Friday, November 18, 2005

News From Vatican Information Services 11/18/2005




SUMMARY:

- Spiritual Bond with John Paul II Has Not Been Broken
- Church Only Seeks Opportunity to Carry out her Mission
- In Brief
- Audiences

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SPIRITUAL BOND WITH JOHN PAUL II HAS NOT BEEN BROKEN

VATICAN CITY, NOV 18, 2005 (VIS) - Yesterday evening in the Vatican's Paul VI Hall, in the presence of the Holy Father, a screening was held of the film "Pope John Paul II." The film was produced by the Lux Vide company, and by RAI (Italian State Television) in collaboration with other European television networks and the American broadcaster, CBS.

After the screening, Benedict XVI expressed his thanks to Ettore Bernabei, president of Lux Vide, and to others who collaborated in making the film, which opens with the attempt on John Paul II's life in St. Peter's Square on May 13, 1981.

"Watching this film," said the Holy Father, "has renewed in me and, I think, in everyone who had the gift of knowing (John Paul II), a sense of profound gratitude to God for having given the Church and the world a Pope of such an exalted human and spiritual stature.

Benedict XVI went on: "Over and above any specific evaluation, I feel the film constitutes further proof ... of the love people hold for Pope John Paul, and of their great desire to remember him, to see him again, to feel him close. And beyond its superficial and emotive aspects, this phenomenon clearly has an intimate spiritual dimension, which we here in the Vatican see every day watching the multitudes of pilgrims who come to pray, or just to pay rapid homage, at his tomb in the Vatican Grottoes.

"That affective and spiritual bond with John Paul II, which became even closer during the period of his final illness and death, was not interrupted. It has never been broken, because it is a bond between souls, between the great soul of the Pope and the souls of innumerable believers; between his fatherly heart and the hearts of countless men and women of good will who recognized in him a friend, and a defender of man, of truth, of justice, of freedom and of peace. All over the world, many people admired in him above all the coherent and generous witness to God."
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CHURCH ONLY SEEKS OPPORTUNITY TO CARRY OUT HER MISSION

VATICAN CITY, NOV 18, 2005 (VIS) - This morning, the Pope received prelates from the Czech Bishops' Conference who have just completed their five-yearly "ad limina" visit.

In his address to them, the Holy Father affirmed that in his individual meetings with the prelates he had learned that the Church in the Czech Republic is "alive and well, and feels the call to be the leavening in a society that is secularized yet at the same time interested ... in the liberating but challenging message of the Gospel."

Benedict XVI expressed the view that "the material and spiritual devastation of the earlier regime has left your fellow citizens, now that they have reacquired complete freedom, with a yearning to make up for lost time, pushing ahead without, perhaps, giving sufficient attention to the importance of spiritual values which give fortitude and consistency to civil and material progress."

Your communities, he went on, "already provide a solid testimony that attracts no small number of people, also from the world of culture. This is a sign of hope for the formation of a mature laity, one that knows how to shoulder its ecclesial responsibilities.

After giving thanks to God because priests and religious are "active and hard-working, disciplined and united," the Pope added that, although this "is a reason for consolation, it should not lead us to forget other aspects that give rise to understandable concern. In the first place, the lack of priests," which "rightly induces you to dedicate special attention to vocational pastoral care . Also from this point of view, commitment to the formation of solid Christian families is particularly important for the life of the Church."

The Holy Father laid emphasis on the importance of the laity's participation "in parish activities, and their introduction to a rich and healthy liturgical life." He continued: "The Christian community is a grouping of people with their own rules, a living body that, in Jesus, exists in the world to bear witness to the strength of the Gospel. It is, then, a group of brothers and sisters who have no goals of power or of selfish interest, but who joyfully live the charity of God, which is Love.

"In such a context," he added, "the State should have no difficulty in recognizing in the Church a counterpart that in no way prejudices its own function at the service of citizens. Indeed, the Church undertakes her activities in the religious sphere, enabling believers to express their faith, yet without invading the area of competence of the civil authorities. ... As is known, the Church does not seek privileges, but only the opportunity to carry out her mission. When this right is recognized, it is really the whole of society that benefits."

Benedict XVI concluded by exhorting the Czech prelates to "continue ecumenical dialogue. I know such dialogue is intense, as is the dialogue with all citizens in the cultural field on the fundamental values upon which all civil coexistence is based."
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IN BRIEF

ON MONDAY NOVEMBER 21, BENEDICT XVI will visit the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, which is currently celebrating its plenary session on the theme: "The conceptualization of the human person in the social sciences." During the plenary session, the theme will be considered from various standpoints: from the point of view of the Church's Magisterium by Cardinal Angelo Scola, patriarch of Venice, Italy; in its philosophical aspects by Cardinal Georges Cottier O.P., and by Rocco Buttiglione and Enrico Berti, Italian university professors; and from a sociological and economic viewpoint by Serge-Christophe Kolm of the "Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales" of Paris, France. Also during the session, Mary Ann Glendon, president of the pontifical academy, and the scholar Hans Zacher will present the book: "Democracy in Debate: the Contribution of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences."

ARCHBISHOP JOHN P. FOLEY, PRESIDENT OF THE PONTIFICAL COUNCIL for Social Communications, yesterday participated in the United Nations World Summit on the Information Society, which is being held in Tunis, Tunisia. In his address, the archbishop recalled how new technologies give us "the opportunity to connect and assist those living in the poorest and most isolated regions of the world and to offer a voice to those who in the past have often been unheard and forgotten." He continued: "The challenge of narrowing or even closing the so-called 'digital divide,' the current disparity in the access to digital communications between developed and developing countries, requires the joint effort of the entire international community."

"PILGRIMS AND SHRINES, GIFTS OF THE GOD-LOVE IN ASIA TODAY" is the theme of the second Asiatic congress on the pastoral care of pilgrimages and shrines, which is being promoted by the Pontifical Care for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant Peoples and is due to be held in Seoul, Korea, on November 21 to 23. The meeting will be attended by 90 pilgrimage directors and rectors of shrines, who will have the opportunity to share their experiences in order to identify shared pastoral criteria. The work of the congress will be opened by Cardinal Stephen Fumio Hamao, president of the pontifical council, who will speak on the subject of shrines as "privileged places where God welcomes His people ... and where ecumenical and inter-religious dialogue is favored," especially in a continent such as Asia where shrines are frequented by pilgrims from various Churches and ecclesial communities, as well as by believers from other religious traditions.
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AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, NOV 18, 2005 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in separate audiences:

- Cardinal Francis Arinze, prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments

- Four prelates from the Czech Bishops' Conference on their "ad limina" visit:

- Bishop Pavel Posad of Litomerice, accompanied by Bishop emeritus Josef Koukl.

- Bishop Frantisek Radkovsky of Plzen.

- Bishop Ladislav Hucko, apostolic exarch for Catholics of the Byzantine rite resident in the Czech Republic.

This evening he is scheduled to receive in audience Archbishop William Joseph Levada, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, accompanied by Archbishop Angelo Amato S.D.B., secretary of the same congregation.
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V.I.S. -Vatican Information Service.
Copyright © Vatican Information Service 00120 Vatican City

Thursday, November 17, 2005

News From Vatican Information Services 11/17/2005



SUMMARY:

- To the CEI: Increase Pastoral Care of Vocations
- Pope Invites Archbishop Christodoulos of Athens to Rome
- Tenth Public Session of Pontifical Academies
- Israeli President Visits Benedict XVI
- Audiences
- Other Pontifical Acts

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TO THE CEI: INCREASE PASTORAL CARE OF VOCATIONS

VATICAN CITY, NOV 17, 2005 (VIS) - Benedict XVI sent a Message to the Italian Episcopal Conference (CEI), which is meeting in Assisi, Italy, from November 14 to 18 to celebrate its 55th general assembly. During the meeting attention will be given, among other themes, to the formation of future priests and to the presence of the Church in the world of health care.

"The Church today," writes the Pope, "needs priests who are fully aware of the gift of grace they receive with priestly ordination and with the mission entrusted to them in times of swift and profound changes."

After recalling all the priests working in Italy, "who contribute to making our parishes and communities lively and rich in grace," Benedict XVI highlights the concern he shares with the bishops "for the drop in numbers of clergy and for the progressive increase in the average age of priests. There is, therefore, an urgent need to boost vocational pastoral care and to define the formative option ever more clearly, so as to guarantee a human, intellectual and spiritual preparation capable of meeting the new challenges that priestly ministry is called to face. ... It is equally important that such formative activity should be carried out in a community context, in order to reflect that communion of life which Jesus had with His disciples, and to ensure that the various elements of the educational program are unified around the needs of pastoral charity."

Referring to the second principal theme of the CEI meeting, pastoral health care ministry, the Holy Father observes in his Message that "illness certainly poses serious and complex problems of social organization, ... yet first and foremost it constitutes a fundamental dimension of the human experience, one that cries out to the mission of the Church and to the conscience of believers. Indeed, it was not by chance that the Lord accompanied His announcement of salvation with much healing of suffering people; and the Christian community in all times has made the care of the sick an emblem of Christian charity.

"The witness given us by my beloved predecessor John Paul II remains engraved in our hearts. He made the cathedra of suffering the pinnacle of his Magisterium. Illuminated and encouraged by such a great testimony, the Church is called to express solidarity and care towards those facing the trial of sickness."

In closing his Message, Benedict XVI stresses the need for Catholic institutions that operate in the field of health care to be exemplary, "in uniting scientific innovation and competence with primary care for the person and for his or her dignity. ... Faced with the call ... to eliminate suffering, even through recourse to euthanasia, the inviolable dignity of human life must again be reaffirmed."

The Pope concludes by uniting himself to the CEI in recalling the 40th anniversary of the end of Vatican Council II, "in anticipation of the celebration, which I myself will preside on December 8, to commemorate the extraordinary gift that the Church and humanity received through the Council."
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POPE INVITES ARCHBISHOP CHRISTODOULOS OF ATHENS TO ROME

VATICAN CITY, NOV 17, 2005 (VIS) - Yesterday in Athens, Greece, Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, archivist and librarian of Holy Roman Church, officially presented a copy of the manuscript of the "Menologue of Basil II," which is held in the Vatican Apostolic Library. The Menologue is a liturgical or hagiographic text of the Church of Greek rite, dating from 985.

In a Message sent to the cardinal for the occasion, the Holy Father affirms that he "learned with interest of the collaboration between the Vatican Apostolic Library and the Greek Orthodox Church for the publication" of this work of art.

Benedict XVI asks Cardinal Tauran to express to His Beatitude Christodoulos, archbishop of Athens and of all Greece, "my fraternal and cordial greetings, and my great satisfaction for this important event, fruit of the new relations established following the unforgettable visit to Athens by my venerable predecessor, His Holiness John Paul II, on the occasion of his Jubilee pilgrimage in the footsteps of St. Paul the Apostle. With joy I note the growth of ever more active cooperation between the Catholic Church and the Greek Orthodox Church."

"On this occasion," writes the Pope in his Message to the cardinal, "I charge you to inform His Beatitude Christodoulos that it would be a joy for me to welcome him in Rome, so that together we may show that another stage has been covered on the journey of reconciliation and cooperation. Pass on my heartfelt desire to develop ever more intense relations of trust and fraternity, in order to carry out many works of evangelization together. Among other things, we could give European nations greater help in reaffirming their Christian roots, to find that nourishing and fruitful sap for their own future and for the good of people and of all society. It will be a way to announce together the Good News of Christ to the modern world, which needs it so badly."

"We will also give an ever stronger response to the ardent desire expressed by the Lord: 'May all be one," until the day comes ... when we can celebrate fully restored communion."
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TENTH PUBLIC SESSION OF PONTIFICAL ACADEMIES

VATICAN CITY, NOV 17, 2005 (VIS) - On Tuesday, November 15, the annual public session of the pontifical academies was held in the Vatican's New Synod Hall. In this session, the tenth since John Paul II established the coordinating council for the pontifical academies in 1995, the central theme - "Christ, Son of God, perfect man, 'the measure of true humanism'," - was prepared by the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas and by the Pontifical Academy of Theology.

During the meeting, the prize and medals of the pontifical academies were also distributed. Benedict XVI awarded the 2005 prize to the Italian Giovanni Catapano for his work, "The concept of philosophy in the early writings of St. Augustine. An analysis of meta-philosophical passages from 'Contra Academicos,' to 'De vera religione'." The Pope also awarded two pontifical medals, one to the Spaniard Fr. Santiago Sanz Sanchez for his dissertation, "The relationship between creation and covenant in contemporary theology," and another to the Italian Massimiliano Marianelli for his book, "The metaphor rediscovered. Myth and symbol in the philosophy of Simone Weil."

The Pope also sent a message to participants in the event, expressing his appreciation for the theme of the meeting, because of its "central and essential importance both in theological reflections and in each Christian's experience of faith. Modern culture, so deeply marked by a subjectivism which leads not infrequently to extreme individualism or to relativism, drives people to consider man as the only measure by which to judge themselves, losing sight of other objectives not centered on the self, which has become the only criterion for evaluating reality and their own choices.

"In this way, the Pope went on, "man tends to fall back ever more onto himself, to close himself in an airless existential microcosm, where there is no longer any space for great ideals open to transcendence, to God. On the other hand, man who overcomes himself and does not allow himself to be closed in the narrow confines of his own egoism is capable of an authentic contemplation of others and of creation."

"Certain cultural currents and tendencies seek to leave man in his minority, in prolonged infancy or adolescence. The Word of God, on the other hand, spurs us decisively to maturity and invites us to commit ourselves with all our strength to a high measure of humanity."

"It is Jesus Christ - Son of God, given by the Father to humanity to restore its image which was disfigured by sin, the perfect man - against Whom true humanism is measured. All men must assess themselves against Him. It is to Him that, with the help of grace, man must tend with all his heart and all his mind, in order to fully realize his existence."
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ISRAELI PRESIDENT VISITS BENEDICT XVI

VATICAN CITY, NOV 17, 2005 (VIS) - Fr. Ciro Benedettini, C.P., vice director of the Holy See Press Office, made the following declaration to journalists late this morning:

"This morning, November 17, 2005, Moshe Katsav, president of the State of Israel, accompanied by his wife and a number of collaborators, visited His Holiness Benedict XVI. He then went on to visit Cardinal Secretary of State Angelo Sodano.

"During the meeting, attention was given to the relations that have developed between Israel and the Holy See, since the start of diplomatic ties between the two parties in 1994.

"Particular consideration was reserved for the implementation of the agreements thus-far signed between Israel and the Holy See: the Fundamental Agreement of 1993, and the Legal Personality Agreement of 1997.

"On the subject of the current situation in the Holy Land, the Holy See's position in favor of the existence of and collaboration between the two States, Israel and Palestine, was again expounded to the illustrious guest.

"A large part of the discussions were also given over to the possibility of more intense collaboration in the humanitarian field, especially in Africa, and in cultural matters."
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AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, NOV 17, 2005 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in separate audiences:

- Seven prelates from the Czech Bishops' Conference on their "ad limina" visit:

- Bishop Vojtech Cikrle of Brno, accompanied by Auxiliary Bishop Petr Esterka.

- Bishop Frantisek V. Lobkowicz O. Praem., of Ostrava-Opava.

- Bishop Jiri Padour O.F.M. Cap., of Ceske Budejovice.

- Bishop Dominik Duka O.P., of Hradec Kralove, apostolic administrator "sede plena" of Litomerice, accompanied by Auxiliary Bishop Josef Kajnek and by Archbishop-Bishop emeritus Karel Otcenasek.

- Cardinal Geraldo Majella Agnelo, archbishop of Sao Salvador da Bahia, Brazil, and president of the National Conference of Bishops of Brazil, accompanied by Bishops Antonio Celso Quiroz of Catanduva, and Odilo Pedro Scherer, auxiliary of Sao Paulo, respectively vice president and secretary of the same conference.
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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, NOV 17, 2005 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Bishop Fabriciano Sigampa of La Rioja, Argentina, as metropolitan archbishop of Resistencia (area 28,250, population 540,000, Catholics 450,000, priests 63, permanent deacons 10, religious 154), Argentina. The archbishop-elect was born in Vichigasta, Argentina in 1936, ordained to the priesthood in 1970 and consecrated a bishop in 1985.
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