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    VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
   YEAR XXII - N° 232   
   DATE 20-12-2012   
      
   Summary:   
    - BENEDICT XVI TO THE YOUNG "IN SEARCH OF A MAKER"   
    - THE POPE IN THE FINANCIAL TIMES: CHRISTMAS IS A TIME FOR CHRISTIANS TO   
   ENGAGE WITH THE WORLD   
    - DECREES OF THE CONGREGATION FOR THE CAUSES OF SAINTS   
    - AUDIENCES   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   BENEDICT XVI TO THE YOUNG "IN SEARCH OF A MAKER"   
   Vatican City, 20 December 2012 (VIS) - This morning Benedict XVI addressed a   
   group of young people from Catholic Action Italy who   
   "We know who this maker is: He is God, who has shown His face to us. God   
   created us, He made us in His image, and above all He gave us the gift of His   
   son, Jesus Christ, as a child - we will soon worship him on the feast of the   
   Nativity - who grew up,   
   as you have, and followed the paths of our world so as to communicate to us   
   the love of God, which brings beauty and happiness to our lives, rendering   
   them full of goodness and generosity.   
   "Certainly, you also search the creator of your joy", the Pope continued.   
   "There are many people who bring you happiness, but there is also a great   
   friend who is the creator of the joy of all, and with Whom our hearts are   
   filled with a joy that   
   surpasses all other, and which lasts throughout our lives: this friend is   
   Jesus. ... The more you get to know Him and to enter into dialogue with Him,   
   the greater the happiness you will feel in your hearts, and the more able you   
   will be to overcome the   
   minor disappointments you sometimes feel within.   
   "You are also in search of a guide in love. ... We all need to love others and   
   to feel that someone accepts and loves us in return. To feel loved is   
   necessary for life, but it is equally important to be able to love others, to   
   bring beauty to the lives   
   of all, including our peers who find themselves in difficult situations. Jesus   
   showed us through the example of His life that God loves all without   
   discrimination, and wants all of us to live in happiness".   
   "Finally, you are without doubt in search of a bringer of peace, the need for   
   whom the world so keenly feels. Often men believe they are able to build peace   
   by themselves, but it is important to understand that it is only God who can   
   bring us true and   
   durable peace. If we learn how to listen to Him, if we make space for Him in   
   our lives, God clears away the selfishness that often pollutes the   
   relationships between people and nations, and gives rise to the desire for   
   reconciliation, forgiveness and   
   peace, even in those with the most hardened of hearts".   
   "If you wish to help each other to find the great Creator of life, joy, love   
   and peace, you will discover that He is never far from you, but rather, is   
   very close to us: He is the God who came to us as the child Jesus Christ!"   
   concluded the Holy Father.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   THE POPE IN THE FINANCIAL TIMES: CHRISTMAS IS A TIME FOR CHRISTIANS TO ENGAGE   
   WITH THE WORLD   
   Vatican City, 20 December 2012 (VIS) - The "Financial Times" daily newspaper   
   has today published an article by Benedict XVI entitled "A time for Christians   
   to engage with the world". According to an introductory note from the Holy See   
   Press Office, "The   
   Pope's article for the Financial Times originates from a request from the   
   editorial office of the Financial Times itself which, taking as a cue the   
   recent publication of the Pope's book on Jesus' infancy, asked for his   
   comments on the occasion of   
   Christmas. Despite the unusual nature of the request, the Holy Father accepted   
   willingly.   
   "It is perhaps appropriate to recall the Pope's willingness to respond to   
   other unusual requests in the past, such as the interview given for the BBC,   
   again at Christmas a few months after his visit to the United Kingdom, or the   
   television interview for   
   the programme 'A sua immagine' produced by the RAI, the Italian state   
   broadcasting company, to mark the occasion of Good Friday. These too have been   
   opportunities to speak about Jesus Christ and to bring his message to a wide   
   forum at salient moments   
   during the Christian liturgical year".   
   Below is the full text of the Pope's article:   
   A time for Christians to engage with the world   
   "'Render unto Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God,'   
   was the response of Jesus when asked about paying taxes. His questioners, of   
   course, were laying a trap for him. They wanted to force Him to take sides in   
   the highly-charged   
   political debate about Roman rule in the land of Israel. Yet there was more at   
   stake here: if Jesus really was the long-awaited Messiah, then surely He would   
   oppose the Roman overlords. So the question was calculated to expose Him   
   either as a threat to   
   the regime, or a fraud.   
   "Jesus’ answer deftly moves the argument to a higher plane, gently   
   cautioning against both the politicisation of religion and the deification of   
   temporal power, along with the relentless pursuit of wealth. His audience   
   needed to be reminded that   
   the Messiah was not Caesar, and Caesar was not God. The kingdom that Jesus   
   came to establish was of an altogether higher order. As He told Pontius   
   Pilate, 'My kingship is not of this world.'   
   "The Christmas stories in the New Testament are intended to convey a similar   
   message. Jesus was born during a “census of the whole world” taken   
   by Caesar Augustus, the Emperor renowned for bringing the Pax Romana to all   
   the lands under Roman   
   rule. Yet this infant, born in an obscure and far-flung corner of the Empire,   
   was to offer the world a far greater peace, truly universal in scope and   
   transcending all limitations of space and time.   
   "Jesus is presented to us as King David’s heir, but the liberation He   
   brought to His people was not about holding hostile armies at bay; it was   
   about conquering sin and death forever.   
   "The birth of Christ challenges us to reassess our priorities, our values, our   
   very way of life. While Christmas is undoubtedly a time of great joy, it is   
   also an occasion for deep reflection, even an examination of conscience. At   
   the end of a year that   
   has meant economic hardship for many, what can we learn from the humility, the   
   poverty, the simplicity of the crib scene?   
   "Christmas can be the time in which we learn to read the Gospel, to get to   
   know Jesus not only as the Child in the manger, but as the one in Whom we   
   recognize God made Man.   
   "It is in the Gospel that Christians find inspiration for their daily lives   
   and their involvement in worldly affairs – be it in the Houses of   
   Parliament or the Stock Exchange. Christians shouldn’t shun the world;   
   they should engage with it.   
   But their involvement in politics and economics should transcend every form of   
   ideology.   
   "Christians fight poverty out of a recognition of the supreme dignity of every   
   human being, created in God’s image and destined for eternal life.   
   Christians work for more equitable sharing of the earth’s resources out   
   of a belief that, as   
   stewards of God’s creation, we have a duty to care for the weakest and   
   most vulnerable. Christians oppose greed and exploitation out of a conviction   
   that generosity and selfless love, as taught and lived by Jesus of Nazareth,   
   are the way that   
   leads to fullness of life. Christian belief in the transcendent destiny of   
   every human being gives urgency to the task of promoting peace and justice for   
   all.   
   "Because these goals are shared by so many, much fruitful cooperation is   
   possible between Christians and others. Yet Christians render to Caesar only   
   what belongs to Caesar, not what belongs to God. Christians have at times   
   throughout history been   
   unable to comply with demands made by Caesar. From the Emperor cult of ancient   
   Rome to the totalitarian regimes of the last century, Caesar has tried to take   
   the place of God. When Christians refuse to bow down before the false gods   
   proposed today, it   
   is not because of an antiquated world-view. Rather, it is because they are   
   free from the constraints of ideology and inspired by such a noble vision of   
   human destiny that they cannot collude with anything that undermines it.   
   "In Italy, many crib scenes feature the ruins of ancient Roman buildings in   
   the background. This shows that the birth of the child Jesus marks the end of   
   the old order, the pagan world, in which Caesar’s claims went virtually   
   unchallenged. Now   
   there is a new king, who relies not on the force of arms, but on the power of   
   love. He brings hope to all those who, like himself, live on the margins of   
   society. He brings hope to all who are vulnerable to the changing fortunes of   
   a precarious world.   
   From the manger, Christ calls us to live as citizens of his heavenly kingdom,   
   a kingdom that all people of good will can help to build here on earth".   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   DECREES OF THE CONGREGATION FOR THE CAUSES OF SAINTS   
   Vatican City, Vatican City, 20 December 2012 (VIS) - Today, during a private   
   audience with Cardinal Angelo Amato S.D.B., prefect of the Congregation for   
   the Causes of Saints, the Pope authorised the Congregation to promulgate the   
   following decrees:   
   MIRACLES   
   - Blessed Antonio Primaldo e Compagni, killed in 1480 in Otranto, Italy.   
   - Blessed Laura Montoya, Colombian foundress of the Congregation of the   
   Missionary Sisters of Mary Immaculate and of St. Catherine of Siena   
   (1874-1949).   
   - Blessed Maria Guadalupe Garcia Zavala, Mexican co-foundress of the Handmaids   
   of St. Margaret Mary and of the Poor (1878-1963).   
   - Venerable Servant of God Antonio Franco, Italian bishop of Santa Lucia del   
   Mela (1585-1626).   
   - Venerable Servant of God Jose Gabriele del Rosario Brochero, Argentinian   
   priest (1840-1914).   
   - Venerable Servant of God Cristobal of St. Catherine (ne: Cristobal Fernando   
   Valladolid), Spanish priest and founder of the Congregation and the Hospital   
   of Jesus of Nazareth in Cordoba (1638-1690).   
   - Venerable Servant of God Sofia Czeska-Maciejowska, Polish foundress of the   
   Congregation of the Virgins of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary   
   (1584-1650).   
   - Venerable Servant of God Margherita Lucia Szewczyk, Polish foundress of the   
   Congregation of the Daughters of the Sorrowful Mother of God - Seraphic   
   Sisters (1584-1650).   
   MARTYRDOM   
   - Servant of God Miroslav Bulesic, Croatian priest, killed in hatred of the   
   faith in 1947.   
   - Servant of God José Javier Gorosterratzu, Spanish, and five   
   companions of the Congregation of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer,   
   killed in hatred of the faith in Spain between 1936 and 1938.   
   - Servants of God Fr. Riccardo Gil Barcelon and Antonio Arrue Peiro,   
   Postulant, of the Congregation of the of killed in hatred of the faith in   
   Spain in 1936.   
   - Servant of God Manuel de la Sagrada Familia, (ne Manuel Sanz Dominguez),   
   Spanish professed monk and Reformer of the Order of San Girolamo, killed in   
   hatred of the faith in Spain in 1936.   
   - Servant of God Maria di Monserrat (nee Giuseppa Pilar Garcia y Solanas) and   
   eight companions, Spanish professed nun, along with Lucrezia Garcia y Solanas,   
   laywoman, killed in hatred of the faith in Spain in 1936.   
   - Servant of God Melchora de la Adoración Cortés Bueno, Spanish,   
   and fourteen companions of the Congregation of the Daughters of Charity of St.   
   Vincent de Paul, killed in hatred of the faith in Spain between 1936 and 1937.   
   HEROIC VIRTUES   
   - Servant of God Paul VI, Giovanni Battista Montini, Italian, Supreme Pontiff   
   (1897-1978).   
   - Servant of God Francesco Saverio Petagna, bishop of Castellamare di Stabia,   
   founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts (1812-1878).   
   - Servant of God Juan José Santiago Bonal Cortada, Spanish founder of   
   the Congregation of the Sisters of Charity of St. Anne (1769-1829).   
   - Servant of God Fr. Louis-Marie Baudouin, French priest, (1765-1835).   
   - Servant of God Marcelina de San José (nee Luisa Aveledo), foundress   
   of the Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of St. Peter Claver, Venezualan   
   (1874-1959).   
   - Servant of God Claudia Russo, Italian foundress of the Congregation of the   
   Poor Sisters of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1889-1964).   
   - Servant of God Maria Francisca de las Llagas (nee Rosa Elena Cornejo),   
   Ecuadorean foundress of the Congregation of Franciscan Missionary Sisters of   
   Mary Immaculate (1874 -1964).   
   - Servant of God Clara Ludmilla Szczesna, Polish cofoundress of the   
   Congregation of the Handmaids of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (1863-1916).   
   - Servant of God Consuelo (nee Joaquina Maria Mercedes Barceló y   
   Pagés), Spanish cofoundress of the Augustinian Sisters of Our Lady of   
   Consolation (1857-1940).   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
      
   AUDIENCES   
   Vatican City, 20 December 2012 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in   
   audience Bishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Council for the   
   Family.   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
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   VISnews121220   
      
   
VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE YEAR XXII - N° 232 DATE 20-12-2012
Summary: - BENEDICT XVI TO THE YOUNG "IN   
   SEARCH OF A MAKER" - THE   
   POPE IN THE FINANCIAL TIMES: CHRISTMAS IS A TIME FOR CHRISTIANS TO ENGAGE WITH   
   THE WORLD - DECREES OF THE CONGREGATION FOR THE CAUSES OF SAINTS -   
   AUDIENCES
Vatican City, 20 December 2012 (VIS) - This morning Benedict XVI addressed   
   a group of young people from Catholic Action Italy who
   
   
"We know who this maker is: He is God, who has shown His face to us. God   
   created us, He made us in His image, and above all He gave us the gift of His   
   son, Jesus Christ, as a child - we will soon worship him on the feast of the   
   Nativity - who grew   
   up, as you have, and followed the paths of our world so as to communicate to   
   us the love of God, which brings beauty and happiness to our lives, rendering   
   them full of goodness and generosity.
   
   
"Certainly, you also search the creator of your joy", the Pope continued.   
   "There are many people who bring you happiness, but there is also a great   
   friend who is the creator of the joy of all, and with Whom our hearts are   
   filled with a joy that   
   surpasses all other, and which lasts throughout our lives: this friend is   
   Jesus. ... The more you get to know Him and to enter into dialogue with Him,   
   the greater the happiness you will feel in your hearts, and the more able you   
   will be to overcome the   
   minor disappointments you sometimes feel within.
   
   
"You are also in search of a guide in love. ... We all need to love others   
   and to feel that someone accepts and loves us in return. To feel loved is   
   necessary for life, but it is equally important to be able to love others, to   
   bring beauty to the   
   lives of all, including our peers who find themselves in difficult situations.   
   Jesus showed us through the example of His life that God loves all without   
   discrimination, and wants all of us to live in happiness".
   
   
"Finally, you are without doubt in search of a bringer of peace, the need   
   for whom the world so keenly feels. Often men believe they are able to build   
   peace by themselves, but it is important to understand that it is only God who   
   can bring us true   
   and durable peace. If we learn how to listen to Him, if we make space for Him   
   in our lives, God clears away the selfishness that often pollutes the   
   relationships between people and nations, and gives rise to the desire for   
   reconciliation, forgiveness   
   and peace, even in those with the most hardened of hearts".
   
   
"If you wish to help each other to find the great Creator of life, joy,   
   love and peace, you will discover that He is never far from you, but rather,   
   is very close to us: He is the God who came to us as the child Jesus Christ!"   
   concluded the Holy   
   Father.
THE POPE IN THE FINANCIAL TIMES: CHRISTMAS IS A TIME FOR CHRISTIANS TO   
   ENGAGE WITH THE WORLD
   
   
Vatican City, 20 December 2012 (VIS) - The "Financial Times" daily   
   newspaper has today published an article by Benedict XVI entitled "A time for   
   Christians to engage with the world". According to an introductory note from   
   the Holy See Press Office,   
   "The Pope's article for the Financial Times originates from a request from the   
   editorial office of the Financial Times itself which, taking as a cue the   
   recent publication of the Pope's book on Jesus' infancy, asked for his   
   comments on the occasion of   
   Christmas. Despite the unusual nature of the request, the Holy Father accepted   
   willingly.
   
   
"It is perhaps appropriate to recall the Pope's willingness to respond to   
   other unusual requests in the past, such as the interview given for the BBC,   
   again at Christmas a few months after his visit to the United Kingdom, or the   
   television interview   
   for the programme 'A sua immagine' produced by the RAI, the Italian state   
   broadcasting company, to mark the occasion of Good Friday. These too have been   
   opportunities to speak about Jesus Christ and to bring his message to a wide   
   forum at salient   
   moments during the Christian liturgical year".
   
   
Below is the full text of the Pope's article:
   
   
A time for Christians to engage with the world
   
   
"'Render unto Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to   
   God,' was the response of Jesus when asked about paying taxes. His   
   questioners, of course, were laying a trap for him. They wanted to force Him   
   to take sides in the highly-charged   
   political debate about Roman rule in the land of Israel. Yet there was more at   
   stake here: if Jesus really was the long-awaited Messiah, then surely He would   
   oppose the Roman overlords. So the question was calculated to expose Him   
   either as a threat to   
   the regime, or a fraud.
   
   
"Jesus’ answer deftly moves the argument to a higher plane, gently   
   cautioning against both the politicisation of religion and the deification of   
   temporal power, along with the relentless pursuit of wealth. His audience   
   needed to be reminded   
   that the Messiah was not Caesar, and Caesar was not God. The kingdom that   
   Jesus came to establish was of an altogether higher order. As He told Pontius   
   Pilate, 'My kingship is not of this world.'
   
   
"The Christmas stories in the New Testament are intended to convey a   
   similar message. Jesus was born during a “census of the whole   
   world” taken by Caesar Augustus, the Emperor renowned for bringing the   
   Pax Romana to all the lands under   
   Roman rule. Yet this infant, born in an obscure and far-flung corner of the   
   Empire, was to offer the world a far greater peace, truly universal in scope   
   and transcending all limitations of space and time.
   
   
"Jesus is presented to us as King David’s heir, but the liberation He   
   brought to His people was not about holding hostile armies at bay; it was   
   about conquering sin and death forever.
   
   
"The birth of Christ challenges us to reassess our priorities, our values,   
   our very way of life. While Christmas is undoubtedly a time of great joy, it   
   is also an occasion for deep reflection, even an examination of conscience. At   
   the end of a year   
   that has meant economic hardship for many, what can we learn from the   
   humility, the poverty, the simplicity of the crib scene?
   
   
"Christmas can be the time in which we learn to read the Gospel, to get to   
   know Jesus not only as the Child in the manger, but as the one in Whom we   
   recognize God made Man.
   
   
"It is in the Gospel that Christians find inspiration for their daily lives   
   and their involvement in worldly affairs – be it in the Houses of   
   Parliament or the Stock Exchange. Christians shouldn’t shun the world;   
   they should engage with   
   it. But their involvement in politics and economics should transcend every   
   form of ideology.
   
   
"Christians fight poverty out of a recognition of the supreme dignity of   
   every human being, created in God’s image and destined for eternal life.   
   Christians work for more equitable sharing of the earth’s resources out   
   of a belief that, as   
   stewards of God’s creation, we have a duty to care for the weakest and   
   most vulnerable. Christians oppose greed and exploitation out of a conviction   
   that generosity and selfless love, as taught and lived by Jesus of Nazareth,   
   are the way that   
   leads to fullness of life. Christian belief in the transcendent destiny of   
   every human being gives urgency to the task of promoting peace and justice for   
   all.
   
   
"Because these goals are shared by so many, much fruitful cooperation is   
   possible between Christians and others. Yet Christians render to Caesar only   
   what belongs to Caesar, not what belongs to God. Christians have at times   
   throughout history been   
   unable to comply with demands made by Caesar. From the Emperor cult of ancient   
   Rome to the totalitarian regimes of the last century, Caesar has tried to take   
   the place of God. When Christians refuse to bow down before the false gods   
   proposed today, it   
   is not because of an antiquated world-view. Rather, it is because they are   
   free from the constraints of ideology and inspired by such a noble vision of   
   human destiny that they cannot collude with anything that undermines it.
   
   
"In Italy, many crib scenes feature the ruins of ancient Roman buildings in   
   the background. This shows that the birth of the child Jesus marks the end of   
   the old order, the pagan world, in which Caesar’s claims went virtually   
   unchallenged. Now   
   there is a new king, who relies not on the force of arms, but on the power of   
   love. He brings hope to all those who, like himself, live on the margins of   
   society. He brings hope to all who are vulnerable to the changing fortunes of   
   a precarious world.   
   From the manger, Christ calls us to live as citizens of his heavenly kingdom,   
   a kingdom that all people of good will can help to build here on earth".
DECREES OF THE CONGREGATION FOR THE CAUSES OF SAINTS
   
   
Vatican City, Vatican City, 20 December 2012 (VIS) - Today, during a   
   private audience with Cardinal Angelo Amato S.D.B., prefect of the   
   Congregation for the Causes of Saints, the Pope authorised the Congregation to   
   promulgate the following   
   decrees:
   
   
MIRACLES
   
   
- Blessed Antonio Primaldo e Compagni, killed in 1480 in Otranto, Italy.
   
   
- Blessed Laura Montoya, Colombian foundress of the Congregation of the   
   Missionary Sisters of Mary Immaculate and of St. Catherine of Siena   
   (1874-1949).
   
   
- Blessed Maria Guadalupe Garcia Zavala, Mexican co-foundress of the   
   Handmaids of St. Margaret Mary and of the Poor (1878-1963).
   
   --- NetMgr/2 1.0y+   
    * Origin: NetMgr+ @ Sursum Corda! BBS Meridian MS USA (1:396/45)