SUMMARY:
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POPE: HUMAN INTELLIGENCE CAN FIND KEY TO UNDERSTANDING THE WORLD IN
SACRED SCRIPTURE
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BENEDICT XVI'S PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR FEBRUARY
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AUDIENCES
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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
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POPE:
HUMAN INTELLIGENCE CAN FIND KEY TO UNDERSTANDING THE WORLD IN SACRED
SCRIPTURE
Vatican
City, 6 February 2013 (VIS) – Continuing his catechesis on the
symbol of Christian faith, the Holy Father's General Audience today
focused on the phrase “Creator of heaven and earth”, explained in
light of the first chapter of Genesis.
“God,”
the Pope said, “is the source of all things and the beauty of
creation reveals the omnipotence of the loving Father. As the origin
of life … He cares for what has He has created with unceasing love
and faithfulness. Creation, therefore, becomes the place in which to
know God's omnipotence and goodness and becomes a call to faith for
believers so that we might proclaim God as Creator. … In the light
of faith, human intelligence can find the key to understanding the
world In Sacred Scripture. Particularly … in the first chapter of
Genesis, with the solemn presentation of divine creative action …
The phrase 'and God saw it was good' is repeated six times. …
Everything God creates is good, and beautiful, full of wisdom and
love. God's creative action brings order and infuses harmony and
beauty into it. In the story of Genesis, it later says that the Lord
created with His word and ten times in the text the phrase 'God said'
is repeated... Life springs forth, the world exists, so that
everything might obey the Word of God.”
“But
does it still make sense to talk about creation,” the Pope
wondered, “in this age of science and technology? The Bible isn't
intended to be a natural science manual. Its intention is to reveal
the authentic and profound truth of things. The fundamental truth
revealed in the stories of Genesis is that the world isn't a
collection of opposing forces, but has its origin and stability in
the Logos, in God's eternal reason, which continues to sustain the
universe. There is a plan for the world that springs from this
reason, from the Creator Spirit.”
“Men
and women, human beings, the only ones capable of knowing and loving
the Creator,” are the apex of all creation. “The creation stories
in Genesis … help us to know God's plan for humanity. First, they
say that God formed man out of the clay of the ground. … This means
that we are not God; we have not made ourselves; we are clay. But it
also means that we come from the good earth by an act of the Creator.
… Beyond any cultural and historical distinctions, beyond any
social difference, we are one humanity, formed from the one earth of
God who … blew the breath of life into the body He formed from the
earth. … The human being is made in the image and likeness of God.
… We carry within us His life-giving breath and all human life is
under God's special protection. This is the deepest reason for the
inviolability of human dignity against any temptation to judge the
person according to criteria of utility or power.”
In
the first chapters of Genesis, “there are two significant images:
the garden with the tree of the knowledge of good and evil and the
serpent. The garden tells us that the reality that God has placed the
human being within is not a savage forest, but a place that protects,
nourishes, and sustains. Humanity must recognize the world, not as
property to plunder and exploit, but as a gift from the Creator …
to cultivate and care for respectfully, following its rhythms and
logic, in accordance with God's plan. The serpent is a figure derived
from oriental fertility cults that fascinated Israel and that were a
constant temptation to forsake the mysterious covenant with God.”
That is why, “the serpent raised the suspicion that the covenant
with God was a chain that … took away freedom and the most
beautiful and precious things in life. The temptation becomes the
building of a world of one's own without accepting the limits of
being a creature, the limits of good and evil, of morality.
Dependence on the love of God the Creator is seen as a burden to be
overthrown. … But when our relationship with God is distorted, when
we put ourselves in His place, all our other relationships are
altered. Then the other becomes a rival, a threat. Adam, after have
succumbed to temptation, immediately accuses Eve. … The world is no
longer the garden in which to live in harmony, but a place to
exploit, one in which … envy and hatred of the other enter into our
hearts.”
The
Pope emphasized one last element of the creation stories. “Sin
begets sin and all the sins of history are related. This aspect leads
us to speak of what is called 'original sin'. What is the meaning of
this reality, which is so difficult to understand? … First, we must
keep in mind that no person is closed in upon themselves. … We
receive life from others, not only at birth, but every day. The human
being is relational: I am only myself in you and through you, in the
loving relationship with the You of God and the you of the other. Sin
alters or destroys our relationship with God … taking the place of
God … Once that fundamental relationship is altered, our other
relationships are also compromised or destroyed. Sin ruins
everything. Now, if the relational structure of humanity is altered
from the beginning, all humans enter the world characterized by the
alteration of that relationship; we enter into the world changed by
sin, which marks us personally. The initial sin disrupts and damages
human nature. … And humanity cannot get out of this situation
alone, cannot redeem itself. Only the creator can restore the correct
relationships. … This takes place in Jesus Christ follows the exact
opposite path of Adam. … While Adam does not recognize his being as
a creature and wants to supplant the place of God, Jesus, the Son of
God is in perfect filial relation to the Father. He lowers himself,
becomes a servant, walks the path of love, humbling himself even to
death on the cross in order to restore the relationship with God.
Christ's Cross becomes the new Tree of Life.”
“Living
by faith,” Benedict XVI concluded, “means acknowledging God's
greatness and accepting our smallness, our creatureliness, letting
God fill us with His love. Evil, with its burden of pain and
suffering, is a mystery that is illuminated by the light of faith,
giving us the certainty of being able to be freed from it.”
BENEDICT
XVI'S PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR FEBRUARY
Vatican
City, 6 February 2013 (VIS) - Pope Benedict's general prayer
intention for February is: "That migrant families, especially
the mothers, may be supported and accompanied in their difficulties".
His
mission intention is: "That the peoples at war and in conflict
may lead the way in building a peaceful future"..
AUDIENCES
Vatican
City, 6 February 2013 (VIS) – After today’s General Audience, the
Holy Father met with participants in the general assembly of the
Priestly Fraternity of the Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 6 February 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father:
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elevated the territorial prelature of Cameta, Brazil, to the rank of
diocese. He appointed Bishop Jesus Maria Cizaurre Berdonces, O.A.R.,
prelate of Cameta, as first bishop of the new diocese.
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appointed Fr. Valdir Mamede as auxiliary bishop of the archdiocese of
Brasilia (area 5,814, population 2,246,000, Catholics 1,541,000,
priests 320, permanent deacons 69, religious 674), Brazil. The
bishop-elect was born in Silvianopolis, Brazil and was ordained to
the priesthood in 1988. He has served as pastor in several Brazilian
parishes, most recently Imaculado Coracao de Maria, and was also
judicial vicar of the archdiocese.
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