Daily Archives: April 8, 2012

Easter Sunday!

Alleluia! Alleluia!

Easter Sunday is here! First thing when you woke up, as you snuggled up to me in bed, I said “Do you know what day it is today joseph?”

one second later you replied..”EASTER SUNDAY! Are there chocolate pio pio pulcini?!” (italian for ‘cheep cheep chicks’)
“let’s go downstairs and see”, I replied. You needed no more encouragement to bounce out of bed!

Indeed your Easter basket was full, and there were chocolate pio pio pulcini…and a big chocolate egg…and other Easter gifts…

Even little Leo got his hands on a massive egg…..(but not for too long as you started to unwrap the egg and eat the gold foil!)…

Although big, it wasnt quite as big as the 250kg chocolate egg that Pope Benedict was given this Easter!!

(he donated it to the local prison!)

After Mass we headed to Nonna’s to enjoy our fabulous easter feast with some dear family friends!
Joseph, I think you must’ve eaten more sugar today than you did during the whole of Lent combined!

And for dessert (well, one of the desserts on offer!)…our simnel cake!

The 11 balls represent the 11 faithful apostles ..but one has already been eaten in the photo above! It was a very good cake! Definitly another one to add to our family easter tradition!

Then in the afternoon our Parish Church was running events for children…crafts, glitter face-painting (Joseph you got a green glitter butterfly on your arm!), egg and spoon race (your team won Beansie!) and then (the thing you had been most anticipating)…the Easter egg hunt!

Yet MORE chocolate eggs!

Then back to Nonna’s for more playing…and home for warm sleep-inducing baths, and you boys were both asleep in minutes!


Yey for Easter!!


See the original post:

Easter Sunday!

Photos From Maundy Thursday…

Thumbnail

2012 04 05_0010

Just a few days later than planned – I’m slowly catching up with myself…

We were extremely fortunate to be able to have Solemn High Mass in the Extraordinary Form for Maundy Thursday. The music was beautifully sung by our choir – to say that the absence of the organ was really noticeable could be taken the wrong way, but what I actually mean is that the contrast struck me quite forcibly this year.

At what felt like the last minute, I was given the task of finding men for the Mandatum – the washing of feet – and was almost despairing, when, with less than ten minutes to go, I had only succeeded in getting one volunteer. Fortunately, with much arm-twisting and pleading, I managed to get another seven before the Mass started, and four of the servers were press-ganged to make up the full number. The reluctance of men to volunteer for the Mandatum was almost comical – I had no idea so many people had foot problems. It is not, however, without biblical precedent: think about how reluctant St. Peter was to have his feet washed…

One elderly man seemed quite touched by the request – he told me that he’d never been asked before, in 70 years of attending church, and thanked me profusely, though he still refused…

2012 04 05_0020

I’ve put up a selection of photos on

my Flickr page

.

Visit site: 

Photos From Maundy Thursday…

From darkness to light

Thumbnail

Happy Easter to one and all!! And what a beautiful season it’s been.

This has also been a heavy couple of weeks for all students I suppose. It ain’t getting any easier for me, with 2 big papers and one smaller one due next week. Unfortunately, being in a non religious university means that they don’t give a damn if it’s Holy week or not, they still expect people to be in class, hand in essays etc…c’est la vie.

Anyways, Matthew (my brother Jesuit and the guy with a room next to mine)and I were talking this week, as were slaving over our papers, and at one point, he just said rather bitterly “It’s HOLY WEEK..I SHOULD NOT BE DOING THIS. I SHOULD BE PRAYING”. Definitely a sentiment I felt as well considering how prayerful my holy week was in Wiky last year…I didn’t feel as connected to the holiest season in our calendar this year. Instead, I locked myself in my room and did lots of research. The plus side of course, was having the opportunity to do discover the wonderful library at the University. Apparently, the main library at t he U of T is one of the largest in the world… but the building itself is freekish:


I guess you can’t see it too well from this picture, but it’s supposed to be some kind of giant turkey, or peacock. A monstrosity of a building in the eyes of many, but I’m not complaining. First off,
I don’t need to use that library that often. The ones from the Toronto School of theology -there are maybe 5 theological libraries- serve me very well!! This means, I’ve never had trouble getting the books I needed for research so far…and this week, I got to spend some time in the rare books library and even took a picture of it. Quite stunning, compared to the rest of the library!! I got to spend the afternoon of Holy Thursday reading a book there -you’re not allowed to take books out of the Rare books library..you have to read them there!-

But despite academia being at the centre of my life, as a Catholic (and even more so as a Jesuit), it’s impossible for me to avoid the movement of holy week. Even though my prayer was not as rich as last year, I still was incredibly inspired by the services -especially the Easter Vigil one on Saturday night, which lasted almost 3 hours, and ended around midnight and was incredibly moving.-. But the most symbolic moment for me was on Good Friday at night, when we celebrated what is known as Tenebrae. In the timeline of the Triduum, -the 3 days before easter, so Holy Thursday, Good Friday and the Easter Vigil on Saturday- this is a powerful prayer, where we celebrate Christ descending into Hell, or Sheol or whatever you want to call it, and conquering death. This is not necessarily a celebration that is scriptural, but the idea of Jesus descending among the dead is part most Credes in Christianity.

I’ve probably celebrated this before, but I had no recollection of ever having done so…so it was a very powerful service for me. The picture I took is from behind our chapel window in our house. The way it works is that there are 7 candels that our lit on the altar. As we read various passages from the bible together, after each passage, one of the candles is extinguished….until we’re in complete darkness. We stay there for a few minutes, meditating on what we’ve heard, on what it means to us to proclaim in our Crede every Sunday that Christ went into hell to conquer death on our behalf.

It may not seem like much, but to me this is the most extraordinary part of the hole Easter season. We contemplate darkness, so we can receive the light that Christ will bring on Easter morning. And we do need to enter the Tenebrae in order to appreciate the glory of His light even more. Of course, we don’t celebrate the light till 24 h ours laster, but maybe that’s the whole point. Easter gives us an opportunity to contemplate the whole passage from darkness to light over a period of time, so that we can understand that there will be tremendous darkness in our own life at times, and that we need to receive it with the hope that it won’t last foreever. That Christ’s light triumphs over everything…even our struggles with paper writting (-;

Visit link:  

From darkness to light

The Ordination of Married Men to the Priesthood












































Many Roman Catholics in the Western (Latin) Church have been discovering more about the fact that married priests have served in the Eastern Churches since the time of the Apostles and there are now again married priests in the West or Latin Rite from a variety of backgrounds.

Those Eastern Churches which have come into full communion with Rome over the past 500 years have all had married priests along with celibate clergy. They are fully Catholic.

The question has arisen: Since there is a long and continuous history of married priesthood in communion with Rome both East and West and there are at the moment many married priests in the Latin Rite (Anglicans and others) who have been dispensed from the rule of celibacy why should this practice not continue?
Here are some thoughts on the ordination of married men that have been shared, in part, on other blogs.
History, Development and Anglicanorum Coetibus
For the ordinariates the rules regarding the ordination of married men to the priesthood are defined constitutionally in Anglicanorum Coetibus (AC) section VI parts 1 and 2 (see below).
The first principle is that the norm of celibacy for priests of the Latin rite (in which Anglican ordinariates exist) remains the rule in the Western Church.
The provision for derogation from the rule in individual cases has been widely applied in the UK ordinariate to married men in the past few months i.e. “for the admission of married men to the order of presbyter on a case by case basis, according to objective criteria approved by the Holy See.”
There appears to be no limit or timeline attached to this as yet. Nor does section VI part 2 (as distinct from part 1) refer exclusively to men currently in Anglican orders but simply “for the admission of married men to the order of presbyter on a case by case basis.”


The important question arises: Are married priests as well as married deacons (currently allowed in the Latin Rite generally) part of the continuing Anglican patrimony?
A thoughtful and considerate discussion of this question needs to take place as the ordinariates establish their distinctive culture within the Catholic Church.
With regard to the ongoing process of discerning vocations to the priesthood within the ordinariates, the Complementary Norms published with AC state:
In consideration of Anglican ecclesial tradition and practice, the Ordinary may present to the Holy Father a request for the admission of married men to the presbyterate in the Ordinariate, after a process of discernment based on objective criteria and the needs of the Ordinariate.
The objective criteria referred to in the constitution will spell out the requirements for future candidates more specifically. It would be unlikely that disciplinary criteria would abrogate the intention of the apostolic constitution to allow for the continuing right of each ordinary to petition the Holy Father on the basis of an already established practice of admitting married men to the presbyterate.
Pope Benedict has readily allowed such petitions in dozens of cases already at the recommendation of Mgr. Newton, the UK ordinary.
Precedent is important. The patrimony question remains to be defined in this as in other areas.
ANGLICANORUM COETIBUS
VI. § 1. Those who ministered as Anglican deacons, priests, or bishops, and who fulfil the requisites established by canon law and are not impeded by irregularities or other impediments may be accepted by the Ordinary as candidates for Holy Orders in the Catholic Church. In the case of married ministers, the norms established in the Encyclical Letter of Pope Paul VI Sacerdotalis coelibatus, n. 42 and in the Statement In June are to be observed. Unmarried ministers must submit to the norm of clerical celibacy of CIC can. 277, §1.

§ 2. The Ordinary, in full observance of the discipline of celibate clergy in the Latin Church, as a rule (pro regula) will admit only celibate men to the order of presbyter. He may also petition the Roman Pontiff, as a derogation from can. 277, §1, for the admission of married men to the order of presbyter on a case by case basis, according to objective criteria approved by the Holy See.

Precedent, Celibacy & Sacerdotalis Coelibatus (1967)
If the Holy Spirit prompts and the Church continues to discern, as she does at present, that married men have priestly vocations in the Anglican ordinariates (and other parts of the Catholic Church) and ordinaries continue to apply, the Pope will not hesitate to recognize vocations under the clear provision of AC VI section 2.
Pope Paul’s VI’s 1967 encyclical Sacerdotalis Coelibatus states:
And that the authority of the Church does not hesitate to exercise her power in this matter can be seen from the recent Ecumenical Council, which foresaw the possibility of conferring the holy diaconate on men of mature age who are already married. (83)
Some saw this recognition of diaconal vocations as ‘revolutionary’ in 1967 but married deacons are now a long established principle in the life of the Latin Church which does not undermine the value of celibacy but rather enhances and complements it. The continuation of the married priesthood in Eastern Catholic and Anglican Catholic Ordinariate communities will do likewise.
To complement the freely chosen state of celibacy the encyclical offers a generous consideration of married vocations in another section of the encyclical:
42. In virtue of the fundamental norm of the government of the Catholic Church, to which We alluded above, (82) while on the one hand, the law requiring a freely chosen and perpetual celibacy of those who are admitted to Holy Orders remains unchanged, on the other hand, a study may be allowed of the particular circumstances of married sacred ministers of Churches or other Christian communities separated from the Catholic communion, and of the possibility of admitting to priestly functions those who desire to adhere to the fullness of this communion and to continue to exercise the sacred ministry. The circumstances must be such, however, as not to prejudice the existing discipline regarding celibacy.

Development since Pius XII




The teaching and legislation of Pius XII, John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul II (Pastoral Provision for Anglicans) and now Benedict XVI are generous affirmations of what the Holy Spirit has and is calling married men to in ordained ministry.


Married priests have been and continue to be ordained in the Church since the time of St. Peter. It is difficult, therefore, to make a case that this continuous witness and recent affirmation by five popes can be a threat to the freely chosen gift of celibacy in the East or the West.
As the Church teaches, the gift of celibacy must be freely chosen and it is the more freely chosen by those who are supported by others who have vocations to marriage. There is no mutual exclusivity. There is no threat since both states for priests are affirmed by the Holy Spirit and confirmed by the Holy Father.
As Blessed John Henry Newman has taught us, true development meets the criteria of growth within the tradition. The tradition must and will grow as perfect love casts out fear. Celibacy has nothing to fear from the long and continuous witness of the married priesthood . . . and the Church has every blessing to gain through the continued support offered by those who are married for our brothers called to celibacy and vice versa.
Some Final Thoughts
In 1951 married priests were again formally ordained in the Western (Latin) Church, with papal dispensation, during the pontificate of Pope Pius XII. This first pastoral provision was aimed at High Church Lutheran clergy in Germany concerned about the union the German Lutheran Church had arranged with the Protestant German Calvinistic Church. As recently as this year, a former Lutheran pastor was ordained: Fr. Harm Klüting.
The remarkable thing about the Pope Paul’s 1967 encyclical is that it actually says, with regard to men coming from Anglican and other ecclesial communities not in communion with Rome, that they may: “continue to exercise the sacred ministry.” The words “to continue” constitute a profound affirmation of ministry and a clear statement that the ministry of married men is to continue within ecclesial communities in communion with Rome.
It is clear about the fact that married men have been and continue to be engaged in the sacred ministry along with and as a complement to celibate clergy. This was so in the early centuries of the Western Church and now has been increasingly recognized for well over half a century in the West.
Vatican II, initiated by Pope John XXIII, opened the door to ecumenical discussion with Anglicans and others leading to the ARCIC talks under Paul VI. These conversations many credit with leading to the welcoming of Anglicans and the ordination of married Anglican priests for the Anglican Use in the 1980s.
It is also clear, that the encyclical allowed an obviously successful “study” which resulted in the Pastoral Provision of John Paul II. The experience of individual married clergy received, ordained and leading Anglican Use parishes has now brought us to the constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus. It is indeed a remarkably clear path.
Why, if the ministry of married priests continues successfully as it is now begun in the ordinariates, would such ministry be said later to be only provisional?
Again, why would approval for ordination of married men be removed from Anglican ordinariates when there is provision for the married priesthood elsewhere in the Catholic Church and when such ministry has never been absent from the life of the Church?
I understand the deep concern for the vocation of celibacy which the whole Church cherishes but not the fearfulness of what the Church has approved with regard to other vocations. We are simply attempting to read the constitution and to understand it in light of actual developments in the Church; surely this is what Newman advocated.
The provision for married priests is not only established but married clergy support those who are called to celibacy and are potentially of great benefit to Latin dioceses. Married ordinariate priests will assist in the great pastoral challenges facing other overworked Latin rite priests because they can assist in Latin parishes as priests of the Western Church. There is, then, every practical reason for the provision and no significant theological, pastoral, traditional or constitutional obstacle.
In addition, and in the experience of many, clergy wives have been a great boon and support to celibate clergy. Some of our closest relationships have been those of mutual support with people called to celibate ministry, both men and women. It is obvious to many that celibates often greatly appreciate the role of clergy wives who are a gift to the Church in their own vocations as pointed out elsewhere on this blog.
The development of ordinariates including both celibate and married priests is now the practice of the Western Church. These are developing in the spirit of Blessed John H. Newman who opposed liberalism though he himself was charged with being a modernist.

Newman saw clearly, however, that the best defence against revolution was a measured, prayerful and considered development of the Church’s doctrine and discipline based upon long established principles and practices. Clearly the Holy Father agrees with Newman, as have his immediate predecessors.

Link:  

The Ordination of Married Men to the Priesthood

The Easter Vigil: Catechumens, Candidates, and Everyone!

Thumbnail

Dear Erin, Gina, Jen, Michael, Paolo, and Samantha,

It’s going to be a long night! Yet the Missal says that the homily—even if brief—is not to be omitted tonight. I’m sure that rule was made mainly for your sake. You, who are about to be baptized, deserve some words of encouragement as you take the final step into a new life.

For my birthday, my mother took me to see the Wizard of Oz, with live music provided by the Vancouver Symphony. It might seem an unusual present for a man my age, but Mom knew that the annual appearance of the Wizard of Oz on TV was one of the central events of my childhood.

If you’ve seen this classic film, you know it begins in black and white. Only when Dorothy opens the door to Oz does it change into rich and vibrant colour.

However, we were the last kids on the block to have a colour TV, so we didn’t get the benefit of Technicolor for some years. But it was a great movie even in black and white.

The liturgy tonight makes much of the passage from darkness to light. This may leave some of you wondering whether the Church thinks your life was black without baptism. I don’t think that’s the best way to look at it. Better we should see baptism as opening a door to beauties you have not seen, joys you have not imagined, and peace you have not felt.

The Resurrection of Jesus was almost too much for Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome. They were alarmed. They were seized by terror and amazement. They were afraid. Not at all what you’d expect—but there was a reason. On that first Easter morning, there was no Church to help them take it in; there was yet no community of believers to help them sort out what had happened; since they were the first to hear the news, they had to figure out its meaning on their own.

Erin, Gina, Jen, Michael, Paolo, and Samantha, you will never need to be alarmed, or terrified, or afraid at the mighty works of God. We are here to help you take it in, to join you in faith, and to encourage you at every step of your walk as Christians. Amazed you may certainly be, but we are amazed along with you—amazed by God’s goodness to you, and amazed by your generous response.

Carolyn, Matthew, Miranda and Suzanne, tonight three of you will enter into full communion with the Catholic Church; all four of you will then complete the sacraments of Christian initiation. Together with our six newly baptized, you will be confirmed and will receive Holy Communion for the first time. But before you celebrate these sacraments, you will recall and renew your own baptism and its central importance in your lives. In our second reading, St. Paul tells us that we are baptized precisely so we can share in His resurrection from the dead. And he spells out what this means: United to the death of Jesus by our baptism, we walk in newness of life.

You began a journey at baptism, and it’s far from over. But a new and wonderful part of the journey begins tonight with these sacraments. They will help you to walk in newness of life every day from now until you inherit the life that never ends. And the Church will offer you roadmaps that not only help you to stay on the right path but also to avoid the potholes and pitfalls that may appear along the way.

And what about the rest of the congregation? Haven’t I something to say to you?

No! Our brothers and sisters Erin, Gina, Jen, Michael, Paolo, Samantha, Carolyn, Matthew, Miranda and Suzanne are your homily. They are living and breathing reminders that Christ has risen and that He has risen in power. The resurrection is not just history—it is victory, victory that these men and women are claiming as their own.

When married couples go to a wedding, they often think about the day of their own marriage; when I attend an ordination to the priesthood, I recall mine.

Most of us were baptized as infants and so can’t remember it; but all of us can see in the faces of our new Christians and Catholics the devotion of our First Communion and the zeal we felt at Confirmation. Their public commitment as adult converts should encourage us to renew our baptismal vows as if for the first time.

Tonight, become part of the action. Let what you see and hear during this solemn liturgy move you to a deep and personal response. With all your heart, “give thanks to the Lord for He is good;” celebrate His triumph and renew your own confidence, for we shall not die, but live, and recount the deeds of the Lord.

View original article: 

The Easter Vigil: Catechumens, Candidates, and Everyone!

Easter Morning Mass : Let’s Get Serious

Last night I baptized a young couple who are getting married in December. I also baptized the groom from a wedding I performed last summer. So I thought I’d start my Easter homily with a story about courtship.

A young man put his arm around his girl friend. “I adore you,” he said. “I love you, I need you, I can’t live without you.”

She pushed him aside and said “Tommy, I don’t want to get serious.”

“Who’s serious?” he replied.

In our personal relationships we do sometimes use language carelessly. There was another young man who wrote his girlfriend an impassioned love letter.

“Dearest Susan,” he wrote. “I would swim the mighty ocean for one glance of your lovely eyes. I would walk through a wall of fire for one touch of your delicate hand. I would cross the deepest river, climb the highest mountain for a single word from your tender lips. With love, your faithful Arnold. P.S. See you Saturday if it doesn’t snow.”

I’m afraid that we can sometimes be a bit like those half-hearted Romeos when it comes to our relationship with God. We tell God we love him, but when push comes to shove, we don’t want to get serious.

Fortunately, God is very, very serious about us. And he knows us very well. He knows we’re weak and need constant help to stay focused and committed to our relationship with him. Through his Church, he gives us an annual opportunity to get back to the basics: every year we renew our baptismal promises at Easter, the heart of our faith.

We could, of course, renew our commitment to Christ any old time. But at Easter we do so with particular awareness of what baptism means—how it liberates from darkness, how it leads from death to life. With the Easter Alleluias ringing in our ears, we’re not likely to forget that our baptism is a baptism into Christ’s death, giving us a share in Christ’s resurrection.

Today at Masses throughout the world, Christians will renew their baptismal vows and profess their baptismal faith. We get a chance to answer “I do” to the most important questions we’ll ever be asked.

Over the centuries, baptism became routine in many cultures. In some countries, even today, almost everyone is a baptized Catholic. Baptism’s just a given.

But it wasn’t always so. The first Christians faced the hostility of their fellow Jews. For generations after that they were persecuted cruelly by the Roman emperors. To receive baptism was to accept the real possibility of martyrdom.

Later in history it wasn’t baptism that cost men and women their lives or their livelihoods, but baptism in the Catholic Church. Persecution of Catholics was a very real fact of life for centuries in many European countries, and our fellow Catholics are dying as we speak in such places as Sudan and Iraq, and gravely discriminated against in China and elsewhere.

We are not in Sudan or Iraq or even in one of the Arabian states where baptism is a crime. But it takes courage to be baptized even in Canada—not physical courage, perhaps, but moral courage: the courage to be thought odd, out-of-step, old-fashioned.

And, for some, the courage to accept consequences. Many professionals will face increasing pressures in the coming years as law, politics, and medicine become more and more hostile to the serious Christian. The days of the comfortable pew are long gone, and the cost of discipleship is increasing by the day.

Can Christian faith really be worth the cost?

This morning’s Gospel gives three answers to the question. First, faith in Christ gives hope to the hopeless.

Peter and John and Mary Magdalene enter the garden dejected and bereaved. They leave convinced, ready to proclaim “I have seen the Lord.”

To meet the Lord, as Mary Magdalene did, to see Him risen from the dead, victor over the worst man could do, builds a fire within our hearts that cannot be quenched by hatred, hunger or disease.

Second, faith in Christ and in His Word gives us the promise of glory. Peter and John and Mary Magdalene invite us ‘to see and to believe’—to understand the Scripture and its promises.

Jesus rose from the dead so that we might have the courage to be baptized into his death and thus share his life. “When Christ who is your life is revealed,” St. Paul writes, “then you also will be revealed with him in glory.”

Thirdly, faith conquers our deepest fear, the fear of death.

Jesus did not rise from the dead to prove a point; He did not rise from the dead to prove his enemies wrong. He rose that we might share His victory over death. Mary Magdalene arrived weeping inconsolably; she left with her tears wiped away by the Risen Lord.

Easter is about life, about victory, about freedom. Baptism is about life, about victory and about freedom. It is baptism that makes us an Easter people, dead to sin, alive to Jesus.

During Holy Week we celebrated the funeral of John Marshall, a pillar of our parish for many years. It could have been a very sad day, a dark day. But the family members filling the first three pews made it feel like Easter; the women had chose to dress in bright pastel colours, Easter colours; and the men were splendid in military and police dress uniforms.

In fact, almost the only man in the funeral party who wasn’t in uniform was a WestJet pilot, who explained he couldn’t wear his since he forgot to bring enough snack mix for everyone in church.

That is how people face death when they live in the truth of baptism. Easter for the baptized is not long-ago and far away; it is here, it is now: hope for the hopeless, a promise of glory, and victory over all that oppresses us, especially sin and death.

In a few moments you will have a special opportunity to renew your hope, to claim the promise, and to share in Christ’s victory.

Brother and sisters, let’s get serious. We have been raised with Christ in baptism. So let us “seek the things that are above, where Christ is”—this Easter day, and every day.

View original article: 

Easter Morning Mass : Let’s Get Serious

Homily from April 8, 2012: Merry… Easter!!

Taken from - 

Homily from April 8, 2012: Merry… Easter!!

CATHOLIC NEWS WORLD : EASTER SUNDAY APRIL 8, 2012

Information:

Feast Day: April 8
Born: 12 July 1751 at Cuvilly,France
Died: 8 April 1816 at Namur, Belgium
Canonized: 22 June 1969 by Pope Paul VI
Patron of: against poverty, bodily ills, impoverishment, poverty, sick
people, sickness

Foundress, and first superior-general of the Congregation of
the Sisters of Notre Dame of Namur, born 12 July, 1751, at Cuvilly, a village of
Picardy, in the Diocese of Beauvais and the Department of Oise, France; died 8
April, 1816, at the motherhouse of her institute, Namur, Belgium. She was the
sixth of seven children of Jean-François Billiart and his wife,
Marie-Louise-Antoinette Debraine. The childhood of Julie was remarkable; at the
age of seven, she knew the catechism by heart, and used to gather her little
companions around her to hear them recite it and to explain it to them. Her
education was confined to the rudiments obtained at the village school which was
kept by her uncle, Thibault Guilbert. In spiritual things her progress was so
rapid that the parish priest, M. Dangicourt, allowed her to make her First
Communion and to be confirmed at the age of nine years. At this time she made a
vow of chastity. Misfortunes overtook the Billiart family when Julie was
sixteen, and she gave herself generously to the aid of her parents, working in
the fields with the reapers. She was held in such high esteem for her virtue and
piety as to be commonly called, “the saint of Cuvilly”. When twenty-two years
old, a nervous shock, occasioned by a pistol-shot fired at her father by some
unknown enemy, brought on a paralysis of the lower limbs, which in a few years
confined her to her bed a helpless cripple, and thus she remained for twenty-two
years. During this time, when she received Holy Communion daily, Julie exercised
an uncommon gift of prayer, spending four or five hours a day in contemplation.
The rest of her time was occupied in making linens and laces for the alter and
in catechizing the village children whom she gathered around her bed, giving
special attention to those who were preparing for their First
Communion.

At Amiens, where Julie Billiart had been compelled to take
refuge with Countess Baudoin during the troublesome times of the French
Revolution, she met Françoise Blin de Bourdon, Viscountess of Gizaincourt, who
was destined to be her co-laborer in the great work as yet unknown to either of
them. The Viscountess Blin de Bourdon was thirty-eight years old at the time of
her meeting with Julie, and had spent her youth in piety and good works; she had
been imprisoned with all of her family during the Reign of Terror, and had
escaped death only by the fall of Robespierre. She was not at first attracted by
the almost speechless paralytic, but by degrees grew to love and admire the
invalid for her wonderful gifts of soul. A little company of young and high-born
ladies, friends of the viscountess, was formed around the couch of “the saint”.
Julie taught them how to lead the interior life, while they devoted themselves
generously to the cause of God and His poor. Though they attempted all the
exercises of an active community life, some of the elements of stability must
have been wanting, for these first disciples dropped off until none was left but
Françoise Blin de Bourdon. She was never to be separated from Julie, and with
her in 1803, in obedience to Father Varin, superior of the Fathers of the Faith,
and under the auspices of the Bishop of Amiens, the foundation was laid of the
Institute of the Sisters of Notre Dame, a society which had for its primary
object the salvation of poor children. Several young persons offered themselves
to assist the two superiors. The first pupils were eight orphans. On the feast
of the Sacred Heart, 1 June, 1804, Mother Julie, after a novena made in
obedience to her confessor, was cured of paralysis. The first vows of religion
were made on 15 October, 1804 by Julie Billiart, Françoise Blin de Bourdon,
Victoire Leleu, and Justine Garson, and their family names were changed to names
of saints. They proposed for their lifework the Christian education of girls,
and the training of religious teachers who should go wherever their services
were asked for. Father Varin gave the community a provisional rule by way of
probation, which was so far-sighted that its essentials have never been changed.
In view of the extension of the institute, he would have it governed by a
superior-general, charged with visiting the houses, nominating the local
superiors, corresponding with the members dispersed in the different convents,
and assigning the revenues of the society. The characteristic devotions of the
Sisters of Notre Dame were established by the foundress from the beginning. She
was original in doing away with the time-honored distinction between choir
sisters and lay sisters, but this perfect equality of rank did not in any way
prevent her from putting each sister to the work for which her capacity and
education fitted her. She attached great importance to the formation of the
sisters destined for the schools, and in this she was ably assisted by Mother
St. Joseph (Françoise Blin de Bourdon), who had herself received an excellent
education.

When the congregation of the Sisters of Notre Dame was
approved by an imperial decree dated 19 June, 1806, it numbered thirty members,
In that and the following years, foundations were made in various towns of
France and Belgium, the most important being those at Ghent and Namur, of which
the latter house Mother St. Joseph was the first superior. This spread of the
institute beyond the Diocese of Amiens cost the foundress the greatest sorrow of
her life. In the absence of Father Varin from that city, the confessor of the
community, the Abbé de Sambucy de St. Estève, a man of superior intelligence and
attainments but enterprising and injudicious, endeavored to change the rule and
fundamental constitutions of the new congregation so as to bring it into harmony
with the ancient monastic orders. He so far influenced the bishop. Mgr.
Demandolx, that Mother Julie had soon no alternative but to leave the Diocese of
Amiens, relying upon the goodwill of Mgr. Pisani de la Gaude, bishop of Namur,
who had invited her to make his episcopal city the center of her congregation,
should a change become necessary. In leaving Amiens, Mother Julie laid the case
before all her subjects and told them they were perfectly free to remain or to
follow her. All but two chose to go with her, and thus, in themid-winter of
1809, the convent of Namur became the motherhouse of the institute and is so
still. Mgr. Demandolx, soon undeceived, made all the amends in his power,
entreating Mother Julie to return to Amiens and rebuild her institute. She did
indeed return, but after a vain struggle to find subjects or revenues, went back
to Namur. The seven years of life that remained to her were spent in forming her
daughters to solid piety and the interior spirit, of which she was herself the
model. Mgr. De Broglie, bishop of Ghent, said of her that she saved more souls
by her inner life of union with God than by her outward apostolate. She received
special supernatural favors and unlooked-for aid in peril and need. In the space
of twelve years (1804 – 1816) Mother Julie founded fifteen convents, made one
hundred and twenty journeys, many of them long and toilsome, and carried on a
close correspondence with her spiritual daughters. Hundreds of these letters are
preserved in the motherhouse. In 1815 Belgium was the battlefield of the
Napoleonic wars, and the mother-general suffered great anxiety, as several of
her convents were in the path of the armies, but they escaped injury. In
January, 1816, she was taken ill, and after three months of pain borne in
silence and patience, she died with the Magnificat on her lips. The fame of her
sanctity spread abroad and was confirmed by several miracles. The process of her
beatification, begun in 1881, was completed in 1906 by the decree of Pope Pius X
dated 13 May, declaring her Blessed. [Note: She was canonized in 1969 by Pope
Paul VI.]

St. Julie’s predominating trait in the spiritual order was
her ardent charity, springing from a lively faith and manifesting itself in her
thirst for suffering and her zeal for souls. Her whole soul was echoed in the
simple and naove formula which was continually on her lips and pen: “Oh, qu’il
est bon, le bon Dieu” (How good God is). She possessed all the qualities of a
perfect superior, and inspired her subjects with filial confidence and tender
affection.

(Taken From Catholic Encyclopedia)

SOURCE:
EWTN.COM

Continued - 

CATHOLIC NEWS WORLD : EASTER SUNDAY APRIL 8, 2012

CATHOLIC NEWS WORLD : HOLY SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 2012

Thumbnail

35 Let sinners be consumed from
the earth, and let the wicked be no more! Bless the LORD, O my soul! Praise the
LORD! –

Genesis
22:
1 – 18


1 After these things God tested
Abraham, and said to him, “Abraham!” And he said, “Here am I.”
2 He said, “Take your son, your
only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Mori’ah, and offer him
there as a burnt offering upon one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.”
3 So Abraham rose early in the
morning, saddled his ass, and took two of his young men with him, and his son
Isaac; and he cut the wood for the burnt offering, and arose and went to the
place of which God had told him.
4 On the third day Abraham
lifted up his eyes and saw the place afar off.
5 Then Abraham said to his young
men, “Stay here with the ass; I and the lad will go yonder and worship, and come
again to you.”
6 And Abraham took the wood of
the burnt offering, and laid it on Isaac his son; and he took in his hand the
fire and the knife. So they went both of them together.
7 And Isaac said to his father
Abraham, “My father!” And he said, “Here am I, my son.” He said, “Behold, the
fire and the wood; but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?”
8 Abraham said, “God will
provide himself the lamb for a burnt offering, my son.” So they went both of
them together.
9 When they came to the place of
which God had told him, Abraham built an altar there, and laid the wood in
order, and bound Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar, upon the wood.
10 Then Abraham put forth his
hand, and took the knife to slay his son.
11 But the angel of the LORD
called to him from heaven, and said, “Abraham, Abraham!” And he said, “Here am
I.”
12 He said, “Do not lay your hand
on the lad or do anything to him; for now I know that you fear God, seeing you
have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.”
13 And Abraham lifted up his eyes
and looked, and behold, behind him was a ram, caught in a thicket by his horns;
and Abraham went and took the ram, and offered it up as a burnt offering instead
of his son.
14 So Abraham called the name of
that place The LORD will provide; as it is said to this day, “On the mount of
the LORD it shall be provided.”
15 And the angel of the LORD
called to Abraham a second time from heaven,
16 and said, “By myself I have
sworn, says the LORD, because you have done this, and have not withheld your
son, your only son,
17 I will indeed bless you, and I
will multiply your descendants as the stars of heaven and as the sand which is
on the seashore. And your descendants shall possess the gate of their enemies,
18 and by your descendants shall
all the nations of the earth bless themselves, because you have obeyed my
voice.”

Psalms
16:
5, 8 – 11


5 The LORD is my chosen portion
and my cup; thou holdest my lot.
8 I keep the LORD always before
me; because he is at my right hand, I shall not be moved.
9 Therefore my heart is glad,
and my soul rejoices; my body also dwells secure.
10 For thou dost not give me up
to Sheol, or let thy godly one see the Pit.
11 Thou dost show me the path of
life; in thy presence there is fulness of joy, in thy right hand are pleasures
for evermore.

Exodus
14:
15 – 31


15 The LORD said to Moses, “Why
do you cry to me? Tell the people of Israel to go forward.
16 Lift up your rod, and stretch
out your hand over the sea and divide it, that the people of Israel may go on
dry ground through the sea.
17 And I will harden the hearts
of the Egyptians so that they shall go in after them, and I will get glory over
Pharaoh and all his host, his chariots, and his horsemen.
18 And the Egyptians shall know
that I am the LORD, when I have gotten glory over Pharaoh, his chariots, and his
horsemen.”
19 Then the angel of God who went
before the host of Israel moved and went behind them; and the pillar of cloud
moved from before them and stood behind them,
20 coming between the host of
Egypt and the host of Israel. And there was the cloud and the darkness; and the
night passed without one coming near the other all night.
21 Then Moses stretched out his
hand over the sea; and the LORD drove the sea back by a strong east wind all
night, and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided.
22 And the people of Israel went
into the midst of the sea on dry ground, the waters being a wall to them on
their right hand and on their left.
23 The Egyptians pursued, and
went in after them into the midst of the sea, all Pharaoh’s horses, his
chariots, and his horsemen.
24 And in the morning watch the
LORD in the pillar of fire and of cloud looked down upon the host of the
Egyptians, and discomfited the host of the Egyptians,
25 clogging their chariot wheels
so that they drove heavily; and the Egyptians said, “Let us flee from before
Israel; for the LORD fights for them against the Egyptians.”
26 Then the LORD said to Moses,
“Stretch out your hand over the sea, that the water may come back upon the
Egyptians, upon their chariots, and upon their horsemen.”
27 So Moses stretched forth his
hand over the sea, and the sea returned to its wonted flow when the morning
appeared; and the Egyptians fled into it, and the LORD routed the Egyptians in
the midst of the sea.
28 The waters returned and
covered the chariots and the horsemen and all the host of Pharaoh that had
followed them into the sea; not so much as one of them remained.
29 But the people of Israel
walked on dry ground through the sea, the waters being a wall to them on their
right hand and on their left.
30 Thus the LORD saved Israel
that day from the hand of the Egyptians; and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon
the seashore.
31 And Israel saw the great work
which the LORD did against the Egyptians, and the people feared the LORD; and
they believed in the LORD and in his servant Moses.

Exodus
15:
1 – 6, 17 – 18


1 Then Moses and the people of
Israel sang this song to the LORD, saying, “I will sing to the LORD, for he has
triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea.
2 The LORD is my strength and my
song, and he has become my salvation; this is my God, and I will praise him, my
father’s God, and I will exalt him.
3 The LORD is a man of war; the
LORD is his name.
4 “Pharaoh’s chariots and his
host he cast into the sea; and his picked officers are sunk in the Red
Sea.
5 The floods cover them; they
went down into the depths like a stone.
6 Thy right hand, O LORD,
glorious in power, thy right hand, O LORD, shatters the enemy.
17 Thou wilt bring them in, and
plant them on thy own mountain, the place, O LORD, which thou hast made for thy
abode, the sanctuary, LORD, which thy hands have established.
18 The LORD will reign for ever
and ever.”

Isaiah
54:
5 – 14


5 For your Maker is your
husband, the LORD of hosts is his name; and the Holy One of Israel is your
Redeemer, the God of the whole earth he is called.
6 For the LORD has called you
like a wife forsaken and grieved in spirit, like a wife of youth when she is
cast off, says your God.
7 For a brief moment I forsook
you, but with great compassion I will gather you.
8 In overflowing wrath for a
moment I hid my face from you, but with everlasting love I will have compassion
on you, says the LORD, your Redeemer.
9 “For this is like the days of
Noah to me: as I swore that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth,
so I have sworn that I will not be angry with you and will not rebuke you.
10 For the mountains may depart
and the hills be removed, but my steadfast love shall not depart from you, and
my covenant of peace shall not be removed, says the LORD, who has compassion on
you.
11 “O afflicted one,
storm-tossed, and not comforted, behold, I will set your stones in antimony, and
lay your foundations with sapphires.
12 I will make your pinnacles of
agate, your gates of carbuncles, and all your wall of precious stones.
13 All your sons shall be taught
by the LORD, and great shall be the prosperity of your sons.
14 In righteousness you shall be
established; you shall be far from oppression, for you shall not fear; and from
terror, for it shall not come near you.
Psalms
30:
2, 4 – 6, 11 – 13


2 O LORD my God, I cried to thee
for help, and thou hast healed me.
4 Sing praises to the LORD, O
you his saints, and give thanks to his holy name.
5 For his anger is but for a
moment, and his favor is for a lifetime. Weeping may tarry for the night, but
joy comes with the morning.
6 As for me, I said in my
prosperity, “I shall never be moved.”
11 Thou hast turned for me my
mourning into dancing; thou hast loosed my sackcloth and girded me with
gladness,
12 that my soul may praise thee
and not be silent. O LORD my God, I will give thanks to thee for ever.
-
Isaiah
55:
1 – 11


1 “Ho, every one who thirsts,
come to the waters; and he who has no money, come, buy and eat! Come, buy wine
and milk without money and without price.
2 Why do you spend your money
for that which is not bread, and your labor for that which does not satisfy?
Hearken diligently to me, and eat what is good, and delight yourselves in
fatness.
3 Incline your ear, and come to
me; hear, that your soul may live; and I will make with you an everlasting
covenant, my steadfast, sure love for David.
4 Behold, I made him a witness
to the peoples, a leader and commander for the peoples.
5 Behold, you shall call nations
that you know not, and nations that knew you not shall run to you, because of
the LORD your God, and of the Holy One of Israel, for he has glorified you.
6 “Seek the LORD while he may be
found, call upon him while he is near;
7 let the wicked forsake his
way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; let him return to the LORD, that he
may have mercy on him, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.
8 For my thoughts are not your
thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, says the LORD.
9 For as the heavens are higher
than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your
thoughts.
10 “For as the rain and the snow
come down from heaven, and return not thither but water the earth, making it
bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,
11 so shall my word be that goes
forth from my mouth; it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish
that which I purpose, and prosper in the thing for which I sent it.
Isaiah
12:
2 – 6


2 “Behold, God is my salvation;
I will trust, and will not be afraid; for the LORD GOD is my strength and my
song, and he has become my salvation.”
3 With joy you will draw water
from the wells of salvation.
4 And you will say in that day:
“Give thanks to the LORD, call upon his name; make known his deeds among the
nations, proclaim that his name is exalted.
5 “Sing praises to the LORD, for
he has done gloriously; let this be known in all the earth.
6 Shout, and sing for joy, O
inhabitant of Zion, for great in your midst is the Holy One of Israel.”
Baruch
3:
9 – 15, 32 – 38


9 Hear the commandments of life,
O Israel; give ear, and learn wisdom!
10 Why is it, O Israel, why is it
that you are in the land of your enemies, that you are growing old in a foreign
country, that you are defiled with the dead,
11 that you are counted among
those in Hades?
12 You have forsaken the fountain
of wisdom.
13 If you had walked in the way
of God, you would be dwelling in peace for ever.
14 Learn where there is wisdom,
where there is strength, where there is understanding, that you may at the same
time discern where there is length of days, and life, where there is light for
the eyes, and peace.
15 Who has found her place? And
who has entered her storehouses?
32 But he who knows all things
knows her, he found her by his understanding. He who prepared the earth for all
time filled it with four-footed creatures;
33 he who sends forth the light,
and it goes, called it, and it obeyed him in fear;
34 the stars shone in their
watches, and were glad; he called them, and they said, “Here we are!” They shone
with gladness for him who made them.
35 This is our God; no other can
be compared to him!
36 He found the whole way to
knowledge, and gave her to Jacob his servant and to Israel whom he loved.
37 Afterward she appeared upon
earth and lived among men.
Baruch
4:
1 – 4


1 She is the book of the
commandments of God, and the law that endures for ever. All who hold her fast
will live, and those who forsake her will die.
2 Turn, O Jacob, and take her;
walk toward the shining of her light.
3 Do not give your glory to
another, or your advantages to an alien people.
4 Happy are we, O Israel, for we
know what is pleasing to God.
Psalms
19:
8 – 11


8 the precepts of the LORD are
right, rejoicing the heart; the commandment of the LORD is pure, enlightening
the eyes;
9 the fear of the LORD is clean,
enduring for ever; the ordinances of the LORD are true, and righteous
altogether.
10 More to be desired are they
than gold, even much fine gold; sweeter also than honey and drippings of the
honeycomb.
11 Moreover by them is thy
servant warned; in keeping them there is great reward.
Ezekiel
36:
16 – 28


16 The word of the LORD came to
me:
17 “Son of man, when the house of
Israel dwelt in their own land, they defiled it by their ways and their doings;
their conduct before me was like the uncleanness of a woman in her impurity.
18 So I poured out my wrath upon
them for the blood which they had shed in the land, for the idols with which
they had defiled it.
19 I scattered them among the
nations, and they were dispersed through the countries; in accordance with their
conduct and their deeds I judged them.
20 But when they came to the
nations, wherever they came, they profaned my holy name, in that men said of
them, `These are the people of the LORD, and yet they had to go out of his
land.’
21 But I had concern for my holy
name, which the house of Israel caused to be profaned among the nations to which
they came.
22 “Therefore say to the house of
Israel, Thus says the Lord GOD: It is not for your sake, O house of Israel, that
I am about to act, but for the sake of my holy name, which you have profaned
among the nations to which you came.
23 And I will vindicate the
holiness of my great name, which has been profaned among the nations, and which
you have profaned among them; and the nations will know that I am the LORD, says
the Lord GOD, when through you I vindicate my holiness before their eyes.
24 For I will take you from the
nations, and gather you from all the countries, and bring you into your own
land.
25 I will sprinkle clean water
upon you, and you shall be clean from all your uncleannesses, and from all your
idols I will cleanse you.
26 A new heart I will give you,
and a new spirit I will put within you; and I will take out of your flesh the
heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.
27 And I will put my spirit
within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes and be careful to observe my
ordinances.
28 You shall dwell in the land
which I gave to your fathers; and you shall be my people, and I will be your
God.
Psalms
51:
12 – 15, 18 – 19


12 Restore to me the joy of thy
salvation, and uphold me with a willing spirit.
13 Then I will teach
transgressors thy ways, and sinners will return to thee.
14 Deliver me from
bloodguiltiness, O God, thou God of my salvation, and my tongue will sing aloud
of thy deliverance.
15 O Lord, open thou my lips, and
my mouth shall show forth thy praise.
18 Do good to Zion in thy good
pleasure; rebuild the walls of Jerusalem,
19 then wilt thou delight in
right sacrifices, in burnt offerings and whole burnt offerings; then bulls will
be offered on thy altar.
Romans
6:
3 – 11


3 Do you not know that all of us
who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death?
4 We were buried therefore with
him by baptism into death, so that as Christ was raised from the dead by the
glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.
5 For if we have been united
with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a
resurrection like his.
6 We know that our old self was
crucified with him so that the sinful body might be destroyed, and we might no
longer be enslaved to sin.
7 For he who has died is freed
from sin.
8 But if we have died with
Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him.
9 For we know that Christ being
raised from the dead will never die again; death no longer has dominion over
him.
10 The death he died he died to
sin, once for all, but the life he lives he lives to God.
11 So you also must consider
yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.
Psalms
118:
1 – 2, 16 – 17, 22 – 23


1 O give thanks to the LORD, for
he is good; his steadfast love endures for ever!
2 Let Israel say, “His steadfast
love endures for ever.”
16 the right hand of the LORD is
exalted, the right hand of the LORD does valiantly!”
17 I shall not die, but I shall
live, and recount the deeds of the LORD.
22 The stone which the builders
rejected has become the head of the corner.
23 This is the LORD’s doing; it
is marvelous in our eyes.
Mark
16:
1 – 7


1 And when the sabbath was past,
Mary Mag’dalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salo’me, bought spices, so
that they might go and anoint him.
2 And very early on the first
day of the week they went to the tomb when the sun had risen.
3 And they were saying to one
another, “Who will roll away the stone for us from the door of the tomb?”
4 And looking up, they saw that
the stone was rolled back; — it was very large.
5 And entering the tomb, they
saw a young man sitting on the right side, dressed in a white robe; and they
were amazed.
6 And he said to them, “Do not
be amazed; you seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has risen, he is
not here; see the place where they laid him.
7 But go, tell his disciples and
Peter that he is going before you to Galilee; there you will see him, as he told
you.”

Taken from:

CATHOLIC NEWS WORLD : HOLY SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 2012

Happy Easter

Thumbnail

View article:  

Happy Easter

2012 Letter #7: Rome on Easter Sunday

Thumbnail

Easter Sunday, April 8, 2012

“Christ Is Risen, As He Said”

Rome was grey and cool this morning, but the sun broke out just before the consecration at Pope Benedict’s Easter Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Square, bathing the square in light, and heat.

Some 200,000 people gathered in and near St. Peter’s Square for Easter Mass at the Vatican. Photo credit: AP/Pier Paolo Cito

Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, one of the Vatican’s top diplomats and the head of the Vatican’s dialogue with Islam seemed to feel not well and could not continue to celebrate the papal Mass this morning.

In fact, one of the two con-celebrants with the Pope, Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, seemed to feel faint, and was helped to a seat near the altar to sit down, and he remained there, unable to complete the celebration of the Mass at the Pope’s side. (I was able to observe the incident from a few yards away.)

The other concelebrant was Cardinal Raymond Burke, an American, who is the head of the Apostolic Signature, the supreme court of appeals in the Catholic Church.

Who is Cardinal Tauran? He is one of the Vatican’s most learned, thoughtful and courageous diplomats. Born on April 3, 1943, he is a relatively young 69 years old. His career in the Church has been almost meteoric. Born and educated in France, he was made the Vatican’s Secretary for Relations with States of the Secretariat of State on December 1, 1990, by Pope John Paul II, at the young age of 47. He received his episcopal consecration on January 6, 1991, from John Paul II himself, with Archbishops Giovanni Battista Re and Justin Francis Rigali serving as co-consecrators, in St. Peter’s Basilica. As Secretary, Tauran  served, in effect, as the “foreign minister” of the Holy See. This put Tauran in the center of a number of tense conflicts, including the conflict bewteen the US-led coalition and Iraq. In regard to that conflict, he repeatedly emphasized the importance of dialogue and the role of the United Nations, and said that “a unilateral war of aggression would constitute a crime against peace and against the Geneva Conventions.”

He was elevated to the cardinalate in 2003, and is the current Cardinal Protodeacon.

Several years ago, he began to suffer from what is diagnosed as Parkinson’s Disease. However, because his condition seemed to be stable or improving, and because of his immense talent, in 2007 Pope Benedict chose him to be President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue in the Roman Curia. In this office he also heads the Commission for Religious Relations with Muslims.

In recent years, Tauran been one of the clearest voices in the Church on behalf of dialogue, especially between the Church and Islam, as a way to increase mutual understanding and avoid tensions and possible bloodshed. Tauran made an historic trip to India last fall, and just a few days ago was in Nigeria for a week, participating in meetings with Muslims and in religious ceremonies in Lagos, Jos, and Kafanchan, where there have been violent clases between Muslims and Christians.

It is perhaps not by chance, then, that among the points touched upon by Pope Benedict was the need for dialogue and peace between Christians and Muslims in Nigeria.

Pope Benedict, though slightly hoarse in comparison to recent days, seemed strong despite a grueling schedule which included his 6-day trip to Mexico and Cuba two weeks ago, then a demanding series of Holy Week liturgies.

There was no homily during the Easter Sunday liturgy, just a moment of silence to reflect on the meaning of the Gospel account of the resurrection.

Then Benedict delivered his “Urbi et Orbi” (“To the city (of Rome) and to the world”) message, precisely at noon, from the main loggia in the middle of the facade of St. Peter’s Basilica, about 20 minutes after the end of the Mass. Here is the complete text of that message.

URBI ET ORBI GREETING OF POPE BENEDICT XVI
ST PETER’S SQUARE
EASTER SUNDAY
8 APRIL 2012

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Rome and throughout the world!

“Surrexit Christus, spes mea” – “Christ, my hope, has risen” (Easter Sequence).

May the jubilant voice of the Church reach all of you with the words which the ancient hymn puts on the lips of Mary Magdalene, the first to encounter the risen Jesus on Easter morning. She ran to the other disciples and breathlessly announced: “I have seen the Lord!” (Jn 20:18). We too, who have journeyed through the desert of Lent and the sorrowful days of the Passion, today raise the cry of victory: “He has risen! He has truly risen!”

Every Christian relives the experience of Mary Magdalene. It involves an encounter which changes our lives: the encounter with a unique Man who lets us experience all God’s goodness and truth, who frees us from evil not in a superficial and fleeting way, but sets us free radically, heals us completely and restores our dignity. This is why Mary Magdalene calls Jesus “my hope”: he was the one who allowed her to be reborn, who gave her a new future, a life of goodness and freedom from evil. “Christ my hope” means that all my yearnings for goodness find in him a real possibility of fulfilment: with him I can hope for a life that is good, full and eternal, for God himself has drawn near to us, even sharing our humanity.

But Mary Magdalene, like the other disciples, was to see Jesus rejected by the leaders of the people, arrested, scourged, condemned to death and crucified. It must have been unbearable to see Goodness in person subjected to human malice, truth derided by falsehood, mercy abused by vengeance. With Jesus’ death, the hope of all those who had put their trust in him seemed doomed. But that faith never completely failed: especially in the heart of the Virgin Mary, Jesus’ Mother, its flame burned even in the dark of night. In this world, hope can not avoid confronting the harshness of evil. It is not thwarted by the wall of death alone, but even more by the barbs of envy and pride, falsehood and violence. Jesus passed through this mortal mesh in order to open a path to the kingdom of life. For a moment Jesus seemed vanquished: darkness had invaded the land, the silence of God was complete, hope a seemingly empty word.

And lo, on the dawn of the day after the Sabbath, the tomb is found empty. Jesus then shows himself to Mary Magdalene, to the other women, to his disciples. Faith is born anew, more alive and strong than ever, now invincible since it is based on a decisive experience: “Death with life contended: combat strangely ended! Life’s own champion, slain, now lives to reign”. The signs of the resurrection testify to the victory of life over death, love over hatred, mercy over vengeance: “The tomb the living did enclose, I saw Christ’s glory as he rose! The angels there attesting, shroud with grave-clothes resting”.

Dear brothers and sisters! If Jesus is risen, then – and only then – has something truly new happened, something that changes the state of humanity and the world. Then he, Jesus, is someone in whom we can put absolute trust; we can put our trust not only in his message but in Jesus himself, for the Risen One does not belong to the past, but is present today, alive. Christ is hope and comfort in a particular way for those Christian communities suffering most for their faith on account of discrimination and persecution. And he is present as a force of hope through his Church, which is close to all human situations of suffering and injustice.

May the risen Christ grant hope to the Middle East and enable all the ethnic, cultural and religious groups in that region to work together to advance the common good and respect for human rights. Particularly in Syria, may there be an end to bloodshed and an immediate commitment to the path of respect, dialogue and reconciliation, as called for by the international community. May the many refugees from that country who are in need of humanitarian assistance find the acceptance and solidarity capable of relieving their dreadful sufferings. May the paschal victory encourage the Iraqi people to spare no effort in pursuing the path of stability and development. In the Holy Land, may Israelis and Palestinians courageously take up anew the peace process.

May the Lord, the victor over evil and death, sustain the Christian communities of the African continent; may he grant them hope in facing their difficulties, and make them peacemakers and agents of development in the societies to which they belong.

May the risen Jesus comfort the suffering populations of the Horn of Africa and favour their reconciliation; may he help the Great Lakes Region, Sudan and South Sudan, and grant their inhabitants the power of forgiveness. In Mali, now experiencing delicate political developments, may the glorious Christ grant peace and stability. To Nigeria, which in recent times has experienced savage terrorist attacks, may the joy of Easter grant the strength needed to take up anew the building of a society which is peaceful and respectful of the religious freedom of its citizens.

Happy Easter to all!

(Following the noontime message to a crowd which spilled over St. Peter’s Square and so must have been more than 200,000, the Pope delivered Easter greetings in 65 languages.)

=====================

“Let There Be Light”

The night before, on Holy Saturday, the Holy Father presided over a majestic 3-hour liturgy inside St. Peter’s Basilica for the vigil of Easter.

(Below is the complete text of the Pope’s Easter Vigil homily.)

One thing I noted in the homily which struck me was the Pope’s use of a quotation of Christ’s words from a non-biblical source. Here is the passage:

“‘Whoever is close to me is close to the fire,’ as Jesus is reported by Origen to have said.” (I have bold-faced the passage in the text below; it is toward the end.)

The use of a citation of Christ’s words from a source outside of the Bible struck me as quite unusual. I am not able now to determine how unusual it is, but I do not recall another instance of it occurring in a papal address.

Usually, all citations of Christ’s words in papal discourses are taken from the scriptures, that is, from the Gospels, or the Epistles.

In this case, the words of Christ cited are not found in any of the Gospels, or Epistles, but only in one of the writings of Origen, a third century Christian theologian who was arguably one of the greatest theologians, and perhaps the greatest theogian, of the early centuries of the Church.

However, as a creative, brilliant theologian, Origen was also quite speculative, and in his speculations, he risked taking certain positions, especially in regard to the universal salvation of all souls, which were later judged to be heterodox or even heretical. And this, tragically, cast a certain shadow on all the great, marvellous corpus of Origen’s writings.

Therefore, Origen has, to my knowledge, not been cited often by previous pontiffs. (If I am wrong on this point, i will be happy to receive correction.)

Benedict XVI, however, has cited Origen on more than one occasion. This alone would be enough to raise some eyebrows, at least a tad. But last night, by citing Origen’s citation of a non-biblical expression of Jesus, Pope Benedict raised  some eyebrows — my own, anyway — a little bit further.

At the very least, what this suggests is that Benedict feels that it is possible that some citations of Christ’s words by early Church Fathers which do not appear anywhere in the Gospels or Epistles are actually worthy of being considered as authentic, or at least valuable and useful. If this is so, we logically must admit the possibility of expanding our search for Christ, for his authentic words, into writings outside of the Gospels and Epistles, which are of course canonical, and authoritative. Others will be more able than I am to comment further on this decision of the Pope, and what it may mean for biblical scholarship and for Christology; for the moment, I simply note that the Pope made this unusual citation.

After the Mass, as the basilica emptied, I was able to greet briefly near the altar a friend from Moscow, Russia, Archpriest Igor Vyzhanov, pastor of the Russian Orthodox Church of St. Catherine of Alexandria, which is on the grounds of the Russian Embassy to Italy. I first met him in 1999, in the Catholic cathedral in Moscow, and was with him when he met Pope John Paul II after a papal general audience in October, 2001.

I also had the privilege of meeting the US Ambassador to the Holy See, Miguel Diaz, and his wife, who also attended the Easter Vigil liturgy.

HOMILY OF POPE BENEDICT XVI
EASTER VIGIL OF THE LORD’S RESURRECTION
SAINT PETER’S BASILICA
7 APRIL 2012

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Easter is the feast of the new creation. Jesus is risen and dies no more. He has opened the door to a new life, one that no longer knows illness and death. He has taken mankind up into God himself. “Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God”, as Saint Paul says in the First Letter to the Corinthians (15:50).

On the subject of Christ’s resurrection and our resurrection, the Church writer Tertullian in the third century was bold enough to write: “Rest assured, flesh and blood, through Christ you have gained your place in heaven and in the Kingdom of God” (CCL II, 994).

A new dimension has opened up for mankind. Creation has become greater and broader. Easter Day ushers in a new creation, but that is precisely why the Church starts the liturgy on this day with the old creation, so that we can learn to understand the new one aright.

At the beginning of the Liturgy of the Word on Easter night, then, comes the account of the creation of the world. Two things are particularly important here in connection with this liturgy.

On the one hand, creation is presented as a whole that includes the phenomenon of time. The seven days are an image of completeness, unfolding in time. They are ordered towards the seventh day, the day of the freedom of all creatures for God and for one another. Creation is therefore directed towards the coming together of God and his creatures; it exists so as to open up a space for the response to God’s great glory, an encounter between love and freedom.

On the other hand, what the Church hears on Easter night is above all the first element of the creation account: “God said, ‘let there be light!’” (Gen 1:3). The creation account begins symbolically with the creation of light. The sun and the moon are created only on the fourth day. The creation account calls them lights, set by God in the firmament of heaven. In this way he deliberately takes away the divine character that the great religions had assigned to them.

No, they are not gods. They are shining bodies created by the one God. But they are preceded by the light through which God’s glory is reflected in the essence of the created being.

What is the creation account saying here? Light makes life possible. It makes encounter possible. It makes communication possible. It makes knowledge, access to reality and to truth, possible. And insofar as it makes knowledge possible, it makes freedom and progress possible. Evil hides. Light, then, is also an expression of the good that both is and creates brightness.

It is daylight, which makes it possible for us to act.

To say that God created light means that God created the world as a space for knowledge and truth, as a space for encounter and freedom, as a space for good and for love. Matter is fundamentally good, being itself is good. And evil does not come from God-made being, rather, it comes into existence through denial. It is a “no”.

At Easter, on the morning of the first day of the week, God said once again: “Let there be light”.

The night on the Mount of Olives, the solar eclipse of Jesus’ passion and death, the night of the grave had all passed.

Now it is the first day once again – creation is beginning anew. “Let there be light”, says God, “and there was light”: Jesus rises from the grave.

Life is stronger than death. Good is stronger than evil. Love is stronger than hate. Truth is stronger than lies.

The darkness of the previous days is driven away the moment Jesus rises from the grave and himself becomes God’s pure light. But this applies not only to him, not only to the darkness of those days.

With the resurrection of Jesus, light itself is created anew. He draws all of us after him into the new light of the resurrection and he conquers all darkness. He is God’s new day, new for all of us.

But how is this to come about? How does all this affect us so that instead of remaining word it becomes a reality that draws us in? Through the sacrament of baptism and the profession of faith, the Lord has built a bridge across to us, through which the new day reaches us.

The Lord says to the newly-baptized: Fiat lux – let there be light. God’s new day – the day of indestructible life, comes also to us. Christ takes you by the hand. From now on you are held by him and walk with him into the light, into real life. For this reason the early Church called baptism photismos – illumination.

Why was this? The darkness that poses a real threat to mankind, after all, is the fact that he can see and investigate tangible material things, but cannot see where the world is going or whence it comes, where our own life is going, what is good and what is evil.

The darkness enshrouding God and obscuring values is the real threat to our existence and to the world in general. If God and moral values, the difference between good and evil, remain in darkness, then all other “lights”, that put such incredible technical feats within our reach, are not only progress but also dangers that put us and the world at risk.

Today we can illuminate our cities so brightly that the stars of the sky are no longer visible. Is this not an image of the problems caused by our version of enlightenment?

With regard to material things, our knowledge and our technical accomplishments are legion, but what reaches beyond, the things of God and the question of good, we can no longer identify.

Faith, then, which reveals God’s light to us, is the true enlightenment, enabling God’s light to break into our world, opening our eyes to the true light.

Dear friends, as I conclude, I would like to add one more thought about light and illumination. On Easter night, the night of the new creation, the Church presents the mystery of light using a unique and very humble symbol: the Paschal candle. This is a light that lives from sacrifice. The candle shines inasmuch as it is burnt up. It gives light, inasmuch as it gives itself.

Thus the Church presents most beautifully the paschal mystery of Christ, who gives himself and so bestows the great light.

Secondly, we should remember that the light of the candle is a fire. Fire is the power that shapes the world, the force of transformation. And fire gives warmth.

Here too the mystery of Christ is made newly visible. Christ, the light, is fire, flame, burning up evil and so reshaping both the world and ourselves. “Whoever is close to me is close to the fire,” as Jesus is reported by Origen to have said. And this fire is both heat and light: not a cold light, but one through which God’s warmth and goodness reach down to us.

The great hymn of the Exsultet, which the deacon sings at the beginning of the Easter liturgy, points us quite gently towards a further aspect. It reminds us that this object, the candle, has its origin in the work of bees. So the whole of creation plays its part.

In the candle, creation becomes a bearer of light. But in the mind of the Fathers, the candle also in some sense contains a silent reference to the Church. The cooperation of the living community of believers in the Church in some way resembles the activity of bees. It builds up the community of light. So the candle serves as a summons to us to become involved in the community of the Church, whose raison d’être is to let the light of Christ shine upon the world.

Let us pray to the Lord at this time that he may grant us to experience the joy of his light; let us pray that we ourselves may become bearers of his light, and that through the Church, Christ’s radiant face may enter our world (cf. LG 1). Amen.

Letter #7: Rome on Easter Sunday

Thumbnail

Easter Sunday, April 8, 2012

“Christ Is Risen, As He Said”

Rome was grey and cool this morning, but the sun broke out just before the consecration at Pope Benedict’s Easter Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Square, bathing the square in light, and heat.

Some 200,000 people gathered in and near St. Peter’s Square for Easter Mass at the Vatican. Photo credit: AP/Pier Paolo Cito

Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, one of the Vatican’s top diplomats and the head of the Vatican’s dialogue with Islam seemed to feel not well and could not continue to celebrate the papal Mass this morning.

In fact, one of the two con-celebrants with the Pope, Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, seemed to feel faint, and was helped to a seat near the altar to sit down, and he remained there, unable to complete the celebration of the Mass at the Pope’s side. (I was able to observe the incident from a few yards away.)

The other concelebrant was Cardinal Raymond Burke, an American, who is the head of the Apostolic Signature, the supreme court of appeals in the Catholic Church.

Who is Cardinal Tauran? He is one of the Vatican’s most learned, thoughtful and courageous diplomats. Born on April 3, 1943, he is a relatively young 69 years old. His career in the Church has been almost meteoric. Born and educated in France, he was made the Vatican’s Secretary for Relations with States of the Secretariat of State on December 1, 1990, by Pope John Paul II, at the young age of 47. He received his episcopal consecration on January 6, 1991, from John Paul II himself, with Archbishops Giovanni Battista Re and Justin Francis Rigali serving as co-consecrators, in St. Peter’s Basilica. As Secretary, Tauran  served, in effect, as the “foreign minister” of the Holy See. This put Tauran in the center of a number of tense conflicts, including the conflict bewteen the US-led coalition and Iraq. In regard to that conflict, he repeatedly emphasized the importance of dialogue and the role of the United Nations, and said that “a unilateral war of aggression would constitute a crime against peace and against the Geneva Conventions.”

He was elevated to the cardinalate in 2003, and is the current Cardinal Protodeacon.

Several years ago, he began to suffer from what is diagnosed as Parkinson’s Disease. However, because his condition seemed to be stable or improving, and because of his immense talent, in 2007 Pope Benedict chose him to be President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue in the Roman Curia. In this office he also heads the Commission for Religious Relations with Muslims.

In recent years, Tauran been one of the clearest voices in the Church on behalf of dialogue, especially between the Church and Islam, as a way to increase mutual understanding and avoid tensions and possible bloodshed. Tauran made an historic trip to India last fall, and just a few days ago was in Nigeria for a week, participating in meetings with Muslims and in religious ceremonies in Lagos, Jos, and Kafanchan, where there have been violent clases between Muslims and Christians.

It is perhaps not by chance, then, that among the points touched upon by Pope Benedict was the need for dialogue and peace between Christians and Muslims in Nigeria.

Pope Benedict, though slightly hoarse in comparison to recent days, seemed strong despite a grueling schedule which included his 6-day trip to Mexico and Cuba two weeks ago, then a demanding series of Holy Week liturgies.

There was no homily during the Easter Sunday liturgy, just a moment of silence to reflect on the meaning of the Gospel account of the resurrection.

Then Benedict delivered his “Urbi et Orbi” (“To the city (of Rome) and to the world”) message, precisely at noon, from the main loggia in the middle of the facade of St. Peter’s Basilica, about 20 minutes after the end of the Mass. Here is the complete text of that message.

URBI ET ORBI GREETING OF POPE BENEDICT XVI
ST PETER’S SQUARE
EASTER SUNDAY
8 APRIL 2012

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Rome and throughout the world!

“Surrexit Christus, spes mea” – “Christ, my hope, has risen” (Easter Sequence).

May the jubilant voice of the Church reach all of you with the words which the ancient hymn puts on the lips of Mary Magdalene, the first to encounter the risen Jesus on Easter morning. She ran to the other disciples and breathlessly announced: “I have seen the Lord!” (Jn 20:18). We too, who have journeyed through the desert of Lent and the sorrowful days of the Passion, today raise the cry of victory: “He has risen! He has truly risen!”

Every Christian relives the experience of Mary Magdalene. It involves an encounter which changes our lives: the encounter with a unique Man who lets us experience all God’s goodness and truth, who frees us from evil not in a superficial and fleeting way, but sets us free radically, heals us completely and restores our dignity. This is why Mary Magdalene calls Jesus “my hope”: he was the one who allowed her to be reborn, who gave her a new future, a life of goodness and freedom from evil. “Christ my hope” means that all my yearnings for goodness find in him a real possibility of fulfilment: with him I can hope for a life that is good, full and eternal, for God himself has drawn near to us, even sharing our humanity.

But Mary Magdalene, like the other disciples, was to see Jesus rejected by the leaders of the people, arrested, scourged, condemned to death and crucified. It must have been unbearable to see Goodness in person subjected to human malice, truth derided by falsehood, mercy abused by vengeance. With Jesus’ death, the hope of all those who had put their trust in him seemed doomed. But that faith never completely failed: especially in the heart of the Virgin Mary, Jesus’ Mother, its flame burned even in the dark of night. In this world, hope can not avoid confronting the harshness of evil. It is not thwarted by the wall of death alone, but even more by the barbs of envy and pride, falsehood and violence. Jesus passed through this mortal mesh in order to open a path to the kingdom of life. For a moment Jesus seemed vanquished: darkness had invaded the land, the silence of God was complete, hope a seemingly empty word.

And lo, on the dawn of the day after the Sabbath, the tomb is found empty. Jesus then shows himself to Mary Magdalene, to the other women, to his disciples. Faith is born anew, more alive and strong than ever, now invincible since it is based on a decisive experience: “Death with life contended: combat strangely ended! Life’s own champion, slain, now lives to reign”. The signs of the resurrection testify to the victory of life over death, love over hatred, mercy over vengeance: “The tomb the living did enclose, I saw Christ’s glory as he rose! The angels there attesting, shroud with grave-clothes resting”.

Dear brothers and sisters! If Jesus is risen, then – and only then – has something truly new happened, something that changes the state of humanity and the world. Then he, Jesus, is someone in whom we can put absolute trust; we can put our trust not only in his message but in Jesus himself, for the Risen One does not belong to the past, but is present today, alive. Christ is hope and comfort in a particular way for those Christian communities suffering most for their faith on account of discrimination and persecution. And he is present as a force of hope through his Church, which is close to all human situations of suffering and injustice.

May the risen Christ grant hope to the Middle East and enable all the ethnic, cultural and religious groups in that region to work together to advance the common good and respect for human rights. Particularly in Syria, may there be an end to bloodshed and an immediate commitment to the path of respect, dialogue and reconciliation, as called for by the international community. May the many refugees from that country who are in need of humanitarian assistance find the acceptance and solidarity capable of relieving their dreadful sufferings. May the paschal victory encourage the Iraqi people to spare no effort in pursuing the path of stability and development. In the Holy Land, may Israelis and Palestinians courageously take up anew the peace process.

May the Lord, the victor over evil and death, sustain the Christian communities of the African continent; may he grant them hope in facing their difficulties, and make them peacemakers and agents of development in the societies to which they belong.

May the risen Jesus comfort the suffering populations of the Horn of Africa and favour their reconciliation; may he help the Great Lakes Region, Sudan and South Sudan, and grant their inhabitants the power of forgiveness. In Mali, now experiencing delicate political developments, may the glorious Christ grant peace and stability. To Nigeria, which in recent times has experienced savage terrorist attacks, may the joy of Easter grant the strength needed to take up anew the building of a society which is peaceful and respectful of the religious freedom of its citizens.

Happy Easter to all!

(Following the noontime message to a crowd which spilled over St. Peter’s Square and so must have been more than 200,000, the Pope delivered Easter greetings in 65 languages.)

=====================

“Let There Be Light”

The night before, on Holy Saturday, the Holy Father presided over a majestic 3-hour liturgy inside St. Peter’s Basilica for the vigil of Easter.

(Below is the complete text of the Pope’s Easter Vigil homily.)

One thing I noted in the homily which struck me was the Pope’s use of a quotation of Christ’s words from a non-biblical source. Here is the passage:

“‘Whoever is close to me is close to the fire,’ as Jesus is reported by Origen to have said.” (I have bold-faced the passage in the text below; it is toward the end.)

The use of a citation of Christ’s words from a source outside of the Bible struck me as quite unusual. I am not able now to determine how unusual it is, but I do not recall another instance of it occurring in a papal address.

Usually, all citations of Christ’s words in papal discourses are taken from the scriptures, that is, from the Gospels, or the Epistles.

In this case, the words of Christ cited are not found in any of the Gospels, or Epistles, but only in one of the writings of Origen, a third century Christian theologian who was arguably one of the greatest theologians, and perhaps the greatest theogian, of the early centuries of the Church.

However, as a creative, brilliant theologian, Origen was also quite speculative, and in his speculations, he risked taking certain positions, especially in regard to the universal salvation of all souls, which were later judged to be heterodox or even heretical. And this, tragically, cast a certain shadow on all the great, marvellous corpus of Origen’s writings.

Therefore, Origen has, to my knowledge, not been cited often by previous pontiffs. (If I am wrong on this point, i will be happy to receive correction.)

Benedict XVI, however, has cited Origen on more than one occasion. This alone would be enough to raise some eyebrows, at least a tad. But last night, by citing Origen’s citation of a non-biblical expression of Jesus, Pope Benedict raised  some eyebrows — my own, anyway — a little bit further.

At the very least, what this suggests is that Benedict feels that it is possible that some citations of Christ’s words by early Church Fathers which do not appear anywhere in the Gospels or Epistles are actually worthy of being considered as authentic, or at least valuable and useful. If this is so, we logically must admit the possibility of expanding our search for Christ, for his authentic words, into writings outside of the Gospels and Epistles, which are of course canonical, and authoritative. Others will be more able than I am to comment further on this decision of the Pope, and what it may mean for biblical scholarship and for Christology; for the moment, I simply note that the Pope made this unusual citation.

After the Mass, as the basilica emptied, I was able to greet briefly near the altar a friend from Moscow, Russia, Archpriest Igor Vyzhanov, pastor of the Russian Orthodox Church of St. Catherine of Alexandria, which is on the grounds of the Russian Embassy to Italy. I first met him in 1999, in the Catholic cathedral in Moscow, and was with him when he met Pope John Paul II after a papal general audience in October, 2001.

I also had the privilege of meeting the US Ambassador to the Holy See, Miguel Diaz, and his wife, who also attended the Easter Vigil liturgy.

HOMILY OF POPE BENEDICT XVI
EASTER VIGIL OF THE LORD’S RESURRECTION
SAINT PETER’S BASILICA
7 APRIL 2012

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Easter is the feast of the new creation. Jesus is risen and dies no more. He has opened the door to a new life, one that no longer knows illness and death. He has taken mankind up into God himself. “Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God”, as Saint Paul says in the First Letter to the Corinthians (15:50).

On the subject of Christ’s resurrection and our resurrection, the Church writer Tertullian in the third century was bold enough to write: “Rest assured, flesh and blood, through Christ you have gained your place in heaven and in the Kingdom of God” (CCL II, 994).

A new dimension has opened up for mankind. Creation has become greater and broader. Easter Day ushers in a new creation, but that is precisely why the Church starts the liturgy on this day with the old creation, so that we can learn to understand the new one aright.

At the beginning of the Liturgy of the Word on Easter night, then, comes the account of the creation of the world. Two things are particularly important here in connection with this liturgy.

On the one hand, creation is presented as a whole that includes the phenomenon of time. The seven days are an image of completeness, unfolding in time. They are ordered towards the seventh day, the day of the freedom of all creatures for God and for one another. Creation is therefore directed towards the coming together of God and his creatures; it exists so as to open up a space for the response to God’s great glory, an encounter between love and freedom.

On the other hand, what the Church hears on Easter night is above all the first element of the creation account: “God said, ‘let there be light!’” (Gen 1:3). The creation account begins symbolically with the creation of light. The sun and the moon are created only on the fourth day. The creation account calls them lights, set by God in the firmament of heaven. In this way he deliberately takes away the divine character that the great religions had assigned to them.

No, they are not gods. They are shining bodies created by the one God. But they are preceded by the light through which God’s glory is reflected in the essence of the created being.

What is the creation account saying here? Light makes life possible. It makes encounter possible. It makes communication possible. It makes knowledge, access to reality and to truth, possible. And insofar as it makes knowledge possible, it makes freedom and progress possible. Evil hides. Light, then, is also an expression of the good that both is and creates brightness.

It is daylight, which makes it possible for us to act.

To say that God created light means that God created the world as a space for knowledge and truth, as a space for encounter and freedom, as a space for good and for love. Matter is fundamentally good, being itself is good. And evil does not come from God-made being, rather, it comes into existence through denial. It is a “no”.

At Easter, on the morning of the first day of the week, God said once again: “Let there be light”.

The night on the Mount of Olives, the solar eclipse of Jesus’ passion and death, the night of the grave had all passed.

Now it is the first day once again – creation is beginning anew. “Let there be light”, says God, “and there was light”: Jesus rises from the grave.

Life is stronger than death. Good is stronger than evil. Love is stronger than hate. Truth is stronger than lies.

The darkness of the previous days is driven away the moment Jesus rises from the grave and himself becomes God’s pure light. But this applies not only to him, not only to the darkness of those days.

With the resurrection of Jesus, light itself is created anew. He draws all of us after him into the new light of the resurrection and he conquers all darkness. He is God’s new day, new for all of us.

But how is this to come about? How does all this affect us so that instead of remaining word it becomes a reality that draws us in? Through the sacrament of baptism and the profession of faith, the Lord has built a bridge across to us, through which the new day reaches us.

The Lord says to the newly-baptized: Fiat lux – let there be light. God’s new day – the day of indestructible life, comes also to us. Christ takes you by the hand. From now on you are held by him and walk with him into the light, into real life. For this reason the early Church called baptism photismos – illumination.

Why was this? The darkness that poses a real threat to mankind, after all, is the fact that he can see and investigate tangible material things, but cannot see where the world is going or whence it comes, where our own life is going, what is good and what is evil.

The darkness enshrouding God and obscuring values is the real threat to our existence and to the world in general. If God and moral values, the difference between good and evil, remain in darkness, then all other “lights”, that put such incredible technical feats within our reach, are not only progress but also dangers that put us and the world at risk.

Today we can illuminate our cities so brightly that the stars of the sky are no longer visible. Is this not an image of the problems caused by our version of enlightenment?

With regard to material things, our knowledge and our technical accomplishments are legion, but what reaches beyond, the things of God and the question of good, we can no longer identify.

Faith, then, which reveals God’s light to us, is the true enlightenment, enabling God’s light to break into our world, opening our eyes to the true light.

Dear friends, as I conclude, I would like to add one more thought about light and illumination. On Easter night, the night of the new creation, the Church presents the mystery of light using a unique and very humble symbol: the Paschal candle. This is a light that lives from sacrifice. The candle shines inasmuch as it is burnt up. It gives light, inasmuch as it gives itself.

Thus the Church presents most beautifully the paschal mystery of Christ, who gives himself and so bestows the great light.

Secondly, we should remember that the light of the candle is a fire. Fire is the power that shapes the world, the force of transformation. And fire gives warmth.

Here too the mystery of Christ is made newly visible. Christ, the light, is fire, flame, burning up evil and so reshaping both the world and ourselves. “Whoever is close to me is close to the fire,” as Jesus is reported by Origen to have said. And this fire is both heat and light: not a cold light, but one through which God’s warmth and goodness reach down to us.

The great hymn of the Exsultet, which the deacon sings at the beginning of the Easter liturgy, points us quite gently towards a further aspect. It reminds us that this object, the candle, has its origin in the work of bees. So the whole of creation plays its part.

In the candle, creation becomes a bearer of light. But in the mind of the Fathers, the candle also in some sense contains a silent reference to the Church. The cooperation of the living community of believers in the Church in some way resembles the activity of bees. It builds up the community of light. So the candle serves as a summons to us to become involved in the community of the Church, whose raison d’être is to let the light of Christ shine upon the world.

Let us pray to the Lord at this time that he may grant us to experience the joy of his light; let us pray that we ourselves may become bearers of his light, and that through the Church, Christ’s radiant face may enter our world (cf. LG 1). Amen.

Christ my Hope is Risen, Alleluia!




URBI ET ORBI GREETING OF POPE BENEDICT XVI
ST PETER’S SQUARE
EASTER SUNDAY
8 APRIL 2012



Dear Brothers and Sisters in Rome and throughout the world!



“Surrexit Christus, spes mea” – “Christ, my hope, has risen” (Easter Sequence).



May the jubilant voice of the Church reach all of you with the words which the ancient hymn puts on the lips of Mary Magdalene, the first to encounter the risen Jesus on Easter morning. She ran to the other disciples and breathlessly announced: “I have seen the Lord!” (Jn 20:18). We too, who have journeyed through the desert of Lent and the sorrowful days of the Passion, today raise the cry of victory: “He has risen! He has truly risen!”

Every Christian relives the experience of Mary Magdalene. It involves an encounter which changes our lives: the encounter with a unique Man who lets us experience all God’s goodness and truth, who frees us from evil not in a superficial and fleeting way, but sets us free radically, heals us completely and restores our dignity. This is why Mary Magdalene calls Jesus “my hope”: he was the one who allowed her to be reborn, who gave her a new future, a life of goodness and freedom from evil. “Christ my hope” means that all my yearnings for goodness find in him a real possibility of fulfilment: with him I can hope for a life that is good, full and eternal, for God himself has drawn near to us, even sharing our humanity.

But Mary Magdalene, like the other disciples, was to see Jesus rejected by the leaders of the people, arrested, scourged, condemned to death and crucified. It must have been unbearable to see Goodness in person subjected to human malice, truth derided by falsehood, mercy abused by vengeance. With Jesus’ death, the hope of all those who had put their trust in him seemed doomed. But that faith never completely failed: especially in the heart of the Virgin Mary, Jesus’ Mother, its flame burned even in the dark of night. In this world, hope can not avoid confronting the harshness of evil. It is not thwarted by the wall of death alone, but even more by the barbs of envy and pride, falsehood and violence. Jesus passed through this mortal mesh in order to open a path to the kingdom of life. For a moment Jesus seemed vanquished: darkness had invaded the land, the silence of God was complete, hope a seemingly empty word.

And lo, on the dawn of the day after the Sabbath, the tomb is found empty. Jesus then shows himself to Mary Magdalene, to the other women, to his disciples. Faith is born anew, more alive and strong than ever, now invincible since it is based on a decisive experience: “Death with life contended: combat strangely ended! Life’s own champion, slain, now lives to reign”. The signs of the resurrection testify to the victory of life over death, love over hatred, mercy over vengeance: “The tomb the living did enclose, I saw Christ’s glory as he rose! The angels there attesting, shroud with grave-clothes resting”.

More:

Christ my Hope is Risen, Alleluia!

"Christ, My Hope, Has Risen"

Thumbnail

URBI ET ORBI GREETING OF POPE BENEDICT XVI
ST PETER’S SQUARE
EASTER SUNDAY
8 APRIL 2012

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Rome and throughout the world!

“Surrexit Christus, spes mea” – “Christ, my hope, has risen” (Easter Sequence).

May the jubilant voice of the Church reach all of you with the words which the ancient hymn puts on the lips of Mary Magdalene, the first to encounter the risen Jesus on Easter morning. She ran to the other disciples and breathlessly announced: “I have seen the Lord!” (Jn 20:18). We too, who have journeyed through the desert of Lent and the sorrowful days of the Passion, today raise the cry of victory: “He has risen! He has truly risen!”

Every Christian relives the experience of Mary Magdalene. It involves an encounter which changes our lives: the encounter with a unique Man who lets us experience all God’s goodness and truth, who frees us from evil not in a superficial and fleeting way, but sets us free radically, heals us completely and restores our dignity. This is why Mary Magdalene calls Jesus “my hope”: he was the one who allowed her to be reborn, who gave her a new future, a life of goodness and freedom from evil. “Christ my hope” means that all my yearnings for goodness find in him a real possibility of fulfilment: with him I can hope for a life that is good, full and eternal, for God himself has drawn near to us, even sharing our humanity.

But Mary Magdalene, like the other disciples, was to see Jesus rejected by the leaders of the people, arrested, scourged, condemned to death and crucified. It must have been unbearable to see Goodness in person subjected to human malice, truth derided by falsehood, mercy abused by vengeance. With Jesus’ death, the hope of all those who had put their trust in him seemed doomed. But that faith never completely failed: especially in the heart of the Virgin Mary, Jesus’ Mother, its flame burned even in the dark of night. In this world, hope can not avoid confronting the harshness of evil. It is not thwarted by the wall of death alone, but even more by the barbs of envy and pride, falsehood and violence. Jesus passed through this mortal mesh in order to open a path to the kingdom of life. For a moment Jesus seemed vanquished: darkness had invaded the land, the silence of God was complete, hope a seemingly empty word.

And lo, on the dawn of the day after the Sabbath, the tomb is found empty. Jesus then shows himself to Mary Magdalene, to the other women, to his disciples. Faith is born anew, more alive and strong than ever, now invincible since it is based on a decisive experience: “Death with life contended: combat strangely ended! Life’s own champion, slain, now lives to reign”. The signs of the resurrection testify to the victory of life over death, love over hatred, mercy over vengeance: “The tomb the living did enclose, I saw Christ’s glory as he rose! The angels there attesting, shroud with grave-clothes resting”.

Dear brothers and sisters! If Jesus is risen, then – and only then – has something truly new happened, something that changes the state of humanity and the world. Then he, Jesus, is someone in whom we can put absolute trust; we can put our trust not only in his message but in Jesus himself, for the Risen One does not belong to the past, but is present today, alive. Christ is hope and comfort in a particular way for those Christian communities suffering most for their faith on account of discrimination and persecution. And he is present as a force of hope through his Church, which is close to all human situations of suffering and injustice.

May the risen Christ grant hope to the Middle East and enable all the ethnic, cultural and religious groups in that region to work together to advance the common good and respect for human rights. Particularly in Syria, may there be an end to bloodshed and an immediate commitment to the path of respect, dialogue and reconciliation, as called for by the international community. May the many refugees from that country who are in need of humanitarian assistance find the acceptance and solidarity capable of relieving their dreadful sufferings. May the paschal victory encourage the Iraqi people to spare no effort in pursuing the path of stability and development. In the Holy Land, may Israelis and Palestinians courageously take up anew the peace process.

May the Lord, the victor over evil and death, sustain the Christian communities of the African continent; may he grant them hope in facing their difficulties, and make them peacemakers and agents of development in the societies to which they belong.

May the risen Jesus comfort the suffering populations of the Horn of Africa and favour their reconciliation; may he help the Great Lakes Region, Sudan and South Sudan, and grant their inhabitants the power of forgiveness. In Mali, now experiencing delicate political developments, may the glorious Christ grant peace and stability. To Nigeria, which in recent times has experienced savage terrorist attacks, may the joy of Easter grant the strength needed to take up anew the building of a society which is peaceful and respectful of the religious freedom of its citizens.

Happy Easter to all!

[Following the traditional noontime message to a crowd estimated at over 100,000, B16

delivered Easter greetings in 65 languages

.]


PHOTOS: Getty


-30-

View the original here - 

"Christ, My Hope, Has Risen"

Happy Easter Sinners!

See original article: 

Happy Easter Sinners!

The Resurrection of the Lord

Thumbnail

First Reading: Acts of the Apostles 10:34a, 37-43

34a And Peter opening his mouth, said: In very deed I perceive, that God is not a respecter of persons.
37 You know the word which hath been published through all Judea: for it began from Galilee, after the baptism which John preached,
38 Jesus of Nazareth: how God anointed him with the Holy Ghost, and with power, who went about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.
39 And we are witnesses of all things that he did in the land of the Jews and in Jerusalem, whom they killed, hanging him upon a tree.
40 Him God raised up the third day, and gave him to be made manifest,
41 Not to all the people, but to witnesses preordained by God, even to us, who did eat and drink with him after he arose again from the dead;
42 And he commanded us to preach to the people, and to testify that it is he who was appointed by God, to be judge of the living and of the dead.
43 To him all the prophets give testimony, that by his name all receive remission of sins, who believe in him.

Psalm: Psalms 118:1-2, 16-17, 22-23

1Give praise to Lord, for he is good: for his mercy endureth for ever.
2Let Israel now say that he is good: that his mercy endureth for ever.
16The right hand of the Lord hath wrought strength: the right hand of the Lord hath exulted me: the right hand of the Lord hath wrought strength.
17I shall not die, but live: and shall declare the works of the Lord.
22The stone which the builders rejected; the same is become the head of the corner.
23This is the Lords doing: and it is wonderful in our eyes.

Second Reading: Colossians 3:1-4

1 Therefore, if you be risen with Christ, seek the things that are above; where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God:
2 Mind the things that are above, not the things that are upon the earth.
3 For you are dead; and your life is hid with Christ in God.
4 When Christ shall appear, who is your life, then you also shall appear with him in glory.

Gospel: John 20:1-9

1 And on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalen cometh early, when it was yet dark, unto the sepulchre; and she saw the stone taken away from the sepulchre.
2 She ran, therefore, and cometh to Simon Peter, and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and saith to them: They have taken away the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where they have laid him.
3 Peter therefore went out, and that other disciple, and they came to the sepulchre.
4 And they both ran together, and that other disciple did outrun Peter, and came first to the sepulchre.
5 And when he stooped down, he saw the linen cloths lying; but yet he went not in.
6 Then cometh Simon Peter, following him, and went into the sepulchre, and saw the linen cloths lying,
7 And the napkin that had been about his head, not lying with the linen cloths, but apart, wrapped up into one place.
8 Then that other disciple also went in, who came first to the sepulchre: and he saw, and believed.
9 For as yet they knew not the scripture, that he must rise again from the dead.

View post:  

The Resurrection of the Lord

A Fool for Christ, A Heart that Watcheth

So, when I was asked to lead Paul Holland’s wake service, which would include a homily, I asked a number of people if they had a word about Paul. I wasn’t surprised at their choice, for it was mine as well. The word we all picked for Paul was one of our favorite Russian words, “urodivoi“—fools for Christ.

That word does not only apply to Paul. What we have become aware of over the many years we have been dealing with death and burial here in Combermere (we have buried almost 45 of our brothers and sisters so far) is that our wounds and our difficulties between one another are softened by death.

Suddenly, soon after they die, everybody’s life history looks like that of a blessed urodivoi, a fool for Christ.

For we are seeing ever more clearly that our Madonna House lives don’t make much sense in terms of the world nor do we have any measure of achievement by those standards either.

And in the end, the rationale we have for our rather mundane life is simply the desire to walk on earth the way Christ walked it, as a fool in almost everyone’s eyes—until the Resurrection.

If our hearts are open to that, then a wake is truly miraculous, because then, through the gift of the Spirit, the foolishness of the deceased becomes Resurrection right before our eyes.

That resurrection was happening throughout their whole “foolish” lives, but usually we didn’t see it until they died. And so it will be for all of us in Madonna House.

Yet it would truly be sad if we only saw this great miracle of grace, how our “foolishness” in Christ was a gradual resurrection in our everyday life as well, if we only saw it after we died.

Our Lady of Combermere has been teaching us something very holy about our life through the many deaths, burials, and wakes of our brothers and sisters over the years.

I think what it is, to use one of Catherine Doherty’s favorite scripture passages from The Song of Songs, is that, while we seek our Beloved through our everyday mundane life, “the heart watcheth.”

And a heart that “watcheth” soon discovers something about being wounded and broken, something that it no longer needs to hide until death.

A “heart that watcheth” realizes ever more clearly that we are all urodivoi; we are all “fools for Christ.” Because no matter how wounded or sinful we are, we watch from the heart for Christ to unfold Himself in our very human condition.

And when the heart “watcheth,” you begin to realize that we are all “wounded fools,” people who simply live by Faith. And then all the wounds and sins no longer seem to matter that much. It’s amazing.

Our foundress, Catherine Doherty, saw that in the “wounded” Paul way back in 1970, and wrote it in her Christmas gift-poem, where she said to him, “Peace-filled man, give peace to all those who ask it from you.”

He probably didn’t hear a word she said back then, but Catherine, whose “heart watcheth,” knew that Paul was a fool for Christ because she was a profound “fool” herself.

So when I looked at Paul’s life in preparation for my homily, I found myself looking at this “heart watcheth” mode in him.

And when I went to the archives and read through as much of his correspondence as I could on such short notice, I was amazed to read about Paul’s sense of himself.

He had an incredible difficulty with his own personality, and yet his words tell you that his “heart watcheth” like a simple fool for Christ.

For example, one day when he was in our house in the Yukon, a young boy was helping him sort apples. The lad was sticking apples in his pocket, and Paul kept saying, “No, you can’t have them.” “Why not?” the boy asked. “Because you don’t have permission.”

“Would you give one to Jesus if he asked?”

Paul said, “Yes, if Mamie gave permission.” (Mamie was the director of the house.)

Some would say that that’s a bit over the top when it comes to authority, but not for Paul. He would have asked permission to eat one apple himself. And he lived there; it was his house.

That’s what we mean by “fool for Christ”—Christ who asked Joseph’s permission to go work in the carpentry shop even though He had created the trees Joseph worked with!

Paul came to Madonna House the same way all the pioneers came, and most of us have come since then: some quirk, some “quack,” some silly thing got us here “by accident.” Oh, really?

“Yeah, I was on my way to a ski party at the North Pole, and the bus broke down in Combermere, Ontario.” Oh really?

“Yeah, I was on my way to Florida for the winter, and we stopped at a gift shop in Combermere, Ontario, and…” Whichever way you go, if Our Lady wants you here, she’ll get you here.

Paul’s journey was true to Madonna House form: He went on a retreat only to discover it was the wrong one. But while he was there, he met a man who invited him to a Thursday evening meeting at the cathedral in Toronto where he lived.

One Thursday he “just happened” to be walking past the cathedral at meeting-time and, deciding to check it out, went inside.

He himself writes: “This was the first time I began to understand that I was no longer in control of my life, but I was being led by the hand, like a child that is led by his mother. The sensation was overwhelming.”

Then good old Paul, like the rest of us, didn’t stop there. He went on more retreats until some nameless priest told him about a “crazy place” in Combermere, Ontario. Ho. Ho. Ho.

In 1959, he made his commitment to Madonna House.

His life here was very much the same as it is for most of the rest of us. Long after he joined, he wrote to Fr. Cal, his spiritual director, and said, “Things are going on normally; that is, every day I fail miserably. I lose my peace. I fall flat on my face. But by the grace of God I get up and start all over again.

“I’m the man who looks in the mirror (this is from the Letter of St. James) and then goes away and forgets what he saw. But God reminds me by letting me fall flat on my face. Thanks be to God.”

The examples are endless. It’s really something when we can look back and recognize God’s mercy in not letting us see any more than we should, though sometimes it’s a mystery why he doesn’t allow us to see more.

Why, for example, didn’t God let Paul see in himself what Kathy Rodman, a staff worker serving with him, wrote about him in Edmonton when Paul was serving the Brother Christophers there. In a newsletter from 1991, Kathy wrote:

“I ask myself: how many times has Paul answered the doorbell, how many sandwiches has he given out in his years of service here? By a quick calculation, I think it’s roughly about half a billion.

“I’m sure the Lord will recognize Paul when he rings the bell at the gates of heaven and say to him, ‘Welcome. I think we’ve met before. I often came to your place on 98th Street.’”

In one of his early letters to Fr. Cal, Paul wrote: “The fog has not fully lifted yet. But one day I’m sure it will.”

And it did, on January 12, 2012, around noon, in Combermere, Ontario.

The last word is from an unpublished letter from Catherine Doherty to the staff of Madonna House, S.L. #140, Sept. 19, 1963.

“You shall go through life, a sort of freak. But there will be a day when men will know you for what you are.

“And because you laid down your life in this ‘death,’ day by day, minute by minute, second by second, your will united to the will of God in laying down your life for your fellowman, hiddenly, without any trumpets, without any acclaim, you shall see, as the years go by, the face of your Beloved.

“Slowly the thousand faces that told you their story, that asked you for help, will take the shape of one Face. And then, so slowly, you will touch your Beloved before you die. This is the reward of your vocation.”

Excerpted and adapted from the homily at Paul Holland’s wake service

Source - 

A Fool for Christ, A Heart that Watcheth

Christ is Risen!

Christ is Risen! Indeed, He is Risen!

Christus resurrexit! Resurrexit vere!

Χριστός ἀνέστη! Ἀληθῶς ἀνέστη!

Хрїстóсъ воскрéсе! Воистину воскресе!

Христос воскрес! Воистину воскрес!

Kristus z mŕtvych vstal! Skutočne z mŕtvych vstal!

Христос воскрес! Воістину воскрес!

Kristus prisikėlė! Tikrai prisikėlė!

! ܡܫܝܚܐ ܩܡ! ܫܪܝܪܐܝܬ ܩܡ

!המשיח קם! באמת קם

ⲠⲓⲬⲣⲓⲥⲧⲟⲥ ⲁϥⲧⲱⲛϥ! Ϧⲉⲛ ⲟⲩⲙⲉⲑⲙⲏⲓ ⲁϥⲧⲱⲛϥ!

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Read the article: 

Christ is Risen!

Resurrexit Sicut Dixit–Alleluia!

Thumbnail

Continue reading - 

Resurrexit Sicut Dixit–Alleluia!

Christus Resurrexit

Thumbnail

Source article: 

Christus Resurrexit