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Monday, December 31, 2007

Felix dies Nativitates et Annum Faustum!

Waaahhhh! My monitor's busted! I am currently updating my blogs at an internet cafe. I am still grateful though because last year was full of blessings and I could not thank God enough. He has blessed me with a good health, a faithful girlfriend, and awesome friends. This year I am positively sure that God will always be there for me whatever happens. I have learned to trust in Him amidst the trials and turmoil that is LIFE. I have also found a safe refuge in Our Blessed Mother who never fails to help and strengthen those who sincerely wish to persevere in the Faith.

This year learn to count your blessings and you will see that you are way better off than most people in the world. A lot of people today do not have the privilege of reading this blog. A lot of young children as young as nine are killing themselves slowly through forced labor in the most horrible working conditions. A lot of children and adults in Africa and other third world nations are going to die this year due to hunger and malnutrition. And a lot more will not be given a chance to live in this world because of abortion and the use of contraceptives.

Always remember that every choice that we make has eternal consequences. In other words our whole lives must be painstakingly focused in making choices that will lead us to salvation. I am not going to beat around the bush.

  • There is a God and He means business. We have always heard that He is a loving and merciful God. But let us not forget that He is just and at judgment day He will set things right and He will have His justice.
  • Hell is real and it is a terrible place. It is not worth going through a sinful life of some forty to seventy years only to suffer eternal punishment.
  • God has established only one Church, one Faith, one Baptism, one Worship and these attributes can only be found in the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. There are thousands of Christian denominations and a lot of false cults and religions. Therefore for a person to say that all belief systems or religions have a semblance of the Truth and all religions worship the same God is only fooling himself. There is only One God and He does not espouse error. The Bible even says that the Church is the pillar and ground of Truth (1 Timothy 3:15).
  • If you want a more detailed explanation go to http://www.fisheaters.com or http://www.olrl.org

May the Holy Family bless you and your family and may you have a holy and fruitful New Year!

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

CFC News: Rains Fail to Dampen 2nd "Paskuhan sa GK 2007"

PIA Press Release
2007/12/25

Rains fail to dampen 2nd "Paskuhan sa GK 2007"

By Bong Pedalino

GK Manlico Village, Manlico, Hinunangan (25 December) -- Despite non-stop rains and cludy skies, the mood on a very wet Saturday, December 15, in this Gawad Kalinga (GK) Village was jolly, festive, and fun all over.

The reason for the jubilant celebration was all too clear and evident: this is the second "Paskuhan sa GK 2007" (Christmas at GK 2007).

"The intermittent surges of downpour have not dampened the spirit of the moment," said Dr. Jerome Paler, the ever active GK Provincial Coordinator of the Couples for Christ (CFC).

In all, at least 800 individuals represnting the Kapitbahayan (neighborhood) Associations coming from the ten established GK villages in the province converged to join the games and partake of anything that needs to be partaken.

"The activity was started with a Holy Mass presided by Rev. Fr. Francis Vega, Parish Priest of St. Isidore Parish, Saint Bernard. It was followed by the traditional 'breaking of the bread', where 3,000 home-made hot pandesal were shared by everybody, with matching hot chocolate and warm noodles," narrated a visibly excited, even though weary, Paler.

Before long, the oath of amateurism was read by Eloy Aragon, Kapitbahayan (KB) Federation President, and the official declaration for the opening of the KB Olympic Games for men, women, and children was done by Litoy Piao, the Provincial Community Organizer.

The ten GK Villages that participated included Josefina II village in barangay Combado, Maasin City ; the pilot GK village at barangay Sta. Rosa, also of Maasin City; GK-Padre Burgos; GK-Jollibee in Bontoc; GK Federation at New Guinsaugon, Saint Bernard;

St. Ignatius Loyola GK of Anilao, Liloan; GK Energy village in New Malangsa, Liloan; GK Rainbow village at Pinut-an, San Ricardo; GK-Philamlife and Canada at Manlico, Hinunangan; and GK Shell at Libas, Hinunangan.

Among the highlights of the day's activity was the fishing contest in the tilapia pond, the grand "pinakbet" salo-salo during lunch, the pig-catching contest, parol contest, and the "parade ng mga litson" where six (6) roasted pigs were paraded and were feasted on by evening.

"It could not have been most enjoyable if not for the help of our partners," Paler said, citing Saint Bernard Mayor Rico Rentuza, Gov. Damian Mercado, Vice-Governor Mike Maamo, and Rep. Roger Mercado for their various invaluable support.

CFC Director and GK Chairman Joe Tale, accompanied by George Asensi and Kevin Caballero, the Regional GK Coordinator, were the visitors of the day, Paler further said. (PIA-Southern Leyte)

Philippine Information Agency
http://www.pia.gov.ph


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Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Latin Masses anyone?

Before Summorum Pontificum, there were only three Churches offering the Tridentine Latin Mass through the Indult and the other one was administered by the SSPX.

Now, I am not sure if there are other parishes who started offering the Extraordinary rite. Is is possible that the dioceses here are forming their own interpretation of the Pope's motu proprio?


Any Latin Masses in Your Parish?

Posted at: 2007-12-17 15:52:00.0
Author: James Martin, S.J.


A few weeks ago, Archbishop Malcolm Ranjith, Secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship, said that he saw a certain obstinance (my word, not his) in response to Pope Benedict's "motu proprio," relaxing restrictions on the Latin Mass, called "Summorum Pontificum."

Here's what Archbishop Ranjith said in an interview:
"You know that there have been, by some dioceses, even interpretative documents which inexplainably intend to limit the Pope's motu proprio. These actions mask behind them, on one hand, prejudices of an ideological kind and, on the other, pride, one of the gravest sins. I repeat: I invite all to obey the Pope." (Catholic News Agency)

Which makes me wonder: Five months after "Summorum Pontificum" was promulgated, how many American parishes have chosen to introduce a Latin Mass? What is your experience?
_________________
IN CORDIBUS JESU ET MARIÆ

SECRETMAN

Monday, December 17, 2007

Read This!

Doctrinal Note on some Aspects of Evangelization

Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
December 14, 2007


I. Introduction

1. Jesus Christ was sent by the Father to proclaim the Gospel, calling all people to conversion and faith (cf Mk 1:14-15). After his resurrection, he entrusted the continuation of his mission of evangelization to the Apostles (cf. Mt 28:19-20; Mk 16:15; Lk24:4-7; Acts 1:3): "As the Father has sent me, so I send you" (Jn 20:21, cf. 17:18). By means of the Church, Christ wants to be present in every historical epoch, every place on earth and every sector of society, in order to reach every person, so that there may be one flock and one shepherd (cf. Jn 10:16): "Go out into the whole world and preach the Gospel to every creature. He who believes and is baptized will be saved, but he who does not believe will be condemned" (Mk 16: 15-16).

The Apostles, therefore, "prompted by the Spirit, invited all to change their lives, to be converted and to be baptized",1 because the "pilgrim Church is necessary for salvation".2 It is the same Lord Jesus Christ who, present in his Church, goes before the work of evangelizers, accompanies it, follows it, and makes their labours bear fruit: what took place at the origins of Christian history continues throughout its entire course.

At the beginning of the third millennium, the call which Peter and his brother Andrew, as well as the other first disciples, heard from Jesus continues to resound in the world: "put out into the deep and lower your nets for a catch" (Lk 5:4).And after the miracle of a huge catch of fish, the Lord revealed to Peter that he would become "a fisher of men" (Lk 5:10).

2. The term evangelization has a very rich meaning4 in the broad sense, it sums up the Church's entire mission: her whole life consists in accomplishing the traditio Evangelii, the proclamation and handing on of the Gospel, which is "the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes" (John 1:16) and which, in the final essence, is identified with Jesus Christ himself (cf. 1 Cor 1:24). Understood in this way, evangelization is aimed at all of humanity. In any case, to evangelize does not mean simply to teach a doctrine, but to proclaim Jesus Christ by one's words and actions, that is, to make oneself an instrument of his presence and action in the world.

"Every person has the right to hear the `Good News' of the God who reveals and gives himself in Christ, so that each one can live out in its fullness his or her proper calling".5 It a right which the Lord himself confers on every person, so that every man and woman is able truly to say with Saint Paul: Jesus Christ "loved me and gave himself up for me" (Gal 2:20). This right implies the corresponding duty to evangelize: "If I preach the Gospel, this is no reason for me to boast; it is a duty for me, Woe to me if I do not preach the Gospel!" (1 Cor 9:16; cf. Rom 10:14). Thus, it is evident how every activity of the Church has an essential evangelizing dimension and must never be separated from the commitment to help all persons to meet Christ in faith, which is the primary objective of evangelization: "Social issues and the Gospel are inseparable. When we bring people only knowledge, ability, technical competence and tools, we bring them too little".6

3.
There is today, however, a growing confusion which leads many to leave the missionary command of the Lord unheard and ineffective (cf. Mt 28:19). Often it is maintained that any attempt to convince others on religious matters is a limitation of their freedom. From this perspective, it would only be legitimate to present one's own ideas and to invite people to act according to their consciences, without aiming at their conversion to Christ and to the Catholic faith. It is enough, so they say, to help people to become more human or more faithful to their own religion; it is enough to build communities which strive for justice, freedom, peace and solidarity. Furthermore, some maintain that Christ should not be proclaimed to those who do not know him, nor should joining the Church be promoted, since it would also be possible to be saved without explicit knowledge of Christ and without formal incorporation in the Church.

In the face of these problems, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has judged it necessary to publish the present Note. This document, which presupposes the entirety of Catholic doctrine on evangelization, as extensively treated in the teaching of Paul VI and John Paul II, is intended to clarify certain aspects of the relationship between the missionary command of the Lord and respect for the conscience and religious freedom of all people. It is an issue with important
anthropological, ecclesiological and ecumenical implications.

 II Some anthropological implications

4. "This is eternal life, that they may know you, the only true God and Jesus Christ whom you have sent" (Jn 17:3). God has given human beings intellect and will so that they might freely seek, know and love him. Therefore, human freedom is both a resource and a challenge offered to man by God who has created him: an offer directed to the human person's capacity to know and to love what is good and true. Nothing puts in play human freedom like the search for the good and the true, by inviting it to a kind of commitment which involves fundamental aspects of life, This is particularly the case with salvific truth, which is not only an object of thought, but also an event which encompasses the entire person - intelligence, will, feelings, actions and future plans - when a person adheres to Christ. In the search for the good and the true, the Holy Spirit is already at work, opening the human heart and making it ready to welcome the truth of the Gospel, as Thomas Aquinas stated in his celebrated phrase: omne verum a quocumque dicatur a Spiritu Sancto est.7 It is important therefore to appreciate this action of the Spirit, who creates an affinity for the truth and draws the human heart towards it, by helping human knowledge to mature both in wisdom and in trusting abandonment to what is true.8

Today, however, with ever-increasing frequency, questions are being raised about the legitimacy of presenting to others - so that they might in turn accept it - that which is held to be true for oneself. Often this is seen as an infringement of other people's freedom. Such a vision of human freedom, separated from its integral reference to truth, is one of the expressions "of that relativism which, recognizing nothing as definitive, leaves as the ultimate criterion only the self with its desires and under the semblance of freedom, becomes a prison for each one'.9 In the various forms of agnosticism and relativism present in contemporary thought, "a legitimate plurality of positions has yielded to an undifferentiated pluralism, based upon the assumption that all positions are equally valid, which is one of today's most widespread symptoms of the lack of confidence in truth. Even certain conceptions of life coming from the East betray this lack of confidence, denying truth its exclusive character and assuming that truth reveals itself equally in different doctrines, even if they contradict one another".10 If man denies his fundamental capacity for the truth, if he becomes skeptical regarding his ability really to know what is true, he ends up losing what in a unique way draws his intelligence and enthralls his heart.

 5. In this connection, when it comes to the search for truth, whoever trusts only in his own individual efforts and does not recognize the need for help from others, is deceiving himself Human beings "from birth, therefore, are immersed in traditions which give them not only a language and a cultural formation but also a range of truths in which they believe almost instinctively... Nonetheless, there are in the life of a human being many more truths which are simply believed than truths which are acquired by way of personal verification".11 The need to trust in the knowledge handed on by one's culture or acquired by others, enriches a person with truths that could not have been attained on one's own, as well as by the interpersonal and social relationships which this process develops. Spiritual individualism, on the other hand, isolates a person, hindering him from opening in trust to others - so as both to receive and to bestow the abundant goods which nourish his freedom and jeopardizes the right to manifest one's own convictions and opinions in society.12

In particular, the truth which is capable of shedding light on the meaning of one's life and giving it direction, is similarly attained through trusting acceptance with regard to those persons who are able to guarantee the certainty and authenticity of the truth itself: "There is no doubt that the capacity to entrust oneself and one's life to another person and the decision to do so are among the most significant and expressive human acts".13 Although it happens on a deeper level, the acceptance of revelation which takes place through faith also falls within the dynamics of the search for truth: "The obedience of faith' (Rom 16:26 cf Rom 1:5; 2 Cor 10:5-6) must be given to God who reveals; by this obedience of faith man freely commits his entire self to God, offering `the full submission of intellect and will to God who reveals' and freely assenting to the revelation given by him".14 The Second Vatican Council, after having affirmed the right and the duty of every person to seek the truth in matters of religion adds: "The search for truth, however, must he carried out in a manner that is appropriate to the dignity of the human person and his social nature, namely, by free enquiry with the help of teaching or instruction, communication and dialogue. It is by these means that people share with each other the truth they have discovered, or think they have discovered, in such a way that they help one another in the search for truth".15 In any case, the truth does not impose itself except by the strength of the truth itself.16 Therefore, to lead a person's intelligence and freedom in honesty to the encounter with Christ and his Gospel is not an inappropriate encroachment, but rather a legitimate endeavour and a service capable of making human relationships more fruitful.

6. Evangelization does not only entail the possibility of enrichment for those who are evangelized; it is also an enrichment for the one who does the evangelizing, as well as for the entire Church. For example, in the process of inculturation, "the universal Church herself is enriched with forms of expression and values in the various sectors of Christian life. She comes to know and to express better the mystery of Christ, all the while being motivated to continual renewal".17 Indeed, since the day of Pentecost, the Church has manifested the universality of her mission, welcoming in Christ the countless riches of peoples from all times and places in human history.18 Beyond its intrinsic anthropological value, every encounter with another person or culture is capable of revealing potentialities of the Gospel which hitherto may not have been fully explicit and which will enrich the life of Christians and the Church. Thanks to this dynamism, "tradition, which comes from the Apostles, makes progress in the Church by the help of the Holy Spirit".19

It is indeed the Holy Spirit who, after having been operative in the incarnation of Jesus Christ in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary, animates the maternal action of the Church in the evangelization of cultures. Although the Gospel is independent from any culture, it is capable of infusing all cultures, while never allowing itself to be subservient to them. 20 In this sense, the Holy Spirit is also the principal agent of the inculturation of the Gospel, presiding in a fruitful way at the dialogue between the Word of God, revealed in Christ, and the deepest questions which arise among the multitude of human beings and cultures, In this way, the Pentecost-event continues in history, in the unity of one and the same faith, enriched by the diversity of languages and cultures.

7.
The communication of religiously significant events and truths in order that they will be accepted by others is not only in profound harmony with the human phenomena of dialogue, proclamation and education, it also corresponds to another important anthropological fact: the desire, which is proper to the human person, to have others share in one's own goods. The acceptance of the Good News in faith is thus dynamically ordered to such a communication. The truth which saves one's life inflames the heart of the one who has received it with a love of neighbour that motivates him to pass on to others in freedom what he has freely been given.

Although non-Christians can be saved through the grace which God bestows in "ways known to him",21 the Church cannot fail to recognize that such persons are lacking a tremendous benefit in this world: to know the true face of God and the friendship of Jesus Christ, God-with-us. Indeed "there is nothing more beautiful than to be surprised by the Gospel, by the encounter with Christ. There is nothing more beautiful than to know him and to speak to others of our friendship with him"2223 about God, about the human person and the world, is a great good for every human person, while living in darkness without the truths about ultimate questions is an evil and is often at the root of suffering and slavery which can at times be grievous. This is why Saint Paul does not hesitate to describe conversion to the Christian faith as liberation "from the power of darkness" and entrance into "the kingdom of his beloved Son in whom we have redemption and the forgiveness of our sins" (Col 1:13-I 4), Therefore, fully belonging to Christ, who is the Truth, and entering the Church do not lessen human freedom, but rather exalt it and direct it towards its fulfillment, in a love that is freely given and which overflows with care for the good of all people. It is an inestimable benefit to live within the universal embrace of the friends of God which flows from communion in the life-giving flesh of his Son, to receive from him the certainty of forgiveness of sins and to live in the love that is born of faith. The Church wants everyone to share in these goods so that they may possess the fullness of truth and the fullness of the means of salvation, in order "to enter into the freedom of the glory of the children of God" (Rom 8:21).

8. Evangelization also involves a sincere dialogue that seeks to understand the reasons and feelings of others. Indeed, the heart of another person can only be approached in freedom, in love and in dialogue, in such a manner that the word which is spoken is not simply offered, but also truly witnessed in the hearts of those to whom it is addressed. This requires taking into account the hopes, sufferings and concrete situations of those with whom one is in dialogue. Precisely in this way, people of good will open their hearts more freely and share their spiritual and religious experiences in all sincerity. This experience of sharing, a characteristic of true friendship, is a valuable occasion for witnessing and for Christian proclamation.

As in any other field of human activity, so too in dialogue on religious matters, sin can enter in. It may sometimes happen that such a dialogue is not guided by its natural purpose, but gives way instead to deception, selfish motives or arrogance, thus failing in respect for the dignity and religious freedom of the partners in dialogue. For this reason, "the Church severely prohibits forcing people to embrace the faith or leading or enticing them by improper techniques; by the same token, she also strongly defends the right that no one be deterred from the faith by deplorable ill treatment".24
The revelation of the fundamental truths

The primary motive of evangelization is the love of Christ for the eternal salvation of all, The sole desire of authentic evangelizers is to bestow freely what they themselves have freely received: "From the very origins of the Church, the disciples of Christ strove to convert men to faith in Christ the Lord; not, however, through coercion or tactics unworthy of the Gospel, but above all by the power of the word of God".25 The mission of the Apostles and its continuation in the mission of the early Church remain the foundational model of evangelization for all time: it is a mission that has often been marked by martyrdom, as demonstrated by the history of the twentieth century. It is precisely martyrdom that gives credibility to witnesses, who seek neither power nor advantage, but instead lay down their lives for Christ. Before all the world, they display an unarmed strength brimming with love for all people, which is bestowed on those who follow Christ unto the total gift of their existence, So it is that Christians, from the very dawn of Christianity up until our own time have suffered persecution on account of the Gospel, as Jesus himself foretold: "If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you" (Jn 15:20).

III. Some ecclesiological implications

9. Since the day of Pentecost, one who fully accepts the faith is incorporated into the community of believers: "those who received his word [Peter's] were baptized and that day about three thousand people were added to them" (Acts 2:41). Since the beginning, the Gospel, in the power of the Spirit, is proclaimed to all people so that they might believe and become disciples of Christ and members of his Church, In the writings of the Fathers of the Church, there are constant exhortations to fulfill the mission entrusted by Christ to his disciples.26 Generally, the term conversion is used in reference to bringing pagans into the Church. However, conversion (metanoia), in its precisely Christian meaning, signifies a change in thinking and in acting, as the expression of the new life in Christ proclaimed by faith: a continuous reform of thought and deeds directed at an ever more intense identification with Christ (cf Gal 2:20), to which the baptized are called before all else, This is, in the first place, the meaning of the call made by Jesus himself: "repent and believe in the Gospel" (Mk 1:15; cf Mt 4:17).

The Christian spirit has always been animated by a passion to lead all humanity to Christ in the Church, The incorporation of new members into the Church is not the expansion of a power-group, but rather entrance into the network of friendship with Christ which connects heaven and earth, different continents and ages. It is entrance into the gift of communion with Christ, which is "new life" enlivened by charity and the commitment to justice. The Church is the instrument, "the seed and the beginning"27 of the Kingdom of God; she is not a political utopia. She is already the presence of God in history and she carries in herself the true future, the definitive future in which God will be "all in all" (1 Cor 15:28); she is a necessary presence, because only God can bring authentic peace and justice to the world, The Kingdom of God is not as some maintain today - a generic reality above all religious experiences and traditions, to which they tend as a universal and indistinct communion of all those who seek God, but it is, before all else, a person with a name and a face: Jesus of Nazareth, the image of the unseen God.28 Therefore, every free movement of the human heart towards God and towards his kingdom cannot but by its very nature lead to Christ and be oriented towards entrance into his Church, the efficacious sign of that Kingdom. The Church, therefore, is the bearer of the presence of God and thus the instrument of the true humanization of man and the world. The growth of the Church in history, which results from missionary activity, is at the service of the presence of God through his Kingdom: one cannot in fact "detach the Kingdom from the Church".29

10. However, the Church's "missionary proclamation is endangered today by relativistic theories which seek to justify religious pluralism, not only de facto but also de iure (or in principle)".30 For a long time, the reason for evangelization has not been clear to many among the Catholic faithful.31 It is even stated that the claim to have received the gift of the fullness of God's revelation masks an attitude of intolerance and a danger to peace.

Those who make such claims are overlooking the fact that the fullness of the gift of truth, which God makes by revealing himself to man, respects the freedom which he himself created as an indelible mark of human nature: a freedom which is not indifference, but which is rather directed towards truth. This kind of respect is a requirement of the Catholic faith itself and of the love of Christ; it is a constitutive element of evangelization and, therefore, a good which is to be promoted inseparably with the commitment to making the fullness of salvation, which God offers to the human race in the Church, known and freely embraced.

Respect for religious freedom32 and its promotion "must not in ally way make us indifferent towards truth and goodness. Indeed, love impels the followers of Christ to proclaim to all the truth which saves" 33 Such love is the sign of the authentic presence of the Holy Spirit who, as the principal agent of evangelization,34 never ceases to move people's hearts when they hear the Gospel, by opening them to receive it. It is a love which lives in the heart of the Church and from there, as burning charity, radiates out to the ends of the earth, as far as the heart of every human being. The entire heart of man awaits the encounter with Jesus Christ.

Thus one understands the urgency of Christ's invitation to evangelization and why it is that the mission entrusted by the Lord to the Apostles involves all the baptized. The words of Jesus "go therefore and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you" (Mt 28:19-20), are directed to everyone in the Church, each according to his own vocation. At the present time, with so many people in the world living in different types of desert, above all, in the "desert of God's darkness, the emptiness of souls no longer aware of their dignity or the goal of human life",35 Pope Benedict XVI has recalled to the world that "the Church as a whole and all her Pastors, like Christ, must set out to lead people out of the desert, towards the place of life, towards friendship with the Son of God, towards the One who gives us life, and life in abundance".36 This apostolic commitment is an inalienable right and duty, an expression of religious liberty, with its corresponding ethical-social and ethical-political dimensions.37 It is a right which in some parts of the world, unfortunately, has not yet been recognized and which in others is not respected in practice. 38

11.
He who announces the Gospel participates in the charity of Christ, who loved us and gave himself up for us (cf Eph 5:2); lie is his ambassador and he pleads in the name of Christ: let yourselves to be reconciled with God (cf. 2 Cor 5:20). It is a charity which is an expression of the gratitude that flows from the heart when it opens to the love given in Jesus Christ, that Love which, as Dante wrote, is displayed throughout the universe.39 This explains the ardour, the confidence, and the freedom of speech (parrhesia) evident in the preaching of the Apostles (cf. Acts 4:31; 9:27-28; 26:26, etc.) and which Agrippa experienced when he heard Paul speaking: "You will soon persuade me to become a Christian!" (Acts 26:28).

Evangelization is not only accomplished through public preaching of the Gospel nor solely through works of public relevance, but also by means of personal witness which is always very effective in spreading the Gospel. Indeed, "side by side with the collective proclamation of the Gospel, the other form of handing it on, from person to person, remains valid and important... It must not happen that the pressing need to proclaim the Good News to the multitudes should cause us to forget this form of proclamation whereby an individual's personal conscience is reached and touched by an entirely unique word that he receives from someone else".40

In any case, it needs to be remembered that, in transmitting the Gospel, word and witness of life go together.41 Above all, the witness of holiness is necessary, if the light of truth is to reach all human beings. if the word is contradicted by behaviour, its acceptance will be difficult. However, even witness by itself is not enough "because even the finest witness will prove ineffective in the long run, if it is not explained, justified - what Peter called `giving a reason for the hope that is in you' (1 Pet 3:15) - and made explicit by a clear and unequivocal proclamation of the Lord Jesus".42

IV. Some ecumenical implications

12. From its beginnings, the ecumenical movement has been closely connected with evangelization. Unity, in fact, is the seal of the credibility of missionary activity and so the Second Vatican Council noted with regret that the scandal of division "damages the most sacred cause of preaching".43 Jesus himself, on the night before his death, prayed "that they all may be one, so that the world may believe" (Jn 17:21).

The mission of the Church is universal and is not restricted to specific regions of the earth. Evangelization, however, is undertaken differently according to the different situations in which it occurs. In its precise sense, evangelization is the missio ad gentes directed to those who do not know Christ. In a wider sense, it is used to describe ordinary pastoral work, while die phrase "new evangelization" designates pastoral outreach to those who no longer practice the Christian faith,44 In addition, there is evangelization in countries where non-Catholic Christians live, including those with an ancient Christian Tradition and culture. In this context, what is required is both true respect for the tradition and spiritual riches of such countries as well as a sincere spirit of cooperation. Catholics, "avoiding every form of indifferentism or confusion, as well as senseless rivalry, through a common profession of faith in God and in Jesus Christ before all peoples - insofar as this is possible - may collaborate with their separated brethren in social, cultural, technical and religious matters in accordance with the Decree on Ecumenism".45

Different dimensions of the work of ecumenism can be distinguished: above all, there is listening, as a fundamental condition for any dialogue, then, theological discussion, in which, by seeking to understand the beliefs, traditions and convictions of others, agreement can be found, at times hidden under disagreement. Inseparably united with this is another essential dimension of the ecumenical commitment: witness and proclamation of elements which are not particular traditions or theological subtleties, but which belong rather to the Tradition of the faith itself.

Ecumenism does not have only an institutional dimension aimed at "making the partial communion existing between Christians grow towards full communion in truth and charity".46 It is also the task of every member of the faithful, above all by means of prayer, penance, study and cooperation. Everywhere and always, each Catholic has the right and the duty to give the witness and the full proclamation of his faith. With non-Catholic Christians, Catholics must enter into a respectful dialogue of charity and truth, a dialogue which is not only an exchange of ideas, but also of gifts,47 in order that the fullness of the means of salvation can be offered to one's partners in dialogue.48 In this way. they are led to an ever deeper conversion to Christ.

In this connection, it needs also to be recalled that if a non-Catholic Christian, for reasons of conscience and having been convinced of Catholic truth, asks to enter into the full communion of the Catholic Church, this is to be respected as the work of the Holy Spirit and as an expression of freedom of conscience and of religion. In such a case, ii would not be a question of proselytism in the negative sense that has been attributed to this term.48 As explicitly recognized in the Decree on Ecumenism of the Second Vatican Council, "it is evident that the wok of preparing and reconciling those individuals who desire full Catholic communion is of its nature distinct from ecumenical action, but there is no opposition between the two, since both proceed from the marvelous ways of God" 50 Therefore, the work of ecumenism does not remove the right or take away the responsibility of proclaiming in fullness the Catholic faith to other Christians, who freely wish to receive it.

This perspective naturally requires the avoidance of any undue Pressure: "in spreading religious faith and introducing religious practices, everyone should refrain at all times from any kind of action which might seem to suggest coercion or dishonest or improper persuasion, especially when dealing with poor or uneducated people".51. 52 Love and witnessing to the truth are aimed above all at convincing others through the power of the word of God (Cf 1 Cor 2:3-5; 1 Thess53 The Christian mission resides in the power of the Holy Spirit and in the truth itself which is proclaimed.

The witness to the truth does not seek to impose anything by force, neither by coercive action nor by tactics incompatible with the Gospel. By definition, the exercise of charity is free 2:3-5) V. Conclusion

13. The Church's commitment to evangelization can never be lacking, since according to his own promise, the presence of the Lord Jesus in the power of the Holy Spirit will never be absent from her: "I am with you always, even until the end of the world" (Mt 28:20). The relativism and irenicism prevalent today in the area of religion are not valid reasons for failing to respond to the difficult, but awe-inspiring commitment which belongs to the nature of the Church herself and is indeed the Church's "primary task"54 "Caritas Christi urget nos - the love of Christ impels us" (2 Cor 5:14): the lives of innumerable Catholics bear witness to this truth. Throughout the entire history of the Church, people motivated by the love of Jesus have undertaken initiatives and works of every kind in order to proclaim the Gospel to the entire world and in all sectors of society, as a perennial reminder and invitation to every Christian generation to fulfill with generosity the mandate of Christ. Therefore, as Pope Benedict XVI recalls, "the proclamation of and witness to the Gospel are the first service that Christians can render to every person and to the entire human race, called as they are to communicate to all God's love, which was flatly manifested in Jesus Christ, the one Redeemer of the world".55 The love which comes from God unites us to him and "makes us a `we' which transcends our divisions and makes us one, until in the end God is `all in all' (1 Cor 15:28)"56

The Sovereign Pontiff Benedict XVI in the Audience granted to the undersigned Cardinal Prefect on 6 October 2007, approved the present Doctrinal Note, adopted in the Ordinary Session of this Congregation, and ordered its publication.

Rome, from the Offices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, 3 December 2007, Memorial of Saint Francis Xavier, Patron of the Missions


+ William Cardinal Levada
Prefect

+ Angelo Amato, SDB
Titular Archbishop of Sila
Secretary



1. JOHN PAUL. II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris rnissio (7 December 1990), 47: JIAS 83(2991), 293.
2. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 14; cf. Decree Ad gentes, 7; Decree Un/tans
redintegratio, 3. This teaching does not contradict the universal salvific will of Cod, who `desires that all men be saved and
come to a knowledge of the truth' (I Ton 2:4); therefore, "it is necessary to keep these two truths together, namely, the real
possibility of salvation in Christ for all mankind and the necessity of the Church for salvation" (JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical
Letter Redemptoris missio, 9: AAS 83 [1991], 258).
3. Cf JOHN PAUL II Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio ineunte (6 January 2001), 1: AAS 93(2001), 266.
4. Cf PAUL. VI, Apostolic Exhortation Evangel/i cant/with (8 December 1975), 24. AAS 69 (1976), 22
5. JOHN PAUL. II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, 46: iL45 83 (1991), 293; cf PAUL VI, Apostolic Exhortation
Evangelli nuntiandi, 53 and 80: ~4.45' 69 (1976), 41-42, 73-74,
6. BENEDICT XVI, Homily at the Moss celebrated at the outdoor site of the Neue Messe in Munich (10 September
2006): 448 98(2006), 710
7. SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS, Summa Theologiae, 1-fl, q 109, al, ad I: "any truth no matter by whom it is spoken,
is from the Holy Spirit".
8 Cf JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Fides et ratio (14 September 1998), 44: il4S 91(1999), 40.
9. BENEDICT XVI, Address to the Participants in the Ecclesial Diocesan Convention of Rome "Family and
Christian community formation of the person and transmission of the faith" (6 June 2005): AAS 97(2005), 816
10. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Fides et ratio: AAS 91(1999), 9~10.
11. ibidem, 31: AAS 91 (1999), 29, of SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes 12.
12. This right was recognized and affirmed also by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948 (art 18-19).
13. JOHNPAUL II, Encyclical Letter Fides et raio,, 33. AAS9I (1999), 31.
14. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum, 5
15 SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Declaration Dignitatis humanae, 3.
16. Ibidem, 1
17. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, 52: ,L4S 83 (1991), 300.
18. Cf. JOHN PAUL II Encyclical Letter Slavorum Apostoli (2 June 1985), 18: AAS 77(1985), 800,
19. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum, 8.
20. Cf PAUL Vi, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelli nuntiandi, 19-20. AilS 69 (1976), 18.19.
21. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Decree Ad gentes, 7; ci Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium, 16; Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 22
22 BENEDICT XVI, Homily at the Mass for the Inauguration of the Pontificate (24 April 2005). AAS 97(2005), 71 S
23. ct: FIRST VATICAN COUNCIL~ Dogmatic Constitution Dei Filius, 2: "It is indeed thanks to this divine revelation,
that those matters concerning God, which are not of themselves beyond the scope of human reason, can, even in the present
condition of the human i-ace, be known by everyone without difficulty, with firm certitude and with no admixture of error
(cf SAINT THOMAS AQUINAS, Summa Theologiae, I, q..l, a I)" (DII 3005)
24. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Decree Ad gentes, 13.
25. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Declaration Dignitatis humanae, 11
26 Cf.. tot example, CI.EMENT OF ALEXANDRIA, Protrepticus (Exhortation to the Greeks), IX, 87, 3-4 (Sources
Chrétiennes 2 154-155); SAIN1 AUGUSTINE, Sermo 141) [-152 Al,) (Nuova Bibliotca Agostiniana, XXXV!), 269-271)
27. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium. 5.
28. Cf JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, IS: 14A8 83 (1991), 265-266: "If the kingdom is
separated from Jesus, it is no longer the kingdom of God which he revealed The result is a distortion of the meaning of the
kingdom, which fins the risk of being transformed into a purely human or ideological tool, and a distortion of the identity
of Christ, who no longer appeals as the Lord to whom everything must one day be subjected (ci I Go;- 15:27)"
29. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, 18: AAS 83 (1991), 266- On the relationship between
Christ and the Kingdom, cf. also CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE. FAITH, Declaration Dominus Iesus (6 August
2000), 18-19. ,t4S 92(2000), 759-761
30. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Declaration Dominus Iesus, 4. AAS 92(2000), 744
31. Cf. PAUL VI, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii nuntiandi, 80: AAS 69 (1976), 73. "Besides, it is added, why
proclaim the Gospel when the whole world is saved by uprightness of heart? We know likewise that the world and history
are filled with "seeds of the Word"; is it not therefore an illusion to claim to bring tile Gospel where it already exists in the
seeds that the Lord Himself has sown?"
32 Cf BENEDICT XVI, Address to the Roman Curia offering Christmas Greetings (22 December 2005). AAS 98
(2006), 50. ". if religious freedom were to be considered an expression of the human inability to discover the truth and thus
become a canonization of relativism, then this social and historical necessity is raised inappropriately to the metaphysical
level and thus stripped of its true meaning Consequently, it cannot be accepted by those who believe that the human person
is capable of knowing the truth about God and, on the basis of the inner dignity of the truth, is bound to this knowledge. It
is quite different, on the other hand, to perceive religious freedom as a need that derives from human coexistence, or indeed,
as an intrinsic consequence of the truth that cannot be externally imposed but that the person must adopt only through the
process of conviction"
33 SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 28; cf PAUL VI. Apostolic Exhortation
Evangeii nuntiandi, 24: AAS 69(1976), 21-22
34. Cf JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, 21-30: A,45' 83(1991)268-276.
35. BENEDICT XVI, Homily at the Mass for the Inauguration of the Pontificate (24 April 2005): AAS 97(2005), 710
36 Ibidem,
37.Cf SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Declaration Dignitatis humanae, 6
38. Indeed, where the right to religious freedom is recognized, the right to share one's owi3 convictions with others
in full respect for their consciences is usually recognized as well; this sharing is aimed at having others enter one's own
religious community and is an established right in numerous legal systems, with a well-developed jurisprudence.
39. Cf DANTE ALIGHIIERI, La Divine Commedia Pared/so, 33.87: che per l'universio si. squaderna
40. PAUL. VI, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii. nuntiandi, 46: AAS 69(1976), 36.
41." Cf SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gent/urn, 35.
42. PAUL VI, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii nuntiandi, 22. AIlS 69(1976), 20.
43..SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Decree Unitatis redintegratio. 1. cf JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris
mission. .1AS 83 (1Q91), 249, 297
44. Cf JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris missio, 34. AAS 83 (1991), 279-280.
45. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Decree Ad gentes, I5.
46 JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Ut unum sint (25 May 1995), 14. AAS 87(1995), 929.
47. Cf ibidem, 28. AAS 87(1995), 939-
48. Cf SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Decree Unitatis redintegratio, 3 and 5
49. The term proselytism originated in the context of Judaism, in which the term proselyte referred to someone who,
Coining from the gentiles, had passed into the Chosen People So too, in the Christian context, the term proselytism was
often used as a synonym for missionary activity. More recently, however, the term has taken on a negative connotation, to
mean the promotion of a religion by using means, and for motives, contrary to the spirit of the Gospel, that is, which do not
safeguard the freedom and dignity of the human person. It is in this sense that the term proselytism is understood in the
context of the ecumenical movement cf. The Joint Working Group between the Catholic Church and the World Council of
Churches, "The Challenge of Proselytism and the Calling to Common Witness" (1995).
50. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Decree Unitatiss redintegratio, 4.
51 SECOND VATICAN CODNCIL, Declaration Dignitalis hurnanae, 4
52.Cf BENEDICT XVI, Encyclical Letter Deus caritas es (25 December 2005), 31 C: AAS 98 (2006), 245.
53. Cf, SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL., Declaration Dignitatis humanae, 11.
54. BENEDICT XVI, Homily during the visit to the Basilica of Saint Paul outside the Walls (25 April 2005): 4~1597
(2005), 745.
55. BENEDICT XVI, Address io the participants in the International Conference on the 40th anniversary of
the conciliar Decree Ad Gentes "(II] March 2006): AAS 98(2006), 334
56. BENEDICT XVI. Encyclical Letter Dees caritas es, 18- AAS 98 2006), 232

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Gloria In Excelsis Deo!

Why is Gregorian chant making a comeback?
Arlene Oost-Zinner and Jeffrey Tucker

The pontificate of Pope Benedict XVI has been marked by new efforts to promote excellence in sacred music. His apostolic exhortation of last March, Sacramentum Caritatis, encourages teaching Latin chant in seminaries and singing it in liturgies, with particular emphasis on international gatherings.

The Pope has been quite direct in other settings as well. "An authentic updating of sacred music," he said in June 2006, "can take place only in the lineage of the great tradition of the past, of Gregorian chant and sacred polyphony." (Polyphony is music performed by multiple voices singing different, harmonized parts.)

Last but not least, Pope Benedict's recent apostolic letter Summorum Pontificum (July 7), which allows for a wider celebration of the traditional Latin Mass, now sets the stage for a wider use of Gregorian chant as well, given its important role in that form of the rite.

This is a Vatican-wide initiative, with an emphasis on the English-speaking world, where the neglect of the treasury of sacred music is widespread and well-known. Cardinal Frances Arinze, head of the Vatican congregation that oversees the sacred liturgy, spoke in St. Louis last year and urged a remedy. He said that in the average parish, Gregorian chant should be constantly present.

These statements echo authoritative documents of the Church: Gregorian chant, says the General Instruction of the Roman Missal (GIRM), holds "pride of place because it is proper to the Roman liturgy."

This in turn restates the message of the Second Vatican Council, whose Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium (1963), teaches that chant represents the ideal liturgical music, the standard against which all else should be measured (see Nos. 116-117).

Clearly, then, the council fathers never intended for chant to vanish after Vatican II. Quite the opposite. Pope Paul VI, in 1974, issued a book of chants along with the pastoral letter Voluntatis Obsequens. "Those who are trying to improve the quality of congregational singing," said the letter, "cannot refuse to Gregorian chant the place which is due to it."

Again, we find the same emphasis from Pope John Paul II, whose "Chirograph on the Centenary of Pius X's Moto Proprio on Sacred Music" (2003) insists, "Among the musical expressions that correspond best with the qualities demanded by the notion of sacred music, espe-cially liturgical music, Gregorian chant has a special place." He adds that the chant is an element of unity in the Roman liturgy.

What Is Gregorian Chant?

The Gregorian tradition took shape in the eighth century as the primary song of the Latin rite. It fused Gallican, Frankish, Jewish and Roman styles, growing up alongside the Mass.

Popes have consistently emphasized that it should be studied, perfected and used, not just in religious communities and cathedrals but in all parishes. That is in part because chant embodies the pace, rhythm and transcendent longings we find in Scripture, particularly the Psalms.

The tradition of Gregorian chant in the Latin rite provides music that meets the needs of all ages, classes and ethnic groups, not just in our times but in all times. The chant is intimately linked with Catholic faith and its prayer life. It takes us out of our everyday environment to remind us that we are in a sacred space. It helps us pray.

For all these reasons, chant has begun to move beyond the world of CDs and movie soundtracks, entering once again into our parish lives. The National Registry of Gregorian Scholas (choirs), for example, lists more than 100 groups singing in parishes around the country.

But more needs to be done. Because the music is so different from popular styles, it can be a challenge to sing. The sheer quantity of Gregorian chant is overwhelming; even in several lifetimes, it would be impossible to learn it all. But there is a core that can be broken down into three parts.

  • 1. The Kyriale is the name given to the body of chants that belong to the people during Mass. These include all the responses to the celebrant and what is called the Ordinary of the Mass: the Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus and Agnus Dei.

Many people today are familiar with the most basic of these, but the Church has actually given us 18 different settings of the Ordinary. There are congregations in this country that know all 18!

  • 2. The Graduale contains the body of chants that belongs to the Schola, or the singers set apart to study and perfect the Propers. The Propers are the sung parts of the Mass that include the Introit, Alleluia, Offertory and Communion, as well as the seasonal Sequences and Tracts. These are the most difficult part of Gregorian music, but also the part most closely tied to the changing prayer of the Mass.
  • 3. Finally, there are the vast numbers of popular chant hymns that can be sung at liturgy. These include the Marian antiphons such as Ave Maria and Salve Regina, as well as poetry set to music such as Attende Domine, Veni Creator Spiritus and O Salutaris. This last type provides an excellent place to start.

Chant Means Change

Many pastors who lack experience with the chant worry about pushing something new on their congregations or music directors. And yet this is not just any change: It's a movement toward fulfilling the wishes of the Church. Just as we expect certain types of music at the baseball game or a restaurant, there's a type of music particularly suited for Mass.

Everyone knows about the feuds over liturgical music. Chant offers a peaceful "third way." It can have an appeal to all parishioners, provided it is presented properly.

Chant links all generations now living and binds us to Catholics in all times and places. It exists not as a time-bound statement about musical fashion, but rather as a timeless melodic means of community prayer.

Chant encourages reverence, prayer and an awareness of the transcendent purpose of liturgical action. Chant catechizes and serves an evangelistic purpose.

Yes, introducing chant means change. Progress in learning it must be counted in years, not weeks or months. But once the ground is prepared, the quiet solemnity of chant can take root and grow, persuading people of its merit by the hearing and doing. Singing it is more convincing than arguing about it.

A Call for Humility

The renewed emphasis on chant in liturgy is a call for humility above all else. Musicians are being asked to serve rather than perform. The motivation must be love of liturgy and its source, love of sung prayer and its purpose, and a genuine desire to hear the people of God united in one voice in praise and thanksgiving.

Rome has been thoroughly consistent on the matter of liturgical music and the importance of using Gregorian chant in worship. But genuine change in response to these directives must begin in the parish community. It must come from the people and their pastors so that it can truly take root once again in the life of everyday Catholics. TCA

Arlene Oost-Zinner and Jeffrey Tucker are directors of the St.Cecilia Schola Cantorum in Auburn, Ala. You may e-mail them at contact@ceciliaschola.org.

From: Our Sunday Visitor

URL source: http://www.osv.com/TCANav/TheCatholicAnswerNovDec2007/GloriainExcelsisDeo/tabid/4642/Default.aspx

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Martha and Mary in Couples


ENTHUSIASMS & FOREBODINGS
By Rene Q. Bas

THE birth of two Couples for Christ branches, which the bishop most directly concerned with lay associations virtually instructed the disagreeing CFC factions to pursue, will end up in something good for everyone and the Church. That’s because, from what I see, both sides love God. St. Paul said everything turns out for the good for him who loves God.

Loving God guarantees good results. Because the one who loves God will not make moves to contradict His will—and God’s will is always for mankind’s good. Now just in case the one who loves God makes human mistakes, God—it is perfectly sensible for us to assume—will make the necessary corrections.

Those who in CFC-Gawad Kalinga were sad to see Frank Padilla leave to set up the CFC-Foundation for Family and Life to start a CFC restoration movement. Frank’s goal is to bring CFC back to the original purpose of the association, which is to make the Lord Jesus Christ’s Gospel a reality to the married couples who become members of CFC and the people they are in touch with most of all their children, relatives and old as well as new friends.

The CFC-GK group, whose people now run the officially original body, admits that perhaps they did go overboard in making the Gawad Kalinga program the be-all and end-all of their CFC work and involvement. That is not right, because Gawad Kalinga is only one of seven co-equal pillars of the association.

They admit that there were isolated cases of bad errors, in which CFC people mobilized to raise funds and get project partners for the universally-acclaimed aim of building houses for the poor pretended that they were not working for Christ to attract non-Catholics. And they gave the impression that GK was totally different and independent of CFC and therefore has nothing to do with the Church’s strictures against contraceptive pills and abortifacients and the Reproductive Health bills being pushed against the Catholic, Orthodox and most mainstream Protestant Christian denominations’ wishes in Congress.

The CFC-GK groups say, “OK, all right. Some of us made mistakes. We will now correct them and do the restoration that you want, Brother Frank. So don’t leave. Work with us for the restoration from within the original association.”

Frank Padilla, however, is not convinced that the powerful GK-oriented CFC leaders and elders are up to the task of restoring the CFC to its original charism, its God-given character and mission. So he formed CFC-Foundation for Family and Life and is now asking the various CFC units all over the country and the world to join him in the effort to restore and rebuild CFC.

The Filipino prelate whose job is to oversee lay associations, like CFC, is Bishop Gabriel V. Reyes. In a clarification he made about media reports that everything was all right with CFC-GK because it had “Vatican support” (as the Inquirer reported Tony Meloto had said), Bishop Reyes quoted Frank Padilla’s complaint that CFC “because of Gawad Kalinga is veering away from the vision/mission of CFC and from Catholic teachings and because of Gawad Kalinga enough manpower and resources are not given to the other ministries of CFC, like evangelization and catechesis.”

Bishop Reyes reminded the CFC elders and ruling executives that “Couples for Christ, together with its ministries, was founded primarily to ‘make disciples of all nations,’ to build up the Kingdom of Christ, ‘not just by building a nation.’”

CFC head Bro. Joe Tale, who is identified with the CFC-GK faction, said Frank Padilla’s break-away group should not use the name Couples for Christ for Family and Life. Several bishops, notably Bishop Reyes, disagree. He said, “As long as the names are explained, it will not cause confusion.” He likened the case to Marriage Encounter and Worldwide Marriage Encounter, which are parallel organizations operating in the Philippines. He also mentioned the original Franciscans who are OFM, and the subsequent OFM Capuchins and the OFM Conventuals. He also mentioned the Carmelites who have the Order of Carmelites and the Order of Carmelites Discalced.

The rift is another outbreak within the Church of the conflict between Martha and Mary, the sisters of Lazarus whom Jesus had raised from the dead. Both are saints—even if Jesus said Mary had chosen the better portion. But GK leaders must make sure that, GK, as it continues to help Muslim and people of other faiths, should stop pretending to be a non-Catholic organization.

Nun Reads Students a List of All The Bad Words That Are Banned At School

Nun reads students a list of all the bad words that are banned at school

Sister Kathy Avery told students to stick around after mass last month and then read out a list of all the nasty words that children aren't allowed to use on the playground at St. Clare of Montefalco Catholic School near Detroit.

"It got a little quiet in church," the nun tells our cousins at the Detroit Free Press.

She says this is the third time she's tried the shock therapy. "I'm not saying that it's an easy thing to do, it's just something that I thought was absolutely necessary," she tells the paper. "I'm not saying we had a terrible language problem. It's just that you start hearing words -- and they're offensive."

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

USCCB withdraws review of “The Golden Compass”

Today the U.S. bishops withdrew the review of the film “The Golden Compass,” which opened in theaters in the United States Dec. 7. The review was written by Harry Forbes and John Mulderig, the director and staff reviewer respectively of the Office for Film and Broadcasting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The review was released and posted on the CNS Web site Nov. 29. The USCCB gave no reason for withdrawing the review.

Since CNS is a distributor of media reviews of the OFB, it must respect the office’s withdrawal of its review. Effective Dec. 10, the review of “The Golden Compass” will not be available on the CNS Web site. It will not be included in subsequent listings of USCCB film reviews and classifications.

CNS stories about the film remain available to clients. These include:

Author of book behind ‘Golden Compass’ criticized as anti-Christian

Critics debate merits of ‘The Golden Compass’ movie

Nun-critic offers media literacy guide for ‘The Golden Compass’

“The Golden Compass” as seen in the Catholic press

Also, since our last post on the CNS News Hub, there’s also this item of interest: ‘Compass’: Challenging believers to articulate faith, values, by Sister Rose Pacatte.

Monday, December 10, 2007

News: Aussies to get Catholic Ads at Movies this Christmas

Aussies to get Catholic ads at movies this Christmas

Mon Dec 10, 2007 8:42pm IST

By Michael Perry

SYDNEY (Reuters Life!) - As well as being encouraged to enjoy the show, Australians going to the movies this festive season will be asked if they know about Jesus in the latest advertising campaign by the Catholic Church.

At a time when people's thoughts may turn to the birthday behind the celebrations, the Church is planning to run ads during the screening of "The Bee Movie", an animated film starring comedian Jerry Seinfeld, and the period drama "Atonement".

The advertisements ask cinema-goers: "Have you ever wanted to know what Catholics believe? Some aspects of the Catholic faith are a mystery."

The ad then tells the audience to call a telephone number to receive a series of free booklets.

"While newspaper advertising is still important to reach our market, newspaper readership is in decline, and this is another way to reach the mass market," said the Catholic Enquiry Centre on its Web site www.catholicenquiry.com.

"This is the peak time that people visit the cinema, with Boxing Day attracting the biggest viewing audiences of the year," said the centre, which has a link to an advertisement.

The Catholic Church remains Australia's biggest faith with 5.1 million followers, followed by 3.7 million Anglicans. But Australians are increasingly turning away from religion, according to the nation's census released in 2007.

About 3.7 million people, or 19 percent of the population, said they had no religion, up from 2.9 million or 17 percent a decade ago. While Christian denominations still prevail, the census found Hinduism, Buddhism and Islam to be the fastest growing religions in this nation of immigrants.

The Catholic Church cinema ads, which will be complemented by a newspaper campaign, are aimed at reaching people whose thoughts might turn to the faith at Christmas time, said the church.

"We know that our Churches fill up over the Christmas period, with people who haven't been to Mass for some time and even with some people who've never been to a Catholic Mass before," said Archbishop John Bathersby, Chairman of the Bishops Commission for Mission and Faith Formation.

"The Christmas season is an important time for people to take time out and remember that the birth of Jesus Christ is the cause of all the celebrations.

"Perhaps, in the quiet darkness of a movie theatre, they will be prompted to find out more about how the Catholic faith can help them find the peace they are searching for," he added.

(Editing by Miral Fahmy)

© Reuters 2006. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Special Report (Part 2): Transparency issue hounds Couples For Christ

The Manila Times

Monday, December 10, 2007

SPECIAL REPORT: COUPLES FOR CHRIST CRISIS

Transparency issue hounds Couples
By Sherryl Anne G. Quito, Senior Reporter

Editor’s note: The first part traced the causes of the split within the Couples for Christ—a difference in mission and a declining membership.

Last of two parts

A Couples of Christ (CFC) member Dr. Vic Cabuquit wrote an article saying that the lack of transparency in handling GK finances was one of the factors that led to the split.

The unexplained CFC debts, which, for a time, ballooned to millions of pesos, further worsened the situation. Overall, there was lack of transparency in how money was being handled. There were instances when money was being spent in advance, that the council was spending beyond its means. This cavalier attitude on finances was reflected in the absence of year-end financial reports and an aversion to so-called corporate auditing procedures. Members were asking amongst themselves, “How is our money being spent?”

However, money was not the principal cause of the rift that wracked Couples for Christ according to a member of the CFC International Council. Joe Tale, who now also chairs Gawad Kalinga, in a previous statement, admitted, however, that the allegations of mismanaged funds had been made by Padilla’s group. But the allegations were “all said in general,” Tale said. “Maybe if there was something specific mentioned, we can properly respond.”

Tale pointed out that the management of funds donated to GK had been and continued to be transparent.

Mike Go-co, GK finance head said the ac-counting firm Isla Li-pana & Co., a member of the accounting giant PriceWaterhouseCoopers International Limited, had been auditing Gawad Kalinga since day one. On top of this and as part of the process of transparency, Gawad Kalinga recently sought the assistance of another top auditing firm, Sycip Gorres & Velayo (SGV), to conduct another audit of the housing program’s processes and identify possible areas for improvement. Goco said the SGV findings, which included a few suggestions for improvement, were generally positive.

In an earlier interview, Nonong Contreras, one of the four members of the CFC interim committee and a former member of the Board of Elders of the International Council of the CFC Foundation for Family and Life, said they had not accused GK of mishandling fund donations.

“Never did we say that there’s an anomaly,” he said. “We only said there should be proper governance and accountability. When the money you are handling is not yours, there should be greater governance and accountability. The disbursements should jibe with the number of houses promised to partners.”


Saturday, December 8, 2007

It's Hip to be Latin

Sat Dec 08, 2007 7:48 am (GMT -5)


Catholics show fresh interest in Latin mass

By JACQUELINE SALMON
The Washington Post via The Colorado Gazette
December 7, 2007
Link to original



WASHINGTON - Parts of it are 1,500 years old, it’s difficult to understand, and it’s even more challenging to watch. And it’s catching on among young Catholics.

It’s the traditional Latin Mass, a formal worship service making a comeback after more than 40 years of moldering in the Vatican basement.

In September, Pope Benedict XVI relaxed restrictions on celebrating Latin Mass, frequently called the Tridentine Mass, citing “a new and renewed” interest in the ancient Latin liturgy, especially among younger Catholics.

Spoken or sung entirely in Latin by priests who face the altar instead of the congregation, it is a radical departure for most Catholics, who grew up attending a more informal Mass celebrated in their native tongue.

And it is a hit with younger priests and their parishioners.

Attendance at the Sunday noon Mass at St. John the Beloved in McLean, Va., has doubled to 400 people since it began celebrating in Latin. Most of the worshippers are younger than 40, said the Rev. Franklyn McAfee.

Younger parishioners “are more reflective,” McAfee said. “They want something uplifting when they go to church. They don’t want something they can get outside.”

For some, the popularity of the service represents the gap between older Catholics, who grew up in the more liberal, post-Vatican II era, and their younger counterparts, who say they feel as if they missed out on a tradition jettisoned in the move to modernize.

Priests, musicians and laypeople are snapping up how-to videos and books, signing up for workshops and viewing online tutorials with step-by-step instructions on the elaborately choreographed liturgy.

“I knew there would be some interest, but I didn’t know how quickly it would spread and how really deep the interest was,” said the Rev. Scott Haynes, a priest in the Archdiocese of Chicago who started a Web site in August offering instructions in celebrating the Mass. The Web site, www.sanctamissa.org, has received at least 1 million hits, Haynes said.

“Before Vatican II, there were a lot of things that marked Catholics as Catholic: the Tridentine Mass in Latin, fish on Fridays, those kinds of things,” said Monsignor Kevin Irwin, dean of the School of Theology and Religious Studies at Catholic University. “And I think that 40 years after the (Second Vatican) Council, there is a revival of questions asking what is Catholic identity, and for some, this is an external manifestation of saying, ‘We’re Catholic.’”

SPECIAL REPORT: Couples For Christ Crisis

The Manila Times
Sunday, December 09, 2007

SPECIAL REPORT: COUPLES FOR CHRIST CRISIS

Gawad Kalinga’s Executive Director, Luis Oquiñena, told The Times he saw no hope of unity and reconciliation between the Frank Padilla and Tony Meloto Couples for Christ factions.

At first reluctant to give a statement, Oquiñena explained that this was because Gawad Kalinga’s “veering away” from the original goals of Couples for Christ  was Frank Padilla’s main complaint against the Meloto faction.

He said the Padilla group has clearly indicated that it is unacceptable to them that GK has forged partnerships with groups that, from Padilla’s perspective of spreading the Catholic faith and adhering to Church tenets as required by Couples for Christ, should not be made CFC-GK partners or even donors.

He added that as far he and the others in GK are concerned they have to be “our brothers, keepers” and it did not matter where donations came from to help the poor.

Among these donors are pharmaceutical companies that peddle contraceptive and abortive pills.  Padilla’s faction charged the Meloto group, in a meeting with Catholic bishops, that there have been instances when Gawad Kalinga fund raisers would hide their being Couples for Christ members.

The Meloto faction, whose people are now running Couples for Christ after the resignation of both Padilla and Meloto from the International Council, have retorted to Padilla’s charges by asking why he tolerated all these things when he was in fact the highest head of Couples for Christ for two decades and chairman of Gawad Kalinga since its inception while Tony Meloto was its executive director.

Padilla’s departure from CFC, of which he was considered the chief moving spirit and principal founder for 25 years, is also based on his belief that the Meloto group that now serves as the elders and executives will not really work to “restore” the old and true Christian mission of the organization.

That is why he has formed the Couples for Christ-Foundation for Family and Life (CFC-FLL). He is also moving to persuade Philippine and global units of CFC to switch from the Meloto faction, being referred to as the FCC-GK by casual observers, to the CFC-FLL.

The Meloto faction holds the official name of “Couples for Christ” and the Securities and Exchange Commission has withheld approval of the CFC-FLL’s application for registration.

But Padilla claims that it was he who originally used the name Couples for Christ in 1983 when he registered the Couples for Christ Foundation Inc.

CFC is a Vatican-approved international private association of the faithful as well as a national association of the faithful in the Philippines.

The idea of having two CFCs, one the Meloto faction’s CFC Global Foundation Inc. and Padilla’s Couples for Christ-Foundation for Family and Life, is actually a principle advanced by Bishop Gabriel Reyes, head of the Catholic Bishops Conference’s Pontifical Commission for the Laity.  This commission holds authority as the Vatican’s deputy over CFC. It is also the official CBCP body that has oversight powers over lay associations.

Bishop Reyes and three other bishops concerned with CFC had ruled that the election of officers be deferred until the problems raised by Frank Padilla and his faction’s withdrawal from the organization are settled.

But the CFC-GK faction went ahead and elected new officers.

Bishop Reyes declared that the election “was not done in the right spirit.”

He and Bishop Socrates Villegas of Balanga, among others, have suggested that Padilla’s FCC-PLL exist side-by-side with DCC-GK, in the same way that the Franciscans have OFM, OFM-Capuchin and OFM-Conventuals and the Carmelites have the Order of Carmelites and the Order of Carmelites-Discalced.
--Rene Q. Bas

Friday, December 7, 2007

News: New Vatican Statement to address central doctrinal dispute


New Vatican statement to address central doctrinal dispute

Dec. 7, 2007 (CWNews.com) - The Vatican will release a new document on evangelization next week, with officials in Rome indicating that it will be an important statement on the duty to spread the Catholic faith.

The subject of the new document, which is being released under the auspices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, is evangelization. The document will be released on December 14.

The importance that the Vatican attaches to the subject is reflected by the list of ranking officials who will participate in a news conference introducing the document. Three cardinals will join in presenting the subject to the press. And because the three cardinals head three separate Vatican congregations, it is clear that the document is the product of careful preparation involving several dicasteries.

Cardinal William Levada, the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, will chair the December 14 presentation, assisted by Archbishop Angelo Amato, the secretary of the Congregation. They will be joined by Cardinals Ivan Dias and Francis Arinze: the prefects of the Congregation for Evangelization and Congregation for Divine Worship, respectively.

While Vatican officials have not announced a title for the document, or given a topic more specific than the broad theme of evangelization, informed officials suggested that this important new statement would address a lingering controversy over the claim that the Catholic Church is the one true Church or Christ.

In July of this year, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith released, a document entitled "Responses to Some Questions Regarding Certain Aspects of the Doctrine on the Church, reaffirming the central role of Jesus Christ and the Catholic Church in the plan of salvation. That document, released without fanfare, revived a controversy that had been ignited in 2000 by Dominus Iesus (doc), a powerful statement released by the same Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (headed at that time by then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger), which affirmed the traditional Catholic teaching that the Christ and his Church provide the only means of salvation.

The new Vatican document is expected to carry the argument of Dominus Iesus a step further, explaining that because of the unique role played by the Church in the plan of redemption, Catholics have an obligation to spread the faith, thus offering others the best means of attaining salvation.

News: Naples "miracle chair" draws childless couples

Thu Dec 06, 2007 7:55 pm (GMT -5)

Naples "miracle chair" draws childless couples

Tue Dec 4, 2007 11:53am EST

By Antonella Cianci

NAPLES (Reuters) - An ordinary old armchair under a worn blanket in a three-room flat in Naples draws thousands of hopeful pilgrims. Pasted all over the walls around it are birth announcements: pink for girls, blue for boys.

Childless women from all over the world flock to the "miracle" chair -- close to Speranzella street whose name suggests hope -- in the picturesque Spanish Quarter of Naples. There they ask Saint Mary Frances of the Five Wounds of Jesus for a miracle.

With her "miracles" reported on Weblogs, the saint's shrine has become a main stop on the religious tourism circuit in Naples, a city which in Italy is almost as well known for veneration of saints as for the Camorra crime syndicate.

"The saint is waiting for you," Sister Elisa, an energetic 65-year-old nun from the order that has guarded the shrine for two centuries, tells hundreds of men and women of all ages gathered for morning prayer at the nearby church.

After the Mass, worshippers are led up a steep staircase and along a narrow corridor into the flat where the saint, born Anna Maria Rosa Nicoletta Gallo, spent half her life in chastity and mystical suffering until her death in 1791 at the age of 76.

Hair shirts and a whip hanging from the walls remind pilgrims of the grim "voluntary penance" the saint adopted after joining the strict order of Saint Peter of Alcantara.

As the religious name she took suggests, she was believed to carry the "stigmata" or wounds of Jesus. She was the first woman saint born in Naples, but there is no hint in her life story as to why her help is sought by childless women in particular.

"Are you married?" Sister Maria Giuliana whispers to a young woman sitting on the armchair, before touching the visitor's breast and belly with a "monstrance" or reliquary containing a vertebra and a lock of hair from the saint.

As the nun prays, the group waits in silence.

"I am here to pray for everybody's sake, not only for myself," one young woman, who declined to give her name, whispered to Reuters in the hushed room.

CITY OF CHURCHES

Later, Sister Elisa shows a picture of a 5-month-old baby and a letter from his parents.

"We came to Naples to visit Saint Mary Frances on January 21, 2006," reads the letter signed by Dejan and Jasmina Bogdanovic, a Serbian couple living in Germany.

Evidence of Saint Mary Frances' miracles is anecdotal, but the groundswell of devotion for the "saint of the family" -- who escaped a forced marriage and an oppressive father -- has spread by word of mouth and, more recently, through blogs like caffenews.wordpress.com.

Roman Catholic Italy is rich in relics, which may be all or part of a saint's body or a belonging such as clothing. The most famous example in Naples is a glass phial believed to contain the dried blood of Saint Gennaro, the patron saint of Naples who was beheaded by pagan Romans in 305 A.D.

Each year pilgrims crowd the cathedral to witness the "miracle" of Saint Gennaro's blood, whose liquefaction is seen as a good omen for the city. On his feast day, a statue of Saint Mary Frances is carried behind his along the streets of Naples.

But nobody appears to know exactly how many relics have been preserved over the centuries in the churches of Naples.

"It is not even possible to say how many churches there are in Naples," Don Luigi Merluzzo, head of public relations at the Archdiocese of Naples, told Reuters.

"There are 287 churches listed in our Archdiocese's website, but many others, which are either closed or privately owned, are still kept out of the public eye," he said.

BLESSED FROM AFAR

Back at Saint Mary Frances' shrine, when the morning visits are over the nuns spend few hours each day answering hundreds of letters from Italy and abroad.

"Hi, I'm Francesca Rosa Limongelli. I was born in London on January 22, 2007, but, even though we are far away, my mum and dad have been feeling the presence of Saint Mary Frances with them," reads a letter published on the congregation's brand new 2008 calendar.

"Even if we don't have an email address yet, we receive many prayer requests by mail or by phone," Sister Elisa said. "Our followers often send us an item of clothing asking us to intercede with the saint by placing their objects on the chair.

"We have a lot of work to do. But the saint has a prayer for everyone," she added in a reassuring tone.

In a city where saints play a role in everyday life for many believers, the saint's work goes beyond reproduction.

"Some days ago a man came to us," Sister Maria Aurora said. "He wanted a house, a job and children. We told him to be patient but, thanks to Saint Mary Frances, his prayers have been fulfilled."

(Editing by Stephen Brown and Sara Ledwith)