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   VATICAN      News direct from the Vatican Information      2,032 messages   

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   Message 54 of 2,032   
   Marc Lewis to All   
   Vatican Information Service (Press Relea   
   20 Sep 10 06:15:10   
   
   Hello All!   
                   This Area is READ ONLY.  Do not post to this area.   
                   The following press release is Copyrighted by the   
                             Vatican Information Service.   
                   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~   
                                  VIS-Press releases   
      
   PRAYER VIGIL FOR BEATIFICATION OF CARDINAL NEWMAN   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 18 SEP 2010 (VIS) - Before this evening's prayer vigil for the   
   beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman, the Pope travelled in his   
   popemobile around Hyde Park, one of London's largest public parks (142   
   hectares), where thousands of people were gathered to greet him.   
      
   Following the readings the Holy Father pronounced his address: "We are gathered   
   here in prayerful vigil to prepare for tomorrow's Mass, during which a great   
   son of this nation, Cardinal John Henry Newman, will be declared blessed", he   
   said. "How many people, in England and throughout the world, have longed for   
   this moment! It is also a great joy for me, personally, to share this   
   experience with you. As you know, Newman has long been an important influence   
   in my own life and thought, as he has been for so many people beyond these   
   isles".   
      
   Benedict XVI referred to certain aspects of Newman's life which, he said, "I   
   consider very relevant to our own lives as believers and to the life of the   
   Church today".   
      
   "Newman, by his own account, traced the course of his whole life back to a   
   powerful experience of conversion which he had as a young man. ... At the end   
   of his life, Newman would describe his life's work as a struggle against the   
   growing tendency to view religion as a purely private and subjective matter, a   
   question of personal opinion. Here is the first lesson we can learn from his   
   life: in our day, when an intellectual and moral relativism threatens to sap   
   the very foundations of our society, Newman reminds us that, as men and women   
   made in the image and likeness of God, we were created to know the truth, to   
   find in that truth our ultimate freedom and the fulfilment of our deepest human   
   aspirations. In a word, we are meant to know Christ Who is Himself 'the way,   
   and the truth, and the life'.   
      
   "Newman's life", the Holy Father added, "also teaches us that passion for the   
   truth, intellectual honesty and genuine conversion are costly. The truth that   
   sets us free cannot be kept to ourselves; it calls for testimony, it begs to be   
   heard, and in the end its convincing power comes from itself and not from the   
   human eloquence or arguments in which it may be couched. Not far from here, at   
   Tyburn, great numbers of our brothers and sisters died for the faith; the   
   witness of their fidelity to the end was ever more powerful than the inspired   
   words that so many of them spoke before surrendering everything to the Lord. In   
   our own time, the price to be paid for fidelity to the Gospel is no longer   
   being hanged, drawn and quartered but it often involves being dismissed out of   
   hand, ridiculed or parodied. And yet, the Church cannot withdraw from the task   
   of proclaiming Christ and His Gospel as saving truth, the source of our   
   ultimate happiness as individuals and as the foundation of a just and humane   
   society".   
      
   The Pope continued: "Finally, Newman teaches us that if we have accepted the   
   truth of Christ and committed our lives to Him, there can be no separation   
   between what we believe and the way we live our lives. Our every thought, word   
   and action must be directed to the glory of God and the spread of His Kingdom.   
   Newman understood this, and was the great champion of the prophetic office of   
   the Christian laity. He saw clearly that we do not so much accept the truth in   
   a purely intellectual act as embrace it in a spiritual dynamic that penetrates   
   to the core of our being. Truth is passed on not merely by formal teaching,   
   important as that is, but also by the witness of lives lived in integrity,   
   fidelity and holiness; those who live in and by the truth instinctively   
   recognise what is false and, precisely as false, inimical to the beauty and   
   goodness which accompany the splendour of truth, 'veritatis splendor'".   
      
   Newman "taught that the 'kindly light' of faith leads us to realise the truth   
   about ourselves, our dignity as God's children, and the sublime destiny which   
   awaits us in heaven. ... Without the life of prayer, without the interior   
   transformation which takes place through the grace of the Sacraments, we   
   cannot, in Newman's words, 'radiate Christ'; we become just another 'clashing   
   cymbal' in a world filled with growing noise and confusion, filled with false   
   paths leading only to heartbreak and illusion".   
      
   The Holy Father laid emphasis on "Newman's fine Christian realism, the point at   
   which faith and life inevitably intersect", expressing the view that "no- one   
   who looks realistically at our world today could think that Christians can   
   afford to go on with business as usual, ignoring the profound crisis of faith   
   which has overtaken our society, or simply trusting that the patrimony of   
   values handed down by the Christian centuries will continue to inspire and   
   shape the future of our society.   
      
   "We know that in times of crisis and upheaval God has raised up great saints   
   and prophets for the renewal of the Church and Christian society; we trust in   
   His providence and we pray for His continued guidance. But each of us, in   
   accordance with his or her state of life, is called to work for the advancement   
   of God's Kingdom by imbuing temporal life with the values of the Gospel. Each   
   of us has a mission, each of us is called to change the world, to work for a   
   culture of life, a culture forged by love and respect for the dignity of each   
   human person".   
      
   Finally, the Pope addressed some words to the young people present. "Christ has   
   need of families to remind the world of the dignity of human love and the   
   beauty of family life", he said. "He needs men and women who devote their lives   
   to the noble task of education, tending the young and forming them in the ways   
   of the Gospel. He needs those who will consecrate their lives to the pursuit of   
   perfect charity, following Him in chastity, poverty and obedience, and serving   
   Him in the least of our brothers and sisters. He needs the powerful love of   
   contemplative religious, who sustain the Church's witness and activity through   
   their constant prayer. And He needs priests, good and holy priests, men who are   
   willing to lay down their lives for their sheep. Ask our Lord what He has in   
   mind for you! Ask Him for the generosity to say 'yes!' Do not be afraid to give   
   yourself totally to Jesus. He will give you the grace you need to fulfil your   
   vocation".   
      
   Benedict XVI concluded by inviting young people to join him at World Youth Day   
   in Madrid, Spain in August 2011. "It is always a wonderful occasion to grow in   
   love for Christ and to be encouraged in a joyful life of faith along with   
   thousands of other young people. I hope to see many of you there!".   
      
   The Pope's address was followed by the adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and   
   the Litany of the Sacred Heart. Then, following Newman's prayer of "Irradiating   
   Christ" and his hymn "Lead, Kindly Light", the vigil continued as the Holy   
   Father left to travel back to the apostolic nunciature where he dined and spent   
   the night.   
   PV-UNITED KINGDOM/VIS 20100919 (1230)   
      
   SUMMARY   
      
   --- MPost/386 v1.21   
    * Origin: Sursum Corda! BBS =Meridian, MS= bbs.sursum-corda.com (1:396/45)   

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