Thursday 23 October 2014

ICN best summary 19 Oct 2014


This is best summary of the Vatican events of 19 Oct 2014.
Courtesy of ICN.
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On Monday, 20 October 2014, 1:08, ICN <indcatholicnews@emarket.bondware.com> wrote:


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Monday, October 20, 2014 1:08 AM BST

Latest news
FiveThings the Synod Just Did | America Magazine, Fr james Martin SJ, Pope Francis, Synod
Five Things the Synod Just Did
What does the final report of the Synod on the Family mean for the church? Fr James Martin SJ wrote in America Magazine yesterday: Essentially, the “relatio” (or report) published today, at the close of the Synod, will serve as a starting point for future discussion. It was also presented with great transparency, including even sections that did not win the necessary votes for complete approval. Before we look at five things the synod did, it’s important to understand the unique “form” of this unusual final document. Pope Francis asked to have all of the paragraphs
 Read More ...
Celebrating Sir Alec Guinness | Trevor Littledale ,  Alec Guinness, Catholic Stage Guild, Catholic Association ofPerforming Arts - CAPA,  Corpus Christi,  Fr Alan Robinson,
Celebrating Sir Alec Guinness
The centenary of the birth of Sir Alec Guinness was celebrated on Friday, 16 October with a special Mass at Corpus Christi Church in Maiden Lane, Covent Garden, followed by 'Two Halves of Guinness' a one-man show performed by Trevor Littledale telling the life story of the great actor. For many years Alec Guinness lead the Catholic Stage Guild (now the Catholic Association of Performing Arts - CAPA) and often popped into Corpus Christi. During the Mass, Fr Alan Robinson, Chaplain to the Association said members of the acting profession have a vocation, to "to show us ourselves".
 Read More ...
Dublin: Archbishop  Martin on 'extraordinary' address by Pope Francis |  Archbishop of Dublin, Synod of Bishops, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin, Pope Francis
Dublin: Archbishop Martin on 'extraordinary' address by Pope Francis
The Archbishop of Dublin has welcomed the publication of the final text at the closing of the Synod of Bishops in Rome this evening. Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said the text must be read in the context of Pope Francis’ extraordinary final remarks to the Synod, after which the Pope received a five minute standing ovation from those present. Pope Francis warned Bishops of the temptation to a hostile rigidity that forces people to lock themselves into the letter of the law, he also criticised the temptation to “come down from the cross to please people 
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Iraq: Refugee camps flooded by torrential rain | Chaldean priest, Fr Paolo Thabit Mekko, Erbil, Iraq, ISIS, Bishop Nuncio Galantino, Italian Episcopal Conference, Caritas Italy, Don Francesco Soddu
Iraq: Refugee camps flooded by torrential rain
Thousands of refugees who fled from ISIS in Mosul and the Nineveh Plain to refugee camps in Iraq are now enduring violent storms and floods. Since Wednesday 16 October, torrential rains have hit camps in Erbil and Ankawa, the predominantly Christian suburb of the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan. The Chaldean archdiocese together with humanitarian agencies involved in the rescue of refugees, have launched an appeal to the local authorities and the international community to help those in critical conditions. There are at least a thousand tents scattered in Ankawa.
 Read More ...
Text: Homily of Pope Francis at Synod Closing Mass, Beatification of Pope Paul VI |  Homily, Pope Francis, Synod Closing Mass, Beatification of Pope Paul VI
Text: Homily of Pope Francis at Synod Closing Mass, Beatification of Pope Paul VI
Huge crowds gathered in St Peter's Square today for the Closing Mass for the Extraordinary Synod on the Family, celebrated by Pope Francis. During the Mass the Holy Father beatified on of his predecessors, Pope Paul VI, whom he described as a “great Pope,” a “courageous Christian” and a “tireless apostle.”  We have just heard one of the most famous phrases in the entire Gospel: “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s” (Mt 22:21). 
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Pope Francis's final address to Synod | Pope Francis's final address to Synod
Pope Francis's final address to Synod
At the conclusion of the Extraordinary Synod on the Family, Pope Francis addressed the assembled Fathers, thanking them for their efforts and encouraging them to continue to journey.... With a heart full of appreciation and gratitude I want to thank, along with you, the Lord who has accompanied and guided us in the past days, with the light of the Holy Spirit...I can happily say that – with a spirit of collegiality and of synodality – we have truly lived the experience of “Synod,” a path of solidarity, a “journey together.” and like every journey
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Pope's Message for World Mission Sunday | Pope Francis, World Mission Sunday
Pope's Message for World Mission Sunday
Today vast numbers of people still do not know Jesus Christ. For this reason, the mission ad gentes continues to be most urgent. All the members of the Church are called to participate in this mission, for the Church is missionary by her very nature: she was born "to go forth". World Mission Day is a privileged moment when the faithful of various continents engage in prayer and concrete gestures of solidarity in support of the young Churches in mission lands. It is a celebration of grace and joy. A celebration of grace, because the Holy Spirit, sent by the Father,
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Text: Message of the Synod of Bishops | Text: Message of the Synod of Bishops
Text: Message of the Synod of Bishops
Bishops attending the Synod on the Family on Saturday voted overwhelmingly in favour of a concluding message that was drawn up to reflect the substance of their two weeks of discussions in the Vatican....“We, Synod Fathers, gathered in Rome together with Pope Francis in the Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, greet all families of the different continents and in particular all who follow Christ, the Way, the Truth, and the Life. We admire and are grateful for the daily witness which you offer us and the world with your fidelity, faith, hope, and love. 
 Read More ...







Sunday 19 October 2014

Paul VI in Holy Land 1964. Beatification Rome 19/10/2014

COMMENT:
Thomas Stransky
The historic meeting of Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras
Mosaic showing Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras I in Jerusalem.
The dates of Pope Francis’ upcoming trip to the Holy Land are no accident. Pope Francis intends to visit from May 24 to 26, primarily to commemorate with Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople the 50th anniversary of the meeting between Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras in Jerusalem in January 1964.
Narratives of that first encounter presupposed that the primary purpose of Pope Paul’s pilgrimage was to provide an occasion for meeting the ecumenical patriarch. The editors of America, for example, wrote on Jan. 18, 1964, that they felt “the ultimate objective of Pope Paul in going to the Holy Land was precisely the chance this offered for such a dramatic confrontation.”
Not so.
Two weeks before the new pope opened the second period of the Second Vatican Council on Sept. 29, 1963, he wrote an appunto, a private memorandum to himself, in which he expressed the hope to be a “papal pilgrim in the Holy Land.” One subordinate purpose was for him to have “a fraternal encounter with the various Christian denominations there.” In his address to the council on Dec. 4, 1963, however, this reason was absent when he shared his decision to make a “pious pilgrimage to the homeland of Jesus our Savior” in January. For some reason, he and his tight-lipped planning committee of five had not envisioned ecumenical meetings. Their sole preoccupation, it seems, was to visit Catholic communities at holy sites in Israel and in Jordanian East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and to negotiate with the two warring countries that were at each other’s throats.
The pilgrimage had been the best kept secret in the Roman Curia, which has a reputation for being leaky. It was a complete surprise to Cardinal Augustin Bea, Msgr. Johannes Willebrands and people on their staff in the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, like Pierre Duprey of the Society of Missionaries of Africa, who until April 1963 had been the rector of the Melkite Saint Anne’s Seminary in Jerusalem, where he was quite familiar with the Christian leaders and their sensitive interchurch protocols for visiting heads of churches. Father Duprey quickly foresaw the possibility of Paul VI’s meeting with the Greek and Armenian patriarchs in Jerusalem, Benediktos I and Yeghishe Derderian. If the Holy See would not even propose the possibility to them, one could face an interchurch setback by a papal snub, a lack of courtesy no matter how unintentional.

Making It Happen  

Blessed Pope Paul VI: Seven facts you didn't know about Paul VI

Night Office Blessed, below ...
Pope Paul VI,- The beatification ceremony will be held at the Vatican on 19 October, Pope Francis announced.
BBC News:
Paul VI  seen here in 1963 with US President John Kennedy  wrote the encyclical Humanae Vitae in 1968
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-27357192
Pope Francis has set another of his predecessors on the road to sainthood.
He approved a miracle credited to the intercession of Paul VI - who died in 1978 after a 15-year pontificate and is remembered by many for his ban on artificial contraception for Catholics.
The beatification ceremony will be held at the Vatican on 19 October, Pope Francis announced.
The move came two weeks after the canonisation of two other 20th Century popes - John XXIII and John Paul II.
Beatification is the third of four steps in the process by which someone officially becomes a saint.
It requires at least one miracle to have been attributed to the intercession of a candidate for sainthood who, once beatified, is given the title blessed.
After beatification, a separate miracle would have to be verified in order for Paul VI to be canonised - declared a saint - allowing him to be venerated by the universal Church as "an example of holiness that can be followed with confidence".
Church teaching on families
Paul VI was born Giovanni Battista Montini in the Lombardy region of Italy in 1897, the son of a prominent newspaper editor.
He was elected pope in 1963 and continued the reforms of his predecessor, John XXIII.
Paul VI died in August 1978 and was succeeded briefly by Pope John Paul who died in October 1978.
During his 15-year pontificate he wrote seven encyclicals - the most controversial of which was Humanae Vitae (Of Human Life), published in 1968.
Its uncompromising position on birth control led to protests around the Catholic world and some national Roman Catholic Church hierarchies openly modified the statement.
In 1995 Pope John Paul II supported Paul VI's view on birth control in his encyclical, Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life).
The teaching on contraception is widely disregarded by modern-day Catholics, says the BBC's David Willey in Rome.
October's beatification ceremony will be held at the end of a crucial meeting of global bishops to discuss Catholic teaching on family life, called by Pope Francis.
The bishops will be discussing the results of a worldwide survey commissioned by the Pope about what parts of the Church's teaching on human sexuality Catholics actually follow today.
As is customary, the Vatican gave no details about the miracle - which the Holy See requires must be a phenomenon certified by doctors as having no medical explanation.
But Italian media report the miracle involved a Californian baby who was born healthy despite the pre-birth diagnoses of a ruptured foetal bladder and absence of amniotic fluid.
The mother reportedly refused to abort the child, instead praying for Paul VI's intercession at the behest of a nun. 
Youtube ...   




TWENTY-NINTH WEEK IN ORDINARY TIME Year II
SUNDAY 19/10/2014

First Reading
Sirach 26:1-4.9-18
Responsory          Sir 17:9-11
The Lord has set before them knowledge, a law of life as their inheritance. + An everlasting covenant God has made with them.
V. His majestic glory their eyes beheld, his glorious voice their ears heard. + An everlasting covenant ...

Second Reading
From a discourse by Paul VI (Discourse, 4 May 1970)
Human love is good by its very origin
As holy scripture teaches us, before it is a sacrament marriage is a great earthly reality: God created man in his own image; he created him in the image of God; he created them man and woman. We always have to go back to that first page of the Bible if we want to understand what a human couple, a family, really is and what it ought to be. Psychological analyses, psychoanalytical research, sociological surveys, and philosophical reflection may of course have a contribution to make with the light they shed on human sexuality and love; but they would blind us if they neglected this fundamental teaching which was given to us at the very beginning: the duality of the sexes was decreed by God, so that together man and woman might be the image of God, and like him, the source of life: Be fruitful and increase, fill the earth and subdue it. Attentive reading of the prophets, the wisdom books, and the New Testa­ment, moreover, shows us the significance of this basic reality, and teaches us not to reduce it to physical desire and genital activity, but to discover in it the complementary nature of the values of man and woman, the greatness and the weaknesses of conjugal love, its fruitfulness, and its opening onto the mystery of God's design for love.
The Christian knows that human love is good by its very origin: and if, like everything else in us, it is wounded and deformed by sin, it finds its salvation and redemption in Christ. Besides, isn't this the lesson that twenty centuries of Christian history have taught us? How many couples have found the way to holiness in their conjugal life, in that community of life which is the only one to be founded on a sacrament!
Love one another, as I have loved you. The ways in which they express their affection are, for Christian husband and wife, full of the love which they draw from the heart of God. And if its human source threatens to dry up, its divine source is as inexhaustible as the unfathomable depths of God's affection. That shows us the intimacy, strength, and richness of the communion which conjugal love aims at. It is an inward and spiritual reality, transforming the community of life of husband and wife into what might be called, in accordance with the teaching authorized by the Council, "the domestic Church," a true "cell of the Church," as John XXIII already called it, a basic cell, a germinal cell in the ecclesial body.
Such is the mystery in which conjugal love takes root, and which illuminates all its expressions. The rapture which moves husband and wife to unite is the carrier of life, and enables God to give himself children. On becoming parents, the husband and wife discover with a sense of wonder, at the baptismal font, that their child is from now on a child of God, reborn from water and the Spirit; and that the child is entrusted to them so that they may watch over his physical and moral growth, certainly, but also the opening out and blossoming in him of the new nature. Such a child is no longer just what they see, but just as much what they believe, "an infinity of mystery and love which would dazzle us if we saw it face to face" as Emmanuel Mounier says. Therefore upbringing becomes true service of Christ, according to his own saying: Whatever you do for one of these little ones, you do for me.

          Responsory   Ps 5:7; Is 6:3
Through the greatness of your love I have access to your house. + I bow down before your holy temple, filled with awe.
V. Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory.+ I bow down ...



Saturday 18 October 2014

World Mission Sunday 2014 - I Will Build My Church. Scotland

Mission Sunday


National Directorin Scotland
·         Propagation of the Faith
·         Community Projects Worldwide
·         Message from the Holy Father
·         2014 Mission Sunday
World Mission Sunday, organized by the Propagation of the Faith, is a day set aside for Catholics worldwide to recommit themselves to the Church's missionary activity through prayer and sacrifice. made to God, in the Eucharistic celebration and for all the missions of the world" (see Redemptoris Missio 81).

In 2014, World Mission Sunday is celebrated on October 19th 2014.  Annually, World Mission Sunday is celebrated on the next-to-last Sunday in October.  As described by Pope John Paul II, World Mission Sunday is "an important day in the life of the Church because it teaches how to give: as an offering
Dear Friends in Christ,
Thank you for your ongoing support of Mission Matters Scotland and our vital work in 1,100 Dioceses around the world. Your generosity makes it possible for missionaries, priests, catechists and pastoral workers to reach out in the name of Christ to communities
in desperate need.  I am pleased to introduce you to the 2014 Mission Matters Scotland
“World Mission Appeal”. This year’s theme ‘I will build my Church’, invites parishioners to reach out and help the people of Mongolia to build their Church, the world’s youngest Catholic Church, and expand similar mission work throughout the world.  After decades of struggling in a communist ruled country, with no religious freedom, it is only recently that the people of Mongolia, the world’s youngest Catholic Church, have had the opportunity
to hear the Good News of Jesus Christ.Bishop Wenceslao (Wens)
Padilla, a former missionary priest from the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, was one of the first missionaries to arrive in Mongolia just over 20 years ago, to build the Catholic Church and the Kingdom of God on earth. He recalls a country
struggling with issues of alcoholism, domestic abuse, minimal government social services and extreme poverty.  It was known by missionaries as the ‘hardship country’. The Pontifical Mission Societies have supported the work of the Mongolian Catholic Church since its inception. It is thanks to the generosity of our supporters, and the holistic work of the missionaries, that people across Mongolia have come to know the grace, joy, peace and hope of our loving God.  I invite you to consider how this year’s Mission Matters Scotland “World Mission Appeal” is a concrete way for you and your parishioners to respond to the invitation by Pope Francis, to live out and witness our faith, to proclaim the Gospel to those who do not yet know the Good News of Jesus Christ, including the people
of the young Church of Mongolia and other emerging churches across the world.      “Dear brothers and sisters, on this World Mission Day my thoughts turn to all the local Churches. Let us not be robbed of the joy of evangelization! I invite you to immerse yourself in the joy of the Gospel and nurture a love that can light up your vocation and
your mission. I urge each of you to recall, as if you were making an interior pilgrimage, that “first love” with which the Lord Jesus Christ warmed your heart, not for the sake of nostalgia but in order to persevere in joy. The Lord’s disciples persevere in joy when they
sense His presence, do His will and share with others their faith, hope and evangelical charity”.
- Message of His Holiness Francis for the World Mission Day 2014
Yours in Christ,
Tom Welsh sx
National Director