Showing posts with label Benedict XVI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benedict XVI. Show all posts

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Apparition at Blue Cross last night, Friday August 17th 2012 with Ivan visionary and Medjugorje Youth Prayer Group

Tonight, Our Lady came very happy and joyful and as she does in her other meetings with her, she greeted us all with the greeting, Praised be Jesus my dear children.

Our Lady prayed over all of us here with her hands extended and especially over the sick that were present. After this, Our Lady Blessed all of us with her motherly blessing and blessed all the articles that we brought for her to bless. After this, Our Lady said:

"Dear Children,
Again today, in a special way, call you tp pray for my priests, my beloved ones. To pray for the Bishops and for the Holy Father. Pray dear children, for my shepherds. Pray more than ever before. Your mother prays together with you andshe is with you, therefore rise up in prayer and pray together with me for my intentions. Thank you dear children for having responded to my call."


After this I recommended all of you, your needs, your intentions and your families and in a special way for the sick. Our Lady then continued to pray for everyone here with extended hands, and especially she prayed for she alone for
priests who are present here and in general for priests. And after this she left, she left in the sign of a light and the cross with "go in peace my dear children."

Please, then, let us pray like never before for our priests, Bishops and the
Holy Father, all of Our Lady's shepherds, her beloved ones.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Children's book offers Pope's teachings on Jesus and 'first companions' :: Catholic News Agency (CNA)


.- A new children's book has been published under Pope Benedict XVI's name. It presents a collection of the Holy Father's descriptions of Jesus' relationship with his "first companions," taken from his catecheses at general audiences over the past five years.
The illustrated book titled "Gli Amici di Gesu" (The Friends of Jesus) was released in spring of 2010 by the Milanese publishing house Piccola Casa Editrice in Italian. Painted depictions from the hand of Franco Vignazia accompany the stories of Jesus and 14 of his "friends."
The characters in the book include each of the original 12 apostles, including Judas Iscariot; Matthias, who replaced Judas after the betrayal, and St. Paul.
The 48-page volume produced for the youngest of readers is a "route that takes the reader to the origins of the Church, through the events of the first people who found Jesus and became his friends," according to the publishing house.
Fr. Julian Carron, president of the Fraternity of Communion and Liberation, says in the preface of book that, through the stories, "The Pope takes us by the hand and accompanies us to discover who were the first companions of Christ, how they found him and how they were conquered by him until they decided that they would never abandon him again."
Lorenzo Murnigotti, editorial coordinator of the Piccola Casa Editrice publishing house, told CNA that it reproduces Pope Benedict's perspective of the most significant moments between them and the Teacher, dedicating each of them three to four pages.
The publisher, he explained, came up with the idea to compile the Pope's descriptions for a young audience after they noticed that references to the apostles during his traditional Wednesday catecheses were also directed to children.
Through an agreement with the Vatican's publishing house, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, they were able to produce the book with the name of the author, "Benedetto XVI," on the cover.
Mr. Murnigotti hoped that English and Spanish versions would be published within the next year and added that, if given the opportunity, they will continue to print works by the Pope "very willingly."

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Pope Picks Religious Freedom as Theme for 2011 Peace Message

13 Jul 10 – RV) «Religious freedom, the path to peace». This is the theme chosen by Pope Benedict XVI for the celebration of the 2011 World Day of Peace. The World Day of Peace – celebrated since 1968 on the first day of every year – will be therefore dedicated to the theme of religious freedom. As is well known, in many parts of the world there exist various forms of restrictions or denials of religious freedom, from discrimination and marginalization based on religion, to acts of violence against religious minorities.
Religious freedom is rooted in the equal and inherent dignity of man, it is oriented toward
the search for «unchangeable truth», and thus can rightly be presented as the «freedom of
freedoms». As such, religious freedom is authentically realized when it is experienced as the
coherent search for the Truth and the truth of man.
This notion of religious freedom offers us a fundamental criterion for discerning the
phenomenon of religion and its manifestations. It necessarily rejects the «religiosity» of
fundamentalism, and the manipulation and the instrumentalization of the truth and of the truth
of man. Since such distortions are opposed to the dignity of man and to the search for truth, they
cannot be considered as religious freedom. Rather, an authentic notion of religious freedom
offers a profound vision of this fundamental human right, one which broadens the horizons of
«humanity» and «freedom» of man, allowing for the establishment of a deep relationship with
oneself, with the other and with the world. Religious freedom is a freedom in this respect for
human dignity and life.
As the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council emphasized: «Man has been made by God to
participate in this law, with the result that, under the gentle disposition of divine providence, he
can come to perceive ever more fully the truth that is unchanging. Wherefore every man has the
duty , and therefore the right, to seek the truth in matters religious in order that he may with
prudence form for himself right and true judgments of conscience, under use of all suitable
means» (Declaration Dignitatis Humanae, 3). The vocation to believe in God, recognized as a
fundamental human right, is a pre-requisite integral human development (Caritas in Veritate,
29), and a condition for the realization of the common good and the promotion of peace in the
world.
As Pope Benedict XVI affirmed during his visit to the General Assembly of the United
Nations: «Human rights, of course, must include the right to religious freedom, understood as
the expression of a dimension that is at once individual and communitarian – a vision that brings
out the unity of the person while clearly distinguishing between the dimension of the citizen and
that of the believer» (Address to the General Assembly of the United Nations, 18 April 2008).
The theme chosen for the 2011 World Day of Peace represents an accomplishment of a «path
to peace» which Benedict XVI has invited the human family to consider in depth on several
occasions. Since 2006, his Message for the World Day of Peace has focused on important
dimensions of the truth (In Truth, Peace, 2006), the dignity of the human person (The Human
Person, the Heart of Peace, 2007), the unity of the human family (The Human Family, a
Community of Peace, 2008), the fight against poverty (Fighting Poverty to Build Peace, 2009),
and finally care for creation (If you Want to Cultivate Peace, Protect Creation, 2010). This
journey has its roots in the vocation of man to truth (capax Dei) and, having as a «polestar»
human dignity, leads to the freedom to seek the truth.
Today there are many areas of the world in which forms of restrictions and limitations to
religious freedom persist, both where communities of believers are a minority, and where
communities of believers are not a minority, and where more sophisticated forms of discrimination
and marginalization exist, on the cultural level and in the spheres of public civil and political
participation. «It is inconceivable» – remarked Benedict XVI – «that believers should have to
suppress a part of themselves – their faith – in order to be active citizens. It should never be
necessary to deny God in order to enjoy one’s rights. The rights associated with religion are all
the more in need of protection if they are considered to clash with a prevailing secular ideology
or with majority religious positions of an exclusive nature» (Address to the United Nations, cit.).
Man cannot be «fragmented», and separated from what he believes, because that in which
he believes has an impact on his life and on his person. «Refusal to recognize the contribution
to society that is rooted in the religious dimension and in the quest for the Absolute – by its
nature, expressing communion between persons – would effectively privilege an individualistic
approach, and would fragment the unity of the person» (Address to the United Nations, cit.). It
is for this reason that: «Religious Freedom is the Path to Peace».

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Benedict XVI to the bishops

Vatican City, June 21, 2010.

As teachers of the faith, bishops have the task of presenting the truth to the faithful, and of helping them to discover the joy of being loved by God, says Benedict XVI.

The Pope said this Saturday upon receiving in audience the bishops of Eastern Region II of the Brazilian episcopal conference, at the conclusion of their five-yearly "ad limina" visit.

"In as much as teachers and doctors of the faith," he said, "you have the mission to teach with audacity the truth that must be believed and lived, presenting it in an authentic way."

"Therefore, help the faithful entrusted to your pastoral care to discover the joy of the faith, the joy of being loved personally by God, who offered His Son for our salvation," the Pontiff added.

He continued: "To believe consists above all in abandoning oneself to this God who knows and loves us personally, accepting the truth that he revealed in Jesus Christ with the attitude that leads us to trust in grace.

"Be able to infuse this trust in your people, so that the faith is always protected, defended and transmitted in its purity and integrity."

Benedict XVI said that bishops are the "administrators of the supreme priesthood," and that they "must truly make the liturgy an epiphany of the mystery, that is, expression of the genuine nature of the Church, which actively offers worship to God through Christ in the Holy Spirit."

Additionally, the Pontiff noted the "responsibility of the celebration of the Eucharist," stressing the importance of providing it "so that the faithful can access the Lord's table, especially on Sunday," and the need to "be promoters and animators of prayer in the human city, often agitated, noisy and forgetful of God."

"You must create places and occasions where, in silence, in listening to God, in personal and community prayer, man can find and have a living experience of Jesus Christ who reveals the authentic face of the Father," he said. "It is necessary that parishes and shrines, realms of education and suffering, families, become places of communion with the Lord."

The Pope also asked the prelates "to promote the participation of all the faithful in the building of the Church, governing with the heart of a humble servant and affectionate pastors, looking to the glory of God and the salvation of souls."

In virtue of the task of governance, he said, the bishop is "also called to judge and discipline the life of the people of God entrusted to his pastoral care, through laws, directives and suggestions, as established in the universal discipline of the Church."

This "right and duty" is very important, he added, "so that the diocesan community will remain united in its interior and walk in sincere communion of faith, love and discipline with the Bishop of Rome and with the whole Church."

"Hence, do not tire of nourishing in the faithful the sense of belonging to the Church and the joy of fraternal communion," he exhorted.

The Holy Father added that the bishop's governance will be fruitful pastorally "only if it enjoys the support of good moral credibility, which stems from the holiness of his life."

"Moulded interiorly by the Holy Spirit, may each one of you come to be 'everything for everyone,' proposing the truth of the faith, celebrating the sacraments of our sanctification and giving witness of the Lord's charity," he added.

"Receive with open heart all those who call at your door," the Holy Father concluded. "Counsel them, comfort them and support them on the path of God, seeking to guide all of them to that unity in the faith and in love of which, by the will of the Lord, you must be visible principle and basis in your dioceses."

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Il Pontefice lancia da Fatima l’appello: siate fedeli, non cedete alle lusinghe del Maligno

Solo un clero «fedele» e saldo davanti «alle lusinghe del Maligno» può far uscire la Chiesa dalla crisi-pedofilia che sta travolgendo il mondo cattolico. A Fatima Benedetto XVI consacra solennemente i preti alla Madonna e durante i vespri nella chiesa della Trinità affida al cielo il sacerdozio minacciato dal «terrificante» scandalo degli abusi.
«La principale preoccupazione di ogni cristiano, specialmente della persona consacrata e del ministro dell’altare, deve essere la fedeltà, la lealtà alla propria vocazione, come discepolo che vuole seguire il Signore - ammonisce il Pontefice -. In quest’anno sacerdotale scenda sui sacerdoti una grazia abbondante perché vivano la gioia della consacrazione e testimonino la fedeltà sacerdotale fondata sulla fedeltà di Cristo».
E’ dalla purificazione, infatti, che inizia la risalita. L’invocazione di Joseph Ratzinger risuona nei placidi luoghi delle apparizioni mariane come un monito ancora più duro. «Quanto grande è oggi il bisogno della testimonianza dei sacerdoti - avverte il Papa -. Molti dei nostri fratelli vivono come se non ci fosse un Aldilà, senza preoccuparsi della propria salvezza eterna. Gli uomini sono chiamati ad aderire alla conoscenza e all'amore di Dio e la Chiesa ha la missione di aiutarli in questa vocazione». «La Chiesa si rinnovi e torni la calma dopo la tempesta». Davanti alla statua di Fatima, Benedetto ringrazia la Vergine per aver salvato Wojtyla dalla pallottola di Agca. Portando «le sofferenze dell’umanità ferita» si definisce «un figlio in visita a sua madre» e prega per la purificazione del clero.
Alle diocesi e agli ordini religiosi il Pontefice chiede una «particolare attenzione alle situazioni di un certo indebolimento degli ideali sacerdotali». Il Concilio Vaticano II ha evitato «vicoli ciechi ed errori» e ora ai fedeli spetta la difesa delle proprie radici culturali e spirituali. Sull’aereo che martedì lo ha portato in Portogallo, Benedetto XVI ha inserito i crimini dei preti pedofili tra le sofferenze della Chiesa annunciate dalla Madonna ai tre pastorelli e ieri, proprio a Fatima, ha tracciato la condanna inequivocabile della condotta immorale del clero, stigmatizzando il «fatto di dedicarsi ad attività che non si accordano integralmente con ciò che è proprio di un ministro di Gesù Cristo». Il Pontefice affida ai vescovi e a tutti i sacerdoti il compito di vigilare su chi tradisce il proprio dovere di fronte a Dio e all'umanità. «E' il momento di assumere il fermo atteggiamento del fratello che aiuta il proprio fratello a restare in piedi», scandisce nel silenzio generale di una platea consapevole della gravità del momento e della delicatezza delle parole pronunciate. Controllo nelle comunità e prevenzione anti-abusi nei seminari.
Il Papa si rivolge in particolare ai giovani che si preparano a diventare preti. I seminaristi vanno incoraggiati a «verificare bene le intenzioni e le motivazioni, dedicandosi con animo forte e spirito generoso alla formazione». Il compito è troppo gravoso per le sole forze umane, perciò Benedetto XVI trasforma la sua lucida analisi in preghiera a Dio affinché «la Chiesa possa essere rinnovata da sacerdoti santi trasfigurati dalla grazia di colui cha fa nuove tutte le cose». Ai preti trasmette un appello accorato: «Non venite mai meno alla vocazione a non cedere ai nostri egoismi alle lusinghe del mondo e alle suggestioni del Maligno». La «tolleranza zero» di Benedetto XVI contro la pedofilia è obbligatoria per gli episcopati nazionali (rimozione immediata del sacerdote, denuncia alle autorità civili, rapida riduzione allo stato laicale, abolizione nel diritto canonico della prescrizione per gli abusi sessuali sui minori). A conclusione della giornata, il cardinale Bertone ha celebrato un’affollata messa alla spianata del Santuario. «Nella Chiesa ci sono forze potenti che non vogliono la verità sugli abusi - commenta l’arcivescovo di Dublino, Martin -. Norme severe a protezione dell’infanzia non sono ancora applicate con rigore».

© Copyright La Stampa, 13 maggio 2010 consultabile online anche qui.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Pontiff grieves with Polish people over crash victims :: Catholic News Agency (CNA)

167ba364.jpg image by lancero444V.- After the Regina Coeli prayer on Sunday, the Holy Father repeated his condolences to the "beloved Polish nation" for the deaths of President Lech Kaczynski and so many others in a plane crash on Saturday. The Pope assured the country of his prayers and entrusted the victims to the "merciful Lord of life."

"As we all know, yesterday saw the tragic airplane accident in Smolensk (Russia) in which the President of Poland, Mr. Lech Kaczynski, his wife, various high authorities of the Polish State and all of the delegation, including the Military Ordinary Archbishop perished," the Pope said.
"In expressing my profound condolences, I assure my heartfelt prayer of homage for the victims and of support for the beloved Polish nation," he added.
The Polish leader and delegation were on their way to the village of Katyn to commemorate, in a ceremony with Russian officials, the 70th anniversary of the assassination of more than 20,000 Polish military officers in World War II.
It was confirmed on Sunday that 97 people died in the crash.
In his individual language greetings to pilgrims, the Pope said, in Polish, that it was "with deep sorrow" that he found out about the accident. Remembering the victims and the reason for their visit to Russia, he entrusted "all to the merciful Lord of life."
"I do it," he told the audience, "uniting myself with the pilgrims gathered from the Sanctuary of Lagiewniki and with all those devoted to the Mercy of God in the entire world."
Citizens of Poland observed two minutes of silence on Sunday to remember the victims.

Thousands visit Shroud of Turin on opening weekend :: Catholic News Agency (CNA)


.- Saturday morning saw the first visitors enter the Cathedral of Turin, taking advantage of a rare opportunity to view the ancient relic at its first exposition in close to a decade. The Holy Father welcomed the exposition as "an extraordinary call back towards the mystery of the suffering of Christ."
The first public exposition of the Shroud since 2000 offers a "path of faith and prayer" for the more than 1.5 million pilgrims and visitors that will see it, according to the Cardinal Archbishop of Turin, Severino Poletto, who celebrated the opening Mass on Saturday afternoon along with the bishops of Italy's Piedmont region.
The Shroud of Turin was seen by thousands of people on the exposition's first day. Among those able to attend for veneration on the opening morning were local civil and religious authorities, journalists and the 4,000 volunteers who will provide assistance for the duration of the showing, from April 10 to May 23.
Following afternoon Mass, 12,000 pilgrims with reserved tickets were able to file through the Cathedral for a prayer and a glimpse at the burial cloth believed to bear the image of Jesus' crucified body.
Pope Benedict XVI said on Sunday that, "God willing," he will also be among the pilgrims to pay his respects during a visit he has planned for May 2.
He noted his happiness at the event after the Regina Caeli prayer at noon on Sunday, saying that it is "once again provoking a vast movement of pilgrims, but also studies, reflections and most of all an extraordinary call back towards the mystery of the suffering of Christ."
The Holy Father also expressed his wish that "this act of veneration may help all to seek the Face of God, that was the intimate aspiration of the Apostles, as well as ours."

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

TELEGRAM FOR VICTIMS OF BOMB ATTACKS IN MOSCOW


VATICAN CITY, 31 MAR 2010 (VIS) - Made public yesterday afternoon was a telegram of condolence sent by the Pope to Dimitry Medvedev, president of the Russian Federation, for the victims of last Monday's bomb attacks on the Moscow underground.

  "Having learned the news of the attacks on the Moscow underground in which numerous people lost their lives, I wish to manifest my profound sorrow and firm condemnation for those barbaric acts of violence, and to send an expression of my solidarity, spiritual closeness and condolences to the families of the victims. With assurances of my fervent prayers for the lives so abruptly cut short, and while invoking heavenly consolation for those who mourn their tragic loss, I readily send my blessings and greetings, with a particular thought for the injured".


CITTA' DEL VATICANO, 31 MAR. 2010 (VIS). Nel pomeriggio di ieri è stato  pubblicato il testo del telegramma di cordoglio per le  vittime dei due attentati compiuti nella metropolitana di Mosca, la mattina di lunedì scorso, e fatto pervenire dal Santo Padre Benedetto XVI al Presidente della Federazione Russa, Dmitrij Anatolevich Medvedev.

  "Appresa la notizia degli attentati verificatisi nella metropolitana di Mosca, dove numerose persone hanno perso la vita, esprimo profondo dolore e ferma riprovazione per gli efferati atti di violenza, desiderando far pervenire i sentimenti della mia solidarietà, vicinanza spirituale e le mie condoglianze ai familiari delle vittime. Assicuro fervide preghiere di suffragio per le vite stroncate, e mentre invoco celesti consolazioni per quanti ne piangono la tragica dipartita, volentieri invio il mio benedicente saluto, con particolare pensiero a quanti sono rimasti feriti".

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Holy Father encourages youth to 'discover their vocation to love


.- In a message for the inaugaration of the 10th International Youth Forum, the Holy Father reminded the 300 young participants from around the globe that "Learning to Love," the theme of the event, is "central in faith and in the Christian life."
The forum, which runs Monday to Friday of this week in Rocca di Papa, Italy, offers sessions on love in several different dimensions, including as a vocation, a life choice, and regarding sexuality.
"As you know," wrote Benedict XVI, "the starting point of each reflection on love is the very mystery of God, since the heart of Christian revelation is this: Deus caritas est (God is love)."
The Pope continued, adding that it is in man's likeness to God that we understand the "profound identity of the person" and "his or her vocation to love.
"Man is made for love; his life is fully realized only if he has lived in love."
Benedict XVI exhorted the youth to "discover their vocation to love" which is "the key of all existence."
The Pope paid particular attention to vocations to the priesthood and to matrimony in his message. Of the priesthood, he wrote that "people consecrated to celibacy are also an eloquent sign of the love of God for the world and of the vocation to love God over all things."
Speaking of the "greatness and beauty" of matrimony, he underscored that "the relation between man and woman reflects divine love in a totally special way; therefore the conjugal bond assumes an immense dignity."
The forum will also include addreses by Archbishop Carlo Caffarra of Bologna, noted Jesuit psychologist Msgr. Tony Anatrella, and French secretary of the Pontifical Council for the Family, Bishop Jean Laffitte.
Married couples from five different continents will also be on hand to offer their perspectives on Christian matrimony.
On Thursday evening, participants will answer the Pope's open invitation to youth to go to St. Peter's Square to celebrate World Youth Day 2010. Then, on Palm Sunday they will be in attendance at Mass presided over by the Pope.
The International Youth Forum is held every three years.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER BENEDICT XVI ON THE OCCASION OF THE TWENTY-FIFTH WORLD YOUTH DAY (MARCH 28, 2010)

Good Teacher, what must I do
to inherit eternal life?
” (Mk 10:17)



Dear Friends,
This year marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the inauguration of World Youth Day in response to the desire of the Venerable John Paul II for an annual gathering of young people of faith from throughout the world. It was a prophetic initiative that has borne abundant fruits, enabling the new generations of Christians to meet one another, to listen to the Word of God, to discover the beauty of the Church, and to have a deep experience of faith. This led many of them in turn to decide to give themselves completely to Christ.
The present 25th World Youth Day is one step along the way leading to the next international encounter of young people, scheduled for Madrid in August 2011. I hope that many of you will be there to experience this grace-filled event.
To prepare ourselves for this celebration, I would like to offer you some reflections on this year’s theme: “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” (Mk 10:17). It is drawn from Gospel passage where Jesus meets the rich young man. It is a theme that Pope John Paul IIreflected on in 1985, in a very beautiful Letter, the first ever addressed to young people.
1. Jesus meets a young man
As [Jesus] was setting out on a journey” – the Gospel of Saint Mark tells us – “a man ran up, knelt down before him, and asked him, ‘Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?’ Jesus answered him, ‘Why do you call me good? No one is good but God alone. You know the commandments: You shall not kill; you shall not commit adultery; you shall not steal; you shall not bear false witness; you shall not defraud; honour your father and your mother.’ He replied and said to him, ‘Teacher, all of these I have observed from my youth’. Jesus, looking at him, loved him and said to him, ‘You are lacking in one thing. Go, sell what you have, and give to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me’. At that statement his face fell, and he went away sad, for he had many possessions” (Mk 10: 17-22).
This Gospel passage shows us clearly how much Jesus was concerned with young people, with all of you, with your expectations and your hopes, and it shows how much he wants to meet you personally and to engage each of you in conversation. Christ interrupted his journey to stop and answer the young man’s question. He gave his full attention to this youth who was moved with an ardent desire to speak to the “good Teacher” and to learn from him how to journey through life. My Predecessor used this Gospel passage to urge each of you to “develop your own conversation with Christ – a conversation which is of fundamental and essential importance for a young person” (Letter to Young People, No. 2).
2. Jesus looked at him and loved him
In his Gospel account, Saint Mark emphasises that “Jesus, looking at him, loved him” (Mk 10: 21). The Lord’s gaze is at the heart of this very special encounter and the whole Christian experience. To be sure, Christianity is not primarily a moral code. It is an experience of Jesus Christ who loves each of us personally, young and old, poor and rich. He loves us even when we turn away from him.
When Pope John Paul II commented on this scene, he turned to you and added: “May you experience a look like that! May you experience the truth that he, Christ, looks upon you with love!” (Letter to Young People, No. 7). It was love, revealed on the Cross so completely and totally, that led Saint Paul to write in amazement: “He loved me and gave himself up for me” (Gal 2:20). Pope John Paul II wrote that “the awareness that the Father has always loved us in his Son, that Christ always loves each of us, becomes a solid support for our whole human existence” (ibid.). It enables us to overcome all our trials: the realization of our sins, our sufferings and our moments of discouragement.
In this love we find the source of all Christian life and the basic reason for evangelization: if we have really encountered Jesus, we cannot help but bear witness to him before those who have not yet met his gaze!
3. Finding a plan in life
If we look at the young man in the Gospel, we can see that he is much like each of you. You too are rich in talents, energy, dreams and hopes. These are resources which you have in abundance! Your age itself is a great treasure, not only for yourselves but for others too, for the Church and for the world.
The rich young man asks Jesus: “What must I do?” The time of life which you are going through is one of discovery: discovery of the gifts which God has bestowed upon you and your own responsibilities. It is also a time when you are making crucial choices about how you will live your lives. So it is a time to think about the real meaning of life and to ask yourselves: “Am I satisfied with my life? Is there something missing?”
Like the young man in the Gospel story, perhaps you too are experiencing situations of uncertainty, anxiety or suffering, and are yearning for something more than a life of mediocrity. It makes you ask yourselves: “What makes a life successful? What do I need to do? How should I plan my life? “What must I do for my life to have full value and full meaning?” (ibid., No. 3).
Do not be afraid to ask yourselves these questions! Far from troubling you, they are giving voice to the great aspirations that you hold in your hearts. That is why you should listen to them. The answers you give to them must not be superficial, but capable of satisfying the longing you truly feel for life and happiness.
In order to discover the life-project that will make you completely happy, listen to God. He has a loving plan for each one of you. You can confidently ask him: “Lord, what is your plan, as Creator and Father, for my life? What is your will? I want to carry it out”. You can be certain that he will answer you. Do not be afraid of his answer! “For God is greater than our hearts and knows everything” (1 Jn 3:20).
4. Come and follow me!
Jesus invites the rich young man to do much more than merely satisfy his aspirations and personal plans. He says to him: “Come and follow me!” The Christian vocation derives from a love-filled invitation made by the Lord, and it can be lived out only by a love-filled response: “Jesus invites his disciples to give their lives completely, without calculation or personal interest, with unreserved trust in God. The saints accept this demanding invitation and set out with humble docility in following the crucified and risen Christ. Their perfection, in the logic of faith which is at times humanly incomprehensible, consists in no longer putting themselves at the centre but in choosing to go against the tide, by living in line with the Gospel” (Benedict XVI, Homily at Canonizations, 11 October 2009).
Following the example of so many of Christ’s disciples, may you too, dear friends, joyfully welcome his invitation to follow him, and so live your lives intensely and fruitfully in this world. Through Baptism, in fact, he calls each of us to follow him concretely, to love him above all things and to serve him in our brothers and sisters. The rich young man, unfortunately, did not accept Jesus’ invitation and he went away saddened. He did not find the courage to leave behind his material goods in order to find the far greater good proposed by Jesus.
The sadness experienced by the rich young man in the Gospel story is the sadness that arises in the heart of all those who lack the courage to follow Christ and to make the right choice. Yet it is never too late to respond to him!
Jesus never tires of turning to us with love and calling us to be his disciples; to some, however, he proposes an even more radical choice. In this Year for Priests, I would like to urge young men and boys to consider if the Lord is inviting them to a greater gift, along the path of priestly ministry. I ask them to be willing to embrace with generosity and enthusiasm this sign of a special love and to embark on the necessary path of discernment with the help of a priest or a spiritual director. Do not be afraid, then, dear young men and women, if the Lord is calling you to the religious, monastic or missionary life, or a life of special consecration: He knows how to bestow deep joy upon those who respond to him with courage!
I also invite those who feel called to marriage to embrace this vocation with faith, working to lay a solid foundation for a love that is great, faithful and receptive to the gift of life. This vocation is a treasure and grace for society and for the Church.
5. Directed towards eternal life
“What must I do to inherit eternal life?”. This question which the young man in the Gospel asks may seem far from the concerns of many young people today. As my Predecessor observed, “Are we not the generation whose horizon of existence is completely filled by the world and temporal progress? (Letter to Young People, No. 5). Yet, the question of “eternal life” returns at certain painful moments of our lives, as when we suffer the loss of someone close to us or experience failure.
But what is the “eternal life” to which the rich young man is referring? Jesus describes it to us when he says to his disciples: “But I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy away from you” (Jn 16: 22). These words point to an exciting possibility of unending happiness, to the joy of being surrounded by God’s love for ever.
Wondering about the definitive future awaiting each of us gives full meaning to our existence. It directs our life plan towards horizons that are not limited and fleeting, but broad and deep, and which motivate us to love this world which God loves so deeply, to devote ourselves to its development with the freedom and joy born of faith and hope. Against these horizons we do not see earthly reality as absolute, and we sense that God is preparing a greater future for us. In this way we can say with Saint Augustine: “Let us long for our home on high, let us pine for our home in heaven, let us feel that we are strangers here” (Tractates on the Gospel of Saint John, Homily 35:9). His gaze fixed on eternal life, Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati, who died in 1925 at the age of 24, could say: “I want to live and not simply exist!” On a photograph taken while mountain-climbing, he wrote to a friend: “To the heights”, referring not only to Christian perfection but also to eternal life.
Dear young friends, I urge you to keep this perspective in developing your life plan: we are called to eternity. God created us to be with him, for ever. This will help you to make meaningful decisions and live a beautiful life.
6. The commandments, the way to authentic love
Jesus reminded the rich young man that obedience to the Ten Commandments is necessary in order to “inherit eternal life”. The Commandments are essential points of reference if we are to live in love, to distinguish clearly between good and evil, and to build a life plan that is solid and enduring. Jesus is asking you too whether you know the Commandments, whether you are trying to form your conscience according to God’s law, and putting the Commandments into practice.
Needless to say, these are questions that go against the grain in today’s world, which advocates a freedom detached from values, rules and objective norms, and which encourages people to refuse to place limits on their immediate desires. But this is not the way to true freedom. It leds people to become enslaved to themselves, to their immediate desires, to idols like power, money, unbridled pleasure and the entrapments of the world. It stifles their inborn vocation to love.
God gives us the Commandments because he wants to teach us true freedom. He wants to build a Kingdom of love, justice and peace together with us. When we listen to the Commandments and put them into practice, it does not mean that we become estranged from ourselves, but that we find the way to freedom and authentic love. The commandments do not place limits on happiness, but rather show us how to find it. At the beginning of the conversation with the rich young man, Jesus reminds him that the law which God gives is itself good, because “God is good”.
7. We need you
Being young today means having to face many problems due to unemployment and the lack of clear ideas and real possibilities for the future. At times you can have the impression of being powerless in the face of current crises and their repercussions. Despite these difficulties, do not let yourselves be discouraged, and do not give up on your dreams! Instead, cultivate all the more your heart’s great desire for fellowship, justice and peace. The future is in the hands of those who know how to seek and find sound reasons for life and hope. If you are willing, the future lies in your hands, because the talents and gifts that the Lord has placed in your hearts, shaped by an encounter with Christ, can bring real hope to the world! It is faith in his love that, by making you stronger and more generous, will give you courage to face serenely the path of life and to take on family and professional responsibilities. Try hard to build your future by paying serious attention to your personal development and your studies, so that you will be able to serve the common good competently and generously.
In my recent Encyclical Letter on integral human development, Caritas in Veritate, I listed some of the great and urgent challenges essential for the life of our world: the use of the earth’s resources and respect for ecology, the fair distribution of goods and control of financial mechanisms, solidarity with poor countries within our human family, the fight against world hunger, greater respect for the dignity of human labour, service to the culture of life, the building of peace between peoples, interfaith dialogue, and the proper use of social communications.
These are challenges to which you are called to respond in order to build a more just and fraternal world. They are challenges that call for a demanding and passionate life plan, in which you use all your many gifts in accordance with the plan that God has for each of you. It is not a matter of accompanishing heroic or extraordinary acts. It means allowing your talents and abilities to flourish, and trying to make constant progress in faith and love.
In this Year for Priests, I ask you to learn about the lives of the saints, and in particular of those saints who were priests. You will see how God was their guide and how they made their way through each day in faith, in hope and in love. Christ is calling each of you to work with him and to take up your responsibilities in order to build the civilization of love. If you follow his Word, it will light up your path and lead you to high goals that will give joy and full meaning to your lives.
May the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church, watch over and protect you. With the assurance of my prayers, and with great affection, I send my blessing to all of you.
From the Vatican, 22 February 2010

BENEDICTUS PP. XVI

Monday, March 22, 2010

The largest Croatian Easter eggs, "Pisanica from the heart in Medjugorje

Largest Croatian Easter egg, “Easter egg from the heart”, 2.05 m tall, 1.5 m wide, with a stand that is 120 kg heavy, gift of Koprivnica – Krizevci County, was officially exposed in front of the church of St. James in Medjugorje. This event was even more beautiful thanks to singing of Children Choir “Doves of Peace” and its leader Sr. Slavica Kozul from Medjugorje and Cultural Club from Koprinica.
At the beginning of event Ivo Jerkic, Mayor of Citluk, gave a talk to everybody present. He said how he hopes that this “Easter egg from the heart” will be sign of friendship, that through Medjugorje it will send message of peace. Head of Koprivnica – Krizevci County, Darko Koren, said that project “Easter egg from the heart” was started in 2007, with desire that large Easter egg, symbol of friendship, love and joy of Easter is taken all over Croatia and rest of the world. These large Easter eggs were painted by naïve expression artists Djuro Jakovic, Drago Zufika, Josip Tot and Drago Kovacic. All together they gave life to these Easter eggs, as well as recognizable note of everyday life and tradition of Podravina region.
Fr. Petar Vlasic, as Medjugorje parish priest and host, greeted everybody present and said: “This celebration and public exhibition of large Easter egg happens exactly at the time when Bjelovar and Krizevci, two Croatian towns, become even more related with foundation of new Bjelovar – Krizevci Diocese. This large Easter egg witnesses richness of Croatian expression, since Croatian people for many centuries grew into reality of our faith, into Jesus Christ, Crucified and Risen.” 
Some of the most famous naïve expression artists were born in the region of Koprivnica – Krizevci County.
On Wednesday, March 17th 2010, Easter egg was also given as a gift to Holy Father, Benedict XVI.
This Easter egg will remain in Medjugorje, in front of the church of St. James until Easter. 

medjugorje.hr

Saturday, March 20, 2010

PASTORAL LETTER OF THE HOLY FATHER POPE BENEDICT XVI TO THE CATHOLICS OF IRELAND


Translation of the Video in Italian




















l Papa e la crisi degli abusi
Cari amici, sono il Padre Federico Lombardi, Direttore della Sala Stampa vaticana, sono con voi per presentarvi un documento del Papa molto atteso.
La lettera del Papa ai cattolici dell’Irlanda per la crisi degli abusi sessuali da parte di esponenti della Chiesa è un documento impressionante. Dimostra il suo dolore e il suo coinvolgimento personale per cercare di contribuire a riparare, risanare, rinnovare.
Le sue parole sono rivolte anzitutto alle vittime, e dimostrano una partecipazione profondissima alla loro sofferenza; alla delusione perché la fiducia che avevano riposto in rappresentanti della Chiesa è stata tradita. Il Papa, che già in passato ha incontrato e ascoltato vittime di abusi - in America, in Australia e anche a Roma -, si dice pronto a farlo ancora in futuro.
Le parole rivolte ai colpevoli sono molto gravi. Dice che devono rispondere dei loro peccati e dei loro crimini davanti a Dio e ai tribunali debitamente costituiti. Ma mentre esige che si sottomettano alle esigenze della giustizia, ricorda loro di non disperare della misericordia di Dio e di fare penitenza.
Altre parole del Papa sono di incoraggiamento e di invito alla responsabilità. Si indirizzano ai genitori, ai giovani, ai sacerdoti, a tutti i fedeli. Per i vescovi la parola è anche di richiamo critico per gli errori compiuti nella guida delle persone a loro affidate, e insiste perché mettano in pratica con rigore le norme penali della Chiesa nei casi di abuso, e collaborino con le autorità civili per la giustizia e la tutela della gioventù.
Il Papa propone anche iniziative concrete, spirituali e pastorali, di penitenza e di rinnovamento spirituale.
Come la sua visita negli Stati Uniti ha aiutato la Chiesa locale a risollevarsi da una crisi simile e a riprendere con fiducia la strada, così la lettera ai fedeli dell’Irlanda deve segnare il punto di partenza di un nuovo cammino.


Sommario
della Lettera Pastorale del Papa ai fedeli irlandesi


Il Papa ha indirizzato una Lettera Pastorale a tutti i Cattolici dell’Irlanda per esprimere lo sgomento per gli abusi sessuali commessi sui giovani da parte di esponenti della Chiesa e per il modo in cui essi furono affrontati dai vescovi irlandesi e dai superiori religiosi. Egli chiede che la Lettera sia letta con attenzione nella sua interezza. Il Santo Padre parla della sua vicinanza nella preghiera a tutta la comunità cattolica irlandese in questo tempo pieno di amarezza e propone un cammino di risanamento, di rinnovamento e di riparazione.
Chiede loro di ricordarsi della roccia da cui sono stati tagliati (cfr Is 51, 1), e in particolare del bel contributo che i missionari irlandesi apportarono alla civilizzazione dell’Europa e alla diffusione del cristianesimo in ogni continente. Negli ultimi anni si sono verificate molte sfide alla fede in Irlanda, al sopraggiungere di un rapido cambiamento sociale e di un declino nell’attaccamento a tradizionali pratiche devozionali e sacramentali. Questo è il contesto all’interno del quale si deve comprendere il modo con cui la Chiesa ha affrontato il problema dell’abuso sessuale dei ragazzi.
Molti sono i fattori che hanno originato il problema: una insufficiente formazione morale e spirituale nei seminari e nei noviziati, una tendenza nella società a favorire il clero e altre figure in autorità, una preoccupazione fuori luogo per il buon nome della Chiesa e per evitare gli scandali hanno portato alla mancata applicazione, quando necessarie, delle pene canoniche che erano in vigore. Solo esaminando con attenzione i molti elementi che diedero origine alla crisi è possibile identificarne con precisione le cause e trovare rimedi efficaci.
Durante la loro visita ad Limina a Roma nel 2006 il Papa ha esortato i vescovi irlandesi a “stabilire la verità di ciò che è accaduto in passato, prendere tutte le misure atte ad evitare che si ripeta in futuro, assicurare che i princìpi di giustizia vengano pienamente rispettati e, soprattutto, guarire le vittime e tutti coloro che sono colpiti da questi crimini abnormi”. Da quel momento egli ha voluto incontrare vittime in più di una occasione, ascoltando le loro vicende, pregando con loro e per loro, ed è pronto a farlo di nuovo in futuro. Nel febbraio 2010 ha chiamato a Roma i vescovi irlandesi per  esaminare con loro le misure che stanno prendendo per porre rimedio al problema, con particolare riferimento alle procedure e ai protocolli ora in vigore per assicurare la tutela dei ragazzi negli ambienti ecclesiali e per rispondere con prontezza e con giustizia alle denunce di abusi. In questa Lettera Pastorale egli parla direttamente a una serie di gruppi all’interno della comunità cattolica irlandese, alla luce della situazione che si è creata.
Rivolgendosi in primo luogo alle vittime di abuso, egli prende atto del tremendo tradimento del quale hanno sofferto e dice loro quanto egli è dispiaciuto per ciò che hanno sopportato. Riconosce come in molti casi nessuno era disposto ad ascoltarli quando trovavano il coraggio di parlare di quanto era accaduto. Si rende conto di come coloro che dimoravano in convitti dovevano essersi sentiti, rendendosi conto che non avevano modo di sfuggire alle loro sofferenze. Pur riconoscendo quanto deve risultare difficile per molti di loro perdonare o riconciliarsi con la Chiesa, li esorta a non perdere la speranza. Gesù Cristo, lui stesso vittima di ingiuste sofferenze, comprende gli abissi della loro pena e il perdurare del suo effetto sulle loro vite e sulle loro relazioni. Ciononostante proprio le sue ferite, trasformate dalle sue sofferenze redentrici, sono i mezzi attraverso i quali il potere del male viene infranto e noi rinasciamo alla vita e alla speranza. Il Papa esorta le vittime a cercare nella Chiesa l’opportunità di incontrare Gesù Cristo e di trovare risanamento e riconciliazione riscoprendo l’infinito amore che Cristo ha per ciascuno di essi.
Nelle sue parole ai sacerdoti e ai religiosi che hanno commesso abusi sui giovani, il Papa ricorda loro che devono rispondere davanti a Dio e a tribunali debitamente costituiti, per le azioni peccaminose e criminali che hanno commesso. Hanno tradito una fiducia sacra e rovesciato vergogna e disonore sui loro confratelli. Un grande danno è stato arrecato, non soltanto alle vittime, ma anche alla pubblica percezione del sacerdozio e della vita religiosa in Irlanda. Mentre esige da loro che si sottomettano alle esigenze della giustizia, ricorda loro che non devono disperare della misericordia di Dio, che egli ha liberamente offerto anche ai peccatori più grandi, se si pentono delle loro azioni, fanno penitenza e con umiltà implorano perdono.
Il Papa incoraggia i genitori a perseverare nel difficile compito di educare i figli a riconoscere che sono amati e desiderati e a sviluppare una sana stima di sé. I genitori hanno la responsabilità primaria di educare le nuove generazioni ai princìpi morali che sono essenziali per una civiltà civile. Il Papa invita i ragazzi e i giovani a trovare nella Chiesa un’opportunità per un incontro vivificante con Cristo, e a non lasciarsi frenare dalle mancanze di alcuni sacerdoti e religiosi. Egli guarda al contributo dei giovani per il rinnovamento della Chiesa. Esorta anche i sacerdoti e i religiosi a non scoraggiarsi, ma al contrario a rinnovare la loro dedizione ai rispettivi apostolati, operando in armonia con i loro superiori in modo da offrire nuova vita e dinamicità alla Chiesa in Irlanda attraverso la loro vivente testimonianza all’opera redentrice del Signore.
Rivolgendosi ai vescovi irlandesi, il Papa rileva i gravi errori di giudizio e il fallimento della leadershipdi molti di loro, perché non applicarono in modo corretto le procedure canoniche nel rispondere alle denunce di abusi. Sebbene risultasse spesso difficile sapere come affrontare situazioni complesse, rimane il fatto che furono commessi seri errori e che di conseguenza essi hanno perso credibilità. Il Papa li incoraggia a continuare a sforzarsi con determinazione per porre rimedio agli errori del passato e per prevenire ogni loro ripetersi, applicando in modo pieno il diritto canonico e cooperando con le autorità civili nelle aree di loro competenza. Invita inoltre i vescovi ad impegnarsi a diventare santi, a presentarsi come esempi, ad incoraggiare i sacerdoti e i fedeli a fare la loro parte nella vita e nella missione della Chiesa.
Infine, il Papa propone alcuni passi specifici per stimolare il rinnovamento della Chiesa in Irlanda. Chiede a tutti  di offrire le loro penitenze del venerdì, per il periodo di un anno, in riparazione dei peccati di abuso che si sono verificati. Raccomanda di ricorrere con frequenza al sacramento della riconciliazione e alla pratica dell’adorazione eucaristica. Annuncia l’intenzione di indire una Visita Apostolica di alcune diocesi, congregazioni religiose e seminari, con il coinvolgimento della Cura Romana, e propone una Missione a livello nazionale per i vescovi, i sacerdoti e i religiosi in Irlanda. In questo Anno dedicato in tutto il mondo ai Sacerdoti, presenta la persona di San Giovanni Maria Vianney come modello e intercessore per un rivivificato ministero sacerdotale in Irlanda. Dopo aver ringraziato tutti coloro che si sono impegnati con alacrità per affrontare con decisione il problema, conclude proponendo una Preghiera per la Chiesa in Irlanda, da usare da tutti i fedeli per invocare la grazia del risanamento e del rinnovamento in questo tempo di difficoltà.

 LETTER IN ENGLISH 

1. Dear Brothers and Sisters of the Church in Ireland, it is with great concern that I write to you as Pastor of the universal Church. Like yourselves, I have been deeply disturbed by the information which has come to light regarding the abuse of children and vulnerable young people by members of the Church in Ireland, particularly by priests and religious. I can only share in the dismay and the sense of betrayal that so many of you have experienced on learning of these sinful and criminal acts and the way Church authorities in Ireland dealt with them.
As you know, I recently invited the Irish bishops to a meeting here in Rome to give an account of their handling of these matters in the past and to outline the steps they have taken to respond to this grave situation. Together with senior officials of the Roman Curia, I listened to what they had to say, both individually and as a group, as they offered an analysis of mistakes made and lessons learned, and a description of the programmes and protocols now in place. Our discussions were frank and constructive. I am confident that, as a result, the bishops will now be in a stronger position to carry forward the work of repairing past injustices and confronting the broader issues associated with the abuse of minors in a way consonant with the demands of justice and the teachings of the Gospel.
2. For my part, considering the gravity of these offences, and the often inadequate response to them on the part of the ecclesiastical authorities in your country, I have decided to write this Pastoral Letter to express my closeness to you and to propose a path of healing, renewal and reparation.
It is true, as many in your country have pointed out, that the problem of child abuse is peculiar neither to Ireland nor to the Church. Nevertheless, the task you now face is to address the problem of abuse that has occurred within the Irish Catholic community, and to do so with courage and determination. No one imagines that this painful situation will be resolved swiftly. Real progress has been made, yet much more remains to be done. Perseverance and prayer are needed, with great trust in the healing power of God’s grace.
At the same time, I must also express my conviction that, in order to recover from this grievous wound, the Church in Ireland must first acknowledge before the Lord and before others the serious sins committed against defenceless children. Such an acknowledgement, accompanied by sincere sorrow for the damage caused to these victims and their families, must lead to a concerted effort to ensure the protection of children from similar crimes in the future.
As you take up the challenges of this hour, I ask you to remember “the rock from which you were hewn” (Is 51:1). Reflect upon the generous, often heroic, contributions made by past generations of Irish men and women to the Church and to humanity as a whole, and let this provide the impetus for honest self-examination and a committed programme of ecclesial and individual renewal. It is my prayer that, assisted by the intercession of her many saints and purified through penance, the Church in Ireland will overcome the present crisis and become once more a convincing witness to the truth and the goodness of Almighty God, made manifest in his Son Jesus Christ.
3. Historically, the Catholics of Ireland have proved an enormous force for good at home and abroad. Celtic monks like Saint Columbanus spread the Gospel in Western Europe and laid the foundations of medieval monastic culture. The ideals of holiness, charity and transcendent wisdom born of the Christian faith found expression in the building of churches and monasteries and the establishment of schools, libraries and hospitals, all of which helped to consolidate the spiritual identity of Europe. Those Irish missionaries drew their strength and inspiration from the firm faith, strong leadership and upright morals of the Church in their native land.
From the sixteenth century on, Catholics in Ireland endured a long period of persecution, during which they struggled to keep the flame of faith alive in dangerous and difficult circumstances. Saint Oliver Plunkett, the martyred Archbishop of Armagh, is the most famous example of a host of courageous sons and daughters of Ireland who were willing to lay down their lives out of fidelity to the Gospel. After Catholic Emancipation, the Church was free to grow once more. Families and countless individuals who had preserved the faith in times of trial became the catalyst for the great resurgence of Irish Catholicism in the nineteenth century. The Church provided education, especially for the poor, and this was to make a major contribution to Irish society. Among the fruits of the new Catholic schools was a rise in vocations: generations of missionary priests, sisters and brothers left their homeland to serve in every continent, especially in the English-speaking world. They were remarkable not only for their great numbers, but for the strength of their faith and the steadfastness of their pastoral commitment. Many dioceses, especially in Africa, America and Australia, benefited from the presence of Irish clergy and religious who preached the Gospel and established parishes, schools and universities, clinics and hospitals that served both Catholics and the community at large, with particular attention to the needs of the poor.
In almost every family in Ireland, there has been someone – a son or a daughter, an aunt or an uncle – who has given his or her life to the Church. Irish families rightly esteem and cherish their loved ones who have dedicated their lives to Christ, sharing the gift of faith with others, and putting that faith into action in loving service of God and neighbour.
4. In recent decades, however, the Church in your country has had to confront new and serious challenges to the faith arising from the rapid transformation and secularization of Irish society. Fast-paced social change has occurred, often adversely affecting people’s traditional adherence to Catholic teaching and values. All too often, the sacramental and devotional practices that sustain faith and enable it to grow, such as frequent confession, daily prayer and annual retreats, were neglected. Significant too was the tendency during this period, also on the part of priests and religious, to adopt ways of thinking and assessing secular realities without sufficient reference to the Gospel. The programme of renewal proposed by the Second Vatican Council was sometimes misinterpreted and indeed, in the light of the profound social changes that were taking place, it was far from easy to know how best to implement it. In particular, there was a well-intentioned but misguided tendency to avoid penal approaches to canonically irregular situations. It is in this overall context that we must try to understand the disturbing problem of child sexual abuse, which has contributed in no small measure to the weakening of faith and the loss of respect for the Church and her teachings.
Only by examining carefully the many elements that gave rise to the present crisis can a clear-sighted diagnosis of its causes be undertaken and effective remedies be found. Certainly, among the contributing factors we can include: inadequate procedures for determining the suitability of candidates for the priesthood and the religious life; insufficient human, moral, intellectual and spiritual formation in seminaries and novitiates; a tendency in society to favour the clergy and other authority figures; and a misplaced concern for the reputation of the Church and the avoidance of scandal, resulting in failure to apply existing canonical penalties and to safeguard the dignity of every person. Urgent action is needed to address these factors, which have had such tragic consequences in the lives of victims and their families, and have obscured the light of the Gospel to a degree that not even centuries of persecution succeeded in doing.
5. On several occasions since my election to the See of Peter, I have met with victims of sexual abuse, as indeed I am ready to do in the future. I have sat with them, I have listened to their stories, I have acknowledged their suffering, and I have prayed with them and for them. Earlier in my pontificate, in my concern to address this matter, I asked the bishops of Ireland, “to establish the truth of what happened in the past, to take whatever steps are necessary to prevent it from occurring again, to ensure that the principles of justice are fully respected, and above all, to bring healing to the victims and to all those affected by these egregious crimes” (Address to the Bishops of Ireland, 28 October 2006).
With this Letter, I wish to exhort all of you, as God’s people in Ireland, to reflect on the wounds inflicted on Christ’s body, the sometimes painful remedies needed to bind and heal them, and the need for unity, charity and mutual support in the long-term process of restoration and ecclesial renewal. I now turn to you with words that come from my heart, and I wish to speak to each of you individually and to all of you as brothers and sisters in the Lord.
6. To the victims of abuse and their families
You have suffered grievously and I am truly sorry. I know that nothing can undo the wrong you have endured. Your trust has been betrayed and your dignity has been violated. Many of you found that, when you were courageous enough to speak of what happened to you, no one would listen. Those of you who were abused in residential institutions must have felt that there was no escape from your sufferings. It is understandable that you find it hard to forgive or be reconciled with the Church. In her name, I openly express the shame and remorse that we all feel. At the same time, I ask you not to lose hope. It is in the communion of the Church that we encounter the person of Jesus Christ, who was himself a victim of injustice and sin. Like you, he still bears the wounds of his own unjust suffering. He understands the depths of your pain and its enduring effect upon your lives and your relationships, including your relationship with the Church. I know some of you find it difficult even to enter the doors of a church after all that has occurred. Yet Christ’s own wounds, transformed by his redemptive sufferings, are the very means by which the power of evil is broken and we are reborn to life and hope. I believe deeply in the healing power of his self-sacrificing love – even in the darkest and most hopeless situations – to bring liberation and the promise of a new beginning.
Speaking to you as a pastor concerned for the good of all God’s children, I humbly ask you to consider what I have said. I pray that, by drawing nearer to Christ and by participating in the life of his Church – a Church purified by penance and renewed in pastoral charity – you will come to rediscover Christ’s infinite love for each one of you. I am confident that in this way you will be able to find reconciliation, deep inner healing and peace.
7. To priests and religious who have abused children
You betrayed the trust that was placed in you by innocent young people and their parents, and you must answer for it before Almighty God and before properly constituted tribunals. You have forfeited the esteem of the people of Ireland and brought shame and dishonour upon your confreres. Those of you who are priests violated the sanctity of the sacrament of Holy Orders in which Christ makes himself present in us and in our actions. Together with the immense harm done to victims, great damage has been done to the Church and to the public perception of the priesthood and religious life.
I urge you to examine your conscience, take responsibility for the sins you have committed, and humbly express your sorrow. Sincere repentance opens the door to God’s forgiveness and the grace of true amendment. By offering prayers and penances for those you have wronged, you should seek to atone personally for your actions. Christ’s redeeming sacrifice has the power to forgive even the gravest of sins, and to bring forth good from even the most terrible evil. At the same time, God’s justice summons us to give an account of our actions and to conceal nothing. Openly acknowledge your guilt, submit yourselves to the demands of justice, but do not despair of God’s mercy.
8. To parents
You have been deeply shocked to learn of the terrible things that took place in what ought to be the safest and most secure environment of all. In today’s world it is not easy to build a home and to bring up children. They deserve to grow up in security, loved and cherished, with a strong sense of their identity and worth. They have a right to be educated in authentic moral values rooted in the dignity of the human person, to be inspired by the truth of our Catholic faith and to learn ways of behaving and acting that lead to healthy self-esteem and lasting happiness. This noble but demanding task is entrusted in the first place to you, their parents. I urge you to play your part in ensuring the best possible care of children, both at home and in society as a whole, while the Church, for her part, continues to implement the measures adopted in recent years to protect young people in parish and school environments. As you carry out your vital responsibilities, be assured that I remain close to you and I offer you the support of my prayers.
9. To the children and young people of Ireland
I wish to offer you a particular word of encouragement. Your experience of the Church is very different from that of your parents and grandparents. The world has changed greatly since they were your age. Yet all people, in every generation, are called to travel the same path through life, whatever their circumstances may be. We are all scandalized by the sins and failures of some of the Church's members, particularly those who were chosen especially to guide and serve young people. But it is in the Church that you will find Jesus Christ, who is the same yesterday, today and for ever (cf. Heb 13:8). He loves you and he has offered himself on the cross for you. Seek a personal relationship with him within the communion of his Church, for he will never betray your trust! He alone can satisfy your deepest longings and give your lives their fullest meaning by directing them to the service of others. Keep your eyes fixed on Jesus and his goodness, and shelter the flame of faith in your heart. Together with your fellow Catholics in Ireland, I look to you to be faithful disciples of our Lord and to bring your much-needed enthusiasm and idealism to the rebuilding and renewal of our beloved Church.
10. To the priests and religious of Ireland
All of us are suffering as a result of the sins of our confreres who betrayed a sacred trust or failed to deal justly and responsibly with allegations of abuse. In view of the outrage and indignation which this has provoked, not only among the lay faithful but among yourselves and your religious communities, many of you feel personally discouraged, even abandoned. I am also aware that in some people’s eyes you are tainted by association, and viewed as if you were somehow responsible for the misdeeds of others. At this painful time, I want to acknowledge the dedication of your priestly and religious lives and apostolates, and I invite you to reaffirm your faith in Christ, your love of his Church and your confidence in the Gospel's promise of redemption, forgiveness and interior renewal. In this way, you will demonstrate for all to see that where sin abounds, grace abounds all the more (cf. Rom 5:20).
I know that many of you are disappointed, bewildered and angered by the way these matters have been handled by some of your superiors. Yet, it is essential that you cooperate closely with those in authority and help to ensure that the measures adopted to respond to the crisis will be truly evangelical, just and effective. Above all, I urge you to become ever more clearly men and women of prayer, courageously following the path of conversion, purification and reconciliation. In this way, the Church in Ireland will draw new life and vitality from your witness to the Lord's redeeming power made visible in your lives.
11. To my brother bishops
It cannot be denied that some of you and your predecessors failed, at times grievously, to apply the long-established norms of canon law to the crime of child abuse. Serious mistakes were made in responding to allegations. I recognize how difficult it was to grasp the extent and complexity of the problem, to obtain reliable information and to make the right decisions in the light of conflicting expert advice. Nevertheless, it must be admitted that grave errors of judgement were made and failures of leadership occurred. All this has seriously undermined your credibility and effectiveness. I appreciate the efforts you have made to remedy past mistakes and to guarantee that they do not happen again. Besides fully implementing the norms of canon law in addressing cases of child abuse, continue to cooperate with the civil authorities in their area of competence. Clearly, religious superiors should do likewise. They too have taken part in recent discussions here in Rome with a view to establishing a clear and consistent approach to these matters. It is imperative that the child safety norms of the Church in Ireland be continually revised and updated and that they be applied fully and impartially in conformity with canon law.
Only decisive action carried out with complete honesty and transparency will restore the respect and good will of the Irish people towards the Church to which we have consecrated our lives. This must arise, first and foremost, from your own self-examination, inner purification and spiritual renewal. The Irish people rightly expect you to be men of God, to be holy, to live simply, to pursue personal conversion daily. For them, in the words of Saint Augustine, you are a bishop; yet with them you are called to be a follower of Christ (cf. Sermon 340, 1). I therefore exhort you to renew your sense of accountability before God, to grow in solidarity with your people and to deepen your pastoral concern for all the members of your flock. In particular, I ask you to be attentive to the spiritual and moral lives of each one of your priests. Set them an example by your own lives, be close to them, listen to their concerns, offer them encouragement at this difficult time and stir up the flame of their love for Christ and their commitment to the service of their brothers and sisters.
The lay faithful, too, should be encouraged to play their proper part in the life of the Church. See that they are formed in such a way that they can offer an articulate and convincing account of the Gospel in the midst of modern society (cf. 1 Pet 3:15) and cooperate more fully in the Church’s life and mission. This in turn will help you once again become credible leaders and witnesses to the redeeming truth of Christ.
12. To all the faithful of Ireland
A young person’s experience of the Church should always bear fruit in a personal and life-giving encounter with Jesus Christ within a loving, nourishing community. In this environment, young people should be encouraged to grow to their full human and spiritual stature, to aspire to high ideals of holiness, charity and truth, and to draw inspiration from the riches of a great religious and cultural tradition. In our increasingly secularized society, where even we Christians often find it difficult to speak of the transcendent dimension of our existence, we need to find new ways to pass on to young people the beauty and richness of friendship with Jesus Christ in the communion of his Church. In confronting the present crisis, measures to deal justly with individual crimes are essential, yet on their own they are not enough: a new vision is needed, to inspire present and future generations to treasure the gift of our common faith. By treading the path marked out by the Gospel, by observing the commandments and by conforming your lives ever more closely to the figure of Jesus Christ, you will surely experience the profound renewal that is so urgently needed at this time. I invite you all to persevere along this path.
13. Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, it is out of deep concern for all of you at this painful time in which the fragility of the human condition has been so starkly revealed that I have wished to offer these words of encouragement and support. I hope that you will receive them as a sign of my spiritual closeness and my confidence in your ability to respond to the challenges of the present hour by drawing renewed inspiration and strength from Ireland’s noble traditions of fidelity to the Gospel, perseverance in the faith and steadfastness in the pursuit of holiness.In solidarity with all of you, I am praying earnestly that, by God’s grace, the wounds afflicting so many individuals and families may be healed and that the Church in Ireland may experience a season of rebirth and spiritual renewal.
14. I now wish to propose to you some concrete initiatives to address the situation.
At the conclusion of my meeting with the Irish bishops, I asked that Lent this year be set aside as a time to pray for an outpouring of God’s mercy and the Holy Spirit’s gifts of holiness and strength upon the Church in your country. I now invite all of you to devote your Friday penances, for a period of one year, between now and Easter 2011, to this intention. I ask you to offer up your fasting, your prayer, your reading of Scripture and your works of mercy in order to obtain the grace of healing and renewal for the Church in Ireland. I encourage you to discover anew the sacrament of Reconciliation and to avail yourselves more frequently of the transforming power of its grace.
Particular attention should also be given to Eucharistic adoration, and in every diocese there should be churches or chapels specifically devoted to this purpose. I ask parishes, seminaries, religious houses and monasteries to organize periods of Eucharistic adoration, so that all have an opportunity to take part. Through intense prayer before the real presence of the Lord, you can make reparation for the sins of abuse that have done so much harm, at the same time imploring the grace of renewed strength and a deeper sense of mission on the part of all bishops, priests, religious and lay faithful.
I am confident that this programme will lead to a rebirth of the Church in Ireland in the fullness of God’s own truth, for it is the truth that sets us free (cf. Jn 8:32).
Furthermore, having consulted and prayed about the matter, I intend to hold an Apostolic Visitation of certain dioceses in Ireland, as well as seminaries and religious congregations. Arrangements for the Visitation, which is intended to assist the local Church on her path of renewal, will be made in cooperation with the competent offices of the Roman Curia and the Irish Episcopal Conference. The details will be announced in due course.
I also propose that a nationwide Mission be held for all bishops, priests and religious. It is my hope that, by drawing on the expertise of experienced preachers and retreat-givers from Ireland and from elsewhere, and by exploring anew the conciliar documents, the liturgical rites of ordination and profession, and recent pontifical teaching, you will come to a more profound appreciation of your respective vocations, so as to rediscover the roots of your faith in Jesus Christ and to drink deeply from the springs of living water that he offers you through his Church.
In this Year for Priests, I commend to you most particularly the figure of Saint John Mary Vianney, who had such a rich understanding of the mystery of the priesthood. “The priest”, he wrote, “holds the key to the treasures of heaven: it is he who opens the door: he is the steward of the good Lord; the administrator of his goods.” The Curé d’Ars understood well how greatly blessed a community is when served by a good and holy priest: “A good shepherd, a pastor after God’s heart, is the greatest treasure which the good Lord can grant to a parish, and one of the most precious gifts of divine mercy.” Through the intercession of Saint John Mary Vianney, may the priesthood in Ireland be revitalized, and may the whole Church in Ireland grow in appreciation for the great gift of the priestly ministry.
I take this opportunity to thank in anticipation all those who will be involved in the work of organizing the Apostolic Visitation and the Mission, as well as the many men and women throughout Ireland already working for the safety of children in church environments. Since the time when the gravity and extent of the problem of child sexual abuse in Catholic institutions first began to be fully grasped, the Church has done an immense amount of work in many parts of the world in order to address and remedy it. While no effort should be spared in improving and updating existing procedures, I am encouraged by the fact that the current safeguarding practices adopted by local Churches are being seen, in some parts of the world, as a model for other institutions to follow.
I wish to conclude this Letter with a special Prayer for the Church in Ireland, which I send to you with the care of a father for his children and with the affection of a fellow Christian, scandalized and hurt by what has occurred in our beloved Church. As you make use of this prayer in your families, parishes and communities, may the Blessed Virgin Mary protect and guide each of you to a closer union with her Son, crucified and risen. With great affection and unswerving confidence in God’s promises, I cordially impart to all of you my Apostolic Blessing as a pledge of strength and peace in the Lord.
From the Vatican, 19 March 2010, on the Solemnity of Saint Joseph


BENEDICTUS PP. XVI






Prayer for the Church in Ireland

God of our fathers,
renew us in the faith which is our life and salvation,
the hope which promises forgiveness and interior renewal,
the charity which purifies and opens our hearts
to love you, and in you, each of our brothers and sisters.
Lord Jesus Christ,
may the Church in Ireland renew her age-old commitment
to the education of our young people in the way of truth and goodness, holiness and generous service to society.
Holy Spirit, comforter, advocate and guide,
inspire a new springtime of holiness and apostolic zeal
for the Church in Ireland.
May our sorrow and our tears,
our sincere effort to redress past wrongs,
and our firm purpose of amendment
bear an abundant harvest of grace
for the deepening of the faith
in our families, parishes, schools and communities,
for the spiritual progress of Irish society,
and the growth of charity, justice, joy and peace
within the whole human family.
To you, Triune God,
confident in the loving protection of Mary,
Queen of Ireland, our Mother,
and of Saint Patrick, Saint Brigid and all the saints,
do we entrust ourselves, our children,
and the needs of the Church in Ireland.
Amen.

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