregations.

This is one statistic to be found in the most recent edition of the Statistical Yearbook of the Church, published in one volume in Latin, English and French. The yearbook actually covers a seven-year span, from 2000 to 2007.

The number of diocesan priests went up 2.5% in that time, increasing from 265,781 to 272,431. The number of religious priests decreased by about that same percentage, such that there were just more than 135,000 in 2007. The American continent accounts for a decrease of 3,000 religious priests.

Speaking of percentages, only in Europe is the number of priests clearly in decline. There they went from representing 51% of the worldwide total to 48%. Nevertheless, in some countries of Eastern Europe, especially Poland, the number of priests is markedly growing.

Italy, France and Spain still have about half of all European priests, and of these, almost half are in Italy.

Asia and Africa continues to see an increase in the number of priests. In Africa, about half come from just four countries: Congo, Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda.

America and Oceania are holding about stable in their numbers. America has just less than 30% of the worldwide population of priests, while Oceania has less than 1%.

The number of permanent deacons saw a marked increase from 2000 to 2007, with 29% more, bringing their number to 35,942.

Religious

The number of men religious who are not priests has also gone down slightly, decreasing from 55,057 to 54,956. By continents, this decrease is seen in Europe (a decrease of 13.82%) and in Oceania (a decrease of 15.8%), though in America the numbers have maintained steady and in Asia and Africa, there has been an increase of 31.10% and 9.16%, respectively.

Still, the number of men religious in Europe continues to represent 34% of the worldwide number, with notable increases in Ukraine, Romania, Hungary and Austria.

Women religious, meanwhile, decreased in number by about 50,000 during that seven-year span, bringing their total number worldwide to approximately 750,000. Almost 42% of those reside in Europe, with the majority in France, Spain and Italy.

Seminarians

The number of priests promises to continue to grow, given that the number of seminarians also went up from 2000 to 2007. The number of those studying for the priesthood increased by some 4.8%, reaching 116,000. This growth is particularly thanks again to Africa and Asia, where the number went up 21.32% and 20.35%, respectively. Nigeria, Congo, India and the Philippines had particularly notable growth.

In Europe, on the other hand, the number of seminarians is on the decline, going down 17%. A notable decrease occurred in Spain and Belgium, but also in Eastern Europe (Hungary, Lithuania, Romania and Slovenia).

Catholics continue to represent about 17% of the world population; in 2007, there were 1.147 billion baptized Catholics, up from 1.045 billion in 2000.

Europe is about 40% Catholic, though the number of the baptized there increased only a bit more than 1%.

In America and Oceania, the increase in the number of Catholics was less than overall population growth. The opposite was true in Asia and Africa.


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WORLD FEATURES

Wanted: Documented Pius XII Defense

Foundation Aims to Prove Pope's Efforts to Save Jews

NEW YORK, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- An organization dedicated to interreligious dialogue is seeking to resolve some of the conflict surrounding Pope Pius XII.

The New York-based Pave the Way Foundation has launched a call seeking images of archived records specifically from ecclesiastical institutions related to the Holy See's efforts to save innocent lives during World War II. The organization is also looking for early (prior to 1963) news articles on the subject.

Gary Krupp, president of the foundation and a Jew, explained that Pave the Way has already "devoted years to identifying, and making public, the documents and eyewitness testimony which has clearly shown the extraordinary efforts of the Holy See to save human lives during this dark time in human history."

The research could have far-reaching effects.

For example, AFP reported that Israel's Holocaust remembrance authority said today that ties with the Vatican could markedly improve if some of the conflict surrounding Pius XII was cleared up.

The chairman of the group, Avner Shalev, acknowledged that the Vatican has already produced evidence that Church officials ordered a convent outside of Rome to shelter Jews during World War II.

"If one or two more documents like this come to light, it would certainly result in a significant improvement in our relations with the Vatican," Shalev said, as Benedict XVI readies to head to the Middle East on Friday.

Krupp's efforts at Pave the Way already produced a documentary that was released last September.

The foundation is now asking everyone from students to retired people to join the research effort; new documents will be included in an updated version of the documentary.

Pave the Way is requesting that documentation be emailed to Krupp at office@ptwf.org. The note should include details such as location of the document, page numbers, dates and any other verifiable information.

Documents can also be faxed to Pave the Way in New York: (1) (516) 432-7561.

--- --- ---

On the Net:

Pave the Way Foundation: www.ptwf.org


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Notre Dame Honor for Obama Seen as Mistake

Poll Reveals Majority Disagrees With University

NEW YORK, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- More than half of all Americans oppose the University of Notre Dame's decision to honor President Barack Obama with an honorary degree, according to a Rasmussen poll.

The telephone survey, released Tuesday, asked 1,000 adults if the university should be giving the president an honorary degree, given the 2004 guidelines established by U.S. bishops stating that Catholic institutions should not honor people whose actions conflict with the Church's moral principles. Fifty-two percent of those polled said no, and among Catholics, 60% said no.

The statement of the U.S. bishops says: "The Catholic community and Catholic institutions should not honor those who act in defiance of our fundamental moral principles. They should not be given awards, honors or platforms which would suggest support for their actions."

Only 25% of those polled agreed with the university's decision, and 19% said they were unsure.

When asked if it's important that commencement speakers for universities with a religious affiliation share the religious views of that university, nearly two-thirds (63%) said yes. Of Catholics, 56% said yes, while 87% of evangelicals answered in the affirmative, along with 63% of other Protestants.

While the majority disagrees with the university's decision to honor the president, only 30% of American adults believe the president should cancel his appearance at Notre Dame. Among Catholics, just 34% think Obama should cancel.

Of those polled, 15% say they are following the story "very closely," and another 23% are following it "somewhat closely."

Among Catholics, 25% are following the story "very closely," and another 27% are following it "somewhat closely."


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NEWS BRIEFS

Stamps Mark Pontiff's Holy Land Trip

TEL AVIV, Israel, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Israel Philatelic Service of the Israel Postal Company is selling the first of two series of commemorative stamps to mark Benedict XVI's visit to the Holy Land.

Each series consists of a dozen stamps. Ten thousand copies have been made of the first series, which have been on sale since Monday. They feature 12 of the holy sites the Pontiff will visit on the Israel leg of his May 8-15 trip.

The first set includes an "Israel Welcomes Pope Benedict XVI" personalized stamp sheet, and an informational booklet containing photos of the Holy Christian Sites in Israel and relevant biblical references.

The booklet was complied and written by journalist Peter Jennings, who is also a member of The Royal Philatelic Society London.

The second series will be released after the Pope's visit and will feature photos taken during the Holy Father's visit and the phrase: "Israel welcomes Benedict XVI."

The set will include a "Pilgrimage of Pope Benedict XVI to the Holy Land" personalized stamp sheet and a booklet containing actual photos, articles and quotes from the addresses and sermons given by the Holy Father while in the Holy Land.

Papal visit postcard sets are also available.

--- --- ---

On the Net:

To order: www.israelpost.co.il/pope


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Madrid Launches World Youth Day Logo Contest

MADRID, Spain, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Archdiocese of Madrid is launching a competition to find a logo for the upcoming World Youth Day hosted by the city.

A prize of €15,000 ($20,115) will be awarded to the designer who submits the winning logo for the youth event, planned for Aug. 16-21, 2011.

Youth day organizers are looking for a unique, attractive and contemporary design to give a graphic identity to the event, a logo that will be used for the official Web site as well as various items in the pilgrim packet including a backpack, hat and fan.

The contest is open to all professional graphic designers who operate in Spain. Documentation must be submitted by May 17 in order to enter the competition. 

A statement from the archdiocese noted, "World Youth Day is an event of a global and open nature -- of Christian identity -- promoted directly by the Pope, which invites young people from around the world, both Catholics as well as non-Catholics interested in knowing the message of Jesus Christ and having an experience of the Catholic Church."

--- --- ---

On the Net:

For more information (in Spanish): www.jmj2011madrid.com/bases/bases.pdf


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Neocatechumenal Way Accompanies Pope to Holy Land

MADRID, Spain, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- More than 7,000 European youth of the Catholic lay Neocatechumenal Way are planning to accompany Benedict XVI on his trip this week to the Holy Land.

The young people will make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land during the eight days of the Pope's visit, which begins Friday, and will participate in the various events planned for these days in Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nazareth.

Álvaro de Juana, a spokesperson for the group, reported today that 2,200 of these youth are Spaniards.

They will meet with the founders and leaders of the Neocatechumenate, Kiko Argüello, Carmen Hernández and Father Mario Pezzi, in a retreat house run by the group on the Mount of the Beatitudes.

The youth will visit parishes in Upper Galilee in order to hold meetings with Orthodox, Byzantine and Maronite young people of the region.


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Coadjutor Takes Leadership of Winona Diocese

WINONA, Minnesota, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Coadjutor Bishop John Quinn took over the leadership of the Winona diocese today when Benedict XVI accepted the resignation of Bishop Bernard Harrington for reasons of age.

Bishop Quinn, 63, was named coadjutor of the diocese last October.

Born in Detroit, he was ordained a priest in that archdiocese in 1972, and an auxiliary bishop in 2003.

The Diocese of Winona has a population of 131,000 Catholics out of a total population of 570,000. It is served by 107 priests and 20 permanent deacons, as well as 414 religious.


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INTERVIEW

Pope Visits Mideast as Brother of Muslims, Jews

Interview With Vicar for Israel's Hebrew-speaking Catholics

By Karna Swanson

JERUSALEM, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- One of the most important challenges for Benedict XVI as he visits the Holy Land this week will be to present the face of Christ to Jews and Muslims, according to Jesuit Father David Neuhaus.

Father Neuhaus, the patriarchal vicar for Hebrew-speaking Catholics in the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, spoke with ZENIT ahead of the Pope's May 8-15 journey to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian National Territories.

In this interview he talks about how Israel is preparing for the visit, the major challenges facing the Holy Father during his journey, and the historic importance of the event.

Q: How is Israel preparing for the visit of Benedict XVI? In particular, how are the Hebrew-speaking Catholics in Israel preparing?

Father Neuhaus: Israel, as a country, is preparing to greet a very prominent guest. The Vatican flag is flying in the streets through which the Holy Father will pass. Security and other measures are already palpable in the places where he will visit. The press is full of stories about Pope Benedict, about the schedule of the visit, about aspects of the life of the Church, and perhaps most significantly about the local Church, which generally receives little attention in a country in which Christians are just 2% or 3% percent of the population.

However, the Hebrew-speaking Catholic community, like the Arabic-speaking Catholic community, is preparing, first and foremost, to greet our pastor, with joy and enthusiasm. We are preparing ourselves to listen and watch, to learn and to open our hearts. We are full of hope that the Pope will encourage us and help as understand ever more profoundly our vocation as a "little rest" in this land that is too often characterized by conflict. We are very proud that Pope Benedict has insisted that he is coming first and foremost to visit us and to be with us.

Q: The Holy Father has repeatedly asked for prayers for this pilgrimage and his spokesman called it a "decidedly courageous" trip. Do you think there are particular risks that come with a trip to the Holy Land right now?

Father Neuhaus: It is indeed a courageous trip because there are many risks. We live in the midst of a political-national conflict. All sides are eager to exploit the Holy Father's visit to further their own interests. He will be encountering not only the religious reality of life in the Holy Land, but he will also be visiting the official representatives of both Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

He will be encountering the two national narratives at their most painful -- when he visits Yad Vashem (the memorial to the victims of the Shoah) and Aida Camp (a camp of Palestinian refugees from the 1948 War). The risks are clear -- the Pope seeks to come as a pilgrim in prayer for peace and unity. Many are waiting to hear from him support for their cause. The Pope seeks to come as a pastor. Many are going to scrutinize every word and every movement in order to derive a political conclusion.

The visit will have to be choreographed with absolute skill so that the Holy Father's intention might be preserved in a context in which many will be trying to pull him into the quagmire of conflict and narrow interests. The Pope will need the courage of the prophets of old in their confrontation with the powers that be in order to say his word of truth and accomplish his act of visiting this land as a pilgrim of peace, unity and love. May the prayers of Pope John Paul II strengthen Pope Benedict as he walks the path of his predecessor. May this pilgrimage build on and further the wonderful pilgrimage of his predecessor.

Q: Cardinal Leonardo Sandri revealed this week that this trip to the Holy Land is one that the Pope has wanted to make since the beginning of his pontificate. Why is this trip so important?

Father Neuhaus: The trip is important on many different levels. First, the Holy Father is coming to the land that is the arena of our history of salvation -- the land of the patriarchs, prophets and sages of the Old Testament, the land of Jesus Our Lord and the disciples and apostles of the New Testament. He comes to remind us of the importance of these holy places for our identity as Christians because they serve as permanent memorials to God's faithfulness to us.

Second, he comes to encourage and support the mother Church of Jerusalem. In these weeks, from Easter to Pentecost, we are reading Acts of the Apostles and there Jerusalem and her Church are a constant point of reference. We must strengthen the Church of Jerusalem as a constant reference to our origins, and because testimony to Jesus is essential in the land he lived in.

Third, the Pope comes into the heart of a troubled area to show the Church's face as a promoter of justice, of peace and most importantly, of pardon and compassion. We need this visit especially to promote pardon, so absent from our usual discourse about the conflict here.

Fourth, the Pope comes to promote dialogue with both Jews and Muslims.

Q: This trip will be an opportunity for encounter between Catholics, Muslims and Jews. What can the Pope do to avoid misunderstandings with the Jewish and Muslim religions as happened earlier this year with the lifting of the excommunication of Bishop Richard Williamson, and with the Regensburg speech at the beginning of his pontificate that offended the Muslims?

Father Neuhaus: The meetings with Jewish and Muslim authorities are an important element of the trip. Likewise, the Holy Father will be visiting the important sites of the two religious traditions -- both the Haram al-Sharif (where he will visit the Dome of the Rock) and the Western Wall. All of this will be preceded by an interfaith gathering in which the Pope will address hundreds of Jews, Christians and Muslims working for interreligious dialogue, education, social welfare, human rights, democracy, tolerance -- those working as peacemakers and promoters of justice and reconciliation.

Both Jews and Muslims are expecting words and acts of reconciliation in the light of earlier tensions. The important moments for this will be not only in the visits to the religious authorities and the sites holy to the Jewish and Muslim traditions, but also at the sites where the Pope will encounter the pain of the peoples of the region. These encounters are themselves the occasion for the Holy Father to show our Jewish and Muslim brothers and sisters the face of a brother as he speaks words of wisdom and love and sets in motion acts of respect and compassion.

Q: The Pope said he is going as a "Pilgrim of Peace" to the Holy Land. How can the head of the Catholic Church be a force of peace in this region?

Father Neuhaus: This is an enormous challenge in a region that too often seems unwilling to embark on the search for peace. The Pope comes not as a political leader, but as a spiritual and religious leader on a pilgrimage. This means he has the freedom of the Spirit and he can attempt to transform the imagination of those in the area who do not see beyond conflict and confrontation.

It is unlikely that the Holy Father has a new political formula to propose to the leaders here, but I have no doubt that he can underline elements that are essential to peacemaking that are rarely mentioned in the political discourse that dominates our region. Pardon and compassion are two of these elements that the Pope, in his encounter with Israelis and Palestinians, can certainly underline.

The Pope comes not as a king, but as a prophet and a sage. This leaves him free to a certain extent from the imperatives of power and political interests and he can address our sad situation with words of truth and love. If he simply opens our imagination to see what we cannot see -- that the other is our brother rather than our enemy -- he will have helped us to exorcise the demons of fear, suspicion and hatred that have colonized our minds and hearts.

Q: For those who are following the Pope's trip from abroad, what are some of the main elements of the cultural context that should be noted?

Father Neuhaus: Perhaps in all simplicity, those who are following must realize that the Pope comes to countries that are not Catholic, but rather those defined by Jewish tradition, history and identity (Israel) and Muslim Arab tradition, history and identity (Jordan and the Palestinian Authority). For most people the Pope is not a beloved pastor, but a foreign dignitary who represents also much of the pain and trouble that have characterized relations between Jews and Catholics on the one hand, and Muslims and Catholics on the other.

We must pray, all of us, that this visit be an important moment of transformation in which Israelis and Palestinians, Jews and Muslims, can see the face of Jesus Christ, humble, compassionate and the servant of his brothers and sisters, in the face of Pope Benedict XVI. This is ultimately the most important challenge of this trip.

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On the Net:

Hebrew-speaking Vicariate in Israel: www.catholic.co.il


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ROME NOTES

Human Rights in Jeopardy; Bankers' Blunders

Social Science Academy Debates Morality and Greed

By Edward Pentin

ROME, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Human rights are becoming so politicized in today's world that the concept is losing credibility and is in danger of collapse.

That was the stark warning given last week at the plenary meeting of the Pontifical Academy for Social Sciences held at Villa Pia, the academy's ornate home in the Vatican Gardens.

In a timely presentation, Janne Haaland-Matlary, professor of international politics at the University of Oslo, explained that because of an absence of agreement in society on what constitutes human nature and how it can be defined, human rights are becoming increasingly vulnerable to political exploitation.

This process of manipulation isn't new, of course; it began accelerating in the 1990s when lobby groups, nongovernmental organizations and governments, using a series of well-trodden paths through supranational and national bodies, have sought to change public opinion on matters such as abortion, and now, increasingly, marriage and the family.

But Matlary, who once served as Norway's deputy foreign minister, further argued that politicization of human rights by undemocratic governments -- ones keen to get on the human rights bandwagon to give themselves legitimacy, or win political points -- is also seriously adding to its erosion.

Speaking with me after her presentation, Matlary said the more such governments engage in inflated rhetorical exercises on the subject, "the more human rights lose their value for those who are really concerned." And she added that if human rights continue along this path, the concept "has to crash because it no longer has symbolic value."

She gave as an example the recent Durban II conference on racism when Iran used the forum to promote its own view of human rights (delegates walked out after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad criticized Israel as racist, and called for perceived blasphemy to be punished). The incident threw into sharp focus how intensely politicized the human rights arena has become.

"Today all governments apart from a perhaps Myanmar and North Korea talk about human rights, and so this makes it imperative that human rights are defined as objectively as possible," she said, reminding that human rights "arise from and derive from human dignity" and are "not given, taken away or changed by states."

"Fundamental human rights are a whole -- universal, indivisible, and interdependent," she explained. "They are premised on individual freedom and responsibility, on a division between politics and religion, and on a difference between the public and the private sphere -- in short, they presuppose a specific view of the human person."

She added that the natural law tradition, as it has been developed in Western thinking and philosophy and preserved by the Catholic Church, "can aid in defining human personhood and the meaning of human rights."

But appealing to natural law is difficult because of the relativist and value-neutral nature of modern democracies. It is further hampered by the media that tend to create a circle of consensus made up of relativist positions, leaving those who take a principled line outside the circle and vilified for their beliefs.

Matlary further stressed that in today's international society, that lacks any guiding moral authority and where nominalism trumps any concept of philosophical first principles, law and democracy become simply procedures, making it hard to define anything as ethically wrong. Echoing Benedict XVI, she believes appealing to reason rather than a relativist trend is one way to tackle the danger.

Benedict XVI explained to the academy's members on Monday, why it is reason -- "the pervading presence of a logos" -- that enables man "to distinguish not only between true and false, but also good and evil, better and worse, and justice and injustice."

"This ability to discern -- this radical agency -- renders every person capable of grasping the natural law," the Holy Father explained. "The natural law is a universal guide recognizable to everyone, on the basis of which all people can reciprocally understand and love each other."

But he warned that if this "solid ethical and political basis is ignored, human rights remain fragile since they are deprived of their sound foundation."

* * *

A Matter of Ethics

Also present at the meeting, whose theme was "Catholic Social Doctrine and Human Rights," was the 2001 Nobel Prize winner in economics, Joseph Stiglitz.

For the American academic, who served as a member of President Bill Clinton's cabinet and is currently a member of the Pontifical Academy for Social Sciences, the challenge facing human rights today is where to draw boundaries on its enforcement. He believes too little has been done to enforce laws on important issues such as torture, and too much on those areas that "should not be within its scope."

Turning to the subject of the U.S. economy, Stiglitz, who lectures in economics at Columbia University, is outspoken in his criticism of the banking sector for precipitating the current recession. I put it to him whether, as Benedict XVI said at a recent general audience, it was greed in the financial sector that was to blame for today's economic woes.

"Greed does not fully describe the outrageous behavior of our bankers," he said. "What they did was prey on the poorest Americans -- it was greed without any moral conscience." He also blamed the financial system that was set up so that no one had to ask moral questions.

"Everyone says 'I'm just doing my job,' no one's accountable and no one has to think of the moral consequences," he said. The question now, he believes, is how to go from these "systemic failures to individual responsibility."

He is also equally angry that the U.S. government should have bailed out the banks with trillions of dollars without any sense of accountability. The decision, the former chief economist for the World Bank said, was a "moral outrage" and certainly not in line with Catholic Social Doctrine.

Also speaking at the meeting was Cardinal Óscar Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga, archbishop of Tegucigalpa in Honduras. The cardinal, who has become a champion for the materially poorest in society, spoke about the implications of globalization from their point of view.

Globalization cannot be reduced to just the free market, he said, but needs "to go deeper" if it is become what Pope John Paul II called the "globalization of solidarity." Echoing the views of Stiglitz, he believes the economic crisis didn't happen because of the markets but because of the "deficit of ethics" in the economic world.

"The human being is always subject and inclined to sin, so we need to recover the ethical dimension, but not as though the Church puts a hat on the people, or a straight-jacket," he explained. "Ethics has to come out from the inside of the person, the best part of the human being, who asks two basic questions: Who am I? And why am I here in this world?"

He added that such an ethical perspective can be formed by each individual looking at the economy in a wider sense, rather than a narrow one limited "to the stock exchange or markets."

Plenty of food for thought which will no doubt be included in some way in the Pope's upcoming social encyclical "Caritas in Veritate."

* * *

Edward Pentin is a freelance writer living in Rome. He can be reached at: epentin@zenit.org.


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DOCUMENTS

Pope's Address to Italian Earthquake Victims

"I Would Like to Embrace You One by One With Affection"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave on April 28, when he visited L'Aquila and the surrounding regions of Abruzzo, Italy, which had been hit by an earthquake April 6.

* * *

Dear Friends,

I have come in person to your splendid, damaged region, that is living through days of great sorrow and precariousness, in order to express my heartfelt sympathy to you in the most direct way possible.

I have been beside you from the first moment ever since I learned the news of the violent earthquake which, in the night of 6 April last, took a toll of almost 300 victims, injuring many and causing extensive material damage to your homes. I followed the news with apprehension, sharing your dismay and your tears for the dead, together with your anxiety over all that you lost in an instant.

I am now here among you: I would like to embrace you one by one with affection. The whole Church is with me, close to your suffering, sharing in your grief at the loss of your relatives and friends, anxious to help you rebuild the houses, churches and firms that have collapsed or have been seriously damaged by the earthquake.

I admired the courage, dignity and faith with which you have also faced this harsh trial, expressing great determination not to give in to adversity. It was not in fact the first earthquake to have hit your region, and today, as in the past, you have not given up. You have not lost heart. There is in you a strength of mind that inspires hope. Very significant in this regard is a saying dear to your elders: "There are still many days behind the Gran Sasso".

In coming here to Onna, one of the centres that has paid a high price in terms of human lives, I could imagine all the sadness and hardship you have felt during these weeks. If it had been possible, I should have liked to have gone to every village and to every district, to all the tent cities and to have met everyone.

I am well aware that despite the commitment of solidarity shown on all sides, there is much daily hardship involved in living out of one's home, in cars or tents, especially because of the cold and the rain. Then I am thinking of all the young people suddenly forced to come to terms with a harsh reality, of the children who have had to interrupt their studies together with their relations and with the elderly, deprived of their habits.

One might say, dear friends, that in a certain way you are in the state of mind of the two disciples of Emmaus, of whom the Evangelist Luke speaks. After the tragic event of the Crucifixion they were going home disappointed and embittered because of the "end" of Jesus. It seemed as though there was no more hope, that God had hidden and was no longer present in the world. But on the way he approached them and began to converse with them. Although they did not recognize him with their eyes, something stirred in their hearts: The words of that "Stranger" rekindled in them the enthusiasm and trust that the experience of Calvary had extinguished.

So now dear friends: My humble presence among you is intended as a tangible sign of the fact that the Crucified Lord is alive, that he is with us, that he is really Risen and does not forget us, does not abandon you. He does not leave your questions about the future unanswered, nor is he deaf to the anxious cry of so many families who have lost everything: homes, savings, work, and even also human lives.

Of course, his practical response passes through our solidarity, which cannot be limited to the initial emergency but must become a permanent, concrete project in time. I encourage everyone, including institutions and businesses, so that this city and these regions may recover.

The Pope is also here with you today to say a word of comfort about your dead: They are alive in God and expect of you a witness of courage and hope. They are waiting to see reborn this land which must be adorned anew with beautiful, solid houses and churches.

It is precisely on behalf of these brothers and sisters that you must commit yourselves once again to living, with recourse to what never dies and what the earthquake has not destroyed, and cannot destroy: love. Love also endures on the other side of the passage of our precarious earthly existence because true Love is God. Those who love, in God, triumph over death and know that they do not lose those they have loved.

I would like to conclude these words by addressing a special prayer to the Lord for the earthquake victims.

We entrust these our loved ones to you, O Lord, knowing
that you do not take the life of your faithful but transform it
and, at the very moment, in which
the dwelling of our exile on this earth is destroyed,
you are concerned with preparing for it an eternal and immortal dwelling place in Paradise.

Holy Father, Lord of Heaven and earth,
hear the cry of pain and of hope
that is raised by this community harshly tried by the earthquake!

It is the silent cry of the blood of mothers, fathers, young people,
and also of tiny innocents which rises from this land.
They have been torn from the love of their dear ones,
may you welcome them all in your peace, Lord, who are God-with-us,
Love who can give us life without end.

We are in need of you and your power,
for in the face of death we feel small and frail;
We pray you, help us, because your support alone
can raise us and lead us to set out together anew on the path of life,
holding one another trustingly by the hand.

We ask this of you through Jesus Christ, Our Saviour,
in whom shines out the hope of blessed resurrection. Amen!

Now, let us say the prayer the Lord taught us. Our Father ...

[After the Pope had imparted the Blessing he added:]

My prayer is with you. We are together and the Lord will help us. Thank you for your courage, your faith and your hope.


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Papal Homily at Canonization Mass

"Let Us Thank the Lord for the Gift of Holiness"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the homily Benedict XVI gave on April 26 at the canonization Mass of five newly recognized saints.

* * *

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

On this Third Sunday in the Easter Season, the liturgy once again focuses our attention on the mystery of the Risen Christ. Victorious over evil and over death, the Author of life who sacrificed himself as a victim of expiation for our sins "is still our priest, our advocate who always pleads our cause. Christ is the victim who dies no more, the Lamb, once slain, who lives for ever" (Easter Preface iii).

Let us allow ourselves to be bathed in the radiance of Easter that shines from this great mystery and with the Responsorial Psalm let us pray: "O Lord, let the light of your countenance shine upon us."

The light of the face of the Risen Christ shines upon us today especially through the Gospel features of the five Blesseds who during this celebration are enrolled in the Roll of Saints: Arcangelo Tadini, Bernardo Tolomei, Nuno de Santa Maria Álvares Pereira, Geltrude Comensoli and Caterina Volpicelli. I willingly join in the homage that the pilgrims are paying to them, gathered here from various nations and to whom I address a cordial greeting with great affection.

The various human and spiritual experiences of these new Saints show us the profound renewal that the mystery of Christ's Resurrection brings about in the human heart; it is a fundamental mystery that orients and guides the entire history of salvation. The Church therefore, especially in this Easter Season, rightly invites us to direct our gaze to the Risen Christ, who is really present in the Sacrament of the Eucharist.

In the Gospel passage, St Luke mentions one of the appearances of the Risen Jesus (24: 35-48). At the very beginning of the passage the Evangelist notes that the two disciples of Emmaus, who hurried back to Jerusalem, had told the Eleven how they recognized him in "the breaking of the bread" (v. 35).

And while they were recounting the extraordinary experience of their encounter with the Lord, he "himself stood among them" (v. 36). His sudden appearance frightened the Apostles. They were fearful to the point that Jesus, in order to reassure them and to overcome every hesitation and doubt, asked them to touch him -- he was not a ghost but a man of flesh and bone -- and then asked them for something to eat.

Once again, as had happened for the two at Emmaus, it is at table while eating with his own that the Risen Christ reveals himself to the disciples, helping them to understand the Scriptures and to reinterpret the events of salvation in the light of Easter.

"Everything written about me," he says, "in the law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled" (v. 44). And he invites them to look to the future: "Repentance and forgiveness of sins [shall] be preached in his name to all nations" (cf. v. 47).

This very experience of repentance and forgiveness is relived in every community in the Eucharistic celebration, especially on Sundays. The Eucharist, the privileged place in which the Church recognizes "the Author of life" (Acts 3: 15) is "the breaking of the bread," as it is called in the Acts of the Apostles. In it, through faith, we enter into communion with Christ, who is "the priest, the altar, and the lamb of sacrifice" (cf. Preface for Easter, 5) and is among us.

Let us gather round him to cherish the memory of his words and of the events contained in Scripture; let us relive his Passion, death and Resurrection. In celebrating the Eucharist we communicate with Christ, the victim of expiation, and from him we draw forgiveness and life.

What would our lives as Christians be without the Eucharist? The Eucharist is the perpetual, living inheritance which the Lord has bequeathed to us in the Sacrament of his Body and his Blood and which we must constantly rethink and deepen so that, as venerable Pope Paul VI said, it may "impress its inexhaustible effectiveness on all the days of our earthly life" (Insegnamenti, v [1967], p. 779).

Nourished with the Eucharistic Bread, the Saints we are venerating today brought their mission of evangelical love to completion with their own special charisms in the various areas in which they worked.

St Arcangelo Tadini spent long hours in prayer before the Eucharist. Always focusing his pastoral ministry on the totality of the human person, he encouraged the human and spiritual growth of his parishioners. This holy priest, this holy parish priest, a man who belonged entirely to God ready in every circumstance to let himself be guided by the Holy Spirit, was at the same time prepared to face the urgent needs of the moment and find a remedy for them.

For this reason he undertook many practical and courageous initiatives such as the organization of the "Catholic Workers Mutual Aid Association," the construction of a spinning mill and a residence for the workers and, in 1900, the foundation of the "Congregation of Worker Sisters of the Holy House of Nazareth" to evangelize the working world by sharing in the common efforts after the example of the Holy Family of Nazareth.

How prophetic the charismatic intuition of Father Tadini was and how timely his example remains today in an epoch of serious financial crisis! He reminds us that only by cultivating a constant and profound relationship with the Lord, especially in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, can we bring the Gospel leaven to the various fields of work and to every area of our society.

Love for prayer and for manual labour also distinguished St Bernardo Tolomei, the initiator of a unique Benedictine monastic movement. His was a Eucharistic life, entirely dedicated to contemplation, expressed in humble service to neighbour. Because of his rare spirit of humility and brotherly acceptance, he was re-elected abbot for 27 years, until his death. Moreover, in order to guarantee the future of his foundation, on 21 January 1344 he obtained from Clement VI papal approval of the new Benedictine Congregation called "Our Lady of Monte Oliveto".

During the epidemic of the Black Death in 1348, he left the solitude of Monte Oliveto for the monastery of S. Benedetto at Porta Tufi, Siena, to attend to his monks stricken with the plague, and died, himself a victim, as an authentic martyr of love.

The example of this Saint invites us to express our faith in a life dedicated to God in prayer and spent at the service of our neighbour, impelled by a love that is also ready to make the supreme sacrifice.

"Know that the Lord has set apart the godly for himself; the Lord hears when I call to him" (Psalm 4: 3). These words of the Responsorial Psalm express the secret of the life of Bl. Nuno de Santa María, a hero and saint of Portugal. The 70 years of his life belong to the second half of the 14th century and the first half of the 15th, which saw this nation consolidate its independence from Castille and expand beyond the ocean not without a special plan of God opening new routes that were to favour the transit of Christ's Gospel to the ends of the earth.

St Nuno felt he was an instrument of this lofty design and enrolled in the militia Christi, that is, in the service of witness that every Christian is called to bear in the world. He was characterized by an intense life of prayer and absolute trust in divine help.

Although he was an excellent soldier and a great leader, he never permitted these personal talents to prevail over the supreme action that comes from God. St Nuno allowed no obstacle to come in the way of God's action in his life, imitating Our Lady, to whom he was deeply devoted and to whom he publicly attributed his victories. At the end of his life, he retired to the Carmelite convent whose building he had commissioned.

I am glad to point this exemplary figure out to the whole Church particularly because he exercised his life of faith and prayer in contexts apparently unfavourable to it, as proof that in any situation, even military or in war time, it is possible to act and to put into practice the values and principles of Christian life, especially if they are placed at the service of the common good and the glory of God.

Since childhood, Geltrude Comensoli felt a special attraction for Jesus present in the Eucharist. Adoration of Christ in the Eucharist became the principal aim of her life, we could almost say the habitual condition of her existence. Indeed, it was in the presence of the Eucharist that St Geltrude realized what her vocation and mission in the Church was to be: to dedicate herself without reserve to apostolic and missionary action, especially for youth.

Thus, in obedience to Pope Leo XIII, her Institute came into being which endeavoured to translate the "charity contemplated" in the Eucharistic Christ, into "charity lived," in dedication to one's needy neighbour.

In a bewildered and all too often wounded society like ours, to a youth, like that of our day in search of values and a meaning for their lives, as a sound reference point St Geltrude points to God who, in the Eucharist, has made himself our travelling companion. She reminds us that "adoration must prevail over all the other charitable works," for it is from love for Christ who died and rose and who is really present in the Eucharistic Sacrament, that Gospel charity flows which impels us to see all human beings as our brothers and sisters.

St Caterina Volpicelli was also a witness of divine love. She strove "to belong to Christ in order to bring to Christ" those whom she met in Naples at the end of the 19th century, in a period of spiritual and social crisis. For her too the secret was the Eucharist. She recommended that her first collaborators cultivate an intense spiritual life in prayer and, especially, in vital contact with Jesus in the Eucharist. Today this is still the condition for continuing the work and mission which she began and which she bequeathed as a legacy to the "Servants of the Sacred Heart."

In order to be authentic teachers of faith, desirous of passing on to the new generations the values of Christian culture, it is indispensable, as she liked to repeat, to release God from the prisons in which human beings have confined him.

In fact, only in the Heart of Christ can humanity find its "permanent dwelling place." St Caterina shows to her spiritual daughters and to all of us the demanding journey of a conversion that radically changes the heart, and is expressed in actions consistent with the Gospel. It is thus possible to lay the foundations for building a society open to justice and solidarity, overcoming that economic and cultural imbalance which continues to exist in a large part of our planet.

Dear brothers and sisters, let us thank the Lord for the gift of holiness that shines out in the Church with rare beauty today in Arcangelo Tadini, Bernardo Tolomei, Nuno de Santa Maria Álvares Pereira, Geltrude Comensoli and Caterina Volpicelli.

Let us be attracted by their examples, let us be guided by their teachings, so that our existence too may become a hymn of praise to God, in the footsteps of Jesus, worshipped with faith in the mystery of the Eucharist and served generously in our neighbour.

May the maternal intercession of Mary, Queen of Saints and of these five new luminous examples of holiness whom we venerate joyfully today, obtain for us that we may carry out this evangelical mission. Amen!


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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

ZE090506

ZENIT

The World Seen From Rome

Daily dispatch - May 06, 2009


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VATICAN DOSSIER
Benedict XVI Greets Holy Land Hosts
Christians Have New Take on World, Says Pope
Benedict XVI Urges Doctors to Serve Life
32 New Swiss Guards Promise to Protect Pope

WORLD FEATURES
Cardinal Warns 400,000 More Children Could Die
Can Australians Raise a Family on Minimum Wage?

NEWS BRIEFS
Children Pray to Stop Drug Violence in Mexico

INTERVIEW
Confession Questions From the Pew

WORDS MADE FLESH
Making Our Home in Jesus

WEDNESDAY'S AUDIENCE
On St. John Damascene

DOCUMENTS
Pope's Address to Biblical Commission



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VATICAN DOSSIER

Benedict XVI Greets Holy Land Hosts

"I Will Be Coming Among You as a Pilgrim of Peace"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI today offered a special message to residents of Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories in preparation for his pilgrimage there that starts Friday.

"I will be coming among you as a pilgrim of peace," the Pope told them at the end of today's general audience in St. Peter's Square. And he promised them that he would be praying for peace for their families.

"I wish this morning to take the opportunity through this radio and television broadcast to greet all the peoples of those lands," the Holy Father said. "I am eagerly looking forward to being with you and to sharing with you your aspirations and hopes as well as your pains and struggles."

He continued, "My primary intention is to visit the places made holy by the life of Jesus, and, to pray at them for the gift of peace and unity for your families, and all those for whom the Holy Land and the Middle East is home."

Benedict XVI noted that he will be meeting with representatives of Muslim and Jewish communities, saying that "great strides have been made in dialogue and cultural exchange" with them.

And he had a special message for Catholics of the region: "In a special way I warmly greet the Catholics of the region and ask you to join me in praying that the visit will bear much fruit for the spiritual and civic life of all who dwell in the Holy Land."

"May we all praise God for his goodness," he concluded. "May we all be people of hope. May we all be steadfast in our desire and efforts for peace."


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Christians Have New Take on World, Says Pope

Explains How Incarnation Justifies Use of Images

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Christian theology offers a new vision of the physical world since Christ became part of it in taking on flesh, says Benedict XVI.

The Pope explained this today during the general audience in St. Peter's Square, in which he spoke of St. John Damascene, one of the great defenders of the use of images in worship.

John Damascene was one of the first to distinguish between adoration and veneration, the Holy Father explained.

"This distinction quickly resulted very important to respond in a Christian way to those who claimed as universal and perennial the observance of the severe prohibition in the Old Testament about the use of images in worship," he said. "This was a great discussion also in the Islamic world, which accepts this Jewish tradition of the total exclusion of images for worship. Christians on the other hand, in this context, considered the problem and found a justification for the veneration of images."

The Pontiff cited one of the saint's explanations: "Is not perhaps matter the wood of the cross thrice blessed? ... And the ink and the holy book of the Gospels are not matter? The salvific altar that dispenses us the bread of life is not matter? ... And before all, is not matter the flesh and the blood of my Lord? Should the sacred character of all of this be suppressed?"

This Christian vision, in which "because of the Incarnation, matter appears as divinized, is seen as the dwelling place of God" is "a new vision of the world and material realities," the Bishop of Rome continued. "God has become flesh and flesh has become truly the dwelling place of God, whose glory shines forth in the human face of Christ.

"Therefore the invitations of the doctor of the East are even today extremely current, considering the great dignity that matter has received in the Incarnation, able to come to be, in faith, efficient sign and sacrament of man's encounter with God."

Optimistic

Benedict XVI noted how St. John reflected on God's love for humanity manifested in the Incarnation.

Taking into account, he said, "the wound inflicted on human nature by free choice desired by God and used inappropriately by man, with all the consequences of widespread disharmony that have come from it," there is a "need, clearly perceived by the theology of Damascene, that the nature in which the goodness and beauty of God is reflected, wounded by our fault, 'would be strengthened and renewed' by the descent of the Son of God in the flesh."

The Pope cited John's teaching: "It was necessary for nature to be strengthened and renewed and that the path of virtue would be indicated and concretely taught, [the path] that banishes corruption and leads to eternal life. ... Thus appeared on the horizon of history the great sea of the love of God for man."

This, the Holy Father reflected, "is a beautiful expression. We see, on one hand, the beauty of creation and on the other, the destruction caused by human fault. But we see in the Son of God, who descends to renew nature, the sea of the love of God for man."

"We can imagine the consolation and the joy that filled the hearts of the faithful with these words so full of fascinating images," the Pontiff concluded. "We too hear them today, sharing the same sentiments of the Christians of that time: God wants to rest in us, he wants to renew nature also through our conversion, he wants to make us participants in his divinity. May the Lord help us to make these words the essence of our lives."


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Benedict XVI Urges Doctors to Serve Life

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Life is a value that shows the wisdom and love of God, and every doctor in the world should be at the service of life, says Benedict XVI.

The Pope said this today to a numerous group of Italian doctors who were among the pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square for the general audience.

He told the health care professionals that the defense of life is "an eloquent testimony of human and Christian solidarity." And he asked them to put their skills "at the service of the human being from conception until natural death."

The Holy Father invited the doctors to "carry on with generosity in your precious service to life, a fundamental value in which the wisdom and love of God is reflected."

"May your work be enriched every day with a deep spirit of faith," he said, "and animated by fidelity and consistence with the principles that should inspire the activities of every doctor."


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32 New Swiss Guards Promise to Protect Pope

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Today in the courtyard of the Vatican apostolic palace, 32 new recruits were added to the ranks of the Pontifical Swiss Guard, currently led by Commander Daniel Anrig.

May 6 is the traditional swearing-in day for new guards because on that day in 1527, some 150 members of the Swiss Guard lost their lives during the sack of Rome, protecting Pope Clement VII and the Church from the onslaught of Emperor Charles V's troops.

Today's events included a Mass for the recruits and their families, celebrated by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Pope's secretary of state, in St. Peter's Basilica.

The swearing-in ceremony took place in the presence of members of the Roman Curia, diplomatic representatives and civil and religious authorities from Switzerland, including Major-General Andre Blattman, the new commander-in-chief of the Swiss armed forces.


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WORLD FEATURES

Cardinal Warns 400,000 More Children Could Die

Appeals to Rich Countries to Stop Retracting Foreign Aid

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The president of Caritas Internationalis is appealing to wealthy countries in this time of economic crisis to remember the poor, asking them not to retract foreign aid in favor of national bailouts.

Cardinal Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga, archbishop of Tegucigalpa, Honduras, made this appeal in an address to Holy See ambassadors from a dozen European countries at the Caritas headquarters in the Vatican.

He spoke about how the economic crisis, cuts to foreign aid and climate change affect the poor of the world, Caritas reported today.

The cardinal noted that the "poor are suffering" because wealthier countries are directing funds to bailouts, while cutting back or "not honoring their commitment to aid."

He told the ambassadors that up to 400,000 more children could die every year if the economic crisis continues, and that millions of people could fall into poverty.

"Our fears are that the poorest people who have benefited least from decades of unequal economic growth will pay the greater price for this folly," Cardinal Rodríguez Maradiaga asserted.

"We can either greet 2009 with paralysis or as an opportunity for change," he said. This year, he added, could be the year to construct a "blueprint for a better world."

The cardinal called on international leaders to use their influence in order to persuade voters that "supporting the poor is not a fair-weather choice but a moral responsibility."

He added, "Each of us has a responsibility to promote and to protect the common good, and to hold our governments to account for their actions."

Referring to the Pauline year, Cardinal Rodríguez Maradiaga expressed the hope that the leaders of wealthy countries will experience their own "road to Damascus moment."

"There must be a conversion away from the old system of blind greed to one where our eyes are opened to justice and dignity for all," he said.


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Can Australians Raise a Family on Minimum Wage?

Bishops Speak Up as Nation Considers Salaries for Poor

ALEXANDRIA, Australia, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Australian bishops are calling for a just minimum wage for working families, particularly in the midst of the current global economic crisis.

This appeal was made in a pastoral letter for the May 1 feast of St. Joseph the Worker, released Friday by the Australian Catholic Social Justice Council, an agency founded by and responsible to the bishops' conference.

The letter, signed by the council's chairman, Bishop Christopher Saunders of Broome, stated, "At a time when our political leaders are considering how the community will bear the costs of the crisis, it must be remembered that wage justice for the most vulnerable is more important than ever."

It noted that the country is making its annual minimum wage review "just as the crisis is having profound effects and unemployment is on the rise."

The council pointed to those "on the fringes of the labor market," the workers "who rely on low wages topped up with government payments," who "have little or no bargaining power and are susceptible to unemployment."

It added, "They are the most vulnerable among those our politicians call 'battlers' or 'working families.'"

The council called for a "decent minimum wage safety net" as "a most important factor in providing security for working families and alleviating the impact of what our prime minister has said will be the worst economic downturn in 75 years."

This "safety net must meet basic needs of workers and their families relative to general living standards in the community" and "should keep pace with price increases and keep workers and their families out of poverty," the letter stated.

It added that "these expectations are not being met."

Inadequate calculations

For years, it reported, the Australian Catholic Council for Employment Relations has "argued that the federal minimum wage and other low paid classifications are inadequate to meet the needs of individuals and their families."

The standard calculated costs of living are outdated and underestimated, the council explained, and the "skyrocketing costs of housing have not been properly taken into account."

It noted that the "minimum wage safety net is failing" low income families, who do not receive enough to "keep their children fed, clothed, housed and educated, let alone meet the costs of childcare or emergency situations like unforeseen health problems."

The council affirmed, "The Church has long maintained that a wage should meet the needs not only of the worker but also the worker's family, and that the minimum wage, including benefits, should meet these needs without requiring the other parent to take up employment if this is not the parents' choice."

It pointed out that the minimum wage policy should not be based on the needs of a single person without dependants, but should take into account "the family responsibilities of workers."

In the midst of the economic crisis, the council acknowledged, while discussing fair wages, arguments will be made that "minimum wages should be frozen or even reduced to ease cost pressures on employers and slow the rate of job loss."

It continued: "Effectively, such arguments suggest those who rely on safety net wages should carry the costs of job protection and the government's fiscal stimulus package. But we know that these workers have little or no discretionary income and a limited capacity to bear this cost."

"Pope John Paul II observed how poverty most often results from the violation of the dignity of work, either through unemployment or the denial of a just wage," the letter affirmed.

It asserted: "Australia needs a minimum wage that ensures families are protected from poverty and have the ability to nurture and care adequately for each family member.

"The fundamental rights of families to create a home, to welcome the sacred gift of life and raise a family require the guarantee of a decent family wage."

The council called on the federal government to "bear in mind those who have struggled to survive on low wages and income support."

It added: "This financial crisis was not of their making. They should not be deprived of the wage increases they need to meet their basic costs of living."

--- --- ---

On the Net:

Australian Catholic Social Justice Council: www.socialjustice.catholic.org.au


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NEWS BRIEFS

Children Pray to Stop Drug Violence in Mexico

St. Benedict Center Responds to Bishop's Request

HARVARD, Massachusetts, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- A religious organization in the United States is mobilizing its resources to ask for 1 million rosaries to be said for a Mexican border town wracked by drug violence.

The lay members of the St. Benedict Center in Still River, Massachusetts, are doing this in response to a request by the town's bishop, Renato Ascencio León of Juarez, Mexico, to have the prayers said by Oct. 7, the feast of the Holy Rosary.

Since January 2008, there have been over 2,000 murders reported in response to the government's concerted effort to crack down on drug traffickers in the region. Underestimating the strength of the drug cartels, the military has met with strong resistance.

The students of the Immaculate Heart of Mary School, associated with the St. Benedict Center, will join in the efforts by learning about Juarez, making rosaries to send to the villagers there, and raising awareness through a poster contest.

"Catholics believe that we can all be united through prayer, and that our efforts can bring comfort and healing to those even thousands of miles away," said Mary Alexander, member of the Third Order. "Further, by getting the children involved in this effort, they come to understand what true charity and love of one's neighbor actually means."

The bishop of Juarez responded with a letter to the efforts of the center, saying there "is no doubt that our prayer, raised to the celestial Father through the hands of Mary Most Holy, will quickly return peace to our country."

--- --- ---

On the Net:

To register rosaries said for Juarez: www.millonxciudadjuarez.org

St. Benedict Center: www.saintbenedict.com


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INTERVIEW

Confession Questions From the Pew

A Pastor Speaks About Promoting and Understanding the Sacrament

By Genevieve Pollock

ANOKA, Minnesota, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The sacrament of confession was meant to be a source of grace and joy, but many people do not know what it is all about, says a Minnesota pastor.

Father Michael Van Sloun, the pastor of St. Stephen's Church in Anoka, authored a 10-part series on confession currently being published in the newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

In this interview with ZENIT, Father Van Sloun speaks about his pastoral experience, answering questions about promoting confession, how much is too often, and what to do when you do not get along with your confessor.

Q: What results are you hoping for from the confession series you are writing for the archdiocesan newspaper?

Father Van Sloun: The most important result that I am hoping for is better catechesis about the sacraments.

My experience, after being in the parish for a long time, is that many people, particularly adults, when they came through formation as children, had instruction about the sacraments that lacked content. Consequently parents who are trying to teach their children really do not even have all of the information that they need.

I do the sacramental preparation for first reconciliation in our parish. We have about 150 children that make their first confession every year.

Thus I have a large number of parents that I visit with on an annual basis about the sacrament. I can see that the lack of fundamental information that they have about the sacrament is a little appalling. They cannot teach what they don't have. So I'm trying to fill in those gaps.

I am an old high school basketball coach, so I understand that if you want your team to do well, they have to have the fundamentals.

My impression is that our parents do not have the fundamentals about our sacramental theology; for them to practice confession themselves, and for them to teach their children well, they are missing these details.

It is my goal to try and provide them with the fundamentals so that they know their faith better and can communicate it better to their own children.

One of the problems when I was in graduate theology, was that I saw these things taught from such a theoretical and historical way, but not in the practical way that helps the person in the pew. That's what I am trying to do, to explain it in more of a practical way that is accessible to the average Catholic.

Q: What do you think are some ways that priests can promote confession in their parishes? In other words, what is it that gets people back in the confessional?

Father Van Sloun: People have to hear about it. Otherwise we're not going to make a shift toward it.

My associate pastors and I make a conscious effort. We try not to go overboard, but we do want to make sure that it is regularly mentioned in preaching, in homilies.

Another thing that I do to keep it before the people is that I write a bulletin article every Advent and every Lent, to again bring up the theology of the sacrament. Then we have a reconciliation day, where we have a priest available throughout the day, both in Advent and Lent.

In our announcements after Mass, we announce when confessions are and encourage people to come. In the announcements, the articles, the way we do the publicity, we try to keep it before them as valuable.

Q: How do you emphasize the value, the worth of the sacrament of confession? What is it that motivates people to get there? What focus do you take when you are talking about confession?

Father Van Sloun: One of the things I talk about is celebrating these major feasts, like Christmas and Easter, in the state of grace, and what a source of joy this can be.

One of my favorite parables is in Luke, Chapter 13: the parable of the bent-over woman. It appears when you look at it that she is like a hunchback, but Luke's deeper theological meaning is that she is crippled by the guilt and shame of her sin, weighed down by all of the burden of her sins, that have been there for a very long time.

Jesus is preaching in the synagogue in Capernaum and he looks out over the assembly, and he basically stops what he is doing because he can see that she is so troubled. He reaches out and touches her and says, "You are healed of your affliction." In saying this he says, "You are forgiven of your sin."

She stands up straight and glorifies God. She is full of joy when she is restored.

Thus, when we speak to people, we say, look at what this offers you. You don't have to carry this burden around anymore.

We explain that Jesus is willing to restore you, wanting to restore you, that your lost joy can be restored, and you can celebrate these great events in a wonderful way.

Q: In addition to the problem of going to confession too little, is it also possible to go to confession too much? To confess sins that are too small?

Father Van Sloun: It can be a beneficial spiritual practice to confess small or little sins. As a person grows in holiness, sensitivity to sin increases, and things that were not offensive before can become quite offensive. Things as "small" as a raised tone of voice, a dirty look, a comment or a mean thought are sinful and deserve attention.

What we are trying to avoid is scrupulosity. I've heard people complain about Catholic guilt, but guilt is the awareness that we have committed sin, and if we lose that we are in a terrible place.

We need to be able to have a sense of guilt, but it has to be a healthy rather than an overdone sense of guilt.

Q: What is a recommended frequency for confession? Should the faithful go on a regular basis, or only go if they are in mortal sin?

Father Van Sloun: The Church teaches that you are only obliged to approach the sacrament when you have committed a mortal sin, and if you have, please go as quickly as possible.

If you haven't committed a mortal sin, the Church says that going to reconciliation for venial sins or less serious sins is still a good avenue to God's healing grace. So we invite people to come even if they haven't committed mortal sins.

I've heard a lot of different approaches to this. One approach is to go a couple times every year during each of the major seasons: Advent and Christmas, and then also during Lent and Easter.

Another approach is to go with the changing of the seasons, every Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall, in other words, quarterly. When I was a youngster I was taught to go monthly. There are some who suggest weekly, but we do not recommend that often to our parishioners.

I try to talk about the positives rather than the negatives. What I am trying to frame up is the beauty and the grace of what the sacrament provides.

Q: How would you encourage people to look at confession positively, rather than looking at their sinfulness? What would you encourage them to see in confession?

Father Van Sloun: In the first article for the archdiocesan paper, I wrote about how Jesus instituted the sacrament. He was very concerned with the reality of sin and the forgiveness of sins, and he commissioned his disciples to forgive peoples' sins.

Forgiveness is the flip side of the law of the love, and he speaks to it greatly. Occasionally we are going to fail, and so for us to get back on the right road, Jesus gives us a wonderful avenue to be able to get restored, cleaned up and moving ahead.

Q: What would you tell someone who avoids confession because he thinks it is mentally unhealthy to focus on guilt, sinfulness or shame?

Father Van Sloun: I think it is mentally extremely healthy to focus on guilt and shame.

If you look at, for example, Alcoholics Anonymous, the 12-step program, the fourth and fifth steps are: I'm going to make a fearless moral inventory and tell someone about what I've done.

It's very clear when you look at these rehabilitation programs that owning up to your sins and telling someone else unburdens you.

When people go to their therapist, one of the things that they do is, in an honest and safe situation, look at the troubles of their life, the problems that they've caused, and try to grow beyond them. There is a kind of inborn need to own up and move on.

We as Catholics have in our sacramental system a way not only to own up and move on, but to invite God's healing grace into the process.

Sociopaths do not pay attention to their evil and are not bothered by it. It's living in a world of denial, an unreal world to not be able to pay attention to your sin and deal with it.

It's unhealthy to not pay attention to our sins. It is healthy to realize our sins, admit them, quit them and move on.

The psychologist might ask, "What will make you happy?" We say, however: "What would make God happy? What would be pleasing to God?" Thus the fundamental spiritual question ends up being different.

It is unfortunate if sin was hammered really hard in yesteryear and it led to scrupulosity. But to say that we overdid it one way in the past and that we cannot talk about it anymore would be to swing the pendulum too far the other way.

Q: How would a person know if they are falling into scrupulosity?

Father Van Sloun: A really good confessor will probably give you some honest feedback about it.

I have a number of people that approach me with the sacrament, and they may have a question like, "Am I going a little overboard with this?" It would be the confessor's job to help lighten that burden and to help them grow a little beyond it.

Q: If a personality conflict exists with one's parish priest, or if one disagrees with what is said in the confessional, what can a parishioner do without falling into being a "cafeteria Catholic?"

Father Van Sloun: This question comes up a fair amount. When I was a young person, one of the priests that I went to when I was in high school did not handle me well in the sacrament.

I've spoken to many other people that have also had troubles. I explain it to them this way: "So you had a bad experience with reconciliation. Let's compare this to going out to eat. You go to a restaurant, and the food is overcooked, undercooked, or there is bad service.

"You have a bad experience at the restaurant so you decide that you're not going to go back there. Right?" They agree, "yes."

I then ask them, "So does that mean you're going to decide to quit eating?" They respond, "No, we decided to go somewhere else."

I conclude: "So that means that eating is not bad; actually it's essential. But that particular place is not good. Thus you find another place to go."

If you've had a bad experience with a confessor, it doesn't mean the sacrament is bad. It means it was badly administered by that priest. Therefore you don't quit going to the sacrament, because the sacrament is good and worthwhile. You go find someone else who can help you better.

Now in a metro area like here, there are eight priests within a 10-minute drive. The problem, the place where my heart aches, is if you're living out in a rural area. You have one priest, and the next town is 25 minutes away and is twinned with the same priest.

People out in rural areas don't have the kind of options that people in metro areas do. I tell them, if they want to re-approach that priest sometime later they can. But sometimes if you're hurt you just really don't want to go back there.

Perhaps on the day that you go into town for shopping, you can do "two for one." In rural America, people often go into their regional center to go to the doctor or go shopping. I would invite them if they cannot get what they're hoping for in their local parish, to find it somewhere else.

The sacrament is too important to say "I'm not going to do it."


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WORDS MADE FLESH

Making Our Home in Jesus

Biblical Reflection for the 5th Sunday of Easter

By Father Thomas Rosica, CSB

TORONTO, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- In John's Gospel (15:1-8) for the 5th Sunday of Easter, we have the image of the vine and its branches to express the relationship between Christ and his disciples. We should not be surprised that at one level it seems utterly simple, but that at other levels it fills us with a sense of mystery, awe, and beauty, always leaving us wanting more.

The branches of a vine have an intimate relationship with the vine, depending on it at all times and forming one living organism with it. The vine, which can be a bit foreign in northern climates, is natural for anyone in the Middle East, where many families possess a vine, a fig tree, or olive trees in their gardens.

Jesus tells his followers that he is the true vine, the real vine, and that they are the branches, whose task is to bear fruit by sharing his life: "I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. Abide in me, and I in you. If you abide in me, and my words in you, ask whatever you want. Apart from me, you can do nothing."

While the images of Christ as king and lord, teacher, shepherd and judge, have their own importance in forming our perspective on how Christ relates to us, these images need to be balanced by such images as the vine, which integrate the disciple into the life of Christ and Christ into the life of the disciple in an intimate unity and closeness that the other images might not always convey.

Today's passage is one of the classic descriptions of authentic Christian spirituality. The image of the vine, while inviting us to a depth of spirituality, sets that personal quest within the larger context of the family of God, stretching through time from Abraham to the present day and beyond, and through space from the Middle East in the first century to the four corners of the earth today.

If Jesus is the vine, we are summoned to ‘abide,' to ‘live,' to make our home ‘in him.' The Gospel text of the vine challenges us: How do we maintain intimacy with the living God as we strive to be obedient to our vocation of bearing fruit for the world? What does it mean, to ‘abide' or ‘dwell' in the vine, to be intimately attached to Jesus?

Abiding in Jesus includes being part of the life of the Church, committed to the daily and weekly fellowship of his people, in mutual support, prayer, common worship, sacramental life, study and not least, work for the Gospel in the world. In every Eucharistic celebration we are drawn into that intimate fellowship both with Jesus himself and with each other at his table.

Authentic Christian spirituality is the personal knowledge of Jesus Christ given to us, as the vine gives its sap to the branches, so that we can be extensions of his work, his love, his fruitbearing, his glorifying of the Father. That is the heart of the Eucharistic mystery.

And yet as soon as Jesus introduced the theme of the vine and the branches in the Gospel passage, he speaks of his Father, the vinedresser, doing two things that require a knife. Every branch that doesn't bear fruit, the Father removes, cuts away; and every branch that does bear fruit the Father prunes, so that it may bear more fruit.

The spirituality to which this Gospel passage invites us is not one of unbridled personal development, fulfilling all the potential we might discover within ourselves. As we follow Jesus and come to know him personally, we find him calling us to submit to the pruning-knife, to cut out some things from our lives that are good in themselves and that would even have had the potential to develop into fruitbearing branches, in order that other things may flourish. Pruning is always a painful process. It is a form of loss or death. The vinedresser is never more intimately involved than when wielding the pruning-knife!

The call to abide in the vine is a call to a personal and intimate knowledge of Jesus himself, not an idea, but a living person. True disciples of Jesus are dependent on the inner presence and activity of Christ for the renewal and regeneration of their own life into one of faith and love. True disciples can only be effective in the regeneration of the lives of others when they are "plugged into Jesus," grafted onto his life, allowing his very presence to pulsate through their minds and hearts.

The images of vine and vineyard are brought together beautifully in that well-known passage from "Lumen Gentium," No. 6, the Second Vatican Council's Dogmatic Constitution on the Church:

"The Church is a piece of land to be cultivated, the tillage of God. On that land the ancient olive tree grows whose holy roots were the Prophets and in which the reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles has been brought about and will be brought about. That land, like a choice vineyard, has been planted by the heavenly Husbandman. The true vine is Christ who gives life and the power to bear abundant fruit to the branches, that is, to us, who through the Church remain in Christ without whom we can do nothing."

To illustrate this dependency, this grafting on the Lord, let me share with you some profound words of a great woman of the Church, St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross [Edith Stein] (1891-1942), Carmelite, martyr, co-patroness of Europe, and one who knew what it meant to be intimately connected to the Lord. They are taken from Chapter 6 of her "Essays on Woman" (ICS Publications).

"The notion of the Church as community of the faithful is the most accessible to human reason. Whoever believes in Christ and his gospel, hopes for the fulfillment of his promises, clings to him in love, and keeps his commandments must unite with all who are like-minded in the deepest communion of mind and heart. Those who adhered to the Lord during his stay on earth were the early seeds of the great Christian community; they spread that community and that faith which held them together, until they have been inherited by us today through the process of time.

"But, if even a natural human community is more than a loose union of single individuals, if even here we can verify a movement developing into a kind of organic unit, it must be still more true of the supernatural community of the Church. The union of the soul with Christ differs from the union among people in the world: It is a rooting and growing in him (so we are told by the parable of the vine and the branches) which begins in baptism, and which is constantly strengthened and formed through the sacraments in diverse ways. However this real union with Christ implies the growth of a genuine community among all Christians. Thus the Church forms the Mystical Body of Christ. The Body is a living Body, and the spirit which gives the Body life is Christ's spirit, streaming from the head to all parts (Ephesians 5:23,30). The spirit which Christ radiates is the Holy Spirit; the Church is thus the temple of the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 2:21-22)."

This week, let us pray that our belonging to Christ be profound and real, going beyond all of the turbulence that exists on life's surface. May Christ's very life flow through us, building up the Body of Christ that is the Church.

[The readings for this Sunday are Acts 9:26-31; 1 John 3:18-24; John 15:1-8.]

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Basilian Father Thomas Rosica, chief executive officer of the Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation and Television Network in Canada, is a consultor to the Pontifical Council for Social Communications. He can be reached at: rosica@saltandlighttv.org.

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On the Net:

Salt and Light Catholic Television Network Web site: www.saltandlighttv.org


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Wednesday's Audience

On St. John Damascene

"God Wants to Rest in Us"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today during the general audience in St. Peter's Square. He continued his series on great writers of the Church in the Middle Ages, focusing today on St. John Damascene.

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Dear brothers and sisters:

I would like to speak today about John Damascene, a prominent personality in the history of Byzantine theology, a great doctor in the history of the universal Church. He is above all an eye witness of the passage from the Greek and Syriac culture, shared in the eastern part of the Byzantine Empire, to the culture of Islam, which took over space with its military conquests in the territory ordinarily recognized as the Middle or Near East.

John, born to a rich Christian family, took on while still young the post -- perhaps also held by his father -- as the economic head of the kingdom. Quite soon, however, unsatisfied with life at court, he fully developed a choice for the monastic life, entering the monastery of San Sabas, close to Jerusalem. It was around the year 700. Never leaving the monastery, he dedicated himself with all his strength to ascesis and literary activity, without spurning a certain pastoral activity, of which his numerous homilies give witness. His liturgical memorial is celebrated Dec. 4. Pope Leo XIII proclaimed him a doctor of the universal Church in 1890.

In the East, he is remembered above all for his three discourses against those who calumniate holy images, [discourses] which were condemned after his death by the iconoclast Council of Hieria (754). These discourses, however, were the principal motive for his reinstatement and canonization by the orthodox fathers gathered in the Second Council of Nicaea (787), the Seventh Ecumenical Council. In these texts it is possible to find the first important theological attempts to legitimize the veneration of sacred images, uniting to them the mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God in the womb of the Virgin Mary.

John Damascene was also one of the first to distinguish between the public and private worship of Christians, and between adoration (latreia) and veneration (proskynesis): The first can only be directed to God, highly spiritual; the second on the other hand can use an image to direct oneself to he who is represented by it.

Obviously, a saint cannot in any way be identified with the material of which an icon is made. This distinction quickly resulted very important to respond in a Christian way to those who claimed as universal and perennial the observance of the severe prohibition in the Old Testament about the use of images in worship. This was a great discussion also in the Islamic world, which accepts this Jewish tradition of the total exclusion of images for worship. Christians on the other hand, in this context, considered the problem and found a justification for the veneration of images.

Damascene wrote: "In other times, God had never been represented in an image, being incorporeal and without a face. But given that now God has been seen in the flesh and has lived among man, I represent what is visible in God. I do not venerate matter, but the Creator of matter, who has made himself matter for me and has deigned to dwell in matter and carry out my salvation through matter. I will never cease because of this to venerate the matter through with salvation has come to me.

"But I do not venerate it absolutely like [I do] God! How could God be that which has received existence from non being? ... Rather I venerate and respect also all the rest of the matter that has procured salvation, inasmuch as it is full of holy energies and graces. Is not perhaps matter the wood of the cross thrice blessed? ... And the ink and the holy book of the Gospels are not matter? The salvific altar that dispenses us the bread of life is not matter? ... And before all, is not matter the flesh and the blood of my Lord? Should the sacred character of all of this be suppressed? Or should it be conceded to the tradition of the Church the veneration of the images of God and that of the friends of God that are sanctified by the name they carry, and because of this reason are dwelt in by the grace of the Holy Spirit. Do not be offended therefore by matter: It is not despicable because nothing that God has made is despicable" (Contra imaginum calumniatores, I, 16, ed. Kotter, pp. 89-90).

We see that, because of the Incarnation, matter appears as divinized, is seen as the dwelling place of God. This is a new vision of the world and material realities. God has become flesh and flesh has become truly the dwelling place of God, whose glory shines forth in the human face of Christ. Therefore the invitations of the doctor of the East are even today extremely current, considering the great dignity that matter has received in the Incarnation, able to come to be, in faith, efficient sign and sacrament of man's encounter with God.

John Damascene is, therefore, a privileged witness of the veneration of icons, which would come to be one of the most distinctive aspects of Eastern theology and spirituality up to today. And nevertheless it is a form of worship that simply belongs to the Christian faith, to the faith in this God that has become flesh and made himself visible. The teaching of St. John Damascene thus is inserted in the tradition of the universal Church, whose doctrine on the sacraments takes into account that material elements taken from nature can change through grace in virtue of the invocation (epiclesis) of the Holy Spirit, accompanied by the confession of the true faith.

United to these underlying ideas, John Damascene also places the veneration of the relics of the saints, on the base of the conviction that holy Christians, having been made participants in the resurrection of Christ, cannot be considered simply as "the dead." Enumerating, for example, those whose relics or images are worthy of veneration, John specifies in his third discourse in defense of images: "Before all (we venerate) those among whom God has rested, the only holy one who dwells among the saints (cf. Isaiah 57:15), such as the holy Mother of God and all the saints. These are those who, inasmuch as possible, have made themselves similar to God with their will and by the indwelling and help of God, [and] are really called gods (cf. Psalm 82:6), not by nature, but rather by contingence, as red-hot iron is called fire, not by nature, but by contingence and through participation in the fire. It is said, in fact: "You will be holy because I am holy" (Leviticus 19:2)" (III, 33, col. 1352 A).

After a series of references of this type, Damascene could serenely deduce, therefore:"God, who is good and superior to all goodness, did not content himself with the contemplation of himself, but rather wanted there to be beings benefited by him who could come to be participants in his goodness: For this he created out of nothing all things, visible and invisible, including man, a visible and invisible reality. And he created him thinking of him and making him a being capable of thinking (ennoema ergon) enriched by the word (logo[i] sympleroumenon) and oriented toward the spirit (pneumati teleioumenon)" (II, 2, PG 94, col. 865A).

And to clarify later this thought, he adds: "It is necessary to leave oneself full of awe (thaumazein) at all the works of providence (tes pronoias erga), praise them all and accept them all, overcoming the temptation to point out in them aspects that to many seem unjust or iniquitous (adika), and admitting instead that God's project (pronoia) goes beyond the cognitive and understanding capacity (agnoston kai akatalepton) of man, meanwhile on the other hand only he knows our thoughts, our actions and even our future" (II, 29, PG 94, col. 964C).

Already Plato, on the other hand, said that all philosophy begins with awe: Also our faith begins with awe at creation, at the beauty of God who becomes visible.

This optimism of natural contemplation (physikè theoria), of this seeing in visible creation the good, the beautiful and the true, this Christian optimism is not a naïve optimism: It takes into account the wound inflicted on human nature by free choice desired by God and used inappropriately by man, with all the consequences of widespread disharmony that have come from it. From here stems the need, clearly perceived by the theology of Damascene, that the nature in which the goodness and beauty of God is reflected, wounded by our fault, "would be strengthened and renewed" by the descent of the Son of God in the flesh, after in many ways and on many occasions God himself had tried to show that he had created man so that he would be not only in "being," but in "being good" (cf. La fede ortodossa, II, 1, PG 94, col. 981).

With a passionate exclamation, John explains: "It was necessary for nature to be strengthened and renewed and that the path of virtue would be indicated and concretely taught (didachthenai aretes hodòn), [the path] that banishes corruption and leads to eternal life ... Thus appeared on the horizon of history the great sea of the love of God for man (philanthropias pelagos) ..."

It is a beautiful expression. We see, on one hand, the beauty of creation and on the other, the destruction caused by human fault. But we see in the Son of God, who descends to renew nature, the sea of the love of God for man.

John Damascene continues: "He himself, the Creator and Lord, fought for his creature, transmitting his teaching to him with his example ... And thus the Son of God, while subsisting in the form of God, descended from the heavens and lowered himself ... toward his servants ... carrying out the newest thing of all, the only thing truly new under the son, through which he manifested in fact the infinite power of God" (III, 1. PG 94, col. 981C-984B).

We can imagine the consolation and the joy that filled the hearts of the faithful with these words so full of fascinating images. We too hear them today, sharing the same sentiments of the Christians of that time: God wants to rest in us, he wants to renew nature also through our conversion, he wants to make us participants in his divinity. May the Lord help us to make these words the essence of our lives.

[Translation by ZENIT]

[The Holy Father then greeted the faithful in various languages. In English, he said:]

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Saint John Damascene was a towering figure in the history of Eastern theology. He was born into a wealthy Christian family at a time when his native Syria was already under Arab rule. He left a promising career in government in order to enter monastic life. His best-known works are his Discourses against the Iconoclasts, which offer an important contribution to the proper theological understanding of the veneration of sacred images. Saint John Damascene was among the first to distinguish between adoration, which is due to God alone, and veneration, which can rightly be given to an image in order to assist the Christian to contemplate him whom the image represents. It is true that in the Old Testament, divine images were strictly forbidden. But now that God has become incarnate and has assumed visible, material form in Jesus, matter has received a new dignity. The wood of the Cross, the book of the Gospels, the altar of sacrifice: all have been used by God to bring about our salvation. Matter now serves as a sign and sacrament of our encounter with God. When we participate in the sacraments, when we venerate icons, if we do so in faith and in the power of the Holy Spirit, they truly become a means of grace. Despite human sinfulness, God has chosen to dwell within men and women, making them holy, making them sharers in his infinite goodness and holiness. Let us welcome him with joy into our hearts.

I am pleased to welcome all the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors here today, including a group of Felician Sisters serving in health care administration. Upon all of you, and upon your families and loved ones, I invoke God's blessings of joy and peace.

[And at the end of the audience, he addressed a special message in English to the peoples of Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Territories:]

My dear friends, this Friday I leave Rome for my Apostolic Visit to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories. I wish this morning to take the opportunity through this radio and television broadcast to greet all the peoples of those lands. I am eagerly looking forward to being with you and to sharing with you your aspirations and hopes as well as your pains and struggles. I will be coming among you as a pilgrim of peace. My primary intention is to visit the places made holy by the life of Jesus, and, to pray at them for the gift of peace and unity for your families, and all those for whom the Holy Land and the Middle East is home. Among the many religious and civic gatherings which will take place over the course of the week, will be meetings with representatives from the Muslim and Jewish communities with whom great strides have been made in dialogue and cultural exchange. In a special way I warmly greet the Catholics of the region and ask you to join me in praying that the visit will bear much fruit for the spiritual and civic life of all who dwell in the Holy Land. May we all praise God for his goodness. May we all be people of hope. May we all be steadfast in our desire and efforts for peace.

© Copyright 2009 -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana


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DOCUMENTS

Pope's Address to Biblical Commission

"God Really Speaks to Men and Women in a Human Way"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 6, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave April 23 to the members of the Pontifical Biblical Commission gathered in plenary assembly.

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Your Eminence,
Your Excellency,
Dear Members of the Pontifical Biblical Commission,

I am pleased to welcome you once again at the end of your annual Plenary Assembly. I thank Cardinal William Levada for his greeting and for his concise presentation of the theme that has been the object of attentive reflection at your meeting.

You have gathered once again to study a very important topic: Inspiration and Truth of the Bible. This subject not only concerns theology, but the Church herself, because the life and mission of the Church are necessarily based on the word of God, which is the soul of theology and at the same time the inspiration of all Christian life. The topic you have addressed furthermore responds to a concern that I have very much at heart, because the interpretation of Sacred Scripture is of capital importance for the Christian faith and for the life of the Church.

As you have mentioned, Cardinal President, in his Encyclical "Providentissimus Deus," Pope Leo XIII offered Catholic exegetes new encouragement and new directives on the subject of inspiration, truth and biblical hermeneutics. Later, Pius XII in his Encyclical "Divino Afflante Spiritu," gathered and completed the preceding teaching and urged Catholic exegetes to find solutions in full agreement with the Church's doctrine, duly taking into account the positive contributions of the new methods of interpretation which had developed in the meantime.

The vigorous impetus that these two Pontiffs gave to biblical studies, as you also said, was fully confirmed and developed in the Second Vatican Council, so that the entire Church has benefited and is benefitting from it. In particular, the Conciliar Constitution "Dei Verbum" still illumines the work of Catholic exegetes today and invites Pastors and faithful to be more regularly nourished at the table of the word of God.

In this regard the Council recalls first of all that God is the Author of Sacred Scripture: "The divinely revealed realities, which are contained and presented in the text of Sacred Scripture, have been written down under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. For Holy Mother Church relying on the faith of the apostolic age, accepts as sacred and canonical the Books of the Old and the New Testaments, whole and entire, with all their parts, on the grounds that, written under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit they have God as their author, and have been handed on as such to the Church herself" (Dei Verbum, n. 11).

Therefore since all that the inspired authors or hagiographers state is to be considered as said by the Holy Spirit, the invisible and transcendent Author, it must consequently be acknowledged that "the books of Scripture, firmly, faithfully and without error, teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to see confided to the sacred Scriptures" (ibid., n. 11).

From the correct presentation of the divine inspiration and truth of Sacred Scripture certain norms derive that directly concern its interpretation. The Constitution "Dei Verbum" itself, after stating that God is the author of the Bible, reminds us that in Sacred Scripture God speaks to man in a human fashion and this divine-human synergy is very important: God really speaks to men and women in a human way. For a correct interpretation of Sacred Scripture it is therefore necessary to seek attentively what the hagiographers have truly wished to state and what it has pleased God to express in human words.

"The words of God, expressed in the words of men, are in every way like human language, just as the Word of the eternal Father, when he took on himself the flesh of human weakness, became like men" (Dei Verbum, n. 13).

Moreover, these indications, very necessary for a correct historical and literary interpretation as the primary dimension of all exegesis, require a connection with the premises of the teaching on the inspiration and truth of Sacred Scripture. In fact, since Scripture is inspired, there is a supreme principal for its correct interpretation without which the sacred writings would remain a dead letter of the past alone: Sacred Scripture "must be read and interpreted with its divine authorship in mind" (ibid., n. 12).

In this regard, the Second Vatican Council points out three criteria that always apply for an interpretation of Sacred Scripture in conformity with the Spirit that inspired it.

First of all it is essential to pay great attention to the content and unity of the whole of Scripture: only in its unity is it Scripture. Indeed, however different the books of which it is composed may be, Sacred Scripture is one by virtue of the unity of God's plan whose centre and heart is Jesus Christ (cf. Lk 24: 25-27; Lk 24: 44-46).

Secondly, Scripture must be interpreted in the context of the living tradition of the whole Church. According to a statement of Origen: "Sacra Scriptura principalius est in corde Ecclesiae quam in materialibus instrumentis scripta", that is, "Sacred Scripture is written in the heart of the Church before being written on material instruments".

Indeed, in her Tradition the Church bears the living memory of the Word of God and it is the Holy Spirit who gives her its interpretation according to the spiritual meaning (cf. Origin, Homilae in Leviticum, 5,5).

As a third criterion, it is necessary to pay attention to the analogy of the faith, that is to the consistence of the individual truths of faith with one another and with the overall plan of the Revelation and the fullness of the divine economy contained in it.

The task of researchers who study Sacred Scripture with different methods is to contribute in accordance with the above-mentioned principles to the deepest possible knowledge and explanation of the meaning of Sacred Scripture. The scientific study of the sacred texts is important but is not sufficient in itself because it would respect only the human dimension. To respect the coherence of the Church's faith, the Catholic exegete must be attentive to perceiving the Word of God in these texts, within the faith of the Church herself.

If this indispensable reference point is missing, the exegetical research would be incomplete, losing sight of its principal goal, and risk being reduced to a purely literary interpretation in which the true Author God no longer appears.

Furthermore, the interpretation of the Sacred Scriptures cannot only be an individual scientific effort but must always be compared with, inserted in and authenticated by the living Tradition of the Church. This rule is decisive to explain the correct relationship between exegesis and the Magisterium of the Church. The Catholic exegete does not only feel that he or she belongs to the scientific community, but also and above all to the community of believers of all times. In reality these texts were not given to individual researchers or to the scientific community, "to satisfy their curiosity or to provide them with material for study and research" (Divino Afflante Spiritu, eb 566).

The texts inspired by God were entrusted in the first place to the community of believers, to Christ's Church, to nourish the life of faith and to guide the life of charity. Respect for this purpose conditions the validity and efficacy of biblical hermeneutics. The Encyclical "Providentissimus Deus" recalled this fundamental truth and noted that, far from hindering biblical research, respect for this norm encourages authentic progress. I would say, a rationalistic hermeneutic of faith corresponds more closely with the reality of this text than a rationalistic hermeneutic that does not know God.

Being faithful to the Church means, in fact, fitting into the current of the great Tradition. Under the guidance of the Magisterium, Tradition has recognized the canonical writings as a word addressed by God to his People, and it has never ceased to meditate upon them and to discover their inexhaustible riches.

The Second Vatican Council reasserted this very clearly: "all that has been said about the manner of interpreting Scripture is ultimately subject to the judgment of the Church which exercises the divinely conferred commisssion and ministry of watching over and interpreting the Word of God" (Dei Verbum, n. 12).

As the above-mentioned Dogmatic Constitution reminds us, an inseparable unity exists between Sacred Scripture and Tradition, because both come from the same source:

"Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture, then, are bound closely together, and communicate one with the other. For both of them, flowing out from the same divine well-spring, come together in some fashion to form one thing, and move towards the same goal. Sacred Scripture is the speech of God as it is put down in writing under the breath of the Holy Spirit. And Tradition transmits in its entirety the Word of God which has been entrusted to the Apostles by Christ the Lord and the Holy Spirit. He transmits it to the successors of the Apostles so that, enlightened by the Spirit of truth, they may faithfully preserve, expound and spread it abroad by their preaching. Thus it comes about that the Church does not draw her certainty about all revealed truths from the Holy Scriptures alone. Hence, both Scripture and Tradition must be accepted and honoured with equal feelings of devotion and reverence" (Dei Verbum, n. 9).

As we know, this word "pari pietatis affectu ac reverentia" was created by St Basil and then absorbed into Gratian's Decree, through which it entered the Council of Trent and then the Second Vatican Council. It expresses precisely this inter-penetration between Scripture and Tradition.

The ecclesial context alone enables Sacred Scripture to be understood as an authentic Word of God which makes itself the guide, norm and rule for the life of the Church and the spiritual growth of believers.

As I have said, this is in no way an obstacle to a serious and scientific interpretation but furthermore gives access to the additional dimensions of Christ that are inaccessible to a merely literary analysis, which remains incapable of grasping by itself the overall meaning that has guided the Tradition of the entire People of God down the centuries.

Dear Members of the Pontifical Biblical Commission, I would like to end my talk by expressing to you all my personal gratitude and encouragement. I thank you warmly for the demanding work you do at the service of the Word of God and of the Church through research, teaching and the publication of your studies. To this I add my encouragement for the ground that has yet to be covered.

In a world in which scientific research is assuming ever greater importance in numerous fields, it is indispensable that exegetical science attain a good level. It is one of the aspects of the inculturation of the faith that is part of the Church's mission, in harmony with acceptance of the mystery of the Incarnation.

Dear brothers and sisters, may the Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God incarnate and the divine Teacher who opened the minds of his disciples to an understanding of the Scriptures (cf. Luke 24: 45), guide and sustain you in your reflection.

May the Virgin Mary, model of docility and obedience to the Word of God, teach you to accept ever better the inexhaustible riches of Sacred Scripture, not only through intellectual research but also in your lives as believers, so that your work and your action may contribute to making the light of Sacred Scripture shine ever brighter before the faithful.

As I assure you of my prayerful support in your efforts, I cordially impart my Apostolic Blessing to you, as a pledge of divine favours.


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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

ZE090505

ZENIT

The World Seen From Rome

Daily dispatch - May 05, 2009


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VATICAN DOSSIER
Benedict XVI Requests Prayers for Holy Land Trip
Cardinal Bertone Visits a John Paul II Favorite
Jordan King Breaking Precedent to Greet Pope

WORLD FEATURES
Pope Saw Mideast Trip as Tone-Setter, Says Prelate
Congolese Bishops Say Condoms Breed Selfishness
Spain's Bishops Defend Pope Against Congress
Holy See Asks Nations to Quit the "Nuclear Club"

NEWS BRIEFS
Auxiliary Bishop Named to Melbourne Archdiocese

LITURGY
Gregorian Masses

DOCUMENTS
Holy See on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons

VATICAN DOSSIER

Benedict XVI Requests Prayers for Holy Land Trip

Says "I Go as a Pilgrim of Peace"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is expressing hope for reconciliation and peace among the people of the Holy Land, especially faced to his upcoming trip to that region.

The Pope said this Saturday in an audience with members of the Philadelphia-based Papal Foundation, currently headed by Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, retired archbishop of Philadelphia.

The Pontiff affirmed that "the entire human race yearns for God's grace of peace."

"Today's world is truly in need of his peace, especially as it faces the tragedies of war, division, poverty and despair," he added.

The Holy Father noted his upcoming visit to the Holy Land, beginning Friday. "I go as a pilgrim of peace," he affirmed.

He continued, "As you are well aware, for more than 60 years, this region -- the land of our Lord's birth, death and resurrection; a sacred place for the world's three great monotheistic religions -- has been plagued by violence and injustice.

"This has led to a general atmosphere of mistrust, uncertainty and fear -- often pitting neighbor against neighbor, brother against brother."

Benedict XVI asked his listeners to join him in "prayer for all the peoples of the Holy Land and the region" as he prepares for this "significant journey."

He expressed the hope that the people he visits will "receive the gifts of reconciliation, hope and peace."

Work harder

The Pope also noted, "Our meeting this year occurs during a time when the entire world is struggling with a very worrying economic situation."

In these moments, he said, "it is tempting to overlook those without a voice and think only of our own difficulties."

He added: "As Christians we are aware, however, that especially when times are difficult we must work even harder to ensure that the consoling message of our Lord is heard.

"Rather than turning in on ourselves, we must continue to be beacons of hope, strength and support for others, most especially those who have no one to watch over or assist them."

The Pontiff acknowledged that the foundation, "through the great generosity of many, enables valuable assistance to be carried out in the name of Christ and his Church."

He told its members, "For your sacrifice and dedication I am most grateful to you: By means of your support the Easter message of joy, hope, reconciliation and peace is more widely proclaimed."

The foundation's Web site explains that it seeks the Holy Father's guidance in distributing aid funds for international needs of the Church.

Grants from the foundation "support the world's poor, sick, and infirmed through the construction and operation of shelters for homeless adults and children, hospitals and other health facilities, the reconstruction of destroyed churches, the construction of seminaries and retreat houses."

The aid goes toward "providing relief for victims of natural disasters, strengthening services for refugees and migrants, providing funding to pro-life programs, and residences for elderly priests and religious."

--- --- ---

On ZENIT's Web page:

Full text: http://www.zenit.org/article-25780?l=english

On the Net:

Papal Foundation: www.thepapalfoundation.com


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Cardinal Bertone Visits a John Paul II Favorite

Entrusts Church to Virgin of Jasna Gora

VATICAN CITY, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI's secretary of state has again entrusted the Church to the Virgin Mary at one of Pope John Paul II's favorite sanctuaries: Czestochowa.

L'Osservatore Romano reported today on Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone's three-day trip to Poland that ended Sunday. While there, the cardinal gave "all the problems and hopes of the Church" to the Virgin of Jasna Gora.

Cardinal Bertone made a visit to the sanctuary that houses the Black Madonna on Saturday, there praying for Benedict XVI and all bishops, priests, men and women religious and the laity so that they can "serve well every man and every people of the world."

The Vatican's semi-official daily noted that the secretary of state asked the Virgin to show the faithful "how to build peace and loving collaboration among men."

And he entrusted to her protection the "difficult situations of each society, each nation and each local Church of the world." He asked her for freedom and peace for every Christian community so that they can "fulfill their evangelizing missions."

Cardinal Bertone made a special prayer for Poland and its faithful and government leaders, so that they understand that "without God, the future of Poland cannot be improved."

On Sunday, the cardinal celebrated a solemn Mass in the sanctuary. He spoke of the importance of Czestochowa for the history of the Church and the history of Poland, noting how Cardinal Karol Wojtyla had presided over celebrations of the Virgin of Jasna Gora there.


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Jordan King Breaking Precedent to Greet Pope

VATICAN CITY, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The king of Jordan plans to break protocol this Friday when he receives Benedict XVI.

Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Vatican press office, gave a briefing Monday on the Pope's upcoming weeklong Holy Land pilgrimage.

The spokesman noted that King Abdallah II will welcome the Pontiff at the airport where he is scheduled to arrive at 2:30 p.m.. And in a particularly unusual gesture, he and Queen Rania will again accompany the Holy Father to the airport when he leaves on Monday.

Father Lombardi contended that this king is offering a noteworthy contribution to interreligious dialogue through various initiatives. He pointed to his Amman Message, encouraging the Islamic world to leave aside extremism, and the Amman Interfaith Message, directed primarily to Christians and Jews and inviting the promotion of peace and values shared among the religions.

The Vatican spokesman further noted that one of King Abdallah's advisors is Ghazi bin Muhammad, who coordinated the initiative from 138 Muslim scholars who responded to 2006 attacks against the Pope following his address in Regensburg.

It was this group who wrote "A Common Word," which eventually led to the formation of the Catholic-Muslim Forum in Rome.


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WORLD FEATURES

Pope Saw Mideast Trip as Tone-Setter, Says Prelate

Cardinal Sandri Recalls Pontiff's Early Hopes

ROME, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI's pilgrimage to the Holy Land this week is something he has wanted to do since the beginning of his pontificate, says the prefect of the Congregation for Eastern Churches.

Cardinal Leonardo Sandri spoke about the Pope's hopes for the pilgrimage as he participated in a book launch in Rome. Though the Holy Father is headed to the Holy Land first now, in the fifth year of his pontificate, the cardinal contended that this pilgrimage was among the first the Pontiff wanted to make.

"He had to make the trips that were already scheduled in the preceding pontificate," the cardinal explained, pointing to World Youth Day in Cologne and the World Meeting of Families in Spain.

But, he added, the Pontiff's "great desire as a first trip and, we could say, as the meaning of the whole of his pontificate toward Jesus, toward the Word of God, was to go to the Holy Land. The principal trip to set the tone of all of his pontificate was this one."

The cardinal reiterated Benedict XVI's intention to go to the Holy Land to promote peace.

"With his presence, the Pope is a bearer of serenity and of peace and [gives] a push to all those who are in charge of the actuality or the situation of those people," the prelate said. "In this case, in the Holy Land, it implies an encouragement for the process of peace [that has been] so long and with so many difficulties."

[Mercedes de la Torre contributed to this report]


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Congolese Bishops Say Condoms Breed Selfishness

Affirm Benedict XVI's Support in Fight Against AIDS

KINSHASA, Congo, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Congolese bishops are noting the hope Benedict XVI brought on his visit to Africa, and are supporting his stance on condom use as an ineffective means to fight AIDS.

A statement from the Congolese bishops' conference affirmed, "In all truth, the pope's message which we received with joy has confirmed us in our fight against HIV/AIDS," Catholic Information Service for Africa reported today.

The statement, signed by the conference president, Bishop Nicolas Djomo Lola of Tshumbe, added, "We say no to condoms!"

The prelates noted that condom use is "not only an ethical disorder but above all the proof of the trivialization of sexuality in our society."

They affirmed, "Instead of preventing the spread of the disease, and without even guaranteeing complete security, [the condom] heightens human selfishness, worsens the problem, and encourages people to let themselves be driven by their sexual instincts and divests sexuality of its religious and symbolic functions."

The statement expressed regret about the controversy stemming from "some mass media sources who have voluntarily created confusion," by taking the Pope's words on AIDS "out of context," although he merely underlined "the consistent teaching of the Catholic Church."

It added, "Only freedom that does not give in before the fleeting passion of desire, the blindness of one's own selfishness, and the tyranny of the convenience of the moment, can contribute to making man more noble and more responsible in his acts, in the prospect of a better future."

The conference affirmed that the Holy Father's visit confirmed their "faith in Jesus Christ, the Light of the World," and brought hope for the future back to Africa.

The statement concluded, "This is how we understand the Pope's insistence on respect for life, the preservation of our African identity which is seriously threatened by a vigorous and aggressive globalization, the fight against corruption and the unjust exploitation of man by other men, and an appeal to African governments regarding their responsibilities in regards to their people and other nations."


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Spain's Bishops Defend Pope Against Congress

Legislators to Debate Public Reproof for Condom Comments

MADRID, Spain, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The proposal before Spain's lower branch of congress to condemn the recent comments Benedict XVI made on condoms is an insult to the nation's Catholics, says the archbishop of Madrid.

Cardinal Antonio María Rouco Varela, who is also the president of the episcopal conference of Spain, said Monday that the proposal that would publicly denounce the Pope "has hurt all Spanish Catholics."

The proposed censure responds to the comments the Holy Father made during a press conference March 17 on the plane en route to Cameroon. He said that condoms are not the solution for AIDS.

Deputies Gaspar Llamazares of the party United Left and Joan Herrera of the party Initiative for Catalonia Greens introduced the proposal last week. It would express "consternation and rejection" for the comments.

The proposal will be debated later this month or in June in the Commission of International Cooperation for Development.

The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party and the People's Party have both said they would not support the bill as the Congress of Deputies is not the place to publicly denounce a head of state.

Cardinal Carlos Amigo Vallejo, the archbishop of Sevilla, responded to the proposal saying it was part of the "new inquisition" that is "fundamentally secular, agnostic and bad-humored," reported the Spanish news service Religión Digital.

"It's formed by all the fundamentalists driven to find, with or without reason, the weak point and the faulty side of the Church," he added.

Manipulation

Cardinal Luis Martínez Sistach, the archbishop of Barcelona, also criticized the proposal in a press statement published Sunday. The cardinal lamented "that they have taken out of context the comments of the Holy Father and have manipulated the position of Benedict XVI as one that is against the defense of life and the promotion of health."

The cardinal expressed his "deep adhesion and communion with the Holy Father" and asked that the "Christian people accompany [the Pope] in the exercise of his ministry as the Successor of Peter at the service of the entire Church."

Cardinal Antonio Cañizares Llovera, the prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments and apostolic administer for the Archdiocese of Toledo, published a statement from Rome in which he asked the faithful of Toledo to offer all the Masses this past weekend for Benedict XVI.

He rejected the proposal as an "attack and a disgrace against a man of God, a good and just man, the utmost defender of humanity, of its dignity and fundamental rights, promoter like few others of the culture of peace and a civilization of love."

The cardinal said the proposal constitutes "an offense against Spain itself, which is always close to the Pope, [and] loved by him."


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Holy See Asks Nations to Quit the "Nuclear Club"

Affirms Peace and Security Are Possible Without Weapons

NEW YORK, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The Holy See is calling on the international community to promote nuclear disarmament and the non-proliferation of weapons in order to foster trust, security and peace among nations.

Archbishop Celestino Migliore, permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations, affirmed this today to a preparatory committee for the 2010 review conference on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons treaty.

He underlined the Holy See's "strong and continuing support" for the treaty, "after four decades of its existence and its good service to the international community."

Nonetheless, the prelate noted, "more than 26,000 nuclear warheads remain in the world and some nations are still racing to join the 'nuclear club,' despite the treaty's legally binding obligations in the areas of disarmament and non-proliferation."

Archbishop Migliore observed "some good signs in the field of putting again nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation at the center of the international debate on peace and security."

"The many initiatives taken by Governments, international organizations and civil society are one step in the right direction," he added.

These initiatives, the archbishop said, "are encouraging steps which inspire renewed hope that the goal of a nuclear-weapons-free world is achievable."

"However," he said, "as long as nuclear weapons exist they will always pose a danger to humanity of being used or falling into the hands of terrorists, threatening peace and security and even human existence itself."

Concrete objectives

"The Holy See stresses the need for concrete, transparent and convincing steps in the fields of disarmament and non-proliferation" under the treaty principles, he stated.

The prelate proposed objectives that "could be reached in a short period of time," including negotiations of a fissile material cut-off treaty, the interpretation of state military doctrines without reliance on nuclear weapons, and the systematic regulation of the peaceful use of nuclear energy.

He continued: "All these measures are necessary to promote trust, transparency, confidence and cooperation among nations and regions.

"The nuclear-weapons-free zones remain the best example of such trust and confidence, and affirm that peace and security is possible without possessing nuclear weapons.

"The Holy See thus calls upon all the nuclear weapon states to take a courageous leadership role and political responsibility in safeguarding the very integrity of the [treaty] and in creating a climate of trust, transparency and true cooperation, with a view to the concrete realization of a culture of life and peace."

Archbishop Migliore affirmed, "In an effort to put priorities and hierarchies of values in their proper place, greater common effort must be made to mobilize resources toward ethical, cultural and economic development so that humanity can turn its back on the arms race."

He underlined the "three mutually reinforcing pillars" of "nuclear disarmament, nuclear non-proliferation, and peaceful use," and called for "urgent and irreversible progress" on all fronts.

"Today's growing expansion of civil nuclear energy programs poses new potential challenges to the non-proliferation regime," the archbishop noted, "but without serious and concrete steps towards disarmament, the non-proliferation pillar will be further weakened."

--- --- ---

On ZENIT's Web page:

Full text: http://www.zenit.org/article-25790?l=english


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NEWS BRIEFS

Auxiliary Bishop Named to Melbourne Archdiocese

MELBOURNE, Australia, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI named Monsignor Les Tomlinson as auxiliary bishop of the Melbourne archdiocese, currently led by Archbishop Denis Hart.

Today the Vatican press office announced the appointment of Monsignor Tomlinson, 65, who has been serving as vicar general of the archdiocese since 2003.

He was ordained a priest in 1972, and is currently the spiritual advisor to the state council of the St. Vincent de Paul Society in Victoria.

The monsignor said, "I humbly accept the appointment of the Holy Father, and will devote myself energetically to the work of the Church and to the service of Melbourne's people with Archbishop Hart."

The archbishop stated: "I am most grateful to Pope Benedict for the appointment, which shows his care for the people of Melbourne. Monsignor Tomlinson is a highly esteemed collaborator who is exceptionally generous in the service of priests and people alike."

Monsignor Tomlinson will be ordained a bishop on June 17.

The archdiocese of Melbourne has some 1,061,570 Catholics, served by 547 priests and 1,800 religious.


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LITURGY

Gregorian Masses

And More on the Easter Candle

ROME, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Answered by Legionary of Christ Father Edward McNamara, professor of liturgy at the Regina Apostolorum university.

Q: I understand a Gregorian Mass to consist of 30 Masses said with unbroken succession. Recently an elderly priest told me that if it is interrupted even for one day, one has to begin the Masses all over. I have also met an elderly religious who was catechizing the lay faithful in the same line. Here then are my questions: 1) Has this Gregorian Mass (or Masses) any liturgical or canonical foundation? 2) Does the effectiveness of the Masses depend on celebrating them without interruption? 3) If this is so (as it is widely held), are we not coming close to superstition or what St. John of the Cross referred to as lack of simplicity of faith? According to him, "These people attribute so much efficacy to methods of carrying out their devotions and prayers and so trust in them that they believe that if one point is missing or certain limits have been exceeded their prayer will be profitless and go unanswered. As a result they put more trust in these methods than they do in the living prayer, not without great disrespect and offense toward God." -- P.C., Rome

A: The practice of Gregorian Masses goes back to a tradition hailing from Pope St. Gregory the Great (540-604). According to legend, a deceased monk appeared and requested 30 Masses to be celebrated for the release of his soul from purgatory. On completion of the stipulated days he appeared once more radiant in heavenly glory.

From this legend the practice of celebrating 30 consecutive Masses for one and the same person with the intention of procuring release from purgatory became an established custom which has been regulated in various ways over the centuries.

Present regulation stems from a declaration published by the Sacred Congregation of Divine Worship on Feb. 24, 1967, which mitigated some of the restrictions mentioned by our reader and of which the elderly priest is apparently unaware.

According to the aforementioned declaration, maintaining the tradition that the Gregorian Mass is a series of 30 consecutive celebrations, it is not required that the same priest celebrate all the Masses nor that they be celebrated on the same altar. Thus, if a priest who has accepted the obligation of celebrating the series finds himself impeded on any particular day, he may request another priest to take the intention for him.

Likewise, it could happen that the priest cannot find a substitute and the series is interrupted because of an unforeseen impediment (for example, an illness), or for a reasonable cause (the celebration of a funeral or a wedding). In this case the Church has disposed that the fruits of suffrage (which, until that moment, Church practice and the piety of the faithful have attributed to this series) are maintained. The priest retains the obligation to complete the 30 Masses as soon as possible but need not begin the series anew.

I do not believe that this pious custom induces superstition or reflects a magical concept. It presumes that the soul is in purgatory and thus recognizes the reality that few people are immediately ready for heaven after death. It is also an act of faith and confidence in the infinite intercessory power of the Mass with respect to souls undergoing purgation. As such, the request for such a series of Masses is a spiritual act of mercy akin to obtaining plenary indulgences on behalf of the deceased.

The Just Judge is also infinitely merciful and can be as generous to those who have toiled but an hour as he is toward those who bore the brunt of labor all day long.

* * *

Follow-up: Lighting the Easter Candle

Pursuant to our comments on the non-use of the Easter candle during exposition (see April 21), a reader from Scotland added an interesting explanation for which I am grateful. He wrote: "I thought you might be interested in my understanding of why the paschal candle is nor lit during exposition of the Blessed Sacrament in the extraordinary form: I was always told that, as the candle represents the Risen Lord and the Sanctissimus is the Risen Lord, it was not right for the symbol to be used in the presence of the reality."

Several readers also inquired as to how to proceed when a parish has two churches or at least other spaces for celebrating Mass during Eastertide and other seasons. As we wrote on April 11, 2006, only one candle may be used during the Easter vigil. But it should be possible to simply bless any extra candles required for other chapels after the vigil is over and subsequently set it up in the other church or chapel without ceremony before the first Easter Mass. These candles may be smaller but should have the grains of incense.

The norms in force for the extraordinary form did not require a new paschal candle every year but only that it should be replaced when notably consumed. For commodity's sake, one was also allowed to bless a smaller candle for the vigil and then expose a larger one for Eastertide, provided that it had been blessed at least once.

In the present rite the candle used for the Easter Vigil should be new. In places where the vigil has not been celebrated, such as weekday and convent chapels, I think it is legitimate to continue using previously blessed Easter candles if still in decent condition. If necessary and possible, the inscription of the current year may be adjusted.

* * *

Readers may send questions to liturgy@zenit.org. Please put the word "Liturgy" in the subject field. The text should include your initials, your city and your state, province or country. Father McNamara can only answer a small selection of the great number of questions that arrive.


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DOCUMENTS

Holy See on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons

"These Measures Are Necessary to Promote Trust, Transparency, Confidence and Cooperation"

NEW YORK, MAY 5, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the address Archbishop Celestino Migliore, permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations, delivered today to a committee on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons treaty.

* * *

Mr. Chairman,

At the outset allow me to congratulate you on your election to the Chairmanship of the Third Session of the Preparatory Committee for the 2010 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference.

After four decades of its existence and its good service to the international community, the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons remains a cornerstone of nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation regimes as well as a key instrument seeking to strengthen international peace and security. The Holy See reaffirms its strong and continuing support for the NPT and calls for universal and full adherence to and compliance with the Treaty.

Last year marked the Treaty's fortieth anniversary. Unfortunately, we note today that more than 26,000 nuclear warheads remain in the world and some nations are still racing to join the "nuclear club," despite the Treaty's legally binding obligations in the areas of disarmament and non- proliferation. In light of this the validity and relevance of the Treaty remain an urgent call for all States to join their efforts in achieving a nuclear-weapons-free world.

After many years of stalemate and even regress, we can observe with satisfaction some good signs in the field of putting again nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation at the center of the international debate on peace and security. The many initiatives taken by Governments, international organizations and civil society are one step in the right direction. My Delegation commends national policies and bilateral agreements to reduce nuclear arsenals and looks forward to seeing progress in addressing issues related to nuclear arms and the delivery of these weapons. The different initiatives taken and the positions expressed in the last months are encouraging steps which inspire renewed hope that the goal of a nuclear-weapons-free world is achievable. However, as long as nuclear weapons exist they will always pose a danger to humanity of being used or falling into the hands of terrorists, threatening peace and security and even human existence itself.

The Holy See stresses the need for concrete, transparent and convincing steps in the fields of disarmament and non-proliferation under the guidance of the NPT principles. To build on the new momentum, the Holy See delegation is of the opinion that five objectives could be reached in a short period of time:

-- The entry into force of the CTBT is essential and achievable if States are serious about their commitment to a nuclear-weapons-free world.

-- The immediate commencement of negotiations of a Fissile Material Cut-Off Treaty is overdue.

-- Nuclear weapon States have to interpret their military doctrines as precluding any reliance on nuclear weapons.

-- The peaceful use of nuclear energy should be under strict control of the International Atomic Energy Agency. All countries should join all relevant instruments in this area. The non-proliferation side of the NPT must be strengthened through increasing the capacity of the IAEA, and through further enhancement of the Agency's safeguards system.

-- With the growing need for energy, it is imperative to find common solutions and international structures for the production of nuclear fuel. In this area, the IAEA should have a leading role to ensure safety, security and fair access for all.

All these measures are necessary to promote trust, transparency, confidence, and cooperation among nations and regions. The nuclear-weapons-free zones remain the best example of such trust and confidence, and affirm that peace and security is possible without possessing nuclear weapons. The Holy See thus calls upon all the nuclear weapon States to take a courageous leadership role and political responsibility in safeguarding the very integrity of the NPT and in creating a climate of trust, transparency and true cooperation, with a view to the concrete realization of a culture of life and peace. In an effort to put priorities and hierarchies of values in their proper place, greater common effort must be made to mobilize resources toward ethical, cultural and economic development so that humanity can turn its back on the arms race.

Nuclear disarmament, nuclear non-proliferation, and peaceful use are the three mutually reinforcing pillars. Urgent and irreversible progress is required on all fronts. Today's growing expansion of civil nuclear energy programmes poses new potential challenges to the non-proliferation regime. But without serious and concrete steps towards disarmament, the non-proliferation pillar will be further weakened.

Mr. Chairman, as we prepare for the 2010 NPT Review Conference, the Holy See makes an appeal that the difficult and complex issues of the Review Conference be addressed in an even-handed way. At the same time, my Delegation assures you of its full support in your endeavours towards a successful outcome of this session.

Thank you, Mr Chairman.


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Daily dispatch - May 04, 2009


Donation Campaign 2009 -- Looking for the 8,400 ...

If we divide our annual fund-raising goal of $420,000 by the 150,000 ZENIT's English-edition private readers, the amount for each one a year is about $2.80 -- about the price of three or four daily newspapers !

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VATICAN DOSSIER
Pope Calls for Promotion of Universal Human Rights
Pontiff Notes Hopes for Charismatic Renewal
Pope to Kids: Now Is the Time to Be Missionaries
Holy Land Trip Seen as "Decidedly Courageous"

WORLD FEATURES
Indians Eager for Visit From US Rights Group

NEWS BRIEFS
Augustinian Bishop to Lead Lancaster Diocese

CIVILIZATION OF LOVE
An Axis of Secularism

DOCUMENTS
Papal Address to Social Sciences Academy
Mary Ann Glendon's Address to Benedict XVI
Pontiff's Address to the Papal Foundation Members



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VATICAN DOSSIER

Pope Calls for Promotion of Universal Human Rights

Affirms Basis in Both Faith and Reason

VATICAN CITY, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is urging members of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences to defend and promote those "non-negotiable human rights" that are based in God's law.

The Pope said this today in an audience with academy members, who are gathered in the Vatican through Tuesday for their plenary session, which is focused on the theme of Catholic social doctrine and human rights.

The Pontiff underlined the Church's stance that "fundamental rights, above and beyond the different ways in which they are formulated and the different degrees of importance they may have in various cultural contexts, are to be upheld and accorded universal recognition because they are inherent in the very nature of man, who is created in the image and likeness of God."

He added, "The modern period helped shape the idea that the message of Christ -- because it proclaims that God loves every man and woman and that every human being is called to love God freely -- demonstrates that everyone, independently of his or her social and cultural condition, by nature deserves freedom."

The Holy Father affirmed the "right to life and the right to freedom of conscience and religion as being at the center of those rights that spring from human nature itself."

He noted that these human rights are not strictly "truths of faith," though they "receive further confirmation from faith."

He continued: "Yet it stands to reason that, living and acting in the physical world as spiritual beings, men and women ascertain the pervading presence of a logos which enables them to distinguish not only between true and false, but also good and evil, better and worse, and justice and injustice.

"This ability to discern -- this radical agency -- renders every person capable of grasping the 'natural law,' which is nothing other than a participation in the eternal law."

Benedict XVI explained, "Human rights, therefore, are ultimately rooted in a participation of God, who has created each human person with intelligence and freedom."

"If this solid ethical and political basis is ignored," he added, "human rights remain fragile since they are deprived of their sound foundation."

Need for God

The Pope stated that the Church's action in promoting human rights is "supported by rational reflection, in such a way that these rights can be presented to all people of good will."

Nevertheless, he continued, "human reason must undergo constant purification by faith, insofar as it is always in danger of a certain ethical blindness caused by disordered passions and sin."

As well, he said, "insofar as human rights need to be re-appropriated by every generation and by each individual, and insofar as human freedom -- which proceeds by a succession of free choices -- is always fragile, the human person needs the unconditional hope and love that can only be found in God and that lead to participation in the justice and generosity of God towards others."

The Pontiff noted recent social problems stemming from the "flagrant contrast between the equal attribution of rights and the unequal access to the means of attaining those rights."

He continued, "For Christians who regularly ask God to 'give us this day our daily bread,' it is a shameful tragedy that one-fifth of humanity still goes hungry."

The Holy Father called on all international leaders to "collaborate in showing a readiness to work in good faith, respecting the natural law and promoting solidarity and subsidiarity with the weakest regions and peoples of the planet as the most effective strategy for eliminating social inequalities between countries and societies and for increasing global security."

Foundation

Mary Ann Glendon, president of the academy, addressed Benedict XVI, affirming, "Our central focus has always been on the dignity of the human person and the common good."

She continued, "We have been mindful of the Church's long engagement with human rights, of her own decisive contributions to the dignitarian vision of rights embodied in so many human rights instruments, including a Universal Declaration of Human Rights; and of the Holy See as a fearless champion of that vision in international settings."

Glendon thanked the Pontiff on behalf of the academy members, for his "teachings on faith, hope and charity that provide an unconditional foundation for human rights."

--- --- ---

On ZENIT's Web page:

Full text of Papal address: http://zenit.org/article-25782?l=english

Full text of Glendon's address: http://zenit.org/article-25786?l=english



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Pontiff Notes Hopes for Charismatic Renewal

VATICAN CITY, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is wishing members of the charismatic renewal a revitalized closeness with the crucified and risen Christ.

The Pope said this in a telegram signed by his secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, and sent to the Italian chapter of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, who were gathered last weekend in their 32nd national assembly in Rimini, Italy.

Some 20,000 members were present, as was the president of the Italian bishops' conference, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco.

The Holy Father expressed his hopes for "an abundant outpouring of the fruits of the Paraclete" on the gathering.

He also noted his desire that the encounter would "enkindle a renewed adherence to the crucified and risen Christ, a deep fraternal communion and a joyous evangelical witness."

Cardinal Bagnasco gave the opening address, inviting the members to "continue being leaven and light in the building up of history and society."

Salvatore Martínez, president of the Italian Charismatic Renewal, said during the concluding address that the three-day national assembly aimed for "a renewed invitation to evangelization."

"We are ready to offer our service to God," he said. "We are a people that has found new vigor in the proclamation of the Gospel, in a world that needs a true spiritual renewal."


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Pope to Kids: Now Is the Time to Be Missionaries

Says Jesus Is Their Unfailing Friend

VATICAN CITY, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is inviting kids as young as 8 years old to "enthusiastically speak about Jesus" so as to bring the light of the Gospel to those who do not know him.

The Pope urged children to be missionaries in a telegram sent on his behalf by his secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, to the 3rd Missionary Encounter in Spain, held last weekend.

Some 4,500 children, ages 8 to 13, participated in the event sponsored by the Spanish chapter of the Pontifical Missionary Works and the Spanish bishops' conference. A parallel event was organized by the Christians Without Borders association.

The Holy Father told the kids to "grow in friendship with Jesus, the friend who never fails, through prayer and the sacraments, so as to speak of him with enthusiasm to those who have perhaps not had the joy of knowing him."

The papal telegram, sent to Archbishop Francisco Pérez González of Pamplona, who directs the Pontifical Missionary Works in Spain, was read Saturday afternoon.

In reference to one of the activities at the encounter in which a presentation of each continent was made, the Pontiff also invited the kids to "observe the various parts of the earth, to become aware of their beauties and necessities."

And, he encouraged the youngsters to "take on already from now the responsibility of bringing to all of them the light of the Gospel and its message of peace, as well as fraternal aid, especially to those who are most needy."


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Holy Land Trip Seen as "Decidedly Courageous"

Spokesman Lauds Pope's Commitment to Peace

VATICAN CITY, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- A Vatican spokesman is calling Benedict XVI's upcoming pilgrimage to the Holy Land "decidedly courageous," as the region is enduring more tension than usual after the January conflict in Gaza.

The Pope is set to leave Friday for a weeklong trip to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories. Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Vatican press office, gave a briefing on the trip today, calling it the most complicated of the 12 international journeys undertaken by this Pontiff.

The spokesman echoed the affirmation made by the Holy Father himself on Sunday, saying the pilgrimage will give the Pope the chance to "confirm and encourage the Christians of the Holy Land who daily have to confront many difficulties."

Nevertheless, the political situation of the region is anything but tranquil, Father Lombardi noted, pointing to new governments in Israel and the United States, divisions among the Palestinians that are delaying elections, and tensions provoked by Iran.

"It is a set of situations in flux, and also of tensions, in which the Pope's trip presents itself as an act of hope and trust, so as to be able to make a contribution to peace and reconciliation," he said. "It seems to me that it is a decidedly courageous act and a beautiful testimony of a commitment to be able to bring a message of peace and reconciliation in difficult situations."

The spokesman recalled that many suspected the conflict in Gaza that closed 2008 and opened 2009 would force Benedict XVI to cancel the trip. Nevertheless, he said, the Holy Father wanted his pilgrimage to be a bid for peace.

This desire of the Pope sets the context for the appeal he made Sunday, speaking in English after praying the midday Regina Caeli with crowds gathered in St. Peter's Square: "This Friday I leave for my pilgrimage to the Holy Land, where men and women first heard the voice of the Good Shepherd.

"I ask you all to join me in praying for the afflicted peoples of that region. In a special way I ask that you remember the Palestinian people who have endured great hardship and suffering. May the Lord bless them and all those who live in the Holy Land with the gifts of unity and peace."


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WORLD FEATURES

Indians Eager for Visit From US Rights Group

Prelates Hoping for Justice for Persecuted Christians

PHULBANI, India, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The prelates of India are hoping that a visit from the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom will bring justice more quickly to persecuted Christians in Orissa.

Archbishop Stanislaus Fernandez of Gandhinagar, secretary of the India episcopal conference, spoke with AsiaNews about the visit next month, saying he hopes it will "speed up the path to justice for the Christians of Kandhamal."

The commission prepares an annual report on the status of religious freedom in nations around the world. While in India, they plan to focus on the state of Orissa in the east, the site of heightened persecution against Christians, and the state of Gujarat in the west, where Muslim faithful were persecuted in 2002. Both situations involved Hindu extremists.

In Orissa, ongoing Hindu-Christian tensions flared into a wave of violence at the end of last August, after extremists blamed the slaying of a Hindu leader on Christians. Dozens of Christians, including a priest, were killed and thousands fled their homes. Thousands of them are still living in displacement camps.

Archbishop Fernandez told AsiaNews, "Anyone who endeavors to protect human rights and religious liberty is welcome."

"We hope," he added, "that the visit of the commission will help the various human rights groups, the social activists and the Church in India to speed up the path to justice for the Christians of Kandhamal and the victims of chauvinistic violence in this nation."

"The Church does not seek revenge," the archbishop clarified. "As Christians, we are forgiving and seek peace. The Church desires justice, which is essential for peace and reconciliation, which is the base on which to build the process of a lasting peace and a stable coexistence among communities."


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NEWS BRIEFS

Augustinian Bishop to Lead Lancaster Diocese

LANCASTER, England, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Coadjutor Bishop Michael Campbell became the head of the Lancaster diocese after Benedict XVI accepted the resignation of Bishop Patrick O'Donoghue for reasons of age.

Bishop Campbell, 68, was coadjutor of the Diocese of Lancaster since March 2008, and immediately succeeded Bishop O'Donoghue after the prelate's resignation was confirmed by the Pope on Friday.

Michael Campbell was born in Larne, Northern Ireland. He entered the Augustinian order in 1962, and was ordained a priest in 1971.

In 2008, he became the first Augustinian friar to be ordained a bishop in England since the 16th century Reformation.

The prelate's episcopal motto is: "Ecce nova facio omnia" -- Behold I make all things new.

The Diocese of Lancaster has some 110,000 Catholics, 108 parishes and 87 Catholic schools and colleges.


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Civilization of Love

An Axis of Secularism

New Ally Joins Europe and the UN

By Carl Anderson

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Several events in the past few months -- and in particular the response of the media and governmental organizations to statements and actions by Pope Benedict -- have made clear that the Pope and the Church face an increasingly hostile secularism.

The international attacks on the Pope, by governments and the media alike, most recently on the solution to the AIDS crisis in Africa, show an increasingly secular orthodoxy. This outlook places no value on Christian morality and is willing to ignore facts in its quest for a secular, valueless solution to any social problem.

Pope Benedict's discussion of this phenomenon in the European context goes back many years. As Europe abandons its Christian roots, it increasingly creates a future where religion has no place in the public square. Some commentators have gone so far as to refer to European "Christianophobia." After all, polling shows that a third or less of people living in Britain, Germany, Italy and France say that religion plays an important role in their lives.

Speaking to a group of European politicians in 2006, Benedict encouraged them to support the Christian heritage of the continent, and warned of the dangers to democracy of excluding Europe's Christian tradition from a public role.

He said that "support for the Christian heritage" could help to "defeat a culture that is now fairly widespread in Europe, which relegates to the private and subjective sphere the manifestation of one's own religious convictions." Citing "Evangelium Vitae," he also warned that such a secularism "exclude[d] engagement with Europe's religious tradition ... thereby threatening democracy itself, whose strength depends on the values that it promotes."

In contrast to Europe's increasing hostility to the Church, Pope Benedict -- even before his election -- saw a more hopeful, less hostile secularism in America. Speaking in the United States just over a year ago, Benedict noted: "It strikes me as significant that here in America, unlike many places in Europe, the secular mentality has not been intrinsically opposed to religion. Within the context of the separation of Church and state, American society has always been marked by a fundamental respect for religion and its public role, and, if polls are to be believed, the American people are deeply religious."

However, he didn't see the American model as free from secular attack either, and he added a sobering sentence: "It is not enough to count on this traditional religiosity and go about business as usual, even as its foundations are being slowly undermined."

In the past year, that last sentence has proven increasingly prescient.

While still not quite as strident as secularists in Europe, secular forces within the United States have become increasingly emboldened, seeking to marginalize the Church, and label its teaching on marriage and life as outdated at best and bigoted at worst. In at least one case, a state government actually considered (unsuccessfully) legally reorganizing the Catholic Church by stripping its bishops and priests of their control over dioceses and parishes.

In the media too, hostility has increased. Just before Easter, the American media was confronted with two polls from prominent polling institutes. One poll -- commissioned by the Knights of Columbus -- showed overwhelming appreciation of Easter by Americans. The other poll showed a modest decrease in the number of Americans who identified themselves as Christian. The secular media chose to give widespread coverage to the "decline of Christianity," and far less to the high regard for Easter and remarkable number of Americans who planned to attend Church services.

We have also an apparently similar bias in attacks on the Pope's -- correct and empirically proven -- statements on AIDS and condoms. Key officials at the United Nations, from several European countries, as well as the international media led by outlets in the United States and Britain were quick to assume that Benedict was wrong.

With an increasing political hostility in the United States to its Christian heritage, it now seems clear that Pope Benedict and the Catholic Church face an axis of secularism, made up of significant elements in the European Union, the United Nations, and, now, the United States as well. This latter addition is notable both because it is a recent addition and because the United States exerts a great deal of influence generally and in terms of its media.

We have also seen the effects. Cut off from its moral compass, which the Pope has referred to as "the pre-political moral foundation of a free state," this axis has shown itself unwilling or unable to accept anything but its own values. In the name of a radical commitment to reason alone, we have witnessed a rush to judgment against the Pope, despite scientific evidence. A so-called commitment to reason -- cut off from faith -- has proven unreasonable in its hostility toward morality and religious faith.

Such a trend, as Benedict has pointed out, is disturbing for the future of democracy. And for a world that has already experimented with radical secularism in the form of Marxism and National Socialism, this trend is too familiar. Cut off from its moral compass, the world risks embracing a familiar dictatorship -- in Benedict's words -- a "dictatorship of relativism."

This "hubris of reason," then-Cardinal Ratzinger once warned, "poses an even greater threat -- it suffices here to think of the atom bomb, or man as a ‘product.'"

Our response will require close cooperation between bishops, priests and the laity -- which Pope Benedict has proposed as the key to the success of the new evangelization. Nothing less will bring the Gospel effectively to these increasingly secular landscapes.

Following Pope Benedict's lead, each of us must work to bring the message of Christ to our neighbors and our nations through our witness to the truth in public as well as private spheres. As has been the case every time that the Church has faced the challenges of a hostile environment, our Christian witness, our love of neighbor, is the most powerful witness we can provide to our ever more secular society.

* * *

Carl Anderson is the supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus and a New York Times bestselling author.


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DOCUMENTS

Papal Address to Social Sciences Academy

"Natural Law Is a Universal Guide Recognizable to Everyone"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the English-language address Benedict XVI gave today to the members of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. The members of the academy are gathered in the Vatican through Tuesday for their plenary session, which is focused on Catholic social doctrine and human rights.

* * *

 

Dear Brothers in the Episcopate and the Priesthood,

Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen,

As you gather for the fifteenth Plenary Session of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, I am pleased to have this occasion to meet with you and to express my encouragement for your mission of expounding and furthering the Church's social doctrine in the areas of law, economy, politics and the various other social sciences. Thanking Professor Mary Ann Glendon for her cordial words of greeting, I assure you of my prayers that the fruit of your deliberations will continue to attest to the enduring pertinence of Catholic social teaching in a rapidly changing world.

After studying work, democracy, globalisation, solidarity and subsidiarity in relation to the social teaching of the Church, your Academy has chosen to return to the central question of the dignity of the human person and human rights, a point of encounter between the doctrine of the Church and contemporary society.

The world's great religions and philosophies have illuminated some aspects of these human rights, which are concisely expressed in "the golden rule" found in the Gospel: "Do to others as you would have them do to you" (Lk 6:31; cf. Mt 7:12). The Church has always affirmed that fundamental rights, above and beyond the different ways in which they are formulated and the different degrees of importance they may have in various cultural contexts, are to be upheld and accorded universal recognition because they are inherent in the very nature of man, who is created in the image and likeness of God. If all human beings are created in the image and likeness of God, then they share a common nature that binds them together and calls for universal respect. The Church, assimilating the teaching of Christ, considers the person as "the worthiest of nature" (St. Thomas Aquinas, De potentia, 9, 3) and has taught that the ethical and political order that governs relationships between persons finds its origin in the very structure of man's being. The discovery of America and the ensuing anthropological debate in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe led to a heightened awareness of human rights as such and of their universality (ius gentium). The modern period helped shape the idea that the message of Christ - because it proclaims that God loves every man and woman and that every human being is called to love God freely - demonstrates that everyone, independently of his or her social and cultural condition, by nature deserves freedom. At the same time, we must always remember that "freedom itself needs to be set free. It is Christ who sets it free" (Veritatis Splendor, 86).

In the middle of the last century, after the vast suffering caused by two terrible world wars and the unspeakable crimes perpetrated by totalitarian ideologies, the international community acquired a new system of international law based on human rights. In this, it appears to have acted in conformity with the message that my predecessor Benedict XV proclaimed when he called on the belligerents of the First World War to "transform the material force of arms into the moral force of law" ("Note to the Heads of the Belligerent Peoples", 1 August 1917).

Human rights became the reference point of a shared universal ethos - at least at the level of aspiration - for most of humankind. These rights have been ratified by almost every State in the world. The Second Vatican Council, in the Declaration Dignitatis Humanae, as well as my predecessors Paul VI and John Paul II, forcefully referred to the right to life and the right to freedom of conscience and religion as being at the centre of those rights that spring from human nature itself.

Strictly speaking, these human rights are not truths of faith, even though they are discoverable - and indeed come to full light - in the message of Christ who "reveals man to man himself" (Gaudium et Spes, 22). They receive further confirmation from faith. Yet it stands to reason that, living and acting in the physical world as spiritual beings, men and women ascertain the pervading presence of a logos which enables them to distinguish not only between true and false, but also good and evil, better and worse, and justice and injustice. This ability to discern - this radical agency - renders every person capable of grasping the "natural law", which is nothing other than a participation in the eternal law: "unde...lex naturalis nihil aliud est quam participatio legis aeternae in rationali creatura" (St. Thomas Aquinas, ST I-II, 91, 2). The natural law is a universal guide recognizable to everyone, on the basis of which all people can reciprocally understand and love each other. Human rights, therefore, are ultimately rooted in a participation of God, who has created each human person with intelligence and freedom. If this solid ethical and political basis is ignored, human rights remain fragile since they are deprived of their sound foundation.

The Church's action in promoting human rights is therefore supported by rational reflection, in such a way that these rights can be presented to all people of good will, independently of any religious affiliation they may have. Nevertheless, as I have observed in my Encyclicals, on the one hand, human reason must undergo constant purification by faith, insofar as it is always in danger of a certain ethical blindness caused by disordered passions and sin; and, on the other hand, insofar as human rights need to be re-appropriated by every generation and by each individual, and insofar as human freedom - which proceeds by a succession of free choices - is always fragile, the human person needs the unconditional hope and love that can only be found in God and that lead to participation in the justice and generosity of God towards others (cf. Deus Caritas Est, 18, and Spe Salvi, 24).

This perspective draws attention to some of the most critical social problems of recent decades, such as the growing awareness - which has in part arisen with globalisation and the present economic crisis - of a flagrant contrast between the equal attribution of rights and the unequal access to the means of attaining those rights. For Christians who regularly ask God to "give us this day our daily bread", it is a shameful tragedy that one-fifth of humanity still goes hungry. Assuring an adequate food supply, like the protection of vital resources such as water and energy, requires all international leaders to collaborate in showing a readiness to work in good faith, respecting the natural law and promoting solidarity and subsidiarity with the weakest regions and peoples of the planet as the most effective strategy for eliminating social inequalities between countries and societies and for increasing global security.

Dear friends, dear Academicians, in exhorting you in your research and deliberations to be credible and consistent witnesses to the defence and promotion of these non-negotiable human rights which are founded in divine law, I most willingly impart to you my Apostolic Blessing.


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Mary Ann Glendon's Address to Benedict XVI

"Our Central Focus Has Always Been on the Dignity of the Human Person"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of the address given today by Mary Ann Glendon, president of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, to Benedict XVI upon being received by the Pontiff during the plenary session of the academy. The members of the academy are gathered in the Vatican through Tuesday, focusing on Catholic social doctrine and human rights.

* * *

Holy Father,

Your Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences comes before you this morning with immense gratitude for the encouragement you have given us, as we strive to be ever more useful to the Church in the development of her social teachings.

Over the years, no matter what aspect of economics, law, sociology or political sciences claimed our attention, there has been one central theme, one golden thread that has stitched all our work together. Our central focus has always been on the dignity of the human person and the common good. This week, Your Holiness, our Plenary Session has been entirely devoted to the way that theme has found expression in the concept of universal human rights.

In so doing, we have been mindful of the Church's long engagement with human rights, of her own decisive contributions to the dignitarian vision of rights embodied in so many human rights instruments, including a Universal Declaration of Human Rights; and of the Holy See as a fearless champion of that vision in international settings. That engagement has been characterized by a prudent recognition that the modern human rights project, like all human enterprises, constantly needs to be called to what is highest and best in its aspirations.

We have also been mindful of the fact that in today's world, ironically, many threats to the dignity of the person have appeared in the guise of human rights. As you pointed out in your memorable speech to the United Nations last year, there are mounting pressures to "move away from the protection of human dignity towards the satisfaction of simple interests, often particular interests."

Accordingly in these days, with the help of experts in all the social sciences, we have reviewed the long reciprocal relationship between Christianity and human rights ideas. We have explored the expanding circle of human rights protection in an effort to discern how new rights claims are, or are not, conducive to human flourishing. We have paid special attention to rights that are currently under assault such as the right to life, the right to found a family, freedom of conscience and religion, and to rights that have too long awaited fulfillment such as the right to decent subsistence. Then building on our previous studies of globalization, we have taken up the question of the proper roles of states, private actors, and international entities in bringing human rights to life.

I would also like to take this opportunity to thank you on behalf of all our members for your teachings on faith, hope and charity that provide an unconditional foundation for human rights, and for the example you set in the difficult Petrine mission to which Providence has called you. We are deeply grateful for your constant solicitude towards our Academy, which is also manifested in the appointment of our new Academician Lubomir Mlcoch.

It only remains for me, dear Holy Father, to ask you to bless this Academy and all those who have generously shared their wisdom with us over the past few days. We thank you most sincerely for the gift of this encounter.


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Pontiff's Address to the Papal Foundation Members

"Continue to Be Beacons of Hope, Strength and Support for Others"

VATICAN CITY, MAY 4, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is the address Benedict XVI gave Saturday in an audience with members of the Philadelphia based Papal Foundation.

* * *

Dear Cardinal Keeler,
Brother Cardinals and Bishops,
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

It is a great pleasure for me to have the opportunity to greet the members of the Papal Foundation once again, on your annual visit to Rome. In this Pauline Year I welcome you with the words of the Apostle of the Gentiles, "Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ" (Rom 1:7).

Saint Paul reminds us of how the entire human race yearns for God's grace of peace. Today's world is truly in need of his peace, especially as it faces the tragedies of war, division, poverty and despair. In just a few days I will have the privilege of visiting the Holy Land. I go as a pilgrim of peace. As you are well aware, for more than sixty years, this region -- the land of our Lord's birth, death and Resurrection; a sacred place for the world's three great monotheistic religions -- has been plagued by violence and injustice. This has led to a general atmosphere of mistrust, uncertainty and fear -- often pitting neighbor against neighbor, brother against brother. As I prepare for this significant journey I ask in a special way that you join me in prayer for all the peoples of the Holy Land and the region. May they receive the gifts of reconciliation, hope and peace.

Our meeting this year occurs during a time when the entire world is struggling with a very worrying economic situation. At moments such as these it is tempting to overlook those without a voice and think only of our own difficulties. As Christians we are aware, however, that especially when times are difficult we must work even harder to ensure that the consoling message of our Lord is heard. Rather than turning in on ourselves, we must continue to be beacons of hope, strength and support for others, most especially those who have no one to watch over or assist them. For this reason I am pleased to have you here today. You are examples of good Christian men and women who continue to meet the challenges we face with courage and trust. Indeed, the Papal Foundation itself, through the great generosity of many, enables valuable assistance to be carried out in the name of Christ and his Church. For your sacrifice and dedication I am most grateful to you: by means of your support the Easter message of joy, hope, reconciliation and peace is more widely proclaimed.

Entrusting all of you to the loving intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, she who remains always in our midst as our Mother, the Mother of Hope, (cf. Spe Salvi, 50), I cordially impart my Apostolic Blessing to you and your families as a pledge of joy and peace in the Risen Savior.

© Copyright 2009 -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana


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Sunday, May 3, 2009

ZE090503

ZENIT

The World Seen From Rome

Daily dispatch - May 03, 2009


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VATICAN DOSSIER
Benedict XVI Notes Goals for Holy Land Trip
Pray a Lot and Well, Pope Urges Priests
Pontiff Supports Mexicans in Flu Fight
Pope: Church Needs Holy Married Couples
Spokesman: Pope's Trip Is for Peace, Not Politics

ANALYSIS
Religion Shopping

NEWS BRIEFS
Before Papal Trip, Holy See-Israel Talks Progress

REGINA CAELI
On the Pope's Prayer Requests

VATICAN DOSSIER

Benedict XVI Notes Goals for Holy Land Trip

Asks Faithful to Pray for Success

VATICAN CITY, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is asking for prayers for his weeklong trip to the Holy Land, saying that his pilgrimage seeks to promote dialogue, reconciliation and peace.

The Pope invited the faithful to pray for the trip today when he recited the midday Regina Caeli with those gathered in St. Peter's Square. He is set to leave this Friday and return May 15, and will visit Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

The Holy Father noted that he will be following in the footsteps of Paul VI and John Paul II, who also made pilgrimages to the Holy Land. He expressed that he hopes "to confirm and encourage the Christians of the Holy Land, who must daily confront many difficulties. As a successor of the Apostle Peter, I will show the closeness and support of the whole body of the Church."

"Moreover, I will be a pilgrim of peace, in the name of the one God, Father of all," the Bishop of Rome continued. "I will give witness to the Catholic Church's commitment in favor of those who work to practice dialogue and reconciliation, to arrive to a stable and lasting peace in justice and mutual respect."

As well, the Pontiff noted, "this trip will necessarily have notable ecumenical and interreligious significance. Jerusalem is, from this point of view, the symbolic city par excellence: There Christ died so as to reunite all of the dispersed children of God."

Benedict XVI will deliver 29 discourses and homilies during his week in the Middle East. He will also meet with civil authorities and representatives of Christianity, Islam and Judaism.


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Pray a Lot and Well, Pope Urges Priests

Ordains 19 to Serve Diocese of Rome

VATICAN CITY, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is encouraging priests to pray a lot and pray well, saying that in this way they will be increasingly united to Christ.

The Pope made this invitation today when he ordained 19 new priests for the Diocese of Rome at a Mass held in St. Peter's Basilica.

Half of the newly ordained are from Rome; three others are Italian and six came from other countries: Nigeria, Haiti, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Chile and South Korea.

The Holy Father encouraged them to live a life of total surrender to God, like that of the apostles who changed the course of history proclaiming salvation in the name of Christ.

"The disciple, and especially the apostle, experiences the same joy of Jesus in knowing the name and face of the Father; and he shares as well his same sorrow at seeing that God is not known, that his love is not reciprocated," the Pontiff said.

He added: "On one hand, we exclaim as John did in his First Letter: 'See what love the Father has bestowed on us that we may be called the children of God. Yet so we are.' And on the other hand, bitterly we attest: 'The reason the world does not know us is that it did not know him' (1 John 3:1).

"It is true, and we priests know this from experience: The 'world,' in the sense that John uses the word, does not understand the Christian, does not understand the ministers of the Gospel -- in part, because in fact it does not know God and in part, because it does not want to know him."

Trapped

Nevertheless, Benedict XVI cautioned, the "world" also ensnares the Church, "contaminating its members and even the ordained ministers."

This world, he explained, "is a mentality, a way of thinking and living that can contaminate even the Church, and in fact does contaminate it, and therefore demands constant vigilance and purification."

"We are 'in' the world and we run the risk of also being 'of' the world," the Pope added. "And in fact, sometimes we are."

Prayer, he said, is the way to reach sanctity and a complete surrender to God, "above all, in the holy Mass of each day."

"The Eucharistic celebration is the greatest and highest act of prayer and constitutes the center and the fount from which the other forms of prayer receive their 'sap': the Liturgy of the Hours, Eucharistic adoration, lectio divina, the holy rosary, meditation," the Holy Father stated.

"The priest who prays a lot and prays well becomes ever more detached from himself and ever more united to Jesus, the Good Shepherd and Servant of his brothers," he went on. "In conformity with him, the priest too 'gives his life' for the sheep who have been entrusted to him."


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Pontiff Supports Mexicans in Flu Fight

Says Our Lady of Guadalupe Will Help

VATICAN CITY, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI expressed his spiritual closeness to Mexicans today, assuring them that Our Lady of Guadalupe will assist them.

After praying the Regina Caeli with pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square, the Pope gave a special greeting in Spanish to Mexicans. The nation has been at the center of the H1N1 flu epidemic; reports today confirmed that 19 have died there of the new flu strain.

"I wish to express my closeness and assure my prayers for the victims of the influenza that is affecting Mexico and other countries," he said. "Dear Mexican brothers and sisters, stay firm in the Lord. He will help you to overcome this difficulty."

The Holy Father invited them to unite in their families to pray: "Our Lady of Guadalupe will assist and protect you always."

Last week, Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Vatican press office, assured Mexicans that Benedict XVI was following with concern and sadness all that was occurring in the country and that he was praying for the victims of the epidemic and their families.

The Pontiff was kept informed of the progress of the flu and supported the decision made by some bishops, including the archbishop primate of Mexico City, to cancel Sunday Masses and relieve the faithful of their Sunday obligation, Father Lombardi said.

The prelates' decision was made in the context of a nationwide shutdown, including the cancellation of classes and the closing of restaurants, in an attempt to keep the epidemic from spreading.


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Pope: Church Needs Holy Married Couples

Reflects on Day of Prayer for Vocations

VATICAN CITY, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI says the Church needs holy spouses who can teach their children by example how best to use their freedom.

The Pope invited the faithful to pray for all types of vocations today when he prayed the midday Regina Caeli with the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square.

Today marks the World Day of Prayer for Vocations and the Holy Father's message for this year's celebration focused on faith in the divine initiative and the human response.

"In fact, trust in the Lord, which continuously calls to sanctity and, for some in particular, to a special consecration, is expressed precisely in prayer," the Pontiff said. "As much personally as in community, we have to pray a lot for vocations, so that the greatness and the beauty of the love of God attracts many to follow Christ on the path of the priesthood and the consecrated life."

The Pope made this invitation just after he had ordained 19 new priests for the Diocese of Rome during a Mass held in St. Peter's Square.

He continued by noting the need for holy married couples: "It is also necessary to pray as well so that there are holy spouses, capable of indicating to their children, above all by example, the horizons to which they should tend toward with their liberty."

The Bishop of Rome suggested entrusting both intentions to the saints: "The men and women saints that the Church proposes for the veneration of all the faithful give witness to the mature fruit of this union between the divine call and the human response. Let us entrust to their heavenly intercession our prayer for vocations."


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Spokesman: Pope's Trip Is for Peace, Not Politics

Insists Holy Land Journey Is a Pilgrimage

VATICAN CITY, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI's May 8-15 trip to the Holy Land is a pilgrimage, not a political event, a Vatican spokesman reiterated.

Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Vatican press office, spoke of the upcoming papal pilgrimage on the most recent edition of Vatican Television's "Octava Dies."

He called the journey the "most awaited" trip the Pope has made thus far, and possibly the "most binding."

Father Lombardi clarified that it is "above all a journey of faith," even if events in the Middle East are always interpreted in a political key.

"The spiritual desire of every Christian has become a spontaneous priority for the Pontiffs ever since their international trips have become a concrete possibility," Father Lombardi contended. "It was not a coincidence that precisely Paul VI's pilgrimage to the Holy Land was the first of all these trips. It was a truly historical moment and one of grace for the Catholic Church that celebrated the Council, because of the ecumenical path in the encounter with Patriarch Athenagorus, and because of the invocation for peace between the peoples of the region and the world."

"John Paul II," he added, "had to wait a lot of time before fulfilling the desire for this pilgrimage, but afterward he had the joy of making it with serenity, in the heart of the Great Jubilee, the true culmination of his grand pontificate, with moments of sublimely intense prayer and with memorable gestures of friendship and closeness with the Jewish and Palestinian people and with their past and present sufferings."

Now that it is Benedict XVI's turn, the spokesman acknowledged, the "political situation in the area is very uncertain, and also the possibilities of peace are fragile. But the Pope all the same sets out, with an admirable courage that is based on faith, to speak of reconciliation and peace."

"All of us," he affirmed, "should accompany him not only with ordinary prayer, but also with that spiritual movement that John Paul II called the 'great prayer' -- so that the Church is renewed in its sources, so that the union between Christians grows closer, and so that hate finally gives way to reconciliation."


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ANALYSIS

Religion Shopping

Faith in Flux in the United State

By Father John Flynn, LC

ROME, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Americans are prone to changing their church affiliation, according to a report released by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. The report, "Faith in Flux: Changes in Religious Affiliation in the U.S.," was published April 27.

The study found that 28% of American adults have changed their religious affiliation from the one in which they were raised. The figure is higher, 44%, if changing from one Protestant denomination to another is counted.

The study was a follow-up to the "U.S. Religious Landscape Survey," published in 2008. It was based on interviews with participants in the previous report.

The survey discovered that there is a notable difference between Catholics and Protestants when it comes to the factors causing a change. Almost 40% of Protestants said they changed denominations simply because of moving. An almost equal number attributed the change due to marrying someone from a different religious affiliation.

Two-thirds of Catholics, by contrast, say they left the Church due to no longer believing in some of its teachings. Nearly six-in-ten former Catholics who are now unaffiliated said they left due to dissatisfaction with Catholic teachings on abortion and homosexuality. About half cited concerns about Catholic teachings on birth control.

Just over 10% of American adults have left the Catholic Church after having been raised Catholic. This is notably greater than the number joining the Catholic Church. Only 2.6% of adults have become Catholic after having been raised something other than Catholic.

Age and instruction

The survey also found that age is a critical factor in changing religious allegiances. Most of those who left the faith they were brought up in did so before reaching 24 years of age. By the age of 36 a large majority reached their current religion, and very few change once they reach 50 years or more.

Another important factor is the level of religious formation and practice during the teen years. The survey found that ex-Catholics who are now unaffiliated are much less likely than lifelong Catholics to have attended Mass regularly or to have had very strong faith as teenagers.

Similarly, now unaffiliated former Protestants were less likely to have regularly attended services as children or teenagers. They also scored lower when it came to attending Sunday school or having had very strong religious faith as a child or a teenager.

The study also revealed that the category of people who are unaffiliated with any particular religion has grown more rapidly than any other religious group in recent decades. The Landscape Survey found that 16% of American adults say they are currently unaffiliated with any particular religion, compared with only 7% who were raised unaffiliated.

The unaffiliated are, however, very diverse. Moreover, approximately four-in-ten unaffiliated individuals say religion is somewhat important in their lives.

Christian America

The Pew study was published shortly after a controversial story on Christianity by Newsweek magazine. In its April 13 Easter issue Jon Meacham authored a feature article titled: "The End of Christian America."

He cited data from the 2009 American Religious Identification Survey, according to which the number of Americans who claim no religious affiliation nearly doubled since 1990, going from 8% to 15%.

According to Meacham's interpretation Christianity is now much less of a force in politics and culture. He also affirmed that this was "a good thing," and even went so far as to claim that it was good for Christians in order to help them rediscover the benefits of separating Church and state.

At the same time Meacham did admit that Christianity is still strong in America and that it would be wrong to define it as "post-Christian."

Meacham's thesis, however, came in for sharp criticism from a number of commentators. In an April 12 article Washington Post columnist, E.J. Dionne, commented that in its history America has gone through several cycles of religious fervor and decline.

Dionne agreed that change is occurring, but maintained that this "will strengthen rather than weaken the Christian church over the long run."

This is so, he continued, because in recent years evangelical Christians were the ones who most exerted cultural and political influence and the relative decline of their power opens up the possibility for other Christian groups to make an impact.

Decent shape

More polemically, L. Brent Bozell, penning an opinion article in the April 16 edition of the Wall Street Journal, turned the focus back on Newsweek itself. The number of Christians may well have decreased, but Bozell drew attention to the plummeting circulation of Newsweek, down 52% in just the last two years.

Bozell also reminded readers that prior to marking Easter by proclaiming the decline of Christianity, Newsweek celebrated last Christmas with another questionable article, making the case for same-sex marriage as being compatible with Christianity.

In an acerbic aside he commented that: "Christianity, in contrast to Newsweek, is in decent demographic shape."

Stephen Prothero, chair of the Department of Religion at Boston University, returned to the Newsweek story in an opinion article published by USA Today on April 27.

Prothero also cited what President Barack Obama said in a speech given April 6 during a visit to Turkey. Obama said that the United States "does not consider itself a Christian nation or a Jewish nation or a Muslim nation" but "a nation of citizens who are bound by ideals and a set of values."

Prothero observed that the rise in the number of Americans who profess no religion becomes less clear once some digging is done. He called the researchers of the American Religious Identification Survey and was told that when asked about God, 23% of the no religion category said they believed in a higher power and that 21% gave allegiance to a personal God.

Still spiritual

Prothero also cited the results of a similar survey carried out by Baylor University in 2006. They found that no less than 63% of Americans who claim no religious affiliation believe in God, and 36% said they prayed at least occasionally.

As well, a 2008 survey done by the Pew Forum discovered that 41% of those without religious affiliation nonetheless described religion as either very important or somewhat important in their lives.

So, Prothero concluded, Christianity in America is changing rather than declining. A greater number of people are reluctant to identify themselves with institutional religion, but they are still spiritually inclined.

While less alarming than the argument put forward by Newsweek, the trend away from organized religion is still a problem, as Pope Benedict XVI admitted in his trip to the United States just over a year ago.

In a question and answer session with American bishops last April 16 the Pontiff addressed the subject of religious faith being more a "pick and choose" approach.

The American people are, in fact, deeply religious, the Pope stressed, but an individualistic approach can reduce religion to its lowest common denominator, leaving it without much practical relevance when it comes to everyday life.

Dealing with this, Benedict XVI explained, requires connecting more the Gospel truths and the principles of natural law with what is the pursuit of authentic human good.

The Church needs to promote more that faith and reason are compatible and to present the Gospel as an attractive and true answer to human problems, the Pope concluded. The challenge, then, is to bring about this new beginning for Christianity.


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NEWS BRIEFS

Before Papal Trip, Holy See-Israel Talks Progress

JERUSALEM, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Relations between the Holy See and Israel have made "significant progress," on the eve of the Pope's pilgrimage to the Holy Land this week, a joint working commission reported.

In a statement released from Jerusalem, the Bilateral Permanent Working Commission Between the State of Israel and the Holy See informed on the results of last Thursday's meeting.

The commission periodically meets in an attempt to advance negotiations regarding the 1993 Fundamental Agreement.

"The plenary meeting of the commission took place in an atmosphere of great friendship and a spirit of cooperation and good will," the statement reported. "The plenary noted that the Working Level Commission achieved significant progress, on the eve of the upcoming important visit of the Pope in Jerusalem.

"It was agreed to hold the next plenary meeting on Dec. 10, 2009, at the Vatican. In the meantime, the working-level commission will hold meetings in furtherance of both delegations' pledge to accelerate the talks and conclude the agreement at the earliest opportunity."


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REGINA CAELI

On the Pope's Prayer Requests

Vocations and the Holy Land Trip

VATICAN CITY, MAY 3, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today to those gathered in St. Peter's Square for the praying of the midday Regina Caeli. The Holy Father had just celebrated a Mass in which he ordained 19 new priests for the Diocese of Rome.

* * *

Dear brothers and sisters:

I have just concluded, in St. Peter's Basilica, the Eucharistic celebration in which I consecrated 19 new priests of the Diocese of Rome. Once again, I have chosen this Sunday, the fourth of Easter, for this joyous event, because it is marked by the Gospel of the Good Shepherd (cf. John 10:1-18) and offers a particularly suitable context.

Because of this, today is celebrated the World Day of Prayer for Vocations. In my annual message for this occasion, I have invited reflection on the theme: "Faith in the Divine Initiative -- the Human Response." In fact, trust in the Lord, which continuously calls to sanctity and, for some in particular, to a special consecration, is expressed precisely in prayer. As much personally as in community, we have to pray a lot for vocations, so that the greatness and the beauty of the love of God attracts many to follow Christ on the path of the priesthood and the consecrated life.

It is also necessary to pray as well so that there are holy spouses, capable of indicating to their children, above all by example, the horizons to which they should tend toward with their liberty.

The men and women saints that the Church proposes for the veneration of all the faithful give witness to the mature fruit of this union between the divine call and the human response. Let us entrust to their heavenly intercession our prayer for vocations.

There is another intention for which I invite you to pray today: the trip to the Holy Land that I will make, God willing, next Friday, May 8 through Friday, May 15. Following the footsteps of my venerable predecessors Paul VI and John Paul II, I will go on pilgrimage to the principle holy places of our faith.

With my visit, I propose to confirm and encourage the Christians of the Holy Land, who must daily confront many difficulties. As a successor of the Apostle Peter, I will show the closeness and support of the whole body of the Church. Moreover, I will be a pilgrim of peace, in the name of the one God, Father of all. I will give witness to the Catholic Church's commitment in favor of those who work to practice dialogue and reconciliation, to arrive to a stable and lasting peace in justice and mutual respect.

Finally, this trip will necessarily have notable ecumenical and interreligious significance. Jerusalem is, from this point of view, the symbolic city par excellence: There Christ died so as to reunite all of the dispersed children of God (cf. John 11:52).

Addressing now the Virgin Mary, let us invoke her as Mother of the Good Shepherd so that she watches over the new priests of the Diocese of Rome, and so that in the whole world, numerous and holy vocations of special consecration to the Kingdom of God may flourish.

[Translation by ZENIT]

[The Holy Father then addressed the faithful in various languages. In English, he said:]

To all the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present for today's Regina Caeli, I extend a warm welcome. I pray that as you follow the voice of the Good Shepherd, you will grow ever closer to the Risen Lord and share his Gospel with all those you encounter. This Friday I leave for my pilgrimage to the Holy Land, where men and women first heard the voice of the Good Shepherd. I ask you all to join me in praying for the afflicted peoples of that region. In a special way I ask that you remember the Palestinian people who have endured great hardship and suffering. May the Lord bless them and all those who live in the Holy Land with the gifts of unity and peace. Upon all of you visiting Rome during this Easter Season, I invoke the abundant blessings of Almighty God.

© Copyright 2009 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana


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