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   VATICAN      News direct from the Vatican Information      2,032 messages   

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   Message 458 of 2,032   
   Vatican Information Service - Eng - to All   
   VISnews 110427   
   27 Apr 11 08:09:36   
   
   Subject: VISnews 110427   
   Organization: VIS - Ufficio Stampa della Santa Sede   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 76   
   ENGLISH   
   WEDNESDAY, 27 APRIL 2011   
      
   SUMMARY 21-27 APRIL:   
      
   - Holy Thursday: Chrism Mass and the Lord's Supper   
   - Good Friday: Lord's Passion and Via Crucis to Colosseum   
   - Holy Saturday: Faith in God Begins with Creation   
   - Easter: Resurrection Gives Strength to Human Hope   
   - Regina Coeli: Learning to be Witnesses of the Risen Lord   
   - Reliquary of Blessed John Paul II   
   - Christians: Witnesses of Easter's New Path   
   - Other Pontifical Acts   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   HOLY THURSDAY: CHRISM MASS AND THE LORD'S SUPPER   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 21 APRIL 2011 (VIS) At 9:30 today, Holy Thursday, in the   
   Vatican basilica, the Pope celebrated the Chrism Mass, which is celebrated   
   today in all cathedrals around the world. The cardinals, bishops and priests   
   gathered in Rome concelebrated with the Holy Father. The homily was followed   
   by the renewal of priestly vows and the blessing of the oils of catechumens,   
   for anointing the sick, and of Chrism.   
      
    In his homily, the Holy Father explained that three oils are blessed in the   
   liturgy of Holy Thursday ... The oil of catechumens "indicates a first way   
   of being touched by Christ and by His Spirit - an inner touch, by which the   
   Lord draws people close to himself. ... God loves us. He comes to meet the   
   unrest of our hearts ... Knowledge of God is never exhausted. ... Let us   
   remain constantly on a journey towards him, longing for him, always open to   
   receive new knowledge and love!".   
      
    Then referring to the oil for anointing the sick, Benedict XVI commented   
   that "healing is one of the fundamental tasks entrusted by Jesus to the   
   Church ... the first and fundamental healing takes place in our encounter   
   with Christ who reconciles us to God and mends our broken hearts. But over   
   and above this central task, the Church's essential mission also includes   
   the specific healing of sickness and suffering".   
      
    "In third place", he continued, "is the most noble of the ecclesial oils,   
   the chrism ... this oil serves chiefly for the anointing of confirmation and   
   ordination. ... Baptism and confirmation are an initiation into this People   
   of God that spans the world; the anointing that takes place in baptism and   
   confirmation is an anointing that confers this priestly ministry towards   
   mankind. Christians are a priestly people for the world. Christians should   
   make the living God visible to the world, they should bear witness to him   
   and lead people towards him. ... Have not we - the People of God - become to   
   a large extent a people of unbelief and distance from God? Is it perhaps the   
   case that the West, the heartlands of Christianity, are tired of their   
   faith, bored by their history and culture, and no longer wish to know faith   
   in Jesus Christ?"   
      
    He concluded, "For all the shame we feel over our failings, we must not   
   forget that today too there are radiant examples of faith, people who give   
   hope to the world through their faith and love. When Pope John Paul II is   
   beatified on 1 May, we shall think of him, with hearts full of thankfulness,   
   as a great witness to God and to Jesus Christ in our day, as a man filled   
   with the Holy Spirit".   
      
    At 5:30 pm, Benedict XVI concelebrated the Mass of the Lord's Supper at the   
   basilica of St. John Lateran. In imitation of the Lord's gesture towards the   
   Apostles, the Pope washed the feet of twelve priests. During the   
   presentation of gifts, the Pope was presented with an offering to the   
   victims of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan.   
      
    In his homily the Pope commented on the words of Jesus at the Last Supper:   
   "In his heart he awaited the moment when he would give himself to his own   
   under the appearance of bread and wine ... Jesus desires us, he awaits us.   
   But what about ourselves?" he asked. "Do we really desire him? Are we   
   anxious to meet him? Do we desire to encounter him, to become one with him,   
   to receive the gifts he offers us in the Holy Eucharist? Or are we   
   indifferent, distracted, busy about other things?"   
      
    The Holy Father commented on one of the prayers Jesus made to the Father   
   during the Last Supper: "the prayer for unity ... Christian unity can exist   
   only if Christians are deeply united to Him, to Jesus".   
      
    The Pope emphasised that "with the Eucharist, the Church is born" and   
   indicated that "the Eucharist is the sacrament of unity. It reaches the very   
   mystery of the Trinity and thus creates visible unity".   
      
    Benedict XVI recalled that "Jesus prays for the faith of Peter and his   
   successors ... Jesus tells Peter beforehand of his coming betrayal and   
   conversion". In this respect he highlighted that "we too, all of us, need to   
   learn again to accept God and Jesus Christ as he is, and not the way we want   
   him to be. We too find it hard to accept that he bound himself to the   
   limitations of his Church and her ministers".   
      
    "All of us need the conversion which enables us to accept Jesus in his   
   reality as God and man. We need the humility of the disciple who follows the   
   will of his Master. Tonight we want to ask Jesus to look to us, as with   
   kindly eyes he looked to Peter when the time was right, and to convert us".   
      
    "The ministry of unity has its visible place in the celebration of the Holy   
   Eucharist. Dear friends, it is a great consolation for the Pope to know that   
   at each Eucharistic celebration everyone prays for him, and that our prayer   
   is joined to the Lord's prayer for Peter. Only by the prayer of the Lord and   
   of the Church can the Pope fulfill his task of strengthening his brethren -   
   of feeding the flock of Christ and of becoming the guarantor of that unity   
   which becomes a visible witness to the mission which Jesus received from the   
   Father".   
   BXVI-HOLY WEEK/                                         VIS 20110427 (920)   
      
   GOOD FRIDAY: LORD'S PASSION AND VIA CRUCIS TO COLOSSEUM   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 22 APRIL 2011 (VIS) At 5:00 pm today, Good Friday, the Pope   
   celebrated the Passion of the Lord in St. Peter's basilica. Following the   
   reading of the Passion according to St. John, in keeping with tradition, Fr.   
   Raniero Cantalamessa, O.F.M. Cap., Preacher of the Pontifical Household,   
   pronounced the homily. This was followed by the universal prayer, adoration   
   of the Holy Cross, and Holy Communion.   
      
    At 9:00 pm, the Holy Father travelled to the Colosseum to preside over the   
   Via Crucis. This year's texts were prepared by Sister Maria Rita Piccione,   
   of the Order of Saint Augustine, from the Monastery of the Santissimi   
   Quattro Coronati in Rome.   
      
    Benedict XVI continued the ceremony from the Palatine Hill. The cross was   
   carried to the different stations by Cardinal Agostino Vallini, the Pope's   
   vicar for the diocese of Rome; a Roman family with five children (triplets   
   and twins); a family from Ethiopia; two Augustinian nuns; a Franciscan and a   
   youth from Egypt; and two Franciscan friars from the Custody of the Holy   
   Land.   
      
    At the end of the ceremony, the Holy Father addressed those gathered:   
   "Tonight we have relived, deep within our hearts, the drama of Jesus,   
   weighed down by pain, by evil, by human sin."   
      
    "But let us look more closely at that man crucified between earth and   
   heaven. Let us contemplate him more intently, and we will realize that the   
   cross is not the banner of the victory of death, sin and evil, but rather   
   the luminous sign of love, of God's immense love, of something that we could   
   never have asked, imagined or expected: God bent down over us, he lowered   
   himself, even to the darkest corner of our lives, in order to stretch out   
   his hand and draw us to himself, to bring us all the way to himself. The   
   cross speaks to us of the supreme love of God and invites, today, to renew   
   our faith in the power of that love, and to believe that in every situation   
   of our lives, our history and our world, God is able to vanquish death, sin   
   and evil, and to give us new, risen life. In the Son of God's death on the   
   cross, we find the seed of new hope for life, like the seed which dies   
   within the earth".   
      
    Finally, the Pope invited us to "gaze on the crucified Jesus", and to "ask   
   in prayer: Enlighten our hearts, Lord, that we may follow you along the way   
   of the cross. Put to death in us the 'old man' bound by selfishness, evil   
   and sin. Make us 'new men', men and women of holiness, transformed and   
   enlivened by your love".   
   BXVI-HOLY WEEK/                                         VIS 20110427 (460)   
      
   HOLY SATURDAY: FAITH IN GOD BEGINS WITH CREATION   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 23 APRIL 2011 (VIS) - At 9:00 pm this evening, Benedict XVI   
   presided over the solemn Paschal Vigil, which began with the blessing of the   
   new flame in the atrium of the Vatican basilica, the processional entry into   
   St. Peter's with the paschal candle, and the singing of the Exultet. During   
   the baptismal liturgy, the Holy Father administered the sacrament of   
   Christian initiation to six catechumens from various countries.   
      
    "The liturgical celebration of the Easter Vigil makes use of two eloquent   
   signs", said the Pope during his homily. "First there is the fire that   
   becomes light ... The second sign is water... Yet these great signs of   
   creation, light and water, are not the only constituent elements of the   
   liturgy of the Easter Vigil. Another essential feature is the ample   
   encounter with the words of sacred Scripture that it provides".   
      
    The Holy Father explained that "The Church wishes to offer us a panoramic   
   view of whole trajectory of salvation history, starting with creation,   
   passing through the election and the liberation of Israel to the testimony   
   of the prophets by which this entire history is directed ever more clearly   
   towards Jesus Christ".   
      
    "At the Easter Vigil", he continued, "the journey along the paths of sacred   
   Scripture begins with the account of creation. This is the liturgy's way of   
   telling us that the creation story is itself a prophecy. It is not   
   information about the external processes by which the cosmos and man himself   
   came into being. ... Now, one might ask: is it really important to speak   
   also of creation during the Easter Vigil? ... To omit the creation would be   
   to misunderstand the very history of God with men, to diminish it, to lose   
   sight of its true order of greatness".   
      
    Benedict XVI emphasised that "the Church is not some kind of association   
   that concerns itself with man's religious needs but is limited to that   
   objective. No, she brings man into contact with God and thus with the source   
   of all things. Therefore we relate to God as Creator, and so we have a   
   responsibility for creation".   
      
    "The creation account tells us, then, that the world is a product of   
   creative Reason. Hence it tells us that, far from there being an absence of   
   reason and freedom at the origin of all things, the source of everything is   
   creative Reason, love, and freedom".   
      
   The Pope remarked that "if man were merely a random product of evolution in   
   some place on the margins of the universe, then his life would make no sense   
   or might even be a chance of nature. But no, Reason is there at the   
   beginning: creative, divine Reason".   
      
    He recalled that "the Sabbath is the seventh day of the week. ... But   
   something quite unprecedented happened in the nascent Church: the place of   
   the Sabbath, the seventh day, was taken by the first day. As the day of the   
   liturgical assembly, it is the day for encounter with God through Jesus   
   Christ who as the Risen Lord encountered his followers on the first day,   
   Sunday, after they had found the tomb empty".   
      
    He continued, "This encounter happens afresh at every celebration of the   
   Eucharist, when the Lord enters anew into the midst of his disciples and   
   gives himself to them, allows himself, so to speak, to be touched by them,   
   sits down at table with them. This change is utterly extraordinary,   
   considering that the Sabbath, the seventh day seen as the day of encounter   
   with God, is so profoundly rooted in the Old Testament".   
      
    Benedict XVI affirmed that "the first day, according to the Genesis   
   account, is the day on which creation begins. Now it was the day of creation   
   in a new way, it had become the day of the new creation. We celebrate the   
   first day. And in so doing we celebrate God the Creator and his creation.   
   Yes, we believe in God, the Creator of heaven and earth. And we celebrate   
   the God who was made man, who suffered, died, was buried and rose again".   
      
    He concluded, "We celebrate the definitive victory of the Creator and of   
   his creation. We celebrate this day as the origin and the goal of our   
   existence. We celebrate it because now, thanks to the risen Lord, it is   
   definitively established that reason is stronger than unreason, truth   
   stronger than lies, love stronger than death. We celebrate the first day   
   because we know that the black line drawn across creation does not last   
   forever".   
   BXVI-HOLY WEEK/                                         VIS 20110427 (760)   
      
   EASTER: RESURRECTION GIVES STRENGTH TO HUMAN HOPE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, APRIL 24, 2011 (VIS) This morning Benedict XVI celebrated the   
   Easter Sunday Resurrection Mass in St. Peter's Square. At midday, following   
   the Eucharist, the Pope addressed those present from the central balcony of   
   the basilica, and delivered the traditional Easter message, from which we   
   offer several extracts:   
      
    "Easter morning brings us news that is ancient yet ever new: Christ is   
   risen! The echo of this event, which issued forth from Jerusalem twenty   
   centuries ago, continues to resound in the Church, deep in whose heart lives   
   the vibrant faith of Mary, Mother of Jesus, the faith of Mary Magdalene and   
   the other women who first discovered the empty tomb, and the faith of Peter   
   and the other Apostles".   
      
    "Just as the sun's rays in springtime cause the buds on the branches of the   
   trees to sprout and open up, so the radiance that streams forth from   
   Christ's resurrection gives strength and meaning to every human hope, to   
   every expectation, wish and plan. Hence the entire cosmos is rejoicing   
   today, caught up in the springtime of humanity, which gives voice to   
   creation's silent hymn of praise. The Easter Alleluia, resounding in the   
   Church as she makes her pilgrim way through the world, expresses the silent   
   exultation of the universe and above all the longing of every human soul   
   that is sincerely open to God, giving thanks to him for his infinite   
   goodness, beauty and truth".   
      
    "'In your resurrection, O Christ, let heaven and earth rejoice.' To this   
   summons to praise, which arises today from the heart of the Church, the   
   'heavens' respond fully: the hosts of angels, saints and blessed souls join   
   with one voice in our exultant song. In heaven all is peace and gladness.   
   But alas, it is not so on earth! Here, in this world of ours, the Easter   
   Alleluia still contrasts with the cries and laments that arise from so many   
   painful situations: deprivation, hunger, disease, war, violence. Yet it was   
   for this that Christ died and rose again! He died on account of sin,   
   including ours today, he rose for the redemption of history, including our   
   own. So my message today is intended for everyone, and, as a prophetic   
   proclamation, it is intended especially for peoples and communities who are   
   undergoing a time of suffering, that the Risen Christ may open up for them   
   the path of freedom, justice and peace".   
      
    "May the Land which was the first to be flooded by the light of the Risen   
   One rejoice. May the splendour of Christ reach the peoples of the Middle   
   East, so that the light of peace and of human dignity may overcome the   
   darkness of division, hate and violence. In the current conflict in Libya,   
   may diplomacy and dialogue take the place of arms and may those who suffer   
   as a result of the conflict be given access to humanitarian aid. In the   
   countries of northern Africa and the Middle East, may all citizens,   
   especially young people, work to promote the common good and to build a   
   society where poverty is defeated and every political choice is inspired by   
   respect for the human person".   
      
    "May help come from all sides to those fleeing conflict and to refugees   
   from various African countries who have been obliged to leave all that is   
   dear to them; may people of good will open their hearts to welcome them, so   
   that the pressing needs of so many brothers and sisters will be met with a   
   concerted response in a spirit of solidarity; and may our words of comfort   
   and appreciation reach all those who make such generous efforts and offer an   
   exemplary witness in this regard".   
      
    "May peaceful coexistence be restored among the peoples of Ivory Coast,   
   where there is an urgent need to tread the path of reconciliation and   
   pardon, in order to heal the deep wounds caused by the recent violence. May   
   Japan find consolation and hope as it faces the dramatic consequences of the   
   recent earthquake, along with other countries that in recent months have   
   been tested by natural disasters which have sown pain and anguish".   
      
    "May heaven and earth rejoice at the witness of those who suffer opposition   
   and even persecution for their faith in Jesus Christ. May the proclamation   
   of his victorious resurrection deepen their courage and trust".   
      
    Following his message, and before imparting the Urbi et Orbi blessing (to   
   the city of Rome and to the world), the Holy Father communicated his Easter   
   greetings in sixty-five languages.   
   BXVI-HOLY WEEK/                                         VIS 20110427 (750)   
      
   REGINA COELI: LEARNING TO BE WITNESSES OF THE RISEN LORD   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 25 APR 2011 (VIS) - Benedict XVI, who has been at the   
   pontifical residence at Castelgandolfo since yesterday, appeared at the   
   balcony of the central patio of the apostolic palace there to pray the   
   Regina Coeli with the gathered faithful. The prayer was televised live for   
   the pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square.   
      
    "Christ has conquered death, caused by our sin, and brings us again to   
   eternal life. The entire life of the Church and our very existence as   
   Christians comes from this event. Today, Monday of the Angel", the Pope   
   said, "we read in the first missionary address of the nascent Church: 'God   
   raised this Jesus', the apostle Paul proclaimed, 'of this we are all   
   witnesses'.   
      
    "How can we meet the Lord, each time becoming more and more his true   
   witnesses?" the Holy Father asked, explaining that St. Maximus of Turin   
   affirmed, "whosoever wishes to reach the Savior must first put themselves,   
   in their very faith, at the right hand of the divinity, and place themselves   
   in heaven with the belief of their hearts". This is constantly learning to   
   direct the mind's and the heart's gaze toward the heights of God where the   
   risen Christ is. In prayer and in adoration God encounters the human being   
   ... Only if we know how to direct ourselves toward Him and pray to Him can   
   we discover the deepest meaning of our lives and our daily path will be   
   illuminated with the light of the Risen One".   
      
    Finally, Benedict XVI recalled that today the Church in the East and the   
   West celebrate St. Mark the Evangelist, patron of the Italian city of   
   Venice, and that he will make a pastoral visit there on 7 and 8 May of this   
   year. After praying the Regina Coeli he greeted the members of the Meter   
   Association, founder of the National Day for children victims of violence,   
   abuse, and indifference. "I encourage you", he said, "to continue your work   
   of prevention and raising awareness side by side with the various   
   educational associations. In particular, I am thinking of the parishes,   
   societies, and other ecclesial institutions that generously dedicate   
   themselves to the formation of the new generations".   
   ANG/                                                                    VIS   
   20110427 (350)   
      
   RELIQUARY OF BLESSED JOHN PAUL II   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 26 APR 2011 (VIS) - Following is the communique published by   
   the Holy See Press Office regarding the reliquary of Blessed John Paul II,   
   which will be displayed during his beatification ceremony this 1 May.   
      
    "The reliquary that will be displayed for the veneration of the faithful,   
   on the occasion of the beatification of Pope John Paul II, is a small   
   ampoule of his blood contained within a precious reliquary that the Office   
   of Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff has prepared expressly for   
   the occasion. It is opportune to explain briefly, but precisely, the origin   
   of this reliquary.   
      
    During the last days of the Holy Father's illness, his entrusted medical   
   personnel extracted blood to be held at the transfusion center of the   
   Bambino Gesu Hospital, in the case of an eventual transfusion. This center,   
   under the direction of Professor Isacchi, was effectively entrusted with   
   this medical service for the Pope.   
      
    Nevertheless, there was no transfusion and the extracted blood remained   
   conserved in four small containers, two of which were left to Pope John Paul   
   II's personal secretary, Cardinal Dziwisz, the other two remaining at   
   Bambino Gesu, devotedly looked after by the hospital's religious staff. For   
   the beatification it is precisely these last two which have been placed in   
   two reliquaries.   
      
    The first will be presented for the veneration of the faithful during the   
   beatification ceremony, 1 May, and later will be kept in the "Sacrario", in   
   the charge of the Office of Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff,   
   together with other important reliquaries. The second will be returned to   
   the care of the Bambino Gesu Hospital, whose religious staff have   
   safeguarded this precious relic throughout these years.   
      
    The blood is in a liquid state, which is explained by an anti-coagulant   
   substance present in the test tubes at the moment of extraction".   
   OP/                                                                     VIS   
   20110427 (210)   
      
   CHRISTIANS: WITNESSES OF EASTER'S NEW PATH   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 27 APR 2011 (VIS) - This morning the Pope travelled from   
   Castelgandolfo to the Vatican for the General Audience that took place in   
   St. Peter's Square and in which over 20,000 people participated.   
      
    "Christ resurrected from the dead", the Holy Father asserted, "is the   
   foundation of our faith that radiates throughout the Church's liturgy,   
   giving it content and meaning ... Christ's resurrection is the door to a new   
   life that is no longer subjected to the termination of time, a life immersed   
   in the eternity of God. With Jesus' resurrection begins a new condition of   
   human being, which illuminates and transforms our daily path and opens a   
   qualitatively new and different future for all humanity".   
      
    "In his Epistle to the Colossians, St. Paul says 'If then you were raised   
   with Christ, seek what is above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of   
   God. Think of what is above, not of what is on earth'". However, Benedict   
   XVI emphasized, the apostle "is far from inviting Christians, any of us, to   
   shun the world in which God has placed us. It is true that we are citizens   
   of another 'city', our true home, but the path toward this goal must be   
   traversed every day in this land. To participate, from this moment, in the   
   life of the resurrected Christ, we must live as new men and women in this   
   world, at the heart of this earthly city".   
      
    "This is the path", the Holy Father continued, "to transform not only   
   ourselves but also to transform the world, to give the city a new face that   
   favors the development of humankind and society within the logic of   
   solidarity, goodness, and profound respect for the dignity proper to each   
   ... Easter offers the newness of a profound and complete passage from a life   
   subject to the slavery of sin to a life of freedom, inspired by love, the   
   force that breaks down barriers and builds new harmony in our hearts and in   
   our relationships with others and with things".   
      
    Every Christian, just as every community, "that lives the experience of   
   this passage to the Resurrection, cannot help but be new leaven in the world   
   giving themselves without reserve to the most urgent and just causes, as   
   seen by the witness of the saints in every age and place. The expectations   
   of our time are also great: believing firmly that the resurrection of Christ   
   has renewed humankind without separating it from the world in which it   
   builds its history, we Christians must be the radiant witnesses of Easter's   
   new path".   
      
    "Easter is, therefore, a gift that must be welcomed in faith more deeply   
   each time, to work in any situation with the grace of Christ, according to   
   the logic of God, the logic of love", the pontiff concluded.   
   AG/                                                                     VIS   
   20110427 (460)   
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   --- NetMgr/2 1.0y+   
    * Origin: NetMgr+ @ Sursum Corda! BBS Meridian MS USA (1:396/45)   

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