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BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

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16/12/2011 04:44
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Irish government now says it would respond positively
if the Pope wishes to visit Ireland next year
for the 50th Eucharistic Congress

By David Kerr


Dublin, Ireland, Dec 15, 2011 (CNA/EWTN News) - The Irish government signaled on Wednesday that it would accept a visit next June by Pope Benedict for the Dublin International Eucharistic Congress, giving hope to organizers who feared a papal visit would not be allowed.

Irish Foreign Minister Eamon Gilmore told an Irish parliamentary committee Dec. 14 that “in order to remove any misunderstandings, I would like to make it clear that should the government be informed by the Holy See that Pope Benedict wishes to visit Ireland at a time of mutual convenience – for instance at the occasion of next year’s Eucharistic Congress – I have no doubt that the government will respond positively.”

In October, when asked a similar question, Gilmore told Parliament that “an invitation has not issued nor is one currently under active consideration.”

The organizers of the Eucharist Congress saw his statement as a rebuff to the idea of a papal visit. A month later, Gilmore also closed the Irish embassy to the Holy See in Rome, after 82 years in existence.

Gilmore asserted on Dec. 14 that the decision to close the Vatican embassy was purely a financial one based on “diminishing resources” for his department.

He also sought to clear up any “misunderstandings” about his government’s attitude toward a possible visit by the Pope, explaining that “according to normal diplomatic practice, invitations to heads of state to visit another country are neither sought nor issued in public.”

Instead, he said that “a formal invitation is issued only after notification that the head of state wishes to visit and dates have been agreed.”

The 50th International Eucharistic Congress will take place in Dublin from the June 10 to 17, 2012. Held every four years, the congress brings together Catholics from across the globe to pray and study the meaning of the Eucharist.

The Dublin event is expected to attract about 25,000 visitors per day, with 80,000 attending the final Mass at the city’s Croke Park Stadium. The organizers have issued an invitation to Pope Benedict and are still waiting for a response from the Vatican.

“The primary focus of the Congress is people’s encounter with Jesus Christ, but if the Pope also came, that would be a real bonus. So I obviously welcome Mr. Gilmore’s comments,” congress organizer Fr. Kevin Doran told CNA Dec. 15.

Fr. Doran said that over the past six months he has received nothing both “generous support” from Ireland’s diplomatic staff across the world as he has worked to organize the congress.

In contrast, relations between the Dublin and Rome have been strained since Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny launched a blistering attack on the Catholic Church in July.

He accused the Vatican of attempting to “frustrate an inquiry” into clerical abuse in the Diocese of Cloyne, County Cork. The Vatican rejected his accusation and a spokesperson for the Prime Minister later stated that he was not referring to any specific incident. However, Kenny has refused to withdraw his remarks or apologize for them.

Pope Benedict XVI, whose example has been responsible for the unprecedented renewal of the practice of Eucharistic Adoration in the universal Church in the past six years, has attended the two national Eucharistic Congresses held in Italy since he became Pope (Bari in May 2005, Ancona in September this year), but missed the 49th IEC in Quebec, Canada, in 2008, and it was held almost certain that he attend the 50th IEC in Dublin next year.

In fact, it is thought that he chose Ireland to be the site of the next IEC precisely because of the problems of the Irish Church with increasing secularization and the consequent falling away from the faith of increasingly more Catholics.

But the disproportionate scandal in Ireland starting last year because of 'new' reports (most of the facts were previously known) on the offenses of some priests and bishops, mostly in past decades, with respect to sex abuses against minors and children, has created a climate of general hostility in Ireland towards the Church and therefore, towards the Pope, as exemplified by the Irish Prime Minister's vicious attack spoken in Parliament.

Let us pray that something positive comes out of this new development.

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