È soltanto un Pokémon con le armi o è un qualcosa di più? Vieni a parlarne su Award & Oscar!
Nuova Discussione
Rispondi
 
Stampa | Notifica email    
Autore

NEWS ABOUT BENEDICT

Ultimo Aggiornamento: 05/01/2014 14:16
06/01/2010 20:14
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.580
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

Insensitivity, smugness, pretension keep people from God, says pope

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service
Jan. 6, 2010

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- An insensitive, hardened heart, over-confidence and world-weary smugness keep people from experiencing the true joy and love found in Jesus Christ, said Pope Benedict XVI.

While the Christ child born in Bethlehem seems weak and fragile, in reality "he has the power to give the human heart the greatest and most profound joy" in the world, he said.

The babe in the manger, he said, represents "the stupendous reality that God knows us and is near, that his grandeur and strength do not follow the logic of the world, but the logic of a defenseless baby whose only strength is the love he entrusts to us."

The pope made his remarks at a Mass in St. Peter's Basilica Jan. 6, the feast of the Epiphany, which marks the manifestation of Jesus as savior to the world.

In his homily, he asked people to reflect upon why there always seem to be so few people who believe in Jesus Christ.

Just as after Christ's birth many people witnessed the star of Bethlehem, but only few -- like the Wise Men or Magi -- actually responded to God's invitation to follow a new path that would change the world, he said.

"What is the reason that some see and find (Christ) and others don't? What opens one's eyes and heart? What is lacking in those who remain indifferent, those who know the way, but do not take it?" he asked.

People do not accept Christ's invitation to come to him when they are too self-assured and display the "pretentiousness of understanding reality perfectly well and the presumption of already having come to a definite judgment about things, which makes their hearts closed and insensitive to the novelty of God," he said.

People need to let themselves be completely bowled over by "the adventure of a God that wants to come to them," he said.

What is missing in the world, he said, is authentic humility and courage, which allow people to recognize and put their trust in what is truly great, "even if it is manifested in a defenseless baby."

The capacity to be surprised, to be a child at heart, is missing, said the pope. Only when people use that sense of wonder to come out of their shell can they "follow the way indicated by the star, the way of God."

The pope said by bringing gifts fit for a king and prostrating in adoration, the Magi demonstrated their willingness to submit to the authority of the Christ child -- the king of the Jews -- and renounce their allegiance to the cruel and powerful sovereignty of King Herod.

"They were led to also follow the way of the child, which would make them ignore the great and powerful of this world and would bring them to the one waiting among the poor, to the path of love, which is the only thing that can transform the world," he said.

After the Mass, Pope Benedict gave his noonday Angelus address from his studio window to those gathered in St. Peter's Square. He dedicated his remarks to the Magi who were guided to Bethlehem by a star and who were the first to come and adore Jesus.

He said the three men of learning and science are excellent examples of "authentic seekers of the truth" and of "the unity between intelligence and faith."

Far from believing that the knowledge gleaned from books and scientific research was sufficient, they were "open to further revelations and divine summons. In fact they were not ashamed to ask for guidance from Jewish religious leaders," he said.

They could have, but didn't, exhibit the fear evident today of any "'contamination' between science and the word of God," said the pope.

They listened and welcomed divine prophecies and embodied "a perfect harmony between human research and divine truth, a harmony that filled the hearts of the authentically wise men with joy."

Pope Benedict asked that people let themselves be open to Christ and strike an even greater harmony in their lives between "reason and faith, science and revelation."

The pope also extended a Christmas greeting to Eastern Christians who follow the Julian calendar and were preparing to celebrate the birth of Christ Jan. 7.


*****************


Magi are models of using both faith and reason, Pope notes

CatholicCulture.org
January 06, 2010

Pope Benedict XVI offered the Magi as an example of “unity between intelligence and faith” as he spoke to a crowd in St. Peter’s Square on January 6, the feast of the Epiphany.

Earlier, in the Vatican basilica, the Holy Father had celebrated Mass for the Epiphany—which is celebrated as a holy day at the Vatican. In his homily the Pope observed that while the prophets foretold the arrival of the Messiah a great king, to whom all the other kings of the earth would bow, in fact the humble birth of Christ drew no attention from the rich and powerful of Jerusalem. Instead, he said, the Christ child was visited by “kings of the East—unknown characters, perhaps views with suspicion.”

When those three kings offered gifts to Jesus, the Pope continued, they were submitting themselves to Him. “The Kings can no longer continue on their way, they can not return to Herod, they can not be allied with that powerful and ruthless ruler. Have been brought over forever to the path of the Child.”

At his midday Angelus audience, the Pope offered a different set of thoughts about the Magi, noting that they were men of learning, for whom the entire universe was “virtually a great book full of signs and messages from God to man.” They studied the skies, and profited from their own learning, but—the Pope stressed—they were still “open to further appeals and divine revelations.” When they reached Jerusalem, they inquired in Herod’s court for advice from Jewish scholars, to help them understand the prophets. Although they must have thought of themselves as men of science; they were “not ashamed to ask for directions from the religious leaders of the Jews.”

Thus reason and faith were combined by the Wise Men in their search. The Pope said that “the star and the Scriptures were the two lights that guided the journey of the three kings.” Their thorough integration of these two paths to knowledge is a model for our time, when so many people see reason and faith in conflict, the Pope concluded.

Before ending his audience the Pope offered a special greeting to the Eastern churches, which will celebrate the Nativity on January 7. "May the mystery of light - he hoped – be a source of joy and peace to every family and community,” he said.


[Modificato da benefan 07/01/2010 01:16]
07/01/2010 06:37
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.583
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

Pope greets 'little missionaries' after the Angelus

Vatican City, Jan 6, 2010 / 05:23 pm (CNA).- After the Angelus on Wednesday, Pope Benedict XVI greeted young representatives the world over in commemoration of the Missionary Day of the Children. Celebrated within the parishes of Italy and in cooperating parishes around the globe, the purpose of the Day is to urge children to become protagonists in international mission work.

The Pontiff recognized the initiative in his Italian-language message following the Marian prayer on Wednesday, when he greeted “all of the little missionaries from the five continents with affection” and encouraged them to “always be witnesses of Jesus and announcers of the Gospel.”

The initiative, whose motto is “Children helping children,” is represented by nearly 6,000 young participants within Italy. Chapters of the movement are present in every diocese in the country, according to the Pontifical Work of Missionary Youth (POIM in Italian) which promotes the initiative.

It isn’t the first time the Holy Father has addressed them this year. While the group was on a joint pilgrimage of missionary children from all of Europe in May of 2009 for the Pauline Year, Pope Benedict XVI met with them to tell them how they should go about announcing the Gospel.

In an interview on Vatican Radio on Wednesday, General Secretary of the POIM Father Piero Pierobon said that the Pope told the children that meditation on the word of God, prayer, an awareness of problems and beauty existent in other cultures and solidarity with others are the four elements to becoming a missionary in the world.

The Pope also mentioned in his message that the initiative was promoted by Venerable Pope Pius XII 50 years ago to educate young people to have open minds and be sympathetic to their disadvantaged peers around the world.

07/01/2010 15:59
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 399
Registrato il: 29/11/2005
Utente Senior
Papa attack
I just read on Google alert, that the woman who attacked Papa ordered tickets for the Mass under the name of her best friend.
Her friend got the confirmation of the Vatican for 3 tickets and was very surprised. She wanted to go with her boyfriend and her grandma.
The crazy woman was very disappointed that her friend didn't ask her to accompany her.
So she traveled to Rome by herself, went to the place (I guess at the bronze gate) to get the tickets by using the name of her friend. When she was asked for a identification she said, all her paperstuff had been stolen. So she got the tickets to get in!
When her friend wanted to pick up the tickets, the Vatican people regret, that probably by mistake the tickets weren't available any more and they gave other tickets to them more in the back. So the friend hasn't even noticed what happened with the crazy woman.

I hope, my story isn't too messy told and fairly understandable.

www.blick.ch/news/ausland/meine-freundin-die-papst-springeri...
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wer glaubt, ist nie allein, im Leben nicht und auch im Sterben nicht.
(PREDIGT DES HEILIGEN VATERS BENEDIKT XVI. ZUR AMTSEINFÜHRUNG 24. April 2005)
08/01/2010 20:21
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 17.354
Registrato il: 28/08/2005
Utente Gold
Very well summarized, Simone, thank you.

For those who may want to read more details, I posted this translation of the BLICK story on Gloria's forum yesterday, which I am posting here with my preliminary comments:






I am posting the following story not to give more undue attention to the person who attacked the Pope on Christmas Eve, but because it appears to indicate that she is not all that crazy, that there is some method in her madness.

An earlier report cited an acquaintance of hers saying the woman had said that when she tried to jump the Pope in 2008, she had 'wanted to claw him in the face".

And it also reveals an apparent breach in Vatican security, in the sense that the ticket office apparently gave out the tickets for somebody else to someone who could not present identification.

The story comes from BLICK, the leading Swiss tabloid daily, a la Germany's BILD. It is published in German. The Pope's attacker is from Frauenfeld, in the German-speaking part of Switzerland.



'My friend, the Pope-jumper'
Adapted and translated from

January 5, 2010


WEINFELDEN TG - Debora E. (24) is the best friend of Susanna, the Pope-jumper. She reveals what took place behind the 'spectacular' attack by her friend Susanna Maiolo (25) against Pope Benedict XVI on Christmas Eve, which shows that Susanna had planned the deed.

"I was totally shocked that Susanna was capable of doing this," Deborah said. She adds that her friend is mentally disturbed, 'a bit cuckoo' and has had several psychiatric confinements. "She sees things differently as we do because she thinks she is from another planet".

Nonetheless, Debora is horrified that her friend apparently had planned her mission for some time. In summer, she had apparently written the Vatican, using Debora's name, asking for tickets to the Christmas Eve Mass.


Left: Part of Vatican letter informing Debora she had three tickets for the Christmas Eve Mass, and first line of Susanna's Dec. 16 note to her friend to Debora, which reads: "By the time you get this gift and read my letter, I don't know what will happen..."; right, a videograb of the woman getting hold of the Pope.

On September 12, Debora received a letter from the Pontifical Household saying she and two companions could come to the Mass, and they could pick up their tickets from the Vatican.

She was perplexed, not knowing what Susanna had done. "But I was very happy and so I asked her and my grandmother to come with me".

Susanna apparently panicked. She had not expected anyone to come to Rome with her. But she was determined not to have her plan derailed.

On December 16, she sent Debora a gift [a Puzzleball for 'constructing' the solar system] with a rather confused letter. [Apparently not enough to alarm Debora, who may not be 'all there' herself, or much too indulgent with her friend! She certainly would have had time to investigate further.]

The previous Christmas Eve, Susanna had already tried to get to the Pope, but was stopped in her tracks, and it seems this time, she was determined she would do it.

On December 21, Susanna showed up at the Vatican to pick up the tickets for Debora, claiming to be her, and saying she had lost her ID papers - but still was given the three tickets.

When Debora came to pick up her tickets the following day, presenting her identification, the person giving out the tickets seemed to think there was nothing unusual in that someone else had already claimed the tickets. He simply gave her 3 tickets far to the rear of the Basilica, where she could not see the attack when it happened.

[The report goes on to say that BLICK asked Debora to call Susanna on the telephone during their interview. She claims Susanna seemed more sorry for the fact that she deceived her friend over the tickets than that she had attacked the Pope. "She does not understand that she did something wrong," Deborah claimed, saying she still loves her friend.]

An uncle will reportedly take back Susanna to Switzerland this weekend.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 08/01/2010 20:22]
09/01/2010 03:17
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.587
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

Thanks for the translation, Teresa.

The article does shed more light on the state of mind and capabilities of Susan Maiolo. She may be unhinged in some ways but is obviously very clever and resourceful. She definitely exposed several huge holes in Vatican security which I hope somebody quickly closes up.

The wider aisles in church and the additional security guys walking alongside Papa are fine but there needs to be more scrutiny of people getting into papal events in the first place. It seems that anybody can get admitted into any event and won't necessarily need tickets. Some of our girls have proved that as have tourists and clergy who have written later about their experiences. There must be some way to be more protective about this. Otherwise, I can imagine we will see more of Susan Maiolo and others like her at papal events in the future. [SM=g27825]



09/01/2010 15:23
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.588
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

Not again


I thought this guy was supposed to be locked up for years. What happened?


Pope gunman to consider book, film offers

Associated Press
Jan. 9, 2010

ANKARA, Turkey – The gunman who shot and wounded Pope John Paul II says he will begin considering book, film and television documentary offers after his release from a Turkish prison later this month.

Mehmet Ali Agca said in a statement to The Associated Press that he would like to travel to the Vatican and meet Pope Benedict XVI, though he has not yet set a date for the visit.


His written response to questions was relayed to the AP by his lawyer Saturday.

Agca shot John Paul in St. Peter's Square on May 13, 1981. The pope met with Agca in an Italian prison in 1983 and forgave him.

Agca served 19 years in an Italian prison for the attack and is nearing the end of a 10-year sentence for killing a Turkish journalist in 1979. He will be released Jan. 18.


**********************


Gunman Mehmet Ali Agca who shot Pope John Paul II seeks £3m in book deals

John Follain
From The Sunday Times
January 10, 2010

Outrage has greeted plans by Pope John Paul II’s would-be assassin to sign multi-million-dollar book and film deals after his release from prison this month.

But in a handwritten letter sent to The Sunday Times, the Turkish gunman Mehmet Ali Agca insisted this weekend that there was “great interest from Japan to Canada” in film and television documentary projects.

Almost three decades after he shot the Polish Pope in St Peter’s Square, Rome, in 1981, it remains a mystery whether he acted alone or was part of a Soviet-led plot to eliminate a threat to communist rule in eastern Europe.

Agca, 52 yesterday, is due to be released on January 18, according to Haci Ali Ozhan, his lawyer. He has been held in Turkey since 2000 when Italy pardoned and extradited him. He had been convicted of murdering Abdi Ipekci, a Turkish journalist, two years before he shot John Paul but escaped from jail.

Agca, who described himself in his letter as “sane and strong both physically and psychologically”, has reportedly sought $2m (£1.2m) for an exclusive television interview and $5m (£3.1m) for two books, including his autobiography. He has also written to Dan Brown, the author of the bestselling The Da Vinci Code, about a book entitled The Vatican Code, to be followed by a film.

He said in his letter: “My plan is to proclaim the end of the world and to write the PERFECT GOSPEL [sic] ... I will proclaim the Perfect Christianity that Vatican [sic] has never understood.” He did not say whether he would speak about the shooting of John Paul.

Arrested just after the shooting, Agca at first named three Bulgarians as his accomplices, saying he had been paid $1.2m. But at their trial he declared himself Jesus Christ and they were acquitted.

European publishers, several of whom have expressed interest to Agca, said his memoirs could be worth $3m in publishing rights worldwide.

“Agca’s memoirs would be of global interest, but only if he delivers what publishers and readers want: he has to tell the full, true story with many new revelations,” said Francesco Aliberti, a prominent Italian publisher.

Critics denounced the idea that Agca, a former member of the neo-fascist Grey Wolves movement, could profit from his crime.

“It’s morally wrong. Agca is just a bandit, a trained and paid killer who worked for a terrorist intelligence network,” said Paolo Guzzanti, a senator who headed a parliamentary commission that concluded four years ago that Soviet leaders had ordered the GRU military secret service to carry out the shooting.

“Some people think he’s crazy but he isn’t. He was well trained by the Soviets and he did exactly what they wanted him to do. The reason he started saying he was Jesus Christ was because a Bulgarian judge and a KGB agent got to him in Italy and ordered him to deny everything he’d said about Bulgarian involvement or he’d be killed,” Guzzanti said.

Judge Ferdinando Imposimato, one of the Rome prosecutors who has investigated the shooting, said Agca “knows everything about the intelligence services behind the shooting” but offering him money could make the mystery harder to solve.

“It’s horrifying and ridiculous that people could offer him money. It’s offensive to Pope John Paul and it could jeopardise what chances are left of finding out the truth. He could be tempted to say outrageous, untrue things just to get more money,” Imposimato said.

Agca himself has expressed a desire to come to Rome, variously saying he wants to meet Pope Benedict XVI, convert to Christianity at a baptism ceremony on St Peter’s Square and pray on the tomb of John Paul, who forgave him for the shooting at a prison meeting two years later and died in 2005.

Asked in a prison interview with The Sunday Times in 2000 whether he regretted shooting John Paul, Agca said: “I would not do it again. I feel no hatred for the Pope. I feel only torment for what happened.”



[Modificato da benefan 10/01/2010 01:29]
10/01/2010 01:14
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.590
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

Pope visits prelate hurt in basilica incident

Associated Press
Sat Jan 9, 2:19 pm ET

ROME – Pope Benedict XVI paid a call Saturday on a hospitalized cardinal who broke a hip when a mentally disturbed woman knocked the pontiff down in St. Peter's Basilica on Christmas Eve.

Benedict embraced 87-year-old French Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, who wore a gray dressing gown during the early evening visit by the pontiff at Rome's Gemelli Polyclinic.

The Vatican said the pope and Etchegaray chatted cordially in French during the 30-minute visit, which hadn't been announced in advance.

"The pope expressed his interest and spiritual closeness" to Etchegaray, whose recovery was going well following surgery shortly after the injury, the Vatican said.

Benedict was shaken but unhurt Dec. 24 when a young Italian-Swiss woman climbed over a barrier during his procession to the altar. The woman, who is being treated at a psychiatric clinic, grabbed at the pope's vestments, bringing the 82-year-old Benedict to the ground. The cardinal fell during the commotion as security guards rushed to Benedict's aid.

Etchegaray is expected to be discharged next week, the Vatican said.

After he visited the cardinal, Benedict greeted patients, a brief Vatican statement said.

Benedict's predecessor, Pope John Paul II, was treated several times during his papacy at the Catholic teaching hospital.

Vatican magistrates are investigating the Christmas Eve breach of security, which raised concern over the pope's protection while in public.


******************


Security official guarantees Pope's safety

Vatican City, Jan 8, 2010 / 01:15 pm (CNA).- Security official Salvatore Festa, who coordinates activity between the Italian police who serve at the Vatican and Holy See officials, guaranteed Pope Benedict's security, as new measures have been taken following the Christmas Eve incident in which the Pope was pulled to the ground by a disturbed woman.

In an interview with L’Osservatore Romano, Festa recalled that during the Christmas Eve Mass, measures were immediately taken to protect the Pontiff when the young Swiss woman, Susana Maiolo lunged at the Holy Father.

Festa noted that Vatican official Domenico Giani reacted immediately to the situation.

Speaking later about the special training provided to those who protect the Holy Father, Festa explained that the first thing the security guards are taught “has to do with guaranteeing the Pope's security without keeping him from fulfilling his mission to the people.”

“You cannot keep the Pope from approaching the railings to greet or bless those who seek or call out to him. For this reason, his closest agents receive a specific kind of training.”

These members of the security team periodically receive updated training sessions to learn new safety techniques, Festa explained, thus ensuring that the Pope is provided the best protection possible.

In response to a question about persons who wish to harm Pope Benedict XVI, Festa explained that a second tier of undercover security agents are specially trained to spot dangerous people...in order to intervene rapidly under any circumstances.”

Festa also noted that security agents who control the entrances into St. Peter’s Square and operate the metal detectors “receive special instruction on how to identify every object that is scanned, even if the most sophisticated techniques are used to camouflage it.” He added that so far, no weapons have been found among those in attendance.




[Modificato da benefan 10/01/2010 01:22]
10/01/2010 15:31
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 118
Registrato il: 15/02/2009
Utente Junior
Re:
[QUOTE:100294913=TERESA BENEDETTA, 08.01.2010 20:21

And it also reveals an apparent breach in Vatican security, in the sense that the ticket office apparently gave out the tickets for somebody else to someone who could not present identification.

The story comes from BLICK, the leading Swiss tabloid daily, a la Germany's BILD. It is published in German. The Pope's attacker is from Frauenfeld, in the German-speaking part of Switzerland.





Re Vatican security breach:
It's very easy to obtain tickets for papal celebration without presenting identification. For instance, you go to the German pilgrim's bureau and ask if they have any left-over tickets and they will give them to you without even asking your name. I have done this myself. Very helpful for 'normal' Papa fans, very dangerous of course for individual with less charitable intentions.

Re 'Blick' tabloid:
As Teresa pointed out, 'Blick' is the Swiss equivalent of the German 'Bild' or the British 'Sun'. They will print any sensational story - sometimes purely and simply made up - to increase sales. They made their biggest gaffe in 1977 when they famously reported the death of Pope Paul VI ONE YEAR before his actual death...
So while I'm not saying this particular story about Maiolo's friend is necessarily untrue, it has to be taken with caution all the same.



[Modificato da _benevolens_ 10/01/2010 15:33]
11/01/2010 05:21
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.597
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

BENEDICT XVI'S "NOVEL" TRADITIONS

Interview With Consultor for Pontifical Liturgies

ROME, JAN. 8, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Attentive viewers have seen a series of subtle changes in papal liturgies during the five years of Benedict XVI's pontificate.

Father Mauro Gagliardi, consultor to the Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff, says these changes are inspired by a mix of factors -- oftentimes practicality, sometimes a renewal of ancient traditions.

ZENIT spoke with Father Gagliardi about some of the "new" elements introduced by the current Bishop of Rome.

ZENIT: In a recent article by Luigi Accattoli, "Il rito del silenzio secondo papa Ratzinger" (The Rite of Silence According to Pope Ratzinger) (Liberal, Dec. 1, 2009, p. 10), there emerges the idea of a certain effort, solicited by the Holy Father himself, to bring the papal liturgy more in line with tradition.

Father Gagliardi: Accattoli's article presents a nice overview of some of the more visible changes in recent decisions regarding the pontifical liturgy, even if [he leaves out] others, which were probably not mentioned for the sake of brevity or because they are more difficult for the general public to grasp. This well known and esteemed Vaticanista often repeats that these changes are more or less inspired by the Holy Father himself, who, as everyone knows, is an expert in the liturgy.

ZENIT: Accattoli begins his panorama mentioning the papal vestments that had been eliminated in recent decades: the camauro, the red saturno, the mozzetta with ermine trim. He also notes changes in respect to the pallium.

Father Gagliardi: These are different elements proper to the attire of the Pontiff, as are the red shoes, not explicitly mentioned [by Accattoli]. If it is true that in recent decades the Supreme Pontiffs have chosen not to use these vestments, or to modify their style, it is also true that they have never been abolished and so every Pope can use them.

It should not be forgotten that, like most of the visible elements of the liturgy, non-liturgical clothing has both a practical and symbolic necessity.

I remember when the Holy Father first used the camauro -- a winter cap that protects against the cold -- a well known Italian weekly carried the smiling face of the Holy Father, who had just put the camauro on his head, and under the photo added the caption: “Good thinking!” -- referring to the fact that even the Pope has a right to protect himself from the cold.

But there are not just practical reasons. We cannot forget who the person is who wears these clothes and the role he plays: The [clothes] have a symbolic value too, which is expressed in their beauty and their special décor.

The pallium is a different case; it is a piece of liturgical attire. John Paul II used the same kind of pallium as the metropolitans. At the beginning of Benedict XVI’s pontificate, a different style of pallium was made for him, one that was of a more ancient form, which he used for some time. After careful study, it was seen that it was preferable to return to the style used by John Paul II, even though small modifications were made to render clearly notable the difference between the pallium of the metropolitans -- bestowed by the Holy Father -- and the pallium of the Supreme Pontiff. Further information about this can be found in a June 26, 2008, interview in L’Osservatore Romano with Monsignor Guido Marini, the master of Pontifical Liturgical Celebrations.

ZENIT: What can you tell us about the ferula (papal cross) chosen by Benedict XVI in place of the crucifix made by the sculptor Scorzelli, which was used by Paul VI, John Paul I and John Paul II, and even by Benedict himself until recently?

Father Gagliardi: You could say that the same principle is at work here. There is a practical reason: Benedict XVI’s present pastoral staff, which he began using at the beginning of this liturgical year, weighs more than 590 grams less than Scorzelli's crucifix -- so more than half a kilo (1.3 pounds), which is not a small difference. There is also a historical element: The staff in the form of a cross is more faithful to the staff that is typical of the Roman tradition, that is, the one used by the Supreme Pontiffs, which has always been in the form of a cross without the corpus. On the other hand, here too one could add other reflections from a symbolic and aesthetic perspective.

ZENIT: Accattoli cites other changes, which we could say have more to do with substance: A concern for the moments of silence, celebrations facing the crucifix and with the back to the people, and Communion distributed to the faithful on their tongues as they are kneeling.

Father Gagliardi: These are elements of great significance, which, obviously, I cannot analyze here in a detailed way but only touch on briefly. The “Institutio Generalis” of the Roman Missal published by Paul VI prescribes that sacred silence be observed in different moments [of the liturgy]. The papal liturgy’s attention to this aspect, then, does nothing more than put the established norms into practice.

In regard to celebrations facing the crucifix, we see that normally the Holy Father is maintaining the so-called "versus popolum" position both in St. Peter’s and elsewhere. He has celebrated facing the crucifix only a few times, in particular, in the Sistine Chapel and in the Pauline Chapel, which has been recently renovated. Since the celebration of every Mass, whatever the celebrant’s physical position, is a celebration toward the Father through Christ in the Holy Spirit and never "versus populum" or the assembly, save for the few moments of dialogue, it is not strange that the celebrant of the Eucharist can also physically position himself "toward the Lord." Especially in the Sistine Chapel, where the altar is against the wall, it is natural and faithful to the norms to celebrate on the fixed and dedicated altar, thus turned toward the crucifix, rather than adding a free-standing altar for the occasion.

Finally, in regard to the way of distributing Holy Communion to the faithful, one needs to distinguish the aspect of receiving it kneeling from that of receiving it on the tongue. In the actual ordinary form of the Roman Rite -- or the Mass of Paul VI -- the faithful have a right to receive Communion standing or kneeling. If the Holy Father has decided to have communicants kneel, I think -- obviously this is only my personal opinion -- that he holds this to be the more appropriate posture to express the sense of adoration that we must always cultivate before the gift of the Eucharist. It is an aid that the Pope gives to those who receive Communion from him, which helps them to consider attentively who He is who is received in the most holy Eucharist.

On the other hand, in “Sacramentum Caritatis,” citing St. Augustine, the Holy Father recalled that in receiving the Eucharistic Bread we must adore it, because we would sin if we received it without adoring it. Before receiving Communion, the priest himself genuflects before the Host -- why not help the faithful cultivate the sense of proper adoration through a similar gesture?

In regard to Communion in the hand, it must be remembered that this is possible in many places today -- possible but not obligatory -- but that it is, and remains, a concession, a dispensation from the ordinary norm that affirms that Communion is received on the tongue. This concession was made to individual bishops’ conferences that asked for it and it is not the Holy See that suggests it or promotes it. And, in any case, no bishop, as a member of a bishops’ conference that has asked for and obtained the indult, is obliged to accept it and apply it in his diocese: Every bishop can always decide to apply the universal norm -- which is still in force -- in his diocese. According to this norm, the faithful must receive Holy Communion on the tongue. If no bishop in the world is obliged to take advantage of the indult, how can the Pope be obliged? In fact, it is important that the Holy Father maintain the traditional rule, confirmed by Paul VI, who prohibited the faithful from receiving Communion in the hand (for further details, see Mauro Gagliardi, “La Liturgia: Fonte di Vita” [Verona: Fede & Cultura, 2009, p. 170-181]).

ZENIT: You are part of the staff of consultors for Monsignor Guido Marini. What meaning do you see in the novelties introduced in the papal liturgy under Benedict XVI?

Father Gagliardi: Naturally, I can only speak here from a personal perspective and not officially on behalf of the Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff. To me it seems that what is being attempted is a wise joining of the ancient with the new, to actuate in spirit and letter, as much as possible, the indications of the Second Vatican Council, and to do this in such a way that the pontifical celebrations are exemplary in all aspects. Those present at the papal liturgy should be able to say: “Ah, this is how you do it! This is how we should do it in our diocese too, in our parish!”

I would like, lastly, to emphasize that these “novelties,” as you call them, are not introduced simply in an authoritarian manner. It should be noted that often they are explained, for example, by way of the interviews that the master of Pontifical Liturgical Celebrations gives to L’Osservatore Romano or to other newspapers. We consultors also publish articles every so often in the Holy See's daily to explain the historical and theological meaning of the decisions that are made.

To use a fashionable word, I would say that there is a “democratic” way of proceeding. I do not mean by this that the decisions are made by a majority, but that we try to bring an understanding of the deeper reasons for these changes, which are always historical, theological and liturgical reasons and never purely aesthetic, much less ideological.

We might say that we try to make the "ratio legis" known, and I think that this fact too represents a "novelty" of a certain importance.

11/01/2010 05:25
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.598
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

POPE: WORLD NEEDS TO REDISCOVER THE JOY OF FAITH

Baptizes 14 Newborns in Sistine Chapel


VATICAN CITY, JAN. 10, 2010 (Zenit.org).- The world has need of rediscovering the joy of faith, Benedict XVI said today as he presided over the baptism of 14 infants in the Vatican's Sistine Chapel.

It is "a great day" for these children, the Pope said during a homily that was interrupted several times by crying newborns. "With Baptism," he said, "they become participants in the death and resurrection of Christ, they begin the joyous and exciting adventure of the disciple."

"Even in our time faith is a gift that needs to be rediscovered, to be cultivated to be witnessed to," he continued.

With this in mind the Pontiff, turning to those present, especially the parents and godparents, hoped that "the Lord will grant that each of us live the beauty and the joy of being Christians."

In this way, he claimed, it is possible to introduce others "to the fullness of adhesion to Christ."

"Baptism enlightens with the light of Christ, opens the eyes to his splendor and introduces one to the mystery of God through the divine ray of faith," the Holy Father added.

In this light, Benedict XVI said, the children can "walk their whole life, helped by the words and example of their parents, their godfathers and godmothers."

Keep torch lit

"[The parents and godparents] must by their words and the testimony of their life commit themselves to keeping lit the torch of the children's faith, so that it may shine in this world of ours, which often gropes in the darkness of doubt, and bring the light of the Gospel, which is life and hope," he said.

In his remarks before the midday recitation of the Angelus in St. Peter's Square, the Pope again reflected on baptism in the context of today's feast of the Baptism of the Lord.

Baptism, he explained, is an event that suggests quite well "the general sense of Christmas festivity in which the theme of 'becoming sons of God' thanks to the only-begotten Son's taking on of our humanity constitutes a dominant element."

He further pointed out that a model of society is also derived from Baptism: "that of being brothers." Fraternity, the Pope said, "cannot be established through an ideology, much less through the decree of just any power that has been set up."

"We recognize ourselves as brothers through a humble but profound awareness of being sons of the one heavenly Father," he added. "As Christians, thanks to the gift of the Holy Spirit received in Baptism, we have the gift and task of living as sons of God and brothers, to be like 'leaven' in a new humanity, solidary and rich in peace and hope."

11/01/2010 15:45
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.599
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

Pope denounces failure to forge new climate treaty

By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press Writer
Jan. 11, 2010

VATICAN CITY – Pope Benedict XVI denounced the failure of world leaders to agree to a new climate change treaty in Copenhagen last month, saying Monday that world peace depends on safeguarding God's creation.

He issued the admonition in a speech to ambassadors accredited to the Vatican, an annual appointment during which the pontiff reflects on issues the Vatican wants to highlight to the diplomatic corps.

Benedict has been dubbed the "green pope" for his increasingly vocal concern about the need to protect the environment. Under his watch, the Vatican has installed photovoltaic cells on its main auditorium to convert sunlight into electricity and has joined a reforestation project aimed at offsetting its CO2 emissions.

For the pontiff, it's a moral issue: Church teaching holds that man must respect creation because it's destined for the benefit of humanity's future.

In his speech, the pontiff criticized the "economic and political resistance" to fighting environmental degradation and creating a new climate treaty at last month's negotiations in Copenhagen.

Officials from 193 countries met at the summit, which ended Dec. 19 having failed to produce a successor treaty to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. It produced instead a non-biding accord that included few concrete steps to combat global warming.

The Copenhagen summit did set up the first significant program of ensuring aid to help poorer nations cope with the effects of a changing climate. But while the accord urged deeper cuts in emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases blamed for global warming, it did nothing to demand them.

"I trust that in the course of this year ... it will be possible to reach an agreement for effectively dealing with this question," Benedict said.

He said the issue was particularly critical for island nations and in places like Africa, where the battle for resources, increased desertification and over-exploitation of land has resulted in wars.

"To cultivate peace, one must protect creation!" Benedict told the ambassadors, many of whom wore their national dress or medal-draped formal attire for the audience in the frescoed Sala Regia of the Vatican's apostolic palace.

The pontiff said the same "self-centered and materialistic" way of thinking that sparked the worldwide financial meltdown was also endangering creation. To combat it will require a new way of thinking and a new lifestyle — and an acknowledgment that the question is a moral one, he said.

"The protection of creation is not principally a response to an aesthetic need, but much more to a moral need, inasmuch as nature expresses a plan of love and truth which is prior to us and which comes from God," he said.

To illustrate his point, the German-born pope pointed to the experiences of eastern Europe under the "materialistic and atheistic regimes" of the former Soviet bloc.

"Was it not easy to see the great harm which an economic system lacking any reference to the truth about man had done not only to the dignity and freedom of individuals and peoples, but to nature itself, by polluting soil, water and air?" he asked.

"The denial of God distorts the freedom of the human person, yet it also devastates creation."


******************


Selfishness, lack of respect for life lead to destruction, pope says

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
Jan. 11, 2010

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- War, hunger, oppression, environmental degradation and the current global financial crisis are all the result of selfishness and a lack of respect for the human person created in God's image, Pope Benedict XVI told diplomats from around the world.

"If we wish to build true peace, how can we separate or even set at odds the protection of the environment and the protection of human life, including the life of the unborn?" the pope asked ambassadors from the 178 countries that have diplomatic relations with the Vatican.

Pope Benedict met Jan. 11 with the ambassadors to offer them his best wishes for the New Year. After his speech, he spent more than half an hour greeting each of them and their spouses.

In his speech, the pope highlighted his hopes and concerns regarding the state of the environment, ongoing wars and violence, military spending and the arms trade, restrictions on religious freedom and attacks on the unborn and on the traditional family.

Much of his talk focused on the environment, echoing his message for World Peace Day Jan. 1, which had as its theme "If You Want to Cultivate Peace, Protect Creation."

The pope told the diplomats that a "self-centered and materialistic way of thinking," which ignores the fact that human beings are creatures and not gods, triggered the current global economic crisis and is also the attitude behind the devastation of the environment.

"The denial of God distorts the freedom of the human person, yet it also devastates creation," he said.

He said the truth of that statement could be seen in the countries of the former Soviet bloc where economic and religious freedoms were denied by communism and government policies left in their wake the pollution of the air, water and soil.

"It follows that the protection of creation is not principally a response to an aesthetic need, but much more to a moral need, inasmuch as nature expresses a plan of love and truth which is prior to us and which comes from God," he said.

Pope Benedict decried "economic and political resistance to combating the degradation of the environment," which he said was evident at the U.N. summit on climate change in Copenhagen, Denmark; he said he hoped that follow-up conferences this year would lead to effective international policies for protecting the environment.

But he also said that the devastation of the world's forests, the spread of its deserts and the pollution of its water cannot be reversed without moral education and changed lifestyles.

The Catholic Church and other religious bodies can play a major role in helping people accept their responsibility for caring for the earth, but only if they are given their rightful place in society, he said.

"Sadly, in certain countries, mainly in the West, one encounters in political and cultural circles, as well as in the media, scarce respect and at times hostility, if not scorn, directed toward religion and toward Christianity in particular," he said.

While the church and state have separate roles to play, the pope said, "denying the social importance of religion" creates only confrontation and division, rather than cooperation.

Pope Benedict also faulted moves in Europe and North and South America to equate marriage and homosexual unions by claiming they are fighting discrimination. In fact, he said, they ignore the natural order of creation and the differences between the sexes.

Turning to military spending, Pope Benedict expressed hope that talks scheduled for May in New York on nuclear non-proliferation would succeed because "enormous resources are being consumed" to maintain and develop nuclear arsenals.

The arms trade, in general, is a scourge, he said, and "helps to perpetuate conflicts and violence as in Darfur, in Somalia or in the Democratic Republic of Congo."

The pope also remembered Coptic Christians in Egypt who were subjected to violent attacks in early January and the violence faced by Christians in Pakistan.

He told the diplomatic corps he was worried about the continuing migration of Christians from the Holy Land, who are "assailed in various ways, even in the exercise of their religious freedom."

The pope repeated the Vatican's position that Israel has a right to exist in peace and security, but that the Palestinian people also have a right to their own homeland.

"I also would like to request the support of everyone for the protection of the identity and sacred character of Jerusalem, and of its cultural and religious heritage, which is of universal value," he said. "Only thus will this unique city, holy yet deeply troubled, be a sign and foreshadowing of that peace which God desires for the whole human family."


[Modificato da benefan 11/01/2010 15:49]
11/01/2010 21:00
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 53
Registrato il: 02/12/2009
Utente Junior
Address to the Diplomatic Corps

Monday, January 11, 2010 / posted on "Whispers in the Loggia" by Rocco Palmo

The "State of the World," 2010 Edition

Earlier this morning, the Pope received the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See -- now 178 in all, following last month's establishment of full relations with Russia -- for their annual New Year exchange of greetings.

In keeping with tradition, the event -- uniquely held in the Sala Regia of the Apostolic Palace -- was highlighted by the pontiff's annual summary of the Vatican's areas of geopolitical attention and concern, which has become known as the "State of the World."

Originally given in diplomacy's working language of French, here's the address in its official English translation:

ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE DIPLOMATIC CORPS
FOR THE TRADITIONAL EXCHANGE OF NEW YEAR GREETINGS

 

Sala Regia
Monday, 11 January 2010

(Video)






Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,

This traditional meeting at the beginning of the year, two weeks after the celebration of the birth of the Incarnate Word, is a very joyful occasion for me. As we proclaimed in the liturgy: “We recognize in Christ the revelation of your love. No eye can see his glory as our God, yet now he is seen as one like us. Christ is your Son before all ages, yet now he is born in time. He has come to lift up all things to himself, to restore unity to creation” (Preface of Christmas II). At Christmas we contemplated the mystery of God and the mystery of creation: by the message of the angels to the shepherds, we received the good news of man’s salvation and the renewal of the entire universe. That is why, in my Message for the 2010 World Day of Peace, I urged all persons of good will – those same men and women to whom the angels rightly promised peace – to protect creation. In the same spirit of joy I am happy to greet each of you today, particularly those present for the first time at this ceremony. I thank you most heartily for the good wishes conveyed to me by your Dean, Ambassador Alejandro Valladares Lanza, and I repeat how much I esteem your mission to the Holy See. Through you I send cordial greetings and good wishes for peace and happiness to the leaders and people of the countries which you worthily represent. My thoughts also go to all the other nations of the earth: the Successor of Peter keeps his door open to everyone in the hope of maintaining relations which can contribute to the progress of the human family. It is a cause for deep satisfaction that, just a few weeks ago, full diplomatic relations were established between the Holy See and the Russian Federation. The recent visit of the President of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam was likewise very significant; Vietnam is a country close to my heart, where the Church is celebrating her centuries-long presence by a Jubilee Year. In this spirit of openness, throughout 2009 I met many political leaders from all over the world; I also visited some of them and would like to continue to do so, insofar as is possible.

The Church is open to everyone because, in God, she lives for others! She thus shares deeply in the fortunes of humanity, which in this new year continues to be marked by the dramatic crisis of the global economy and consequently a serious and widespread social instability. In my Encyclical Caritas in Veritate, I invited everyone to look to the deeper causes of this situation: in the last analysis, they are to be found in a current self-centred and materialistic way of thinking which fails to acknowledge the limitations inherent in every creature. Today I would like to stress that the same way of thinking also endangers creation. Each of us could probably cite an example of the damage that this has caused to the environment the world over. I will offer an example, from any number of others, taken from the recent history of Europe. Twenty years ago, after the fall of the Berlin wall and the collapse of the materialistic and atheistic regimes which had for several decades dominated a part of this continent, was it not easy to assess the great harm which an economic system lacking any reference to the truth about man had done not only to the dignity and freedom of individuals and peoples, but to nature itself, by polluting soil, water and air? The denial of God distorts the freedom of the human person, yet it also devastates creation. It follows that the protection of creation is not principally a response to an aesthetic need, but much more to a moral need, in as much as nature expresses a plan of love and truth which is prior to us and which comes from God.

For this reason I share the growing concern caused by economic and political resistance to combatting the degradation of the environment. This problem was evident even recently, during the XV Session of the Conference of the States Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change held in Copenhagen from 7 to 18 December last. I trust that in the course of this year, first in Bonn and later in Mexico City, it will be possible to reach an agreement for effectively dealing with this question. The issue is all the more important in that the very future of some nations is at stake, particularly some island states.

It is proper, however, that this concern and commitment for the environment should be situated within the larger framework of the great challenges now facing mankind. If we wish to build true peace, how can we separate, or even set at odds, the protection of the environment and the protection of human life, including the life of the unborn? It is in man’s respect for himself that his sense of responsibility for creation is shown. As Saint Thomas Aquinas has taught, man represents all that is most noble in the universe (cf. Summa Theologiae, I, q. 29, a. 3). Furthermore, as I noted during the recent FAO World Summit on Food Security, “the world has enough food for all its inhabitants” (Address of 16 November 2009, No. 2) provided that selfishness does not lead some to hoard the goods which are intended for all.

I would like to stress again that the protection of creation calls for an appropriate management of the natural resources of different countries and, in the first place, of those which are economically disadvantaged. I think of the continent of Africa, which I had the joy of visiting last March during my journey to Cameroon and Angola, and which was the subject of the deliberations of the recent Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. The Synod Fathers pointed with concern to the erosion and desertification of large tracts of arable land as a result of overexploitation and environmental pollution (cf. Propositio 22). In Africa, as elsewhere, there is a need to make political and economic decisions which ensure “forms of agricultural and industrial production capable of respecting creation and satisfying the primary needs of all” (Message for the 2010 World Day of Peace, No. 10).

How can we forget, for that matter, that the struggle for access to natural resources is one of the causes of a number of conflicts, not least in Africa, as well as a continuing threat elsewhere? For this reason too, I forcefully repeat that to cultivate peace, one must protect creation! Furthermore, there are still large areas, for example in Afghanistan or in some countries of Latin America, where agriculture is unfortunately still linked to the production of narcotics, and is a not insignificant source of employment and income. If we want peace, we need to preserve creation by rechanneling these activities; I once more urge the international community not to become resigned to the drug trade and the grave moral and social problems which it creates.

Ladies and Gentlemen, the protection of creation is indeed an important element of peace and justice! Among the many challenges which it presents, one of the most serious is increased military spending and the cost of maintaining and developing nuclear arsenals. Enormous resources are being consumed for these purposes, when they could be spent on the development of peoples, especially those who are poorest. For this reason I firmly hope that, during the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference to be held this May in New York, concrete decisions will be made towards progressive disarmament, with a view to freeing our planet from nuclear arms. More generally, I deplore the fact that arms production and export helps to perpetuate conflicts and violence, as in Darfur, in Somalia or in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Together with the inability of the parties directly involved to step back from the spiral of violence and pain spawned by these conflicts, there is the apparent powerlessness of other countries and the international organizations to restore peace, to say nothing of the indifference, amounting practically to resignation, of public opinion worldwide. There is no need to insist on the extent to which such conflicts damage and degrade the environment. Finally, how can I fail to mention terrorism, which endangers countless innocent lives and generates widespread anxiety. On this solemn occasion, I would like to renew the appeal which I made during the Angelus prayer of 1 January last to all those belonging to armed groups, of whatever kind, to abandon the path of violence and to open their hearts to the joy of peace.

The grave acts of violence to which I have just alluded, combined with the scourges of poverty, hunger, natural disasters and the destruction of the environment, have helped to swell the ranks of those who migrate from their native land. Given the extent of this exodus, I wish to exhort the various civil authorities to carry on their work with justice, solidarity and foresight. Here I wish to speak in particular of the Christians of the Middle East. Beleaguered in various ways, even in the exercise of their religious freedom, they are leaving the land of their forebears, where the Church took root during the earliest centuries. To offer them encouragement and to make them feel the closeness of their brothers and sisters in faith, I have convened for next autumn a Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the Middle East.

Ladies and Gentlemen, to this point I have alluded only to a few aspects of the problem of the environment. Yet the causes of the situation which is now evident to everyone are of the moral order, and the question must be faced within the framework of a great programme of education aimed at promoting an effective change of thinking and at creating new lifestyles. The community of believers can and wants to take part in this, but, for it to do so, its public role must be recognized. Sadly, in certain countries, mainly in the West, one increasingly encounters in political and cultural circles, as well in the media, scarce respect and at times hostility, if not scorn, directed towards religion and towards Christianity in particular. It is clear that if relativism is considered an essential element of democracy, one risks viewing secularity solely in the sense of excluding or, more precisely, denying the social importance of religion. But such an approach creates confrontation and division, disturbs peace, harms human ecology and, by rejecting in principle approaches other than its own, finishes in a dead end. There is thus an urgent need to delineate a positive and open secularity which, grounded in the just autonomy of the temporal order and the spiritual order, can foster healthy cooperation and a spirit of shared responsibility. Here I think of Europe, which, now that the Lisbon Treaty has taken effect, has entered a new phase in its process of integration, a process which the Holy See will continue to follow with close attention. Noting with satisfaction that the Treaty provides for the European Union to maintain an “open, transparent and regular” dialogue with the Churches (Art. 17), I express my hope that in building its future, Europe will always draw upon the wellsprings of its Christian identity. As I said during my Apostolic Visit last September to the Czech Republic, Europe has an irreplaceable role to play “for the formation of the conscience of each generation and the promotion of a basic ethical consensus that serves every person who calls this continent ‘home’ ” (Meeting with Political and Civil Authorities and with the Diplomatic Corps,, 26 September 2009).

To carry our reflection further, we must remember that the problem of the environment is complex; one might compare it to a multifaceted prism. Creatures differ from one another and can be protected, or endangered, in different ways, as we know from daily experience. One such attack comes from laws or proposals which, in the name of fighting discrimination, strike at the biological basis of the difference between the sexes. I am thinking, for example, of certain countries in Europe or North and South America. Saint Columban stated that: “If you take away freedom, you take away dignity” (Ep. 4 ad Attela, in S. Columbani Opera, Dublin, 1957, p. 34). Yet freedom cannot be absolute, since man is not himself God, but the image of God, God’s creation. For man, the path to be taken cannot be determined by caprice or willfulness, but must rather correspond to the structure willed by the Creator.

The protection of creation also entails other challenges, which can only be met by international solidarity. I think of the natural disasters which this past year have sown death, suffering and destruction in the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Taiwan. Nor can I pass over Indonesia and, closer to us, the Abruzzi region, hit by devastating earthquakes. Faced with events like these, generous aid should never be lacking, since the life itself of God’s children is at stake. Yet, in addition to solidarity, the protection of creation also calls for concord and stability between states. Whenever disagreements and conflicts arise among them, in order to defend peace they must tenaciously pursue the path of constructive dialogue. This is what happened twenty-five years ago with the Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Argentina and Chile, reached thanks to the mediation of the Apostolic See. That Treaty has borne abundant fruit in cooperation and prosperity which have in some way benefited all of Latin America. In this same area of the world, I am pleased by the rapprochement upon which Columbia and Ecuador have embarked after several months of tension. Closer to us, I am gratified by the agreement concluded between Croatia and Slovenia on arbitration regarding their sea and land borders. I am also pleased by the accord between Armenia and Turkey for the re-establishment of diplomatic relations, and I express my hope that, through dialogue, relations will improve among all the countries of the southern Caucasus. In the course of my pilgrimage to the Holy Land, I urgently appealed to the Israelis and the Palestinians to dialogue and to respect each others’ rights. Once again I call for a universal recognition of the right of the State of Israel to exist and to enjoy peace and security within internationally recognized borders. Likewise, the right of the Palestinian people to a sovereign and independent homeland, to live in dignity and to enjoy freedom of movement, ought to be recognized. I would also like to request the support of everyone for the protection of the identity and sacred character of Jerusalem, and of its cultural and religious heritage, which is of universal value. Only thus will this unique city, holy yet deeply afflicted, be a sign and harbinger of that peace which God desires for the whole human family. Out of love for the dialogue and peace which protect creation, I exhort the government leaders and the citizens of Iraq to overcome their divisions and the temptation to violence and intolerance, in order to build together the future of their country. The Christian communities also wish to make their own contribution, but if this is to happen, they need to be assured respect, security and freedom. Pakistan has been also hard hit by violence in recent months and certain episodes were directly aimed at the Christian minority. I ask that everything be done to avoid the reoccurrence of such acts of aggression, and to ensure that Christians feel fully a part of the life of their country. In speaking of acts of violence against Christians, I cannot fail to mention also the deplorable attack which the Egyptian Coptic community suffered in recent days, during its celebration of Christmas. Concerning Iran, I express my hope that through dialogue and cooperation joint solutions will be found on the national as well as the international level. I encourage Lebanon, which has emerged from a lengthy political crisis, to continue along the path of concord. I hope that Honduras, after a period of uncertainty and unrest, will move towards a recovery of normal political and social life. I desire the same for Guinea and Madagascar with the effective and disinterested aid of the international community.

Ladies and Gentlemen, at the end of this rapid overview which, due to its brevity, cannot mention every situation worthy of note, I am reminded of the words of the Apostle Paul, for whom “all creation groans and is in agony” and “we ourselves groan inwardly” (Rom 8:20-23). There is so much suffering in our world, and human selfishness continues in many ways to harm creation. For this reason, the yearning for salvation which affects all creation is that much more intense and present in the hearts of all men and women, believers and non-believers alike. The Church points out that the response to this aspiration is Christ “the firstborn of all creation, for in him all things in heaven and on earth were created” (Col 1:15-16). Looking to him, I exhort every person of good will to work confidently and generously for the sake of human dignity and freedom. May the light and strength of Jesus help us to respect human ecology, in the knowledge that natural ecology will likewise benefit, since the book of nature is one and indivisible. In this way we will be able to build peace, today and for the sake of generations to come. To all I wish a Happy New Year!

The full text taken from vatican.va

© Copyright 2010 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana



[Modificato da PapaB83 11/01/2010 21:04]
12/01/2010 00:32
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 55
Registrato il: 02/12/2009
Utente Junior
New Frontal for Sistine Chapel Altar
From the New Liturgical Movement site:
Sorry didn't know where to post this .. I was looking for the Vestments thread but anyway, since it made its appearance at Papa's mass in the chapel ...

Monday, January 11, 2010

Restored Altar Frontal for the Sistine Chapel

Some of you may have noticed the altar frontal we had not seen before in yesterday's papal Mass in the Sistine chapel. Here is a better look at it (click to enlarge):




From the 11-12 January edition of the Osservatore Romano (NLM translation) we learn that it is:

[...] a frontal of 1747 - a work of the Turinese cabinet maker Pietro Piffetti (1701-1777) - made in wood covered by mother-of-pearl, inlaid with ivory and tortoiseshell joined by brass wire. It was used for the first time after the restoration which was concluded last 22 December. It was commissioned by Carlo Vittorio Amedeo delle Lanze as a token of gratitude to Pope Benedict XIV for the cardinalatial purple which he received in 1747. Traditionally it was used in the Palatine Chapel of the Quirinal Palace [NLM note: the papal residence until the conquest of Rome by the Italians in 1870] until it was brought to the Vatican by Pius IX.
12/01/2010 23:35
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 2.193
Registrato il: 27/11/2005
Utente Veteran
PapaB - We did have a thread on vestments and the liturgy; I think it's gone up to page 2 now. I'll try to get it back into circulation, or I'll ask benefan if she can do it.

I really loved the Ad Orientem Mass on Sunday - just shows that even the Novus Ordo can fit in with this way of saying Mass. For me it's the right way - priest and people facing the same way, all going towards Christ.

13/01/2010 14:49
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 121
Registrato il: 15/02/2009
Utente Junior
13/01/2010 15:31
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.602
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

What!?!!??!!!

OMG, I can't believe it!!!!!!!!!!!

The article said Papa had a private meeting with the woman and her parents. I guess this was somewhere indoors after the General Audience. Even though I admire Papa's compassion and his concern for the mentally ill, this gesture could certainly send the wrong message.

I am guessing that thousands of women around the world are buying track shoes and signing up for fitness classes as we speak so they can be the next Susan Maiolo. My gosh. I was certain that sending George G. to visit her was really the most that was going to happen.

[Modificato da benefan 13/01/2010 15:33]
13/01/2010 16:00
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 191
Registrato il: 21/10/2008
Utente Junior
Good grief !!!!!

If you want to approach papa, you have to be

1) a cute little baby [SM=g27821]

2) a mentally disturbed woman [SM=g27826] [SM=g27826] [SM=g27826] [SM=g27826]

What : if you are just a ben16fan from the first hour [SM=x40791] [SM=x40791] ????????

13/01/2010 17:19
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 4.603
Registrato il: 23/11/2005
Utente Master

The official announcement from the Vatican:


HOLY FATHER RECEIVES SUSANNA MAIOLO

VATICAN CITY, 13 JAN 2010 (VIS) - Holy See Press Office Director Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J. released the following declaration late this morning:

"At the conclusion of this morning's general audience, the Holy Father had a brief private meeting with Susanna Maiolo in a room adjoining the Paul VI Hall.

"Ms Maiolo told the Holy Father of her regret for the incident that happened at the beginning of the celebration of Midnight Mass last month. For his part, the Pope expressed his forgiveness, as well as his cordial concern and his best wishes for her health.

"Ms Maiolo was accompanied by two members of her family.

"As for the investigations launched by the magistrates of Vatican City State, they will follow their course to their conclusion".

13/01/2010 22:25
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 400
Registrato il: 29/11/2005
Utente Senior

Is it really true? I am shocked.
I really appreciate Papa’s way of forgiveness but this it too much in my opinion. [SM=x40796]
It’s a kind of unfair, as so often it approves, the goofier a person is acting, the more attention the others and especially the media are paying attention to her or him.

I am sorry, got to go to the gym to train my jumping power.




-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wer glaubt, ist nie allein, im Leben nicht und auch im Sterben nicht.
(PREDIGT DES HEILIGEN VATERS BENEDIKT XVI. ZUR AMTSEINFÜHRUNG 24. April 2005)
14/01/2010 00:03
 
Email
 
Scheda Utente
 
Modifica
 
Cancella
 
Quota
OFFLINE
Post: 198
Registrato il: 28/05/2007
Utente Junior
Well, we could form some type of relay-team... whoever is closest gets to tackle him and the others will be able to jump him when he's on the ground!!!

I volunteer for the tackling part!!!! Swiss guards or whatever other security... no problem!!!
Nuova Discussione
Rispondi
Cerca nel forum
Tag cloud   [vedi tutti]

Feed | Forum | Bacheca | Album | Utenti | Cerca | Login | Registrati | Amministra
Crea forum gratis, gestisci la tua comunità! Iscriviti a FreeForumZone
FreeForumZone [v.6.1] - Leggendo la pagina si accettano regolamento e privacy
Tutti gli orari sono GMT+01:00. Adesso sono le 15:38. Versione: Stampabile | Mobile
Copyright © 2000-2024 FFZ srl - www.freeforumzone.com