Subject: VISnews 110924   
   Organization: VIS - Ufficio Stampa della Santa Sede   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 161   
   ENGLISH   
   SATURDAY, 24 SEPTEMBER 2011   
      
   SUMMARY OF THE POPE'S TRIP TO GERMANY: 23 - 24 SEPTEMBER   
      
   - God Never Desires Anything Other Than Our True Happiness   
   - Communique Issued by the Holy See Press Office   
   - Broader Horizons for the Catholic Church in Germany   
   - Notice   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   GOD NEVER DESIRES ANYTHING OTHER THAN OUR TRUE HAPPINESS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 23 SEP 2011 (VIS) - This afternoon Benedict XVI travelled by   
   helicopter from Erfurt to Etzelsbach where he arrived at 5.30 p.m. He then   
   went to the nearby Wallfahrtskapelle to celebrate Marian Vespers and the   
   Liturgy of the Hours with thousands of faithful gathered there.   
      
    In his address the Pope recalled the role that this Marian shrine has had   
   in German history. "During two godless dictatorships, which sought to   
   deprive the people of their ancestral faith, the inhabitants of Eichsfeld   
   were in no doubt that here in this shrine at Etzelsbach an open door and a   
   place of inner peace was to be found", he said.   
      
    The Holy Father then turned to consider the Pieta conserved in the chapel.   
   "A particular feature of that holy image", he said, "is the position of Our   
   Lord's body. The wounded side of the crucified Lord ... is concealed,   
   because the body is facing the other way. It seems to me that a deep meaning   
   lies hidden in this representation, that only becomes apparent through   
   silent contemplation: in the Etzelsbach image, the hearts of Jesus and His   
   mother are turned to one another; they come close to each other. They   
   exchange their love. ... In Mary's heart there is room for the love that her   
   divine Son wants to bestow upon the world".   
      
    "It is not self-fulfilment that truly enables people to flourish,   
   according to the model that modern life so often proposes to us, which can   
   easily turn into a sophisticated form of selfishness. Rather it is an   
   attitude of self-giving directed towards the heart of Mary and hence also   
   towards the heart of the Redeemer", the Holy Father explained.   
      
    "With Mary, God has worked for good in everything, and He does not cease,   
   through Mary, to cause good to spread further in the world. Looking down   
   from the Cross, from the throne of grace and salvation, Jesus gave us His   
   mother Mary to be our mother. ... At the foot of the Cross, Mary becomes our   
   fellow traveller and protector on life's journey. ... In life we pass   
   through high-points and low-points, but Mary intercedes for us with her Son   
   and conveys to us the strength of divine love".   
      
    When the Blessed Virgin rescues us from plight, "with a mother's   
   tenderness, she wants to make us understand that our whole life should be a   
   response to the love of our God, Who is so rich in mercy. 'Understand,' she   
   seems to say to us, 'that God, Who is the source of all that is good and Who   
   never desires anything other than your true happiness, has the right to   
   demand of you a life that yields unreservedly and joyfully to His will,   
   striving at the same time that others may do likewise'. Where God is, there   
   is a future. Indeed, when we allow God's love to influence the whole of our   
   lives, then heaven stands open. ... Then the little things of everyday life   
   acquire meaning, and great problems find solutions".   
      
    The celebration was followed by the adoration of the Eucharist, the final   
   blessing and the praying of the 'Salve Regina'. Before leaving the chapel to   
   return to Erfurt, the Holy Father left a golden rosary at the feet of the   
   Virgin in sign of profound veneration.   
   PV-GERMANY/ VIS 20110924   
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   COMMUNIQUE ISSUED BY THE HOLY SEE PRESS OFFICE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 23 SEP 2011 (VIS) - The Holy See Press Office has released the   
   following communique on the meeting between the Holy Father and a group of   
   victims of sexual abuse.   
      
    "This evening, in the seminary at Erfurt, Pope Benedict XVI met with a   
   group of victims of sexual abuse committed by priests and church personnel.   
   Subsequently he greeted some people who care for those injured by these   
   crimes.   
      
    "Moved and deeply shaken by the sufferings of the victims, the Holy Father   
   expressed his deep compassion and regret over all that was done to them and   
   their families. He assured the people present that those in positions of   
   responsibility in the Church are seriously concerned to deal with all crimes   
   of abuse and are committed to the promotion of effective measures for the   
   protection of children and young people. Pope Benedict XVI is close to the   
   victims and he expresses the hope that the merciful God, Creator and   
   Redeemer of all mankind, may heal the wounds of the victims and grant them   
   inner peace".   
   OP/ VIS   
   20110924 (190)   
      
   BROADER HORIZONS FOR THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN GERMANY   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 24 SEP 2011 (VIS) - At 9 a.m. today, Benedict XVI celebrated   
   Mass in the Domplatz (Cathedral Square) of Erfurt. More than 50,000 people   
   participated in the liturgy which used texts specific to the diocese of   
   Erfurt for the veneration of the local patron, St. Elizabeth of Thuringia.   
      
    "If we think back thirty years to the Elizabeth Year 1981, when this city   
   formed part of the German Democratic Republic", said the Pope at the   
   beginning of his homily, "who would have thought that a few years later, the   
   wall and the barbed wire at the border would have come down? And if we think   
   even further back, some seventy years, to the year 1941, in the days of   
   National Socialism, who could have predicted that the so-called   
   'thousand-year Reich' would turn to dust and ashes just four years later?"   
      
    "Here in Thuringia and in the former German Democratic Republic, you have   
   had to endure first a brown and then a red dictatorship, which acted on the   
   Christian faith like acid rain. Many late consequences of that period are   
   still having to be worked through, above all in the intellectual and   
   religious fields. Most people in this country since that time have spent   
   their lives far removed from faith in Christ and from the communion of the   
   Church. Yet the last two decades have also brought good experiences: a   
   broader horizon, an exchange that reaches beyond borders, a faithful   
   confidence that God does not abandon us and that He leads us along new   
   paths".   
      
    This "new freedom has helped bring about greater dignity and a great many   
   new possibilities for people's lives. On the part of the Church, we can   
   point gratefully to many things that have become easier, whether it be new   
   opportunities for parish activities, renovation and enlargement of churches   
   and community centres, or diocesan initiatives of a pastoral or cultural   
   nature. But have these opportunities led to an increase in faith? Are not   
   the deep roots of faith and Christian life to be sought in something very   
   different from social freedom? It was actually amid the hardships of   
   pressure from without that many committed Catholics remained faithful to   
   Christ and to the Church. They accepted personal disadvantages in order to   
   live their faith".   
      
    Among those people, the Holy Father made special mention of the many   
   priests and laypersons who provided pastoral care to refugees in the years   
   following World War II, and of the parents who brought up their children in   
   the Catholic faith "in the midst of the diaspora and in an anticlerical   
   political environment".   
      
    Referring then to the patrons of the diocese of Erfurt - St. Elizabeth of   
   Thuringia, St. Boniface and St. Kilian - and to St. Severus to whom the   
   "Severikirche" in the Domplatz is dedicated, the Pope said: "God's presence   
   is seen especially clearly in His saints. Their witness to the faith can   
   also give us the courage to begin afresh today", because they "show us that   
   it is truly possible and good to live our relationship with God in a radical   
   way, to put Him in first place, not as one concern among others. The saints   
   help us to see that God first reached out to us, He revealed and continues   
   to reveal Himself to us in Jesus Christ. Christ comes towards us, He speaks   
   to every individual with an invitation to follow Him".   
      
    "Faith always includes as an essential element the fact that it is shared   
   with others. ... This 'with', without which there can be no personal faith,   
   is the Church. And this Church does not stop at national borders, as we can   
   see from the nationalities of the saints I mentioned earlier: Hungary,   
   England, Ireland and Italy. ... If we open ourselves up to the whole of the   
   faith in all of history and the testimony given to it in the whole Church,   
   then the Catholic faith also has a future as a public force in Germany. ...   
   Saints, even if there are only a few of them, change the world.   
      
    "Thus", the Holy Father added, "the political changes that swept through   
   your country in 1989 were motivated not just by the demand for prosperity   
   and freedom of movement, but also decisively by the longing for   
   truthfulness. This longing was kept awake partly through people completely   
   dedicated to serving God and neighbour and ready to sacrifice their lives.   
   They and the saints I mentioned before give us courage to make good use of   
   this new situation. We have no wish to hide in a purely private faith, but   
   we want to shape this hard-won freedom responsibly".   
      
    Following Mass, Benedict XVI travelled to the airport of Erfurt. At 11.50   
   a.m. he departed for the city of Freiburg im Breisgau where he landed at   
   Lahr airport shortly before 1 p.m.   
   PV-GERMANY/ VIS 20110924   
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   NOTICE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 24 SEP 2011 (VIS) - VIS informs its readers that tomorrow,   
   Sunday 25 September, a special bulletin will be transmitted, continuing   
   coverage of Benedict XVI's apostolic trip to Germany.   
   .../ VIS   
   20110924 (40)   
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