2014-11-29T13:01:00+00:00

Rome, Italy, Nov 29, 2014 / 06:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Nov. 8 the Vatican announced the transfer of Cardinal Raymond Burke from prefect of the Apostolic Signatura, which ensures correct administration of justice in the Church, to Patron of the Sovereign Order of the Knights of Malta. In an interview on Nov. 21, Cardinal Burke explained his new role to CNA. “The technical title is Patron,” he stated. “It is an office of representation of the Holy Father to the grand master of the sovereign military order.” Cardinal Burke will be helping Fra. Matthew Festing, Prince and Grand Master of the “Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta”, colloquially known as the “Knights of Malta.” “He is actually a professed religious, but not a priest. My work principally is to assist him, to be a spiritual guide to him, and to carry forward the great work of the order.” The order sets itself two principal missions. “The defense of the faith: the ’defensio fidei’, and then care for the poor, the ‘obsequium pauperum.' Both of these things go together, because you obviously need deep faith and the strength that comes from Christ to serve those who deserve to be served.” The order was established in 1099, and recognized as sovereign by the Pope in 1113. It has more than 13,000 members and 80,000 volunteers today. Among them are 20,000 medical personnel such as doctors, nurses, auxiliaries, and paramedics. The Knights are present in over 120 countries, some of which Burke will visit as part of his office. “I will be going out to visit the Knights in various parts of the world where the Knights are active. They are widespread, it is a large order, and it is very active in many aspects.” The order has the peculiarity of being a religious order composed of lay people. This gives them a unique spirit, but creates also challenges for their structure, and dealings within the Church. “There will be also the possibility of drawing from my knowledge as a canon lawyer to address the complex canonical questions which are tied to an order which has professed religious and also lay members in different ranks.” The cardinal voiced his optimism for the future and his work with the Grand Master, and is looking forward to his new assignment. Read more

2014-11-28T23:39:00+00:00

Bangkok, Thailand, Nov 28, 2014 / 04:39 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Church in Thailand observed the Nov. 25 celebration of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women with a seminar helping form networks to end trafficking and other forms of sex-based violence in the country. The Thai bishops held the seminar Nov. 22 at Xavier Hall in Bangkok, which drew more than 200 participants, including women religious, conscrated laywomen, pastoral workers, teachers, and students. It urged for collaborative networking and action to end discrimination and violence against women throughout Thailand. The annual workshop was organized by Caritas Thailand; Talitha Kum, the International Network of Consecrated Life Against Trafficking in Persons; and the National Human Rights Commission. “Women are not slaves or commodities for sale,” Msgr. Vissanu Thanya Annan, executive secretary of the Thai bishops' conference, said at the meeting. The bishops are deeply concerned about the issue, he noted, and said they have unrelentingly promoted the mission of the Church to “educate, protect, and uphold the rights and dignity of women and the poor.” Msgr. Vissanu pointed to Pope Francis’s persistent call for solidarity and his exemplary endeavors in reaching out to the poor and the suffering victims of violence. According to Sr. Franciose Champen Jiranonda, S.P.C., chairperson of Talita Kum Thailand, “the workshop aimed at fostering collective efforts of networking with the state and private institutions, religious leaders, and citizens to counter violence against women and children.” Sr. Franciose also drew attention to the contributions of religions whose scriptures teach love and nonviolence, urging that in Thailand they help to reform Thais' outlooks so as to build-up a violence-free society. The conference reflected that exploitation and domestic violence against women remains a widespread epidemic in Thailand. With coercion, guilt, and fear, numerous cases also go unreported, putting social stigma on victims, who are also not effectively supported and protected by public authorities. According to the Asia-Pacific office of UN Women, challenges to equality and women's impowerment in Thailand remain in “traditional attitudes and stereotypes which underpin domestic violence and violence against women, low participation of women in politics and decision-making positions, discrimination and vulnerabilities of ethnic and rural women as well as women in the informal sector, HIV prevalence, trafficking and exploitation.” Speaking to the participants at the seminar, Dr. Amara Phongsapich, chairperson of Thailand's National Human Rights Commission, said that “the anti-violence campaign should be a continuous fight against discrimination and violence to bring social justice and change.” She recalled that during the past years the country has witnessed numerous cases of violence against women and children. Testimonies by women victims of violence at the conference evidenced that victims in Thailand lack protection, and that a lack of specialized services for victims of violence and training for professional helpers of victims are both needed. A colonel in the Thai armed forces, Kanokwan Srichaiya, gave a practical session on safety and self-defense techniques to counter the attacks of muggings. “The Catholic Church in Thailand is continuously exploring the quest for practical solutions to address these tangible issues concerning human life and the family,” Msgr. Vissanu told CNA. “Promoting and preserving the gift of human life and dignity is at the core of Catholic teaching,” he added. “It's important to impress on the authorities the importance of upholding rights protection with legislation, and of promoting education.”   Read more

2014-11-28T22:09:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 28, 2014 / 03:09 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- On the occasion of the Year of Consecrated Life that begins this weekend, Pope Francis has allowed the faithful to receive plenary indulgences, under the normal conditions. “The Holy Father, on the occasion of the Year of Consecrated Life, will concede plenary indulgences, with the customary conditions, to all members of the institutes of consecrated life and other truly repentant faithful moved by a spirit of charity,” a Nov. 28 statement from the Vatican read. Called by Pope Francis last fall, the Year for Consecrated will begin the First Sunday of Advent, Nov. 30, and will be preceded by a prayer vigil the night before. The opportunity to receive plenary indulgences will run through the close of the year, Feb. 2, 2016. The indulgence may also be offered for souls in Purgatory. The indulgence for the Year of Consecrated Life can be obtained in Rome through participation in the meetings and celebrations set in the calendar of the Congregation for the Institutes of Consecrated Life and the Societies of Apostolic Life. In all the particular Churches, the faithful can obtain the indulgence “during the days devoted to consecrated life in the diocese, and during diocesan celebrations organised for the Year of Consecrated Life, by visiting the cathedral or another sacred place designated with the consent of the Ordinary of the place, or a convent church or oratory of a cloistered monastery, and publicly reciting the Liturgy of the Hours or through a suitable period of time of devout reflection The Vatican also specified that members of institutes of consecrated life who are unable to visit these sacred places due to health or other “serious reasons” may still obtain the indulgence, if “completely detached from any type of sin and with the intention of being able to fulfil the three usual conditions as soon as possible, devoutly carry out the spiritual visit and offer their illness and the hardships of their life to God the merciful through Mary.” In each of the ways to obtain the plenary indulgence, the indulgenced act is to be accompanied by the recitation of the Our Father, the Profession of Faith (Creed), and invocation of the Virgin Mary. To help facilitate the process, Apostolic Penitentiary Cardinal Mauro Piacenza, who signed the degree, asked that the canons, members of the Chapter, the priests of the Institutes of Consecrated Life and all others make themselves more available to administer the sacraments. He encouraged them to “hear confessions,  offer themselves willingly and generously to the celebration of the Sacrament of Reconciliation and regularly administer Holy Communion to the sick.” An indulgence is defined as the remission of the temporal punishment – the unhealthy attachment to created things – due to sins which have already been forgiven. The usual conditions for an indulgence – which apply to that for the Year of Consecrated Life – are that the individual be in the state of grace by the completion of the acts, have complete detachment from sin, and pray for the Pope's intentions. The person must also sacramentally confess their sins and receive Communion, up to about twenty days before or after the indulgenced act.   Read more

2014-11-28T18:39:00+00:00

Istanbul, Turkey, Nov 28, 2014 / 11:39 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Currently a living as a refugee at a Salesian school in Istanbul, 14-year-old Sarah will give Pope Francis a picture that she painted,  and  says that she will ask him to pray for world peace. “My name is Sarah, and I made this picture in the name of the school to give it to the Pope. This is my picture with Jesus and Don Bosco, and here we have the glow of Don Bosco and the Sun of Jesus,” Sarah told CNA Nov. 27. Originally from Aleppo, Sarah has been living with her family as a refugee in Istanbul for a year, and is currently enrolled as a student in the Don Bosco center of Istanbul, which is run by religious and attends to the needs of refugees and immigrants. One of the handful of students who will meet with the Pope for a private encounter just before his Nov. 30 return to Rome, Sarah said that her mother is an artist, and helped her to do the painting, which will be given to the Pope in the name of the school. “We need peace in our country,” she said, explaining that when she meets Pope Francis she will tell him “to pray for us and to (pray for) the peace of the world, because in Syria we have the war.” The Syrian conflict began in March, 2011 when anti-government demonstrations sprang up nationwide against Bashar al-Assad's rule. In April of that year, the Syrian army began to deploy to put down the uprisings, firing on protesters. Since then, the violence has morphed into a civil war which has claimed the lives of more than 200,000 people. The civil war is being fought among the Syrian regime and a number of rebel groups, which include moderates, such as the Free Syrian Army; Islamists such as al-Nusra Front and the Islamic State; and Kurdish separatists. The war has resulted in the flight of more than 3.2 million Syrians as refugees in nearby countries, most of them in Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan. An additional 8 million Syrian people are believed to have been internally displaced by the war. Pope Francis is set to meet with the children from the Don Bosco Center on the final day of his trip, after holding a private Mass, praying Divine Liturgy at the patriarchal church of St. George, and signing a joint declaration with Bartholomew I in the morning. Read more

2014-11-28T16:18:00+00:00

Istanbul, Turkey, Nov 28, 2014 / 09:18 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Dialogue between religious leaders and the “shared recognition of the sanctity of each human life” in bringing aid to the suffering were at the core of Pope Francis' Nov. 28 address to Turkey's Department for Religious Affairs, delivered on the first day of his three-day Apostolic Journey to Turkey. “Without this openness to encounter and dialogue, a papal visit would not fully correspond to its purposes,” the Holy Father said, noting the custom of a Pope to meet with the  leaders and representatives of other religions whenever he visits another country. The Department for Religious Affairs (Diyanet) is the highest Sunni Muslim authority in Turkey. Pope Francis addressed the Diyanet on the first of his three days in Turkey. Upon his arrival, he was received Mehmet Gormez, the Diyanet's presdient, with whom he held a private meeting before delivering his official address. Recalling Benedict XVI's 2006 visit to Turkey, he said the relations and dialogue between religious demonstrate “that mutual respect and friendship are possible, notwithstanding differences.” “Such friendship, as well as being valuable in itself, becomes all the more meaningful and important in a time of crises such as our own, crises which in some parts of the world are disastrous for entire peoples.” The Pope decried the death and destruction brought about by wars, including “inter-ethnic and interreligious tensions and conflicts, hunger and poverty afflicting hundreds of millions of people, (which also) inflict damage on the natural environment – air, water and land.” The Holy Father made particular mention of the crisis in the Middle East, most notably in Iraq and Syria. “Everyone suffers the consequences of these conflicts, and the humanitarian situation is unbearable,” he said. “I think of so many children, the sufferings of so many mothers, of the elderly, of those displaced and of all refugees, subject to every form of violence.” Christians and Yazidis, among other minority groups, have been forced to “leave behind everything to save their lives and preserve their faith,” he said. “As religious leaders, we are obliged to denounce all violations against human dignity and human rights,” Pope Francis continued.  Because human life, as a gift from God, is sacred, “any violence which seeks religious justification warrants the strongest condemnation because the Omnipotent is the God of life and peace.” “The world expects those who claim to adore God to be men and women of peace who are capable of living as brothers and sisters, regardless of ethnic, religious, cultural or ideological differences,” he said. In addition to denouncing these violations against religious freedom, effort must be made to find “adequate solutions,” which requires the cooperation of “governments, political and religious leaders, representatives of civil society, and all men and women of goodwill.” Muslims and Christians, he continued, can recognize the “shared elements” in their respective faiths, “such as the adoration of the All-Merciful God, reference to the Patriarch Abraham, prayer, almsgiving, fasting … elements which, when lived sincerely, can transform life and provide a sure foundation for dignity and fraternity. Referring to Saint John Paul II's 1979 address to the Catholic community in Ankara, Pope Francis stressed: “Recognizing and developing our common spiritual heritage – through interreligious dialogue – helps us to promote and to uphold moral values, peace and freedom in society.” “The shared recognition of the sanctity of each human life is the basis of joint initiatives of solidarity, compassion, and effective help directed to those who suffer most.” Pope Francis expressed his appreciation for the help Turkish Muslims and Christians have provided for the hundreds of thousands of people fleeing conflict areas. “This is a clear example of how we can work together to serve others, an example to be encouraged and maintained.” Finally, the Holy Father noted the good relations between the Diyanet and the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue.  “It is my earnest desire that these relations will continue and be strengthened for the good of all, so that every initiative which promotes authentic dialogue will offer a sign of hope to a world which so deeply needs peace, security and prosperity.”   Read more

2014-11-28T14:21:00+00:00

Vatican City, Nov 28, 2014 / 07:21 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis spoke to Turkish authorities on Friday of the need to create a lasting peace – one based on a fraternal solidarity which respects human dignity and man’s essential right t... Read more

2014-11-28T12:27:00+00:00

Istanbul, Turkey, Nov 28, 2014 / 05:27 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A common declaration of Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew on the issues of ecology and poverty would be natural is foreseeable for the future, a theological advisor of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Costantinople told CNA Nov. 28. “Today, there is no excuse for indifference or inaction. A joint response between Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew can prove both powerful and permanent,” said Fr. John Chrissavgis, who works for the partriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Churches. Fr. Chryssavgis spoke on the eve of Pope Francis’ voyage to Turkey, scheduled Nov. 28-30. During Pope Francis' Nov. 28-30 trip to Turkey, he will meet with Patriarch Bartholomew for an ecumenical prayer on Saturday night at the Phanar, the Headquarters of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul. According to Fr. Chryssavgis, there are thre three main challenges that both the Papacy and the Ecumenical Patriarchate can face together. First, both should foster “a sense of humility and repentance for the arrogant suspicion and hostile polemics of the past. We should no longer be tempted by isolationism and fanaticism that characterized relations between the two Churches in previous centuries.” Second, “we should honestly examine the theological differences that continue to separate us, especially the issue of authority and primacy, as well as infallibility and collegiality. Pope Francis has already demonstrated his willingness and openness to explore the common tradition of the early, undivided Church on these matters.” And finally – Fr. Chryssavgis maintained – “even as we discuss doctrinal matters, we should not ignore the global problems facing people everywhere, including poverty, war, injustice, and the ecological crisis.” Pope Francis has proven to be very attentive to ecological matters: he already announced he will issue an encyclical on ecology by the beginning of the next year, and often mentioned the notion of human ecology in his speeches – the last time Nov. 25, speaking in front of the European Parliament in Strasbourg. “The Pope’s love of the poor and vulnerable in society makes him equally sensitive to the natural environment,” said Fr. Chryssavgis. On the other hand, Patriarch Bartholomew has “worked tirelessly for the awakening of people’s conscience about climate change. Hence the title that he has been given by journalists: ‘the Green Patriarch.” Fr. Chryssavgis noted that “it is true that natural and human ecology are inseparably linked. The way we treat people, and especially the poor, is directly reflected in the way we respond to environmental issues; and the way we respect God’s creation is manifested in our attitude toward human beings created in the image of God. Indeed, both visionary leaders can discern this truth.” “It would be wonderful – and natural – for the Pope and the Patriarch to stand together on this issue and sign a common declaration, just as Patriarch Bartholomew co-signed the Venice Declaration with Pope John Paul II in 2002. I can certainly foresee this happening in the near future.”   Read more

2014-11-28T12:16:00+00:00

Istanbul, Turkey, Nov 28, 2014 / 05:16 am (CNA/EWTN News).- People at the refugee center that Pope Francis will visit this coming Sunday are learning to seek a future, the director of the center told CNA Nov. 27. “Pope Francis will come here b... Read more

2014-11-28T11:26:00+00:00

Philadelphia, Pa., Nov 28, 2014 / 04:26 am (CNA/Vatican Insider).- “It isn't possible to be pro-life and simultaneously forget the cries of the poor.” Francis has confirmed his attendance at the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia next September. The Archbishop of the great US metropolis, Archbishop Charles Chaput, talks to Vatican Insider about the meaning of this visit and about how Francis’ message has been received in the US.  Pope Francis has now confirmed his participation at the meeting in Philadelphia scheduled for next September. What do you think will be the focus of this papal visit?   “The Holy Father combines two great qualities with unusual skill. He has compassion for people alienated from the Church, and he has courage in speaking the truth with love. He condemns no one. He genuinely shares in the sufferings of persons wounded by the hardships of life. This makes his voice deeply appealing. At the same time, he's also spoken frequently in support of what Paul VI called the "natural family.”  He showed his support again just last week in Rome with his words at the Humanum conference on the complementarity of men and women. A strong natural family is the greatest source of nourishment for healthy human development and the greatest antidote to poverty and loneliness. So I'm sure the Pope will bring that same, simultaneous message of mercy and truth about the family to Philadelphia next year. Some people waste a great deal of time, and create a great deal of confusion, by trying to interpret what the Holy Father "really" means by his actions.  He doesn't need narrators.  Pope Francis is a man thoroughly grounded in Catholic faith and teaching.  We need to let him do in his own way what God calls him to do: pastor the Church.”  How is it possible to announce today, in a secularized society, the Gospel of the family? And how is it possible to respond to the needs and suffering of families broken by a separation or a divorce?   “Nothing is stronger than personal witness. If we live our faith as Christian families with generosity and joy, it will naturally attract others. If we don't, no amount of beautiful words or harsh judgments will substitute for that witness. Today's crisis of the family, and all the problems that go with it, shouldn't surprise anyone. In large measure, we created the tragedy ourselves by a combination of poor catechesis of engaged and married couples and by our own poor example of married and family life. The Church needs to do a much better job of evangelizing men and women called to marriage and helping them live out their vocation joyfully. Where divorce does occur, we need to help divorced persons continue on the Christian path, reminding them that God’s love for them endures even in the face of loneliness or abandonment. And we especially need to support the children of divorce, who often end up literally on the margins, caught between the respective lives of their separated parents.”  One and a half years into Francis’ pontificate, what - in your opinion – has been the most important message the new Pope has tried to get across?   “I think he sees the mission of the Church through the eyes of the global South.  That's where the vast majority of Catholics live. So he has different experiences from the Catholic world in the North and a different perspective in weighing the needs of the Church. Also he's clearly a very intelligent man, but he radiates a mixture of simplicity and joy that people find new and very magnetic.”  Why does it seem so difficult, for certain Catholic groups in the United States, to syntonize themselves with the message of the Pope?   “ He's new: not just new in the papal ministry, but new in his style of leadership and in his personality. That's a blessing, but new things make people nervous. Eight hundred years ago, the founder of my own religious order, St. Francis, made a lot of people very nervous. It's human nature. What your readers need to understand is that the American media play a very large role in shaping the perceptions of this pontificate, and not always in service to the truth. What some in the media call the "conservative" wing of the Church in the United States is very different from what “conservative” can mean in other parts of the world. In the United States, the label “conservative” is often used to demean and dismiss committed, faithful Catholics who support the Church’s right to religious freedom, and her teaching on issues of life, marriage and family. Many Catholics who are fully committed to helping the poor, nonetheless get labeled as “conservative” simply because they embrace the full range of Church teaching on unpopular moral issues.  These Catholics are not upset with the Pope: that would be a contradiction of their own basic beliefs. But they do react to media stories that create the impression of a revolution in Catholic teaching.  And some people in the media, and also within the Church, want that revolution to happen. I suspect that the pope understands the nature of media power very well. In the book On Heaven and Earth, the Holy Father, then Archbishop of Buenos Aires, speaks of the way the media often distorted his teaching on moral values by giving it a partisan political meaning. He also notes that the media often shape their coverage in ways that betray their own particular prejudices – coverage that favors a stress on conflict rather than unity.  He sums up the problem of media bias very nicely in that book, and many U.S. bishops have had similar experiences.”Is it possible to be pro-life and at the same time not to be pro-poor? Do you think that the social message of Pope Francis, in accordance with the entire tradition of the Social Doctrine of the Catholic Church (expressed for example in Pius XI’s encyclical Quadragesimo anno, in which Pope Ratti spoke about the “international imperialism of the money”), needs to be assimilated further in the North American Church?   “I've said many times over many years that if we ignore the poor, we will go to hell: literally. We ignore the needs of the poor at the cost of our own souls. Unless it's checked by a vigorous religious faith, North American culture very easily becomes destructively selfish and hyper-materialistic. This is a paradox, because the American people are also, at the same time, very generous. They’re routinely listed as world leaders in surveys of individual generosity, both in terms of time and money donated to charitable causes. A great many American Catholics support Pope Francis’ message on the issue of poverty. When he highlights the suffering of the poor, the Holy Father ministers not just to the practical needs of people in material poverty, but to the moral needs of people in spiritual poverty. So to answer your question more directly: No, it isn't possible to be prolife and simultaneously forget the cries of the poor. But I would add one more thought:  Evangelium Vitae  - "the Gospel of Life" - is every bit as much a social encyclical as Quadragesimo Anno. Defending the unborn child is a vital part of the social doctrine of the Church.  And the social doctrine of the Church is incomplete without actively working to defend the unborn child legally and to support women and families materially. The unborn child is also part of the poor, and often the poorest and most exploited of the poor. In the United States in 2011 more than 1 million children were aborted.  In the same time frame, about 3,000 people died of malnutrition. Each of these deaths is a tragedy that demands our attention, and we all have the duty to look beyond our own national borders to the needs of social justice globally. But in the U.S. Catholic context, more than 300 times more deaths occur every year from abortion than from hunger. That’s why abortion and other “sanctity of life” issues remain so highly charged in my country.”   What has your pastoral experience - in Philadelphia - been of Francis’ teaching on the need to go to the geographical and existential peripheries?   “Pope Francis talks about these issues in a fresh and winning way, free of fear, that helps Catholics see the world through new eyes. But his basic message isn't new. It's the same Gospel preached by all his predecessors. For 200 years the Church in Philadelphia has been serving the poor in dozens of different ways - education, nutrition, service to the homeless, the elderly, the disabled - and these ministries have transformed hundreds of thousands of lives for the better. We can always do the work of the Gospel even better. We need to constantly examine our actions to ensure that we never grow cold in our zeal or effectiveness. Immigration justice is especially important for the invisible millions of undocumented immigrants in my country, and many of them are Catholic. But in working harder to serve the needs of the marginalized, we also need to take heart from the good work already being done.  The Church in Philadelphia has been reaching out to people on the margins for a very long time.  Our people have generous hearts, and that isn't going to change. I think the Holy Father will see that when he visits. And I know that he’ll be warmly welcomed and very well loved by the Church and the city he finds here.” Read more

2014-11-28T11:11:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Nov 28, 2014 / 04:11 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Advocates pushing for the U.S. State Department to demand the release of Christen pastor Saeed Abedini – a U.S. citizen imprisoned in Iran – remained hopeful after Iranian nuclear t... Read more



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