Subject: VISnews 111130   
   Organization: VIS   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 210   
   ENGLISH   
   WEDNESDAY, 30 NOVEMBER 2011   
      
   SUMMARY:   
      
   - Christians Are Called to Be Witnesses of Prayer   
   - Encouraging Initiatives to Eliminate the Death Penalty   
   - Catholics and Orthodox Face the Same Challenges   
   - Benedict XVI's Prayer Intentions for December   
   - Other Pontifical Acts   
   - In Memoriam   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   CHRISTIANS ARE CALLED TO BE WITNESSES OF PRAYER   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 30 NOV 2011 (VIS) - This morning's general audience was   
   celebrated in the Paul VI Hall in the presence of 5,500 faithful. Having   
   recently completed a series of catecheses dedicated to prayer in the Old   
   Testament, the Pope today began a new cycle on the subject of the prayer of   
   Christ which, he said, was "like a hidden canal irrigating His life,   
   relationships and actions, and guiding Him with increasing firmness to the   
   total gift of self, in keeping with the loving plan of God the Father".   
      
    One particularly significant moment of prayer followed the Baptism of   
   Jesus in the Jordan. This, the Pope noted, poses a query as to why Jesus,   
   Who was without sin, should have chosen to submit Himself to John's Baptism   
   of penance and conversion. John the Baptist himself raised the question,   
   saying "I need to be baptised by you, and do you come to me?". The Holy   
   Father explained how "by emerging Himself in the Jordan River, Jesus ...   
   expressed His solidarity with people who recognise their sins, who chose to   
   repent and change their lives. He helps us to understand that being part of   
   the people of God means entering into a new life, a life in conformity with   
   God. By this gesture Jesus anticipated the cross, beginning His active life   
   by taking the place of sinners, bearing the weight of the sin of all   
   humankind on His shoulders".   
      
    By praying after His Baptism, Jesus demonstrates His intimate bond with   
   the Father, "experiencing His paternity and apprehending the demanding   
   beauty of His love. Speaking to God, Jesus receives confirmation of His   
   mission", with the words that resound from on high: "This is my son, the   
   Beloved" and with the descent of the Holy Spirit upon Him. "Through prayer",   
   the Pope said, "Jesus lives in uninterrupted contact with the Father in   
   order to achieve His project of love for mankind". It is in this profound   
   union with the Father that Jesus made the move for the hidden life of   
   Nazareth to His public ministry.   
      
    Jesus' prayer had its roots in His family, deeply attached to the   
   religious tradition of the People of Israel, but its "most profound and   
   essential origin is in the fact that He is the Son of God, in a unique   
   relationship with God the Father". In the Gospel narratives "the setting for   
   Jesus' prayers always stands at the crossroads between the traditions of His   
   people and the novelty of a personal and unique rapport with God. The   
   'deserted place' to which He often retired, the 'mountain' He ascended to   
   pray and the 'night' which gave Him solitude, all recall phases of God's   
   revelation in the Old Testament and indicate the continuity of His plan of   
   salvation".   
      
    "Jesus' prayer enters into all stages of His ministry and into every day   
   of His life. It is not interrupted by fatigue. Quite the contrary, the   
   Gospels make it clear that Jesus was wont to spend part of the night in   
   prayer, ... and when the decisions to be taken become more urgent and   
   complex, His prayer becomes longer and more intense".   
      
    "Contemplating Jesus' prayer, we should ask ourselves how we pray", said   
   Benedict XVI, "and how much time we dedicate to our relationship with God".   
   In this context he highlighted "the importance of the prayerful reading of   
   Holy Scripture. ... Listening, meditating and remaining in silence before   
   the Lord is an art we learn through constant practice", he said.   
      
    Christians are today called "to be witnesses of prayer, because our world   
   often remains closed to the divine, to the hope which leads to the encounter   
   with God. Through profound friendship with Jesus, by living in Him and with   
   Him as children of the Father, through faithful and constant prayer, we can   
   open ourselves to heaven and God. Indeed, by following the paths of prayer,   
   ... we can also help others to follow them".   
      
    In conclusion, the Holy Father exhorted the faithful "to maintain an   
   intense relationship with God, to pray, not intermittently but constantly   
   and faithfully, so as to illuminate our lives as Jesus taught us. And let us   
   ask Him to help us communicate with those around us, with those whom we meet   
   on our journey, transmitting to them the joy of meeting the Lord, light of   
   life".   
   AG/ VIS   
   20111130 (730)   
      
   ENCOURAGING INITIATIVES TO ELIMINATE THE DEATH PENALTY   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 30 NOV 2011 (VIS) - Following his catechesis this morning, the   
   Holy Father delivered greetings in various languages to groups attending his   
   general audience.   
      
    Speaking English to delegations from a number of countries participating   
   in a meeting being promoted by the Sant'Egidio Community on the theme "No   
   Justice without Life", he said: "I express my hope that your deliberations   
   will encourage the political and legislative initiatives being promoted in a   
   growing number of countries to eliminate the death penalty and to continue   
   the substantive progress made in conforming penal law both to the human   
   dignity of prisoners and the effective maintenance of public order".   
      
    He then turned to greet students of the Pontifical French Seminary in   
   Rome, and a delegation from the French diocese of Belley-Ars accompanied by   
   Bishop Guy Bagnard, who have come to Rome with a portrait of St. John Mary   
   Vianney for the Vatican Basilica in commemoration of the Year for Priests.   
   "Following the example of St. John Mary Vianney", he told them, "let us   
   rediscover the importance of prayer in our lives".   
      
    The Holy Father also welcomed nuns of the Congregation of Daughters of   
   Divine Charity who, accompanied by Cardinal Vinko Puljic, archbishop of   
   Vrhbosna, Bosnia Herzegovina, have come to Rome on a pilgrimage of   
   thanksgiving for the recent beatification in Sarajevo of five members of   
   their order martyred during World War II. "Grateful for their witness, let   
   us pray to God to give us the courage to persevere in our service", the Pope   
   said.   
      
    Finally, he thanked representatives of the Italian Federation of Bakers   
   for their gift of a number of "panttoni" which will be used for the Pope's   
   charity.   
   AG/ VIS   
   20111130 (290)   
      
   CATHOLICS AND ORTHODOX FACE THE SAME CHALLENGES   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 30 NOV 2011 (VIS) - Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the   
   Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, is leading a delegation   
   sent by the Holy See to Istanbul to participate in celebrations marking the   
   Feast of St. Andrew, patron of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of   
   Constantinople. The Holy See and the Patriarchate exchange regular annual   
   visits for the feast days of their respective patrons.   
      
    The Holy See delegation to this year's celebration - which coincides with   
   the twentieth anniversary of the election of His Holiness Bartholomew I as   
   Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople - is made up of Cardinal Koch; Bishop   
   Brian Farrell, secretary of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian   
   Unity; Fr. Andrea Palmieri, an official of the same dicastery, and   
   Archbishop Antonio Lucibello, apostolic nuncio to Turkey. The group attended   
   a divine liturgy celebrated by Bartholomew I in the patriarchal church of   
   Fanar, then met with the Patriarch and the synodal commission which oversees   
   relations with the Catholic Church.   
      
    Cardinal Koch gave Bartholomew I a gift and a message from the Holy   
   Father. In the message, which was read out at the end of the divine liturgy,   
   Benedict XVI recalls his most recent meeting with the Patriarch during last   
   month's Day of Prayer for Peace in the Italian town of Assisi. "I give   
   thanks to the Lord for having allowed me to strengthen the bonds of sincere   
   friendship and true brotherhood which unite us, and to bear witness before   
   the entire world to the broad vision we share".   
      
    The message continues: "The present cultural, social, economic, political   
   and religious circumstances place exactly the same challenges before   
   Catholics and Orthodox. Announcing the mystery of salvation through the   
   death and resurrection of Christ needs to undergo deep renewal in many   
   regions which once accepted the light but are now suffering the effects of   
   secularisation which impoverishes man in his deepest dimension. Faced with   
   this emergency we must show all mankind that we have achieved a maturity in   
   the faith, that we are capable of coming together despite human tensions,   
   thanks to our joint search for truth and with the awareness that the future   
   of evangelisation depends upon the witness of unity and the level of charity   
   the Church can show".   
      
    The Pope concludes by asking the Lord that, through the intercession of   
   Sts. Andrew, Peter and Paul, both Church may receive "the gift of unity   
   which comes from on high".   
   MESS/ VIS   
   20111130 (410)   
      
   BENEDICT XVI'S PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR DECEMBER   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 30 NOV 2011 (VIS) - Benedict's general prayer intention for   
   December is: "That all peoples may grow in harmony and peace through mutual   
   understanding and respect".   
      
    His mission intention is: "That children and young people may be   
   messengers of the Gospel and that they may be respected and preserved from   
   all violence and exploitation".   
   BXVI-PRAYER INTENTIONS/ VIS 20111130 (70)   
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 30 NOV 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father:   
      
    - Appointed Bishop Jose Francisco Rezende Dias of Duque de Caxias, Brazil,   
   as metropolitan archbishop of Niteroi (area 4,722, population 2,206,000,   
   Catholics 1,185,959, priests 139, permanent deacons 59, religious 269),   
   Brazil. He succeeds Archbishop Alano Maria Pena O.P., whose resignation from   
   the pastoral care of the same archdiocese the Holy Father accepted, upon   
   having reached the age limit.   
      
    - Appointed Bishop Esmeraldo Barreto de Farias of Santarem, Brazil, as   
   archbishop of Porto Velho (area 84,696, population 664,958, Catholics   
   598,000, priests 29, permanent deacons 1, religious 128), Brazil. He   
   succeeds Archbishop Moacyr Grechi O.S.M., whose resignation from the   
   pastoral care of the same archdiocese the Holy Father accepted, upon having   
   reached the age limit.   
      
    - Appointed Bishop Nicholas Mang Thang of Hakha, Myanmar, as coadjutor   
   archbishop of Mandalay (area 212,407, population 9,078,000, Catholics   
   23,617, priests 57, religious 173), Myanmar, and as apostolic administrator   
   "sede vacante et ad nutum Sanctae Sedis" of Hakha.   
      
    - Erected the new diocese of Gaoua (area 10,411, population 260,550,   
   Catholics 19,074, priests 14, religious 24) Burkina Faso, with territory   
   taken from the diocese of Diebougou, making it a suffragan of the   
   metropolitan church of Bobo-Dioulasso. He appointed Fr. Modeste Kambou,   
   vicar general of the diocese of Diebougou, as first bishop of the new   
   diocese. The bishop-elect was born in Bouti, Burkina Faso in 1963 and   
   ordained a priest in 1991. He has worked as parochial vicar, and as   
   professor and later director of the minor seminary of St. Tarcisius of   
   Kakapele.   
      
    - Accepted the resignation from the office of auxiliary of the diocese of   
   Osnabruck, Germany, presented by Bishop Theodor Kettmann, in accordance with   
   canons 411 and 401 para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law.   
   NER:NEC:ECE:RE/ VIS 20111130   
   (300)   
      
   IN MEMORIAM   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 30 NOV 2011 (VIS) - The following prelates died in recent   
   weeks:   
      
    - Bishop Luigi Belloli, emeritus of Anagni-Alatri, Italy, on 5 November at   
   the age of 88.   
      
    - Archbishop Oscar Rolando Cantuarias Pastor, emeritus of Piura, Peru, on 7   
   November at the age of 80.   
      
    - Bishop Domenico Tarcisio Cortese, emeritus of Mileto-Nicotera-Tropea,   
   Italy, on 11 November at the age of 80.   
      
    - Bishop Justo Oscar Laguna, emeritus of Moron, Argentina, on 3 November at   
   the age of 82.   
      
    - Bishop Jean-Paul Randriamanana, auxiliary of Antananarivo, Madagascar, on   
   9 November at the age of 61.   
      
    - Bishop Crescenzio Rinaldini, emeritus of Aracuai, Brazil, on 24 October   
   at the age of 85.   
      
    - Archbishop Hector Rueda Hernandez, emeritus of Medellin, Colombia, on 1   
   November at the age of 90.   
      
    - Bishop Ricardo Watty Urquidi M.Sp.S. of Tepic, Mexico, on 1 November at   
   the age of 73.   
      
    - Bishop Dieudonne Yougbare of Koupela, Burkina Faso, on 4 November at the   
   age of 94.   
   .../ VIS   
   20111130 (170)   
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