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    VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
   YEAR XXIII - N° 99   
   DATE 02-05-2013   
      
   Summary:   
    - BENEDICT XVI RETURNS TO THE VATICAN THIS AFTERNOON   
    - MESSAGE OF PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE FOR FEAST OF   
   VESAKH   
    - ARCHBISHOP BECCIU SPEAKS OF POPE FRANCIS' REFORM   
    - POPE NOTES THAT WORK IS FUNDAMENTAL ELEMENT IN DIGNITY OF PERSON   
    - AUDIENCES   
    - OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   BENEDICT XVI RETURNS TO THE VATICAN THIS AFTERNOON   
   Vatican City, 2 May 2013 (VIS) – Shortly before 5:00pm this afternoon,   
   Pope Francis will go to receive Pope emeritus Benedict XVI who is returning to   
   the Vatican after his two month stay at Castel Gandolfo.   
   Benedict XVI will leave Castel Gandolfo by helicopter around 4:30pm and will   
   arrive some 20 minutes later at the Vatican heliport. From this afternoon on,   
   the Pope emeritus will take up permanent residence at the “Mater   
   Ecclesiae” convent,   
   which has been recently restored. Joining him will be his secretary,   
   Archbishop Georg Ganswein, prefect of the Prefecture of the Papal Household,   
   and the four women of the “Memores Domini” lay association who   
   have been part of the Papal   
   Household for years, cleaning and cooking. The monastery, built over 20 years   
   ago at the bequest of Blessed John Paul II, has housed four different   
   cloistered orders over the years: Poor Claires, Discalced Carmelites,   
   Benedictine nuns, and Visitandine   
   nuns.   
   In these past two months, Pope Francis and the Pope emeritus have spoken   
   several times by telephone, such as on 19 March and 16 April, respectively   
   Benedict XVI's saint's day and his birthday. The two also met on 23 March in   
   the Apostolic Palace of   
   Castel Gandolfo.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   MESSAGE OF PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE FOR FEAST OF VESAKH   
   Vatican City, 2 May 2013 (VIS) – Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran and Fr.   
   Miguel Angel Ayuso Guixot M.C.C.I., respectively president and secretary of   
   the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, signed the message that,   
   on the occasion of the   
   feast of Vesakh, that dicastery annually sends to the followers of Buddhism.   
   Vesakh is a major Buddhist holy day that commemorates the birth,   
   enlightenment, and death of Gautama Buddha. According to tradition, the   
   historical Buddha was born, achieved enlightenment and passed away during the   
   full moon of the month of May, thus   
   Vesakh is a mobile feast, which this year falls on 24 or 25 May, depending on   
   the country it is celebrated in. On those days, Buddhists visit local temples   
   to offer the monks food and to hear the teachings of the Buddha, taking   
   special care to meditate   
   and to observe the eight precepts of Buddhism.   
   This year's message is entitled: “Christians and Buddhists: Loving,   
   Defending, and Promoting Human Life”. Following is the letter in its   
   entirety.   
   “On behalf of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, I   
   would like to extend my heartfelt greetings and good wishes to all of you, as   
   you celebrate the feast of Vesakh which offers us Christians an occasion to   
   renew our friendly   
   dialogue and close collaboration with the different traditions that you   
   represent.”   
   “Pope Francis, at the very beginning of his ministry, has reaffirmed the   
   necessity of dialogue of friendship among followers of different religions. He   
   noted that: 'The Church is […] conscious of the responsibility which   
   all of us have for   
   our world, for the whole of creation, which we must love and protect. There is   
   much that we can do to benefit the poor, the needy, and those who suffer, and   
   to favour justice, promote reconciliation, and build peace' ('Audience with   
   Representatives of   
   the Churches and Ecclesial Communities and of the Different Religions', 20   
   March 2013). The Message of the World Day of Peace in 2013 entitled 'Blessed   
   are the Peacemakers', notes that: 'The path to the attainment of the common   
   good and to peace is   
   above all that of respect for human life in all its many aspects, beginning   
   with its conception, through its development and up to its natural end. True   
   peacemakers, then, are those who love, defend, and promote human life in all   
   its   
   dimensions—personal, communitarian, and transcendent. Life in its   
   fullness is the height of peace. Anyone who loves peace cannot tolerate   
   attacks and crimes against life' ('Message for the World Day of Peace' in   
   2013, n. 4).”   
   “I wish to voice that the Catholic Church has sincere respect for your   
   noble religious tradition. Frequently we note a consonance with values   
   expressed also in your religious books: respect for life, contemplation,   
   silence, simplicity (cf. 'Verbum   
   Domini', no. 119). Our genuine fraternal dialogue needs to foster what we   
   Buddhists and Christians have in common especially a shared profound reverence   
   for life.”   
   “Dear Buddhist friends, your first precept teaches you to abstain from   
   destroying the life of any sentient being and it thus prohibits killing   
   oneself and others. The cornerstone of your ethics lies in loving kindness to   
   all beings. We Christians   
   believe that the core of Jesus’ moral teaching is twofold; love of God   
   and love of neighbour. Jesus says: 'As the Father has loved me, so have I   
   loved you; abide in my love'. And again: 'This is my commandment, that you   
   love one another as I have   
   loved you' ('Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 1823).The fifth Christian   
   Commandment, 'You shall not kill' harmonizes so well with your first precept.   
   'Nostra Aetate' teaches that: 'the Catholic Church rejects nothing of what is   
   true and holy in   
   these religions' (NA 2). I think, therefore, that it is urgent for both   
   Buddhists and Christians on the basis of the genuine patrimony of our   
   religious traditions to create a climate of peace to love, defend, and promote   
   human life.&rd   
    quo;   
   “As we all know, in spite of these noble teachings on the sanctity of   
   human life, evil in different forms contributes to the dehumanization of the   
   person by mitigating the sense of humanity in individuals and communities.   
   This tragic situation   
   calls upon us, Buddhists and Christians, to join hands to unmask the threats   
   to human life and to awaken the ethical consciousness of our respective   
   followers to generate a spiritual and moral rebirth of individuals and   
   societies in order to be true   
   peacemakers who love, defend and promote human life in all its d   
   mensions.”   
   “Dear Buddhist friends, let us continue to collaborate with a renewed   
   compassion and fraternity to alleviate the suffering of the human family by   
   fostering the sacredness of human life. It is in this spirit that I wish you   
   once again a peaceful   
   and joyful feast of Vesakh.”   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   ARCHBISHOP BECCIU SPEAKS OF POPE FRANCIS' REFORM   
   Vatican City, 2 May 2013 (VIS) – On 13 April, the news that Pope Francis   
   had established a group of eight cardinals to advise him on the government of   
   the universal Church and to study a plan for revising the Apostolic   
   Constitution on the Roman   
   Curia, “Pastor Bonus” was made public. The decision generated   
   great interest and, at the same time, more than a few speculations. Yesterday,   
   1 May, Archbishop Angelo Becciu, substitute of the Secretariat of State, gave   
   an interview on this   
   topic to the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, from which ample   
   extracts are given below.   
   Osservatore Romano: Much speculation has been heard regarding the reform of   
   the Curia: the balance of power, economic “super-ministers”,   
   revolutions, etc...   
   Archbishop Becciu: "Actually, it is a little strange. The Pope has not yet met   
   with the group of advisers who have been chosen and already advice is raining   
   down. After having spoken with the Holy Father, I can say that, at this   
   moment, it is absolutely   
   premature to put forward any hypothesis about the future structure of the   
   Curia. Pope Francis is listening to everyone but, in the first place, he will   
   want to listen to those whom he has chosen as advisers. Following that, a   
   project of reform of the   
   'Pastor Bonus' will be outlined, which will obviously have to follow its own   
   process."   
   OR: Likewise, much has been said about the IOR, the Institute for Religious   
   Works. Some have gone so far as to predict its elimination.   
   AB: "The Pope was surprised to see words attributed to him that he never said   
   and that misrepresent his thoughts. The only mention about it was during a   
   brief homily at the Santa Marta, made off the cuff, in which he passionately   
   recalled how the   
   essence of the Church consists in a story of love between God and human   
   beings, and how the various human structures, the IOR among them, should be   
   less important. His reference was a mention, motivated by the presence of some   
   of the employees of the   
   IOR at the Mass, in the context of a serious invitation to never lose sight of   
   the essential nature of the Church."   
   OR: Should we expect that a restructuring of the current organization of   
   dicasteries may not be imminent?   
   AB: "I don't know how to predict the timing. The Pope, in any case, has asked   
   us all, the heads of dicasteries, to continue in our service, without,   
   however, wanting to proceed for the moment in confirming any positions. The   
   same holds for the members   
   of the Congregations and the Pontifical Councils: the normal cycle of   
   confirmations or nominations, which occur at end of five-year mandates, is for   
   the moment suspended, and everyone continues in their assigned job 'until   
   otherwise provided for'   
   ('donec aliter provideatur'). This indicates the Holy Father's desire to take   
   the time needed for reflection—and for prayer, we must not   
   forget—in order to have the full picture of the situation."   
   OR: Regarding the group of advisers, some have argued that such a choice might   
   put the Pope's primacy in question...   
   AB: It is a consultative, not a decision-making, body and I truly do not see   
   how Pope Francis' choice might put the primacy in question. However, it is   
   true that it is a gesture of great importance, which means to send a clear   
   signal regarding the way   
   in which the Holy Father would like to exercise his ministry. We must not   
   forget the first task that has been assigned to the group of eight cardinals:   
   to assist the pontiff in the government of the universal Church. I would not   
   like for curiosity   
   regarding the arrangement and the structures of the Roman curia to overshadow   
   the profound meaning of Pope Francis' gesture.   
   OR: But isn't the expression “to advise” a little too vague?   
   AB: On the contrary, advising is an important task that is theologically   
   defined in the Church and that finds expression on many levels. Think, for   
   example, of the bodies participating in dioceses and parishes, or of councils   
   of superiors, provincials,   
   and generals in the Institutes of consecrated life. The function of advising   
   must be interpreted in theological terms: from a worldly perspective we should   
   say that a council without decision-making power is irrelevant but that would   
   mean equating the   
   Church to a business. Instead, theologically, advising has a function of   
   absolute importance: helping the superior in the task of discernment, in   
   understanding what the Spirit asks of the Church in a precise historical   
   moment. Without this reference,   
   for that matter, it wouldn't even be possible to understand the true meaning   
   of the action of government in the Church.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   POPE NOTES THAT WORK IS FUNDAMENTAL ELEMENT IN DIGNITY OF PERSON   
   Vatican City, 1 May 2013 (VIS) – The importance of work and   
   contemplating Jesus, following Joseph and Mary's example, were the central   
   themes of the Pope's first catechesis in the month of May, which coincided   
   with the feast of St. Joseph the   
   Worker.   
   Before the more than 70,000 persons gathered in St. Peter's Square for the   
   general audience, the Pope explained that Jesus “enters into our   
   history, comes among us, born of Mary by an act of God, but with the presence   
   of St. Joseph, his legal   
   father who cares for him and also teaches him his work … the trade of   
   carpentry in his workshop in Nazareth, sharing with him the commitment, the   
   fatigue, the satisfaction, and also the difficulties of every day. This   
   reminds us of the dignity   
   and importance of labour. The Book of Genesis narrates that God created man   
   and woman, entrusting to them the task of filling and subduing the earth,   
   which did not mean exploiting it but cultivating and safeguarding it, caring   
   for it with their very   
   labour.”   
   “Labour is part of God's plan of love. We are called to cultivate and   
   safeguard all the goods of creation and, in this way, we participate in the   
   act of creation! Labour is a fundamental element for the dignity of a person.   
   … It makes us   
   like God, who laboured and labours, who always acts. He gives us the capacity   
   to maintain ourselves, our family, to contribute to the growth of our own   
   nations. Here,” the pontiff added, “I am thinking of the   
   difficulties that, in various   
   countries, the world of labour and business encounters today. I am think of   
   how many, and not just young persons, are unemployed,often because of an   
   economistic conception of society that seeks selfish profit, outside the   
   parameters of social   
   justice.”   
   “I would like to invite all to solidarity, and encourage those   
   responsible for public affairs to make every effort to give new impetus to   
   employment. This means having care for the dignity of the person. Mostly I   
   would like to say not to lose   
   hope. Even St. Joseph had difficult moments, but he never lost trust and he   
   knew how to overcome them with the certainty that God does not abandon us.   
   “   
   After that exhortation, the Bishop of Rome referenced another troubling   
   situation, “slave labour”, work that enslaves. “How many   
   persons around the world are victims of this type of slavery in which the   
   person is at the service of   
   labour while it should be labour that offers service to the person so that   
   they might have dignity. I ask our brothers and sisters in the faith and all   
   men and women of good will to make a decisive choice against the trafficking   
   of persons within which   
   'slave labour' figures.”   
   The Pope then touched upon the second theme of his catechesis, Jesus, who was   
   Joseph and Mary's shared centre of attention in the silence of their everyday   
   actions. The attitude of both is revealed in how the Virgin, as St. Luke   
   narrates in his Gospel,   
   “kept all these things, reflecting on them in her heart.”   
   “In order to listen to the Lord, we need to learn how to contemplate   
   him, to perceive his constant presence in our lives. We need to stop and   
   dialogue with him, give him space   
   with our prayer. … Let us remember the Lord more during our days!”   
   During this month of May, I would like to recall the important and the beauty   
   of praying the Holy Rosary,” Francis continued, “contemplating the   
   mysteries of Jesus, reflecting, that is, on the central moments of his life,   
   so that, as for   
   Mary and St. Joseph, He may be the centre of our thoughts, of our concerns,   
   and of our actions. It would be beautiful if, above all during this month of   
   May, we would recite together in our families, with our friends, and in our   
   parishes, the Holy   
   Rosary or some prayer to Jesus and the Virgin Mary. Praying together is a   
   precious moment for making our family life and our friendship more steadfast!   
   Let us learn to pray more in our families and as a family!”   
   “Let us ask St. Joseph and the Virgin Mary,” the Holy Father   
   concluded, “to teach us to be faithful to our everyday commitments, to   
   live our faith in our everyday actions, and to give more space to the Lord in   
   our lives, to stop and   
   contemplate his face.”   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   AUDIENCES   
   Vatican City, 2 May 2013 (VIS) – This morning, the Holy Father received   
   in separate audiences:   
    - His Excellency Mr. Aleksander Avdeev, the new ambassador of the Russian   
   Federation to the Holy See, presenting his credential letters,   
    - Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli, titular of Cluentum and president of the   
   Pontifical Council for Social Communications, and   
    - His Excellency Mr. Jozef Dravecky, ambassador of the Slovak Republic, on   
   his farewell visit.   
   This afternoon he is scheduled to receive Cardinal Angelo Amato, S.D.B.,   
   prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
   Vatican City, 2 May 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father:   
    - appointed Fr. Raymond Browne as bishop of Kerry (area 5,300, population   
   149,514, Catholics 143,300, priests 113, religious 215), Ireland. The   
   bishop-elect was born in Athlone, Ireland in 1957 and was ordained a priest in   
   1982. Since   
   ordination he has served in several pastoral and judicial roles, most recently   
   as pastor in Ballagh and the Diocese of Elphin's designated contact for the   
   National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland   
   (NBSCCCI) as well as   
   for assistance for elderly and ill clergy. He succeeds Bishop William Murphy,   
   whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese the Holy Father   
   accepted, upon having reached the age limit.   
    - gave his assent to the canonical election carried out by the Synod of   
   Bishops of the Greek-Melkite Church of Archimandrite Nicolas Antipa, B.A., as   
   metropolitan archbishop of Bosra e Hauran of the Greek-Melkites (Catholics   
   27,000,   
   priests 22, religious 10), Syria. The archbishop-elect was born in Aleppo,   
   Syria, in 1945 and ordained a priest in 1971. Since ordination he has served   
   in several pastoral and academic roles, most recently as professor of Sacred   
   Scripture at the Saint   
   Paul Theological Institute of Harissa, Lebanon and at the Institute of   
   Theological and Pastoral Studies of the archeparchy of Beirut of the   
   Greek-Melkites, Lebanon.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
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   VISnews130502   
      
   
VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE YEAR XXIII - N° 99 DATE 02-05-2013
Summary: - BENEDICT XVI RETURNS TO THE   
   VATICAN THIS AFTERNOON -   
   MESSAGE OF PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE FOR FEAST OF   
   VESAKH - ARCHBISHOP BECCIU SPEAKS OF POPE FRANCIS' REFORM - POPE   
   NOTES THAT WORK IS FUNDAMENTAL ELEMENT IN DIGNITY OF PERSON -   
   AUDIENCES - OTHER PONTIFICAL   
   ACTS
BENEDICT XVI RETURNS TO THE VATICAN THIS AFTERNOON
   
   
Vatican City, 2 May 2013 (VIS) – Shortly before 5:00pm this   
   afternoon, Pope Francis will go to receive Pope emeritus Benedict XVI who is   
   returning to the Vatican after his two month stay at Castel Gandolfo.
   
   
Benedict XVI will leave Castel Gandolfo by helicopter around 4:30pm and   
   will arrive some 20 minutes later at the Vatican heliport. From this afternoon   
   on, the Pope emeritus will take up permanent residence at the “Mater   
   Ecclesiae”   
   convent, which has been recently restored. Joining him will be his secretary,   
   Archbishop Georg Ganswein, prefect of the Prefecture of the Papal Household,   
   and the four women of the “Memores Domini” lay association who   
   have been part of the   
   Papal Household for years, cleaning and cooking. The monastery, built over 20   
   years ago at the bequest of Blessed John Paul II, has housed four different   
   cloistered orders over the years: Poor Claires, Discalced Carmelites,   
   Benedictine nuns, and   
   Visitandine nuns.
   
   
In these past two months, Pope Francis and the Pope emeritus have spoken   
   several times by telephone, such as on 19 March and 16 April, respectively   
   Benedict XVI's saint's day and his birthday. The two also met on 23 March in   
   the Apostolic Palace of   
   Castel Gandolfo.
MESSAGE OF PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE FOR FEAST OF   
   VESAKH
   
   
Vatican City, 2 May 2013 (VIS) – Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran and Fr.   
   Miguel Angel Ayuso Guixot M.C.C.I., respectively president and secretary of   
   the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, signed the message that,   
   on the occasion of the   
   feast of Vesakh, that dicastery annually sends to the followers of   
   Buddhism.
   
   
Vesakh is a major Buddhist holy day that commemorates the birth,   
   enlightenment, and death of Gautama Buddha. According to tradition, the   
   historical Buddha was born, achieved enlightenment and passed away during the   
   full moon of the month of May, thus   
   Vesakh is a mobile feast, which this year falls on 24 or 25 May, depending on   
   the country it is celebrated in. On those days, Buddhists visit local temples   
   to offer the monks food and to hear the teachings of the Buddha, taking   
   special care to meditate   
   and to observe the eight precepts of Buddhism.
   
   
This year's message is entitled: “Christians and Buddhists: Loving,   
   Defending, and Promoting Human Life”. Following is the letter in its   
   entirety.
   
   
“On behalf of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, I   
   would like to extend my heartfelt greetings and good wishes to all of you, as   
   you celebrate the feast of Vesakh which offers us Christians an occasion to   
   renew our friendly   
   dialogue and close collaboration with the different traditions that you   
   represent.”
   
   
“Pope Francis, at the very beginning of his ministry, has reaffirmed   
   the necessity of dialogue of friendship among followers of different   
   religions. He noted that: 'The Church is […] conscious of the   
   responsibility which all of us have   
   for our world, for the whole of creation, which we must love and protect.   
   There is much that we can do to benefit the poor, the needy, and those who   
   suffer, and to favour justice, promote reconciliation, and build peace'   
   ('Audience with Representatives   
   of the Churches and Ecclesial Communities and of the Different Religions', 20   
   March 2013). The Message of the World Day of Peace in 2013 entitled 'Blessed   
   are the Peacemakers', notes that: 'The path to the attainment of the common   
   good and to peace is   
   above all that of respect for human life in all its many aspects, beginning   
   with its conception, through its development and up to its natural end. True   
   peacemakers, then, are those who love,   
   --- NetMgr/2 1.0y+   
    * Origin: NetMgr+ @ Sursum Corda! BBS Meridian MS USA (1:396/45)