2015-02-16T17:45:00+00:00

Vatican City, Feb 16, 2015 / 10:45 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis mourned the 21 Egyptian Christians beheaded by the Islamic State, calling them martyrs that “belong to all Christians.” “The blood of our Christian brothers and sisters is a testimony which cries out to be heard,” the Pope said. “Their only words were: 'Jesus, help me!'” Pope Francis made these off-the-cuff remarks in his native Spanish on Monday, one day after the release of a video from the self-proclaimed Islamic State purporting to show the grisly beheadings of 21 Coptic Christians from Egypt. “It makes no difference whether they be Catholics, Orthodox, Copts or Protestants”, the pontiff continued. “They are Christians! Their blood is one and the same. Their blood confesses Christ.” They were killed “only because they confessed Christ,” the Pope said. “I ask that we encourage each another to go forward with this ecumenism which is giving us strength, the ecumenism of blood. The martyrs belong to all Christians.” Pope Francis telephoned Patriarch of the Coptic Orthodox Church, Pope Tawadros II, on Monday afternoon to show his deep participation in the sufferings of the Coptic Church following the executions. He assured him of his prayers, and said that tomorrow, the day celebrating the funerals of the victims, he will unite himself spiritually to the prayers and sufferings of the Coptic Church during the morning Eucharistic celebration. On Monday, Egypt's military launched airstrikes against Libya in retaliation for the deaths of the Egyptian Christians, according to the New York Times. The beheadings occurred weeks after some 20 Coptic Christians had gone missing near the coastal city of Surt, also known as Sirte, the report continues. Many Egyptians, including Copts, travel to Libya seeking employment opportunities. This is not the first time Egyptian Christians have been targeted in Libya. Last month, an Egyptian Christian teen and her parents were found dead in Surt. Libyan authorities discovered the bodies of seven Egyptian Christians last February near militant-held parts of Benghazi. John Chalmers, moderator for the Church of Scotland, was present for Pope Francis’ comments Sunday. In an interview with CNA shortly after his audience with the Pope, Chalmers said Pope Francis is a man of humility and prayer who “is feeling for those Coptic Christians who have been martyred.” “In reflecting on that, it is clear that whatever denomination that Christians come from they are one," he said. Throughout his pontificate, Pope Francis has frequently condemned violence against Christians in the Middle East. During his Urbi et Orbi address on Christmas Day, 2014, he called for peace in Libya, as well as in Nigeria, South Sudan, the Central African Republic, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Read more

2015-02-16T00:05:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Feb 15, 2015 / 05:05 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Theological giants Benedict XVI and one of his heroes – the controversial Cardinal Jean Danielou – have been hailed for illuminating through their respective works the ever-relevant answer to a modern world in crisis: Jesus Christ. “If you want to be modern, you have to look at Jesus,” Rome-based theology professor Father Giulio Maspero told CNA Feb. 13. And through the writings of the late French cardinal in particular, he noted, the Christian claim in today's world is infinitely superior “than what you can find by thinking that everything is relative.”   Fr. Maspero, a professor in Dogmatic Theology at the Pontifical University of Santa Croce in Rome, helped to organize a Feb. 12-13 conference titled: “Study days: Danielou-Ratzinger before the Mystery of History.” Held at the University of Santa Croce, the conference explored the great continuity between Cardinal Danielou and Benedict XVI, who are both known for placing a historical frame around their theological writings. Originally from Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, Cardinal Danielou was a Jesuit, and is considered one of the greatest theologians of the 20th century. He is known for his clarity in explaining profound concepts in a comprehensible way for the unlearned reader. Danielou was highly criticized following the Second Vatican Council, a false interpretation of which he faulted for the crisis in religious life and the increase in secularization which ensued. In a controversial interview with Vatican Radio in 1972, the cardinal stressed that “Vatican II declared that human values must be taken seriously. It never said that we should enter into a secularized world in the sense that the religious dimension would no longer be present in society.” “It is in the name of a false secularization that men and women are renouncing their habits, abandoning their works in order to take their places in secular institutions, substituting social and political activities for the worship of God,” he said. Cardinal Danielou also faulted “a false conception of freedom” that devalued religious constitutions and “an erroneous conception of the changing of man and the Church” for many of the crisis that unfolded after the Vatican council. However, despite the criticism directed at the French cardinal, then-Bishop Josef Ratzinger was an avid supporter of Danielou, and placed great value on his stance and writings. The two maintain numerous similarities in their theological writings, beginning with their historical gaze at theology, their emphasis on scripture and turning to the Church Fathers. Danielou and now-retired pope Benedict XVI, or “Father Benedict” as he wishes to be called, also place a great emphasis on the liturgy and, perhaps most importantly, the idea of mission. “In one word I can say that for them the meaning of our world is Christ,” Fr. Maspero said. For them, “if you read the Gospel, if you pray, if you go to church and receive the sacraments, your sight changes and you are able to see that below the surface there is the presence of God, of Jesus Christ not only in the time we are living but also within the matter we are living with,” the priest said. Because of the emphasis that both place on the relationship between being and history, they are “very modern” in the sense that they address one of the key concerns in contemporary society. In the midst of a world in crisis where man is searching and can’t seem to find what he is looking for, Danielou and Benedict XVI step into the middle of “this puzzle” with the answers provided by scripture, which are enlightened by the Church Fathers. “What they wrote is wonderful and I think it can show a way out of this crisis situation that we are living in now,” Fr. Maspero said, noting how both dug into the past with the goal of finding meaning for their present time. One contemporary issue the theologians can shed light on is that of homosexuality, the priest said, pointing specifically to Cardinal Daneilou – whose brother, Alain, was a prominent Buddhist and gay author. “This is the typical point where we can see the crisis of our time because we are not able to manage differences. We have tried to find a solution saying ‘ok, we have no differences,’ but you always have differences,” Fr. Maspero explained. “If you have homosexuality, you have to manage the difference between homosexual and heterosexual. You cannot erase all the differences.” Both of the theologians found the solution to the problem of differences by looking to the way Jesus dealt with them in the Gospels, the priest noted, saying that before doing anything else Christ accepted the people who came to him. Cardinal Danielou embodied this in the way that he encountered his brother. After finding out that Alain was same-sex attracted, his shocked family threw him out, and they went through a lot of suffering, the priest observed. However, Cardinal Danielou had the opposite reaction and dedicated his life to praying for his brother, and accepted his different ideas while remaining open to him. Alain, Fr. Maspero said, “recognized this love of his brother.” “We are living in the world where everybody has the perception that they must change in order to be ‘right,’ (but) Jesus’ answer is that you are right just as you are, because you are mine, because I created you,” the priest explained. Jesus Christ, he said, “told us to love everybody, so I think it’s a big problem now when we are talking about Catholicism that the topics of homosexuality (and) abortion are just moral topics.” Although we are all sinners, we are all “right” by nature because we have been created in the image of God, he noted, and stressed that because of this a homosexual person can never be considered a problem. In the priest's view, the problem lies with today's gay rights movement at large, as he believes it reduces the individual to a definition. “Life is more complex.” “We have to learn from each other and at the same time to keep our ideas,” Fr. Maspero said, adding that we have been given the freedom to maintain different beliefs, which must be accepted with respect for the other person. Each person has the freedom to believe there is a wrong way of doing things and to promote a different method, he said, stressing that the Church, in her teachings, “is not imposing a behavior on anybody.” People, the priest said, should believe what they want, but emphasized that “there is a truth,” and history will tell who was right and who was wrong. One of the reasons why Cardinal Jean Denielou is so little known outside the French Catholic circles is because he died suddenly, of a heart attack, while visiting the house of a prostitute. The fact was used by the French secular press to imply the “hypocrisy” of the Jesuit’s moral life. Alain, as famous an author in the Agnostic circles as his brother was in the Catholic one, wrote after the death of the French Cardinal: “His death and the scandal provoked by it, when he had become one of the leading figures of the Church, was a sort of posthumous vendetta, one of those favors that the gods bestow on those whom they love. If he had died just a little while sooner or later, or if he had been visiting a lady of the sixteenth arrondissement (an expensive neighborhood in Paris) under the pretext of works of charity, instead of bringing the revenue of his theological writings to a poor and needy woman, there would have been no scandal.” “Jean had always dedicated himself to disregarded people. For a certain period he had celebrated a Mass for the sake of homosexuals. He tried to help prisoners, criminals, troubled young people, prostitutes. I deeply admired this ending of life similar to that of the martyrs, whose fragrance rises to heaven amid the opprobrium and sarcasm of the crowd.” According to Vatican analyst Sandro Magister, since 2012, when the first conference on Jean Danielou was held in Rome, “the quarantine has ended for this Cardinal.” Read more

2015-02-15T16:14:00+00:00

Vatican City, Feb 15, 2015 / 09:14 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In his Sunday Angelus address Pope Francis focused on mercy, noting how Jesus heals not by giving lectures, but by going close to those who suffer and curing the “leprosy” of our sin. “The hand of Jesus touched the leper. He isn't placed at a distance and he doesn't act through a proxy, but is exposed directly to the contagion of our evil; so our own evil becomes the place of contact,” the Pope told pilgrims in his Feb. 15 Angelus address. “He, Jesus, takes from us our sick humanity and we take from him his healthy and healed humanity.” Pope Francis spoke to those gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the recitation of the traditional Marian prayer. He pointed to the day’s Gospel reading from Mark, in which Jesus heals a man from leprosy. He said the episode has three distinct moments: the plea of the leper, Jesus’ response and the result of the miraculous healing. “The leper begged Jesus ‘on his knees’ and said ‘If you will it, you can make me clean’,” the Pope observed, recalling how Jesus responds to the humble prayer with a deep attitude of compassion, which he noted means to “suffer with” someone. In this moment Jesus’ heart manifests the paternal compassion that God has for man, he said, explaining that the fact Jesus went close to the man and touched him is significant due to the cultural stigma surrounding lepers at the time. As leprosy was a contagious and “merciless” disease that was considered a sign of impurity, those infected with it were ostracized and forced to live outside of the city, and had to signal their presence to passersby. Lepers were marginalized from both civil and religious communities, Francis said, noting that their life was like that of “a walking dead man.” By reaching out to touch the infected man who begged him for healing, Jesus show us that God’s mercy is able to overcome all barriers, Francis said. Rather than remaining far away, Jesus goes close and restores the man to health. “This happens every time we receive a sacrament with faith,” the Pope observed, pointing specifically to the sacrament of Reconciliation, “which cures us from the leprosy of sin.” What the Gospel passage shows us, the Pope said, is that God doesn’t confront evil by giving “a lecture on pain” or by eliminating suffering and death from the world, but instead takes this weight upon himself and carries it “to the end.” “This is how Christ combats the evil and suffering of the world: becoming the load and overcoming it with the power of God's mercy.” Pope Francis concluded by saying that if we want to be true disciples of Christ, we are called to unite ourselves to him and become “instruments of his merciful love, overcoming every type of marginalization.” “To be ‘imitators of Christ’ in front of a poor or sick person, we don't have to be afraid of looking him in the eye and drawing close with tenderness and compassion,” Francis said. He explained that if evil is contagious, then so is good, so we need to allow whatever is good to grow inside of us. “Let us be infected by good and let us infect others with it!” After leading pilgrims in the Angelus prayer, the Pope took a moment to greet various groups present, and gave his well-wishes to those preparing to celebrate the Lunar New Year, also referred to as the Chinese New Year, Feb. 19. He prayed that the celebrations surrounding the event would be a “happy occasion of rediscovering fraternity and of living in in an intense way, as it the precious bond of family life and the basis of social life.” Francis also greeted those pilgrims who came for the occasion of yesterday’s consistory of cardinals, during which he elevated 20 bishops to the rank of the cardinalate, 15 of whom are under 80 and are therefore eligible to vote in the next conclave. He thanked the pilgrims for “accompanying” the cardinals, and expressed his gratitude to the countries who came with an official delegation. Read more

2015-02-15T11:27:00+00:00

Vatican City, Feb 15, 2015 / 04:27 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After elevating 20 new cardinals, Pope Francis reminded them that true honor is found in service, and urged them to follow Jesus in breaking rigid ways of thinking and touching society’s mar... Read more

2015-02-15T11:05:00+00:00

Austin, Texas, Feb 15, 2015 / 04:05 am (CNA).- It is hard to ignore the fact that religious intolerance has reached a boiling point the world over in the past year or so. The radical-Islamic groups ISIS and Boko Haram have become notorious for killi... Read more

2015-02-14T23:01:00+00:00

Philadelphia, Pa., Feb 14, 2015 / 04:01 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia has welcomed Pennsylvania governor Tom Wolf's decision on Friday to effectively establish a moratorium on the death penalty in the state due to the flawed nature of the system. The moratorium “will remain in effect until the governor has received and reviewed the forthcoming report of the Pennsylvania Task Force and Advisory Commission on Capital Punishment,” Wolf's office announced Feb. 13. “This decision is based on a flawed system that has been proven to be an endless cycle of court proceedings as well as ineffective, unjust, and expensive,” Wolf stated. “Since the reinstatement of the death penalty, 150 people have been exonerated from death row nationwide, including six men in Pennsylvania.” Archbishop Chaput praised Wolf for his decision, saying, “I’m very grateful to Governor Wolf for choosing to take a deeper look into these studies and I pray we can find a better way to punish those who are guilty of these crimes.” “Turning away from capital punishment does not diminish our support for the families of murder victims.  They bear a terrible burden of grief and they rightly demand justice,” Archbishop Chaput continued. “But killing the guilty does not honor the dead nor does it ennoble the living. When we take a guilty person’s life we only add to the violence in an already violent culture and we demean our own dignity in the process.” The advisory commission will study the effectiveness of capital punishment, and Wolf said the moratorium would be in place until “all concerns are addressed satisfactorily.” Wolf, a Democrat, took office on Jan. 20. This morning he granted a temporary reprieve to Terrance Williams, who was to have been executed March 4. As each death row inmate's execution is scheduled, Wolf will grant a reprieve, but not a commutation, his office stated. More than 180 persons are on the state's death row. “Today’s action comes after significant consideration and reflection,” said Wolf. “This moratorium is in no way an expression of sympathy for the guilty on death row, all of whom have been convicted of committing heinous crimes.” Archbishop Chaput had also praised a Philadelphia judge in 2012, when he stayed Williams' scheduled execution, sending the case to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. In his Sept. 10, 2012 column, the archbishop noted that even convicted murderers “retain their God-given dignity as human beings” and that “we don't need to kill people to protect society or punish the guilty.” He added that “we need to end the death penalty now” saying it does not heal or redress wounds, “because only forgiveness can do that.” Several US states have moved away from capital punishment in recent years. In total, 18 states have abolished capital punishment. Read more

2015-02-14T23:01:00+00:00

Philadelphia, Pa., Feb 14, 2015 / 04:01 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia has welcomed Pennsylvania governor Tom Wolf's decision on Friday to effectively establish a moratorium on the death penalty in the state due to the flawed nature of the system. The moratorium “will remain in effect until the governor has received and reviewed the forthcoming report of the Pennsylvania Task Force and Advisory Commission on Capital Punishment,” Wolf's office announced Feb. 13. “This decision is based on a flawed system that has been proven to be an endless cycle of court proceedings as well as ineffective, unjust, and expensive,” Wolf stated. “Since the reinstatement of the death penalty, 150 people have been exonerated from death row nationwide, including six men in Pennsylvania.” Archbishop Chaput praised Wolf for his decision, saying, “I’m very grateful to Governor Wolf for choosing to take a deeper look into these studies and I pray we can find a better way to punish those who are guilty of these crimes.” “Turning away from capital punishment does not diminish our support for the families of murder victims.  They bear a terrible burden of grief and they rightly demand justice,” Archbishop Chaput continued. “But killing the guilty does not honor the dead nor does it ennoble the living. When we take a guilty person’s life we only add to the violence in an already violent culture and we demean our own dignity in the process.” The advisory commission will study the effectiveness of capital punishment, and Wolf said the moratorium would be in place until “all concerns are addressed satisfactorily.” Wolf, a Democrat, took office on Jan. 20. This morning he granted a temporary reprieve to Terrance Williams, who was to have been executed March 4. As each death row inmate's execution is scheduled, Wolf will grant a reprieve, but not a commutation, his office stated. More than 180 persons are on the state's death row. “Today’s action comes after significant consideration and reflection,” said Wolf. “This moratorium is in no way an expression of sympathy for the guilty on death row, all of whom have been convicted of committing heinous crimes.” Archbishop Chaput had also praised a Philadelphia judge in 2012, when he stayed Williams' scheduled execution, sending the case to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. In his Sept. 10, 2012 column, the archbishop noted that even convicted murderers “retain their God-given dignity as human beings” and that “we don't need to kill people to protect society or punish the guilty.” He added that “we need to end the death penalty now” saying it does not heal or redress wounds, “because only forgiveness can do that.” Several US states have moved away from capital punishment in recent years. In total, 18 states have abolished capital punishment. Read more

2015-02-14T16:20:00+00:00

Vatican City, Feb 14, 2015 / 09:20 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis welcomed the Catholic Church’s newest cardinals on Saturday, encouraging them to center themselves in Jesus Christ as they lead the faithful in patience, justice, and docility to the Holy Spirit. “The man of God is someone captivated by truth, one who encounters it fully in the word and flesh of Jesus Christ, the inexhaustible source of our joy,” the Pope said in Saint Peter’s Basilica at a ceremony creating the 20 newest members of the College of Cardinals. The Pope stressed the importance of charity, noting that “those who abide in charity are not self-centered” and concerned with their own interests. Rather, charity draws us away from self-centeredness “in order to set ourselves in the real center, which is Christ alone,” whereby we can “be persons who are respectful and attentive to the good of others.” Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who personally knows many of those being received into the college, attended the consistory. Many family members of the new cardinals were in attendance. Pope Francis described the cardinalate as an “honor,” but one which “is not honorific.” The word “cardinal” originates from the Latin word for hinge, “cardo,” and the Pope’s remarks played on this origin. The Pope, quoting Lumen Gentium, said to the cardinals:  “You are ‘hinges’ and are ‘incardinated’ in the Church of Rome, which ‘presides over the entire assembly of charity’.” Three of the newest members to the college of cardinals hail from countries which have never before been represented by a cardinal: Archbishop Charles Bo of Yangon (Burma); Bishop Soane Mafi of Tonga; and Bishop Arlindo Gomes Furtado of Santiago de Cabo Verde. Cardinal Dominique Mamberti, recently-appointed prefect  of the Apostolic Signatura, also received his red hat on Saturday. Speaking near the beginning of the ceremony on behalf of all the new cardinals, he expressed “gratitude” to Pope Francis, assuring him of their “loyal and sincere collaboration” in support of his mission of guiding the Church, according to Vatican Radio's translation. Out of the new cardinals, 15 are currently eligible to vote in the next papal election. Newly-created Cardinal José de Jesús Pimiento Rodriguez of Colombia, 96, was unable to attend, citing age. The Pope’s address to the cardinals drew its guiding theme from the reading from Saint Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians. The Pope stressed the importance of presiding over the Church “in charity.” Pope Francis began by invoking the Virgin Mary’s intercession to “help us to listen” to God’s word and “assist us by her humility and maternal tenderness, because charity, as God’s gift, grows wherever humility and tenderness are found.” Taking the congregation step-by-step through St. Paul’s “hymn to charity,” the Pope explained that patience “is in some sense synonymous with catholicity.” This means “to love without limits,” he said, including that which “is great without neglecting what is small,” and knowing “how to love through acts of kindness,” including “those unfriendly to us.” Reflecting on St. Paul's words that charity “is not jealous or boastful,” nor “puffed up with pride,” Pope Francis observed that persons at “every stage” of life are susceptible to this temptation, including “Church dignitaries.” However, it is for this reason that “the divine power of love, which transforms hearts, can be all the more evident in us, so that it is no longer you who live, but rather Christ who lives in you.” The Holy Father said charity is neither “irritable” nor “resentful,” but rather “frees us from the risk of reacting impulsively,” as well as “from the mortal danger of pent-up anger, of that smoldering anger which makes us brood over wrongs we have received.” Such sentiment “is unacceptable in a man of the Church.” Charity, moreover, “does not rejoice at the wrong, but rejoices in the right.” Pope Francis stressed the importance of “a strong sense of justice” on the those in Church governance, who must also “rejoice in the right.” Finally, St. Paul’s description of love as that which “bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things” offers “a spiritual and pastoral program of life,” the Pope said. Playing once  again on the word “cardinal,” Pope Francis concluded by saying that “the more we are “incardinated” in the Church of Rome, the more we should become docile to the Spirit, so that charity can give form and meaning to all that we are and all that we do.” After the close of the consistory, Pope Francis announced the canonizations of three new saints: Maria of the Crucified Jesus, a professed religious of the discalced Carmelites; Maria Alfonsina Danil Ghattas, founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Rosary; and Giovanna Emilia de Villeneuve, the French founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Immaculate Conception. The three will be canonized on May 13. Read more

2015-02-14T14:08:00+00:00

Buffalo, N.Y., Feb 14, 2015 / 07:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Beyond boxed chocolates and Valentine cards, authentic married love is a gift and blessing that brings unity to society, and it deserves support and protection, said a New York bishop. Bishop ... Read more

2015-02-14T00:50:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Feb 13, 2015 / 05:50 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Muslims gathered in front of the White House to pray for the victims of the Chapel Hill shooting on Friday, emphasizing a message of peace and love in response to the killing.   &ldquo... Read more



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