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BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

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    00 24/10/2010 06:28







    See preceding page for earlier posts on 10/23/10.




    Another belated post I failed to see when it first came out...


    Czechs to invite Benedict XVI back
    in 2013 for 1150th anniversary of
    evangelization by Cyril and Methodius



    Vranov, South Moravia, Oct 13 (CTK) - Prague Archbishop Dominik Duka retierated today that the Church plans to invite Pope Benedict XVI back to the Czech Republic in 2013.

    The Czech Bishops' Conference is preparing for the 1150th anniversary celebrations of the arrival of Sts. Cyril and Methodius in the historical region called Great Moravia, roughly situated on what is now the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

    Archbishop Duka, president of the conference, confirmed the initiative to invite the Pope to participate in the jubilee celebrations.

    Irena Sargankova, conference spokeswoman, said representatives of the Church in the Czech Republic will go on a Nov. 9-11 pilgrimage to Rome where they will meet with the Pontiff and thank him for his visit to their country last year.

    The celebrations in 2013 will also be held in Slovakia. Duka said earlier that Slovaks, too, were planning to invite Pope Benedict XVI. [In fact, Slovak President Gasparovic extended the invitation formally when he met with the Holy Father at the Vaticanlast May.]

    Pope Benedict XVI visited the Czech Republic last September in connection with an anniversary of Saint Wenceslas, patron saint of Bohemia, and also with the 20th anniversary of the overthrow of the Communist regime.

    He visited Prague, Brno and Stara Boleslav, central Bohemia, where Duke Wenceslas died a martyr's death in 935.



    Saint Cyril and Saint Methodius, known as "the apostles to the Slavs", were two Greek brothers who introduced Christianity to Central Europe in the 9th century, translated the Bible into the Slavic languages and in doing so, devised the alphabet still used by the Slavic family of languages. They were declared among the patrons of Europe by John Paul II.

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    00 24/10/2010 17:32




    October 24, 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time
    World Mission Day


    ST. ANTONI MARIA CLARET (b Spain 1807, d France 1870), Weaver, Priest, Missionary, Founder of the Claretians, Archbishop, Writer and Publisher
    A Catalan born near Barcelona, Antoni learned his father's trade as a weaver and worked in the textile mills of Barcelona, studying Latin and printing while he did this. He was a mediocre Catholic, but a near-drowning accident revived his faith. When he decided to enter the religious life, he wanted to be a Carthusian or a Jesuit, but in both cases, he was rejected due to ill health. He became a diocesan priest and was ordained at age 28. He became a famous preacher and retreat master throughout Spain. He was a fiery orator with extraordinary charisms (prophecy, exorcism and miracles) and attracted enormous and enthusiastic crowds. He stressed devotion to the Eucharist and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. After spending 15 months as a missionary in the Canary Islands, he came back to the mainland and at age 42, he and five young priests started the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (commonly known as the Claretians). Later, he would also found the order of the Teaching Sisters of Mary Immaculate. Just as important, he founded what became the great religious publishing house of Barcelona, now known as Libreria Claret, which went on to publish millions of cheap editions of the best Catholic works, old and new. Claret himself, in his lifetime, published over 200 books and pamphlets. In 1850, Pope Pius IX named him Archbishop of Santiago de Cuba to reform the Church on that Caribbean island. His reforms, both in the clergy and in social practices, were bitterly opposed in the anti-clerical atmosphere of that era. when Freemasons were highly influential. Particularly resented was his campaign to have families produce a variety of crops for their own use and for the market, instead of everyone merely devoting themselves to cultivating sugar cane. At least 15 attempts were made against his life. After seven year,s he was recalled to Spain to be the chaplain to Queen Isabella II. He agreed on three conditions: he would not live in court; he would only come to hear the Queen's confession and instruct her children; and he would be exempt from court functions. He used his influence to help the poor adn to propagate learning. He established a monastic school at the Escorial, which had a science laboratory, a museum of natural history, a library, a college and schools of music and languages. In the Revolution of 1868, he fled with the Queen's entourage to Paris, where he used his time preaching to the Spanish colony in France. he continued his popular missions and distribution of books and pamphlets wherever he went. When Isabella recognized the government of the new unified Italy, Claret went to Rome where he was summoned by Pius IX. In 1869, he took part in the First Vatican Council where he defended the concept of papal infallibility. During an argument by liberal bishops opposing it, he had a stroke from which he never recovered. He retired to a Cistercian monastery in southern France where he died the following year. In 1897, when his relics were transferred from France to his mission house in Vic, near Barcelona, to the mission house at Vic near Barcelona in 1897, his heart was found to be incorrupt. He was beatified in 1934 and canonized in 1950. Today, the Claretians have 450 houses and 3100 members, with missions in five continents. and hundreds of educational institutions around the world are named for him.
    Readings for today's Mass:
    www.usccb.org/nab/readings/102410.shtml



    OR today:

    At the end of the Synodal Assembly, Benedict XVI thanks the Synodal Fathers
    and praises the rich plurality of the Middle Eastern Churches:
    'A polyphony of the one faith'
    Besides the wrap-up story (translated and posted yesterday on this thread in the preceding page), the issue contains the full text of the Synodal Assembly's final message. Other Page 1 stories: G20 finance ministers meeting in Seoul agree to give nations with emerging major economies more voice in a reformed International Monetary Fund; and the Wikileaks hackers unload 400,000 documents containing classified information about the US war in Iraq.


    THE POPE'S DAY

    Concluding Mass of the Synodal Assembly on the Middle East - The Holy Father reaffirms the major points of
    the assembly's final message, underscoring that the world must never resign itself to the absence of peace. He also
    announced a General Assembly of the Bishops' Synod in 2012 to discuss New Evangelization.

    Noontime Angelus - He noted that today is also World Mission Day for the Church, and that the theme this year
    was related to the theme of communion and witness in the Synodal Assembly on the Middle East. He paid tribute to
    Sr. Alfonsa Clerici (1860-1930), an Italian nun who was beatified yesterday in northern Italy.

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    00 24/10/2010 17:33




    CLOSING MASS OF
    SYNODAL ASSEMBLY ON THE MIDDLE EAST



    Illustration: “The whole group of believers was united, heart and soul” (Acts 4:32).




    At 9:30 this morning, the Holy Father Benedict XVI presided at a concelebration of the Eucharist with the Synodal Fathers at St. Peter's Basilica formally closing the two-week Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Bishops' Synod.








    Here is a full translation of his homily, from the English service of Vatican Radio:




    Venerable Brothers,
    Illustrious Ladies and Gentlemen,
    Dear brothers and sisters,

    Two weeks on from the opening Celebration, we are gathered once again on the Lord’s day, at the Altar of the Confession in St. Peter’s Basilica, to conclude the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Synod of Bishops.

    In our hearts is a deep gratitude towards God who has afforded us this truly extraordinary experience, not just for us, but for the good of the Church, for the People of God who live in the lands between the Mediterranean and Mesopotamia.

    As Bishop of Rome, I would like to pass on this gratitude to you, Venerable Synod Fathers: Cardinals, Patriarchs, Archbishops, Bishops. I wish to especially thank the Secretary General, the four Presidents Delegate, the Relator General, the Special Secretary and all the collaborators, who have worked tirelessly in these days.

    This morning we left the Synod Hall and came to “the temple to pray”: in this, we are touched directly by the parable of the Pharisee and the publican, told by Jesus and recounted by the evangelist St Luke (cf. 18:9-14).

    We too may be tempted, like the Pharisee, to tell God of our merits, perhaps thinking of our work during these days. However, to rise up to Heaven, prayer must emanate from a poor, humble heart.

    And therefore we, too, at the conclusion of this ecclesial event, wish to first and foremost give thanks to God, not for our merits, but for the gift that He has given us.

    We recognize ourselves as small and in need of salvation, of mercy; we recognize all that comes from Him and that only with his Grace we may realize what the Holy Spirit told us. Only in this manner may we “return home” truly enriched, made more just and more able to walk in the path of the Lord.

    The First Reading and the responsorial Psalm stress the theme of prayer, emphasizing that it is much more powerful to God’s heart when those who pray are in a condition of need and are afflicted.

    “The prayer of the humble pierces the clouds” affirms Ecclesiasticus (35:21); and the Psalmist adds: “Yahweh is near to the broken-hearted, he helps those whose spirit is crushed” (34:18).

    Our thoughts go to our numerous brothers and sisters who live in the region of the Middle East and who find themselves in trying situations, at times very burdensome, both for the material poverty and for the discouragement, the state of tension and at times of fear.

    Today the Word of God also offers us a light of consoling hope, there where He presents prayer, personified, that “until he has eliminated the hordes of the arrogant and broken the sceptres of the wicked, until he has repaid all people as their deeds deserve and human actions as their intentions merit” (Ecc 35:21-22).

    This link too, between prayer and justice makes us think of many situations in the world, particularly in the Middle East. The cry of the poor and of the oppressed finds an immediate echo in God, who desires to intervene to open up a way out, to restore a future of freedom, a horizon of hope.

    This faith in God who is near, who frees his friends, is what the Apostle Paul witnesses to in today’s epistle, in the Second Letter to Timothy.

    Realizing that the end of his earthly life was near, Paul makes an assessment: “I have fought the good fight to the end; I have run the race to the finish; I have kept the faith” (2 Tm 4:7).

    For each one of us, dear brothers in the episcopacy, this is a model to imitate: May Divine Goodness allow us to make a similar judgment of ourselves!

    St Paul continues, “the Lord stood by me and gave me power, so that through me the message might be fully proclaimed for all the gentiles to hear” (2 Tm 4:17).

    It is a word which resounds with particular strength on this Sunday in which we celebrate World Mission Day! Communion with Jesus crucified and risen, witness of his love.

    The Apostle’s experience is a model for every Christian, especially for us Shepherds. We have shared a powerful moment of ecclesial communion. We now leave each other so that each may return to his own mission, but we know that we remain united, we remain in his love.

    The Synodal Assembly which concludes today has always kept in mind the icon of the first Christian community, described in the Acts of the Apostles:
    It is a reality that we experienced in these past days, in which we have shared the joys and the pains, the concerns and the hopes of Christians in the Middle East. We experienced the unity of the Church in the variety of Churches present in that region.

    Led by the Holy Spirit, we became “united, heart and soul” in faith, in hope, and in charity, most of all during Eucharistic celebrations, source and summit of ecclesial communion, and in the Liturgy of the Hours as well, celebrated every morning according to one of the seven Catholic rites of the Middle East.

    We have thus enhanced the liturgical, spiritual and theological wealth of the Eastern Catholic Churches, as well as of the Latin Church. It involved an exchange of precious gifts, from which all the Synodal Fathers benefitted.

    It is hoped that this positive experience repeats itself in the respective communities of the Middle East, encouraging the participation of the faithful in liturgical celebrations of other Catholic rites, thus opening themselves to the dimensions of the Universal Church.

    Common prayer helped us to face the challenges of the Catholic Church in the Middle East as well. One of these is communion within each sui iuris Church, as well as in the relationships between the various Catholic Churches of different traditions.

    As today’s Gospel reminded us (cf Lk 18:9-14), we need humility, in order to recognize our limitations, our errors and omissions, in order to be able to truly be “united, heart and soul”.

    A fuller communion within the Catholic Church favors ecumenical dialogue with other Churches and ecclesial communities as well. The Catholic Church reiterated in this Synodal meeting its deep conviction to pursuing such dialogue as well, so that the prayer of the Lord Jesus might be completely fulfilled: “May they all be one” (Jn 17:21).

    The words of the Lord Jesus may be applied to Christians in the Middle East: “There is no need to be afraid, little flock, for it has pleased your Father to give you the kingdom” (Lk 12:32).

    Indeed, even if they are few, they are bearers of the Good News of the love of God for man, love which revealed itself in the Holy Land in the person of Jesus Christ.

    This Word of salvation, strengthened with the grace of the Sacraments, resounds with particular potency in the places in which, by Divine Providence, it was written, and it is the only Word which is able to break that vicious circle of vengeance, hate, and violence.

    From a purified heart, in peace with God and neighbor, may intentions and initiatives for peace at local, national, and international levels be born. In these actions, to whose accomplishment the whole international community is called, Christians as full-fledged citizens can and must do their part with the spirit of the Beatitudes, becoming builders of peace and apostles of reconciliation to the benefit of all society.

    Conflicts, wars, violence and terrorism have gone on for too long in the Middle East. Peace, which is a gift of God, is also the result of the efforts of men of goodwill, of the national and international institutions, in particular of the states most involved in the search for a solution to conflicts.

    We must never resign ourselves to the absence of peace. Peace is possible. Peace is urgent. Peace is the indispensable condition for a life of dignity for human beings and society. Peace is also the best remedy to avoid emigration from the Middle East.

    “Pray for the peace of Jerusalem”, we are told in the Psalm (122:6). We pray for peace in the Holy Land. We pray for peace in the Middle East, undertaking to try to ensure that this gift of God to men of goodwill should spread through the whole world.

    Another contribution that Christians can bring to society is the promotion of an authentic freedom of religion and conscience, one of the fundamental human rights that each state should always respect.

    In numerous countries of the Middle East there exists freedom of belief, while the space given to the freedom to practice religion is often quite limited. Increasing this space of freedom becomes essential to guarantee to all the members of the various religious communities the true freedom to live and profess their faith.

    This topic could become the subject of dialogue between Christians and Muslims, a dialogue whose urgency and usefulness was reiterated by the Synodal Fathers.

    During the work of the Synod what was often underlined was the need to offer the Gospel anew to people who do not know it very well or who have even moved away from the Church. What was often evoked was the need for a new evangelization for the Middle East as well. This was quite a widespread theme, especially in the countries where Christianity has ancient roots.

    The recent creation of the Pontifical Council for Promoting the New Evangelization also responds to this profound need. For this reason, after having consulted the episcopacy of the whole world and after having listened to the Ordinary Council of the General Secretariat of the Synod of Bishops, I have decided to dedicate the next Ordinary General Assembly, in 2012, to the following theme: “Nova evangelizatio ad christianam fidem tradendam - The new evangelization for the transmission of the Christian faith”.

    Dear brothers and sisters of the Middle East! May the experience of these days assure you that you are never alone, that you are always accompanied by the Holy See and the whole Church, which, having been born in Jerusalem, spread through the Middle East and then the rest of the world.

    We entrust the results of the Special Assembly for the Middle East, as well as the preparation for the Ordinary General Assembly, to the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church and Queen of Peace. Amen




    Illustrations for the libretto of today's Mass are from the
    TETRAVANGELO DI RABBULA, Syria, 6th-cent.
    Biblioteca Medicea Laurentiana, Florence














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    00 24/10/2010 17:51



    Benedict XVI:
    'Never give up on quest
    for Mideast peace'




    VATICAN CITY, Oct. 24 (AFP) - Pope Benedict XVI urged all sides in the Middle East not to give up on peace and appealed for religious freedom to be respected as he wrapped up a two-week synod of bishops from the region Sunday.

    "For too long, the Middle East has been the victim of conflict, wars, violence and terrorism. Peace, which is a gift of God, is also the result of the efforts of men of good will, national and international institutions," Benedict said as he led Mass at St Peter's Basilica.

    "We must never simply resign ourselves to the absence of peace. Peace is possible. Peace is urgent. Peace is an essential condition for the dignity of man and for the dignity of society," added Benedict.

    The Pope's homily was proceeded by a procession into St Peter's by 180 members of the clergy from the Middle East who have gathered in The Vatican over the last fortnight for the synod.

    They each prayed in their own language, including Arabic, Turkish, Hebrew and Farsi, as well as Latin.

    The Pope invited the congregation to pray for peace, saying their thoughts were with "our numerous brothers and sisters who live in difficult circumstances in the Middle East ... who face economic problems, and must overcome tension and sometimes fear".

    "Christians can and must make their own contribution ... become peace builders and apostles for reconciliation to the benefit of all," he added.

    The Pope also urged Christians to play their part in promoting freedom of religious, particularly by striking up dialogue with Muslims, calling it "one of the fundamental rights which should always be respected by every state."

    In a final statement issued on Saturday, the bishops and patriarchs of the region's Catholic churches urged the United Nations to end the Israeli occupation of Arab lands

    The synod was marked by repeated affirmations that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is at the root of the tension affecting the whole Middle East.

    [The story omits the Pope's announcement at the end of the homily that he is calling a General Assembly of the Bishops' Synod in 2012 to discuss New Evagenlization.]



    Pope Benedict urges Mid-East
    sides to reach peace




    Pope Benedict XVI has urged Israelis and Palestinians to push for peace in the Middle East and not to give up hope of a settlement.

    He spoke at the Vatican at the end of a two-week meeting of Catholic bishops from around the world.

    Peace would be the best way to stem the emigration of Christians from the Middle East, the Pope said.

    Separately, Israel's Prime Minister has called on Palestinians not pursue independence without peace talks.

    Frustrated that direct talks with Israel have stalled over the issue of Jewish settlement construction, Palestinians have suggested they could ask the United Nations to recognise an independent state beyond the Green Line - territories occupied by Israel since the 1967 Middle East war.

    Speaking before the start of Israel's weekly cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said face-to-face talks were the best option.

    "I think any attempt to circumvent it by going to international bodies isn't realistic and won't advance true peacemaking in any way. Peace will be achieved only through direct talks."

    In Rome, Pope Benedict used clear language in his Sunday homily: "Peace is possible. Peace is urgent.

    "Peace is also the best remedy to avoid the emigration from the Middle East."

    His words came after a declaration by the conference that said the international community should take "the necessary legal steps to put an end to the occupation of the different Arab territories".

    Palestinians seized on the declaration as evidence of the "moral and legal" justification for an independent Palestinian state. {Wnat an unfortunate way to exploit what the Pope says! First of all, no one - not even Israel - denies that a separate Palestinian state is justified. Second, while the declarations of the Pope and the Catholic Church certainly affirm the moral justification for a Palestinian state, they have no legal weight at all.]

    "We join the synod in their call to the international community to uphold the universal values of freedom, dignity and justice," chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said.

    He said Christians were "an integral part" of the Palestinian people and blamed Israel for their emigration from the region, AFP news agency reported.


    10/25/10
    And now, Catholic News Service's belated reports on the Synodal Assembly's concluding Mass and the Pope's announcement on the next Synodal General Assembly. (Wooden makes up by providing a good wrap=up of the Synodal Assembly's final Message and Propositions):


    Peace is possible in the Middle East,
    Pope says at Synod's closing Mass

    By Cindy Wooden



    VATICAN CITY, Oct. 25 (CNS) -- Closing the Synod of Bishops for the Middle East, Pope Benedict XVI said, "We must never resign ourselves to the absence of peace."

    "Peace is possible. Peace is urgent," the Pope said Oct. 24 during his homily at the Mass closing the two-week synod.

    Peace is what will stop Christians from emigrating, he said.

    Pope Benedict also urged Christians to promote respect for freedom of religion and conscience, "one of the fundamental human rights that each state should always respect."

    Synod members released a message Oct. 23 to their own faithful, their government leaders, Catholics around the world, the international community and to all people of goodwill.

    The Vatican also released the 44 propositions adopted by synod members as recommendations for Pope Benedict to consider in writing his post-synodal apostolic exhortation.

    Although the bishops said the main point of the synod was to find pastoral responses to the challenges facing their people, they said the biggest challenges are caused by political and social injustice and war and conflict.

    "We have taken account of the impact of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on the whole region, especially on the Palestinians who are suffering the consequences of the Israeli occupation: the lack of freedom of movement, the wall of separation and the military checkpoints, the political prisoners, the demolition of homes, the disturbance of socio-economic life and the thousands of refugees," they said in one of the strongest sentences in the message.

    They called for continued Catholic-Jewish dialogue, condemned anti-Semitism and anti-Judaism and affirmed Israel's right to live at peace within its "internationally recognized borders."

    Although relations between Christians and Jews in the region often are colored by Israeli-Palestinian tensions, the bishops said the Catholic Church affirms the Old Testament -- the Hebrew Scriptures -- is the word of God and that God's promises to the Jewish people, beginning with Abraham, are still valid.

    However, they said, "recourse to theological and biblical positions which use the word of God to wrongly justify injustices is not acceptable. On the contrary, recourse to religion must lead every person to see the face of God in others."

    Addressing the synod's final news conference Oct. 23, Melkite Bishop Cyrille S. Bustros of Newton, Mass., said, "For us Christians, you can no longer speak of a land promised to the Jewish people," because Christ's coming into the world demonstrated that God's chosen people are all men and women and that their promised land would be the kingdom of God established throughout the world"

    The bishops' point in criticizing the use of Scripture was intended to say "one cannot use the theme of the Promised Land to justify the return of Jews to Israel and the expatriation of Palestinians," Bishop Bustros said.

    In their message, the bishops expressed particular concern over the future of Jerusalem, particularly given Israeli "unilateral initiatives" that threaten the composition and demographic profile of the city through construction and buying up the property of Christians and other Arabs.

    They also offered words of support for the suffering Iraqi people, both Christians and Muslims, and for those forced to flee the country.

    The synod members said they talked extensively about Christian-Muslim relations and about the fact that they both are long-standing citizens of the same countries and should be working together for the good of all.

    "We say to our Muslim fellow-citizens: We are brothers and sisters; God wishes us to be together, united by one faith in God and by the dual commandment of love of God and neighbor," they said.

    But Christians must be given their full rights as citizens and the future peace and prosperity of the region require civil societies built "on the basis of citizenship, religious freedom and freedom of conscience."

    Throughout the synod, members said that while religious freedom and freedom of worship are recognized in most of the region's constitutions, freedom of conscience -- particularly the freedom to change religious affiliation -- is not respected in many places.

    The synod propositions called for educating Christians in the beliefs of their Muslim and Jewish neighbors and for strengthening dialogue programs that would help the region's people "accept one another in spite of their differences, working to build a new society in which fanaticism and extremism have no place."

    Much of the synod's discussion focused on the fact that many Christians are emigrating because of ongoing conflicts, a lack of security and equality and a lack of economic opportunities at home.

    They praised those who have remained despite hardship and thanked them for their contributions to church and society.

    While they did not call on emigrants to return home, they did ask them to consider it eventually and to think twice before selling their property in their homelands. Several bishops had told the synod that Christians selling off their property was turning previously Christian-Muslim neighborhoods and towns into totally Muslim areas.

    One of the synod propositions said, "We exhort our faithful and our church communities not to give in to the temptation to sell off their real estate," and they pledged to set up micro-finance and other projects to help people retain their property and make it prosper.

    The synod members affirmed their commitment to efforts to promote full Christian unity and promised to strengthen cooperative efforts with other Christian churches in the region because "we share the same journey" and unity is necessary for effectively sharing the Gospel.

    The bishops at the synod also recognized their own failures in not promoting greater communion between Catholics of different rites, with other Christians and with the Jewish and Muslim majorities of their homelands.

    And they told their lay faithful, "We have not done everything possible to confirm you in your faith and to give you the spiritual nourishment you need in your difficulties."

    All Christians, including the bishops, are called to conversion, they said.

    The propositions called for creation of a "commission of cooperation" between church leaders of different rites, the sharing of material resources and establishment of a program to share priests.

    They also echoed a repeated call in the synod for the pope to study ways to expand the jurisdiction of Eastern Catholic patriarchs and major archbishops to allow them greater power in providing for their faithful who live outside the traditional territory of their churches and to consider dropping restrictions on ordaining married men to the priesthood outside the traditional homeland of the particular church.

    Maronite Archbishop Joseph Soueif of Cyprus told reporters, "The synod is not a medical prescription or a cure" for the problems Christians face in the Middle East, "it's a journey that is just beginning" and will have to be implemented by the region's Catholics.


    Pope chooses 'new evangelization'
    as theme for 2012 Synod of Bishops

    By John Thavis



    VATICAN CITY, Oct. 25 (CNS) -- Pope Benedict XVI has chosen "new evangelization" as the theme for the next world Synod of Bishops in 2012.

    The Pope said the topic reflects a need to re-evangelize in countries where Christian faith and practice have declined, and where people "have even moved away from the Church."

    The Pope made the announcement at the end of his homily at the closing Mass Oct. 24 for the special Synod of Bishops for the Middle East, which focused on the pastoral challenges of the region. He said that during the October synod, bishops spoke of the "need to offer the Gospel anew to people who do not know it very well."

    "What was often evoked was the need for a new evangelization for the Middle East as well. This was quite a widespread theme, especially in the countries where Christianity has ancient roots," he said.

    The Pope said he chose the next synod topic, "New evangelization for the transmission of the Christian faith," after consulting with the world's episcopate. He recently created the Pontifical Council for Promoting New Evangelization, and has made re-evangelizing a main theme of his pontificate.

    Pope Benedict has presided over two world synods*, one on the Eucharist and one on Scripture, as well as regional synods for Africa and the Middle East. [The Vatican term for the 'world synods' is 'General Assembly of the Bishops' Synod", as opposed to the 'Special Assemblies' held for Afirca and the Middle East.]

    He streamlined the format of these encounters to allow for more exchange of opinion, and has sometimes joined in the discussions.

    His apostolic letter on the synod on Scripture, held in 2008, was expected late this year.

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    00 24/10/2010 18:53





    ANGELUS TODAY

    The Holy Father led the noontime Angelus prayers today and reminded the faithful that today is World Mission Sunday. He also spoke about the beatification yesterday in Vercelli, Italy, of Suor Alfonsa Clerici (1860-1930) of the Congregation for the Most Precious Blood.

    Here is a translation of his words at the Angelus today:


    Dear brothers and sisters:

    With the solemn celebration this morning at St. Peter's Basilica, we concluded the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Bishops' Synod on the theme "The Catholic Church in the Middle East: Communion and witness".

    This Sunday is also World Mission day, and its motto this year says "Building ecclesial communion is the key to mission".

    The similarity of the two themes for these two ecclesial events is striking. Both invite us to look at teh Church as a mystery of communion which, by her nature, is destined for the whole man and for all men.

    The Servant of God Pope Paul VI said: "The Church exists in order to evangelize - that is to say, to preach and to teach, to be the channel for the gift of grace, to reconcile sinners with God, to perpetuate the sacrifice of Christ in the Holy Mass, which is the memorial of his death and his glorious resurrection" (Esort. Ap. Evangelii nuntiandi, 8 dicembre 1975, 14: AAS 68, [1976], p. 13).

    Therefore, the next Ordinary General Assembly of the Bishops' Synod in 2012 will be dedicated to the theme "New evangelization to transmit the Christian faith".

    Always and everywhere - even in the Middle East today - the Church is present and works to welcome every man to offer him, in Christ, the fullness of life.

    As the Italian-German theologian Romano Guardini wrote, "the reality of the 'Church' implies the fullness of being Christian that has developed throughout history insofar as she embraces the fullness of man who is in relationship with God" (Formazione liturgica, Brescia 2008, 106-107).

    Dear friends, in today's liturgy, we read the testimony of St. Paul regarding the final prise that the Lord will give "to all who have to all who have longed for his appearance" (2Tm 4,8).

    This is not an inactive and solitary wait. On the contrary, the Apostle had lived in communion with the risen Christ "so that through me the proclamation might be completed and all the Gentiles might hear it" (2 Tm 4,17).

    The missionary task is not to revolutionize the world but to transfigure it, drawing strength from Jesus Christ who "summons us to the banquet of his word and of the Eucharist, to taste the gift of his presence, to be formed at his school, and to live ever more closely united to him, our teacher and Lord" (Message for the 84th World Mission Day).

    Even Christians of today - as the letter to Diogneto says - "demonstrate how wonderful... and extraordinary their life is in association. They pass their existence on earth, but they are citizens of heaven. They obey established laws, but with their way of life, they go beyond the laws... They are condemned to die, but from this they draw life. And although they do good, they... are persecuted, and grow in number every day" (V, 4.9.12.16; VI, 9 [SC 33], Paris 1951, 62-66).

    To the Virgin Mary, who from the crucified Jesus received the new mission to be the Mother of all who wish to believe in him and follow him, we entrust the Christian communities of the Middle East and all missionaries of the Gospel.



    After the Angelus prayers, he said this:

    I am happy to remind you that yesterday, at Vercelli, Sister Alfonsa Clerici, of the Congregation of the Most Precious Blood in Monza, was proclaimed Blessed. She was born in Latinate near Milan in 1860 and died in Vercelli in 1930.

    Let us give thanks to God for this sister of ours whom he led to perfect charity.



    In English, he said:

    To the English-speaking pilgrims gathered for this Angelus prayer, I offer warm greetings. We give thanks to God for the blessings received during the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Synod of Bishops, which concluded this morning in St. Peter’s Basilica.

    We also celebrate today World Mission Sunday, which reminds us that ecclesial communion is the key to our task of proclaiming the Gospel. Entrusting this mission to the intercession of our Mother Mary, I invoke upon you and your families God’s abundant blessings
    .


    No photos available so far of the Angelus.

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    00 24/10/2010 23:14





    TIME OUT FOR
    BENADDICTIONS


    Thanks to Caterina for singling out these photos from the wealth of photos available in the OR and Felici catalogs (See the photogallery in the main forum for the large formats):


    First, the OR photographer did record the episode of the stray dog that wandered up to the stage after the Holy Father had addressed the youth of Palermo last Oct. 3:

    The report at the time said the papal security were unsure what to do about the dog when Mons. Gaenswein decided to take the dog to the Pope who did not hesitate to bend down and caress the canine.


    And then, this very sweet sequence with a lucky little girl on a recent occasion that is not identified:


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    00 25/10/2010 16:03



    Monday, Oct. 25, 30th Week in Ordinary Time

    Center photos show Benedict XVI at the canonization of Frei Galvao in Sao Paolo on May 11, 2007.
    ST. ANTONIO DE SANT'ANNA GALVAO (Brazil, 1739-1822), Franciscan Friar, Founder of Sisters of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, Miracle Healer
    Born near Sao Paolo, Antonio started studying at the Jesuit seminary but decided to become a Franciscan instead and was ordained in 1762. He served as preacher, confessor and porter in a Sao Paolo parish, and was appointed confessor to the Recollect nuns of St. Teresa. With one of the nuns, he founded a new community of sisters, which he was left to care for after his co-founder's premature death. Over the next 28 years, besides acting as their spiritual director, he raised money to build a convent and church for them which was inaugurated in 1802. Now called the Monastery of Light, the complex has been declared a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO. At the same time, Frei Galvao became guardian of the Franciscan Friary in Sao Paolo and established a new convent in Sorocaba. During this time, he gained widespread fame for miraculous healing and other supernatural powers like bilocation. In his old age, he retired to the Recollect House where he died. His tomb remains a very popular pilgrimage site, and he is even more greatly venerated now as the first native-born saint of the world's largest Catholic country. He was beatified in 1998, and Benedict XVI canonized him during his visit to Brazil in 2007.
    Readings for today's Mass:
    www.usccb.org/nab/readings/102510.shtml



    No OR today.


    THE POPE'S DAY

    The Holy Father met today with

    - H.E. James Alix Michel, President of the Republic of Seychelles, and his delegation

    - Mons. Robert Zollitsch, Archbishop of Freiburg and president of tHE German bishops' conference

    - Participants of the International Symposium on the late German theologian Erik Peterson.

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    00 25/10/2010 17:41



    I didn't monitor anything yesterday after posting the translation of the Pope's Angelus message so I missed this 'instant' Israeli reaction to the Synodal assembly's final message. Unfortunately, some Middle Eastern bishops who are openly pro-Palestine and anti-Israel, along with Palestinian authorities and the Israeli government, have all chosen to politicize the Synod.


    Israel slams 'political attacks'
    by Catholic bishops




    JERUSALEM, Oct. 24 (AFP) — Israel on Sunday slammed critical remarks made by Middle East Catholic bishops after a meeting chaired by Pope Benedict XVI as "political attacks" on the Jewish state.

    "We express our disappointment that this important synod has become a forum for political attacks on Israel in the best history of Arab propaganda," Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said in a statement.

    "The synod was hijacked by an anti-Israel majority," he added.

    Bishops and patriarchs from across the Middle East on Saturday called on the international community to end the occupation of Arab lands in an official statement following a two-week synod held at the Vatican.

    "Recourse to theological and biblical positions which use the Word of God to wrongly justify injustices is not acceptable," the synod said.

    Archbishop Cyril Salim Bustros, head of the commission which drew up the statement, went one step further, saying: "The theme of the Promised Land cannot be used as a basis to justify the return of the Jews to Israel and the expatriation of the Palestinians."

    "For Christians, one can no longer talk of the land promised to the Jewish people,"
    the Lebanese-born head of the Greek Melkite Church in the United States said, because the "promise" was "abolished by the presence of Christ."

    Ayalon said he was "especially appalled" at those remarks.

    "We call on the Vatican to (distance) themselves from Archbishop Bustros's comments, which are a libel against the Jewish people and the state of Israel and should not be construed as the Vatican's official position."

    Most religious Jews believe the land of Israel was given to them by God, and Jewish settlers often cite biblical justifications for holding onto the West Bank and east Jerusalem, territories seized in the 1967 Six-Day War.

    But foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said scripture had never been used by any Israeli government to justify the occupation or settlement of territory.

    He also pointed out that Israel's Christian population had grown since the establishment of the Jewish state, while in much of the rest of the Middle East Christians have fled in large numbers because of war, instability and economic hardship.

    Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat, meanwhile, welcomed the synod's call for a two-state solution and blamed Israel for the emigration of Christians from the occupied territories.

    "The international community must uphold its moral and legal responsibility to put a speedy end to the illegal Israeli occupation," he said. [Erekat's full statement also said the Synod statement was 'a moral and legal justification' for a separate Palestinian state. An outrageous exploitation, since not even Israel questions the rightness of having a separate Palestinian state, and that whatever moral position the Catholic Church holds on the issue does not have any legal weight at all!]

    The United States convinced Israel and the Palestinians to renew direct peace negotiations in early September but the talks ground to a halt later that month when a 10-month partial Israeli moratorium on settlements expired.


    In fairness, the statement found offensive by the Israeli government was made by an American prelate of the Greek Melkite church, not someone who practices his pastoral work in the Middle East himself. At the very least, the statement was uncalled for and a contradiction to Nostra aetate and the Church Magisterium that has always emphasized the Jewish roots of Christianity.

    To the credit of the resident Middle Eastern bishops - even Palestinian Mons. Fouad Twal, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, who has never been shy about his 'anti-Israeli' views - they took great care at the just-concluded Synodal Assembly to avoid the harsh language about Israeli policy that was rather jarring in the working agenda Instrumentum laboris.

    Unfortunately, all that diplomatic caution served for nothing in the face of the unwarranted statements by Archbishop Bustros, which he has every right to make. But one questions his prudence in making it.



    As far as how Islam was treated at the Synod, Sandro Magister in his blog today calls attention to a self-censorship on the part of the Vatican Secretariat of State regarding some specific criticisms of Islam made by a resident Catholic prelate in the Middle East.

    A Lebanese bishop criticizes Islam -
    and the Secretariat of State censors his statement

    Translated from

    Oct. 25, 2010

    Below is reproduced the integral text of the intervention at the Synodal Assembly by the Lebanese Bishop of Antioch of the Syrians, Raboula Antonie Beylouni, as published in the Synod Bulletin No. 21 on Oct. 21. L'Osservatore Romano published it the next day (Oct. 22) but with obvious cuts ordered by the Secretariat of State. The censored parts are those in boldface [green here] below. The title is that given to the intervention by the OR.


    For several years in Lebanon we have had a national committee for Islamic-Christian dialogue. There was also an episcopal commission from the Assembly of Catholic Patriarchs and Bishops of Lebanon entrusted with Islamic-Christian dialogue. It was recently suppressed to give more importance to the other committee, but also because because it had not produced any results.

    Sometimes dialogue occurs here and there, in the Arab countries, such as in Qatar, where the Emir himself invites, at his expense, personalities from different countries and from the three religions: Christian, Muslim and Jewish.

    In Lebanon the Télélumiere and Noursat networks, and other television networks, sometimes broadcast programs on Islamic-Christian dialogue. Often a topic is chosen, and each side explains or interprets according to their religion. These programs are usually very instructive.

    With my intervention, I wish to draw attention to the points that make these encounters difficult and often ineffective. It should be clear that we are not discussing dogma. But even the subjects of a practical and social order are difficult to discuss when the Koran or the Sunna discusses them.

    Here are some difficulties which we have faced:

    - The Koran inculcates in the Muslim pride in being the only true and complete religion, taught by the greatest prophet, because he was the last one. [In this view],the Muslim is part of the privileged nation, and speaks the language of God, the language of Paradise - the Arabic language. This is why, he comes to dialogue with a sense of superiority, and with the certitude of being victorious.

    - The Koran, supposedly written by God Himself, from beginning to end, gives the same value to everything that is written, [which is considered] dogma that supercedes all law or practice.

    - In the Koran, men and women are not equal, not even in marriage itself where the man takes several wives and can divorce them at his pleasure; nor in inheritance, where the man takes double the wife's share;nor in testifying before judges where the voice of one man is equal to the voice of two women, etc...

    - The Koran allows the Muslim to hide the truth from the Christian, and to speak and act contrary to how he thinks and believes.

    - In the Koran, there are contradictory verses which annul others, which gives the Muslim the possibility of using one or the other to his advantage, and therefore he can tell the Christian that he is humble and pious and believes in God, just as he can treat him as impious, apostate and idolatrous.

    - The Koran gives the Muslim the right to judge Christians and to kill them in Jihad (the holy war). It commands the imposition of religion through force, with the sword. The history of invasions bears witness to this.

    This is why the Muslims do not recognize religious freedom, for themselves or for others. And it isn’t surprising to see all the Arab countries and Muslims refusing the whole of the “Human Rights” instituted by the United Nations.


    Faced with all these interdictions and other similar attitudes, should one suppress dialogue? Of course not. But the themes that can be discussed should be chosen carefully, and capable and well-trained Christians chosen as well, as well as those who are courageous and pious, wise and prudent... who tell the truth with clarity and conviction...

    We sometimes deplore certain dialogues on TV, where the Christian speaker isn’t up to the task, and does not give the Christian religion all its beauty and spirituality, which scandalizes the viewers.


    Worse yet, when sometimes there are clergyman speakers who, in dialogue to win over Muslims call Mohammed the prophet and add the Muslim invocation, known and constantly repeated: “Salla lahou alayhi was sallam”.

    Finally I would like to suggest the following:

    As the Koran speaks well of the Virgin Mary, insisting on her perpetual virginity and miraculous and unique conception in giving us Christ and as Muslims take her into great consideration and ask for her intercession, we should turn to her for all dialogue and all encounters with the Muslims. Being the Mother of us all, she will guide us in our relations with the Muslims to show them the true face of Her Son Jesus, the Redeemer of mankind.

    If it pleased God that the Feast of the Annunciation was declared a national feast day in Lebanon for Christians and Muslims, may it also become a national feast day in other Arab countries.



    Inadvertently, when taken in conjunction with the Israeli reaction to the Boutros statement, the self-censorship exercised by the Secretariat of State, through the OR which it controls, appears like a double standard - in which care is taken not to offend the Muslims, but the same care is not taken not to offend the Jews.

    As Benedict XVI has often pointed out, charity in truth is essential in inter-religious dialog, and it must be exercised evenhandedly.



    For its part, Vatican Radio reports a development with the recent Synodal assembly that might have helped with disseminating its message to interested Jews:


    An unprecedented service:
    The Synodal assembly
    through the eyes of a Jew

    Adapted from the English service of


    For the first time, since its foundation almost 80 years ago, Vatican Radio has been able to offer a webpage in Hebrew - with up-to-date information about the just-ended Synod of Bishops for the Middle East.

    The radio actually employed a young woman, Hana Bendcowsky, to create and update a special webpage that aimed to make quite sure "that the Israeli public" be correctly and well-informed about Synod proceedings and the message of the Bishops with no margin for misunderstandings and controversy. [Unfortunately, Israeli officials speak English and are not likely to look at the Hebrew webpage but at the English texts that were published promptly in the Synod bulletins online.]

    Hana is a Jewish expert on early church history and Programme Director of the Jerusalem Center for Jewish-Christian Relations.


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    00 25/10/2010 18:44


    MEETING WITH
    THE PRESIDENT OF SEYCHELLES






    Today 25 October 2010 the Holy Father Benedict XVI received in audience James Alix Michel, President of the Republic of the Seychelles.

    The President subsequently went on to meet with Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone S.D.B. who was accompanied by Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, Secretary for Relations with States.

    Having expressed their satisfaction at the cordiality of bilateral relations, the two parties exchanged opinions on questions of mutual interest. In this context, attention focused particularly on commitment and collaboration for the promotion of human dignity, especially in fields of great social importance such as the family, education of the young and protection of the environment.







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    Pope Benedict on the life and and legacy
    of an influential theological 'outsider'

    Adapted from



    25 OCT 2010 (RV) - Pope Benedict XVI today addressed participants in aninternational symposium being held in Rome to celebrate the life and thought of a German Lutheran theologian who converted to Catholicism and lived in Rome thereafter.

    Erik Peterson was born in Hamburg on June 7th, 1890 and died in that city on the 26th of October 1960.

    He was trained as a Lutheran theologian and began an academic career that had great promise, before experiencing a call to conversion and full communion with the Catholic Church. In 1930, he converted to Catholicism, in Rome, where he also founded a family.

    A convinced enemy of Italian fascism and German national-socialism, he struggled through years of poverty and distress, with temporary teaching posts until 1947, when he was made assistant professor for Patristics with an emphasis in the area of ‘antiquity and Christianity’ at Rome’s Pontifical Institute for Christian Archaeology.

    He became a full professor in 1956, just 4 years before his death at the age of 70.

    In his remarks to the participants, Pope Benedict XVI remembered Peterson as a thinker from whose work, Theological Treatises, he himself learned in a profound and essential manner what theology really is.

    “He did not limit himself to saying what he thought [in Theologische Traktate]. The book was an expression of a journey, which was the passion of his very life.”

    The Symposium dedicated to Peterson’s thought opened on Sunday the 24th and closes tomorrow, Oct. 26, the 50th anniversary of his death.


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    00 26/10/2010 01:19




    This article is not so much about the rite itself but about the setting for the liturgy, which, as we learn, matters in more than just the obvious ways...


    Westminster Cathedral Mass
    shows us the way ahead

    Parishes throughout Britain should draw inspiration
    from the papal Mass on September 19

    by Fr Anthony Symondson, SJ

    21 October 2010



    At the Mass in Westminster Cathedral, besides the large crucifix hanging from the dome, there is a 18th-century standing crucifix on the altar.


    Shortly after his appointment as Archbishop of Westminster in 2000, Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor attended a meeting of the Westminster Cathedral Art and Architecture Committee. After thanking the members for their work, he said that the main reason for coming was to propose changes to the high altar.

    Several times, he recalled, he had asked Cardinal Hume why he had left the Cathedral only temporarily re-planned in conformity to the regulations laid down by the Second Vatican Council.

    “I am leaving that to my successor,” explained the cardinal. “I am he,” declared the new archbishop, with a smile. He proposed that the temporary altar erected for the pastoral visit of Pope John Paul II to England in 1982 should be removed and the great monolith of Cornish granite, given by the Hon George Savile, which forms the original high altar should be moved forward to the centre of the ciborium magnum, or baldacchino, to enable Mass to be celebrated versus populum and ad orientem.

    As a member of the committee, I welcomed this proposal because it meant returning to Bentley’s high altar and drawing the Cathedral into the liturgical unity it had formerly enjoyed.

    It also meant that once more Mass would be celebrated beneath a ciborium and that the sanctuary would have one altar. It was also enlightened in so far as it excluded destruction, built upon what was already there, rather than introduce innovations, and enabled Mass to be celebrated in both positions.

    With few reservations the committee welcomed the proposal. These were that it would constitute a change to the relationship between the altar and ciborium, so far undisturbed, and the destruction of the inlaid wooden predella that stood in front of it.

    Michael Drury, the Cathedral’s inspecting architect, was commissioned to investigate the possibility of the proposal and make plans. The matter was then, under listed building consent, referred to English Heritage, the Westminster City Planning Department, the Victorian Society and the Historic Churches Committee.

    All appeared to be going smoothly until a letter was received from Paul Vellouet, of English Heritage, an Anglican architect with an interest in liturgical planning. This reflected the provisional liturgical ideals of 40 years ago.

    He objected to the suggestion because he thought it would be temporary and would, in due course, be replaced by a radical re-planning of the sanctuary, of which he appeared to be enthusiastic. Adapting the high altar would represent an expensive waste of money and was the wrong path to take. Money was certainly a factor and it transpired that it had not entered the considerations behind the proposal. It would cost an estimated £50,000, but the Cathedral did not have it. An appeal was not launched and quietly the proposal fell into abeyance.

    Meanwhile, a mock-up was made to show the new position of the altar and, for a time, experimentally, Mass was celebrated facing the people when it was used. The sightlines were unaffected and there were no objections to the proposed change. Indeed, the transformation of worship occasioned by returning to the high altar was met with wide approval. The practical problem was that there was hardly any room behind the altar to celebrate Mass easily and genuflection was almost impossible.

    Nine years later the cardinal again came to the committee to bid farewell on the eve of his retirement. He said that one of his biggest regrets was that he had been unable to re-plan the sanctuary and leave a permanent liturgical legacy behind. He seemed concerned by the redundancy of the stalls and the obstruction created by the rosso antico cancelli walls.

    In 2005 Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, was elected Pope Benedict XVI and a new liturgical chapter in the history of the Church was opened that eclipsed the former liturgical zeitgeist which had come into being in the years immediately following the Second Vatican Council and opened many of its radical, de-sacralising objectives to question.

    One was a criticism of the principle of a clean break with the past in architectural terms in the re-planning of churches; another was an emphasis on historical continuity in the celebration of Mass. Evidence of this is to be seen in the celebration of papal Masses in St Peter’s, St John Lateran and on papal visits abroad.

    Archbishop Vincent Nichols was translated to Westminster in 2009 and his inaugural Mass and enthronement launched a new regime in the Cathedral. Despite the restricted space, Mass was celebrated with great splendour at the high altar, facing the people, and few, if any, complaints were received afterwards. The desire to make this practice permanent recurred.

    The proposal to move the massive mensa was abandoned but superseded by another to move the wall behind the altar, on which stood the crucifix and six candlesticks, three feet back towards the apse, narrowing the steps that led up to it, thereby freeing space behind the altar to enable greater ease of movement.

    At one time it was thought that this would be structurally impossible because of the shift of weight on the supporting pillars in the crypt, below the altar. Investigation by Michael Drury resulted in a positive solution and plans were made to make the structural changes as carefully and unobtrusively as possible at half the cost of the original proposal.

    The aim was to finish the alterations in time for the state visit of the Holy Father this year. The papal Mass celebrated on September 18, televised universally, was widely considered to be the most magnificent Mass celebrated so far by the Pope on a foreign journey, and the use of the high altar significantly contributed to this verdict.

    Once more Westminster Cathedral embodied a liturgical unity which did not compromise its architectural integrity or the reformed and unreformed liturgical canons.

    These developments are deeply significant for the liturgical life not only of the Diocese of Westminster, but the Church in England and Wales. Several radical proposals were drawn up since Vatican II to re-plan the sanctuary but none were executed, despite experiment with temporary solutions. The present result is so convincing that one wonders why it was not considered 40 years ago.

    Not least is the liturgical advantage of celebrating Mass once more beneath a ciborium.

    In recent years there has been a tendency to erect permanent square altars in sanctuaries on the basis that they follow the primitive model of Constantinian basilican practice. Indeed they do to some extent, but they are frequently architecturally maladroit and their size as well as form often does violence to the scale of churches.

    As Edmund Bishop, the leading English 19th-century liturgiologist, whose influence on 20th-century liturgical theory was profound, proved, the primitive Christian altar was indeed square but it was completed by the addition of a ciborium to provide necessary protection and a liturgical enclosure.

    That is what is found in the undisturbed, fourth-century Roman basilicas and surviving churches of the period in Italy. It was Bishop’s research that persuaded Bentley that a ciborium was an essential part of the Christian altar and that his baldacchino was the best thing about the cathedral.

    A square altar looks wrong without a ciborium to cover it. Where square altars are put in modern churches, the liturgical space would be transformed by the addition of a simple ciborium and I hope that Westminster Cathedral will sow seed in their revival as necessary adjuncts to the sanctuary.

    For the papal Mass a graceful silver 18th-century standing crucifix and candlesticks, chosen by Mgr Guido Marini, the papal master of ceremonies, were put on the altar and it would be good if these remained permanently in place.

    The crucifix simply applies what was laid down after Vatican II and provides an indispensable Christocentric focus for the celebrant. It is not an obstruction but a necessary ornament. [And yet, until Mons. Guido came to the Vatican, it was not to be found on any Novus Ordo altar - and had not been in 40 years!]

    All in all, the recent changes at Westminster and the example of the papal Mass are radical in their exemplary celebration of [the ordinary form of] the Roman Rite and I hope the precedent they give will be followed in the parishes of England and Wales. Worship would thereby be newly reformed, as commended and practised by the highest source of ecclesial authority.


    Unfortunately, none of the newsphotos of the Mass enable us to properly appreciate the architectural descriptions of the altar made in the article, but in the left photo, we can see the baldachin (that the writer calls a ciborium, which I always thought had a single meaning, which is the chalice from which hosts are given out for Communion.]

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    00 26/10/2010 03:44


    Thanks to Lella's blog for alerting me that Bruno Mastroianni did file his opinion brief last week - I do not always catch it promptly because I have not yet determined how he decides where he posts - on his blog or, as in this case, in his newspaper's opinion page!

    The Council for New Evangelization:
    In the East as in the West,
    Benedict XVI has the same priority -
    to re-propose God to all men

    by Bruno Mastroianni
    Translated from


    It is significant that during the Synodal Assembly on the Middle East, the Pontifical Council for New Evangelization was formally instituted - which many have interpreted only as a response to the secularization of the West.

    But it is a fact that harks back to that all-too-Christian awareness - or, shall we say, Catholic, in the sense of universal - that in the north and south, as in east and west, the urgent question is the same: God must be brought to the world.

    As time goes by, the more it is obvious that Benedict XVI sees not just the future of the Church tied up to this priority but the future of the world itself.

    It is a priority that has really taken a back seat in the past few centuries - whether it be due to ferocious secularization, or the (psychological/ideological) complexes of some Christians, or even the clericalism that has in some cases emptied the Church of the sense of the supernatural that had kept it institutionally safe from the effect of human failings.

    It is about time that those complexes and other distractions from the central mission of the Church be set aside. Indeed. by simply having kept our heads low, Christians have found ourselves boxed in between the great promise of technoscience (which quickly appears to raise more concern than solutions to problems) and the ever-receding goal of economic development (instead of which we have the current crisis) - while in the rest of the world, wars and poverty rule.

    It is not about closing ranks nor becoming prey to anti-scientific fixations. It is about thinking of the future!

    To re-propose faith in God means going forward but able to lift one's eyes to see where one is going, in the words of Benedict XVI.

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    00 26/10/2010 15:54


    Tuesday, Oct. 26, 30th Week in Ordinary Time

    BLESSED CONTARDO FERRINI (Italy, 1859-1902), Professor and Jurist, Secular Franciscan
    Born in Milan and home-schooled by his professor father, he went on to become a most learned man himself who knew a dozen languages and was recognized as an expert in both civil and canon law. A child prodigy, he earned his doctorate in jurisprudence at age 21, then won a scholarship to Berlin where he pursued further studies. He returned to Italy where he taught at several top universities, including a stint at teh University of Paris, ending up in the famous University of Pavia. As a scholar he left more than 200 books, articles and speeches on law, as well as the relationship between science and faith. Always a devout Catholic, he read the Scriptures in the original languages, joined the secular Franciscan order and the charitable Society of St. Vincent de Paul. In an era marked by the dominance of Freemasonry, anti-clericalism and the general breakdown of traditional values, he was remarkably untouched by secularism, managing to live a silent apostolate of work, prayer, charity and friendship with God. Even his atheist friends said that his llfestyle 'allowed a glimpse of God', and a friend who would become Pius XI said it was almost a miracle that Ferrini could live as he did. He died at the age of 42 after contracting typhus from infected water. Immediately, his townspeople and his fellow professors declared him a 'saint' and Pius X began the cause for his canonization in 1909, and was proclaimed Venerable by his friend Pius XI. He was beatified by Pius XII in 1947. Having advocated a Catholic university for Italy in his lifetime, eh is considered a patron of universities, and the Catholic University of Milan, founded after his death, now has his remains entombed in its chapel.
    Readings for today's Mass:
    www.usccb.org/nab/readings/102610.shtml



    OR for 10/25-10/26:

    The Pope closes the Synodal Assembly on the Middle East with an appeal for peace and religious freedom
    'The Church exists to evangelize'
    Announces a General Synodal Assembly in 2012 on 'new evangelization'

    Other papal stories in this issue: The Pope's audience for the President of Seychelles, and his address to participants in an international symposium on German theologian Erik Peterson who was a convert from Lutheranism. There is a front-page editorial on the Pope's call for peace in his Sunday homily.


    No events scheduled for the Holy Father today.



    The Holy Father's Message for the next World Day for Migrants and Refugees was released today in all
    the official languages of the Vatican.

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    00 26/10/2010 16:16


    October 26, 2010



    "In this Psalm (81), in a great concentration, in a prophetic vision, we can see the power taken from the gods. Those that seemed gods are not gods, lose their divine characteristics, and fall to earth. Diis estis et moriemini sicut homine ('You are gods, but you shall die like man,' cf. 81: 6-7): the weakness of power, the fall of the divinities. This process that is achieved along the path of faith of Israel, and which is summed here in one vision, is the true process of the history of religion, the fall of the gods."
    — Pope Benedict XVI,
    Opening Address to Synod of Bishops for the Middle East
    October 11, 2010






    I.

    In an extraordinary address to the opening of the Near East Synod, the Holy Father recalled that the Council of Ephesus in 431 A.D. defined Mary as the Theotokos, the Mother of God.

    Fifteen hundred years later, Pius XI established "Mary, the Mother of God," as a feast in the Church. When John XXIII opened Vatican II on October 11, 1962, he put it under the patronage of Mary, the Mother of God. At the end of the Council, Paul VI added the patronage for the subsequent work and effects of the Council to "Mary, the Mother of the Church."

    Benedict adds that these two titles refer to the same mother. The present Synod of Bishops on the Near East, that cradle of Christianity, now no longer in Christian hands, likewise began on October 11. Coincidences!

    The Church has memory. We might even say that "the Church is memory." The essential things do not pass away, only heaven and earth will pass away, not God's Word.

    In the Mass, after the Consecration, what do we do but remember? "We recall His, passion, resurrection from the dead, and His glorious ascension..." We make them present, or, perhaps better, these events are present in Christ's eternal now, in the Body and Blood of Christ, which the words help us to remember and realize.

    But why does Benedict bring in Mary and the famous definition of some four hundred years after Christ? Why is the title, "Mother of God," so significant? And what's its relation to "the Mother of the Church"?

    This Pope always speaks with the greatest profundity. He recalls the most remarkable things. Here, he begins by reminding us that the very idea of God having a "mother" was and remains shocking to almost all religious minds.

    As Msgr. Sokolowski has often and eloquently pointed out [1], the great and abiding opposition to Christian revelation is not that "God is God," but that "God became man." Is not this contradictory?

    The explanation of why it is not is at the very foundation of the Catholic mind. Almost the whole history of theology is bound up with the defense of this latter proposition and the reality of what it signifies. All other religions minds and traditions cannot or will not accept the fact that Christ was both God and man.

    II.

    It is extremely interesting that Benedict XVI would choose this seemingly irrelevant topic for a Synod on the Near East. Why isn't he talking of Islam, or Israel, or peace treaties, or relativism, anything "useful"? The fact is: he is. Until our minds are clear, our politics will be muddled.

    The first step, as Benedict always intimates, is mind clearing, not "mind-cleansing." Catholicism does not really begin its theologically explanatory mission until it thinks clearly. Not all theologians do this, of course. Revelation is also directed to mind, to philosophy. We should not doubt it.

    What's the connection between the Theotokos and current events? The core issue is whether we still worship "false gods," even when we do not call them such?

    But no one in the ancient world (and few today) could see how the eternal God had a mother, even though there were all kinds of cavorting among the classical Greek and Roman gods and goddesses. In spite of the "god is Mother" crowd, it just does not work.

    Christ was God. He is the Second Person within the Godhead. He is also man. He had a mother. But He never called his Father "Mother." He called Him "Father." He told us to do the same. Christ told us to use the words "Our Father." He told us to do the same.

    But Christ Himself always spoke of and to "My Father." The word "Father" means something. The word "mother" means something too, but something else.

    "Mother" is what Christ called Mary. That is what she was. He probably called her "Mary" once in a while. Yet, the "Mother of God" is what the Council of Ephesus defined. The infant born of her was true man, true God, one Person, two natures that are distinct.

    Mary is designated as "the Mother of God" because her Son was true God. What else could we call her? The Church ever since has firmly held this teaching as central in the understanding of the particular revelation that it has received.

    It did not just make it up, but heard it, and figured its meaning out in as clear and exact philosophical terms as possible. The Church passes it on for us to believe and know; it thinks about it, but it does not change it. God did have a mother, one Mary, of whom we read in the New Testament. There is no doubt that she is there. She was not a goddess, though she was "blessed."

    Now this fact that Mary was not a goddess is where Benedict takes up the intriguing issue of "the fall of the gods." This is such a striking theme in this address to the Synod. I presume the good bishops noted it.

    What gods have fallen because of Mary? The Old Testament is full of idols of stone and wood that the Hebrews come across in their neighbors. They were warned: "Hear O Israel, the Lord is God, the Lord is one" (Deut. 6:4).

    The first Commandment seems to be designed to protect against the most subtle of the temptations of man, the temptation to worship false gods, including himself and his ideologies. Invariably, the worship of false gods results in a false understanding of man, for man is made to love and worship the true God. It is in his being.

    "The man Jesus is God." He did not just have "something to do with God." He was not just a prophet, or a good guy, or a revolutionary, though He probably had a touch of these too. God indeed "became" man, but He was already and still is God. That did not change.

    Indeed, we might better say that, as a result of God "descending" to be man, He really took us up to the divinity. This is really what the Resurrection is about. We do not become "gods." We remain ourselves, body and soul. But we are invited to live at a lever higher than our nature.

    We can do this because Christ was true man and God. He did it. He invited us into the society formed by Him on the basis that man, after his own possibilities, is invited into the inner life of the Godhead as his ultimate end and good. The only other thing available to him is the rejection of this offer.

    III.

    The fact that Mary was a woman, a human being, but also the Mother of God meant, logically, that the ancient concept of the gods could no longer stand. It had to fall. Something greater had occurred in her motherhood.

    The "Mother of God" and the "Mother of the Church" are "intrinsically" linked. Mary is present at the moment of Christ's Incarnation and birth, as she is also present in Acts at the beginning of the Church from whence the Apostles are now directed to "the whole world." Christ unites "the cosmos" in Himself. He is the "Head of a great body, or the Great Church" directed by the Holy Spirit. Mary is the "heart" of the Church.

    Between the birth of Christ and the birth of the Church lies the life, Cross, Resurrection, and Ascension of the Lord. This tells us how God went about making His presence known in the world. These events, with His words, indicated who Christ was, what He was about in this world. "God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son..."

    To emphasize what he is driving at, the Pope turns to Psalm 81. Here God is still among "gods". With the announcement of the Incarnation, "we can see power taken from the gods." This removal is because God did not "incarnate" Himself in a spirit or a neighborhood god. He chose the Virgin in Nazareth, a real creature, a human person of the species man. The whole divine enterprise evidently depended on her "fiat." Now, "those that seemed to be gods are not gods." How could they compare with Mary's Son?

    The "fall of the gods" followed Israel and proceeded into the Church. Something else was being prepared by God with respect to the gods, something even the Hebrew leaders did not anticipate. This plan is the "true process of history of religion."

    What goes on in history is the preparation of our kind to enter the Kingdom of God, to participate in the divine life. Such is what is really happening in the places and times we can identify, including our own times. The center of this new history is the Incarnation.

    On the human side, it is the consent of the Virgin, without which it could not take place in the way that it did. The "problem" of the history of religion is precisely "the fall of the gods." That is, what undermined the gods that we see even in the Old Testament? The answer is that something greater has come to pass to overshadow the shadowy gods.

    Aristotle's First Mover, Benedict maintains, does not "go out" to the world. He draws nothing to himself. But the God of the Hebrews, in Christ, does go out of Himself.

    The initiative is not on man's side. God intervenes within history in a human way, that is, by becoming man Himself in the Word made flesh. Christ does not cease to be Word or God. That is what He is as the Second Person to whom the Father has eternally generated but not outside of Himself.

    Christ, the "redeemer of man," as John Paul II called Him, is the reflection of the Father as received. Christ, in turn, with the Father, sends the Spirit. This divine intervention comes to us not as necessity but as gift.

    IV.

    Like Aristotle's god, God need not create, but can. It is not altogether certain to me that had Aristotle known revelation that his philosophy could not have accepted it. In fact, I think it could have without becoming a totally different philosophy. It would have simply have been an improved philosophy, as Aquinas suspected.

    Aristotle's isolated god was not totally illogical, granted what he knew. He did not know revelation. We only know that the One God created because He did and told us He did. That is why we think about it — to show that it is not unreasonable.

    In the book of Revelation, we also read of "the fall of the angels." Not all fell, but some did. The fall of the angels and the gods that needed to fall may not be totally unrelated, especially when we see what Benedict calls modern "divinities."

    But Benedict speaks here of those who are not "truly angels." He is speaking of the gods, spirits, and ideas that deflect us from our final end. They are more familiar than we perhaps like to admit.

    These false gods too occur all through history. They are idols. We have martyrs to prove their danger and constant presence, even today, perhaps especially today.

    "The fall is not only the knowledge that they are not God; it is the process of the transformation of the world, which costs blood, causes the suffering of the witnesses of Christ." We can, if we look, see this going on, this continued persecution by false gods. We do not like to know about it.

    "Let us remember the great powers of history today," Benedict tells us.

    The Pope adds something quite provocative: "Let us remember the anonymous capital that enslaves man which is no longer in man's possession but is an anonymous power served by men, by which men are tormented, even killed."

    Something strange and pervasive exists in the culture, "the culture of death," as John Paul II called it. The individuals who bear and promote it often seem like unthinking zombies or automata. They refuse to admit the results of ideas they think popular and powerful. They blind themselves.

    Benedict next gives examples of "powers" that do these horrid things. First he mentions the "power of terroristic ideologies."

    "Violent deeds are apparently made in the name of God, but this is not God; they are false divinities that have to be unmasked; they are not God." Again, this remark is but a recapitulation of both the First Commandment and the daily news. Who is Benedict talking about here? He does not explicitly say. But, as far as I know, the only groups who do violence "in the name of God" are those claiming Islamic origins.

    Benedict next lists "drugs" as another anonymous but all pervasive presence and power. Finally, he cites the prevalence of "public opinions," those many groups and laws that deny, or make difficult, marriage and chastity.

    Benedict calls these ideologies of today "divinities" in the more classic sense of false gods or idols. Such "divinities" must fall. But they are powers that "can destroy the world."

    The Pope does not exaggerate. They can and are. The Pope returns to the twelfth chapter of Revelation, about the fleeing woman and the flowing river. "I think that the river is easily interpreted: these are the currents that dominate all and wish to make faith in the Church disappear, the Church that seems no longer to have a place in the face of the force of these currents that impose themselves as only rationality, as the only way to live." What suffers the force of these aberrant currents is the "face of the people."

    The greatest aberrations thus also propose themselves as reason. For this reason alone we need to philosophize to see why it is not.

    In the end, it is the ordinary human being and family who bear the brunt of the ideologies, now increasingly put into law and practice, the scourges of divorce, abortion, homosexuality, and the plans of those who would make human nature and life unrecognizable in the name of improving our lot, things dealt with in Spe Salvi.

    The Pope is right to see this extraordinary lecture on the "fall of the gods" to be an aspect of what Theotokos really means throughout the history of dogma and the Church. Mary was the "Mother of God."

    We only know and can know God through her Son. She, a mother, stands for the fact that God did become man, again the most difficult and most consoling of all doctrines that really touch our ordinary lives and the lives that we are called to lead: the inner life of the Trinity itself, something we are first given, should we choose it. All the false divinities and ideologies are but desperate efforts to escape the truth that Mary is the Mother of God and what flows from this fact.

    ENDNOTES:
    [1] See Robert Sokolowski, Christian Faith & Human Understanding: Studies on the Eucharist, Trinity, And the Human Person (CUA, 2006), pp. 69-85.


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    00 26/10/2010 17:01



    Pope defends 'right to emigrate'
    in message for 2011 World Day for Migrants

    By John Thavis



    VATICAN CITY, Oct. 26 (CNS) -- Pope Benedict XVI said the world has a responsibility to help refugees find places to live and work in safety, as part of its vocation to form "one family."

    Welcoming refugees is an "imperative gesture of human solidarity," the Pope said in a message released at the Vatican Oct. 26.

    "This means that those who are forced to leave their homes or their country will be helped to find a place where they may live in peace and safety, where they may work and take on the rights and duties that exist in the country that welcomes them," he said.

    The Pope made the comments in his message for the 2011 World Day for Migrants and Refugees, which will be celebrated Jan. 16 in most countries. He chose "One Human Family" as the theme for next year's commemoration.

    The human family is multi-ethnic and multicultural, the Pope said, and everyone, including migrants and the local populations that welcome them, "have the same right to enjoy the goods of the earth whose destination is universal, as the social doctrine of the church teaches."

    "It is here that solidarity and sharing are founded," he said.

    The Pope underlined that the increasing movement of peoples today is often motivated by situations of conflict or discrimination.

    "For these people who flee from violence or persecution, the international community has taken on precise commitments. Respect of their rights, as well as the legitimate concern for security and social coherence, foster a stable and harmonious existence," he said.

    The Pope defended the "right to emigrate" as a fundamental right to leave one's country and enter another country to look for better conditions of life. That implies responsibilities among immigrants and the host countries, he said.

    "States have the right to regulate migration flows and to defend their own frontiers, always guaranteeing the respect due to the dignity of each and every human person. Immigrants, moreover, have the duty to integrate into the host country, respecting its laws and its national identity," he said.

    At a news conference to present the papal message, a Vatican official said such integration does not mean mere assimilation into a kind of "melting pot."

    Archbishop Antonio Veglio, president of the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Travelers, said that immigrants can undergo a "de-culturalization" when they are expected to simply conform to the host culture. At the other end of the scale, immigrants who completely resist the host culture end up living in a kind of cultural ghetto, he said.

    The proper balance involves "cultural synthesis," in which cultural values are exchanged, benefiting both the immigrant community and the host country, he said.

    Archbishop Veglio related that when he was named to head the council for migrants in 2008, he noticed that its activities included pastoral outreach to Roma, or Gypsies.

    "I thought, 'Oh, Lord, I have to defend the Gypsies?' That was a stupid reaction. I didn't realize this is a people of 12 million throughout Europe with their own history," he said. He said he understands now that Gypsies cannot simply be assimilated into various European cultures, because they have one of their own.

    Father Gabriele Bentoglio, undersecretary of the pontifical council, said there are about 15 million refugees in the world today, and about 27 million internally displaced persons. Many have acted with "courage" in leaving tragic circumstances in their homelands, he said.

    Father Bentoglio said it's a common misperception that only places like Europe or the United States are facing a large influx of immigrants. Last year, he said, South Africa had 220,000 people requesting refuge in the country, nearly equal to the total for all of Europe.

    He said the behavior of many countries today is one of refusal and discrimination toward immigrants, in contradiction to the international agreements they have signed.


    The situation with respect to llegitimate refugees from wars and civil conflict is clearcut, but not the one on foreigners seeking to enter other countries illegally, at least not to liberals in the Church.

    In the United States, many Church officials faced with immigration problems of this kind have not given enough attention - not even lip service - to the fact that illegal immigration must not and cannot be tolerated. In some cases, their attitudes, and sometimes their actions, actually encourage illegal immigration, when they should be preaching that it is wrong to knowingly break the law, it is unfair to intending immigrants who are following the law, and equally important, it is unjust to burden the host taxpayer for the cost of the illegal aliens' health and education when a significant number of American citizens themselves are already deficient in education and health services.



    Here is the full text of the papal message:






    Dear Brothers and Sisters,

    The World Day of Migrants and Refugees offers the whole Church an opportunity to reflect on a theme linked to the growing phenomenon of migration, to pray that hearts may open to Christian welcome and to the effort to increase in the world justice and charity, pillars on which to build an authentic and lasting peace.

    "As I have loved you, so you also should love one another" (Jn 13:34), is the invitation that the Lord forcefully addresses to us and renews us constantly: if the Father calls us to be beloved children in his dearly beloved Son, he also calls us to recognize each other as brothers and sisters in Christ.

    This profound link between all human beings is the origin of the theme that I have chosen for our reflection this year: "One human family", one family of brothers and sisters in societies that are becoming ever more multiethnic and intercultural, where also people of various religions are urged to take part in dialogue, so that a serene and fruitful coexistence with respect for legitimate differences may be found.

    The Second Vatican Council affirms that "All peoples are one community and have one origin, because God caused the whole human race to dwell on the face of the earth (cf. Acts 17:26); they also have one final end, God" (Message for the World Day of Peace, 2008, 1). "His providence, His manifestations of goodness, His saving design extend to all men" (Declaration Nostra aetate, 1).

    Thus, "We do not live alongside one another purely by chance; all of us are progressing along a common path as men and women, and thus as brothers and sisters" (Message for the World Day of Peace, 2008, 6).

    The road is the same, that of life, but the situations that we pass through on this route are different: many people have to face the difficult experience of migration in its various forms: internal or international, permanent or seasonal, economic or political, voluntary or forced.

    In various cases the departure from their country is motivated by different forms of persecution, so that escape becomes necessary. Moreover, the phenomenon of globalization itself, characteristic of our epoch, is not only a social and economic process, but also entails "humanity itself [that] is becoming increasingly interconnected", crossing geographical and cultural boundaries.

    In this regard, the Church does not cease to recall that the deep sense of this epochal process and its fundamental ethical criterion are given by the unity of the human family and its development towards what is good (cf. Benedict XVI, Encyclical Caritas in veritate, 42).

    All, therefore, belong to one family, migrants and the local populations that welcome them, and all have the same right to enjoy the goods of the earth whose destination is universal, as the social doctrine of the Church teaches. It is here that solidarity and sharing are founded.

    "In an increasingly globalized society, the common good and the effort to obtain it cannot fail to assume the dimensions of the whole human family, that is to say, the community of peoples and nations, in such a way as to shape the earthly city in unity and peace, rendering it to some degree an anticipation and a prefiguration of the undivided city of God" (Benedict XVI, Encyclical Caritas in veritate, 7).

    This is also the perspective with which to look at the reality of migration. In fact, as the Servant of God Paul VI formerly noted, "the weakening of brotherly ties between individuals and nations" (Encyclical Populorum progressio, 66), is a profound cause of underdevelopment and – we may add – has a major impact on the migration phenomenon.

    Human brotherhood is the, at times surprising, experience of a relationship that unites, of a profound bond with the other, different from me, based on the simple fact of being human beings.

    Assumed and lived responsibly, it fosters a life of communion and sharing with all and in particular with migrants; it supports the gift of self to others, for their good, for the good of all, in the local, national and world political communities.

    Venerable John Paul II, on the occasion of this same Day celebrated in 2001, emphasized that "[the universal common good] includes the whole family of peoples, beyond every nationalistic egoism. The right to emigrate must be considered in this context. The Church recognizes this right in every human person, in its dual aspect of the possibility to leave one’s country and the possibility to enter another country to look for better conditions of life" (Message for World Day of Migration 2001, 3; cf. John XXIII, Encyclical Mater et Magistra, 30; Paul VI, Encyclical Octogesima adveniens, 17).

    At the same time, States have the right to regulate migration flows and to defend their own frontiers, always guaranteeing the respect due to the dignity of each and every human person. Immigrants, moreover, have the duty to integrate into the host Country, respecting its laws and its national identity.

    "The challenge is to combine the welcome due to every human being, especially when in need, with a reckoning of what is necessary for both the local inhabitants and the new arrivals to live a dignified and peaceful life" (World Day of Peace 2001, 13).

    In this context, the presence of the Church, as the People of God journeying through history among all the other peoples, is a source of trust and hope. Indeed the Church is "in Christ like a sacrament or as a sign and instrument both of a very closely knit union with God and of the unity of the whole human race" (Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium, 1); and through the action within her of the Holy Spirit, "the effort to establish a universal brotherhood is not a hopeless one" (Idem, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 38).

    It is the Holy Eucharist in particular that constitutes, in the heart of the Church, an inexhaustible source of communion for the whole of humanity. It is thanks to this that the People of God includes "every nation, race, people, and tongue" (Rev 7:9), not with a sort of sacred power but with the superior service of charity.

    In fact the exercise of charity, especially for the poorest and weakest, is the criterion that proves the authenticity of the Eucharistic celebration (cf. John Paul II, Apostolic Letter Mane nobiscum Domine, 28).

    The situation of refugees and of the other forced migrants, who are an important part of the migration phenomenon, should be specifically considered in the light of the theme "One human family".

    For these people who flee from violence and persecution the International Community has taken on precise commitments. Respect of their rights, as well as the legitimate concern for security and social coherence, foster a stable and harmonious coexistence.

    Also in the case of those who are forced to migrate, solidarity is nourished by the "reserve" of love that is born from considering ourselves a single human family and, for the Catholic faithful, members of the Mystical Body of Christ: in fact we find ourselves depending on each other, all responsible for our brothers and sisters in humanity and, for those who believe, in the faith.

    As I have already had the opportunity to say, "Welcoming refugees and giving them hospitality is for everyone an imperative gesture of human solidarity, so that they may not feel isolated because of intolerance and disinterest" (General Audience, 20 June 2007: Insegnamenti II, 1 [2007], 1158).

    This means that those who are forced to leave their homes or their country will be helped to find a place where they may live in peace and safety, where they may work and take on the rights and duties that exist in the Country that welcomes them, contributing to the common good and without forgetting the religious dimension of life.

    Lastly, I would like to address a special thought, again accompanied by prayer, to the foreign and international students who are also a growing reality within the great migration phenomenon.

    This, as well, is a socially important category with a view to their return, as future leaders, to their countries of origin. They constitute cultural and economic "bridges" between these countries and the host countries, and all this goes precisely in the direction of forming "one human family".

    This is the conviction that must support the commitment to foreign students and must accompany attention to their practical problems, such as financial difficulties or the hardship of feeling alone in facing a very different social and university context, as well as the difficulties of integration.

    In this regard, I would like to recall that "to belong to a university community… is to stand at the crossroads of the cultures that have formed the modern world" (John Paul II, To the Bishops of the United States of America of the Ecclesiastical Provinces of Chicago, Indianapolis and Milwaukee on their ad limina visit, 30 May 1998, 6: Insegnamenti XXI, 1 [1998] 1116).

    At school and at university the culture of the new generations is formed: their capacity to see humanity as a family called to be united in diversity largely depends on these institutions.

    Dear brothers and sisters, the world of migrants is vast and diversified. It knows wonderful and promising experiences, as well as, unfortunately, so many others that are tragic and unworthy of the human being and of societies that claim to be civil.

    For the Church this reality constitutes an eloquent sign of our times which further highlights humanity’s vocation to form one family, and, at the same time, the difficulties which, instead of uniting it, divide it and tear it apart.

    Let us not lose hope and let us together pray God, the Father of all, to help us – each in the first person – to be men and women capable of brotherly relationships and, at the social, political and institutional levels, so that understanding and reciprocal esteem among peoples and cultures may increase.

    With these hopes, as I invoke the intercession of Mary Most Holy, Stella Maris, I cordially impart the Apostolic Blessing to all and, especially, to migrants and refugees and to everyone who works in this important field.


    From Castel Gandolfo
    27 September 2010





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    00 26/10/2010 19:14



    Pope's brother and Cardinal-elect Bartolucci
    awarded at annual Musica Sacra Festival

    Adapted and translated from the Spanish service of




    Center panel, left, Mons. Georg Gaenswein assists the Pope's brother by taking the large candle. Bottom panel, right, Cardinal-designate Domenico Bartolucci.
    CORRECTION: I see from an Italian news report that the candle received by Mons. Gaenswein was a candle specially ordered by the Foundation for Benedict XVI, to whom this year's festival is dedicated.



    October 26, 2010 - Music is eternal. Therefore, every year, the International Foundation Pro Musica Sacra recognizes those who conserve and promote sacred music, in connection with the Foundation's annual sacred music festival held in Rome, this year from Oct. 23-26.

    The 2010 awardees are:
    - Msgr. Prof. Dr. Georg Ratzinger, 85, Protonotary apostolic, Choir Master Emeritus;
    - Msgr. Domenico Bartolucci, 93, Music Director Emeritus of the Papal Choir 'Capella Sistina', and recently named by the Holy Father one of the 24 prelates to be made cardinal in November;
    - Prof. Dr. Clemens Hellsberg, President representing the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, for the institution's long-standing support of the Festival Internazionale di Musica e Arte Sacra; and
    - Hans Urrigshardt, Patron, for his continued support of the institutional aims of the Fondazione Pro Musica e Arte Sacra.

    Pope Benedict's older brother, Mons.Georg Ratzinger, was music director of the world-famous Regensburger Domspatzen from 1964-1994.

    Each of the awardees received a diploma of recognition and a candle symbolizing music as "praise of God through the joy it gives human beings".

    This year's festival was dedicated to the music-loving Benedict XVI.

    Hellsberg, president of the Vienna Philharmonic, said on this occasion: "I know the Pope personally and his passion for classical music. His speeches on music are very original because he speaks on two levels. At the musical level, he speaks as an expert and a man of great sensitivity, and on the other, at the spiritual level".

    Hans Albert Courtial, current president of the Foundation gave thanks to the patrons whose contributions this year will finance the Foundation's restoration projects at St. Peter's Basilica.

    Besides the clean-up of the lateral and rear walls, these include other restorations within the Basilica and reconstruction of a mausoleum in the Vatican necropolis.


    Mons. Ratzinger: Sacred music makes
    liturgy more joyous and beautiful

    by Marinella Bandini
    Translated from



    ROME, Oct. 26 - When he speaks of music, his eyes light up, and his mind goes back to the Regensburger Domspatezen, the world-famous boys' choir whom he directed for 30 years, and to piano duets with his brother.

    Mons. Georg Ratzinger, older brother of the Pope, is in Rome these days where today he received an award from the Fondazione Pro Muisca Sacra e Arte Sacra.

    He told us in a brief interview: "Of course, it makes great sense even today to speak of sacred music. It is important to anyone interested in it to make others see the sense itself of sacred music".

    He says sacred music "makes liturgy more communicative, more joyous and more beautiful, and this, of course, has great value".

    Mons. Ratzinger cultivated his passion for music since he was a boy - he was the parish organist when he was 11 - and in the seminary. A passion he was then able to express and develop as choirmaster in Traunstein then musical director of the Regensburg Domspatzen.

    He notes from his experience that "In the countryside, often the first experience people had of serious music was church music". And that sacred music has led to important careers for many people. He cites one of his famous contemporaries, Austrian bass-baritone Walter Berry who was discovered while singing in a church choir [and went on to become one of Europe's most outstanding opera voices in the second half of the 20th century].

    The diploma for Mons. Ratzinger's award today recognizes "his lifelong work and his outstanding merits in the field of sacred music, for having dedicated himself tirelessly for 30 years to promote sacred music at the Cathedral of Regensburg and throughout the world, placing the talent that God the Creator had gifted him in the service of announcing the faith and glorifying Almighty God at the highest artistic level".

    I wish, of course, that he could stay much longer with his brother, but one can almost be certain he will be going home to Regensburg in time for All Saints' and All Souls' Day to visit the graves of their parents and sister, and to represent his brother in doing so. One of the more poignant sacrifices for any Pope is to be unable to do simple 'normal' things like this...

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    00 26/10/2010 23:06


    CORRECTING A MALICIOUS
    MISREPRESENTATION



    Not having the least inclination to dig around in cybertrash for negative material about the Holy Father, I was not aware of a photo apparently circulating online purportedly showing the young Joseph Ratzinger 'giving the Nazi salute'.

    A San Francisco website for cultural events apparently got taken in and used the photograph, but has now, on its own, issued a correction, for which we can all be thankful. It's a rare thing these days to find some honor in the media...



    It's really quite malicious to partially use a gesture from the Holy Father's ordination to misrepresent it as a Nazi salute!



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    00 27/10/2010 00:47




    The Jerusalem Post ran a mostly reasonable editorial today to protest what the Israelis perceive as an anti-Israeli slant in the final Message of the Synodal Assembly for the Middle East. I am not sure that the Pope himself should speak up about this, although it would be helpful if he did.... This was an entirely unnecessary controversy.


    The Pope must speak up:
    Bishops from this region have distorted both Church teachings and the facts
    to sully Israel, while the Vatican has remained silent.

    EDITORIAL

    10/26/2010


    In the name of radical Islamic-inspired nationalism, Mideast Christians of all denominations, including Catholics, have faced devastating persecution for their religious convictions.

    From the Gaza Strip and Egypt to Iraq to Turkey, Christians have been murdered, had their churches burned to the ground and their holy books destroyed, and have been demoted to secondclass citizens exposed to libels and exploitation by Muslim neighbors.

    Ostensibly with the purpose of addressing these injustices and stemming the tide of a dwindling Christian population in the Mideast, Pope Benedict XVI convened a special Vatican Synod in Rome, composed of about 200 bishops mostly from Muslim countries.

    Yet these bishops hijacked the synod and issued a statement Saturday that all but ignored the plight of Catholics living in Muslim lands while singling out Israel’s “occupation” for special castigation. [Not true that the plight ofCatholics in Muslim lands was 'ignored' by the message!]

    One of the synod’s leaders, Greek Melkite Archbishop Cyril Salim Bustros, even reiterated anti-Semitic theological positions that contradicted official Catholic positions as stated in Nostra Aetate, a groundbreaking interfaith document drafted in October 1965 during the Second Vatican Council that radically revamped the Church’s previous negative views of the Jewish people. [Bustros, who exercises his pastoral duties in the United States, is not exactly 'one of the Synod's leaders', but he was chairman of the working group that drafted part of the final Message.]

    Rabbi David Rosen, the American Jewish Committee’s International Director of Inter-Religious Affairs, has now called on the Vatican to issue a clear repudiation of Bustros’s “outrageous and regressive comments.” We firmly join him in that call. [Rosen addressed the Synodal assembly himself several days before the session at which Boutros expressed himself so imprudently.]

    IT IS an undeniable fact that the bulk of Christian persecution in the Mideast is perpetrated in the name of radical Islam.

    Open Doors, an organization that tracks attacks on Christians, regularly compiles a global “persecution index.” North Korea has topped the list for many years.

    However, of the top 10 countries on the list, eight are Islamic and three – Iran, Saudi Arabia and Yemen – are in the Middle East. Egypt and Iraq are also listed in the top 20.

    The “Palestinian Territories” is ranked 47, cited primarily as a conflict zone, and also in part due to the strife suffered by all Gazans, Christians included, as a result of the destruction caused by Operation Cast Lead.

    Open Doors takes pains to note, however, that even before the offensive, which was directed at Hamas terrorists, not Christians, “Many [Christian] believers had already left, pressured by the growing influence of radical Islam...”

    SO, IF radical Islam is the principal persecutor of Christians in the Mideast, why was Israel singled out? Apparently, by bashing Israel, Arab Catholic bishops as a persecuted minority in the Mideast are attempting to go out of their way to prove their loyalty to their Muslim brethren.

    This is a common socio-psychological phenomenon among Jews in response to anti-Semitism. Some British Jews, for instance, have been known to become more British than the Brits. Some of the most adamant communist ideologues in anti-Semitic Bolshevik Russia were Jews.

    So, too, Arab Christians have attempted to emphasize their ethnic and cultural loyalties above their religious affiliation, not only out of strongly heartfelt emotional ties to the Arab people, but also as a way of neutralizing religious tensions.

    When secular Pan-Arabism was still in vogue, this tactic was much easier to pull off. Christians such as Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine founder George Habash, who was of Greek Orthodox background, could join forces with Muslim terrorists under the banner of Palestinian nationalism.

    However, with the rise of Wahhabism, the Muslim Brotherhood, Al-Qaida, radical Shi’ism and other extremist Islamic movements, Arab Christians have had an increasingly harder time integrating into their respective societies.

    In a push to garner favor among Muslim extremists, the temptation among the bishops to revert to pre-Nostra Aetate anti-Semitic Catholic theology is evidently irresistible.

    We can muster some understanding, if not empathy, for the Mideast bishops’ disingenuous and ultimately self-defeating behavior, which will only perpetuate the persecution of Christians by kowtowing to Muslim extremism.

    We cannot, however, excuse the Vatican for allowing itself to be hijacked. Bishops from this region have distorted both Church teachings and the facts to sully Israel, while the Vatican has remained silent, in the process turning a blind eye to Christian suffering. [That is just as offensive a distortion of what the Synod's final message says as the extreme interpretation of the line about 'using Scripture as an excuse'.]

    Pope Benedict XVI still has a chance to distance himself from the synod’s declarations and make it clear that Bustros’s comments deviate from Church teaching. That is the right and necessary thing for the Pope to do – not just for Jewish-Catholic relations, but also for the sake of the Middle East’s persecuted Christian minority.

    [The editorial, unfortunately, does not distinguish between Bouteros's offensively explicit statement against Israel, and the general statement from the message - ""Recourse to theological and biblical positions which use the Word of God to wrongly justify injustices is not acceptable". To an objective mind, the statement from the Message would refer primarily to the use of the Koran to justify violence against non-Muslims, rather than the Israeli state's references to 'the promised land' and 'chosen people' in the Bible - not to justify violence against anyone, but their right to exist as a state and nation on the territory inhabited by the 'chosen people' for millennia before Muhammad was even born!]

    IMHO, Father Lombardi's response to the Israeli reaction was not entirely satisfactory:

    Fr. Lombardi responds to critics and says
    the Final Message of the Synodal Assembly
    represents the only 'voice' of the Synod



    VATICAN CITY, OCT. 25, 2010 (Zenit.org).- To understand the Mideast synod, it is necessary to read the final message its entirety, instead of focusing in on one or two voices, a Vatican spokesman affirmed in response to critiques coming from the Israeli government that the assembly was a forum for anti-Israeli sentiment.

    In an interview on Vatican Radio today, the director of the Vatican press office, Father Federico Lombardi, affirmed that the Message to the People of God of the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Synod of Bishops, which was published Saturday, is the only "synthetic expression of the positions of the synod at this time," and that it's the "only text written together and approved by the synod."

    "There was a great richness and variety of the contributions of the synod fathers," he explained, "but as such, one cannot consider each one as the 'voice' of the synod as a whole."

    Additionally, he noted that reaction to the synod has been to a great extent favorable: "The evaluation of the synod in its entirety and of its working sessions, in the words of the Holy Father and in the common opinion of the participants and observers, appears largely positive."

    His comments responded directly to the "disappointment" expressed by Danny Ayalon, Israel's deputy foreign minister, that the synod, which concluded Sunday, had become "a forum for political attacks on Israel in the best history of Arab propaganda." He added, in comments to the Jerusalem Post, that "the synod was hijacked by an anti-Israel majority."

    The Israeli minister referred in particular to comments made Saturday at the presentation of the final message, during with the Greek-Melkite Archbishop Cyrille Salim Bustros of Newton, Massachussets, said that "the concept of the promised land cannot be used as a base for the justification of the return of Jews to Israel and the displacement of Palestinians." He aded that "sacred Scripture should not be used to justify the occupation by Israel of Palestine."

    The archbishop's comment was not an exact expression of the synod's message, in which the fathers said that it was time "to commit ourselves together to a sincere, just and permanent peace," and that "both Christians and Jews are called to this task by the Word of God."

    "Recourse to theological and biblical positions which use the Word of God to wrongly justify injustices is not acceptable," the message continued, without specifically referring to Israel or the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    The final message also recognized the suffering of both the Israelis and the Palestinians.

    On one hand, the fathers considered the sufferings of the Palestinians "who are suffering the consequences of the Israeli occupation: the lack of freedom of movement, the wall of separation and the military checkpoints, the political prisoners, the demolition of homes, the disturbance of socio-economic life and the thousands of refugees."

    On the other hand, the fathers also considered the "suffering and insecurity in which Israelis live," and on "the situation of the holy city of Jerusalem."

    The synod's message urged a "just and lasting peace", and called on the international community "to work to find a peaceful, just and definitive solution in the region."


    The following article expresses much of what I have always felt about the unwarrantedly partisan attitude of some Middle East bishops against Israel.


    Singling out Israel isn’t Christian
    by William Doino Jr.

    Oct 26, 2010


    Several days ago, an article from the Associated Press appeared, with the provocative headline, “Vatican Meeting of Mideast Bishops Demands Israel End Occupation of Palestinian Lands.” Concerned that headline might be a little-one-sided, I read on, only to find this:

    In a final joint communiqué, the bishops also told Israel it shouldn’t use the Bible to justify ‘injustices’ against the Palestinians. . . . While the bishops condemned terrorism and anti-Semitism, they laid much of the blame for the conflict squarely on Israel. They listed the ‘occupation’ of Palestinian lands, Israel’s separation barrier with the West Bank, its military checkpoints, political prisoners, demolition of homes and disturbance of Palestinians’ socio-economic lives as factors that have made life increasingly difficult for Palestinians.


    Still alarmed, and unsatisfied, I read the Synod’s full statement but, alas, the AP story accurately summarized it. Although there are many fine Christian affirmations in it, the statement is damaged by an undue animus against Israel. No other country comes in for the kind of blame dished out against its policies.

    The bishops raise concerns about Iraq and Lebanon, but only in the context of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute, for which, they suggest, Israel bears almost sole responsibility.

    Like many who proclaim the need for peace, the bishops naively believe that once the Palestinians have a homeland, Israel “will be able to enjoy peace and security” too, and many other conflicts in the region will disappear. In part, the statement reads like a utopian projection — its boundless faith in the United Nations being just one example. The statement does condemn fanaticism and intolerance, but in a generalized, politically-correct way:

    We condemn violence and terrorism from wherever it may proceed as well as all religious extremism. We condemn all forms of racism, anti-Semitism, anti-Christianism and Islamophobia and we call upon the religions to assume their responsibility to promote dialogue between cultures and civilizations in our region and in the entire world.


    Note that these condemnations do not specify exactly who might be guilty of these evils, and to what degree. Note also the moral equivalence. Is “Islamophobia,” for example, anywhere near as dangerous or intense as anti-Semitism, not to mention anti-Christianism, in the Middle East, and “the entire world[/S}”?

    And if Israel should be criticized by name, for its failures and abuses, why not countries with far more horrendous records, like Iran and Syria? Why not organizations like the PLO and Hezbollah? And have the bishops forgotten about al Qaeda?

    In a recent commentary on al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, Thomas Joscelyn noted that “the ideology that fuels al Qaeda’s hate . . . relies on a paranoid and delusional view of the world in which an imaginary ‘Zionist-Crusader’ conspiracy seeks to impose its will on Muslims.”

    In this, he continues, “al Qaeda’s paranoia is not all that different from the insanity of Nazism or the anti-capitalist ranting of Communists. In each case, the ideologues pretend that a dastardly cabal threatens humanity and they are the last hope for redemption.”

    Are the bishops aware of just how entrenched this poisonous world view is among Israel’s opponents (and actually part of indoctrination programs for the young); and if so, why were they not more explicit in describing and condemning it, and assigning specific blame to those who promote it?

    If it is argued that the bishops, representing an endangered Christian minority in the Middle East, have to be very careful about what they say against extremist governments and movements, lest more Christians become targets themselves, fair enough. But isn’t the reverse also true: don’t the bishops need to be extremely careful about what they say about Israel, lest more Jews become targets?

    Israel’s deadly enemies will surely exploit the Synod’s final declaration, using it as a propaganda weapon, giving it the widest possible publicity — which is not to say that’s what the bishops intended, at all.

    On the contrary, and to their credit, they cited Vatican II’s Nostra aetate, on the non-Christian religions, stressing Christianity’s bond with Judaism, and its abhorrence of religious prejudice. But the bishops should realize the power of words, and unintended consequences, especially in that part of the world.

    It is right and proper for the Middle East’s bishops to stand on the side of those who are suffering — often desperately so — and it is natural that they would be particularly anxious about the quality of life for Christians in the Middle East. The Catholic Church is right not to be uncritical of everything Israel does in the name of security, any more than it should be about America’s war on terror.

    But fair’s fair. Why has Israel applied some (admittedly debatable) security measures? Because Israelis have been under attack — fierce and fanatical attack — for years and years and years. Do the bishops have a better strategy which can guarantee peace and security for all, and if so, what is it?

    The Synod’s final declaration addresses these concerns only sparingly, and with idealistic platitudes — not with anything approaching a healthy Christian realism.


    Ironically, the very fact the bishops are making these “bold” statements is a testament to Israel’s essential decency and humanity the bishops know there will be no serious consequences or massive reprisals against Christians in Israel for “speaking out”, whereas any similar Christian criticism — or even questioning — of an Arab government in the region, or Islamic extremism, would — well, we all saw what happened after Regensburg.

    In a statement meant to be fully and intensely Christian, Israel was singled out for blame and criticism. That’s not fair, much less Christian.

    William Doino Jr. is a contributor to Inside the Vatican magazine, among many other publications, and writes often about religion, history and politics. His annotated bibliography on Pius XII appears in The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII (Lexington Books, 2004). His most recent articles for "On the Square" were 'Pius XII and the Distorting Ellipsis' and 'Pope Benedict Confounds His Critics' (about the UK visit).


    [I understand that obviously, not even the Holy Father - who is never partisan - can influence what the Synodal Fathers vote on to include in their final Message and how they say it, but I always hoped that a sense of fairness and justice wold override any anti-Israeli partisanship among the bishops, who are, after all, men of God. However, as I commented earlier, the final Message was far less partisan and negatively-charged as the Instrumentum laboris had been. It could really have been much worse.]



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    00 27/10/2010 15:42



    Wednesday, Oct. 27, 30th Week in Ordinary Time

    The only image I could find online, from an Italian site.
    BLESSED BARTOLOMEO DI BREGANZE (Bartolomeo da Vincenza) (Italy, 1200-1271), Dominican, Bishop, Papal Legate
    Considered one of the most illustrious of St. Dominic's early disciples, Bartolomeo descended from the counts of Braganza and was born in Vicenza. As a Dominican, he was given various leadership positions, and on his own, founded a military order, the Chevaliers of Santa Maria Gloriosa, to keep civil peace in towns throughout Italy. He quickly became known as a preacher who challenged the various heresies of the day, particularly the Manichaeans. Pope Gregory IX summoned him to Rome to be his theologian 'master of the Sacred Palace', a post previously held by St. Dominic himself. He also wrote copiously, with commentaries on Scripture. A little pamphlet he wrote on the education of princes, dedicated to the consort of the future St. Louis IX, King of France, caught the King's attention, who made him his confessor. While in Paris, Innocent IV named him bishop of Cyprus (he was 48), and he set out with Louis on his Crusade, to take up his post. He spent the next six years as a vigilant and diligent bishop. Then the Pope ordered him to join King Louis in the Holy Land in 1254. After Louis returned to France, the new Pope Alexander IV appointed Bartholomew bishop of his native city, Vicenza, which he was forced to leave after being persecuted by anti-Catholic elements in the city. This time, the Pope sent him as a papal legate to France and England, helping to bring peace between their two sovereigns. Before he left Paris for the last time, Louis gifted him with a relic of the true Cross and a thorn said to have come from the Crown placed on Jesus. He returned to Vicenza, where his arch-enemy had since died, and he set about rebuilding the diocese from the physical and spiritual ravages of the heretics. He built the Church of the Crown to house the relics given to him. When he died in 1271, the faithful gave him the title Blessed, and miracles took place at his grave. When his body was exhumed 80 years later, it was found to be incorrupt. He was beatified in 1793.
    Readings for today's Mass:
    www.usccb.org/nab/readings/102710.shtml



    OR today:
    The only papal story in today's OR is the Holy Father's message for the World Day for Migrants and Refugees in 2011. Other Page 1 stories: UN expresses alarm over cholera epidemic in Haiti; 10 Indonesia villages wiped out by tsunami; 7,000 killed this year so far in Mexico drug wars; and 2 editorial commentaries - one on the new look at the universe made possible by 'all-sky' images from the European Planck satellite which expects by 2012 to show pictures of teh primordial universe as it was 13.7 billion years ago, or shortly after the Big Bang (the light emissions only now reaching us); and the brave new world of stem-cell research, in which, it is claimed, the universal question is no longer whether the human embryo is a human being, but whether human beings should be classified as disposable and non-disposable.


    THE POPE'S DAY

    General Audience - The Holy Father's catechesis is on St. Brigid of Sweden, a co-patron of Europe. He makes
    an appeal for international aid to Indonesia for its current earthquake and tsunami emergency, and to Benin
    for its disastrous floods.

    After the audience, the Pope met at the Auletta Paolo VI with a delegation from the European Courts.





    Favorite Vatican topic for the world's media today, judging from the online headline lists: 'Vatican wants clemency for Tariq Aziz". Vatican spokesman Fr. Federico Lombardi expressed the wish that the Iraqi government will stay the death sentence just given by Iraq's supreme court to Saddam Hussein's foreign minister Tariq Aziz, who is Christian. He was convicted for "murder and various crimes against humanity", particularly for his role in persecuting Shiites. The Church is opposed to the death penalty.

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