Subject: VISnews 110214   
   Organization: VIS - Ufficio Stampa della Santa Sede   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 29   
   ENGLISH   
   MONDAY, 14 FEBRUARY 2011   
      
   SUMMARY: 11 - 14 FEBRUARY   
      
   - Fraternity of St. Charles Borromeo Celebrates 25 Years   
   - Other Pontifical Acts   
   - Angelus: Pope Recalls Four Roma Children Who Died in Fire   
   - Consistory on Several Causes of Canonisation   
   - Audiences   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   FRATERNITY OF ST. CHARLES BORROMEO CELEBRATES 25 YEARS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 12 FEB 2011 (VIS) - At midday today the Holy Father received   
   priests and seminarians of the Fraternity of St. Charles Borromeo, which is   
   currently celebrating its twenty-fifth anniversary. The group was   
   accompanied Msgr. Massimo Camisaca, founder and president of the fraternity,   
   and by Fr. Julian Carron, president of the Fraternity of Communion and   
   Liberation.   
      
    "This moment brings to mind my long friendship with Msgr. Luigi Giussani",   
   said the Pope, "and stands as testimony to the fecundity of his charism. On   
   this occasion I would like to respond to two questions which our meeting   
   today raises in my mind: What is the place of the ordained priesthood in the   
   life of the Church? What is the place of fraternal life in the experience of   
   priests?   
      
    "The Christian priesthood is not an end unto itself. It was established by   
   Jesus for the birth and life of the Church. ... The glory and joy of the   
   priesthood is to serve Christ and His mystical Body. ... The presence of   
   priestly vocations is a sure sign of the authenticity and vitality of a   
   Christian community. God calls at all times, also to the priesthood. There   
   is no true and fruitful growth in the Church without an authentic priestly   
   presence to support and nourish it".   
      
    In this context the Pope expressed his gratitude "to everyone who   
   dedicates their energy to the formation of priests and to the reform of   
   priestly life. Like the rest of the Church, in fact, the priesthood also   
   needs continual renewal, rediscovering the most essential traits of its   
   being in the life of Jesus". Such renewal requires "profound education in   
   meditation and prayer", as well as "a study of theology which enables   
   Christian truths to be discovered in a way that associates them to the life   
   of the individual and the community".   
      
    Going on then to refer to the importance of the shared life, the Holy   
   Father explained that it is not simply "a strategy to respond to the lack of   
   priests. Nor is it, per se, merely a stay against man's solitude and   
   weakness. All this can also exist, of course, but only if the fraternal life   
   is understood and experienced as a journey in which to immerse oneself in   
   the reality of communion. ... No priest administers things which belong to   
   him; rather, with his brethren he participates in a sacramental gift which   
   comes directly from Jesus".   
      
    "Living with other people means accepting the need for one's own continual   
   conversion. Above all it means discovering the beauty of such a journey, the   
   joy of humility, of penance, but also of conversation, of mutual   
   forgiveness, of reciprocal support".   
      
      
    Benedict XVI concluded by highlighting the importance "of abiding with   
   Jesus in order to be able to abide with other people. This is the heart of   
   the mission. In the company of Christ and of his brothers each priest can   
   find the energy necessary to take care of mankind, to shoulder the spiritual   
   and material needs he encounters, to teach - with ever-new words dictated by   
   love - the eternal truths of the faith for which our contemporaries also   
   thirst".   
   AC/ VIS   
   20110214 (530)   
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 12 FEB 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father accepted:   
      
    - The resignation from the pastoral care of the archdiocese of Monrovia,   
   Liberia, presented by Archbishop Michael Kpakala Francis, upon having   
   reached the age limit. He is succeeded by Coadjutor Archbishop Lewis   
   Zeigler.   
      
    - The resignation from the pastoral care of the archdiocese of Poitiers,   
   France, presented by Archbishop Albert Rouet, upon having reached the age   
   limit.   
      
    On Friday 11 February it was made public that he:   
      
    - Appointed Bishop John Barwa S.V.D. of Rourkela, India, as archbishop of   
   Cuttack-Bhubaneswar (area 32,440, population 12,047,000, Catholics 63,700,   
   priests 120, religious 300), India. The archbishop-elect was born in   
   Gaibira, India in 1955, he was ordained a priest in 1985 and consecrated a   
   bishop in 2006. He succeeds Archbishop Raphael Cheenath S.V.D., whose   
   resignation from the pastoral care of the same archdiocese the Holy Father   
   accepted, upon having reached the age limit.   
      
    - Elevated the apostolic prefecture of Likoula (area 66,044, population   
   167,000, Catholics 45,000, priests 8, religious 29), Republic of Congo, to   
   the rank of diocese with the same territorial configuration as before,   
   giving it the name of Impfondo. He appointed Fr. Jean Gardin C.S.Sp.,   
   apostolic perfect of Likoula, as first bishop of the new diocese. The   
   bishop-elect was born in Saint-Pois, France in 1941 and ordained a priest in   
   1969.   
      
    - Appointed Fr. Victor Abagna Mossa, pastoral care worker among Congolese   
   residents in the diocese of Namur, Belgium, as bishop of Owando (area   
   113,250, population 570,000, Catholics 397,064, priests 62, permanent   
   deacons 1, religious 56), Republic of Congo. The bishop-elect was born in   
   Makoua, Republic of Congo in 1946 and ordained a priest in 1974.   
   RE:NER:ECE/ VIS 20110214   
   (280)   
      
   ANGELUS: POPE RECALLS FOUR ROMA CHILDREN WHO DIED IN FIRE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 13 FEB 2011 (VIS) - At midday today Benedict XVI appeared at   
   the window of his study to pray the Angelus with faithful gathered in St.   
   Peter's Square.   
      
    Commenting on today's Gospel reading (the continuation of the "Sermon on   
   the Mount"), the Pope noted how, "following the 'Beatitudes', which are His   
   programme for life, Jesus proclaims the new Law, His 'Torah' as our Jewish   
   brothers call it. Indeed, the Messiah, at His coming, was also to bring the   
   definitive revelation of the Law, and this is precisely what Jesus says: 'Do   
   not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have come   
   not to abolish but to fulfil'. Then, turning to His disciples, He adds:   
   'Unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and the Pharisees,   
   you will never enter the kingdom of heaven'. But", the Pope asked, "in what   
   does this 'fullness' of Christ's Law, this 'higher' justice He requires,   
   consist?   
      
    "Jesus explains it by a series of antitheses between the ancient   
   commandments and His way of re-presenting them", Pope Benedict added. "He   
   begins each phase with: 'You have heard that it was said ...', then affirms:   
   'But I say to you'. ... This way of speaking made a great impression on the   
   people ... because that 'I say to you' meant that He was claiming the   
   authority of God, source of Law, for Himself. The novelty of Jesus consists,   
   essentially, in the fact that He 'fills' the commandments with the love of   
   God, with the power of the Holy Spirit Who dwells in Him. And we, through   
   faith in Christ, can open ourselves to the action of the Holy Spirit, which   
   makes us capable of experiencing divine love.   
      
    "Thus each precept becomes true as a requirement of love, and they all   
   come together in one single commandment: love God with all your heart and   
   love your neighbour as yourself. 'Love is the fulfilling of the law', St.   
   Paul writes".   
      
    "Faced with this requirement", the Holy Father went on, "the pitiful case   
   of the four Roma children, who died last week on the outskirts of this city   
   when their shack burned down, forces us to face the question whether a more   
   united and fraternal society, more coherent in charity, in other words, more   
   Christian, would not have been able to avoid this tragic event. And this   
   also holds true for many other painful episodes, more or less well-known,   
   which happen every day in our cities and countries".   
      
    "Perhaps it is no mere chance that Jesus' first great discourse is called   
   the 'Sermon on the Mount'", the Holy Father concluded. "Moses climbed Mount   
   Sinai to receive the Laws of God and bring them to the Chosen People. Jesus   
   is God's own Son Who came down from heaven in order to bring us to heaven,   
   to bring us to the heights of God, along the way of love. Indeed, He Himself   
   is this way and all we have to do is to follow Him so as to put God's will   
   into practice and enter His Kingdom of eternal life".   
   ANG/ VIS   
   20110214 (530)   
      
   CONSISTORY ON SEVERAL CAUSES OF CANONISATION   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 14 FEB 2011 (VIS) - In the Consistory Hall of the Vatican   
   Apostolic Palace at midday on Monday 21 February, the Holy Father will   
   preside at an ordinary public consistory for the canonisation of the   
   following blesseds:   
      
    - Guido Maria Conforti, Italian archbishop-bishop and founder of the Pious   
   Society of St. Francis Xavier for Foreign Missions (1865-1931).   
      
    - Luigi Guanella, Italian priest and founder of the Congregation of the   
   Servants of Charity and of the Institute of the Daughters of Our Lady of   
   Providence (1842-1915).   
      
    - Bonifacia Rodriguez Castro, Spanish foundress of the Congregation of the   
   Missionary Sisters, Servants of St. Joseph (1837-1905).   
   OCL/ VIS   
   20110214 (120)   
      
   AUDIENCES   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 14 FEB 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in separate   
   audiences:   
      
    - Four prelates from the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines on   
   their "ad limina" visit:   
      
    - Bishop John F. Du of Dumaguete.   
      
    - Bishop Precioso D. Cantillas S.D.B. of Maasin.   
      
    - Bishop Leonardo Y. Medroso of Tagbilaran.   
      
    - Bishop Angel N. Lagdameo of Jaro.   
      
    - Cardinal Antonio Maria Rouco Varela, archbishop of Madrid, Spain.   
      
    On Saturday 12 February, the Holy Father received in separate audiences:   
      
    - Cardinal Marc Ouellet P.S.S., prefect of the Congregation for Bishops.   
      
    - Cardinal Ricardo J. Vidal, archbishop emeritus of Cebu, Philippines,   
   accompanied by former Auxiliary Bishop Antonio R. Ranola, on their "ad   
   limina" visit.   
      
    - Archbishop Antonio Mennini, apostolic nuncio to Great Britain.   
   AL:AP/ VIS 20110214   
   (130)   
   _____________________________________________   
      
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