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The President to the readers
Dear friends,
Just a
short time ago in Aparecida in Brazil, the 5th General Conference of the
Latin-American and Caribbean Episcopate came to a close. The theme was:
Disciples and missionaries of Jesus Christ, so that our people may have
life in Him”. The Conference was opened on 13 May by His Holiness
Benedict XVI with an address that oriented the future of that continent,
a programme of life and action for the Latin-American laity. To fully
grasp the importance of this event, we must refer to the general
conferences that preceded it and that are milestones in the life of the
Church in Latin America, particularly Medellín (1968), Puebla (1979) and
Santo Domingo (1992). In Medellín they looked for ways in which to apply
the conciliar magisterium to the Latin-American situation. The themes
that emerged concerned the poor, “liberation”, base ecclesial
communities and social-political engagement. However, mistaken
interpretations can unfortunately lead to a reading of reality from an
exclusively ethical-social or political viewpoint that in many cases can
prevail over the salvific event. A turning-point takes place when the
attention and pastoral concern of the Church by the committed lay
minorities and the militant elite, extends out to the multitudes of the
baptised for whom Christian tradition, even if not very sophisticated,
is very strong. Their forms of popular piety are then re-evaluated as a
precious heritage that can respond with Christian wisdom to the great
existential questions. To preserve, reformulate and revitalise that
patrimony of faith that pertains to almost 90% of Latin-Americans,
representing just under half of all baptised Catholics, becomes a
crucial question. It is, in fact, threatened both by the currents of
christianisation induced by a global culture that is increasingly more
distant and hostile to Catholic tradition, and by the spreading and
proliferation of evangelical and neo-pentecostal communities as well as
sects.
The greatest need is to deal with gaps in evangelisation
and catechesis and to avoid the risk of translating Christianity into
exasperated moralism, political messianism and ideological syncretism.
It was at the time of the Puebla Conference and then that of Santo
Domingo, both of which took place under the guidance of the pontificate
of John Paul II, that there emerged a longing to reaffirm the Christian
identity and the mission of the Church in order to give rise to a new
evangelisation that makes the presence of Christ more evident,
persuasive and incisive in people’s lives, in families and among
peoples.
Following upon this desire, the Aparecida Conference was
to be a loud call to return to the essentials of Christian identity. In
our world full of false masters who seduce and deceive with illusory
promises of happiness and “salvation” bought cheaply, it is really
important that the lay faithful recognise in Christ the only true Lord
and Master who has “the word of eternal life” (cf Jn 6:56). His
disciples must be recognised, and they are those people who enter into a
communion of life with Christ-Master. The generosity of the
Latin-American laity can be seen today in the commitment of a very large
number of catechists, effective participation in parish life, Christian
communities, and so many networks of solidarity close to the poor.
However, it is of utmost importance that the laity assure a more
coherent and effective presence in the cultural areopagi and on the
political scene where the destiny of nations is decided. There is still
very much to be done to further the culture of life, authentic
development, the fight against poverty and greater equity, processes of
social inclusion and the consolidation of democracy and integration
among the countries of the continent. On the one hand, political leaders
who declare themselves Catholics with the purpose of attracting support
rather than to really take on responsibility and be coherent with faith
and the social doctrine of the Church, and on the other hand,
discontented individualism and the moral relativism generated by the
consumer society, both show the need for in-depth Christian education
and for community accompaniment. These will permit the lay faithful to
be capable of clear discernment of faith and of coherent and competent
commitment in public life, so as to give witness to the transforming
power of faith and charity at the service of the common good. In this
sense great help can be given - as the Holy Father said explicitly in
his inaugural address - by the ecclesial movements and new communities
that have been spreading throughout the continent since the eighties.
John Paul II and Benedict XVI called them “providential”. They represent
an extraordinary charismatic, educational and missionary richness for
the Church and for peoples. This came out strongly in the Congress of
ecclesial movements and new communities organised in Bogota in March
2006 by the Pontifical Council for the Laity and CELAM as a contribution
to the path of preparation of the Aparecida Conference, the first in
which representatives of these new ecclesial groups have taken part.
Much can be learned from these groups concerning methods, ways and
schools of formation of true disciples and missionaries of the Lord.
With their missionary impetus and creativity that distinguish their
pedagogical methods and their proclamation of Christ, the movements and
new communities born through the action of the Holy Spirit in
Latin-America bring an enormous contribution to the mission of the
Church. This is not only in Latin America but in many other countries of
the western world that are wealthy and forgetful of God. These groups
offer them the faith they have received according to the law of
traditio and redditio. In this way, to the tired and
discouraged Christianity of many, they respond with a faith full of joy,
enthusiasm and courage. To a Christianity turned in on itself, passive
and inhibited, they respond with an active, missionary faith that does
not face the world with an inferiority complex. This is also seen in the
renewal experiences of the great tradition of Catholic Action and other
worthy associations of the faithful.
In Aparecida Benedict XVI delivered to the people of
Latin America a programmatic manifesto that is valid for all peoples:
every serious project at the service of humankind, for social
advancement in justice and freedom, must part from recognition of the
reality of God, the primacy of God, and of God’s centrality in the life
of human beings. There have always been attempts to remove that primacy
as people forget that “those who exclude God from their horizons falsify
the notion of “reality” [and that] only those who recognize God know
reality and are able to respond to it adequately and in a truly human
manner”. For this reason, historical memory, present urgent needs and
the future goals of Latin America were outlined by the Pope with a fixed
gaze on the truth of “faith in the God of Love, the incarnate God who
died and rose again in Jesus Christ”, the unshakable foundation of a
hope that cannot be imprisoned in political ideology, social movements
or economic systems of sorts. Recalling that evangelisation has always
gone step in step with human advancement and authentic Christian freedom,
the Holy Father has reminded us again of the need for a social
catechesis and adequate instruction in the social doctrine of the Church
because “the Christian life is not expressed solely in personal virtues,
but also in social and political virtue” and because “the encounter with
God is, in itself and as such, an encounter with our brothers and
sisters, an act of convocation, of unification, of responsibility
towards the other and towards others”. How then can the Church,
illumined by faith in Christ, contribute to a solution of the problems
of Latin America and the world of today? How can it respond to the
challenges of poverty and the degradation of the dignity of humankind?
How can it contribute to the creation of just and fair structures, an
indispensable condition for a just society? Structures that are just,
the Pope said, do not arise or function without the moral consensus of
society on fundamental values, and on the need to live according to
these values even against one’s own interest. Moreover, a society in
which God is absent does not find the consensus needed on moral values
and the strength to live according to the standard of these values. The
task and fundamental vocation of the Church is therefore “to form
consciences, to be the advocate of justice and truth, to educate in
individual and political virtues”. Lay Catholics should continue to
mature in awareness of their responsibility to be present where
consensus is being formed, to oppose injustice and to bring the Gospel
to light in public, cultural, economic and political life, working as
“leaven” and making Christ visible through the witness of a life that
shines with faith, hope and charity.
Stanisław Ryłko
* * *
Benedict XVI and the movements
Bishops’ seminar
With the encouragement of His Holiness Benedict XVI, the
Pontifical Council for the Laity will hold a seminar from 22 to 24
November 2007 with the presence of a large number of bishops to reflect
and discuss the reality of movements in the Church. On 3 June 2006, the
Vigil of Pentecost, the ecclesial movements and new communities were at
the centre of a remarkable encounter with the Holy Father in Saint
Peter’s Square. For a few days leading up to this event there was a
congress with over one hundred leaders of these movements. The theme was:
“The beauty of being a Christian and the joy of communicating it”. To
follow up on these two events, we feel it is appropriate to continue the
reflection with pastors from all over the world and speak of ecclesial
movements and new communities as a gift of the Holy Spirit for the
Church of our times.
The years that have passed since a similar event took
place in June 1999 have been rich in getting-to-know one another better
and in a greater awareness of the role that these different groups have
had in the work of the new evangelisation. In this regard, the thinking
of the Holy Father Benedict XVI proceeds in perfect harmony with the
magisterium of the Servant of God John Paul II.
The seminar will receive orientation from the words of
Benedict XVI “I ask you to approach movements with a great deal of
love”. This statement is taken from an address given to a group of
bishops on their ad limina visit.
During the seminar - at which some ecclesial movements
and new communities will be represented - there will be lectures,
working groups, testimonies and discussion. The high point will be the
audience the Holy Father will grant to all the participants. From the
responses received we can see that bishops from local Churches
everywhere are interested to register their participation in this event.
The movements and new communities in the words of
the Holy Father.
A brief review
The faithful and pastors who wish to delve into the
teachings of Benedict XVI on ecclesial movements and new communities,
are concentrating their attention particularly on the words he spoke at
the memorable encounter on the vigil of Pentecost 2006 and the message
he sent on the occasion of the Congress held in preparation of that
event. During the vigil, one of the points emphasised by the Pope was
that the Holy Spirit gives life and freedom, and that “the movements
were born precisely because of a thirst for true life” and “they are
intended to be and should be schools of freedom, of this true freedom”.
In his words to the Congress several days earlier, he affirms that these
new ecclesial groups are “a luminous sign of the beauty of Christ and of
the Church, his Bride”. These are clear fundamental indications that
deserve to be increasingly better known and studied. Moreover, the
Pontiff has on many occasions dealt with the subject, tracing the
fundamental lines for a clear understanding of the “new era of group
endeavours of the lay faithful” (Christifideles
laici, 29). We would like to mention some of these “sparse”
teachings, because perhaps not everyone knows about them or has realised
their importance. Further teachings of the Holy Father will be included
with the next issue of our newsletter.
Benedict XVI has reasserted several times that movements
and new communities do not have their origin in human initiative but
that they are gifts of the Holy Spirit as is the Church itself: “Among
the realities raised up in the Church by the Holy Spirit are the
movements and ecclesial communities ... The entire Church, as Pope John
Paul II loved to say, is one great movement animated by the Holy Spirit,
a river that travels through history to irrigate it with God’s grace and
make it full of life, goodness, beauty, justice and peace” (4
June 2006, Regina Coeli). These new groups are considered by the
Pope to be a gift for the Church, particularly in order to help put the
Second Vatican Council into effect. Over the past few decades we have
witnessed a “vast flowering of associations, movements and new ecclesial
realities providentially raised up by the Holy Spirit in the Church
after the Second Vatican Council. Every gift of the Spirit is found
originally and necessarily at the service of the edification of the Body
of Christ, offering a witness of the immense charity of God for the life
of each person. The reality of ecclesial movements, therefore, is a sign
of the fecundity of the Lord’s Spirit, because it manifests in the world
the victory of the Risen Christ and it accomplishes the missionary
mandate entrusted to the whole Church” (24
March 2007, to the members of Communion and Liberation).
In maintaining this premise, Benedict XVI is well aware
that he is completely in conformity with the teachings of John Paul II:
“My venerable Predecessor, John Paul II, has presented the Movements and
New Communities which have come into being in these years as a
providential gift of the Holy Spirit to the Church, in order to respond
in an effective way to the challenges of our time. And you know that
this is also my conviction (Address
of His Holiness Benedict XVI to the Bishop-friends of the
Focolare Movement and the Sant’Egidio Community, 8
February 2007). The Pope predicts that they will continue to
spread: “Dear representatives of the new movements in the Church, the
vitality of your communities is a sign of the Holy Spirit’s active
presence! It is from the faith of the Church and from the richness of
the fruits of the Holy Spirit that your mission has been born. My prayer
is that you will grow ever more numerous so as to serve the cause of the
Kingdom of God in today’s world” (26
May 2006, to the representatives of movements in Poland).
The movements express the variety of gifts of the Spirit,
all necessary to build up the Church, gathered in unity thanks to the
ministry of the bishops in communion with the Pope: “The Holy Spirit
wants the multiformity of the movements at the service of the one Body,
which is the Church. And this comes about through the ministry of those
he has placed to sustain the Church of God: the Bishops in communion
with the Successor of Peter” (Address
of His Holiness Benedict XVI to the Bishop-friends of the
Focolare Movement and the Sant’Egidio Community, 8 February 2007).
The charismatic origin of the movements requires that they be welcomed
by the bishops with attention and respect, “with much love”,
notwithstanding the difficulties that such a wave of innovations can
imply in some circumstances: “After the Council, the Holy Spirit endowed
us with the ‘movements’. They sometimes appear to be rather strange to
the parish priest or Bishop but are places of faith where young people
and adults try out a model of life in faith as an opportunity for life
today. I therefore ask you to approach movements very lovingly. Here and
there, they must be corrected or integrated into the overall context of
the parish or Diocese. Yet, we must respect the specific character of
their charism and rejoice in the birth of communitarian forms of faith
in which the Word of God becomes life” (18
November 2006, to German bishops). There is no
contradiction in the Church between charism and institution, but
complementarity and reciprocal interpenetration: “In the Message to the
World Congress of Ecclesial Movements, 27 May 1998, the Servant of God
John Paul II had this to say: that there is no conflict or opposition in
the Church between the institutional and the charismatic dimensions, of
which the Movements are a significant expression. Both are co-essential
to the divine constitution of the People of God. In the Church the
essential institutions are also charismatic and indeed the charisms must,
in one way or another, be institutionalized to have coherency and
continuity. Hence, both dimensions originate from the same Holy Spirit
for the same Body of Christ, and together they concur to make present
the mystery and the salvific work of Christ in the world. This explains
the attention with which the Pope and the Pastors look upon the richness
of the charismatic gifts in the contemporary age” (24
March 2007, to the members of Communion and Liberation).
The Pope gave two fundamental rules on how to welcome
the movements: “It seems to me that we have two fundamental rules of
which you spoke. The first was given to us by St. Paul in his First
Letter to the Thessalonians: do not extinguish charisms. If the Lord
gives us new gifts we must be grateful, even if at times they may be
inconvenient. And it is beautiful that without an initiative of the
hierarchy but with an initiative from below, as people say, but which
also truly comes from on High, that is, as a gift of the Holy Spirit,
new forms of life are being born in the Church just as, moreover, they
were born down the ages. At first, they were always inconvenient. Even
St. Francis was very inconvenient, and it was very hard for the Pope to
give a final canonical form to a reality that by far exceeded legal
norms. For St. Francis, it was a very great sacrifice to let himself be
lodged in this juridical framework, but in the end this gave rise to a
reality that is still alive today and will live on in the future: it
gives strength, as well as new elements, to the Church’s life. I wish to
say only this: movements have been born in all the centuries. Even St.
Benedict at the outset was a movement. They do not become part of the
Church’s life without suffering and difficulty. St. Benedict himself had
to correct the initial direction that monasticism was taking. Thus, in
our century too, the Lord, the Holy Spirit, has given us new initiatives
with new aspects of Christian life. Since they are lived by human people
with their limitations, they also create difficulties. So the first rule
is: do not extinguish Christian charisms; be grateful even if they are
inconvenient. The second rule is: the Church is one; if movements are
truly gifts of the Holy Spirit, they belong to and serve the Church and
in patient dialogue between Pastors and movements, a fruitful form is
born where these elements become edifying for the Church today and in
the future. This dialogue is at all levels. Starting with the parish
priest, the Bishops and the Successor of Peter, the search for
appropriate structures is underway: in many cases it has already borne
fruit (22
February 2007, to the clergy of Rome).
[To be continued in the next issue]
Sport: a pastoral
and educational challenge
This coming September 7 and 8, the “Church and Sport”
Section of the Pontifical Council for the Laity will host an
international seminar on the theme: “Sport, a pastoral and educational
challenge” that will specifically address the role of sport chaplains.
The first international seminar, held in November 2005,
focused on the theme: “The Christian mission within the field of sport
today” and analysed in a general way the opportunities and challenges
that the growing sector of sport in today’s society presents to the
Church. This initial exchange of ideas helped to point out some of the
ways in which sport can be considered a field of Christian mission and
the role the Church and Sport Section should play in this sector.
In addition, in March 2007, the Section also
collaborated with the Scientific Commission of the Church and Sport
study group of the German Bishops’ Conference for a seminar held in
Mainz, dedicated to elaborating the anthropological, theological and
pastoral aspects of a Christian vision for sport. To build upon the work
undertaken, during the seminar in September, the “Church and Sport”
Section will consider one of the pastoral aspects of sport, namely, the
specific role of sport chaplains within the greater context of the
pastoral mission of the Church in sport in light of today’s educational
challenges.
For these two days of reflection, participants will be
representatives from the pastoral offices for sport within national
bishops’ conferences, representatives from Catholic sport associations,
experts from various sectors of sport, and chaplains of professional and
youth teams.
The seminar will begin with a general reflection on the
world of sport within the context of a greater educational crisis. This
will be followed by a general review of the pastoral ministry to the
world of sport to date. The seminar will then shift its focus to the
specific significance and role of sport chaplains.
The seminar will also include two panel discussions: one
will be dedicated to receiving feedback on what professional and amateur
athletes and coaches look for in a chaplain, and the other panel
discussion will voice the pastoral experiences of various chaplains from
different sectors of the sporting world. Lastly, the seminar will also
be an opportunity for an exchange of ideas and initiatives in light of
some of the upcoming major sports events around the world.
Twenty years after
Mulieris dignitatem
In 2008 we shall have the twentieth anniversary of the
Apostolic Letter
Mulieris dignitatem by John Paul II on the
dignity and vocation of women. This letter is in perfect continuity with
the teaching of the Second Vatican Council which encouraged a much wider
participation of women not only in the cultural and social sphere, but
also in the ecclesial sphere. In the decree
Apostolicam actuositatem we read: “Since in our times women have
an ever more active share in the whole life of society, it is very
important that they participate more widely also in the various fields
of the Church’s apostolate” (no. 9). The concern of the Church for the
effective advancement of women did not cease with Vatican II.
In 1973, six years after the establishment of the
Consilium de Laicis, Paul VI, responding to an explicit request from
the Synod of Bishops and in view of the International Year of women
proclaimed by the United Nations in 1975, instituted the “Study
commission on women in society and in the Church”.
In 1988, in response to the wishes of the Synod of
Bishops concerning the participation of the laity in the life of the
Church and in order to study the question of women, John Paul II
published
Mulieris dignitatem. It is significant that
this letter was written during the Marian Year, a providential time to
look at the theme of women while looking at Our Lady. In this path of
reflection,
Mulieris dignitatem is a milestone. For the first
time, a pontifical document was entirely dedicated to the topic of women.
John Paul II proceeds with an anthropological analysis in the light of
Revelation in order to derive, both from the first chapters of Genesis
and from the words and actions of Jesus Christ, fundamental truths like
the equal dignity of men and women created in the image of God, the
unity of the two and the call to communion, the importance of
complementarity and reciprocity between men and women, the appreciation
of the feminine “genius”, the figure of Mary as a model for women, and
the total fulfilment of human beings called to holiness.
It is an established fact that, twenty years after
Mulieris dignitatem, the language and contents of the
magisterium of John Paul II have not only been assimilated but they have
also generated a perspective of renewed appreciation of women and a
keener awareness of the importance of reciprocity between men and women.
John Paul II laid the foundation for a new feminism and his reflection
has brought a breath of fresh air to a culture often hurt by
antagonistic tendencies in the man-woman relationship, a theme that was
later developed in the
Letter to the bishops of the Catholic Church on the
collaboration of men and women in the Church and in the
world published in 2004 by the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith.
Benedict XVI in turn expressed and took up again the
appreciation of the Church for the contribution of women. It is enough
here to mention the catechesis in the general audience of 14 February
2007, dedicated to women and their ecclesial responsibility from the
early Christian communities until today.
On the twentieth anniversary of
Mulieris dignitatem, the Pontifical Council for the
Laity is again taking up this in-depth study of the relationship
man-woman and the participation of women in the mission of the Church,
with a conference on the theme: “Woman and man, the humanum in
its entirety”. It will be held in Rome from 7 to 9 February 2008 with
the participation of around 250 people coming from the five continents.
The main objectives of the Conference are to review the progress made
over the past twenty years in the field of the advancement of women and
the recognition of their dignity; to open up a reflection in the light
of revelation on the new cultural paradigms and on the difficulties
faced by Catholic women in living according to their identity and in
collaborating in fruitful reciprocity with men in building up the Church
and society; to remind women of the beauty of the vocation to holiness,
encouraging them to respond to it with increasing awareness and, as
players in the mission of the Church, to place at the service of the
apostolate, family, workplace and culture, all the richness of the
feminine “genius”.
Witnessing to Christ
in the world of work
9th International Youth Forum
The central theme of the 9th International Youth Forum
was “Witnessing to Christ in the world of work”. The Forum took place in
Rocca di Papa from 28 March to 1st April. The theme touches on one of
the focal questions in human experience, and reflects, especially among
youth, the complexity of our globalised world. It is a challenge for
evangelisation and for Christian life. In a world undergoing rapid
transformation, the fragmentation of traditional relations opens the way
to new styles of life and types of employment that are not always better.
This is seen in the marginalisation of the young and the elderly and in
the growing gap between rich and poor. Proclaiming the Gospel here is
certainly an exciting and difficult challenge.
Around three hundred delegates from eighty or so
countries around the world, were invited to Rocca di Papa by the
Pontifical Council for the Laity. They enthusiastically took part in the
full schedule of the Forum. Archbishop Stanisław Ryłko gave a very clear
synthesis at the end: “As we looked at the epoch-making transformations
in the labour market of our times that mostly penalise the younger
generations, we asked how Christians can live out their work commitments
in a globalised world that is changing so rapidly and so much; how they
can retrieve the true meaning of their daily toil so that it will not
become mere routine and degenerate into activism that has no end beyond
itself and that parches the spirit; how they can live in situations of
“precarity” or unemployment that are so common today and cause such
hardship; how the “Gospel of work” proclaimed by the Church is heard in
the world of work of our times, so conditioned by inflexible market laws
and ruthless competition, and if it still has a word to say to our
contemporaries and above all to the youth; how to witness to Christ in
workplaces that are totally disconnected from the logic of faith. The
Forum has been a time of passionate searching for answers to these
questions by treasuring the lessons that were heard, by listening to the
views offered in the panel discussions, by the dialogue and exchange of
each one’s direct experience, and also through the moments of prayer and
recollection before the Lord present in the Eucharist”.
The path of this study began with an analysis of the
situation by professors Giancarlo Rovati and Michele Tiraboschi. It was
studied further in a panel discussion and in the contributions made by
the delegates from the floor. It went on to discuss the meaning of work
in human life and came to the heart of the question: “Proclaiming the
‘Gospel of Work’ today”, and then “Joining professional and Christian
life” which was the topic of the talk by Bishop Gregor Maria Hanke osb
of Eichstätt in Germany.
There is no space here to mention all the panellists at
the conference and guests who joined the working groups, people with
different experiences from the five continents. However, we wish to
point out that their guidance and invaluable contributions together with
the enthusiasm of the delegates helped the forum to grow day by day. The
syntheses given by the working groups was witness to the fact that: “It
is in facts and daily actions that we each witness to Christ”, “We
should stand out for our courage and capacity to listen”, “We should be
faithful to our option as baptised people”, “We should set up pastoral
ministry for workers in our countries if it does not already exist, and
we should study the social doctrine of the Church”, “It is important to
be close to those who suffer, to help young people to reconcile their
faith life with their work life”, “We should put our experience here ‘on
the net’”, “I have discovered the maternal character of the Church
towards the movements”, “The Church has a treasure of humanity that it
keeps, not for itself, but for the whole world”, “We must be witnesses
of charity”.
His Holiness Benedict XVI sent a message to the
participants that contained many thoughts for reflection: “The ultimate
reference of every human activity can only be the human person”,
therefore “Every human activity should be an occasion and place for the
growth of individuals and society”. Referring to the transformations
that “have radically changed the appearance and conditions of the labour
market”, the Pope pointed out that “disturbing forms of marginalisation
and exploitation” often affect young people. He reminded them of “the
need to evaluate the human dimension of work and to protect the dignity
of the person”.
After a short reminder of the World Youth Day Message,
the Pope wrote: “It is not simply a question of becoming more
competitive and productive, but it is necessary to be witnesses of
charity”.
The forum was an experience of faith and of the
universality of the Church. There were deeply spiritual moments with
prayer and Holy Mass. The celebrants were Archbishop Stanisław Ryłko,
Cardinal Renato Martino, Cardinal Ivan Dias and Bishop Josef Clemens.
One of the days was dedicated to a pilgrimage in the footsteps of the
Apostles Peter and Paul, and the Forum concluded in Saint Peter’s Square
with Benedict XVI for the 22nd World Youth Day.
On the way to Sydney
The journey of the WYD Cross and Icon
THE JOURNEY OF THE CROSS AND
ICON OF OUR LADY IN AFRICA COMES TO A CLOSE
The last phase of the pilgrimage of the Cross and Icon
in Africa, beginning after Christmas 2006, took them to Tanzania,
Malawi, Zambia, Botswana, South Africa, Swaziland, Mozambique
and Madagascar. Here, as in the previous stages, great numbers of
youth and adults, Christians and otherwise, welcomed the Cross and Icon
with festive choral singing and dancing before kneeling down in
adoration and to entrust their intentions to Jesus and Mary.
The length of stay for the Cross and Icon was not the
same in every country. Nevertheless, even when they stayed for only two
days, as in the case of Swaziland and Botswana, those
short visits were experienced as a time of grace. At times, the Cross
and Icon could not reach the youth in their communities as happened in
Mozambique. Time was short and the rainy season had made many
places inaccessible. Therefore the youth went to Maputo, setting out in
plenty of time to be sure to be there for the arrival of the Cross and
Icon. At each stage, the local Church decided the priorities that often
became prayer intentions. In South Africa, for example, the Cross
and Icon were in territories like the Eastern Cape which the organisers
did not hesitate to call “a land of death, disaster and desperation”.
Here, drugs, no work prospects, and above all, AIDS, has victims among
the very young. Gathered around their bishop and filled with hope, the
young South Africans prayed to the Lord and his Mother, closer than ever
during this pilgrimage, to bring their healing to this country and its
people.
Madagascar was the last stopover in an amazing
experience of faith that had begun on 12 April 2006 in Senegal.
Politicians, members of government and institutional leaders all met at
the Apostolic Nunciature with the bishops, and above all, with a huge
crowd of young Christians to offer the Cross and Icon a welcome worthy
of the most illustrious guests. At the farewell ceremony at Antananarivo
airport, it was as if the whole of Africa were represented and not only
those twenty countries who had the privilege of hosting the Cross and
Icon during that long pilgrimage. On 17 February 2007 the Cross and Icon
left Africa and headed for Seoul in Korea to start the last stretch on
the way to WYD in Sydney. This journey includes countries of the
Asian-Pacific region.
THE JOURNEY TO KOREA, THE PHILIPPINES AND THE PACIFIC
ISLANDS
Each stopover that the Cross and Icon make has a unique
and special characteristic, but one sentiment that seems to join them
all is the feeling of togetherness with the rest of the world that is
experienced when standing before this Cross and Icon that have travelled
the world and been touched by so many young people.
The youth of Korea took the Cross and Icon to the
Bridge of Freedom and prayed for the unity of the people from both parts
of their country and for peace in the world, convinced that young people
have a major role to play in securing this goal. The visit of the Cross
and Icon to the Philippines awoke awareness in the Philippine
Church that ministry cannot remain “inward looking” but must reach out
to the many young people who have yet to personally meet Christ. They
too want to touch and be healed by the Cross. On their arrival in
Guam, the Cross and Icon were carried on a four-day pilgrimage
around the island in the company of a large crowd of young people and
families. The Cross and Icon remained for less than one day in Majuro in
the Marshall Islands, and in that time a huge crowd followed them
on an eight-mile procession. The Cross and Icon had a short but busy
visit to the Chuuk Islands. They made their way to the parishes
on small boats along rivers through the jungle and across the sea from
island to island greeted by people throwing flowers and singing.
The next stopover was in Palau, and then the
Cross and Icon went on to Papua New Guinea where some
areas witnessed the largest crowds ever seen as people followed the
Cross and Icon in procession. One of the areas visited in the Solomon
Islands had been devastated by an earthquake and tsunami only two
weeks earlier. The youth of the region spent the night in prayer with
the Cross and Icon beside the damaged cathedral and they focussed on the
Cross as a symbol of the Resurrection. Reconciliation was the theme for
the visit of the Cross and Icon to Timor Leste, a country where
there have been tensions between communities recently. The journey
continued from island to island - Kiribati, Appia Samoa,
American Samoa, Tahiti, Tonga - where the Cross and
Icon were greeted by crowds of young people in traditional dress and
where torrential rains did not stop the festivities - Fiji,
New Caledonia, Vanuatu and New Zealand - where the
3-week journey around the country was very well prepared and attempted
to reach young people in all kinds of situations, in schools,
institutions, rural and urban areas, ethnic minorities, etc. and to pray
in places with special significance in local memory. From 1 July the
Cross and Icon are travelling around the dioceses of Australia to
call the youth of the country to World Youth Day 2008 in Sydney.
Preparing for WYD 2008
All over the world departments of youth ministry are
using the internet to gather applications from pilgrims, to inform them
of meetings, liturgical celebrations and other gatherings. They are
encouraging parishes to sponsor the participation of some of their young
parishioners, and they are suggesting that young people be creative in
finding ways of fundraising to make the trip.
Group registrations opened in March and individual
pilgrim registration will open in July. For World Youth Day 2008, each
member of a group will have to register individually. So far in 2007
representatives of the WYD08 Team in Sydney have been in Rome four times
for discussions with the PCL on organisational and technical issues.
Australian government officials also visited when they were in Rome for
security meetings with the Vatican.
The second preparatory meeting for WYD 2008 will be held
in Sydney on 15-17 October 2007 to which WYD organisers from bishops’
conferences and international movements, associations and communities
will be invited.
The John Paul II Youth Foundation
The Youth Church Hope Foundation has changed name.
Following the decision made by the Administrative Council of the
Foundation during the meeting on 8 January 2007, and with the agreement
of the heads of the Pontifical Council for the Laity, the new name given
is the John Paul II Youth Foundation. This is a tribute to the
pontiff whose intuition gave birth to World Youth Day, an event that has
given great impetus to youth pastoral ministry in the Church.
The Foundation was established to sustain the activities
of the Youth Section of the Dicastery and it was erected with public
juridical personality on 29 June 1991 by the president of the Pontifical
Council for the Laity in order to “contribute to the implementation of
the teaching of the magisterium of the Catholic Church regarding the
priority of youth ministry, as particularly expressed in the World Youth
Days”; and “to promote the evangelization of young people and support
youth ministry throughout the world” (Statutes, art. 1, 2.1).
Juridical
recognition and approval of statutes
The Pontifical Council for the Laity: By decree of 16
October 2006 approved the new statutes of the Fédération
Internationale des Mouvements d’Adultes Ruraux Catholiques
(FIMARC).
By decree of 8 December 2006, granted final approval of
the statutes of the “Vivere In” Spirituality Movement.
By decree of 1 January 2007 approved the new statutes of
the World Union of Catholic Women’s Organisations (WUCWO).
By decree of 22 January 2007, granted final approval of
the statutes of the Silent Workers of the Cross Association.
By decree of 9 February 2007, approved the modifications
to the statutes of the “Memores Domini” Lay Association
By decree of 22 February 2007, recognised as an
international association of the faithful, Shalom Catholic Community,
and approved its statutes “ad experimentum”.
By decree of 15 March 2007, approved the modifications
to the statutes of the Work of Mary (Focolare Movement)
By decree of 15 March 2007 approved the new statutes of
the Association Internationale des Charités (AIC)
By decree of 25 March 2007, recognised as an
international association of the faithful, the Franciscanos de María
Association, and approved its statutes “ad experimentum”.
By decree of 5 April 2007, recognised as an
international association of the faithful, Les Maisons d’adoration
Association, and approved its statutes “ad experimentum”.
By decree of 11 April 2007 approved the new statutes of
the International Catholic Movement for Intellectual and
Cultural Affairs (ICMICA-Pax Romana).
By decree of 26 April 2007 approved the new statutes of
the International Catholic Society for Girls (ACISJF - In Via).
By decree of 19 May 2007, granted final approval of the
statutes of the Institute for World Evangelization - ICPE
Mission.
By decree of 26 May 2007, granted final approval of the
statutes of the Missionary Community of Villaregia.
By decree of 27 May 2007 approved the new statutes of
the International Council of Catholic Men (FIHC-Unum Omnes).
By decree of 15 June 2007, recognised as an
international association of the faithful, the Apostolate for Family
Consecration association, and approved its statutes “ad experimentum”.
The Dicastery is presently examining the requests for
canonical recognition presented by the following lay groups: Alliance
of the Holy Family International, Fondacio, Catholic
Integrated Community, Families of Nazareth Movement, Milicia de
Santa María, Family Hope, Rinnovamento Carismatico Servi
di Cristo Vivo, Light-Life Movement, Schönstatt Apostolic
Movement, Hogares Nuevos-Obra de Cristo, Comunità Cenacolo,
Cançao Nova Community, Parish Cells of Evangelisation,
Pan-American Health Care Network, Fédération Internationale des
Centres de Préparation au Mariage, Movimiento de la
Palabra de Dios.
The process of canonical readjustment of International
Catholic Organisations (ICOs) continues. To date, the new statutes of
ten of these organisations have been approved: ACISJF - In Via,
AIC, BICE, CIJOCICYCW, FIHC-Unum Omnes, FIMARC, MIAMSI,
ICMICA-Pax Romana, UCIP, WUCWO.
Ad limina visits
Between November 2006 and April this year we had the
ad limina visits of the Italian bishops. They alternated by regions
in showing their full communion with the See of Peter, and expressed
their personal gratitude to the Holy Father for speaking to the national
Convention of the Italian Church held recently in Verona. This was an
essential contribution to guide pastoral ministry in Italy over the next
few years. Our Dicastery received delegations from Lazio, Emilia
Romagna, Marche, Puglia, Sicily and Tuscany. The encounters confirmed
the words of the Pope in Verona when he described Italy as “a favourable
terrain for Christian testimony”, where “Christian traditions often
continue to be rooted and to produce fruit, while a great effort of
evangelization and catechesis is taking place, addressed particularly to
the new generations, but now even more so to families”. The bishops
testified to the revival of traditional associations and the surprising
spread of ecclesial movements and new communities that stand in contrast
to the advance of relativism that derives from secularisation and is,
according to Benedict XVI, “a radical and profound departure, not only
from Christianity, but more generally from the religious and moral
traditions of humanity”. The bishops informed us of progress in the
“Cultural Project” set up by the Bishops’ Conference with the
contribution of many of the laity, defined by the Pope as “a happy
intuition and can make a very important contribution” so that Catholics
may have suitable instruments to help the culture of their country grow.
A work of authentic evangelisation “is never a simple adaptation to
culture, but it is always also a purification, a courageous departure
that leads to maturation and healing, an openness that brings to birth
that ‘new creation’ that is the fruit of the Holy Spirit”. The bishops
retraced with us the five areas of human existence that determined the
organisation of the discussions in Verona. We spoke of the witness of
the lay faithful with regard to affective relationships and the family,
work and leisure, education and culture, conditions of poverty and
illness, responsibilities in social and political life. In this
framework we discussed the topic of Christian education as a rediscovery
of the potential inherent in the sacraments of initiation so that, in
the words of the Pope, “they reach effective fulfilment in the daily
reality of our life, what the Holy Spirit accomplishes in us with
Baptism. In fact, we are called to become new women and men, to be able
to be true witnesses of the Risen One and thus bearers of Christian joy
and hope in the world, concretely in that community of men and women in
which we live”. The social and political commitment of Catholics shows
encouraging signs of revival, after a period in which there was a
general defeatist attitude, of bringing things down to levels extraneous
to Christian experience. However, as the Pope urged them, there is much
to be done to help them face, with “determination and clear policies the
risks of political and legislative choices that contradict fundamental
values and anthropological principles and ethics rooted in the nature of
the human being, in particular, regarding the guardianship of human life
in all its stages, from conception to natural death, and to the
promotion of the family founded on marriage, avoiding the introduction
in the public order of other forms of union that would contribute to
destabilising it, obscuring its particular character and its
irreplaceable role in society. On the other hand, the Pope in Verona
recognised that “the open and courageous testimony that the Church and
Italian Catholics have given and are giving in this regard is a precious
service to Italy, useful and stimulating also for many other nations.
This commitment and this witness are certainly part of that great ‘yes’
that as believers in Christ we say to humankind loved by God”.
Contacts with
associations and movements
-
On 16 January Archbishop Stanisław Ryłko received
the founders of the Missionary Community of Villaregia,
Rev. Luigi Prandin and Maria Luigia Corona.
-
On 18 January Bishop Josef Clemens received the
leaders of the Missionary Community of Saint Paul the
Apostle and Mary Mother of the Church, which is based
in the Archdiocese of Paderborn, Germany.
-
On 23 January Bishop Clemens received Rev. Bernard
Michon, head of the Foyers de Charité.
-
On 27 January Archbishop Ryłko received the
President of the International Federation of Catholic
Medical Associations (FIAMC), Dr José María Simón de
Castellvi.
-
On 29 January Archbishop Ryłko met with Ernesto
Preziosi, Secretary General of the International Council of
Catholic Men (FIHC Unum Omnes).
-
On 31 January Archbishop Ryłko received Rev. Hans
Stapel, founder of Fazenda da Esperança, a community
that arose in Brazil and is now present in other countries, and that
by means of work, prayer and family lifestyle work to rehabilitate
young people dependant on drugs and alcohol.
-
On 1 February Archbishop Ryłko received the leaders
of the International Federation of Pueri Cantores (FIPC).
-
On 1 February Bishop Clemens received Josep M.
Torrents, President of the International Federation of
Pueri Cantores with the Ecclesiastical Assistant Rev.
Robert Tyrała.
-
On 2 February Archbishop Ryłko received Chiara
Amirante, founder of the Nuovi Orizzonti association.
-
On 5 February Archbishop Ryłko spoke at the annual
meeting of the bishopfriends of the Focolari Movement
in Castelgandolfo.
-
On 7 February Prof. Carriquiry met with Yves Marie-
Lanoë, President of the International Catholic Child
Bureau (BICE) and the Ecclesiastical Assistant Most Rev. Luis
Del Castillo.
-
On 13 February Archbishop Ryłko received Rev. Julián
Carrón, President of Communion and Liberation.
-
On 13 February Prof. Carriquiry received Moysés
Louro de Azevedo Filho, founder of Shalom Catholic
Community.
-
On 14 February Archbishop Ryłko met with the members
of the executive of the Christian Life Community (CVX).
-
On 20 February Bishop Clemens met with Ms Traudl
Wallbrecher, head of the Catholic Integrated Community
(KIG).
-
On 23 February Prof. Carriquiry met with the
administrative staff of Maintenance des Confréries de
Pénitents.
-
On 24 February Bishop Clemens received Col. Reinhard
Kloss and Col. Michael Jedlicka, President and Secretary General
respectively of the International Military Apostolate
(AMI).
-
On 25 February Archbishop Ryłko visited the
headquarters of the Confederation of Catholic Integrated
Communities in Grottaferrata and met with members of the
general management council.
-
On 26 February Archbishop Ryłko received Rev. Yves
Le Saux, coordinator of priests of the Emmanuel Community.
-
On 9 March Archbishop Ryłko received Prof. Matteo
Calisi, President of the Charismatic Covenant Communities
and Fellowships, and Oreste Pesare, Executive Director of the
International Catholic Charismatic Renewal Services
(ICCRS).
-
On 10 March Archbishop Ryłko was in Barcelona to
preside at the thanksgiving Mass for the 39th anniversary of the
Sant’Egidio Community.
-
On 12 March Archbishop Ryłko met with Francisco and
Annelise Nuño, the new representatives of the Schönstatt
Movement in Italy.
-
On 13 March Archbishop Ryłko received Rev. Michele
Vassallo, National Coordinator of the Rinnovamento
Carismatico Servi di Cristo Vivo.
-
On 15 March Archbishop Ryłko presided at the Mass
celebrated in Santa Maria in Trastevere in thanksgiving for the
pontifical recognition of the Shalom Catholic Community.
-
On 17 March Bishop Clemens received Dr Baldur
Hermans and Msgr Robert Guglielmone, Secretary General and
Ecclesiastical Assistant respectively of the International
Catholic Conference of Scouting (ICCS).
-
On 13 April Bishop Clemens and Dr Rocío Figueroa met
with Daniel Guery, President of the International Movement
of Apostolate in the Independent Social Milieus
(MIAMSI) and Maria Bianca Pisoni, member of the international
bureau.
-
On 18 April Bishop Clemens led a meditation on the
book Jesus of Nazareth by Benedict XVI for the Sant’Egidio
Community in the basilica of Santa Maria in Trastevere in Rome.
-
Archbishop Ryłko presided at the opening Mass for
the 20th International Convention of the Risen Jesus Community
that was held in Chianciano Terme from 22 to 25 April on the theme
“A year of the Lord’s grace” with the participation of around six
thousand people.
-
On 26 April Msgr Kohn received Stefano Cascio, Nina
von Heereman and Mayda Rojas, leaders of Adoremus: International
Meeting of Eucharistic Adoration Youth Groups who
reported on their 2007 meeting.
-
On 3 May Bishop Clemens received a group from the
Foyers de Charité.
-
On 4 May Archbishop Ryłko met with the leaders of
L’Arche International.
-
On 5 May Archbishop Ryłko celebrated Holy Mass for
the members of the Fraternity of Communion and
Liberation who were in Rimini for their annual spiritual
exercises.
-
On 8 May Bishop Clemens received a group from the
Internationale Akademie für Musik und Evangelisation
(IME), an international school of evangelisation run by the
Emmanuel Community in Altötting, Germany.
-
From 14 to 16 May Bishop Clemens was in Alsópáhok in
Hungary to take part in the 31st General Assembly of Kolping
International (IKW). He spoke on “The Church in the world
today. Encouragement from the Pastoral Constitution Gaudium
et Spes for the presence of the Church and Catholic
associations in the contemporary world”.
-
On 19 May Bishop Clemens received Corso and Elena
Pecori Giraldi from the Movimento Gloriosa Trinità
association of Milan, Italy.
-
On 20 May Bishop Clemens presided at solemn Mass in
the Choir Chapel of the basilica of Saint Peter, the Vatican, to
celebrate the sixtieth anniversary of the founding of the
International Catholic Movement for Intellectual and
Cultural Affairs (Pax Romana-MIIC/ICMICA).
-
On 21 May Msgr Kohn received the visit of Kevin J.
Ahern, President of the International Movement of Catholic
Students (IMCSPax Romana) and Christopher Derige Malano,
representative of the Movement in North America.
-
On 25 May Bishop Clemens received Rev. Heinrich
Walter, President of the General Praesidium of the Schönstatt
Apostolic Movement.
-
On 26 May Bishop Clemens presided at the Eucharistic
celebration for the Vigil of Pentecost in the cathedral of St.
Christopher in Roermond, the Netherlands, for the ecclesial
associations and movements present in the Diocese. The following day
he celebrated Holy Mass for the solemnity of Pentecost in the
cathedral of St Servaas in Maastricht, the Netherlands.
-
On 31 May Msgr Kohn met with Rev. Vincenzo
Benetollo, OP, President of the International Thomas
Aquinas Society.
-
On 1 June Archbishop Ryłko received Mario Cappello,
President of the Institute for World Evangelisation
(ICPE Mission). That same day he met with Rev. Laurent Fabre SI,
founder of the Chemin Neuf Community.
-
On 4 June Bishop Clemens presided at Holy Mass
celebrated in Santa Maria della Pietà in the Vatican to mark sixty
years since the founding of the charitable work Aid to the Church
in Need (ACN).
-
On 9 June Bishop Clemens met with a group of
participants in the Second International Institute for Catholic
Charismatic Leadership Formation organised by International
Catholic Charismatic Renewal Services (ICCRS).
-
On 11 June Archbishop Ryłko received Jerome F.
Coniker, president, and a group of leaders of the Apostolate
for Family Consecration.
-
On 19 June Msgr Kohn accompanied Archbishop Ryłko to
the headquarters of the Emmanuel School of Mission of the
Emmanuel Community for a meeting with the leaders and
students to close the academic year 2006/07.
-
On 20 and 21 June Prof. Carriquiry took part in the
General Assembly of the Conference of Catholic
International Organisations (CICO) held in Paris.
-
On 22 June Prof. Carriquiry and Msgr Delgado
received the visit of Gérard Testard, President of Fondacio.
Mr Testard also met with Msgr Kohn.
-
On 26 June Archbishop Ryłko received the visit of
Rev. Santiago Martín, founder of the Franciscans of Mary.
-
On 27 June Archbishop Ryłko received the visit of
Rev. Manuel Morujeo, General Councillor of the Company of Jesus, and
Rev. Claudio Barriga, head of the Apostleship of Prayer and
the Eucharistic Youth Movement. Both Jesuit fathers also met
Msgr Kohn.
-
On 27 June Msgr Kohn received Maria Grazia Tibaldi,
President of the International Forum of Catholic Action
(IFCA), and Oana Tuduce, head of Catholic Action in Romania and
coordinator of the youth of the IFCA.
Others engagements
-
On 8 January Bishop Clemens attended the
installation of the new Administrative Council of the “Youth Church
Hope” Foundation.
-
On 17 January Archbishop Ryłko was in Ischia to
preside at the solemn Eucharistic celebration that closed the
Antonian Jubilee Year held in memory of the 1650th anniversary of
the death of St Antony Abbot, and the diocesan prayer vigil which
had the theme “on the wings of the Spirit” with the participation of
the founders and leaders of ecclesial movements and new communities
present on the island.
-
On 18 January Msgr Kohn received Bishop Jean-Luc
Brunin of Ajaccio (France), accompanied by priests and young deacons
from the diocese.
-
On 19 January Prof. Carriquiry received Elisabeth
Algier, President of Famille Cor Unum, Rev. Robert Mendiburu,
General President of the Institute of the Heart of Jesus,
a Secular Institute for priests, and Isabelle Lécutand, head of the
Institute of the Heart of Jesus for women.
-
On 19 January Bishop Clemens received the insignia
of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany at the
Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany to the Holy See from the
Ambassador H.E. Hans-Henning Horstmann, in the presence of
Archbishop Ryłko and Prof. Carriquiry.
-
On 24 January Bishop Clemens received H.E. Georges
Santer, Ambassador of Luxembourg to the Holy See.
-
On 30 January Prof. Carriquiry met with the Hon.
Olimpia Tarsia, President of the “Women and Life” Italian Committee.
-
On 31 January Prof. Carriquiry met with the managers
of the association Italia Solidale.
-
On 2 February Bishop Clemens received Vincent
Cabanac, Editor-in-Chief of La Documentation Catholique
and Le Pèlerin, and head of youth ministry for the
Augustinians of the Assumption. Father Cabanac was also
received by Msgr Kohn.
-
Archbishop Ryłko spoke at the Symposium organised in
Rome on 3-4 February by the World Conference of Secular Institutes
on the theme “Our time has come. Secular Institutes 60 years after
Provida Mater”.
-
On 6 February at the PCL offices Bishop Clemens met
with leaders in youth ministry and parish council delegates from the
Austrian dioceses accompanied by Bishop Egon Kapellari, Vice-
president of the Austrian Bishops’ Conference and Bishop Alois
Schwarz of Gurk-Klagenfurt, Austria.
-
On 7 February Msgr Kohn met with Prof. Alfredo
Luciani, President of The International Association of
Missionaries of Political Charity and his assistant
Virginie Leclercq.
-
On 8 February Bishop Clemens received Msgr Carlo
Mazza, Director of the National Office for Leisure, Tourism and
Sport of the Italian Bishops’ Conference.
-
On 9 February Bishop Clemens received Bishop Ludwig
Schick of the diocese of Bamberg, Germany.
-
On 10 February Bishop Clemens received Archbishop
Ivan Prendja of Zadar, Croatia.
-
On 13 February Bishop Clemens received Dr. Hans J.
Götz of the Götz Foundation in Liechtenstein.
-
On 14 February Prof. Carriquiry was invited by the
Association of Volunteers in International Service
(AVSI) in the Republic of San Marino for a conference on Latin
America.
-
On 19 February Bishop Clemens gave a talk on “Being
Christians in times of change” to Germanspeaking members of the
general headquarters of religious institutes present in Rome. The
meeting took place at the headquarters of the Society of the Divine
Word (SVD).
-
On 21 February Archbishop Ryłko, Bishop Clemens,
Prof. Carriquiry, Msgr Kohn and the youth section had a working
session on the organisation of WYD 2008 in Sydney with Bishop
Anthony Fisher, Coordinator of the Organising Committee and Danny
Casey, Chief Operating Officer. Another meeting was held on 24
April.
-
On 22 February Bishop Clemens conveyed a greeting
from the PCL to the participants at a Seminar on “Youth and secular
society” that took place at the Pontifical Council for the Laity
offices and was organised by The International Association
of Missionaries of Political Charity, the Università
Cattolica and the Pontifical Council for Culture. Msgr Kohn gave a
talk on the theme.
-
On 23 February Msgr Kohn received the visit of Antré
Récipon, President emeritus of the Raoul Follereau
Association, and Paola Pagani.
-
On 23 February Bishop Clemens received Dr Bernd
Posselt, member of the European Parliament and President of
Paneuropa- Union Deutschland. That same day he attended
an inter-dicastery meeting at the offices of the Pontifical Council
for Promoting Christian Unity.
-
From 1 to 4 March Bishop Clemens was in Mainz,
Germany, to attend an international Symposium on “The Christian
vision of sport. Anthropological, theological and pastoral aspects”
organised by the “Church and sport” commission of the German
Bishops’ Conference in collaboration with the Pontifical Council for
the Laity. He spoke on the theme: “The role of the Church and Sport
section of the Pontifical Council for the Laity”.
-
On 8 March Prof. Carriquiry and Msgr Delgado
received the visit of Cardinal Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga, Archbishop
of Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and President of the Pan American Catholic
Health Care Network. He was accompanied by Michael Lampert. The
cardinal also met with Bishop Clemens.
-
On 9 March Bishop Clemens and Msgr Kohn had a
meeting with the presidential committee of the “John Paul II Youth
Foundation”, the president Marcello Bedeschi, Vice-president Lorenzo
Serri, Secretary General Paolo Bessio, and Treasurer Gabriele
Turella.
-
On 12 March Bishop Clemens presided at a Seminar
held in the PCL offices organised by the “Conference of Catholic
Student Associations in Germany”.
-
On 15 March Bishop Clemens received Archbishop Cosmo
Francesco Ruppi of Lecce, President of the Bishops’ Conference of
Puglia. On that same day he received Most Rev. Jaroslav Pryriz,
Auxiliary Bishop of Sambir-Drohobych of the Ukrainians.
-
On 16 March Prof. Carriquiry was invited by the
Faith and Culture Association to give a talk in Barcelona on the
theme: “Faith, reason and culture in the magisterium of Benedict
XVI”. During his stay in Barcelona, on 18 March Prof. Carriquiry
spoke to lecturers from various universities present for a
conference on university research and passion for truth.
-
On 17 March Bishop Clemens received Dr Wolfgang
Thierse, Vice-president of the German parliament. That same day he
met with the Prior of the Taizé Community, Br. Aloïs Löser,
accompanied by several of his confreres.
-
On 20 March Archbishop Ryłko met with Br. Aloïs
Löser, the Prior of the Taizé Community.
-
On 20 March Bishop Clemens received a group of
theology students from the Catholic Theology Institute of Philipps
University of Marburg, Germany.
-
On 21 March Bishop Clemens received Bishop Reinhard
Marx of Trier, Germany.
-
On 22 March Bishop Clemens received the insignia of
merit of the Republic of Italy from Ambassador Giuseppe Balboni
Acqua at the Embassy of Italy to the Holy See.
-
On 23 and 24 March Bishop Clemens was in Madrid to
attend an international conference on “Introduction to the theology
of Benedict XVI” organised by the Spanish University Foundation. He
gave a talk on “Europe and Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI”.
-
On 24 March Archbishop Ryłko presided at the morning
prayer liturgy and Holy Mass for the participants at a national
conference in Rome on “Passion, competitiveness and spirituality”,
organised by the National Office for leisure, tourism and sport of
the Italian Bishops’ Conference.
-
On 26 March at the cultural centre of the church of
San Luigi dei Francesi, there was a presentation of the book by
Prof. Carriquiry Globalisation et humanisme chrétien.
Perspectives sur l’Amerique Latine. The author was
present.
-
On 2 April Bishop Clemens received a group of
students from the Sacré Coeur Institute of the Archdiocese of Vienna
who were taking part in a seminar on the pastoral ministry of
children. That same day he met with Danny Casey of the Sydney WYD
2008 Organising Committee and representatives of the government of
New South Wales. Other members of the Sydney Committee had a working
session with the Youth Section that morning.
-
On 3 April Bishop Clemens received the participants
of a Seminar organised by the “Kommende” Social Academy of the
diocese of Paderborn, Dortmund.
-
On 13 April Bishop Clemens received a group from the
Catholic Pastoral Centre of the University of Karlsruhe.
-
On 14 April Bishop Clemens received the visit of
Cardinal Friedrich Wetter, Apostolic Administrator of the
Archdiocese of Munich and Freising, Germany.
-
On 17 April Bishop Clemens was at the Vicariate
offices in Rome to preside at a press conference to present the 4th
John-Paul II Marathon-Pilgrimage in the Holy Land from 23 to 28
April 2007, promoted by the Italian Sports Centre (CSI), the Opera
Romana Pellegrinaggi and the National Office for Sports Ministry of
the Italian Bishops’ Conference.
-
On 18 April Archbishop Ryłko was at the Pontifical
Lateran University aula magna to speak at the presentation of the
books by Cardinal Ruini Alla sequela di Cristo [In the
footsteps of Christ] about John Paul II, and Verità di Dio e
verità dell’uomo (Truth of God and truth of humankind) on
Benedict XVI.
-
On 18 April Bishop Clemens, on the occasion of the
Pope’s 80th birthday, gave a talk in the Pontifical Atheneum “Regina
Apostolorum” in Rome on the theme “Europe and Joseph Ratzinger
(Benedict XVI)”.
-
On 20 April Archbishop Ryłko received delegations
from the United States Conferences of Major Superiors.
-
On 21 April Prof. Carriquiry attended the
presentation of the book L’altra Europa [The other
Europe] by Giovanni Cantoni, founder of Alleanza cattolica.
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From 23 to 28 April Bishop Clemens presided the 4th
John-Paul II Marathon- Pilgrimage in the Holy Land. He delivered
homilies at the Eucharistic celebrations in Bethlehem, Jerusalem
(Holy Sepulchre and Cenacle), Mount of the Beatitudes and Nazareth.
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On 25 April Archbishop Ryłko received the visit of
Cardinals Péter Erdö, Jean- Pierre Ricard and Josip Bozanic´,
members of the new presidential committee of the Council of European
Bishops’ Conferences (CCEE), and the Secretary General, Msgr Nicola
Giordano.
-
On 30 April Bishop Clemens received Maire-Luise
Dött, President, and a group from the League of Catholic
Entrepreneurs (BKU), Germany.
-
On 2 May Bishop Clemens received the visit of the
Ambassador of Israel to the Holy See, H.E. Oded Ben-Hur.
-
On 3 May Bishop Clemens received a group of members
of the parliament of the city of Hamburg.
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On 6 May Bishop Clemens was in the parish of S.
Sofia in Anacapri to celebrate the thanksgiving Mass for the 80th
birthday and second anniversary of the pontificate of Pope Benedict
XVI. He unveiled a plaque commemorating the occasion.
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Archbishop Ryłko, member by pontifical appointment,
and Prof. Carriquiry, expert by pontifical appointment, were present
at the fifth general conference of the bishops of Latin America and
the Caribbean: “Disciples and missionaries of Jesus Christ: that our
people may have life in Him”, held in Aparecida from 13 to 31 May.
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On 18 May Bishop Clemens presided at the Eucharistic
celebration in Santa Maria in Trastevere on the occasion of the
sixtieth anniversary of Nikolaus- Kollegium of Freckenhorst (Diocese
of Münster, Germany). That same day, in the PCL offices, he gave a
talk on the activities of the Pontifical Council for the Laity to
participants at a Seminar on the Roman Curia, organised by the
Catechetics Office of the Archdiocese of Salzburg, Austria, for
teachers of religion.
-
On 19 May Bishop Clemens received Dr Günter
Gorschenek, Director of the Katholische Akademie in Hamburg,
Germany, accompanied by a group of members of the Academy.
-
On 23 May Bishop Clemens gave a talk on the role and
activities of the Dicastery at a meeting of Ambassadors of the
European Union to the Holy See. It was held in the residence of the
Ambassador of the federal Republic of Germany, H.E. Hans-Henning
Horstmann.
-
On 24 May Bishop Clemens received Bishop Oscar D.
Sarlinga of the diocese of Zárate-Campana in Argentina.
-
On 25 May Bishop Clemens received Dr Alois Glück,
President of the Bavarian Parliament.
-
On 1 June Bishop Clemens received Msgr Wolfgang
Miehle, National Director of the Migration Office of the German
Bishops’ Conference, accompanied by delegates from the Office.
-
On 11 June Bishop Clemens received a group of
deputies from the two branches of the Austrian Parliament, led by
the Vice-president Dr Michael Spindelegger. The following day he
celebrated Mass for the group in the chapel of Saints Cyril and
Methodius in the Vatican Basilica of St Peter.
-
On 12 June Bishop Clemens received the board of
directors of the Spanish Federation of Religious (CONFER).
-
On 13 June Rev. Antonio Grappone represented the
Pontifical Council for the Laity at the interdicasteral meeting
promoted by the Pontifical Council for Culture on the occasion of
the 25th anniversary of its foundation.
-
On 23 and 24 June Prof. Carriquiry attended a
conference on “Don Francesco Ricci: passion for humanity” organised
in the Republic of San Marino by the John Paul II Foundation for the
Social Teaching of the Church.
-
On 26 June Msgr Kohn received Sister Victorine
Mbuyanda Muamba, Coordinator of the Pontifical Missionary
Works (OPM) for Ile-de-France, accompanied by Fr Gamet and a
delegation of lay leaders of Missionary Cooperation in the
region of Ile-de-France.
-
On 29 June Bishop Clemens conferred diaconal
ordination on a group of seminarians of the Legionaries of
Christ, in the chapel of the Congregation’s Centre for Higher
Studies in Rome.
-
During the first six months of the year, Msgr Kohn
met with leaders of Schools of Evangelisation of the Emmanuel
Community and presented the activities of the Youth Section of
the Pontifical Council for the Laity and preparations for WYD 2008
in Sydney: on 18 January he met with a group of youth from the
Emmanuel School of Mission in Rome; on 26 April he met with Michel
and Maylis Bronstun, Florence Rochetti and Rev. Vincent Bedon
together with twenty-two young participants in the School of
formation and evangelisation of Paray-le-Monial, France; on 27 April
he received the visit of Otto Neubauer and Rev. Christian Schmitt of
the Institute of Evangelisation of Vienna, Austria, who were in Rome
with forty young people from ten different countries of Europe; on 8
May he met with Rev. Francis Manoukian, Mr and Mrs Franz Kinsky,
directors of the School of evangelisation in Altötting, Germany,
accompanied by some students.
-
In view of the 9th International Youth Forum on the
theme “Witnessing to Christ in the world of work”, Msgr Kohn, on 9
February, met journalists from the French magazine La Vie; on
15 February he was interviewed by Radio-Espérance and Zenit News
Agency. On that same day he met with Camilo Coronel Escobar,
President of CIJOC-ICYCW and the chaplain Rev. John Marsland.
* * *
Activities of the San Lorenzo International Youth
Centre
On 2 February, feast of the Presentation of the Child
Jesus at the temple, Bishop Renato Boccardo, Secretary General of the
Vatican City State, celebrated Holy Mass at San Lorenzo Centre.
On 16 February, Holy Mass was celebrated by Msgr Mauro
Parmeggiani, Secretary Prelate of the Vicariate of Rome and head of the
diocesan youth ministry.
On 9 March Archbishop Ryłko celebrated Holy Mass for the
young people and then presented the message that Benedict XVI addressed
to the youth of the world for the 22nd World Youth Day.
On 4 May Bishop Clemens was at the Centre to celebrate
Mass and meet with a group of students from the Internationale
Akademie für Evangelisation (IAE), the international school of
evangelisation of the Emmanuel Community in Vienna.
On 14 June, the solemnity of the Sacred Heart, Msgr Kohn
celebrated Holy Mass, followed by a meeting with the animators of the
Centre - Rev. Sébastien Dehorter, chaplain, Pamela Fabiano and Leen den
Blauwen - to evaluate the year 2006/2007 and make plans for 2007/2008.
Msgr Kohn met with Rev. Xavier Brizard, youth
coordinator of the Emmanuel Community, to discuss the
animation of the Centre.
Latest publications
“Laity Today” collection
-
The Beauty of Being a Christian. Movements in the
Church, Proceedings of the 2nd World Congress of Ecclesial
Movements and New Communities (Rocca di Papa, 31 May - 2 June 2006)
and texts of the encounter with the Holy Father Benedict XVI on the
vigil of Pentecost (Rome, 3 June 2006). € 15.
“This volume contains the texts of the various interventions and
meditations that accompanied the celebration of Vespers on the vigil
of Pentecost, presided over by the Supreme Pontiff in St. Peter’s
Square on 3 June 2006 in the presence of over a hundred ecclesial
movements and new communities.
It also contains the proceedings of the second World Congress of
ecclesial movements and new communities, held at Rocca di Papa (near
Rome) on the initiative of the Pontifical Council for the Laity in
the immediately preceding days. [...] In publishing the present
volume, we hope to perpetuate the memory of these two great events.
We hope that the memory of these two events will be an encouragement
to the ecclesial movements and new communities that took part, and
that they may bear fruit in the lives of all those who, in reading
these pages, may see – to use the Pope’s words – how the Lord makes
life beautiful and causes the desert in which we often find
ourselves living to blossom anew”. (from the Preface by
Archbishop Ryłko)
-
La parrocchia ritrovata. Percorsi di rinnovamento
(The Parish rediscovered. Paths of renewal,
Proceedings of the 22nd Plenary assembly of the Pontifical Council
for the Laity, 21-24 September 2006). Available in Italian only. €
15.
IN PREPARATION
“Youth” collection
-
Witnessing to Christ in the World of Work,
Proceedings of the 9th International Youth Forum, Rocca di Papa 28
March-1 April 2007. It will be published in English, French, Italian
and Spanish.
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