00 02/04/2011 15:50


Pope Benedict's Assisi day will differ from the previous gatherings in that even non-believers are invited in the spirit of the Court of the Gentiles, since truth and peace are universal values regardless of religion or lack of it.... And all those naysayers who howled their kneejerk reaction against the Pope's initiative when he announced it on January 1 should now realize they ought to have waited to hear what exactly Benedict XVI had in mind before crying doom and gloom. These are generally the same people who raised all those false alarms about the Summorum Pontificum Instructions, in an earlier demonstration of their autistic, arrogant and ego-filled assumption that only they have common sense, and that Benedict XVI, whom they praise on other things, does not.


Pope gives new meaning
to Assisi gathering


April 2, 2011





On 1 January 2011, after the Angelus, Pope Benedict XVI announced that he wished to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the historic meeting that took place in Assisi on 27 October 1986, at the wish of the Venerable Servant of God John Paul II.

On the day of the anniversary, 27 October this year, the Holy Father intends to hold a Day of reflection, dialogue and prayer for peace and justice in the world, making a pilgrimage to the home of Saint Francis and inviting fellow Christians from different denominations, representatives of the world’s religious traditions and, in some sense, all men and women of good will, to join him once again on this journey.

The Day will take as its theme: Pilgrims of truth, pilgrims of peace. Every human being is ultimately a pilgrim in search of truth and goodness. Believers too are constantly journeying towards God: hence the possibility, indeed the necessity, of speaking and entering into dialogue with everyone, believers and unbelievers alike, without sacrificing one’s own identity or indulging in forms of syncretism.

To the extent that the pilgrimage of truth is authentically lived, it opens the path to dialogue with the other, it excludes no one and it commits everyone to be a builder of fraternity and peace. These are the elements that the Holy Father wishes to place at the centre of reflection.

For this reason, as well as representatives of Christian communities and of the principal religious traditions, some figures from the world of culture and science will be invited to share the journey – people who, while not professing to be religious, regard themselves as seekers of the truth and are conscious of a shared responsibility for the cause of justice and peace in this world of ours.

The image of pilgrimage therefore sums up the meaning of the event. There will be an opportunity to look back over the path already travelled from that first meeting in Assisi to the following one in January 2002, and also to look ahead to the future, with a view to continuing, in company with all men and women of good will, to walk along the path of dialogue and fraternity, in the context of a world in rapid transformation.

Saint Francis, poor and humble, will once more welcome everyone to his home town, which has become a symbol of brotherhood and peace.

The Program

The delegations will set off from Rome by train on the morning of 27 October, together with the Holy Father. Upon arrival in Assisi, they will make their way to the Basilica of S. Maria degli Angeli, where the previous meetings will be recalled and the theme of the Day will be explored in greater depth. Leaders of some of the delegations present will make speeches and the Holy Father will likewise deliver an address.

There will follow a simple lunch, shared by the delegates: a meal under the banner of sobriety, intended to express fraternal conviviality, and at the same time solidarity in the suffering of so many men and women who do not know peace.

There will follow a period of silence for individual reflection and prayer. In the afternoon, all who are present in Assisi will make their way towards the Basilica of Saint Francis. It will be a pilgrimage in which, for the final stretch, the members of the delegations will also take part; it is intended to symbolize the journey of every human being who assiduously seeks the truth and actively builds justice and peace.

It will take place in silence, leaving room for personal meditation and prayer. In the shadow of Saint Francis’ Basilica, where the previous meetings were also concluded, the final stage of the Day will include a solemn renewal of the joint commitment to peace.

In preparation for this Day, Pope Benedict XVI will preside over a Prayer Vigil at Saint Peter’s the previous evening, together with the faithful of the Diocese of Rome.

Particular Churches and communities throughout the world are invited to organize similar times of prayer.

In the coming weeks the Cardinal Presidents of the Pontifical Councils for the Promotion of Christian Unity and of Inter-Religious Dialogue and the Pontifical Council for Culture will write in the Holy Father’s name to all those invited.

The Pope asks the Catholic faithful to join him in praying for the celebration of this important event and he is grateful to all those who will be able to be present in Saint Francis’s home town to share this spiritual pilgrimage.




BTW, a graphic I used yesterday with my post on Vesakh in the Church&Vatican thread is a useful snapshot of the size of teh world religions (and non-religions) today:

It is rather disconcerting that the various groups who claim no religious belief at all now far outnumber the Buddhists (more than double) and are almost as numerous as the Hindus! Surely the numbers show why tThe Holy Father's Court of the Gentiles and Assisi initatives are so important.
[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 03/04/2011 01:02]