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   VATICAN      News direct from the Vatican Information      2,032 messages   

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   Message 605 of 2,032   
   Vatican Information Service - Eng - to All   
   VISnews 111128   
   28 Nov 11 07:51:34   
   
   Subject: VISnews 111128   
   Organization: VIS   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 208   
   ENGLISH   
   MONDAY, 28 NOVEMBER 2011   
      
   SUMMARY: 26 - 28 NOVEMBER   
      
   - Holy Father Meets Lebanese Prime Minister   
   - Humanity Has No Future Unless It Cares for the Creation   
   - Audiences   
   - Other Pontifical Acts   
   - Life Does Not Have Only an Earthly Dimension   
   - Music Helps Us to Turn to God   
   - Experts from MONEYVAL Visit the Vatican   
   - The Face of the Dying Christ Teaches Us to Defend Life   
   - Exercising the Prophetic Dimension of Episcopal Ministry   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   HOLY FATHER MEETS LEBANESE PRIME MINISTER   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 28 NOV 2011 (VIS) - The Holy See Press Office released the   
   following communique at midday today:   
      
     "This morning the Holy Father Benedict XVI received in audience Najib   
   Mikati, prime minister of Lebanon. The prime minister subsequently went on   
   to meet with Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone S.D.B. who was   
   accompanied by Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, secretary for Relations with   
   States.   
      
     "The cordial discussions served to highlight the role Lebanon plays in the   
   region and in the entire world, and its vocation to offer a message of   
   freedom and respectful coexistence among the various Christian and Muslim   
   communities who live there.   
      
     "The parties expressed a hope for greater political stability and more   
   fruitful collaboration and dialogue between the various leaders of social   
   and institutional life, also in order to meet the challenges the country   
   faces, both internally and internationally.   
      
     "Attention then turned to the Middle East, also with reference to the   
   delicate situation in Syria. On this subject, emphasis was given to the   
   vital need for all parties to commit themselves to peaceful coexistence   
   founded on justice, reconciliation, and respect for the dignity of human   
   beings and their inalienable rights. Finally, mention was made of the   
   fundamental contribution that can be made in this field by Christians, who   
   are called to be builders of harmony and peace, and whose presence is   
   essential for the good of the region".   
   OP/                                                                     VIS   
   20111128 (240)   
      
   HUMANITY HAS NO FUTURE UNLESS IT CARES FOR THE CREATION   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 28 NOV 2011 (VIS) - This morning in the Paul VI Hall, the Holy   
   Father received 7,000 students who are participating in a meeting promoted   
   by the Italian Association "Sorella natura". Extracts from his address to   
   them are given below.   
      
     "Dear young people, it is for your sake that I wished this meeting to take   
   place, and I want to tell you how much I appreciate your decision to become   
   'guardians of the creation'".   
      
     "We must first remember that your Foundation, indeed this meeting itself,   
   have a deep Franciscan inspiration. Even the date has been chosen to recall   
   the proclamation of St. Francis of Assisi as patron of the environment by my   
   beloved predecessor John Paul II in 1979".   
      
     "St. Francis, faithful to Holy Scripture, invites us to recognise that   
   nature is like a marvellous book speaking to us of God, of His beauty and   
   goodness. Francis used to ask the friar who tended the convent garden ... to   
   leave space for a rich flowerbed so that passers-by would raise their   
   thoughts to God, Creator of such beauty".   
      
     "Dear friends the Church, while appreciating the most important scientific   
   research and discoveries, has never ceased to remind people that by   
   respecting the mark of the Creator in all creation, we achieve a better   
   understanding of our true and profound human identity. ... If, in fact,   
   human activity forgets to collaborate with God, it can do violence to the   
   creation and cause damage which always has negative consequences, also for   
   mankind. ... Today more than ever it is clear that respect for the   
   environment cannot overlook recognition for the importance and inviolability   
   of human beings, at every stage of life and in every condition. Respect for   
   the human being and respect for nature are the same thing, they grow and   
   find their just measure if we respect the Creator and His creation, both in   
   the human creature and in nature".   
      
     "I would now like to address teachers and representatives from the public   
   authorities, ... highlighting the great importance education has in   
   environmental questions. ... It is now clear that humankind has no   
   productive future on earth if we do not educate everyone to be responsible   
   for the creation, This is first learnt in the family and in school, and for   
   this reason I encourage parents and teachers to continue educating people to   
   that end. Furthermore it is indispensable that the efforts made by families   
   and schools find support in the relevant institutions".   
      
     "May St. Francis teach us to sing, with all creation, a hymn of praise and   
   thanksgiving to our heavenly Father, giver of all gifts".   
   AC/                                                                     VIS   
   20111128 (450)   
      
   AUDIENCES   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 28 NOV 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in   
   audience:   
      
    - Cardinal Marc Ouellet P.S.S., prefect of the Congregation for Bishops.   
      
    - Cardinal Justin Francis Rigali, archbishop emeritus of Philadelphia,   
   U.S.A.   
   AP/                                                                     VIS   
   20111128 (40)   
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 28 NOV 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed:   
      
    - Fr. Fidelis Lionel Emmanuel Fernando, episcopal vicar for Tamil faithful   
   in the archdiocese of Colombo, Sri Lanka, and Fr. Sampathawaduge Maxwell   
   Grenville Silva, headmaster of the St. Thomas College at Kotte, as   
   auxiliaries of the archdiocese of Colombo (area 3,838, population 5,891,000,   
   Catholics 634,202, priests 588, religious 1,502). Bishop-elect Fernando was   
   born in Jaffna, Sri Lanka in 1948 and ordained a priest in 1973. He studied   
   in Rome and the U.S.A., and has worked as pastor, and as a professor and   
   later rector of the National Seminary of Kandy. Bishop-elect Silva was born   
   in Willorawatte, Sri Lanka in 1953 and ordained a priest in 1981. He has   
   worked as pastor and as a school teacher.   
      
     On Saturday 26 November it was made public that he appointed:   
      
    - Msgr. Charles John Brown, official of the Congregation for the Doctrine   
   of the Faith, as apostolic nuncio to Ireland, at the same time elevating him   
   to the dignity of archbishop. The archbishop-elect was born in New York,   
   U.S.A. in 1959 and ordained a priest in 1989. Before coming to Rome he   
   worked as parochial vicar in the parish of St. Brendan in the Bronx. In   
   September 2009 he was appointed as adjunct secretary of the International   
   Theological Commission.   
      
    - Msgr. Marek Solczynski, nunciature counsellor, as apostolic nuncio to   
   Georgia, at the same time elevating him to the dignity of archbishop. The   
   archbishop-elect was born in Stawiszyn, Poland in 1961 and ordained a priest   
   in 1987. He entered the diplomatic service of the Holy See in 1993, since   
   when he has served in Paraguay, Russia, U.S.A., Turkey, Czech Republic and   
   Spain.   
      
    - Fr. Antonio De Luca C.SS.R., pro episcopal vicar for consecrated life in   
   the archdiocese of Naples, Italy, as bishop of Teggiano-Policastro (area   
   1,986, population 117,200, Catholics 116,400, priests 81, permanent deacons   
   3, religious 107), Italy. The bishop-elect was born in Torre del Greco,   
   Italy in 1956 and ordained a priest in 1981. He has worked in various   
   offices for his order including provincial secretary for formation and   
   provincial superior for the Italian Region of Campania, and has been active   
   in missionary work in Madagascar and Argentina.   
      
    - Bishop Johannes Wihelmus Maria Liesen, auxiliary of 's-Hertogenbosch,   
   Netherlands, as bishop of Breda (area 3,368, population 1,114,000, Catholics   
   491,323, priests 251, permanent deacons 25, religious 974), Netherlands.   
   NEA:NN:NER/                                                     VIS 20111128   
   (400)   
      
   LIFE DOES NOT HAVE ONLY AN EARTHLY DIMENSION   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 27 NOV 2011 (VIS) - In his remarks before praying the Angelus   
   this morning, Benedict XVI reflected on the period of Advent, which begins   
   the liturgical year. In Advent "people's hearts are reawakened to the   
   expectation of Christ's return, and to the memory of His first coming, when   
   He divested Himself of His divine glory to assume our mortal flesh", he   
   said.   
      
     He then went on to quote from today's Gospel reading in which Jesus tells   
   His disciples to "keep awake". That was, said the Holy Father, "a timely   
   reminder to us that life has not only an earthly dimension, but is projected   
   'beyond'".   
      
     "Isaiah, the prophet of Advent, also makes us think today with his   
   heartfelt prayer addressed to God. ... He dwells on the shortcomings of his   
   people and at a certain point says: 'There is no one who calls on your name,   
   or attempts to take hold of you; you have hidden your face from us, and have   
   delivered us into the hands of iniquity'. How can we not be struck by this   
   description? It seems to reflect certain aspects of the post-modern world:   
   cities where life has become anonymous and horizontal, where God seems to be   
   absent and only man is master, as if he were the universal architect.   
   Building, work, economy, transport, science, technology, everything seems to   
   depend only upon man. And at times, in this apparently perfect world,   
   terrible things happen, either in nature or society, which make us think   
   that God has withdrawn and has, so to say, left us to our own devices.   
      
     "The real 'master' of the world is not man but God", the Pope added. "The   
   Gospel says: 'keep awake for you do not know when the master of the house   
   will come, in the evening, or at midnight, or at cockcrow, or at dawn, or   
   else he may find you asleep when he comes suddenly'. Advent comes every year   
   to remind us of this fact, that our lives might find their just orientation   
   towards the face of God. The face not of a 'master', but of a Father and a   
   Friend".   
      
     Following the Marian prayer, the Pope recalled that a United Nations   
   conference on climate change and the Kyoto Protocol is beginning tomorrow in   
   Durban, South Africa. "My hope", he said, "is that all the members of the   
   international community will agree on a responsible, credible and joint   
   response to this worrying and complex phenomenon, while taking account of   
   the needs of the poorest people and of future generations".   
   ANG/                                                                    VIS   
   20111128 (430)   
      
   MUSIC HELPS US TO TURN TO GOD   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 26 NOV 2011 (VIS) - This evening in the Vatican's Paul VI   
   Hall, the government of the Principality of Asturias, Spain, offered a   
   concert in honour of the Holy Father. The Orchestra of the Principality   
   played works by Falla, Albeniz, Rueda, Strauss and Rimsky-Korsakov. At the   
   end of the performance Benedict XVI arose to address some words to musicians   
   and public.   
      
     "This evening", he said, "a 'piece' of Spain has been transferred into   
   this hall. We have heard music written by some of the most famous composers   
   of that land, ... as well as by the German Richard Strauss and the Russian   
   Rimsky-Korsakov who were fascinated with what ... has been defined as 'more   
   hispano'; that is, the 'Hispanic' way of being, and of composing and playing   
   music. This is the element which the various pieces we have heard have in   
   common, they share the fundamental characteristic of using music to   
   communicate feelings and emotions, almost I would say the fabric of daily   
   life. This is because composers who follow 'more hispano' are almost   
   naturally led to a harmonious fusion of elements of folklore and popular   
   song, which come from everyday life, with what we call 'classical music'".   
      
     "However", the Holy Father went on, "another constantly recurring theme of   
   'more hispano' compositions is the element of religion, with which the   
   Spanish people are so deeply imbued. Rimsky-Korsakov understood this well   
   mixing, in his splendid 'Capriccio Espagnol', songs and dances of Spanish   
   folklore with popular religious melodies. ... This is the magic worked by   
   music, the universal language which can overcome all barriers and allow us   
   to enter the world of others, of a nation or a culture, at the same time   
   enabling us to turn our mind and hearts ... to the world of God".   
   BXVI-CONCERT/                                                   VIS 20111128   
   (310)   
      
   EXPERTS FROM MONEYVAL VISIT THE VATICAN   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 26 NOV 2011 (VIS) - From 21 to 26 November a series of   
   meetings took place between members of the Council of Europe Committee of   
   Experts on the Evaluation of Anti-Money Laundering Measures and the   
   Financing of Terrorism (MONEYVAL) and the Vatican authorities responsible   
   for the prevention and countering of money laundering and the financing of   
   terrorism, according to a communique released today by the Holy See Press   
   Office.   
      
     "The 'in loco' visit of the inspectors is a further step in the MONEYVAL   
   assessment procedures, promoted by request of the Holy See following the   
   issue of Law No. 127 of 30 December 2010. Those procedures began on 14   
   September 2011 with the delivery of a preliminary explanatory document   
   concerning both the juridical system of the Holy See and Vatican City State,   
   and the implementation of initiatives to adapt to international standards in   
   this field (40+9 Recommendations of FATF/GAFI (Financial Action Task Force)   
   and the methodology of assessment agreed with the International Monetary   
   Fund and the World Bank).   
      
     "The group of legal, financial and law enforcement experts from various   
   countries (Russian Federation, United Kingdom, Belgium, Netherlands,   
   Liechtenstein), coordinated by the MONEYVAL Secretariat, met with   
   representatives from the Secretariat of State, the Governorate, the   
   Juridical Offices, the Gendarmerie, the Prefecture for Economic Affairs, the   
   Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), the Administration of the Patrimony   
   of the Apostolic See (APSA), and the newly-founded Financial Information   
   Authority.   
      
     "The outcome of this procedure will be the final assessment report, to be   
   discussed at the MONEYVAL plenary assembly which is expected to take place   
   around the middle of 2012".   
   OP/                                                                     VIS   
   20111128 (280)   
      
   THE FACE OF THE DYING CHRIST TEACHES US TO DEFEND LIFE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 26 NOV 2011 (VIS) - This morning in the Vatican the Holy   
   Father received 500 participants in an international conference on the   
   theme: "Health Pastoral Care, Serving Life in the Light of the Magisterium   
   of Blessed John Paul II", organised by the Pontifical Council for Health   
   Pastoral Care. It was John Paul II who established the Pontifical Council   
   for Health Pastoral Care, as well as the World Day of the Sick, and the Good   
   Samaritan Foundation which offers health care services to poor people in a   
   number of countries.   
      
     Extracts from Benedict XVI's remarks to the group are given below:   
      
     "Over the long and intense years of his pontificate, Blessed John Paul II   
   proclaimed that serving the sick in body and spirit must be a constant part   
   of the ecclesial community's commitment to evangelisation, in accordance   
   with Jesus command to the Twelve to go forth and heal", he said.   
      
     "The mystery of suffering seems to obscure the face of God, almost making   
   Him a stranger, or even identifying Him as the person responsible for human   
   suffering; however the eyes of faith can see into the depths of this   
   mystery. God became incarnate, He came close to man, even in the most   
   difficult situations. He did not eliminate suffering, but in the risen   
   Christ, in the Son of God Who suffered unto death, and death on a cross, He   
   showed us that His love descends even into man's deepest abyss and brings   
   him hope. ... In the Son, Who was 'given' for the salvation of humankind,   
   the truth of love is, in some way, proven through the truth of suffering,   
   and the Church, born from the mystery of Redemption upon the Cross of   
   Christ, must meet man on the long path of his suffering".   
      
     "Your proximity and the care you show to our sick brothers and sisters,   
   often alone and suffering not only physically, but also spiritually and   
   morally, places you in a privileged position to bear witness to the salvific   
   action of God, His love for mankind and the world which embraces even the   
   most painful and terrible situations. The Face of the Saviour, dying upon   
   the cross, ... teaches us to defend and promote life, whatever its state and   
   condition, recognising the dignity and value of each individual human being,   
   who was created in the image and likeness of God, and is called to eternal   
   life.   
      
     "The slow Calvary of the final years of life of Blessed John Paul II bore   
   witness to this vision of pain and suffering illuminated by the death and   
   resurrection of Christ", Pope Benedict added. "His profound humility, rooted   
   in his intimate bond with Christ, enabled him to continue to guide the   
   Church, and to address an even more eloquent message to the world, even when   
   his physical strength was failing".   
      
     "Dear friends", the Holy Father concluded, "in the service you provide in   
   the various fields of health pastoral care, may you too experience that   
   'only if I serve my neighbour can my eyes be opened to what God does for me   
   and how much He loves me'".   
   AC/                                                                     VIS   
   20111128 (530)   
      
   EXERCISING THE PROPHETIC DIMENSION OF EPISCOPAL MINISTRY   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 26 NOV 2011 (VIS) - This morning in the Vatican, Benedict XVI   
   received a group of prelates from the United States Conference of Catholic   
   Bishops, at the end of their "ad limina" visit. Today's meeting was the   
   first between the Pope and American bishops since the Holy Father's 2008   
   visit to the U.S. which, he said, "was intended to encourage the Catholics   
   of America in the wake of the scandal and disorientation caused by the   
   sexual abuse crisis of recent decades".   
      
     "I wished to acknowledge personally the suffering inflicted on the victims   
   and the honest efforts made both to ensure the safety of our children and to   
   deal appropriately and transparently with allegations as they arise", he   
   added. "It is my hope that the Church's conscientious efforts to confront   
   this reality will help the broader community to recognise the causes, true   
   extent and devastating consequences of sexual abuse, and to respond   
   effectively to this scourge which affects every level of society. By the   
   same token, just as the Church is rightly held to exacting standards in this   
   regard, all other institutions, without exception, should be held to the   
   same standards".   
      
     The Holy Father then turned to consider another purpose of his 2008 trip,   
   that of summoning "the Church in America to recognise, in the light of a   
   dramatically changing social and religious landscape, the urgency and   
   demands of a new evangelisation. ... Many of you have shared with me your   
   concern about the grave challenges to a consistent Christian witness   
   presented by an increasingly secularised society", he said. "I consider it   
   significant, however, that there is also an increased sense of concern on   
   the part of many men and women, whatever their religious or political views,   
   for the future of our democratic societies. They see a troubling breakdown   
   in the intellectual, cultural and moral foundations of social life, and a   
   growing sense of dislocation and insecurity, especially among the young, in   
   the face of wide-ranging societal changes.   
      
     "Despite attempts to still the Church's voice in the public square, many   
   people of good will continue to look to her for wisdom, insight and sound   
   guidance in meeting this far-reaching crisis. The present moment can thus be   
   seen, in positive terms, as a summons to exercise the prophetic dimension of   
   your episcopal ministry by speaking out, humbly yet insistently, in defence   
   of moral truth, and offering a word of hope, capable of opening hearts and   
   minds to the truth that sets us free".   
      
     "The obstacles to Christian faith and practice raised by a secularised   
   culture also affect the lives of believers, leading at times to that 'quiet   
   attrition' from the Church. ... Immersed in this culture, believers are   
   daily beset by the objections, the troubling questions and the cynicism of a   
   society which seems to have lost its roots, by a world in which the love of   
   God has grown cold in so many hearts. Evangelisation thus appears not simply   
   a task to be undertaken ad extra; we ourselves are the first to need   
   re-evangelisation".   
      
     The Holy Father expressed his appreciation at the progress made by the   
   American episcopate in responding to these issues, and cited the examples of   
   recent documents on faithful citizenship and the institution of marriage. He   
   also thanked them for their efforts in implementing the revised translation   
   of the Roman Missal, and their efforts "to ensure that this new translation   
   will inspire an ongoing catechesis which emphasises the true nature of the   
   liturgy and, above all, the unique value of Christ's saving sacrifice for   
   the redemption of the world".   
      
     Pope Benedict concluded: "A weakened sense of the meaning and importance   
   of Christian worship can only lead to a weakened sense of the specific and   
   essential vocation of the laity to imbue the temporal order with the spirit   
   of the Gospel. America has a proud tradition of respect for the Sabbath;   
   this legacy needs to be consolidated as a summons to the service of God's   
   Kingdom and the renewal of the social fabric in accordance with its   
   unchanging truth".   
   AL/                                                                     VIS   
   20111128 (680)   
   _____________________________________________   
      
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