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   12 Feb 13 08:20:00   
   
   
VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE YEAR XXIII - N° 30 DATE 12-02-2013
Summary: - POPE TO PRESIDE OVER IMPOSITION   
   OF ASHES IN VATICAN   
   BASILICA - GRATITUDE AND FIDELITY TO BENEDICT XVI - CONSISTORY FOR   
   SEVERAL CAUSES OF CANONIZATION - GOD DOESN'T CONSIDER AS MUCH THE   
   QUALITIES OF THE CHOSEN AS THEIR FAITH - POPE VISITS MAJOR ROMAN   
   SEMINARY - POPE TO ORDER   
   OF MALTA: ACT WITH FAITH AND CHARITY FOR RENEWAL OF HOPE - AUDIENCES - OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS - NOTICE
POPE TO PRESIDE OVER IMPOSITION OF ASHES IN VATICAN BASILICA
   
   
Vatican City, 12 February 2013 (VIS) – Wednesday, 13 February at   
   5:00pm, the Holy Father will celebrate the rite of blessing and imposition of   
   ashes in the Vatican Basilica, instead of the Roman Basilica of Santa Sabina,   
   where the celebration   
   is traditionally held. The reason, as Fr. Federico Lombardi, director of the   
   Holy See Press Office, explained, is that, as this will be Benedict XVI's last   
   public concelebration, a large number of participants is expected.
   
   
For the same reason, the Pope's annual meeting with the pastors of Rome,   
   scheduled to take place on 14 February, will take place in the Paul VI Hall   
   and will focus on?according to Fr. Lombardi's information?Vatican Council II,   
   as the Roman clergy   
   requested. Also, in expectation of great numbers, Benedict XVI's last general   
   audience, scheduled for 27 February in the Paul VI Hall, will probably be   
   moved to St. Peter's Square.
   
   
"The Pope is well," Fr. Lombardi said, "and his soul is serene. He did not   
   resign the pontificate because he is ill but because of the fragility that   
   comes with old age," he affirmed, recalling that the pontiff, recently   
   underwent an entirely routine   
   procedure to replace the battery of the pacemaker he wears, but that this had   
   no impact on his decision. Likewise, Fr. Lombardi explained, the trip to Cuba   
   and Mexico, due to his fatigue, was another reason in the development of   
   Benedict XVI's decision,   
   but not its cause.
   
   
The director of the Press Office confirmed that the Pope's calendar will   
   continue as scheduled until 28 February, the last day of his pontificate, with   
   ad limina visits from the Italian bishops, visits with the presidents of   
   Romania and Guatemala,   
   etc. However, the expected encyclical on Faith will not be published because   
   the text still is not ready.
Vatican City, 12 February 2013 (VIS) - Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz,   
   archbishop of Krakow, Poland, after begin informed of Benedict XVI's   
   resignation yesterday, made the following declaration in Krakow.
   
   
"With great respect and emotion I accept the Holy Father Benedict XVI's   
   decision to resign from the governance of the Church and to entrust the care   
   of Her future events to the College of Cardinals. I understand the reasons   
   that the Holy Father   
   presented to the members of the consistory. After John Paul II's death,   
   Benedict XVI has guided Christ's Church with great reflection and wisdom,   
   which come from his exceptional intellectual ability as well as his deep   
   faith. I thank the Holy Father for   
   all his efforts to renew the Church in the spirit of fidelity to the Teacher   
   of Nazareth. As one of the bishops of Poland, I assure him of our gratitude   
   for his friendship with John Paul II, for his beatification, and also for his   
   exceptional   
   benevolence toward the Polish nation. Personally, I will always be faithful   
   and grateful for everything that I have received from him. The Church in   
   Krakow will be eternally appreciative to the Peter of our time, Benedict   
   XVI. Gratitude and fidelity. We will remain united in prayer and dedication,   
   together with the Holy Father. I entrust Benedict XVI to the Holy Spirit and   
   to Our Lady of Lourdes, the patroness of the day."
Vatican City, 11 February 2013 (VIS) – This morning at 11:00am in the   
   Consistory Hall of the Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father presided over an   
   ordinary public consistory for the canonization of the blesseds:
   
   
- Antonio Primaldo and Companions, martyrs, (1480);
   
   
- Laura di Santa Caterina da Siena Montoya y Upegui (1874 -1949), virgin,   
   foundress of the Congregation of the Missionaries of Mary Immaculate and St   
   Catherine of Siena; and
   
   
- Maria Guadalupe Garcia Zavala, co-foundress of the Congregation of the   
   Handmaids of St Margaret Mary (Alacoque) and the Poor.
   
   
During the course of the consistory, the Pope decreed that blesseds Antonio   
   Primaldo and his companions, Laura di Santa Caterina da Siena Montoya y Upegui   
   and Maria Guadalupe Garcia Zavala be inscribed in the book of saints on   
   Sunday, 12 May 2013.
GOD DOESN'T CONSIDER AS MUCH THE QUALITIES OF THE CHOSEN AS THEIR FAITH
   
   
Vatican City, 10 February 2013 (VIS) – As is customary on Sundays,   
   Benedict XVI appeared at the window of his study to pray the Angelus with the   
   faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square.
   
   
The Pope commented on the Gospel of St. Luke that narrates the call of the   
   first disciples, a call "preceded by Jesus' teaching to the multitude and by a   
   miraculous catch of fish." While the crowd gathered on the shore of Lake   
   Gennesaret to listen to   
   Him, Jesus?seeing Simon disheartened because he hadn't caught anything the   
   whole night?asks if He can board his boat to preach to the people a little way   
   from the shore. Once finished preaching, Christ orders Simon to go out to sea   
   with his companions   
   and to cast their nets. Simon obeys and the nets are filled with an incredible   
   amount of fish. "The Gospel writer shows that the first disciples followed   
   Jesus, trusting in Him, acting on His Word, while accompanied by prodigious   
   signs. … This is   
   the pedagogy of God's call, which doesn't look as much at the quality of the   
   chosen as at their faith, as in Simon's case.
   
   
"The image of the catch," the Pope emphasized, "recalls the Church's   
   mission … Peter's experience, certainly unique, is also representative   
   of the call of each Apostle in the Gospel, who should never lose heart in   
   proclaiming Christ to all   
   people, even to the ends of the earth. today's text also brings us to reflect   
   on the vocation to the priesthood and to consecrated life. This is God's work.   
   Human beings are not the authors of their own vocation, but respond to a   
   divine call. Human   
   weakness should not lead us to fear God's call. It is necessary to be   
   confident in His strength, which acts precisely in our weakness. We must trust   
   ever more in the power of His mercy, which transforms and renews us."
   
   
"May this Word of God also reignite in us and in our Christian communities   
   the courage, confidence, and enthusiasm to announce and witness to the Gospel.   
   Challenges and difficulties don't dishearten us: it falls to us to cast our   
   nets with faith. The   
   Lord will do the rest," concluded the Holy Father.
   
   
After praying the Angelus, Benedict XVI noted that many Asian countries are   
   celebrating the Lunar New Year. Peace, harmony, and thanksgiving to heaven,"   
   he observed, "are the universal values that are celebrated in this happy   
   circumstance, and they   
   are wished for by all so as to build their family, society, and their nation   
   upon them. I wish for those peoples the fulfilment of their aspirations for a   
   happy and prosperous life. I send a special greeting to the Catholics of those   
   countries that, in   
   this Year of Faith, they may be guided by Christ's wisdom.
   
   
Lastly, he spoke of the World Day of the Sick, which will be celebrated   
   tomorrow, 11 February, on the liturgical feastday of Our Lady of Lourdes. "The   
   solemn ceremony," he said, "will take place in the Marian Shrine in Altotting,   
   Bavaria, Germany. I   
   am near to all the ill in prayer and affection and I spiritually join with   
   those gathered in that sanctuary that I love so much."
Vatican City, 11 February 2013 (VIS) – Yesterday afternoon at 6:15pm,   
   the Holy Father visited the Major Roman Seminary on the eve of its feast of   
   its patroness, Our Lady of Trust. On arriving he was greeted by Cardinal   
   Agostino Vallini and the   
   rector, Fr. Concetto Occhipinti. Benedict XVI delivered a lectio divina on the   
   First Letter of St. Peter to seminarians of the Major and Minor Roman   
   Seminary, the "Almo Collegio Capranica", the "Redemptoris Mater" diocesan   
   seminary, and the Virgin of   
   Divine Love Seminary. Following are ample excerpts of his address, which was   
   given without an official text.
   
   
"Peter speaks. This is almost the first encyclical by which the first   
   apostle, vicar of Christ, speaks to the Church of all time. … He   
   doesn't write as an isolated individual, but with the help of the Church, of   
   the persons who help him to go   
   more deeply into his faith, to enter into the depth of his thought. …   
   This is very important: Peter doesn't speak as an individual, but 'ex persona   
   Ecclesiae'. He speaks as a man of the Church, certainly as a person, with   
   personal responsibility,   
   but also as a person who speaks on behalf of the Church … in communion   
   with the Church."
   
   
“I believe that it is also important that at the end of the letter he   
   names Silvanus and Mark, two people who belonged to the group of St.   
   Paul’s friends. Thus, the worlds of St. Peter and St. Paul come   
   together; it is not an exclusively   
   Petrine theology as opposed to a Pauline theology. Rather, it is a theology of   
   the Church, of the faith of the Church, in which there is of course a   
   diversity of temperament, of thought, of style. It is good that there are   
   differences—different   
   charisms, different temperaments—then as well as now. These differences   
   do not divide but are united in the same faith.”
   
   
“St. Peter writes from Rome. This is important: here we already have   
   the Bishop of Rome, the beginning of the succession, the basis of the concrete   
   primacy located in Rome, not only given by the Lord but also placed in this   
   city, capital of the   
   world. Ever since his flight from Herod’s prison, Peter entrusted the   
   Judeo-Christian church, the church of Jerusalem, to James and, in entrusting   
   it to James, remained without qualification primate of the universal Church,   
   primate of the Church   
   of the pagans as well as primate of the Judeo-Christian Church … In   
   Rome he met both parts of the Church: the Judeo-Christian and the   
   Pagan-Christian united, an expression of the universal Church. And Peter was   
   not alone in thinking of this   
   movement: Jerusalem/Rome, Judeo-Christian Church/Universal Church. St. Paul   
   knew that his end would be martyrdom, would be the cross. Therefore, to go to   
   Rome was without doubt to go to martyrdom. The primacy has this universal   
   component and also a martyriological component. The cross can take many   
   different forms, but one cannot be Christian without following the Crucified,   
   without accepting also the martyriological moment.”
   
   
“St. Peter called those to whom he wrote 'the chosen ones who are   
   dispersed aliens'. Once again we have the paradox of glory and the cross:   
   chosen but dispersed and strangers. We are chosen: God knows us always, since   
   before we were born. God   
   wanted me, as Christian, as Catholic, as priest … he chose me, he loved   
   me, and now I respond. But to rejoice because God has chosen us is not   
   triumphalism but gratitude, and I think that we have to learn this joy.   
   Without doubt, 'chosen ones'   
   needs to be accompanied by strangers and dispersed ones. As Christians, we are   
   dispersed and we are strangers. We see that today Christians in the world   
   today are the most persecuted group because they do not conform, because they   
   go against the   
   tendencies toward egoism and materialism.”
   
   
“Certainly Christians are not only strangers; we are also Christian   
   nations, we feel proud to have contributed to the formation of culture. There   
   is a healthy patriotism, a healthy joy in belonging to a nation that has a   
   great history of   
   culture and faith. However, without doubt, as Christians we are always   
   strangers; this is the destiny of Abraham, as it is described in the Letter to   
   the Hebrews. Today, as Christians we are each time more strangers than before.   
   In the workforce,   
   Christians are a minority and encounter a situation of alienation. It is   
   remarkable that today one can still believe and live in this way. It is part   
   of our life: it is the way of being with Christ Crucified, being strangers,   
   who do not live the way   
   everyone else lives. We live—or at least we try to live—according   
   to his Word, in a great diversity, respectful of what everyone says. This is   
   characteristic of Christians.”
   
   
"Finally we arrive at today’s three verses. I would only like to   
   point out three words: regenerated, inheritance, and safeguarded by faith.   
   Regenerated: this does not only refer to the area of the will; it refers to   
   the whole sphere of being.   
   It does not depend only on my will; it is an act of God … I am reborn.   
   I am transformed, renewed. Being reborn, being regenerated indicates that I   
   become part of a new family: God, My Father; the Church, my Mother; and other   
   Christians, my   
   brothers and sisters.”
   
   
"The second word: Inheritance. We are heirs, but not heirs of specific   
   country but of the land of God, of the future of God. This word says that as   
   Christians we have the future. Thus, as Christians, we know that ours is the   
   future, and the tree of   
   the Church is not a dying tree but a tree that grows ever new. Therefore, we   
   have reason to not let ourselves be moved by the prophets of doom, as John   
   XXIII said, who say that the Church is a tree grown from a mustard seed, which   
   has lived two thousand   
   years but now her time is past and the time to die has arrived. No. The church   
   always renews itself; it is continually reborn. The future is ours. Of course,   
   there is a false optimism and a false pessimism. A false pessimism says that   
   the time of   
   Christianity has come to an end. No: it begins again! A false optimism was   
   that witnessed immediately after the Council when convents and seminaries were   
   closed and people said: it doesn’t matter, everything is good. No: this   
   is not good! There are also serious and grave dangers. We have to recognize   
   with a healthy realism that all is not well. It is not good when they do wrong   
   things. At the same time, we have to be sure that even though here and there   
   the Church dies for   
   the sins of humans, because of their lack of belief, at the same time, it is   
   reborn."
   
   
"Finally, 'safeguarded by faith'. Faith is like the 'sentinel' that   
   preserves the integrity of my being. We have to be grateful for this vigilance   
   of faith that protects us, that helps us, that guides us, and that gives us   
   safety. God will not let us   
   fall from his hands."
POPE TO ORDER OF MALTA: ACT WITH FAITH AND CHARITY FOR RENEWAL OF HOPE
   
   
Vatican City, 9 February 2013 (VIS) – Members of the Sovereign   
   Military Order of Malta, whose Grand Master is Fra' Matthew Festing, have come   
   to Rome on pilgrimage to celebrate the ninth centenary of the "Pie postulatio   
   volutatis" privilege of   
   February 15, 1113, by which Pope Paschal II placed the newly created   
   "hospitaller fraternity” of Jerusalem, dedicated to Saint John the   
   Baptist, under Church protection, giving it sovereign status and constituting   
   it as an Order in church law,   
   with the faculty freely to elect its superiors without interference from other   
   lay or religious authorities. This morning, Benedict XVI welcomed them to St.   
   Peter's Basilica, thanking the Order for their offering, which will be   
   destined to a work of   
   charity. He also thanked Cardinal Paolo Sardi, patron of the Order, "for the   
   care with which he strives to strengthen the special bond that joins you to   
   the Catholic Church and most particularly to the Holy   
   See".
   
   
"This important event," the Pope explained, "takes on a special meaning in   
   the context of the Year of Faith, during which the Church is called to renew   
   the joy and the commitment of believing in Jesus Christ, the one Saviour of   
   the world. In this   
   regard, you too are called to welcome this time of grace, so as to deepen your   
   knowledge of the Lord and to cause the truth and beauty of the faith to shine   
   forth, through the witness of your lives and your service, in this present   
   time. Your Order,   
   from its earliest days, has been marked by fidelity to the Church and to the   
   Successor of Peter, and also for its unrenounceable spiritual identity,   
   characterized by high religious ideals. Continue to walk along this path,   
   bearing concrete witness to   
   the transforming power of faith. …"
   
   
"By faith, down the centuries, the members of your Order have given   
   themselves completely, firstly in the care of the sick in Jerusalem and then   
   in aid to pilgrims in the Holy Land who were exposed to grave dangers: their   
   lives have added radiant   
   pages to the annals of Christian charity and protection of Christianity. In   
   the nineteenth century, the Order opened up to new and more ample forms of   
   apostolate in the area of charitable assistance and service of the sick and   
   the poor, but without ever   
   abandoning the original ideals, especially that of the intense spiritual life   
   of individual members. In this sense, your commitment must continue with a   
   very particular attention to the religious consecration? of the professed   
   members?which constitutes   
   the heart of the Order."
   
   
"In this sense," the Pope emphasized, "your Order, compared with other   
   organizations that are committed in the international arena to the care of the   
   sick, to solidarity and to human promotion, is distinguished by the Christian   
   inspiration that must   
   constantly direct the social engagement of its members. Be sure to preserve   
   and cultivate this your qualifying characteristic and work with renewed   
   apostolic ardour, maintaining an attitude of profound harmony with the   
   Magisterium of the Church. Your   
   esteemed and beneficent activity, carried out in a variety of fields and in   
   different parts of the world, and particularly focused on care of the sick   
   through hospitals and health-care institutes, is not mere philanthropy, but an   
   effective expression   
   and a living testimony of evangelical love. …"
   
   
"In Sacred Scripture, the summons to love of neighbour is tied to the   
   commandment to love God with all our heart, all our soul and all our strength.   
   Thus, love of neighbour?if based on a true love for God?corresponds to the   
   commandment and the   
   example of Christ. ... In order to offer love to our brothers and sisters, we   
   must be afire with it from the furnace of divine charity: through prayer,   
   constant listening to the word of God, and a life centred on the   
   Eucharist."
   
   
The Pope concluded his address by inviting the members of the Order of   
   Malta to "continue working in society and in the world along the elevated   
   paths indicated by the Gospel?faith and charity, for the renewal of hope.   
   Faith, as testimony of   
   adherence to Christ and of commitment to the Gospel mission, which inspires   
   you to an ever more vital presence in the ecclesial community and to an ever   
   more conscious membership of the people of God; charity, as an expression of   
   fraternity in Christ,   
   through works of mercy for the sick, the poor, those in need of love, comfort   
   and assistance, those who are afflicted by loneliness, by a sense of   
   bewilderment and by new material and spiritual forms of poverty. These ideals   
   are aptly expressed in your   
   motto: “Tuitio fidei et obsequium pauperum”. These words summarize   
   well the charism of your Order which, as a subject of international law, aims   
   not to exercise power and influence of a worldly character, but in complete   
   freedom to accomplish its own mission for the integral good of man, spirit and   
   body, both individually and collectively, with special regard to those whose   
   need of hope and love is greater.
Vatican City, 11 February 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father   
   appointed Msgr. Robert J. Coyle as as military ordinary for the United States   
   of America, assigning him the titular see of Zabi. The bishop-elect was born   
   in Brooklyn, New York in   
   1964 and was ordained a priest in 1991. He has served in several pastoral   
   roles, currently as pastor of Corpus Christi Parish in Mineola, New York. He   
   was a military chaplain from 1991 to 1999, when he was named to Corpus Christi   
   Parish, but has   
   remained a reservist chaplain and has achieved the level of commander.
   
   
On Saturday, 9 February, the Holy Father appointed:
   
   
- Fr. Domingo Buezo Leiva as bishop of the apostolic vicariate of Izabal   
   (area 9,038, population 413,339, Catholics 175,000, priests 30, permanent   
   deacons 3, religious 45), Guatemala, assigning him the titular see of Dardano.   
   The bishop-elect was   
   born in Zulia, Guatemala in 1962 and was ordained a priest in 1988.   
   Bishop-elect Buezo Leiva has served as pastor of several parishes in   
   Guatemala, currently San Juan Bautista in Camotan in the diocese of Zacapa,   
   and, since 1998 has served as episcopal   
   vicar for Pastoral Care of that same diocese.
   
   
- Msgr. Leonardo Sapienza, S.C.I., regent of the Prefecture of the   
   Pontifical Household, to the College of Apostolic Protonotaries "de numero   
   participantium".
Vatican City, 12 February 2013 (VIS) – The Vatican Information   
   Service begs the pardon of its readers for the errors that may have appeared   
   in yesterday's transmission, due to technical problems caused by the overload   
   of the Vatican servers.
   
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