Subject: VISnews 111103   
   Organization: VIS - Ufficio Stampa della Santa Sede   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 189   
   ENGLISH   
   THURSDAY, 3 NOVEMBER 2011   
      
   SUMMARY: 1 - 3 NOVEMBER   
      
   - All Saints: from Earthly Reality to Eternity   
   - Faith in Eternal Life Gives Us Hope to Improve This World   
   - Mass for Deceased Cardinals and Bishops   
   - Other Pontifical Acts   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   ALL SAINTS: FROM EARTHLY REALITY TO ETERNITY   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 1 NOV 2011 (VIS) - "The Solemnity of All Saints is a good   
   occasion to raise our eyes from temporal matters, which are marked by time,   
   to the dimension of God, the dimension of eternity and sanctity", said the   
   Pope before praying the Angelus this morning with faithful gathered in St.   
   Peter's Square.   
      
    "Today's liturgy reminds us that sanctity is the primary vocation of all   
   the baptised. In fact Christ, Who with the Father and the Holy Spirit is   
   alone holy, loved the Church as His bride and gave Himself for her so as to   
   sanctify her. For this reason, all members of the People of God are called   
   to become saints. ... We are, then, invited to look to the Church not only   
   in her temporal and human guise, which is tainted by fragility, but as   
   Christ wished her to be: a 'communion of saints'. ... Today we venerate this   
   innumerable community of All Saints who, by their different lives, show us   
   the different ways to sanctity, sharing the single common denominator of   
   following Christ and conforming themselves to Him, which is the final goal   
   of our human existence".   
      
    Benedict XVI then went on to speak of tomorrow's Feast of All Souls which,   
   he said, "helps us to recall our loved ones who are no more, and all the   
   souls journeying towards the fullness of life in the horizon of the heavenly   
   Church, to which today's Solemnity had raised us.   
      
    "From the earliest years of the Christian faith", he added, "the Church on   
   earth, recognising the communion of the entire mystical body of Jesus   
   Christ, piously cultivated the memory of the departed and offered prayers   
   for them. Our prayer for the dead is not only useful but necessary, in that   
   it can not only help them but at the same time makes their intercession for   
   us effective. Visiting cemeteries, while conserving the bonds of affection   
   with the people we loved in this life, reminds us that we all tend towards   
   another life, a life after death. May the sorrow of earthly separation not   
   prevail over the certainty of the resurrection, the hope of achieving the   
   beatitude of eternity".   
   ANG/ VIS   
   20111103 (370)   
      
   FAITH IN ETERNAL LIFE GIVES US HOPE TO IMPROVE THIS WORLD   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 2 NOV 2011 (VIS) - The Pope celebrated his general audience   
   this morning in the Paul VI Hall, where he welcomed pilgrims from many   
   different countries, focusing his remarks on today's Solemnity of All Souls   
   and the reality of death.   
      
    "Despite the fact that death is a subject almost banned from our   
   societies, and there are continuous attempts to remove even the thought of   
   it from our minds, it actually concerns each one of us", Pope Benedict   
   explained. "Faced with this mystery all of us, even unconsciously, seek   
   something that allows us to hope, a sign that can bring consolation, a   
   horizon open to a future".   
      
    We are afraid of death because "we are afraid of the void, of departing   
   towards something we do not know". At the same time, "we cannot accept that   
   all the great and beautiful achievements of a lifetime can suddenly be wiped   
   out, that they can fall into the abyss of emptiness. Above all we feel that   
   love calls out for eternity, and we cannot accept that it is destroyed by   
   death in a single moment. ... When we find ourselves towards the end of   
   life, we have a perception that there is judgment of our actions, of how we   
   conducted our life, especially in those dark movements which, with great   
   ability, we often remove or seek to remove from our conscience".   
      
    In today's world, the Holy Father went on, "there is a widespread tendency   
   to think that everything must be approached with the criteria of   
   experimental science, and that even the great question of death must be   
   answered, not with faith, but on the basis of empirical data. We are not   
   sufficiently aware, however, that precisely by doing so we have ended up   
   falling into a form of spiritism, in the attempt to have some contact with   
   the world beyond death".   
      
    However, for Christians the Solemnities of All Saints and All Souls "tell   
   us that only those capable of recognising great hope in death are also able   
   to live lives founded on hope. ... Man needs eternity; for him any other   
   hope is too brief, too limited. Man is explainable only if there is a Love   
   which overcomes all isolation, even the isolation of death, in a totality   
   which transcends time and space. Man is explainable, he finds his most   
   profound meaning, only if God exists. And we know that God ceased to be   
   distant, that He came close to us".   
      
    "God truly showed Himself, He became accessible, He so loved the world   
   'that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not   
   perish but may have eternal life'. And by the supreme act of love upon the   
   Cross, by emerging Himself in the abyss of death, He conquered death, He   
   rose again and opened the doors of eternity for us too. Christ supports us   
   through the night of death, which He Himself experienced. He is the Good   
   Shepherd, to Whose guidance we can entrust ourselves without fear, because   
   He knows the way, even through the darkness".   
      
    "It is precisely faith in eternal life which gives Christians the courage   
   to love this earth of ours even more intensely, and to work to build an   
   earthly future of true and secure hope", the Holy Father concluded.   
      
    After greeting pilgrims in a number of languages, Benedict XVI then   
   mentioned the G20 Summit, due to take place on 3 and 4 November in the   
   French city of Cannes "to examine the main problems of the global economy.   
   My hope", he said, "is that the meeting may help to overcome the   
   difficulties which, at the global level, hinder the promotion of truly human   
   and integral development".   
      
    The audience concluded with the Our Father and the Pope's apostolic   
   blessing.   
   AG/ VIS   
   20111103 (640)   
      
   MASS FOR DECEASED CARDINALS AND BISHOPS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 3 NOV 2011 (VIS) - Yesterday evening the Holy Father descended   
   to pray in the Vatican Grottos, where many Pontiffs are buried, and this   
   morning he presided at the traditional November Mass in the Vatican Basilica   
   for the souls of cardinals and bishops who died over the course of the year.   
      
    At the beginning of his homily, Benedict XVI recalled the names of the   
   cardinals who passed away during the last twelve months: Urbano Navarrete   
   S.J., Michele Giordano, Agustin Garcia-Gasco Vicente, Georg Maximilian   
   Sterzinsky, Kazimierz Swiatek, Virgilio Noe, Aloysius Matthew Ambrozic, and   
   Andrzej Maria Deskur. He then turned to comment on the passage from the   
   Gospel of St. Mark in which the Apostles were afraid to ask Jesus the   
   meaning of the phrase: "The Son of Man is to be betrayed into human hands,   
   and they will kill him, and three days after being killed, he will rise   
   again".   
      
    "In the face of death", said the Pope, "we too cannot but experience   
   feelings and thoughts dictated by our human condition. And we are always   
   surprised and overwhelmed by a God Who came so close to us as not to pause   
   even before the abyss of death. He crossed that abyss and remained in the   
   grave for two days. But here the mystery of the 'third day' arises. Christ   
   assumed our mortal flesh unto its ultimate consequences, that it might be   
   invested with the glorious power of God by the vent of the life-giving   
   Spirit which transforms and regenerates".   
      
    "The death of Christ is a source of life because therein God revealed all   
   His love, like an immense cataract. ... The abyss of death is filled with   
   another even greater abyss, the love of God. Thus death no longer has any   
   power on Jesus Christ, nor on those who, by faith and Baptism, are   
   associated with Him. 'If we have died with Christ", St. Paul says, 'we   
   believe that we will also live with him'".   
      
    "Only in Christ does this hope have a real foundation", the Holy Father   
   went on. "Before Him it risked being reduced to an illusion, a symbol drawn   
   from the cycle of the seasons. ... However, God's intervention in the drama   
   of human history does not obey any natural cycle, if obeys only His grace   
   and His faithfulness. The new and eternal life is a fruit of the Cross. ...   
   Without the Cross of Christ, all the energy of nature is impotent before the   
   negative force of sin. A beneficial power greater than that which commands   
   the cycles of nature is needed, a Good greater than that of creation itself:   
   a Love which proceeds from God's very 'heart' and which, while revealing the   
   ultimate meaning of creation, renews it and orients it towards its original   
   and ultimate goal".   
      
    Benedict XVI concluded: "All this took place in those 'three days' when   
   the 'grain of wheat' fell to earth and remained there the time necessary to   
   fill the measure of God's justice and mercy. And finally it produced 'much   
   fruit', not remaining alone but as the first of a multitude of others. Now,   
   thanks to Christ, ... the images taken from nature are no longer mere   
   symbols, illusory myths; they speak to us of reality".   
   HML/ VIS   
   20111103 (550)   
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 3 NOV 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed:   
      
    - Fr. Charles Morerod, rector of the Pontifical University of St. Thomas   
   Aquinas and secretary general of the International Theological Commission,   
   as bishop of Lausanne, Geneve et Fribourg (area 5,557, population 1,582,447,   
   Catholics 687,192, priests 534, permanent deacons 22, religious 1,222),   
   Switzerland. The bishop-elect was born in Riaz, Switzerland in 1961 and   
   ordained a priest in 1988. He worked in pastoral ministry before gaining a   
   doctorate in theology in 1996. Since then he has worked as a professor of   
   theology at various academic institutes in Switzerland, Rome and U.S.A.   
      
    - Msgr. Jose Armando Alvarez Cano of the clergy of Zamora, Mexico, pastor   
   of the parish of "San Pedro" in Paracho and president of the diocesan   
   commission for the permanent formation of the clergy, as bishop prelate of   
   Huautla (area 1,284, population 145,000, Catholics 131,404, priests 23,   
   permanent deacons 1, religious 16), Mexico. The bishop-elect was born in   
   Jiquilpan, Mexico in 1960 and ordained a priest in 1986. He has had   
   experience of pastoral ministry in a number of parishes and spent two years   
   as a "fidei donum" missionary in the diocese of Tacna, Peru.   
   NER/ VIS   
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