Subject: VISnews 111012   
   Organization: VIS - Ufficio Stampa della Santa Sede   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 175   
   ENGLISH   
   WEDNESDAY, 12 OCTOBER 2011   
      
   SUMMARY:   
      
   - Human History Is a History of Salvation   
   - Pope Calls for Respect for Minorities in Egypt   
   - Other Pontifical Acts   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   HUMAN HISTORY IS A HISTORY OF SALVATION   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 12 OCT 2011 (VIS) - During his general audience this morning   
   the Holy Father dedicated his catechesis to Psalm 126 which, he said,   
   "celebrates the great things which the Lord has done for His people, and   
   which He continues to do for all believers".   
      
    The Psalm "speaks of 'restored fortunes'", the Pope explained, "in other   
   words, fortunes restored to their original state". This was the experience   
   of the People of Israel when they returned to their homeland after the   
   Babylonian exile, which had been such a devastating experience not only in   
   political and social terms but also from a religious and spiritual point of   
   view.   
      
    "Divine intervention often takes unexpected forms which go beyond what man   
   might expect. ... God works marvels in the history of mankind. ... He   
   reveals Himself as the powerful and merciful Lord, the refuge of the   
   oppressed Who does not ignore the cry of the poor. ... Thus, with the   
   liberation of the People of Israel, everyone recognises the great and   
   wondrous things God has done for His People and celebrates the Lord as   
   Saviour".   
      
    However, the Holy Father went on, "the Psalm goes beyond the purely   
   historical and opens to a broader, theological dimension". It uses images   
   which "allude to the mysterious truth of redemption, in which the gift we   
   have received and the gift we await, life and death, intertwine".   
      
    The watercourses of the Neg'eb symbolise divine intervention which, like   
   water, "is capable of transforming the desert into a vast expanse of green   
   grass and flowers", the Pope explained. Later the Psalm also uses the image   
   of peasants cultivating their fields "to speak of salvation. The reference   
   here is to the annual cycle of agriculture: the difficult and arduous time   
   of sowing then the overriding joy of the harvest. ... The seed sprouts and   
   grows".   
      
    "This is the hidden mystery of life, these are the 'great and wondrous   
   things of salvation which the Lord achieves in the history of mankind, but   
   the secret of which is unknown to man. Divine intervention, when fully   
   expressed, has an overpowering dimension, like the watercourses of the   
   Neg'eb and the grain in the fields. This latter image also evokes the   
   disproportion typical of the things of God: disproportion between the   
   fatigue of sowing and the immense joy of the harvest".   
      
    "The Psalmist refers to all these things to speak of salvation. ... The   
   deportation to Babylon, like other situations of suffering and crisis, ...   
   with its doubts and the apparent distance from God is, in reality, ... like   
   a seedbed. In the mystery of Christ and in the light of the New Testament,   
   the message becomes even clearer and more explicit: the believer who passes   
   through the darkness is like the seed of grain that falls to earth and dies,   
   but brings forth much fruit".   
      
    "This Psalm teaches us that ... we must remain hopeful and firm in our   
   faith in God. Our history, though often marked by suffering, uncertainty and   
   moments of crisis, is a history of salvation and 'restoration of fortunes'.   
   In Jesus our exile ends: ... in the mystery of His cross, in death   
   transformed into life, like the seed which splits in the earth and becomes   
   an ear of wheat".   
   AG/ VIS   
   20111012 (550)   
      
   POPE CALLS FOR RESPECT FOR MINORITIES IN EGYPT   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 12 OCT 2011 (VIS) - "I am profoundly saddened by the episodes   
   of violence that took place in Cairo last Sunday", said the Pope today   
   following his customary language greetings at the end of his Wednesday   
   general audience.   
      
    "I share the suffering of the families of the victims and of all the   
   Egyptian people, lacerated by attempts to undermine peaceful coexistence   
   among their communities, a coexistence which it is vital to safeguard,   
   especially in this moment of transition", the Holy Father went on. "I exhort   
   the faithful to pray that that society might enjoy true peace, based on   
   justice and respect for the freedom and dignity of all citizens.   
      
    "I support the efforts made by the civil and religious authorities in   
   Egypt to foster a society in which everyone's human rights are respected, in   
   particular those of minorities, for the benefit of national unity".   
      
    During his greetings to pilgrim groups participating in the audience, the   
   Holy Father also recalled the fact that the month of October is dedicated to   
   the Rosary, inviting the faithful "to discover the beauty of this simple but   
   effective prayer".   
   AC/ VIS   
   20111012 (200)   
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 12 OCT 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father:   
      
    - Appointed Bishop Paul-Andre Durocher of Alexandria-Cornwall, Canada, as   
   metropolitan archbishop of Gatineau (area 6,445, population 313,243,   
   Catholics 250,594, priests 71, permanent deacons 1, religious 209), Canada.   
   He succeeds Archbishop Roger Ebacher, whose resignation from the pastoral   
   care of the same archdiocese the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached   
   the age limit.   
      
    - Appointed Bishop Jose de la Trinidad Valera Angulo of La Guaira,   
   Venezuela, as bishop of Guanare (area 7,600, population 436,000, Catholics   
   384,000, priests 26, religious 46), Venezuela. He succeeds Bishop Jose   
   Sorero Valero Ruz, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same   
   bishop the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached the age limit.   
      
    - Appointed Bishop Carlos Jose Tissera of San Francisco, Argentina, as   
   bishop of Quilmes (area 503, population 1,198,000, Catholics 1,028,000,   
   priests 100, permanent deacons 84, religious 275), Argentina. He succeeds   
   Bishop Luis Teodorico Stockler, whose resignation from the pastoral care of   
   the same diocese the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached the age   
   limit.   
      
    - Appointed Fr. Gabriel Zurbriggen, pastor of the cathedral of Rafaela,   
   Argentina, as coadjutor of the territorial prelature of Dean Funes (area   
   28,700, population 61,995, Catholics 55,930, priests 16, permanent deacons   
   1, religious 17), Argentina. The bishop-elect was born in Curupaity,   
   Argentina in 1963 and ordained a priest in 1990. He studied at the Gregorian   
   University in Rome before returning to Argentina where he worked as   
   parochial vicar then pastor in various parishes. He teaches theology at the   
   seminaries in Parana and Cordoba and is member of a number of diocesan   
   councils.   
   NER:NEC/ VIS   
   20111012 (270)   
   _____________________________________________   
      
   For further information and research of documents visit:   
    www.visnews.org and www.vatican.va   
   VIS english (text format) sends its news service only to those who have   
   requested it. If you no longer wish to receive the service, visit the   
   following link and click on calcel. Don't forget to select language and text   
   format:   
   http://press.catholica.va/news_services/press/vis/englinde.php   
      
   COPYRIGHT: The news items contained in the Vatican Information Service   
   may be used, in part or in their entirety, by quoting the source:   
   V.I.S. -Vatican Information Service   
      
      
      
      
   --- NetMgr/2 1.0y+   
    * Origin: NetMgr+ @ Sursum Corda! BBS Meridian MS USA (1:396/45)   
|