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   VISnews130520   
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    VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
   YEAR XXIII - N° 110   
   DATE 20-05-2013   
      
   Summary:   
    - POPE FRANCIS: BE OPEN TO GOD'S SURPRISES   
    - CELEBRATION OF PENTECOST IN UPPER ROOM UNDER HEAVEN   
    - ECCLESIAL MOVEMENTS: THE CHURCH CANNOT BE LOCKED WITHIN ITSELF   
    - HUMAN RIGHTS, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM, AND INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION FOCUS OF   
   AUDIENCE BETWEEN POPE AND ANGELA MERKEL   
    - CHRISTIANS AND BUDDHISTS: INNER PEACE, PEACE AMONG PEOPLES   
    - AUDIENCES   
    - OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   POPE FRANCIS: BE OPEN TO GOD'S SURPRISES   
   Vatican City, 19 May 2013 (VIS) – The Mass that Pope Francis celebrated   
   this morning in St. Peter's Square in front of over 200,000 people was the   
   concluding event of the two days of pilgrimage for the ecclesial movements,   
   communities, and lay   
   associations to Rome as part of the Year of Faith celebrations. In his homily,   
   Francis noted that, on the Solemnity of Pentecost, “we contemplate and   
   re-live in the liturgy the outpouring of the Holy Spirit sent by the Risen   
   Christ upon his   
   Church; an event of grace which filled the Upper Room in Jerusalem and then   
   spread throughout the world.”   
   “Newness,” he said, “always makes us a bit fearful, because   
   we feel more secure if we have everything under control, if we are the ones   
   who build, programme, and plan our lives ... This is also the case when it   
   comes to God. ... It is   
   hard to abandon ourselves to him with complete trust, allowing the Holy Spirit   
   to be the soul and guide of our lives ... We fear that God may force us to   
   strike out on new paths and leave behind our all too narrow, closed and   
   selfish horizons in order   
   to become open to his own. Yet throughout the history of salvation, whenever   
   God reveals himself, He brings newness—God always brings n   
   wness—and demands our complete trust: Noah, mocked by all, builds an ark   
   and is saved; Abram leaves his   
   land with only a promise in hand; Moses stands up to the might of Pharaoh and   
   leads his people to freedom; the apostles, huddled fearfully in the Upper   
   Room, go forth with courage to proclaim the Gospel. This is not a question of   
   new   
    ness   
   for novelty’s sake, the search for something new to relieve our boredom   
   ... The newness which God brings into our life is something that actually   
   brings fulfilment, that gives true joy, true serenity, because God loves us   
   and desires only our   
   good. Let us ask ourselves today: Are we open to 'God’s surprises'? Or   
   are we closed and fearful before the newness of the Holy Spirit? Do we have   
   the courage to strike out along the new paths which God’s newness sets   
   before us, or do we   
   resist, barricaded in transient structures which have lost their capacity for   
   openness to what is new? We would do well to ask ourselves these questions all   
   through the day.”   
   “The Holy Spirit,” the pontiff continued, “would appear to   
   create disorder in the Church, since he brings the diversity of charisms and   
   gifts; yet all this, by his working, is a great source of wealth, for the Holy   
   Spirit is the Spirit   
   of unity, which does not mean uniformity, but which leads everything back to   
   harmony. In the Church, it is the Holy Spirit who creates harmony. ... Only   
   the Spirit can awaken diversity, plurality, and multiplicity, while at the   
   same time building unity.   
   Here too, when we are the ones who try to create diversity and close ourselves   
   up in what makes us different and other, we bring division. When we are the   
   ones who want to build unity in accordance with our human plans, we end up   
   creating uniformity,   
   standardization. But if instead we let ourselves be guided by the Spirit,   
   richness, variety and diversity never become a source of conflict, because he   
   impels us to experience variety within the communion of the Church. ... Having   
    a   
   sense of the Church is something fundamental for every Christian, every   
   community, and every movement. It is the Church which brings Christ to me, and   
   me to Christ; parallel journeys are very dangerous! When we venture beyond the   
   Church’s teaching   
   and community ... and do not remain in them, we are not one with the God of   
   Jesus Christ.”   
   In his last point, the Pope observed that “early theologians used to say   
   that the soul is a kind of sailboat, the Holy Spirit is the wind which fills   
   its sails and drives it forward, and the gusts of wind are the gifts of the   
   Spirit. Lacking his   
   impulse and his grace, we do not go forward. The Holy Spirit draws us into the   
   mystery of the living God and saves us from the threat of a Church which is   
   gnostic and self-referential, closed in on herself; He impels us to open the   
   doors and go forth to   
   proclaim and bear witness to the goodness of the Gospel ... The Holy Spirit is   
   the soul of mission. The events that took place in Jerusalem almost two   
   thousand years ago are not something far removed from us; they are events   
   which affect us and become a   
   lived experience in each of us. The Pentecost of the Upper Room in Jerusalem   
   is the beginning, a beginning which endures. ... It is the Paraclete, the   
   'Comforter', who grants us the courage to take to the streets of the world, bri   
    nging   
   the Gospel! The Holy Spirit makes us look to the horizon and urges us toward   
   the very outskirts of existence in order to proclaim life in Jesus   
   Christ.”   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   CELEBRATION OF PENTECOST IN UPPER ROOM UNDER HEAVEN   
   Vatican City, 19 May 2013 (VIS) – At the end of the Mass celebrating the   
   Solemnity of Pentecost for the movements, new communities, and lay   
   associations, the Holy Father prayed the Regina Coeli with the faithful   
   gathered in St. Peter's Square.   
   This “renewed Pentecost,” the Pope said, “has transformed   
   St. Peter's Square into an Upper Room under the heavens. We have re-lived the   
   experience of the nascent Church, praying with Mary, the Mother of Jesus. In   
   the diversity of these   
   charisms we have experienced the beauty of unity, of being one. This is the   
   work of the Holy Spirit who always creates unity in the Church anew.”   
   The bishop of Rome thanked the ecclesial movements, communities, and   
   associations, calling them “a gift and a wealth for the Church”   
   and especially thanking them for having come from Rome and so many parts of   
   the world to gather together.   
   “Always carry with you the strength of the Gospel! Do not be afraid!   
   Always have joy and passion for communion in the Church! May the Risen Lord be   
   always with you and Our Lady protect you!”   
   At the end of the Regina Coeli, the Pope recalled in his prayers the   
   population of Emilia Romagna in northern Italy who, at this time last year,   
   suffered an earthquake, also praying for the Italian Federation of   
   Associations of Volunteers in Oncology.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   ECCLESIAL MOVEMENTS: THE CHURCH CANNOT BE LOCKED WITHIN ITSELF   
   Vatican City, 18 May 2013 (VIS) – Today and yesterday, events for   
   ecclesial movements of new lay communities and associations to reflect on the   
   theme “I Believe! Increase our Faith!” were held in Rome as part   
   of the Year of Faith. Over   
   120,000 people were gathered in St. Peter's Square this afternoon when the   
   Pope arrived at 5:30pm and, after greeting the pilgrims, initiated the   
   Pentecost Vigil.   
   After the opening welcome by Archbishop Rino Fisichella, president of the   
   Pontifical Council for Promoting the New Evangelization, the image of the   
   Virgin Mary Salus Populi Romani was brought in a procession to the centre of   
   the square and then   
   enthroned. After a series of readings, songs, and testimonials, Pope Francis   
   answered four questions asked by representatives of the movements. Following   
   are the questions with a summary of the Holy Father's answers.   
   Q: “How were you able to achieve certainty of faith in your life, and   
   what path can you indicate to us so that each one of us can overcome our   
   fragility of faith?”   
   A: “I have had the good fortune to grow up in a family where the faith   
   was lived in a simple and concrete manner ... The first proclamation is in the   
   home, within the family, right? And this makes me think of the love of so many   
   mothers and so   
   many grandmothers in the transmission of the faith. … We do not find   
   our faith in the abstract, no! It is always a person who preaches it to us,   
   who tells us who Jesus is, who gives us the faith, who gives us the first   
   announcement. … But   
   there is a very important day for me: September 21, 1953. I was almost 17. It   
   was the 'Students' Day'.... Before going to the festival, I went to my parish   
   and met a priest I did not know, but I felt the need to confess. …   
   After confession I felt   
   that something had changed. I was not the same. I felt a voice call me: I was   
   convinced that I had to become a priest. This experience of faith is   
   important. We say that we must seek God, go to him to ask for forgiveness ...   
   but when   
    we   
   go, He is already waiting for us. He is the first one there! ... And this   
   creates wonder in the hearts of those who do not believe, and this is how   
   faith grows! With an encounter with a Person, with an encounter with the   
   Lord.”   
   Regarding fragility: “Fragility’s biggest enemy curiously enough,   
   is fear. But do not be afraid! We are weak, we know it but He is stronger! If   
   you are with him, then there is no problem! A child is fragile—I see   
   many today—but   
   they are with their fathers and their mothers so they are safe! We too are   
   safe with the Lord; we are secure. Faith grows with the Lord, out of the very   
   hands of the Lord.”   
   Q: The second question concerned the challenge of evangelization and what the   
   movements should do to put the task have been called to into practice.   
   A: “I will say just three words. First: Jesus. … If we move   
   forward with planning and other things, beautiful things indeed, but without   
   Jesus, then something is wrong. Jesus is the most important thing. …   
   The second word is prayer.   
   Look at the face of God, but above all ... know that you are being looked at   
   in return. … And third, 'witness'. … the faith can only be   
   communicated through witness and that is through love. Not with our ideas, but   
   by living the Gospel in   
   our own lives, which the Holy Spirit brings to life within us. … Not so   
   much speaking, but speaking through the way you live: the consistency of your   
   life … which means living Christianity as an encounter with Jesus that   
   leads me towards   
   others and not as a social fact. Socially this how we are. Are we Christians?   
   Wrapped up in ourselves? No, not that. Witness!”   
   Q: The third question was how to live as “a poor Church, for the   
   poor”.   
   A: “First of all, the main contribution we can make is to live the   
   Gospel. The Church is not a political movement or a well-organized structure:   
   That is not her. … The Church is the 'salt of the earth, the light of   
   the world’. She is   
   called to make the leaven of the Kingdom of God present in society and do it   
   first by witness, her witness of fraternal love, solidarity … When you   
   hear some say that solidarity is not a value, that it's a 'basic attitude'   
   that needs to disappear   
   ... this is wrong! … Moments of crisis, such as the one we are   
   experiencing ... are not only an economic crisis, not a cultural crisis. It is   
   a crisis of humanity: it is humanity that is in crisis. And what can be   
   destroyed is mankind! But   
   mankind is the image of God!”   
   “In this time of crisis we can't just worry about ourselves, can't get   
   wrapped up in loneliness or discouragement … Please do not get locked   
   away in yourselves! That is a danger: locking ourselves away inside our   
   parish, among our friends,   
   in our movement, with people who think the same way we do ... But you know   
   what is happening? When the Church becomes closed up in itself it gets sick.   
   ,,, The Church must go out from herself. Where? Towards the boundaries of   
   existence, whatever those   
   might be, but get out. Faith is an encounter with Jesus and we must do the   
   same as Jesus, meet others. .… We have to bring about encounter. We   
   have to make our faith a 'culture of encounter' and of friendship, a culture   
   wherein we find brothers   
   and sisters, where we can talk even with those who do not think like us, even   
   with those with which have a different faith … Everyone has something   
   in common with us: they are made in the image of God! … We must go out   
    to   
   meet with everyone without negotiating about the faith we belong to.”   
   “And another important point: we must go out to meet the poor. …   
   Today, imagine, all the children who don't have something to eat is not news.   
   This is serious. We cannot stay calm! We cannot become starch-pressed   
   Christians, those   
   Christians who are too highly educated, who speak of theological issues over   
   tea, calmly. No! We must become courageous Christians and go out in search of   
   those who are the flesh of Christ. … Poverty, for us Christians, is not   
   a sociological or   
   philosophical or cultural category. No. It is a theological category. I would   
   say, perhaps, the first category, because God, the Son of God, humbled   
   himself, became poor to walk along the road with us. This is our poverty: the   
   poverty of the flesh of   
   Christ; the poverty that has brought us the Son of God with his    
   ncarnation.”   
   Q: The fourth question was: How can we help our brothers and sisters if there   
   is little we can do to change the socio-political climate they are living   
   under?   
   A: “Two virtues are needed to proclaim the Gospel: courage and patience.   
   They are in the Church of patience. They suffer and there are more martyrs   
   today than in the early centuries of the Church. … It should be noted   
   that many times these   
   conflicts do not have a religious origin. Often there are other causes of a   
   social and political nature and unfortunately, religious affiliations are used   
   like fuel to the fire. A Christian must always know how to respond to evil   
   with good, although it   
   is often difficult. We must try to make them feel—these brothers and   
   sisters of ours—that we are deeply united ... to their situation, that   
   we know that they are Christians who have 'entered a state of patience'.   
   … they experience the   
   limits, the very limits, between life and death. And for us, this experience   
   should lead us to promote religious freedom for all: for everyone! Every man   
   and woman should be free in their religious confession, whatever it may be.   
    Why?   
   Because that man and that woman are children of God.“   
   The vigil ended with the profession of faith, prayer intentions, and the   
   singing of the Regina Coeli.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   HUMAN RIGHTS, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM, AND INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION FOCUS OF   
   AUDIENCE BETWEEN POPE AND ANGELA MERKEL   
   Vatican City, 18 May 2013 (VIS) – This morning, Saturday 18 May 2013, in   
   the Vatican Apostolic Palace, the Federal Chancellor of Germany, Her   
   Excellency Ms. Angela Merkel, was received in audience by the Holy Father   
   Francis. Chancellor Merkel then   
   went on to meet with Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, secretary for Relations   
   with States.   
   During the cordial conversations, the long history of relations between the   
   Holy See and Germany was recalled and topics of common interest were focused   
   on, including the socio-political, economic, and religious situation in Europe   
   and the World. In   
   particular, the protection of human rights, the persecution of Christians,   
   religious freedom, and international collaboration for the promotion of peace   
   were discussed.   
   Finally, there was an exchange of viewpoints on Europe as a community of   
   values and its responsibilities in the world, with the expression of the   
   desire for all civil and religious elements to commit to a development founded   
   upon the dignity of the   
   person and inspired by principles of subsidiarity and solidarity.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   CHRISTIANS AND BUDDHISTS: INNER PEACE, PEACE AMONG PEOPLES   
   Vatican City, 20 May 2013 (VIS) – “Inner Peace, Peace Among   
   Peoples” was the theme of the fourth Buddhist-Christian Colloquium held   
   at the Pontifical Urbaniana University, sponsored by the Pontifical Council   
   for Interreligious Dialogue   
   in collaboration with the Office of Ecumenical and Interreligious Dialogue of   
   the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Italy. The participants, coming from   
   Italy, Japan, the Republic of China (Taiwan), Vietnam, South Korea, Thailand,   
   Myanmar, Sri   
   Lanka, and India, reaffirmed the need of mutual responsibility to maintain or   
   to restore peace and to contribute to friendship and solidarity among persons   
   and peoples.   
   “In both the Christian and Buddhist journeys,” a communique   
   released today states, “inner freedom, purification of the heart,   
   compassion, and the gift of self are the essential conditions for the inner   
   peace of the individual as well   
   as for social peace. In spite of differences, both Buddhist and Christian   
   ethical teaching on respect for life is a search for common good based on   
   loving kindness and compassion. The participants expressed that dialogue   
   between Buddhists and Christians   
   be strengthened to face new challenges such as threat to human life, poverty,   
   hunger, endemic diseases, violence, war, etc., which belittle the sanctity of   
   human life and poison peace in human society.“   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   AUDIENCES   
   Vatican City, 20 May 2013 (VIS) – This morning the Holy Father received   
   in separate audiences:   
   nine prelates from the Sicilia Region of the Italian Episcopal Conference on   
   their "ad limina" visit:   
    - Archbishop Salvatore Gristina of Catania,   
    - Archbishop Salvatore Pappalardo of Siracusa,   
    - Archbishop Calogero La Piana, S.D.B., of Messina-Lipari-Santa Lucia del   
   Mela,   
    - Bishop Ignazio Zambito of Patti,   
    - Bishop Paolo Urso of Ragusa,   
    - Bishop Salvatore Muratore of Nicosia,   
    - Bishop Antonio Stagliano of Noto,   
    - Bishop Calogero Peri, O.F.M. Cap., of Caltagirone, and   
    - Bishop Antonino Raspanti of Acireale.   
   Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, president emeritus of the Pontifical   
   Commission “Ecclesia Dei”, and   
   Cardinal Robert Sarah, president of the Pontifical Council “Cor   
   Unum”.   
   This afternoon in the Domus Sanctae Marthae chapel he is scheduled to receive   
   nine prelates from the Sicilia Region of the Italian Episcopal Conference on   
   their "ad limina" visit:   
    - Cardinal Paolo Romeo, archbishop of Palermo and apostolic administrator   
   "sede vacante et ad nutum Sanctae Sedis" of the eparchy of Piana degli   
   Albanesi (of the Italo-Albanians), with the auxiliary of Palermo:   
    - Bishop Carmelo Cuttitta, titular of Novi,   
    - Archbishop Francesco Montenegro of Agrigento,   
    - Archbishop Michele Pennisi of Monreale,   
    - Archbishop Alessandro Plotti, emeritus of Pisa and apostolic   
   administrator "sede vacante et ad nutum Sanctae Sedis" of Trapani,   
    - Bishop Vincenzo Manzella of Cefalu,   
    - Bishop Mario Russotto of Caltanissetta,   
    - Bishop Domenico Mogavero of Mazara del Vallo, and   
    - Msgr. Giovanni Bongiovanni, diocesan administrator of Piazza Armerina.   
   On Saturday, 18 May, the Holy Father received in separate audiences:   
    - Archbishop Miroslaw Adamczyk, apostolic nuncio to Liberia and titular of   
   Otriculum, and   
    - Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the   
   Doctrine of the Faith.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
   Vatican City, 20 May 2013 (VIS) - Today, the Holy Father appointed Archbishop   
   William Goh Seng Chye as archbishop of Singapore, (area 639, population   
   5,076,700, Catholics 189,094, priests 144, religious 417). Archbishop Goh,   
   previously coadjutor of that   
   same archdiocese, succeeds Archbishop Nicholas Chia Yeck Joo, whose   
   resignation from the pastoral care of the same archdiocese the Holy Father   
   accepted, upon having reached the age limit.   
   On Saturday, 18 May, the Holy Father appointed:   
    - Bishop Manuel Jose Macario do Nascimento Clemente as patriarch of Lisbon   
   (area 3,735, population 2,235,000, Catholics 1,869,000, priests 604, permanent   
   deacons 79, religious 1,507), Portugal. Bishop Macario do Nascimento Clemente,   
   previously of Porto, Portugal, currently serves as the vice president of the   
   Portuguese Episcopal Conference. Since 2012 he has been a member of the   
   Pontifical Council for Social Communications. He succeeds Cardinal Jose da   
   Cruz Policarpo, whose   
   resignation from the pastoral care of the same patriarchy the Holy Father   
   accepted, upon having reached the age limit.   
    - Archbishop Michael Wallace Banach as apostolic nuncio to the Solomon   
   Islands. Archbishop Banach, titular of Memphis, is also apostolic nuncio to   
   Papua New Guinea.   
    - Bishop Jozef Piotr Kupny as archbishop of Wroclaw (area 8,850, population   
   1,200,300, Catholics 1,153,600, priests 858, religious 1,204), Poland.   
   Archbishop-elect Kupny, previously auxiliary of Katowice and titular of   
   Vanariona, was   
   born in Dabrowka Wielka, Lodz Voivodeship, Poland, in 1956, was ordained to   
   the priesthood in 1983, and received episcopal ordination in 2005. He was   
   recently elected a member of the permanent council of the Polish Episcopal   
   Conference and is president   
   of the Council for Social Questions and delegate to Catholic Movements and   
   Associations. He succeeds Archbishop Marian Golebiewski, whose resignation   
   from the pastoral care of the same archdiocese the Holy Father accepted, upon   
   having reached the age   
   limit.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
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   VISnews130520   
      
   
VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE YEAR XXIII - N° 110 DATE 20-05-2013
Summary: - POPE FRANCIS: BE OPEN TO GOD'S   
   SURPRISES - CELEBRATION   
   OF PENTECOST IN UPPER ROOM UNDER HEAVEN - ECCLESIAL MOVEMENTS: THE   
   CHURCH CANNOT BE LOCKED WITHIN ITSELF - HUMAN RIGHTS, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM,   
   AND INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION FOCUS OF AUDIENCE BETWEEN POPE AND ANGELA   
   MERKEL - CHRISTIANS   
   AND BUDDHISTS: INNER PEACE, PEACE AMONG PEOPLES - AUDIENCES -   
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican City, 19 May 2013 (VIS) – The Mass that Pope Francis   
   celebrated this morning in St. Peter's Square in front of over 200,000 people   
   was the concluding event of the two days of pilgrimage for the ecclesial   
   movements, communities, and lay   
   --- NetMgr/2 1.0y+   
    * Origin: NetMgr+ @ Sursum Corda! BBS Meridian MS USA (1:396/45)