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BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

Ultimo Aggiornamento: 23/08/2021 11:16
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Coventry cancelled as site
of Newman beatification Mass


Jun 24 2010


THE POPE will not be coming to Coventry, the Catholic Church has confirmed.

The plug was officially pulled on Pope Benedict XVI’s huge open air mass at Coventry Airport after months of planning.

The church has switched the venue for September’s visit to the much smaller Cofton Park in Birmingham.

The Telegraph has learned the first news of the Vatican’s decision came in a phone call yesterday morning from Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols, to Coventry City Council leader John Mutton.

It ended weeks of speculation over the venue for the landmark event of the papal UK trip - the beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman.

Councillor Mutton told the Telegraph: "The Archbishop rang to say it will not now be in Coventry.

"The reason he gave was that Cofton Park is right next to where Cardinal Newman was buried.

The beatification for the sainthood will be made at the same time.

"The papal advisers understand that Cofton Park does hold fewer people, but they think that’s a price worth paying to be close to Cardinal Newman’s resting place.

"The Archbishop thanked Coventry and said all the good work the city would put into the visit could be transferred to Birmingham.

"He knows we would have made an excellent job of it, just as we did for the last papal visit to Coventry Airport in 1982.


I feel 'robbed' even if there is no chance I could go to England for the papal visit! If the Church could have staged a Mass in Coventry airport for John Paul II in 1982, I do not understand why they were unable to arrange it for Pope Benedict's Mass which will be England's first beatification rite on home ground! Yes, costs would have gone up, but the bishops of Scotland managed to arrange for Bellahouston Park to the the Papal Mass site again this year as they did in 1982.

And then there comes a story like this! I dare you to finish reading it without being brought to tears of great emotion towards the end!

Preparing for the Pope
by Joanna Bogle

6/24/10


It sounds like something that would at one time have been every British Catholic's dream: The Pope comes to England for a state visit; he is received by Her Majesty the Queen; he addresses members of Parliament in Westminster's Great Hall, where St. Thomas More was tried four centuries earlier; and he celebrates a great public Mass at which John Henry Cardinal Newman is beatified.

But the upcoming papal visit in September has encountered problems from the start. The tragedy is that they are not problems rooted in the old anti-Catholicism of Britain's past -- which would have made a papal visit in the 18th, 19th, or even early 20th centuries a complete impossibility -- but in the very modern tensions of the Britain of the 21st century.

The invitation to Pope Benedict XVI was initiated earlier this year by then-Prime Minister Gordon Brown -- essentially for political reasons connected with boosting his international status (news of the plan first emerged while he was flying to America to meet President Barack Obama) and increasing his popularity with Catholics in his native Scotland (where Keith Patrick Cardinal O'Brien of Edinburgh had been deeply critical of government policy on issues of marriage and family).

There was then an embarrassing hiatus while Rome and the bishops' conferences of England, Wales, and Scotland had to await further information. When that finally came, there were statements of general enthusiasm, but it was only too clear that there would be difficulties: The visit was planned for September, which allowed very little time for organization and planning; and there was an embarrassment about funding it all, because a state visit means use of taxpayers' money.

Just as these tensions were being discussed, the much-hyped clergy sex-abuse story blazed its way across the world, with lurid material pumped out day after day: German bishops urged to resign, allegations of abuse in Italy, American tales from the 1980s revived alongside inaccurately reported and confused material -- and, of course, the full hideous Irish disaster.

As the stories were worked and re-worked, the headlines grew more dramatic, and the media adored it: The Times [obviously, the mother bitch of all the anti-Papist Pavlov dogs] called for the Pope to resign, as did a number of prominent columnists; there were endless letters and op-eds written by people who announced themselves as devout but now disillusioned Catholics; and organizations once deemed neutral on religious issues, such as the BBC [Which has not been neutral since World War II!], denounced papal statements and Church teachings at random.

Then came the ghastly Foreign Office memo. Here, we reached a nadir: It emerged in April that the Foreign Office staff organizing the state visit had produced a memo suggesting that the Holy Father be invited to open an abortion clinic and preside at a same-sex wedding.

No, it wasn't a joke -- or, at least, it didn't appear to be one. We had to watch while our Foreign Office at first tried to bluster things out, only to finally admit that something seriously wrong had occurred and issue an apology to the Holy See and a reprimand to the staff concerned.

News from the committee established by the bishops to organize the ecclesial side of the visit was not much better. Huge practical difficulties presented themselves: Quoting "health and safety regulations," the bishops announced that numbers at papal events would have to be severely curtailed, and Britain's Catholics were urged to remain at home and watch the proceedings on TV.

We also learned that some of the planned venues had been turned down because they were deemed unsuitable, and rumors circulated that a proposed event for young Catholics would be limited to one -- yes, one -- young person from each parish.

It all went over extremely poorly, especially as it coincided with an appeal for funds to finance the very events from which ordinary Mass-goers would be excluded.

All this, plus announcements of anti-papal demonstrations planned by the National Secular Society and all sorts of media-savvy atheists. And we still have the summer ahead, when silly-season stories can whip up plenty of anti-Catholic grudges.

It has all been a mess. But then, the whole history of the Church has been one long series of messes, and it has to be said that God seems to be more than capable of drawing great good out of things that His children begin very badly.

There is, in fact, huge enthusiasm for the papal visit among ordinary Catholics in Britain. People want to see him, they want to cheer him, they want a World Youth Day-type event for young people and a huge celebratory Mass for the beatification of Cardinal Newman.

They don't want to be told that they should watch the Holy Father on TV; we can all do that any time. We want to be with him when he comes to Britain.

It is a sentiment from the heart, echoing the emphatic statements and announcements and e-mails and conversations and indignation-sessions that have been the stuff of life among Britain's Roman Catholics in recent weeks.


We are well aware that modern Britain -- unlike the nation that welcomed Pope John Paul II back in the 1980s -- is now awash with nitpicking health-and-safety regulations, and that organizing great events could pose challenges. But we are also well aware that vast crowds routinely gather for football matches, pop festivals, and royal events.

We understand that the Church in our country is at a stage that could use a boost to morale, and a papal visit would provide just that.

Mass attendance figures here in Britain have risen, not fallen, in recent months -- if anything, the media headlines focusing on scandals seem to have given Catholics a renewed sense of the things that really matter, rather than making them reject the Church because of the sins of a few priests.

There is an increasing recognition of tensions between government policies -- on sex education, on care of the dying, on marriage -- and the stance of the Church. Catholics feel a need to draw together. This is an excellent moment for a papal visit, and the mood is increasingly ripe for it to work well.

So what happens next? We must hope -- and pray -- for opportunities for ordinary Catholics in England to greet the Pope -- not least in the streets of London when he travels to and from Parliament.

Catholics in Scotland have already ensured that there will be a great event there -- a grand Mass at Bellahouston Park that will be packed out.

We need to be emphatic about seeing Benedict: We won't be banned from the streets of our capital city, and we won't settle for minimum possibilities for the young to be with him. Catholics in Britain have been to World Youth Days overseas, and to Rome, and they know what it can and should be like.

As a students' chaplain put it in the Catholic Herald recently:


We have to make the case that this is not just any public event. This is like nothing else on earth: not a rock concert or not a demonstration. Catholics would want to be squeezed together, hot and sweaty, if that's what it takes to see the "sweet Christ on earth", as St Catherine of Siena described the Roman Pontiff.

We are going to turn out for our pope, and our bishops must be encouraged to tackle the public authorities with that in mind -- "to kick up a fuss, to overcome whatever obstacles could keep British Catholics from having direct contact with their spiritual Father."


Join us in prayer. Storm heaven that all will be well. Ask for the intercession of our martyrs -- Sts. John Fisher, Thomas More, Edmund Campion, Anne Line, Ralph Sherwin, Robert Southwell, Margaret Clitheroe…

If some of these names are unfamiliar to you, it is because they died for the faith in the years when the Catholic Church was banned in the United Kingdom; when you could be hanged, drawn, and quartered for being a Catholic priest; when Mass was said secretly; when to be a Catholic was to be deemed a traitor.

They persevered, and the Faith that they loved was passed on to us; and now we have parishes across the country, a great cathedral in Westminster, young people who are enthusiastic in their Faith -- and a visit from the Holy Father himself, who will meet the queen at Holyrood Palace and address our legislators in London.

God can do great things. A papal visit that started with a series of muddles is nothing compared to 400 years of persecution. Pray with us, that the voice of Peter's successor may be heard in our country. Pray for us, that this visit may exceed all expectations of success and bring much, much good to the United Kingdom. You won't be praying alone.



BRAVA, MS BOGLE! Yes, we will pray with you and for you, for all the people of the United Kingdom! God bless!

Anna Arco has more details about the Pope's last event during the visit:



Pope to visit Newman's rooms
at Birmingham oratory


June 24, 2010


Pope Benedict XVI will visit the Birmingham Oratory during his trip to Britain, it emerged today. While he is there he will visit Cardinal John Henry Newman’s rooms.

There had been some doubt about whether the Pope would visit the Oratory because of controversies within the Birmingham Oratory community, but it is an obvious stop for the Pontiff because Newman lived there in his final years. It holds his library as well as the relics that were found when grave was opened in 2008.

A spokesman for the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales said that the visit’s organisers had asked Birmingham City Council for the use of Cofton Park for Newman’s beatification on September 19.

He said that, while the details still had to be worked out with the City of Birmingham, they hoped that at least 80,000 people would be able to attend. The site is near Rednal, where Newman’s Oratorians had a house and where the Fathers of the Oratory were later buried. Cardinal Newman’s grave is there.

The spokesman said: “Cofton Park will have more historical resonance, because it is next to Rednal. The Oratorians used to take their recreation in Cofton Park. What is important is that it enables a visit to the Birmingham Oratory. If it all works out, the Pope will make a private visit to Newman’s rooms.

“After lengthy discussions with the Vatican, we were hoping for something with close historical references. And Cofton is our prefered venue in Birmingham.”

Coventry Airport had been touted as the original venue for the Pope to beatify Newman and organisers were hoping the venue would fit 200,000 people.

The spokesman said: “Coventry was being discussed in good faith but as the detail of the planning became more apparent and the Pope was keen on something with more historical references and links to Newman the attraction to moving it to Cofton Park became more apparent.” [Uh-oh! Sounds like a cop-out alibi for not having managed to get Coventry airport!]

Both Longbridge car factory and the seminary at Oscott had been reported as possible venues for the beatification. This week, a Vatican team scouted out locations in and around Birmingham Archdiocese.






Cardinal Newman's Birmingham


Cofton Park is green space surrounded by the old Austin-Rover car plant on two sides, now scheduled for redevelopment. It is a few miles away from Rednal, the little village where Newman was buried until his 'remains' were transferred to the Birmingham Oratory on All Saints Day, 2008. Center photo: Jack Sullivan and his wife visiting the graveyard at Rednal, after Sullivan's miracle cure was certified for Newman's beatification. Right photo: Archbishop Vincent Nichols, then Archbishop of Birmingham, praying before the reliquary, after officiating at a traditional Mass for the translation ceremony. When the grave was opened in October 2008, no mortal remains were found except a few locks of hair and items buried with Newman.


The Birmingham Oratory, where Newman lived from 1850 to his death. The Holy Father is now expected to visit his rooms - in which his large study, lower left, also contained his private chapel, lower right. Jack Sullivan is in the picture.

While searching out these photos, I also came across this quotation from Cardinal Newman:

Cardinal Newman on the role of the Pope:

Peter is no recluse, no abstracted student, no dreamer about the past, no doter upon the dead and gone, no projector of the visionary.

… If there ever was a power on earth who had an eye for the times, who has confined himself to the practicable, and has been happy in his anticipations, whose words have been deeds, and whose commands, prophecies - such is he in the history of ages, who sits from generation to generation in the Chair of the Apostles, as the Vicar of Christ and Doctor of His Church.



[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 25/06/2010 14:18]
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