Subject: VISnews 120102   
   Organization: VIS   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY SECOND YEAR - N. 1   
   ENGLISH   
   MONDAY, 2 JANUARY 2012   
      
   SUMMARY: 31 DECEMBER 2011 - 2 JANUARY 2012   
      
   - Pope to Families: Strengthen the Faith in Your Homes   
   - Te Deum: Entrust Tragedies and Hopes of the World to God   
   - Importance of Educating Young People in Justice and Peace   
   - Angelus: Praying That the New Year May Be a Time of Peace   
   - Other Pontifical Acts   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   POPE TO FAMILIES: STRENGTHEN THE FAITH IN YOUR HOMES   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 31 DEC 2011 (VIS) - The Holy Father has sent a message to   
   Cardinal Antonio Maria Rouco Varela, archbishop of Madrid, Spain, for the   
   Feast of the Holy Family. The message, dated 27 December, was read out   
   yesterday at the beginning of a Mass for families celebrated by Cardinal   
   Rouco Varela in Madrid's Plaza de Colon.   
      
    "I invite everyone to consider this celebration as a continuation of   
   Christmas", the Pope writes. "Jesus became man in order to bring the world   
   the goodness and love of God, and He did so in that place where human beings   
   are most disposed to want the best for others, ready to do anything for them   
   and to place love above all other interests. ... The family is, so to speak,   
   the door by which the Saviour of humankind entered the world. At the same   
   time it gives domestic love and communion the greatness of being a special   
   reflection of the Trinitarian mystery of God.   
      
    "This greatness is also a splendid and decisive vocation for families",   
   the Holy Father adds. "I encourage you ... to be aware that God is at your   
   side and to invoke Him always so as to ensure He gives you the help you need   
   to overcome your difficulties; this help is certain and has its foundation   
   in the grace of the Sacrament of Marriage. Allow yourselves to be guided by   
   the Church, which Christ entrusted with the mission of spreading the good   
   news of salvation down the centuries, and do not surrender to the many   
   worldly powers threatening the great treasure of the family, which you must   
   protect day after day".   
      
    "It is in the family that we learn to live together, that faith is   
   transmitted, values are strengthened and freedom is channelled to ensure   
   that one day children will be fully aware of their own vocation and dignity,   
   and that of others. The warmth of the home and domestic example can teach   
   much more than words can say. This educational dimension of the family may   
   receive particular encouragement in the Year of Faith, due to begin in a few   
   months time. For this reason, I invite you to revitalise the faith in your   
   homes and to become increasingly aware of the Creed we profess".   
      
    "I pray to God ... that (young people) may not cease to thank Him for the   
   gift of the family, that they may be grateful to their parents and undertake   
   to defend and promote the authentic dignity of this institution, so vital   
   for society and the Church".   
      
   MESS/ VIS   
   20120102 (440)   
      
   TE DEUM: ENTRUST TRAGEDIES AND HOPES OF THE WORLD TO GOD   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 31 DEC 2011 (VIS) - In the Vatican Basilica at 5 p.m. today,   
   the Pope presided at first Vespers for the Solemnity of Mary Mother of God.   
   This was followed by the exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, the singing of   
   the traditional "Te Deum" of thanksgiving for the conclusion of the year,   
   and the Eucharistic blessing.   
      
    Extracts from Benedict XVI's homily are given below:   
      
    "Another year is drawing to a close, as we await the start of a new one:   
   with some trepidation, with our perennial desires and expectations.   
   Reflecting on our life experience, we are continually astonished by how   
   ultimately short and ephemeral life is. So we often find ourselves asking:   
   what meaning can we give to our days? What meaning, in particular, can we   
   give to the days of toil and grief? This is a question that ... runs through   
   the heart of every generation and every individual. But there is an answer:   
   it is written on the face of a Child Who was born in Bethlehem two thousand   
   years ago, and is today the Living One, risen for ever from the dead. From   
   within the fabric of humanity, rent asunder by so much injustice, wickedness   
   and violence, there bursts forth in an unforeseen way the joyful and   
   liberating novelty of Christ our Saviour, Who leads us to contemplate the   
   goodness and tenderness of God through the mystery of His Incarnation and   
   Birth".   
      
    "Since the Day of the Lord's Nativity, the fullness of time has reached   
   us. So there is no more room for anxiety in the face of time that passes,   
   never to return; now there is room for unlimited trust in God, by Whom we   
   know we are loved. ... Since the Saviour came down from heaven, man has   
   ceased to be the slave of time that passes to no avail, marked by toil,   
   sadness and pain. Man is son of a God Who has entered time so as to redeem   
   it from meaninglessness and negativity, a God Who has redeemed all humanity,   
   giving it everlasting love as a new perspective of life.   
      
    "The Church lives and professes this truth and intends to proclaim it   
   today with fresh spiritual vigour. ... Christ's disciples are called to   
   reawaken in themselves and in others the longing for God and the joy of   
   living Him and bearing witness to Him. ... We must give primacy to truth,   
   seeing the combination of faith and reason as two wings with which the human   
   spirit can rise to the contemplation of the Truth; we must ensure that the   
   dialogue between Christianity and modern culture bears fruit; we must see to   
   it that the beauty and contemporary relevance of the faith is rediscovered,   
   ... as a constant orientation, affecting even the simplest choices,   
   establishing a profound unity within the person, so that he becomes just,   
   hard-working, generous and good. What is needed is to give new life to a   
   faith that can serve as a basis for a new humanism, one that is able to   
   generate culture and social commitment".   
      
    "To proclaim faith in the Word made flesh is ... at the heart of the   
   Church's mission, and the entire ecclesial community needs to rediscover   
   this indispensable task with renewed missionary zeal. Young generations have   
   an especially keen sense of the present disorientation, magnified by the   
   crisis in economic affairs which is also a crisis of values, and so they in   
   particular need to recognise in Jesus Christ 'the key, the centre and the   
   purpose of the whole of human history'".   
      
    "Ever since God sent His only-begotten Son, so that we might obtain   
   adoptive sonship, we can have no greater task than to be totally at the   
   service of God's plan".   
      
    "'Te Deum laudamus!' We praise you, O God! The Church suggests that we   
   should not end the year without expressing our thanks to the Lord for all   
   His benefits. It is in God that our last hour must come to a close, the last   
   hour of time and history. To overlook this goal of our lives would be to   
   fall into the void, to live without meaning. Hence the Church places on our   
   lips the ancient hymn 'Te Deum'. It is a hymn filled with the wisdom of many   
   Christian generations, who feel the need to address on high their heart's   
   desires, knowing that all of us are in the Lord's merciful hands".   
      
    "With hearts full of thanksgiving, let us prepare to cross the threshold   
   of 2012, remembering that the Lord is watching over us and guarding us. To   
   Him this evening we wish to entrust the whole world. Let us place in His   
   hands the tragedies of this world and let us also offer Him our hopes for a   
   brighter future".   
   HML/ VIS   
   20120102 (810)   
      
   IMPORTANCE OF EDUCATING YOUNG PEOPLE IN JUSTICE AND PEACE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 1 JAN 2012 (VIS) - In the Vatican Basilica this morning,   
   Benedict XVI presided at a Eucharistic celebration for the Solemnity of Mary   
   Mother of God. The Mass was concelebrated by Cardinal Secretary of State   
   Tarcisio Bertone S.D.B.; Cardinal Peter Kodwo Turkson, president of the   
   Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace; Archbishop Giovanni Angelo Becciu,   
   substitute for General Affairs; Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, secretary for   
   Relations with States; Archbishop Pier Luigi Celata, secretary of the   
   Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue, and Bishop Mario Toso   
   S.D.B., secretary of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace. The   
   ceremony also marked today's forty-fifth World Day of Peace, which has as   
   its theme: "Educating Young People in Justice and Peace".   
      
    Extracts from Benedict XVI's homily are given below:   
      
    "On the first day of the year, the liturgy resounds in the Church   
   throughout the world with the ancient priestly blessing that we heard during   
   today's first reading: 'The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make His   
   face to shine upon you, and be gracious to you; the Lord lift up His   
   countenance upon you and give you peace'. ... In order to be blessed, we   
   have to stand in God's presence, take His Name upon us and remain ... in a   
   space lit up by His gaze, diffusing grace and peace".   
      
    "The shepherds of Bethlehem had ... the experience of standing in God's   
   presence, they received His blessing ... in a stable, before a 'babe lying   
   in a manger'. From this child, a new light issues forth, shining in the   
   darkness of the night. ... Henceforth, it is from Him that blessing comes,   
   from His name - Jesus, meaning 'God saves' - and from His human face, in   
   which God, the almighty Lord of heaven and earth, chose to become incarnate,   
   concealing His glory under the veil of our flesh, so as to reveal fully to   
   us His goodness.   
      
    "The first to be swept up by this blessing was Mary the virgin. ... Her   
   whole life was spent in the light of the Lord, within the radius of His name   
   and of the face of God incarnate in Jesus, the 'blessed fruit of her womb'.   
   ... The mystery of her divine motherhood that we celebrate today contains in   
   superabundant measure the gift of grace that all human motherhood bears   
   within it. ... The Mother of God is the first of the blessed, and it is she   
   who bears the blessing; she is the woman who received Jesus into herself and   
   brought Him forth for the whole human family".   
      
    "Mary is the mother and model of the Church. ... The Church also   
   participates in the mystery of divine motherhood, through preaching, which   
   sows the seed of the Gospel throughout the world, and through the   
   Sacraments, which communicate grace and divine life to men. ... Like Mary,   
   the Church is the mediator of God's blessing for the world: she receives it   
   in receiving Jesus and she transmits it in bearing Jesus. He is the mercy   
   and the peace that the world, of itself, cannot give, and which it needs   
   always, at least as much as bread".   
      
   Jesus Christ, the path of peace   
      
    "The Church too, on the first day of the year, invokes this supreme good   
   in a special way; she does so, like the Virgin Mary, by revealing Jesus to   
   all, for as St. Paul says, 'He is our peace', and at the same time the 'way'   
   by which individuals and peoples can reach this goal to which we all   
   aspire".   
      
    "'Educating Young People in Justice and Peace' is a task for every   
   generation, and thanks be to God, after the tragedies of the two great world   
   wars, the human family has shown increasing awareness of it, as we can   
   witness, on the one hand, from international statements and initiatives, and   
   on the other, from the emergence among young people themselves, in recent   
   decades, of many different forms of social commitment in this field. For the   
   ecclesial community, educating men and women in peace is part of the mission   
   received from Christ, it is an integral part of evangelisation, because the   
   Gospel of Christ is also the Gospel of justice and peace".   
      
    "In the face of the shadows that obscure the horizon of today's world, to   
   assume responsibility for educating young people in knowledge of the truth,   
   in fundamental values and virtues, is to look to the future with hope. And   
   in this commitment to a holistic education, formation in justice and peace   
   has a place. Boys and girls today are growing up in a world that has, so to   
   speak, become smaller, where contacts between different cultures and   
   traditions, even if not always direct, are constant. For them, now more than   
   ever, it is indispensable to learn the importance and the art of peaceful   
   coexistence, mutual respect, dialogue and understanding. Young people by   
   their nature are open to these attitudes, but the social reality in which   
   they grow up can lead them to think and act in the opposite way, even to be   
   intolerant and violent. Only a solid education of their consciences can   
   protect them from these risks and make them capable of carrying on the   
   fight, depending always and solely on the power of truth and good. This   
   education begins in the family and is developed at school and in other   
   formative experiences. It is essentially about helping infants, children and   
   adolescents to develop a personality that combines a profound sense of   
   justice with respect for their neighbour, with a capacity to address   
   conflicts without arrogance, with the inner strength to bear witness to   
   good, even when it involves sacrifice, with forgiveness and reconciliation.   
   Thus they will be able to become people of peace and builders of peace.   
      
    "In this task of educating young generations, a particular responsibility   
   lies with religious communities. Every pathway of authentic religious   
   formation guides the person, from the most tender age, to know God, to love   
   Him and to do His will. God is love, He is just and peaceable, and anyone   
   wishing to honour Him must first of all act like a child following his   
   father's example. ... In God, justice and mercy come together perfectly, as   
   Jesus showed us through the testimony of His life. ... Jesus is a way that   
   can be travelled, open to everyone. He is the path of peace. Today the   
   Virgin Mary points Him out to us, she shows us the Way: let us walk in it!".   
   HML/ VIS   
   20120102 (1090)   
      
   ANGELUS: PRAYING THAT THE NEW YEAR MAY BE A TIME OF PEACE   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 1 JAN 2012 (VIS) - At the end of this morning's Mass for the   
   Solemnity of Mary Mother of God, Benedict XVI appeared at the window of his   
   study in the Vatican Apostolic Palace to pray the Angelus with faithful and   
   pilgrims gathered below in St. Peter's Square.   
      
    "The Face of God ... was revealed in Jesus", he said in his remarks to   
   them. "He is the visible image of the invisible God, thanks also to the   
   Virgin Mary whom we celebrate today under her most exalted title, by virtue   
   of which she plays a unique role in the history of salvation: Mother of God.   
   In her womb the Son of the Most High took on our flesh, that we might   
   contemplate His glory and feel His presence as God-with-us.   
      
    "Thus do we begin the new year 2012 with our gaze fixed on the Face of   
   God, revealed in the Child of Bethlehem, and on His Mother Mary, who with   
   humble submission accepted the divine plan", the Pope added. "Thanks to her   
   generous 'yes' the true light which enlightens everyone came into the world,   
   and the path of peace was reopened".   
      
    "Today we celebrate the forty-fifth World Day of Peace", he went on. "In   
   my message, which has as its theme 'Educating Young People in Justice and   
   Peace' and is addressed to heads of State, leaders of nations and all men   
   and women of good will, I underline the importance of giving young   
   generations an adequate education in order to ensure the integral formation   
   of the person, including the moral and spiritual dimension, ... and the   
   values of justice and peace".   
      
    "I invite everyone to have the patience and constancy to seek out justice   
   and peace, to cultivate a taste for what is just and true. Peace is never a   
   quality that can be fully achieved, but a goal to which we must all aspire   
   and for which we must all work".   
      
    "Let us pray that the leaders of nations may renew their willingness and   
   commitment to accept and support this irrepressible desire of humanity. We   
   entrust these hopes to the intercession of the Mother of the 'King of   
   Peace', that the year now beginning may be a time of hope and of peaceful   
   coexistence for the whole world".   
      
    Following the Angelus, Benedict XVI greeted pilgrims in various languages,   
   expressing his thanks for the many expressions of good wishes he had   
   received over this period, and his appreciation for the prayers for today's   
   World Day of Peace.   
   ANG/ VIS   
   20120102 (440)   
      
   OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 1 JAN 2012 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Fr. Jeffrey   
   Steenson as the first ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of   
   Saint Peter. The Ordinariate was today erected on the territory of the   
   United States Conference of Catholic Bishops by the Congregation for the   
   Doctrine of the Faith, under the terms of the Apostolic Constitution   
   "Anglicanorum coetibus".   
      
    On Saturday 31 December it was made public that the Holy Father accepted   
   the resignation from the pastoral care of the archdiocese of Lublin, Poland,   
   presented by Bishop Ryszard Karpinski, upon having reached the age limit.   
   NA:RE/ VIS 20120102   
   (110)   
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