Washington D.C., Dec 5, 2014 / 04:45 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A new art exhibit in Washington, D.C., hopes to revive a sense of womanhood exemplified in the Virgin Mary, as depicted by Renaissance and Baroque artists. “I think one of the me... Read more
Washington D.C., Dec 5, 2014 / 04:45 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A new art exhibit in Washington, D.C., hopes to revive a sense of womanhood exemplified in the Virgin Mary, as depicted by Renaissance and Baroque artists. “I think one of the me... Read more
Washington D.C., Dec 5, 2014 / 02:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The East and West must cooperate to save ancient Christian cultures in the Middle East, to secure peace, and to protect humanity as a whole, an expert in Aramaic culture insists. “If Ch... Read more
Panjim, India, Dec 5, 2014 / 12:03 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Wednesday, the 462nd anniversary of his death, an estimated 200,000 people visited Se Cathedral in Old Goa to venerate the relics of St. Francis Xavier, the “Apostle to the Far East.” The saint's relics are in the midst of an exposition, lasting from Nov. 22 until Jan. 4, 2015, which only happens once every ten years. The last exposition, in 2004, drew more than 2.5 million to Goa. “There is a great spiritual awakening through catechesis, which is animating faith formation in the family and also fostering the building of small Christian communities,” explained Fr. Mario Saturnino Dias, director of the Archdiocese of Goa and Daman's missionary center. “We are indebted to ‘Goencho Saib’ in receiving faith, vocations, and the Catholic Church,” Fr. Dias told CNA Dec. 3. The residents of Goa, irrespective of religion, hold St. Francis Xavier in high esteem, calling him “Goencho Saib,” Konkani for “Sir” or “Lord.” St. Francis Xavier was among the first companions of St. Ignatius of Loyola, and was one of the first members of the Society of Jesus. He evangelized in India, Indonesia, and Japan, and died in 1552 on his way to China. His remains are normally kept at the Basilica of Bom Jesus in an elevated silver casket, but they were transferred to Se Cathedral on Nov. 22 for public veneration. Some 95-100,000 pilgrims were coming to Goa each day, but last weekend the number surged to over 200,000 daily, in anticipation of his feast. Some pilgrims have walked hundreds of miles on foot to visit the relics. “People have identified St. Francis as a holy man of God who can intercede for them; they have witnessed several grace and miracles,” Fr. Dias said. “The faith of the people is also seen in the popular devotions that are strengthened in the Eucharist. Thousands of faithful also queue for confessions.” Fr. Dias emphasized the role of catechesis in promoting and refining popular piety, which the Goa-Daman archdiocese has taken up formation modules sent to the parishes. During Mass on Dec. 3, Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Bombay called Francis Xavier “a holy man, a messenger of God.” Cardinal Gracias' family has roots in Goa, and he noted that it is through St. Francis' teaching of the catechism, administering the sacraments, and forming Christian communities that his forefathers received the faith. “Through him my ancestors received faith, and so today I am thanking God for this gift of faith.” The prelate, explaining “the jewel of faith” received from St. Francis, asked the faithful “Are we keeping it shining? Is the Gospel the center of our life?” Cardinal Gracias urged the families to maintain and continue the Goan traditions of family prayer and Bible reading. The Mass was concelebrated by Bishop Carlos de Pinho Moreira Azevedo, an official of the Pontifical Council for Culture; Bishop Jose Caires de Nobrega of Manajary, in Madagascar; Archbishop Blasco Collaco, apostolic nuncio emeritus to South Africa; and Bishop Anthony Fernandes Barreto of Sindhudurg, a suffragan diocese to Goa and Daman. Archbishop Filipe Neri Antonio do Rosario Ferrao of Goa and Daman expressed his gratitude to the pilgrims and looked forward to the Jan. 4 canonization of Bl. Joseph Vaz by Pope Francis during his trip to Sri Lanka. Bl. Joseph Vaz was a native of Goa who evangelized Sri Lanka in the 16th century and is known as the island's “apostle.” Read more
Vatican City, Dec 4, 2014 / 07:07 pm (CNA).- The 2013 papal conclave that elected Pope Francis is news again now that four cardinals have denied a new book’s claim that they campaigned for Pope Francis to be elected – though the book’... Read more
Rome, Italy, Dec 4, 2014 / 05:01 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- As Nigeria's general elections draw near, the archbishop of the central city of Jos warned candidates not to put political agendas over people's safety and urged more rapid solutions to Boko Haram violence. “This is a time in Nigeria that calls for genuine, authentic patriotism, because the attacks seem to be ongoing and destruction and displacement seem to be becoming a regular phenomenon,” Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama told CNA Nov. 22. “We are hoping that Nigerians who care for the good and the profit of Nigeria and Nigerians will do everything possible by transcending narrow political interests in order to genuinely seek solutions to end the phenomenon of Boko Haram.” The radical Islamist group Boko Haram began its deadly insurgency in 2009, killing over 4,000 people in 2014 alone, according to Human Rights Watch. The group has been threatening to cross into Cameroon, which shares a 300-mile border with Nigeria. With violence continuing to grow rather than abate, the Nigerian government's inability to contain the group has drawn heavy criticism. Boko Haram captured the town of Chibok on Nov. 13, and the Nigerian army retook the area three days later. The group also overran the predominantly Christian community of Mubi Oct. 29, forcing over 50,000 people to flee. “The attacks seem to be endless and without any sense,” Archbishop Kaigama said. He noted the many people who have been displaced due to the continued conflict, including Muslims that don't share Boko Haram's extremist ideologies. Fear has become the everyday experience of the people, he said, explaining that the government's efforts to control Boko Haram will only be believed “when we see that these attacks and territorial expansion stop.” As violence continues to unfold in the country, Nigeria's leaders are intensely campaigning for their general elections, which are set to take place in February. According to the Independent National Electoral Commission, the country’s presidential and national elections will take place on Feb. 14, while elections for the Governorship and State House of Assembly is set for Feb. 28. With many politicians busy with campaigns and strategizing for the elections, Archbishop Kaigama lamented that “they have not given sufficient attention to the safety of the people who are being attacked by Boko Haram.” “There is more interest in who gets what position. That is all that matters. They spend a lot of resources on this…and when you compare that with the thousands of displaced people, you wonder what our politicians are struggling to have power for,” he said. The archbishop voiced his hope that politicians, traditional leaders, tribal elders, and members of both the People’s Democratic Party and All People's Congress of Nigeria would forget about political aspirations and put the safety and interests of their citizens first. In a recent meeting held between Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan and the bishops of Nigeria, Archbishop Kaigama recalled how “we had to remind them that things are not good; that there is fire on the mountain.” He said that if the ongoing violence – mostly limited to Nigeria's northeast provinces – is not contained, it will spread and “de-civilize” the entire country. “We are just waiting to see what can be done and what is being done,” the archbishop said, noting that despite the bleak situation, Nigerians are maintaining a spirit of optimism. “We believe that with the pressure being mounted on the government and the security agents that something is being done,” he said, but called for the government to show the physical evidence that they have won back some of the towns that they have claimed to regain. At this point it’s not enough simply to be told, he said, explaining that once the elections are over the hope is that government will put forth more decisive means of putting the threat of Boko Haram to an end. “I don’t see this progressing beyond the Northeast. We are quite optimistic that this will not last too long,” he said. “We are not giving in and we don’t believe that Boko Haram will have the last laugh.” Read more
Denver, Colo., Dec 4, 2014 / 04:38 pm (CNA).- Despite having a life radically different than the one she expected as a Belgian youth, philosopher Dr. Alice von Hildebrand says God supported her through every challenge. “God has chosen the patt... Read more
Vatican City, Dec 4, 2014 / 03:16 pm (CNA).- News broke weeks ago that a new volume of Benedict XVI's collected works was being released in German with an updated version of a 1972 essay, which no longer suggests that the divorced and remarried can receive Communion, as it once did. But thanks to Sandro Magister and his translator Matthew Sherry, the full text of his “Retractatio” is now available in English. As CNA reported Nov. 25, Joseph Ratzinger published an essay in 1972, while a priest of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising, which argued for access, under certain limited conditions, to Communion for the divorced and remarried. This line of argument was taken up in a 1977 book by Walter Kasper, who was then a priest of the Diocese of Rottenburg. Fr. Kasper is now Cardinal Kasper, who in a February address to cardinals advocating for the admission to Communion of the divorced and remarried cited Ratzinger's essay. But as doctrine developed, Ratzinger moved away from his 1972 essay, humbly retracting the suggestion he had then offered. In 1991, he wrote that the suggestions had been made “as a theologian in 1972. Their implementation in pastoral practice would of course necessarily depend on their corroboration by an official act of the magisterium to whose judgment I would submit … Now the Magisterium subsequently spoke decisively on this question in the person of (St. John Paul II) in Familiaris consortio.” Dr. Nicholas Healy, an assistant professor at the John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family, told CNA Nov. 24 that the development in Ratzinger's thought “shows us what it means to think with the Church. ‘Sentire cum ecclesia’ means allowing one’s partial perspectives to be integrated into the greater whole of the Church’s faith and occasionally corrected by the teaching office of the Church.” Magister's Dec. 3 article includes both the original conclusion of Ratzinger's 1972 essay, and the new conclusion written in 2014. He writes that “it comes as no surprise … that Ratzinger should have maintained that it was inappropriate for Kasper to cite his 1972 article in support of his own theses, as if nothing had happened after that year.” The new version of the essay has more than doubled in length – from 922 words in English, to 2,059. And it reflects a personal maturation of thought, from the writing of a 45-year-old theologian-priest to an 87-year-old man who has been a bishop, the Vatican's guarantor of doctrine, Pope, and finally Pope Emeritus.The Original Essay In 1972, then-Fr. Ratzinger wrote that while the Church “cannot stop proclaiming the faith of the New Covenant,” in light of man's hardness of heart, “very often it is forced to begin its concrete life somewhat below the standards of the Scriptures.” He wrote that “in clear emergency situations,” the Church “can make limited exceptions in order to avoid worse things,” but that “this action cannot bring into question the foundational form itself by which the Church lives.” He held that the divorced and remarried, in certain conditions, “find themselves in an emergency situation of a special nature,” and that they can be granted Communion, citing two justifications in tradition for this concession: the margin of latitude found in annulment processes and the attendant potential for injustice; and a corresponding practice known to at least some of the Church Fathers.42 Years Later But in 2014, Pope Emeritus Benedict has different concerns, writing a retraction that departs from the original text before the end of its first sentence. In light of man's hardness of heart, he now asks “what can be done concretely, especially at a time in which the faith is being watered down more and more, even within the Church, and the 'things with which the pagans are concerned,' against which the Lord warns the disciples, threaten to become ever more the norm?” The Church's role, Benedict writes, is first of all proclaim the faith so that it will be “living and strong,” saying that “the healing of 'hardness of heart' can come only through faith,” but that the Church must also “plumb the breadth and boundaries of the words of Jesus.” Since nullity can arise from both a lack of form and a lack of understanding (of consent), Benedict asks, “can it still be presumed today that persons know 'by nature' about the definitiveness and indissolubility of marriage, and that they consent to it with their yes … can the intention of the definitive yes be taken for granted, or should one not expect the contrary, that there is already a predisposition to divorce?” “This makes it clear how important a correct preparation for the sacrament is today,” the Emeritus Bishop of Rome writes. In light of all this, processes of annulment have to live in the tension between two poles: they mustn’t become “a disguised form of divorce,” but they must also “examine with the necessary conscientiousness the issues of possible nullity, and, where there may be just reasons in favor of annulment, express the corresponding sentence.” Two further elements Benedict has identified as problems in the area of marriage validity are that while some are unable to contract marriage because of “psychological factors” and we are now better able to perceive these, nullity should not be “rashly construed” on the basis of psychological problems; and that a difficulty arises in the case of “baptized pagans” – those who have been baptized, yet “not believe and have never known the faith.” On the basis of all this, Benedict says, the Catholic Church “on the one hand knows that it is strictly bound to the word of the Lord on the indissolubility of marriage, but on the other has also sought to recognize the limits of this guideline in order not to impose on persons more than is necessary.” The Pope Emeritus notes in particular the value of pastoral care for the divorced, saying it has an “important task” that “perhaps has not yet been sufficiently incorporated into the Church’s everyday life.” The divorced can and should participate in the Church's life, Benedict says, adding, “I think that they should be granted the possibility of participating in ecclesial associations and even of becoming godfathers or godmothers, something that the law does not provide for as of now.” The push for the divorced and remarried to receive Communion is acute, he writes, because nearly everyone who attends Mass goes to receive. In light of this, he says, “I maintain that Saint Paul’s warning about examining oneself and reflecting on the fact that what is at issue is the Body of the Lord should be taken seriously once again” adding that such self-examination would “represent a form of solidarity with divorced and remarried persons.” As a final suggestion for pastoral care, the former Pope noted that it is in some places now customary that those who cannot receive Communion approach the priest for a blessing, “which is given to them as a sign of the love of Christ and of the Church.” “This form could certainly be chosen also by persons who are living in a second marriage and therefore are not admitted to the Lord’s table,” he concludes. “The fact that this would make possible an intense spiritual communion with the Lord, with his whole Body, with the Church, could be a spiritual experience that would strengthen and help them.” Read more
Vatican City, Dec 4, 2014 / 01:51 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Vatican has confirmed it will release its report on the state of women religious in the United States later this month, following up on the apostolic visitation that concluded in January 2012. ... Read more
Istanbul, Turkey, Dec 4, 2014 / 12:03 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis' visit to Turkey was highly appreciated by Muslims because of the care and interest he demonstrated for them, and for his acknowledgement that not all Muslims are terrorists, a local scholar has said. “The Turkish people deeply appreciated the Pope’s visit,” Zeynet Cebeci Suvari, a Ph.D. candidate at Bogazici University, told CNA. “The message is clear: 'I care about you and that is why I am here'. Even only this gesture means a lot in itself, without any words uttered.” Cebeci Suvari, a Muslim, is the first non-Christian to earn a licentiate in sacred theology from a pontifical university, having graduated from the Pontifical Gregorian University. She commented that “in general, Muslims do not know much about how Holy Father is perceived in the Catholic world …. the differences among the various confessions of Christianity do not mean anything to an ordinary Muslim.” In Turkey, Muslims are more familiar with the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, the head of Eastern Orthodoxy. The patriarchate is located in Istanbul, and the patriarch, Bartholomew I, is himself Turkish. “The more important a role the patriarchate can play in the Christian world, the more respected it will become by Muslims as well,” said Cebeci Suvari. “Although Turkey’s relationship with its Christian minorities is still problematic today, hopefully the respect shown to Bartholomew I by the Pope can set a good example for the Turkish leaders.” She then stressed that “leaders can be pioneers in spreading wisdom and kindness among their people, and this can only be achieved when leaders talk to each other.” In Turkey, Cebeci Suvari explained, “the rise of the nationalist societies was hurtful for cosmopolitanism and multiculturalism. All of a sudden, each nation was closed in itself and tried to find a scapegoat among the neighbors who have been living together for centuries.” Some of the appreciation for Pope Francis' visit is because it “tells the world that not all Muslims are barbaric terrorists. There is too much disinformation about culture and religion. Pope Francis' visit may have shattered some of misconceptions about religions.” During his trip, and again during his flight back from Turkey, Pope Francis had underscored that Muslims should speak out against violence and terrorism. “Every single Muslim that I know is disturbed by the Islamic State,” Cebeci Suvari said. She explained that the “slowness of reaction” is an outcome of the fact “Muslims do not perceive Islamic State as Muslim. What Islamic State is doing in the name of Islam has no resemblance to the Islam these ordinary Muslims know.” “They do not relate to it, and so they do not even think they should talk against it.” “They are baffled how anyone cannot see that this is not the real Islam,” Cebeci Suvari said. Read more
Vatican City, Dec 4, 2014 / 09:57 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis cautioned against the false appearances of those who are proud or vain, saying that true holiness is found in the silent, everyday witness of the poor and humble. “We should think about so much hidden holiness there is in the Church; Christians who remain in Jesus,” the Pope told those present in the Vatican's Saint Martha guesthouse for his Dec. 4 daily Mass. While there are there are some Christians who put on appearances, many others are true saints, he said, noting that they are not necessarily “canonized saints, but saints (who) put the love of Jesus into practice.” The Pope centered his reflections on the day's first reading from the prophet Isaiah, who speaks of the importance of founding oneself on the rock of the Lord, and foretells the destruction of the high and “lofty” cities, who will be trampled by the poor and needy. When it comes to being a true Christian, the Pope said, we should not be “Christians in appearance,” whose make-up comes off as soon as the rain begins. “So many 'apparent Christians,' collapse at the first temptation (because) there is no substance there,” so it's not enough to simply belong to a Catholic family, an association or to be a benefactor if we don’t follow God’s will. However, there are also many who do follow God’s will and put his love into practice every day, Pope Francis noted, pointing to those who are considered small but who offer their daily suffering to the Lord. “Let us consider the sick who offer their sufferings for the Church, for others. Let us consider so many of the elderly who are alone, who pray and make offerings,” he said, also recognizing the many families who work hard to raise children and who don’t “strut about,” but bear their problems with hope. These people are “the saints of daily life,” the Pope said. He also lauded the witness of the many parish priests who carry out their work with love, and without being seen. Priests who work hard catechizing children, caring for the elderly and the sick, and preparing couples for marriage do the same thing every day, he said, but never get bored “because their foundation is the rock. It is Jesus, it this that gives holiness to the Church, it is this that gives hope!” Even these hidden saints are still sinners, because we all are, he observed, saying that when a good Christian sometimes falls and commits a grave sin but is penitent and asks forgiveness, it is a good thing. “Not confuse sin with virtue,” the Pope said, explaining that it’s good to “know well where virtue is, and where sin is, (but) these (people) are founded on rock, and the rock is Christ.” The proud and the vain are those who have built their house on sand, the Pope said, noting that as the prophet Isaiah said in the first reading, they will be “demolished” while the poor and those who consider themselves nothing in the sight of God will triumph. He concluded his reflections by encouraging all present to use the time of Advent, in which we prepare for the coming of Jesus at Christmas, to place our foundation on the Lord, who is our rock and our hope. “We are all sinners, we are weak, but if we place our hope in Him we can go forward. And this is the joy of a Christian: knowing that in Him there is hope, there is pardon, there is peace (and) there is joy.” Read more
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