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SimplyMe
Monday, April 24, 2006 1:06 AM
Condoms, IVF, embryos and Aids
@gracelp:

I don't know about that, but I can confirm one piece of other bad news:

Cardinal Martini (retired Jesuit archbishop of Milan) has just spoken out about his stand FOR condoms, IVF and embryos on 21 April.

I'm worried about that because it shows a division even within the college of cardinals.
In fact, I've been wondering if it was because of his outspoken stand that he was asked not to preside at the Mass for the Society of Jesuits on 22 April. He was named as the celebrant of the mass on vatican's CTV programme website, but instead it turned out that it was Cardinal Sodano (who is not a Jesuit) who presided it. It's just a guess...

Cardinal Martini is a very intelligent man, like Ratzinger, but he's wellknown for his liberal stand and considered to be a strong papal contender during the conclave of last year.

The Pope B16 has recently recommended him as a great teacher of Lectio Divina to a university student during the April6 youth meeting with the Pope.

With due respect to his intelligence (he has an impressive list of achievements...), I don't really like him because of his opposing views to, not just the pope's, but also Church's doctrines.. <p><font class='xsmall'>[<i>Modificato da SimplyMe 24/04/2006 1.06</i>]</font></p><p><font class='xsmall'>[<i>Modificato da SimplyMe 24/04/2006 1.12</i>]</font></p><p><font class='xsmall'>[<i>Modificato da SimplyMe 24/04/2006&nbsp;1.15</i>]</font></p>
Maklara
Monday, April 24, 2006 1:15 AM
Reuters
it maybe belogs to NEWS ABOUT CHURCH thread but we are speaking about it in this thread so I am posting here the Reuters article


Vatican preparing statement on condoms and AIDS
23 Apr 2006 16:42:43 GMT

ROME, April 23 (Reuters) - The Vatican will soon publish a statement on the use of condoms to prevent the spread of AIDS, an issue highlighted by a call from a leading cardinal to ease its ban on them, a Catholic Church official said.

Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragan, the head of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral Care, declined to reveal the contents of the document in an interview published in Sunday's la Repubblica newspaper, but said Pope Benedict had asked his department to study the issue.

The former archbishop of Milan, Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, who was standard bearer for a moderate minority in the conclave that elected the Pope last year, called for a reform in an interview published in Italy on Friday.

The Vatican opposes condoms as a form of contraception, but several cardinals have said in recent years that using them is a lesser evil if the alternative is infection with AIDS.

"This is a very difficult and delicate subject that requires prudence," said Mexican-born Barragan.

"My department is studying this closely with scientists and theologians expressly assigned to draft a document that will be issued soon," he said.

The Catholic Church, which runs many hospitals and institutions to help AIDS victims, opposes the use of condoms and teaches that fidelity within heterosexual marriage, chastity and abstinence are the best way to stop the spread of AIDS.

It says promoting condoms to fight the spread of AIDS fosters immoral and hedonistic lifestyles and behaviour that will only contribute to its spread.

In his interview with the weekly L'Espresso, Martini backed up his call for a change in condom policy by referring to cases where one partner in a marriage is infected with AIDS.

"This person has an obligation to protect the other partner and the other partner also has to protect themselves," he said. The Church disapproves of sexual intercourse outside marriage.

Barragan commented favourably on Martini's suggestion that the Church allow women who cannot get pregnant to use surplus frozen embryos from fertility clinics that usually dispose of them after a couple has undergone fertility treatment.









Gerald fromCafeteria is Closed

The Church doesn't talk about the customs in pre-marital or extra-marital sex (such as condom use) for pretty much the same reason as the government doesn't give people tips on how to steal. Talking about how to sin is not Church business.

Here an article from Der Spiegel, Germany's most renowned magazine. It is based on a report from the DPA, the German Press Agency, which in turn translated an article in one of Italy's major newspapers, La Repubblica. I translated the Spiegel article.


According to statements by a Curia cardinal the Vatican wants to allow HIV-infected people the use of condoms (note: likely this means, among married people, as other sources say). Cardinal Baragan, the Vatican's "health secretary", said that work was being done to publish such a document in the near future, according to an interview the cardinal gave to the Italian newspaper La Repubblica (not online yet).

Up until now, the Catholic CHurch has strictly rejected the use of condoms for HIV-infected people/people with AIDS. The newspaper called the decision (note: alleged decision) an important correction of policy. Observers opined that a Curia cardinal could only make a statement on such an important topic if he had consulted Pope Benedict XVI. beforehand.

"We are dealing with a very complicated and delicate topic", the cardinal said, who is generally viewed as a close confidant of Pope Benedict XVI. "It was Benedict, who asked for an examination of this extraordinary question of condom use by people suffering from AIDS", the cardinal added. What the new regulation will contain as far as details are concerned is not yet known.

Already last week, the highly influential former Archbishop of Milan, Cardinal Martini, had made headlines, when he said, "Everything needs to be done to fight AIDS. In some situations the use of a condom is the lesser evil".

The late John Paul II. was much stricter on the topic - he rejected condoms for prevention of infections, instead he demanded celibacy.


If you remember, before the instruction on homosexuals and the seminaries came out, there were rumblings in the press. This time it's the responsible cardinal giving an interview, so it'd seem that something will probably happen. What it means concretely, remains to be seen. I would think that the Vatican will only talk about condom use within marriage, when one spouse is HIV infected.

[Modificato da Maklara 24/04/2006 1.24]

mag6nideum
Monday, April 24, 2006 2:22 AM
AIDS in Africa
I live in Africa. One or two things can be brought to the attention of people who are perhaps not familiar with traditions of many African tribes, and also of many Africans who call themselves Christians.
[1] Many (most??)African Christians do not live a celibate life before marriage. It is not part of their tradition, where a man must be certain that the girl he is going to marry will be able to produce children. Most of them have children before marriage. The Pope is well aware of this African traditional way of looking at life. He has spoken to African bishops about this.
[2]I have seen a recent documentary on AIDS in Africa where interviews were held with many African men. Most of those in these interviews were contemptuous of condoms. They don't want to use it anyway, as it lessens their "pleasure" according to them, and is also somehow seen as "unmanly".
[3]The percentage of people dying of AIDS and infected by the virus is truly staggering. 13% of the world's total statistics for AIDS-infected people live in South Africa alone. The number of orphans where both parents had already died of AIDS is very high and increasing every day.
[4] The desperate message given to the population by the medical profession and the media is: PLEASE use condoms and keep to one "safe" partner (at a time!!).(But who is "safe" anymore?) In South Africa no secular leader up till now has ever pointed out that sex should be kept for marriage only and that unmarried people should live a celibate life. They place the blame for AIDS on poverty etcetera, never on the sexual morality of millions of people, Christian or non-Christian.

IF the Vatican chooses to allow the "lesser evil" in the form of condoms in a marriage with one infected partner, I seriously wonder if it will have a significant effect.
gracelp
Monday, April 24, 2006 3:37 AM
aids/condom use
maklara,simplyme and mag6nideum,thanks for all the input..i was reading blogs and i dunno im worried about how ppl will again react towards Papa..but like Maklara said Lord Jesus is with him and Holy Spirit will guide him.:)

mag6nideum,your post about Africa is so enriching esp. that you yourself live there..ive learned so much and i do share same apprehensions about it-thres more to the problem of Aids there than using condoms...culture and attitude of people themselves paly a major role in addressing such disease..too much underlying issues
@Nessuna@
Monday, April 24, 2006 5:17 AM
I've just posted an article in the spanish/portug. section that confirms the Vatican is preparing a documment about the use of condom....but the sourece didn't mention if the Church will alow it use or not.
benefan
Monday, April 24, 2006 7:56 PM
[This probably should go in the News about the Church thread but since it continues the discussion above, here it is.]


Vatican preparing document on condom use and AIDS, official says

By John Thavis
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Benedict XVI has asked a commission of scientific and theological experts to prepare a document on condom use and AIDS prevention, a Vatican official said.

Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragan, head of the Pontifical Council for Health Care Ministry, said the document would focus, at least in part, on condom use by married couples when one spouse is infected.

He said the document would be made public soon, but refused to give details about the commission's conclusions.

Cardinal Lozano was responding to questions in the wake of an interview by Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, retired archbishop of Milan, who said use of condoms can be the lesser evil in some situations.

Cardinal Lozano spoke in an interview April 23 with the Rome newspaper La Repubblica. He was asked specifically about use of condoms by married couples seeking to prevent transmission of AIDS.

"It's a very difficult and delicate theme that requires prudence," Cardinal Lozano said.


"My council is studying this attentively with scientists and theologians expressly charged with preparing a document on the subject, which will be made public soon," he said.

"It was Pope Benedict who asked us to make a study on this particular aspect of the use of condoms by those with AIDS and other infectious diseases," he said.

In recent years, even as Vatican officials have criticized anti-AIDS condom campaigns, several bishops, theologians and Vatican officials have said they could envision situations in which condom use to prevent AIDS would be the "lesser evil" that can be tolerated.

Cardinal Lozano, for example, said in 2005 that if a husband had AIDS, it was a woman's right to ask him to use a condom.

In the context of married love, the church teaches that contraceptive techniques, including condoms, are immoral because they close off the possibility of procreation.

Some theologians, including those who are consultors to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, have been among those suggesting that condom use by married couples may be acceptable when the intention is to prevent a deadly disease and not to prevent procreation.

Cardinal Martini told the Italian magazine Espresso that a spouse infected with HIV has an obligation to protect his or her partner.

At the same time, Cardinal Martini questioned whether religious leaders should promote anti-AIDS condom campaigns, because he said they risk promoting sexual irresponsibility.

That has been the primary argument of other church leaders, who have also said -- as Pope Benedict did last June -- that chastity and fidelity are the only fail-safe ways to prevent the spread of the disease.

In his interview with Espresso, Cardinal Martini also spoke at length about abortion. While calling for every effort to reduce the number of abortions, he said decriminalizing the practice has had the positive effect of reducing the number of clandestine abortions.

Decriminalizing abortion does not represent a "license to kill," he said. He said it means the state does not feel it necessary to intervene in every possible case; instead, he said, the state tries to eliminate the causes of abortions and prevents them from being carried out after a certain point in pregnancy.

Cardinal Martini also said that while one must do "whatever is possible and reasonable to defend and save every human life," there were complex and painful situations that require careful reflection and decisions on what is best for the person and what "concretely serves to protect or promote human life."

"It is important to recognize that the continuation of physical human life is not in itself the first and absolute principle. Above it stands human dignity, a dignity that in the Christian vision and that of many religions involves an openness to the eternal life that God promises to man," he said.

Physical human life should be respected and defended, he added, "but it is not the supreme and absolute value."

Cardinal Martini said he did not believe the principles of self-defense or "lesser evil" could be applied to cases of abortion, unless the mother's life was actually threatened by carrying the pregnancy to term.

Even when a mother cannot care for a child, he said, there are other ways in modern society for the child to be raised.

"But in any case I hold that respect is due to any person who, perhaps after much reflection and suffering, in these extreme cases follows their conscience, even if the person decides to do something that I cannot approve," he said.

The Espresso interview was conducted as a dialogue between Cardinal Martini and Italian bioethicist Ignazio Marino. In it, the cardinal touched on a number of other issues:

-- The cardinal said he agreed with Marino that it appeared that individual human life began sometime after the joining of sperm and egg. In particular, Cardinal Martini said he agreed that a new individual did not seem to be present in a fertilized egg before the male and female nuclei had combined to form the new embryo's nuclei. That is an argument made by some scientists who are promoting new, more sophisticated forms of artificial insemination. Cardinal Martini said a more precise understanding of when individual human life begins could help overcome the church's opposition to every form of artificial insemination.

-- The cardinal said the implantation of frozen embryos, so-called embryonic adoption, was preferable to simply letting the embryos perish -- even when the mothers are single.

-- On the question of allowing single people to adopt children, the cardinal said adoption by married couples was generally preferable, but that he would not want to exclude the possibility for singles. It's a question of making the best choice for the child, he said.

benefan
Monday, April 24, 2006 8:21 PM

Polish TV to ban erotic ads during pope's visit


WARSAW (AFP) - Poland's TVP public broadcaster is to ban television adverts containing erotic and violent scenes during Pope Benedict XVI's visit to the country next month, officials said.

"Programmes of masses will obviously not be accompanied by publicity," Zbigniew Badziak, the TVP official responsible for publicity, told AFP.

"For other programmes linked to the pope's visit, we will eliminate all advertisements that could hurt religious feelings, particularly those containing violent or erotic scenes."

Badziak also said TVP would avoid transmitting adverts for products such as beer and intimate hygiene items during the pope's visit.

"It was the same during visits to Poland by Pope John Paul II," he added.

Benedict XVI's May 25-28 visit is due to take in Warsaw, Krakow, the former Nazi death camp at Auschwitz, the shrine of the Black Madonna in Czestochowa, and Wadowice, the birthplace of John Paul II.

Over 90 percent of Poles profess to be Roman Catholic.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Tuesday, April 25, 2006 1:10 AM
PETER SEEWALD ON YEAR-1 OF B16
On 4/18/06, Die Tagespost, a German Catholic newspaper that generally has excellent coverage of Church and Papal news, published an interview with journalist-author Peter Seewald to mark the first anniversary of Benedict XVI's papacy. Here is a translation.
----------------------------------------------------------------

'It is almost a miracle':
The seamless transition between two Papacies

Peter Seewald interviewed by Jose Garcia

Probably no other journalist knows Pope Benedict XVI as well as Peter Seewald does. Twice he sat down for about a week of extended interviews with then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. Out of that material came the books Salt of the Earth (1996) and God and the World (2000), which allowed a profound look into the thinking of the then Prefect of the Cognregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. And in his last book, Benedict XVI: A Close-up Portrait(2005), Seewald reveals many previously undisclosed aspects of Ratzinger’s life.

You write that after the Conclave last year, one of your friends said to you, “I cannot believe that the friend of my best friend is now Pope.” Would you describe yourself as “a friend of the Pope”?
No, of course not. Although I had the great good fortune to get to know Cardinal Ratzinger since 1992 through my work as a journalist and to later write two books with him.

Still, you are among those who may be said to know the Pope quite well, because for the two books, you held long and deep conversations with him. How would you characterize Joseph Ratzinger?
He has a spirit capable of reaching the heights. He has a brilliant intellect and the special gift of transmitting even complicated things understandably. At the same time, he is distinguished by a deep and simple religiousness.

Basically, he has remained a simple priest who defends the people’s faith, with great amiability and a desire to help. He reaches across to people, instead of simply giving them boilerplate answers, but without any false comradeship or cheap fraternizing. He always keeps a certain distance, out of respect for the other, on the one hand, and also because of his natural shyness. But he completely ‘accepts’ whoever his interoluctor is. I have never once observed in him any trace of cynicism or vanity. One can truly say that Joseph Ratzinger genuinely strives to be saintly in every area of his life, as every Christian should.

Therefore, it was also incumbent on him, as guardian of the faith when he was Prefect of the CDF to show firmness. But by nature he is anything but a ‘hardliner’, quite the opposite. As his brother said, he needed, and rightly so, to muster all his fighting force (for this), as he was obliged to do,

On the whole, I always had the impression that this was a totally special man, someone who had endured the difficulties of the 20th century and came through it relatively unharmed and unspoiled, indeed coming through it whole and pure. Out of this specialness comes the radiance and brilliance with which he is able to portray the message of Christ so persuasively.

Your acquaintance with Cardinal Ratzinger began in 1992 when you were assigned by to write a profile of him for the magazine of the Sueddeutsche Zeitung. How did you get the assignment?
At that time, I had been thinking again about religious faith. When I was 18, I left the Church for political reasons. Although I had been a communist for years, somehow I started to look at religion again, because I was concerned at the unrecognizable decadence that our civilization appeared to be going through.

I asked myself: Where can a society go that is so estranged from God? What is going to happen to our culture? Is there really a relationship, as the Church has always maintained, between Godlessness and the loss of ethical values, (in) a selfish society which was descending towards barbarity and would ultimately be inhuman and evil? These questions gave me a lot to think about.

I asked my editors – was it possible that the Pope was right about things this once? In that circle, it was, of course, a frightful provocation. Anyway, they assigned me to do this profile and later a book about and with Cardinal Ratzinger. This fell right in with my personal interests so that most of the questions that I ended up asking the Cardinal, were my own questions.

To discuss such questions with a wise man was a great challenge – but ultimately, a giant opportunity for me to be 'infected' myself. Ratzinger’s analyses were so enlightening that it was difficult for me to refute him on anything. Many of my ‘arguments” came from pure prejudice or simply lack of knowledge. Although I was still formally on “the other side”, he convinced me about a lot of things.

In your book “Als ich began, wieder an Gott zu denken” (When I began to think about God again), you wrote: “The encounter with Joseph Ratzinger… did not lead to my return to the Catholic Church, but he gave me the big push, after so many little steps, to take the last big step.” Can you explain that further?
Whoever wishes to learn about Christianity can go back to the great books. One can allow oneself to be fascinated by the wisdom of the Testaments, the inspiration of the Church fathers and the saints. A basic secret, however, is that faith must above all be transmitted to men. It is empty unless it is transmitted by men whose lives bear witness that the faith is authentic and beliefworthy. With Cardinal Ratzinger, one felt that he really lived what he said. He has an authenticity which makes the faith itself worthy of belief.

Then I began to see that persuasive answers to the complicated problems of our modern world could be found in the Gospel, in the great traditions of the Church, but especially in the reflections of this great mind who sat across from me – (Christianity is) an over-arching vision that has not lost its brilliance after 2000 years. After the break-up of the “great” political ideologies, Christianity has remained basically the only system of thought that is left us.

Before the Conclave, you said in an interview that you did not doubt Cardinal Ratzinger would be elected. And you noted that April 19 was the birthday of the German Pope Leo IX, which you thought “an interesting constellation.” Why were you so convinced?
I had been asking myself the whole year, What if Cardinal Ratzinger were a candidate for Pope? But as time went on, this prospect seemed even more unlikely for a lot of people. For me, two historical points were decisive. No one knew the Church as well as he did, and vice versa, the Church knew no one as good as it knew him. He was really a co-shaper of John Paul II’s Pontificate, and I suspected that the Pope had his ulterior reasons for never allowing Ratzinger to retire.

Add to this Ratzinger’s unquestioned qualities as a great analyst, a great theologian, someone who could lead and synthesize any dialog. Moreover, I got the impression from looking at his biography that his path was leading him toward a certain end which he had not yet reached.

A special event happened on the feast day of St. Scholastica in 2000, when he preached the homily in Montecassino. As he came out of the sacristy, I suddenly felt an electric jolt. I called my wife over and said, “Don’t laugh, but I just saw the future Pope.” This thought kept running through my head during the conclave. That April 19th happened to be another German Pope’s birthday only strengthened my assumption.

Cardinal Ratzinger knows John Paul II’s Pontificate like no other man can. We may therefore expect that many of the things that John Paul sought to do but was unable to or could not finish doing, will now be carried out. Many observers obviously kept this consideration in mind: that the man who will be Pope must be able to carry on with the initiatives of John Paul.

But the Pontificate is not a project and the Pope is not a politician. He does not need his own program, because the program has remained the same for 2000 years. However, a Pope must have a certain profile. He must be appropriate to the tasks of his time, and in this case, he must also be up to the measure of the preceding Pontificate, which many consider to have been great. Even in this respect, one could not think of anyone beyond Cardinal Ratzinger.

And so it has happened. We are living through a sensational event, a never-before-experienced “double Pontificate.” The fantastically seamless transition is almost a miracle. After the great John Paul II, it was thought, anyone who succeeded him would pale by comparison. But now we see that Peter’s Successor is not a pale figure, if only because historically, he will not stand by himself. It will be seen that two friends led the Church from the second millennium into the third.

Benedict is carrying the legacy forward, with new emphases and his own charisma, and has received almost from the day of his election a widespread acceptance that was not thought possible.

When you look back at the first year of this Pontificate, do you feel validated? Or were there any surprises for you?
The surprise was that, as I indicated earlier, there were no surprises, no ruptures. Ratzinger is not necessarily a great showman. The question then was whether he could present the Church to the world. But from the first moment, all these apprehensions disappeared. Whoever knows him also knows that his friendliness and simplicity are neither play-acting nor put on, but really part of his personality. Now he is free of his previous encumbrances, along with the pain that came with it – he has overcome all of that - and has brought all his outstanding qualities to his new office.

I believe that Pope Benedict is enjoying not only the exceptional trust of the faithful, but he has also achieved a new ‘tone.’ For many, he has made the papacy far more accessible somehow, and many feel more open to its message. In a way that will have enormous consequences, he is focusing the Church on its own mission.

Is it another outcome we can expect of this Pontificate that he, who himself took part in shaping it, will bring the Second Vatican Council to full fruition?
There has been a widespread hypothesis that Ratzinger changed from a progressive theologian at the time of Vatican-II to a conservative hardliner. I cannot understand this because there is no evidence for it. I find that he has always remained true to his thinking, and his life story follows from that.

Of course, he has also reacted to the currents of time. When everything is stirred up as during the 60s and 70s, one must hold fast to what is worthwhile so that it does not get lost. Ratzinger has been distinguished by his faithfulness to the Gospel.

It is also very fortunate for the Church that it is led by someone who can bring to it his experiences of totalitarianism, who experienced a Godless society in its extremest form. Out of this, Joseph Ratzinger drew the conviction that it does not help the Church if she is strong as an institution but does not have enough members who truly live by its principles. His life experience also led him to be critical of the ‘uprisings’ of the 60s .

Likewise he lived through the initial consensus about the Second Vatican Council, which he can bring to his Pontificate without being blind to the negative events that eventually came with so many so-called reforms.

In a surprising move he gave up the title “Patriarch of the West”. After the Church has been Eurocentric for so long, can Benedict XVI, as a German Pope firmly rooted in Western thought, be predestined at the same time to have the universal Church more clearly in his vision?
The decision to give up the title is not isolated. He also did away with the tiara in his coat of arms. Although the Pope can never give up anything that is part of the Church’s basic beliefs, as a modern nan, he must be ready to cut off some (inessential) offshoots.

The Church has been universal, from the beginning, and this is exmphasized in the office of the papacy. Perhaps the renunciation of this title was not only a signal for ecumenism but more especially, an expression of the fact that the center of gravity of the universal church has shifted.

In the other continents, we have a young energetic Church while Western Europe is on the decline, and it is quite possible that Benedict XVI will be the last European Pope for a long time.

But the West has given Catholicism its face. The Church is inseparably bound to it, and furthermore, Europe is of outstanding significance for Christendom. Nevertheless, one must recognize that the Church has new centers of strength now.

For ecumenism, Europe continues to play a central role, since the heads of the Orthodox Churches have their seats in Europe.

For years, John Paul II offered the Orthodox Churches a dialog with respect to the Petrine primacy. Do you think Benedict XVI will take this farther?
Absolutely. Perhaps it was somewhat surprising that right at the start of his Pontificate he started to push significantly for this great task of reuniting the separated Churches and church associations with Rome. He will devote all his powers to it because it is one of the most important issues for him.

Without speculating, I think we may be in for many surprises in this respect during this Papacy. One such surprise for me was Cardinal Kasper’s reconfirmation [as the principal Vatican liaison with the orthodox churches], who is highly motivated in this mission and who has intensified his contacts with the eastern churches. We can also look forward with some suspense to the Pope’s trip to Turkey in November.

All this does not mean that the Papacy itself is ‘negotiable.’ He has said earlier that one must look for certain definitions that will make it easier for the evangelical and Orthodox Christians to proceed with the ecumenical dialog.


[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 25/04/2006 1.14]

SimplyMe
Tuesday, April 25, 2006 1:49 AM
Re: Please, can you help me?

[QUOTE][DIM]7pt[=DIM]Scritto da: josie '86 21/04/2006 23.21
[C][/C]I can't translate my whole article about the pizzaioli of Salerno because it's too difficult 4 me !It's in the file 'Lo sapevate che...?'!Can anybody help me to translate this article,please?

Antony la Salernitana[/DIM][/QUOTE]


Can someone help josie in the translation? I think the news article is an interesting one...about pizza... I am hungry too.
TERESA BENEDETTA
Tuesday, April 25, 2006 5:00 PM
PLEASE GO TO 'NEWS ABOUT THE CHURCH' FOR FURTHER REPORTS AND DISCUSSION ON THE 'CONDOM' REPORT. As of 4/24/06, a Vatican official has quashed down all speculation about this. The issue is being studied by the CDF, in consultation with other dicasteries, which will make its recommendations to the Pope. See CNA report of 4/24/06 in NEWS ABOUT THE CHURCH.

About Josie's request, the reason I have not translated her item is that we already reported this in POPE-POURRI shortly after the audience where it happened, with a photograph of it from the Vatican photo gallery. I appreciate the enthusiasm of our members to share any and all information they can get their hands on, and hope they will continue to do so. Next time, I will comment right away if a flagged item is something we already reported...

Also, the thread for 'light' items about the Pope is POPE-POURRI, whereas all the 'serious' news reports, analyses and commentary are to be found here in NEWS ABOUT BENEDICT .

Thank you all for your great participation and cooperation.




benefan
Tuesday, April 25, 2006 7:37 PM
Benedict XVI's Analytical-Rational Style

Interview With La Stampa's Marco Tosatti

VATICAN CITY, APRIL 24, 2006 (Zenit.org).- How does a leading Vatican-watcher see Benedict XVI's first year in the papacy?

For a perspective on the pontificate, which marked its first anniversary last Wednesday, ZENIT interviewed journalist Marco Tosatti of the Italian newspaper La Stampa.

Tosatti is the author of the book "Il dizionario di Papa Ratzinger, una guida al pontificato" (The Dictionary of Pope Ratzinger: A Guide to the Pontificate), published by Baldini & Castoldi.

Q: How do you evaluate the first year of Benedict XVI's pontificate?

Tosatti: I think that Benedict XVI has dedicated these first 12 months above all to study. A widely shared opinion now is that, though he has spent many years in Rome, some mechanisms and functioning of the Curia were not familiar to him. This explains why, as opposed to many predictions, his Curia is to a very great extent that of John Paul II.

Q: The struggle against secularization, renewal of the faith, the defense of life and the family, the spread of knowledge of Christ -- the subjects seem the same, but Benedict XVI's style is very different from John Paul II's, don't you think?

Tosatti: The subjects are absolutely the same as those of his predecessor. And it would be very odd if it wasn't so.

Joseph Ratzinger was John Paul II's theological pillar for almost 25 years, and in the last years, according to what I have learned, there was no important topic, including many appointments, on which he was not consulted.

The style is profoundly different, and it couldn't be otherwise. John Paul II's poetic-intuitive tendency is not the analytical-rational one of Benedict XVI. Two different paths to arrive at the same objective.

Q: In an original and unexpected way, Benedict XVI published his first encyclical on the subject of the love of God. What do you think of it?

Tosatti: I think it is, in part, one of John Paul II's numerous "legacies,” specifically, the second part.

But I think that the first part, in which the authentic Ratzinger is seen more easily, is very beautiful and opens -- along with the words he pronounced a few days before making it public -- a wide picture on little-known aspects of Benedict XVI's personality and sensitivity, something very remote from the stereotype that the media have built of him in all these years.

Q: There has been talk for some time of the reform of the Vatican Curia. It seems that Benedict XVI is about to carry out a substantial restructuring. In what way and with what criteria will he implement it?

Tosatti: I would also like to know! The only thing we can try to guess at present is that Pope Ratzinger seems more partisan to making changes little by little, perhaps spreading out decisions and substitutions over time, rather than in "packages” of great dimension.

At least, up to now, he has done so; and also from what we know about the way he administered the Diocese of Munich, which seems to respond to this criterion.

But he is certainly a person who assesses, reflects and ponders much, specifically, in the choice of men, which perhaps is his greatest concern. Likewise in regard to episcopal appointments, he studies personally each "capacity," and the requests are a little numerous. I think he wants to be sure to entrust dioceses to strong and holy persons.



benefan
Tuesday, April 25, 2006 8:17 PM
[Aha! Finally, the truth about the so-called Prada loafers.]


Does the Pope Wear Prada?

Marketers Pray for Day
Pontiff Is Seen Using Their Brand;
Even Better Than a Movie Star

By STACY MEICHTRY
The Wall Street Journal
April 25, 2006

Pope Benedict XVI is appealing to a new group of admirers: marketers seeking not blessings but pontifical product placements.

Since his election last year, the pope has been spotted wearing Serengeti-branded sunglasses and brown walking shoes donated by Geox. He owns a specially engraved white Apple iPod, and he recently stirred much publicity with a pair of stylish red loafers that may or may not be from Prada.

The raft of designer labels floating around the new pontiff is one of the odder consequences of last year's long-awaited papal transition. For the marketing world, the change at the helm of the Holy See is presenting an unprecedented opportunity, but also an ethical dilemma over how far to exploit religion for hyping a product.

Benedict XVI's media-savvy predecessor, John Paul II, was one of the world's most photographed public figures, but he also was a conspicuous ascetic. His preferred footwear was a pair of worn brown shoes. Prior to a 1981 assassination attempt, the Polish pontiff cruised around Rome in a 1960s Mercedes he inherited from his predecessor. Product placement was also a relatively nascent marketing technique throughout the first decade of John Paul II's tenure, and his last decade was marred by a steady decline in health.

Benedict XVI is striking a snazzier profile, presenting international brands with a welcome change of pace. Being associated with the pope is worth at least 100 times more than an A-list celebrity because the pontiff has a more devoted following, says John Allert, chief executive of the British unit of Interbrand, a global branding consultancy that is part of the Omnicom Group Inc.

But unlike movie stars, who can command huge sums for product endorsements, or the queen of England, who discreetly allows companies to mention royal patronage, the pope, as the moral and spiritual leader of more than one billion Catholics, endorses holiness and chastity but not products.

That means companies have to hope the pontiff uses a product they have donated to him and then tastefully note the event, or delicately capitalize on a photograph showing the 79-year-old theologian using or wearing a particular brand. Astute marketers say the key words are "tastefully" and "delicately." Pursuing pope-and-product juxtaposition poses risks. Brands have to be careful not to appear opportunistic or they could risk a backlash with the pope's followers. "The question of endorsing products, especially from a figure such as the pope, raises an enormous number of questions in terms of the ethics of each company," says Ben Cronin, general manager and research director of S.Comm, an international advertising-research firm.

A senior Vatican official who asked not to be named says that when it comes to worldly goods, Benedict XVI's choice of personal accessories is "completely arbitrary."

The official adds: "He's aware of the buzz, but mostly he laughs about it, because it's so absurd. What does he really have to choose? He doesn't wear a tie or coat. The glasses he wears are the same glasses he wore as a cardinal, as is the pen he writes with."

But because the pope is so lightly accessorized, brands like to be associated with him all the more. This was relatively easy for Italian shoe company Geox SpA, whose founder, Mario Moretti Polegato, is a friend of papal spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls. (Mr. Navarro-Valls is a member of Geox's ethics committee.) Following Benedict XVI's election in April of last year, Geox gave Mr. Navarro-Valls several pairs of Geox Uomo Light loafers -- featuring the brand's trademark antifoot-sweat system -- as a present for the new pope.

When the pope wore the shoes, Geox chose not to promote the event through advertisements or press materials. But the company was delighted when word got out. "If the pope uses our product that means it works. He's out in public under the sun for hours in a heavy tunic, so he risks becoming sweaty," says Geox spokesman Eros Scattolin. "What better testimony could you ask for?"

Bushnell Performance Optics got a lucky break when, during one of his first outings last year, Benedict XVI was photographed wearing a pair of its Serengeti sunglasses. Bushnell didn't advertise the photos or send out news releases, but a spokesman says the spotting helped Serengeti's business with retailers. "Our salesperson comes in and the retailer says, 'My Gosh! Did I just see the pope wearing Serengetis? Show me that style!'" says Phil Gyori, Bushnell's vice president of marketing.

Apple Computer Inc. declined to comment on the pencil-thin iPod nano that Benedict received as a gift from employees of Vatican Radio on the station's 75th anniversary. Radio technicians specially ordered the nano from Apple with the engraving "To His Holiness, Benedict XVI" and packed it with Vatican Radio programming. But Apple trade magazines, such as Macworld, immediately trumpeted the event, peppering their Web sites with newspaper reports of the gift.

Italian upscale leather maker Natuzzi was also bold with its marketing efforts. The company created the internal upholstery for a golf cart that General Electric Motorcars, a subsidiary of DaimlerChrysler AG, gave the pope last year. The pontiff only uses the cart inside the Vatican gardens and, therefore, out of the public eye. But Natuzzi and General Electric Motorcars issued a joint news release to let people know about the vehicle.

Car makers are the most active campaigners for papal patronage. With Benedict XVI's planned trips to Spain, Poland and Turkey, Volkswagen AG and BMW AG are both jockeying to replace DaimlerChrysler's Mercedes as the next maker of the popemobile --the car with a bulletproof bubble that is arguably the world's most visible sport-utility vehicle. Mercedes-Benz has supplied popes with cars since the 1930s, providing three bubble-backed popemobiles over the years. The German company donated the current popemobile -- a heavily armored ML 430 -- to the Vatican in 2002, and company spokesman Joerg Zwilling said Benedict XVI has no immediate plans to abandon it.

And that's unfortunate for Volkswagen, which supplied a fleet of 100 vehicles to organizers of World Youth Day during the pope's high-profile visit to Cologne, Germany, in August. At the time, Volkswagen also offered to redesign the popemobile based on its Touareg SUV. The Vatican declined.

This past October, BMW donated a bulletproof X5 SUV to the Vatican, and the car maker says it hopes Benedict XVI will soon make public use of it since the vehicle, like the pope, is "Bavarian-made."

"The appeal is that he is one of, if not the, world's best-known persons," says BMW spokesman Michael Rebstock. "If he is on his way somewhere, he's attracting everyone's attention."

The most widely publicized papal branding event appears to have been the result of mistaken identity.

Over the past few months, scores of media reports have dubbed Benedict XVI the "Prada Pope," crediting the Italian fashion house with having made the pope's eye-catching red loafers.

The senior Vatican official says the loafers were actually made by the pope's personal cobbler. But Prada has refused to confirm or deny the reports, allowing the press speculation to continue. A spokesman for Prada said the fashion house lacked "the necessary elements" to make an accurate determination.

SimplyMe
Tuesday, April 25, 2006 9:07 PM
Re: Prada loafers
[QUOTE][DIM]7pt[=DIM]Scritto da: benefan 25/04/2006 20.17
[Aha! Finally, the truth about the so-called Prada loafers.]

The senior Vatican official says the loafers were actually made by the pope's personal cobbler.
[/DIM][/QUOTE]

HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!
SimplyMe
Wednesday, April 26, 2006 12:33 AM
Re:
[QUOTE][DIM]7pt[=DIM]Scritto da: TERESA BENEDETTA 25/04/2006 17.00
About Josie's request, the reason I have not translated her item is that we already reported this in POPE-POURRI [G]shortly after the audience where it happened[/G], with a photograph of it from the Vatican photo gallery. I appreciate the enthusiasm of our members to share any and all information they can get their hands on, and hope they will continue to do so. Next time, I will comment right away if a flagged item is something we already reported...

Also, the thread for 'light' items about the Pope is POPE-POURRI, whereas all the 'serious' news reports, analyses and commentary are to be found here in NEWS ABOUT BENEDICT .

Thank you all for your great participation and cooperation.

[/DIM][/QUOTE]


Ok, thanks for your explanation. As I am very new here in this forum, it will take me MONTHS to finish reading all back articles in this forum and to getting used to all the categories available. Besides, I don't understand italian so I won't know if a translated Italian article should fall into which category. I only saw josie's request for help and seeing that she's not getting any reply, I thought I will just make a second call for help on her behalf.

So, yes, you will do us newcomers a great service by telling us if an article has already been posted (and in which category).
Once again, thanks very much for your help
TERESA BENEDETTA
Thursday, April 27, 2006 2:29 PM
ON WOMEN IN THE CHURCH
ROME, APRIL 26, 2006 (Zenit) - Benedict XVI's teaching on the dignity and mission of women takes up again, in a sense, the thought of Pope John Paul II, says a professor of theology.

Salesian Sister Marcellina Farina, who teaches fundamental theology at the Faculty of Educational Sciences Auxilium, notes that the encyclical Deus Caritas Est furthers this teaching.

"In fact, if we take up the texts in which his predecessor spoke of the 'feminine genius,'" Sister Farina said in an interview with us, "we may conclude that this genius coincides with the acceptance and communication of love that, from the heart of God, radiates and shines in human hearts."

Sister Farina is a member of the Pontifical Theological Academy and of the Interdisciplinary Mariological Association. She is also a founding member of the Italian Society for Theological Research.

Q: John Paul II spoke of the "feminine genius." Do you think that Benedict XVI will surprise us with some gesture toward women?
Benedict XVI follows in John Paul II's footsteps with his own style, made of noble delicacy and clear testimony.

With his first encyclical letter, Deus Caritas Est, he lets us perceive his profound proximity to the contemporary world and, therefore, to women; he also indicates the path he is taking and which he wishes to propose not just to the Church but to all people of good will.

When one receives God's charity with simplicity and radicalism, the world is transformed; it is reborn as a new spring. Each creature, especially the human creature made in God's image, reflects the luminosity of God, hence, his beauty.

Over this year of pontificate, Benedict XVI has given us a rich doctrinal patrimony in the anthropological ambit. Suffice it to think of the audiences, addresses and messages proposed to the pontifical academies, and of meetings with people of different institutions, believers and nonbelievers.

He has a sober style, made of audacity and evangelical ardor, humility and courage, generous dedication and simplicity. I do not think he will make "astounding" gestures in the phenomenological sense. The wonder he arouses in those who meet and hear him springs from his kind and profound closeness.

Q: The "Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on the Collaboration of Men and Women in the Church and in the World" was published precisely when Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger headed the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Yes, it is dated May 31, 2004, feast of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary, an especially eloquent day for the communication of anthropological values expressed in the feminine.

When he was prefect of the congregation, he published the text on July 31, 2004. The letter, as noted, has the date of a day in which Mary is commemorated going to visit her cousin Elizabeth to whom she takes Life, which is Jesus.

I think he wishes to have it understood that, with Mary, the dawn of a new humanity according to God's plan, the messianic joy is offered to men and women, to past, present and future generations, to individuals and nations. It is a message of proposal and commitment that he offers to humanity, hence to women.

In a certain sense, he resumes John Paul II's teaching on the dignity and mission of woman. The encyclical Deus Caritas Est furthers it.

If we review the texts in which his predecessor spoke of the "feminine genius," we may conclude that this genius coincides with the acceptance and communication of love that, from the heart of God, radiates and shines in human hearts.

Q: Benedict XVI has spoken of great women in the Church, such as St. Catherine of Siena and Hildegard of Bingen, women that John Paul II already much appreciated.
Indeed, on October 19, 1997, John Paul II proclaimed St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus, doctor of the Church. It was a singular way of celebrating the centenary of her death.

In the apostolic letter Divini Amoris Scientia he speaks of the feminine genius and establishes a beautiful comparison between little Thérèse and Catherine of Siena: both are doctors of the Church by the gift of the Spirit, which made them wise and enabled them to understand the essential meaning of the human and Christian experience, which is love.

In the encyclical letter Evangelium Vitae, he entrusts the elaboration of a new feminism to women, a task they will be able to carry out by putting their feminine genius into action.

In his teaching, Benedict XVI often returns to this doctrinal patrimony, stressing also before nonbelievers the enhanced anthropological meaning that the Gospel contributes to human self-understanding, hence to a more profound and mature feminine self-science.

I would like to recall the wealth of humanizing meaning that there might be for humanity, thinking and living "veluti si Deus daretur" [as if God existed]. He adds that a thought without the fullness of transcendence, hence, without the acceptance of the mystery of God, is not a truly free and fruitful thought.

So, he invites believers and nonbelievers to the ethical task of thinking in depth about truth and recalls the vocation to holiness which is also addressed to our minds. Otherwise, how could one love God with one's whole heart, one's whole mind, one's whole soul and one's whole being?

If nonbelievers are called to think and live "veluti si Deus daretur," we believers are called to think and live responding all the way to the moral task of giving the reason for our faith.

In this field, there is a special area reserved for women who in history have nourished a bond between reason and relationship, between thought and sentiment. Above all, we women believers are called to go all the way in giving the reason for our faith, according to the way of Divini Amoris Scientia, favoring the passage from theology to theophany, from Christology to Christophany.

The risen Jesus meets Mary of Magdala and leads her on the way of paschal love. Let's hope he also meets us and shows us this way, so that we can make the Easter proclamation with his ardor.
mag6nideum
Thursday, April 27, 2006 11:55 PM
Re: Sister Marcellina on Papa
Sister Marcellina said some very perceptive things about Papa. She formulated his strong points differently than most male commentators on Benedict and it seems as though she had truly "studied" him and his words.
TERESA BENEDETTA
Friday, April 28, 2006 4:27 AM
BENEDICT CLARIFIES STANDARDS FOR SAINTHOOD
From www.catholicnewsagency.com/new.php?n=6590

Pope clarifies Church’s traditions,
norms for canonization;
announces new instruction


Vatican City, Apr. 27, 2006 (CNA) - As the world watches the Catholic Church in its process for the beatification of John Paul II, the Vatican has released a message from Pope Benedict to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, which just finished its plenary assembly. In it, the Pope clarifies the Church’s stance and means for assessing sainthood.

The message, released today, was addressed specifically to Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins C.M.F., prefect of the Congregation.

The Holy Father wrote that ''From her beginnings, the Church has dedicated great attention to the procedures that elevate Servants of God to the glory of the altars. The causes of saints are considered 'major causes' because of their noble and material impact on the lives of the people of God."

Benedict then recalled many of his predecessors - including John Paul II - who sought to improve the Church’s ways of studying and celebrating the lives of saints, including the 1983 Apostolic Constitution Divinus Perfectionis Magister and the Normae servandae in inquisitionibus ab Episcopis faciendis in Causis Sanctorum [Instruction for the procedure of diocesan inquiries into the causes of saints]

He wrote that "The experience of more than 20 years since this text was published has prompted this congregation to publish an 'Instruction for the procedure of diocesan inquiries into the causes of saints,' which is chiefly addressed to diocesan bishops and constitutes the first theme examined by the plenary."

The new instruction, he said, "attempts to facilitate the application of the Normae servandae in order to safeguard the seriousness of investigations", into virtues, causes of martyrdom or possible miracles.

The Pope went on, saying that "It is clear that a cause of beatification or canonization cannot be initiated in the absence of a proven reputation for holiness, even when dealing with people who have been distinguished for their evangelical coherence and for particular ecclesial or social merits."

He then addressed the second theme of the plenary session - "the miracle in the causes of saints" - explaining that "miracles constitute divine confirmation of a judgment expressed by the ecclesial authorities on [a person's] virtuous life.”

“I hope”, he added, “that the plenary will study this subject deeply in the light of the tradition of the Church, of modern theology, and of the most accredited discoveries of science.”

He likewise cautioned that “in examining purportedly miraculous events, the competency of scientists and theologians comes together, although the decisive judgment falls to theology which alone is capable of interpreting miracles in the light of the faith.”

“It should also be clearly borne in mind”, he wrote, “that unbroken Church practice establishes the need for a physical miracle, a moral miracle is not enough."

Moving to the subject of martyrdom, the Pope said that in its truest sense, the source and motive of martyrdom must be modeled in Christ, not done for what he called “fake different reasons” like “political or social ones.”

“It is of course necessary”, he said, “to find incontrovertible proof of willingness to suffer martyrdom, ... and of the victim's acceptance thereof. But it is equally necessary that, directly or indirectly but always in a morally certain fashion, the odium Fidei of the persecutor should be apparent.”

“If this element is lacking,” Benedict explained, “there is no real martyrdom in accordance with the perennial theological and juridical doctrine of the Church."

The pontiff concluded his message by again referring to the late John Paul II’s Apostolic Constitution Divinus Perfectionis Magister which deals with the need to associate bishops with the Holy See in dealing with the causes of saints.

Based on that document, the Pope said, "I have implemented the widespread desire that the substantial difference between the celebration of beatification and that of canonization should be more deeply underlined.”

Namely, he stressed that “particular Churches should be more visibly involved in the rite of beatification, it being understood that only the Roman Pontiff may concede veneration to a Servant of God."
benefan
Friday, April 28, 2006 4:38 AM

@ Mag6: "Sister Marcellina said some very perceptive things about Papa. She formulated his strong points differently than most male commentators on Benedict and it seems as though she had truly "studied" him and his words."

@ Benefan: Of course. Sister Marcellina is a woman, thus another [drum roll] "victim of the Benedict effect". She is probably a closet member of the order of Sisters "upstairs".



Maklara
Friday, April 28, 2006 6:24 PM
Cherie gets surprise in white



Cherie Blair gets surprise audience with Pope

Press Association
Friday April 28, 2006

Guardian Unlimited
Cherie Blair had a surprise 10-minute private audience with Pope Benedict XVI today, as she was attending a Vatican conference on children and young people.

The UK ambassador to the Holy See, Francis Campbell, said the prime minister's wife was "thrilled" by the unexpected conversation, which took place in the Pope's library.

A spokesperson for Mrs Blair had earlier said she would not meet the pontiff, but Mr Campbell explained: "It was completely unexpected. There was to be a general audience next Tuesday for delegates to the conference but Mrs Blair isn't staying that long and we found out this morning that the Pope wanted to meet her and invited her for a purely private audience and they had a one-to-one conversation for 10 minutes.

"It was a suprise to me as well, but she is thrilled by it and the Pope had a 10-minute conversation with Mrs Blair in his library. She was very honoured, excited and thrilled because it was so unexpected."

The surprise nature of the audience meant Mrs Blair, a devout Roman Catholic, was dressed in white, rather than the traditional black worn when meeting the Pontiff.

Mrs Blair and the premier had met the late Pope John Paul II in 2003, and this afternoon she prayed at his tomb before visiting the English College in Rome.

Before meeting Pope Benedict Mrs Blair delivered a speech on social policy and children and young people to the conference organised by Professor Pierpaolo Donati of the University of Bologna, titled: "Vanishing Youth? Solidarity with Young People in an Age of Turbulence."

It was part of the plenary session of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences.

Mrs Blair, a QC, human rights lawyer and a mother of four, is listed by the Vatican as an outside expert.

Her speech was not being released to the media. She was not paid for her attendance, a spokesperson stressed.

Other speakers include Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, president of the Pontifical Council on the Family.

Issues tabled for discussion include the effect of the media on children, their educational and psychological needs and children's rights.
benefan
Friday, April 28, 2006 7:19 PM
LifeSiteNews.com
Friday April 28, 2006


Pope Says Low Birth Rate Due Mainly to Lack of Love

By John-Henry Westen

VATICAN, April 28, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - In a message to the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences yesterday, Pope Benedict XVI noted "we are witnessing on a planetary level, and in the developed countries in particular, two significant and interconnected trends: on the one hand, an increase in life expectancy, and, on the other, a decrease in birth rates." He added, "As societies are growing older, many nations or groups of nations lack a sufficient number of young people to renew their population."

While he admitted that the cause of the troublesome situation is "complex" he stressed that "its ultimate roots can be seen as moral and spiritual; they are linked to a disturbing deficit of faith, hope and, indeed, love." He explained, "To bring children into the world calls for self-centred eros to be fulfilled in a creative agape rooted in generosity and marked by trust and hope in the future."

Concluding the point he said, "Perhaps the lack of such creative and forward-looking love is the reason why many couples today choose not to marry, why so many marriages fail, and why birth rates have significantly diminished."

The German-born Pontiff who has seen the birth rate plummet in his own native land warned that the lack of love which inhibits the acceptance of children as a gift from God also harms children already born. "It is children and young people," he said, "who are often the first to experience the consequences of this eclipse of love and hope." Adding that, "Often, instead of feeling loved and cherished, they appear to be merely tolerated."

Children "frequently lack adequate moral guidance from the adult world, to the serious detriment of their intellectual and spiritual development . . . they are often exposed solely to materialistic visions of the universe, of life and human fulfillment," he concluded.

Despite the clamouring of population control enthusiasts who continue to espouse debunked theories of overpopulation, the consensus among researchers even at the United Nations, is that there is a population implosion on the horizon. However, there remain some who laugh off declining fertility rates, and see no cause for concern. One such naysayer, the UK Ambassador to the Vatican Francis Campbell, got an earful from Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, the President of the Pontifical Council on the Family at a conference in Rome earlier this year.

Responding to Campbell's suggestion that the phenomena of declining fertility rates was nothing to be alarmed about, the Cardinal replied, "We are realizing the worst prophecies of aging and demographic implosion, and European politicians are seeing this with alarm . . . The myth of over-population has collapsed."
TERESA BENEDETTA
Friday, April 28, 2006 11:56 PM
DEAR ee...I am replying to your post in the CHATTER thread.
TERESA BENEDETTA
Saturday, April 29, 2006 2:42 PM
ANOTHER YEAR-1 REVIEW
From the May 1, 2006 issue of US News and World Report,
www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/060501/1pope.htm
I have interposed an occasional comment.

A Pontiff's First Year
Benedict has foiled
the expectations of liberals
and conservatives alike
By Jay Tolson



Now a full year into Pope Benedict XVI's papacy, it may be time to retire the canine metaphor--or at least to say that it was the year that God's Rottweiler didn't bite.

In his quietly purposeful way, the scholarly, soft-spoken pontiff has managed to foil most expectations. Liberals who feared a reign of intolerance have been pleasantly surprised by the gentle pastoral style of a leader whose first encyclical explored the meaning of God's love.

Conservatives who expected the German-born pope to crack the whip, drive out dissidents, and restore the Latin mass (and do all of it yesterday) have been equally surprised. And perhaps a little disappointed.

This, after all, was the man who had made his name as John Paul II's strict top cop for church doctrine, the would-be corrector of all that went wobbly after Vatican II. And in the run-up to the conclave that selected him as pope, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger shored up his reputation with a bracing attack on the "dictatorship of relativism."

No wonder conservatives thought he was precisely the man to build on John Paul II's achievements by directing the church toward a more rigorous doctrinal clarity. [But he is, and remains so!]

But then came some early surprises. Benedict's meeting with one of his oldest intellectual foes, the liberal theologian Hans Kung, seemed almost too conciliatory to some.

Puzzling, too, was the appointment of Archbishop William Levada of San Francisco--a pragmatist without particularly strong theological credentials--to Benedict's old post in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

On other fronts, some conservatives wondered why Benedict didn't move faster to fix the liturgy or trim the bloated, occasionally wayward Vatican bureaucracy.

But by far the most urgent concern, at least among American Roman Catholics, was whether Benedict would put real teeth into the church's proclamation against the ordination of men of "homosexual orientation."

"He's certainly been a much more cautious and moderate figure than people had anticipated," says John Allen, the Vatican correspondent of the National Catholic Reporter.

Other seasoned observers, however, caution against a rush to judgment. "The Rottweiler tag was always unfair," writes Damian Thompson, editor of the Catholic Herald, "but I think the German shepherd is about to let himself off the leash."

Methodical may be the word for the man who took until December to move all of his belongings--including some 20,000 books--into the papal apartments.

The Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, editor of First Things and one of America's leading voices of Catholic orthodoxy, reads even more into the pope's deliberate style: "He's made it clear that he views this papacy as a long-term pontificate," says Neuhaus.

Many expected Benedict's reign to be a short, unremarkable coda to the 26-year reign of his charismatic predecessor. But Benedict is already cutting a distinctive path.

"He is John Paul's successor and he's faithful to his theology," says Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, archbishop of Washington, "but he's not afraid to be his own man."

John Paul, a man of the theater, thrived on public appearances and the bold gesture, qualities instrumental to his role as a world leader who drew huge crowds and helped bring down the Iron Curtain.

The more reserved Benedict, winning in his own diffident way, has an almost Protestant attraction to simplicity and understatement. "This is a guy who believes that people can be swayed by unadorned argument," says Allen. "It is very much an intellectual's way of doing business."

Benedict is also more of a stay-at-home pope. Although he journeyed to Cologne, Germany, for the World Youth Day last summer and plans to visit Turkey, he is unlikely to come anywhere close to matching the air miles of his peripatetic predecessor. And that in itself is a clue to Benedict's sense of his mission: a papacy devoted to the precise articulation of the principles of the faith.

The question, though, is whether Benedict's intellectual rigor and clarity will translate into a leadership style that will be as valuable to the church as John Paul's more exuberant, evangelical ministry--or even if it will correct some of the perceived shortcomings of the Polish pontiff's reign.

For example, many claim that administration and governance were critical deficits in the last papacy--one reason, some say, that the sex-abuse crisis got so far out of hand. Benedict's supporters believe that he will clean house by creating a leaner, meaner Curia and by arranging for more direct interaction with diocesan bishops. He has already merged four curial offices into two.

Yet while some conservatives find progress too slow on this front, liberals worry that the downsizing of offices dealing with justice and peace, migration, dialogue with non-Christians, and culture reflects a diminished concern with some of the more pressing issues of the day.

"I think what we'll see is a decline of interest in justice and peace and an increase of interest in internal issues of the church--except where abortion and gay marriage are concerned," says the Rev. Thomas Reese, former editor of the Jesuit weekly, America, and a leading scholar of the Vatican. [A decline of interest in justice and peace?! What exactly is Reese's his basis for concluding this?)

Reese, who was pushed out of his editorship shortly before Benedict was installed, finds little evidence of administrative finesse in the curial office that Ratzinger headed: "You heard of theologians called in to face accusations that were totally false. Ratzinger was not getting good work from his staff. This is a guy who would frankly rather go home and read his books."
[Yeah, let's go to Reese for an objective statement about the CDF! Let him name one instance of his blanket accusation!]

But there is no question that this pope is cultivating more direct communication with his bishops and cardinals than John Paul did. One reason, many say, is that Benedict grew wary of national bishops' conferences, finding that they developed their own agendas and were often heavily influenced by midlevel conference officials.

"He's picking his own men, and he will teach them in synods," says the Rev. Anthony Figueiredo of Seton Hall University and a special assistant to Benedict at last October's synod. This teaching style, Figueiredo says, will involve at least as much listening as talking. "We are going to see an emphasis," he says, "on dialogue."

That emphasis also came through at the March consistory, when the pope met with the College of Cardinals before the installation of his 15 new selections to that body. "He really wants to collaborate," McCarrick says, "to listen to those around him, to be open."

A big question is how all this communication will help Benedict achieve his vision of a church that is clearer about its bedrock principles.

Rightly or wrongly, many American Catholics will evaluate the pontiff's success by how he deals with the sex-abuse scandal. To them, the Vatican's November instruction banning the ordination of men with "deep-seated homosexual tendencies" is only a first step.

To conservatives such as Neuhaus and theologian George Weigel, its enforcement in the face of widespread dissent will be as crucial a test of church discipline as was the lax enforcement of the 1968 encyclical on birth control.

Liberals within the church, including the Rev. John Coleman of Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, argue that the conservatives are trying to make the document into something it isn't.

Coleman and others emphasize that the teaching was issued (with papal approval, to be sure) by the Congregation for Catholic Education and therefore is of lesser standing than a papal encyclical.

They also point out the definitional haze that surrounds terms like "homosexual orientation" (often noting that such an orientation has little causal connection with pedophilia) and suggest that the real test of the teaching won't come until church officials visit the seminaries to apply it.

But conservatives counter that such nitpicking amounts to nothing less than a dare. "There can be no doubt," wrote Neuhaus, "that the rejectionists have thrown down the gauntlet in challenging the still-young pontificate of Benedict XVI."
Keeping the faith.

So far, Benedict himself appears to be less absorbed by that challenge than by the task of preserving the faith in its former European homeland.

He has pressed hard to keep Christianity in the European public square, notably through the church's attempts to resist state-recognized gay marriage in Spain and in vitro fertilization in Italy, and he strongly supports movements like "Communion and Liberation" aimed at attracting young Europeans to a more active life in the church.

It is telling that almost half of his cardinal selections come from Europe, while only one comes from densely Catholic South America.

Relations with Islam also rank high in the mind of a man who once opposed Turkey's entrance into the European Union. Whether he has softened that line is not clear, but Benedict has taken a quite different tack from John Paul's almost exclusive emphasis on tolerance and understanding by calling on Muslims for responsibility and reciprocity.

After World Youth Day in Germany, Benedict was blunt in his appeals to Muslim leaders to address religious extremism and terrorism. And he insists that religious tolerance be reciprocated in predominantly Muslim nations. That concern came through strongly in the Vatican's denunciation of the apostasy charges brought against the Afghan Christian Abdul Rahman.

Some observers, while not faulting Benedict's harder line, think that it could be pursued more tactfully. The transfer of Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald, former head of the council for interreligious dialogue, to the post of papal nuncio in Cairo was widely seen as a demotion of the Vatican's most knowledgeable student of Islam.

Some think that Fitzgerald might have brought a more balanced view to a recent Vatican-sponsored conference that characterized the goal of the Crusades as "noble." At the very least, comments Reese, it was "sending the wrong message at a time when Americans are fighting a war in the Middle East."

Some conservatives say that the man who helped craft John Paul's encyclical Dominus Iesus, which described other faiths as "gravely deficient," never really went missing during the past year.

On the issue of dialogue with other religions, Neuhaus insists that this pope has already distinguished himself from John Paul: "I think there has been a more realistic acknowledgment that it takes a lot more than holding hands [at interfaith gatherings] in Assisi."

And Neuhaus sees a subtler version of Benedict's earlier argument with liberation theology in the second part of his "God is Love" encyclical. There, Neuhaus explains, the pope argues that efforts to achieve social justice must be firmly grounded in Christian teaching or else they devolve into worldly ideologies like Marxism.

It is still too early to say whether such subtlety will be an asset in the pope's efforts to move world opinion or even to guide the more than 1 billion members of his flock.

"Intellectual circles find him erudite and clear," says Allen. "He is the deepest thinker among the current crop of world leaders. But will anybody other than the eggheads be paying attention?" [Maybe the pilgrims who keep flocking to St. Peter's, the faithful who follow his liturgical celebrations, audiences and messages on radio and TV?]

In a world increasingly shaped by a simplifying commercial culture, where The Da Vinci Code takes on the aura of gospel [alack and alas!], the answer is anything but certain.

---------------------------------------------------------------
Just for the record, here is how the Times of London reported the actual anniversary event at St. Peter's on April 19:

Pope salutes faithful on first anniversary
From Richard Owen in Rome

Pope Benedict XVI today claimed his election a year ago had come as an absolutely unexpected surprise and told the faithful their continuing support was indispensable.

Benedict - the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger - was elected on the fourth ballot after presiding over the funeral of John Paul II and delivering an astutely judged oration which outlined the challenges facing the Church while also drawing attention to the authority and continuity he embodied as the late Pope’s right hand man. In the ensuing conclave cardinals backing "liberal" and Latin American candidates were outvoted.

Smiling broadly and looking relaxed and confident as he began his second year Benedict today greeted 50,000 pilgrims gathered on a sunlit St Peter’s Square for his regular weekly audience. He walked through the crowd, grasping many by the hand and accepting gifts marking both the anniversary and his 79th birthday last Sunday, Easter Day.

He noted that "a whole year has passed since the cardinals chose me to succeed that great Pope, John Paul II", adding: "how times flies!".

He recalled the impact and emotion of stepping onto the balcony of St Peter’s, adding: "I ask you to continue praying that by God’s grace I may always be a gentle and firm Shepherd for Christ’s flock".

The Pope, a German theologian by training with a reputation as doctrinal hardliner, has drawn record crowds in his first year, a phenomenon at first attributed to the "John Paul II effect". The acclamation however is increasingly for Benedict himself. He was repeatedly interrupted by applause and shouts of Viva Il Papa! today.

He has also begun to speak out on international issues. He condemned Monday’s suicide bombing in Tel Aviv in the strongest terms, adding: "It is not by such execrable acts that the legitimate rights of a people can be defended".

He has reduced the number of private audiences however, and has made few foreign trips. He is to visit Poland, John Paul II’s homeland, next month May, when he will pray at Auschwitz, the former Nazi death camp, and is to visit Turkey in the autumn. He is expected to streamline and reshuffle the Vatican bureaucracy in his second year.

Many holding top Vatican posts are near or even past retirement age.
---------------------------------------------------------------

Also, for the record, the Reuters story on 4/19/06:

By Crispian Balmer
Wed Apr 19, 7:31 AM ET

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Benedict marked the first anniversary of his pontificate on Wednesday, recalling his shock at being elected and saying he wanted to be a "mild and firm" leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, a veteran theologian with a reputation as a fierce traditionalist, was elevated to the papacy following the death of Pope John Paul II.

"How time flies," Pope Benedict told some 60,000 pilgrims gathered in a sun-soaked St. Peter's Square for his weekly general audience.

"Already one year has passed from when the cardinals at the conclave, in what for me was totally unexpected and surprising, wanted to choose my poor self to succeed that beloved servant of God, the great Pope John Paul," he said, to huge cheers.

"I ask all of you to continue to support me, praying to God that he lets me be a mild and firm shepherd of his Church."

Ratzinger's election on April 19 2005 was greeted by the pealing of the huge Vatican bells, but not everyone was happy that the man branded "God's rottweiler" had become pope and many feared he would launch a ferocious assault on Church liberals.

However, over the past year Benedict has confounded his critics, showing the world his gentle side, appearing open to dialogue with dissidents and proving surprisingly popular.

Cheers and yells echoed around the colonnade as the Pope was driven into the square and nuns strained over the metal barriers to get a touch of the pontiff's hand.

"He had a reputation as a very severe disciplinarian, but he hasn't lived up to this," said Michael Walker, a 51-year-old analytical chemist visiting from Northern Ireland.

"He has been listening a lot and thinking about the future of the church. It has been a good start," he said.

Some churchmen had expected Benedict to be more assertive in his first year and make sweeping changes to the Curia, the Vatican's central administration which had grown increasingly rigid and staid during John Paul's long reign.

But he has made few changes thus far and is taking a softly-softly approach to tackling the Church's many problems.

"We live in an age when people think everything has to work like a Coca-Cola machine. You put money in, you immediately get something out. Well the Church isn't like that," said Eduardo Fernandez, a 38-year-old student from Mexico City.

"The new Pope is doing what has to be done. He is guiding the Church. It is a vocation, not a profession so don't expect instant gratification."

But not everyone in the huge cobbled esplanade was happy about Benedict's first year, with some Catholics saying the Church faced a meltdown in the wealthy West.

"As a person this new pope is fine, as a role model he is fine, but as a manager of the Roman Catholic Church he is letting the whole hierarchy crumble," said Carl Ridgeway, a retired teacher from Michigan in the United States. [What exactly is 'letting the whole hierarchy crumble'? if he meant an aging hierarchy, as he refers to in his next sentence, did he really expect the Pope to undo the situation in a year? Typical problem of a journalist thoughtlessly using a man-on-the-street quotation without without examining the quotation!]

"Most of our priests are old men. Young people don't want to enter the priesthood. If things don't change fast, our Church will be dead in 10 years." [Come, Mr. Ridgway, don't be such a pessimist. There are positive reports too, you know, about vocations on the rise.]


[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 30/04/2006 6.30]

TERESA BENEDETTA
Sunday, April 30, 2006 5:29 AM
MORE YEAR-1 REVIEWS
This one appeared in the International Herald Tribune of 4/27/06 syndicated from the Boston Globe.
www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/27/opinion/edweiss.php
---------------------------------------------------------------

A kinder, gentler pope?
By James M. Weiss
The Boston Globe



Benedict XVI has been pope for a year now, and many Catholics who had expected profound changes have been wondering, when will they come?

Indeed, the new pope has pope has kept a fairly low profile. Most of his first-year agenda was already set by John Paul II: World Youth Day, the international meeting of bishops last autumn, a decree barring homosexuals from the priesthood, even the encyclical about love were all already in the works. Benedict finished John Paul's commitments, though it is true he often influenced them as well.

Yet if much of Benedict's program was set in advance, his style has been a major surprise. He has not lowered the boom. He has not cracked down on persons or trends in the church. On numerous occasions when he could have denounced modern trends, he conspicuously did not. In fact, some Catholic conservatives voice dismay over the "kinder, gentler" Benedict.

Benedict's way of being pope points to the office, not the personality. John Paul acted as pastor of the planet. Benedict acts as self-effacing steward of a tradition. He doesn't see history culminating in his own significance, as John Paul did. [I think this is a gratuitous and unfounded dig at John Paul II.] He desires more consultation with cardinals and bishops.

For many, his modest personality makes the Gospel easier to absorb than the dramatic, autocratic John Paul did.

Benedict's restraint showed up in four compelling moments. First, when his encyclical on love was announced, one critic asked, "What will he condemn this time?" Yet Benedict passed over anticipated hot- button issues and warmly praised sexual love as part of God's plan.

Second, his major address on World Youth Day encouraged young people to attend church and receive Communion, but never denounced youth culture, as some had expected.

Third, the decree against homosexual seminarians appeared with a tempered authority, leaving local bishops some discretionary power in applying it.

Fourth, when Benedict appointed an American to fill his previous post as watchdog of doctrine, he chose a notably milder, more flexible, less confrontational figure than he himself had been.

Reviewing the past year, three themes and three events stake out Benedict's probable legacy. The first is a key to guide church affairs. In a major speech, he declared that reforms of Vatican II flow in continuity with church tradition; they do not break from it. This foretells continued obstacles to innovation, experimentation and even women's roles in the church.

Second, Benedict praises freedom - not as individualism, but as capacity to accept clear truth.

Third, he says the church should not engage in political affairs but only seek to influence them. Some find this puzzling, others hypocritical, but it seems to allow church officials to have it both ways.

Benedict began by streamlining church bureaucracy, shrinking the size of the Vatican administration and appointing specialists, not career churchmen, to offices. He tends to rise above the fray, leaving tough action to others. On issues such as parish closings, clergy sexual abuse and the bishops' delinquency in handling it, the Vatican has let local authorities sweat out their own decisions. If frustrating at times, a less centralized church may be something many Catholics prefer.

While Benedict will most probably not change his or John Paul's core positions, his calling as pope reflects his earlier calling as a teacher. Teaching relies on patience and slow progress rather than instant clarity and compliance. The surprises of his first year may signal a pope of some paradox after all.

James M. Weiss, associate professor of church history at Boston College, is a specialist on the modern papacy and College of Cardinals.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Sunday, April 30, 2006 7:27 AM
HE KNOWS HOW TO 'POPE'
The ubiquitous John Allen was interviewed on PBS for the first anniversary of Benedict's Papacy. Here is a transcript of the interview aired 4/14/06 from
www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/week933/newsfeature.html

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: The Vatican announced this week that Pope Benedict will be visiting the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz when he travels to Poland in late May. He will also visit the birthplace of John Paul II. It will be Benedict's second trip outside Italy since he was elected a year ago this coming Tuesday (April 18). We asked Vatican expert John Allen of the National Catholic Reporter to help us assess the first year of Benedict's papacy.

Benedict came to the papacy with the reputation of a hard-line conservative. But in the year since, Allen says, some Catholic conservatives have been unpleasantly surprised.

JOHN ALLEN: I think one of the great ironies at the end of the first year is about the only people that you can find publicly critical of the pope at this stage are those who were most excited about his election one year ago and who are now worried that the man they thought they were electing is not the pope they got.

ABERNETHY: When Benedict appointed American William Levada to his old job as the Vatican's chief enforcer of doctrine, some conservatives complained that Levada had not opposed homosexuality enough when he was Archbishop of San Francisco. And although the Pope reaffirmed Vatican policy barring homosexuals from seminaries and the priesthood, some conservatives worried about enforcement.

Mr. ALLEN: The question is will there be the follow-through, you know, to make sure that people are towing the line? And I think there's concern in some constituencies that they are not yet seeing that. I'll tell you what one very prominent American neo-conservative Catholic told me off the record, which is, "You know, we thought we were electing a Ronald Reagan. We got stuck with Jimmy Carter."

ABERNETHY: Benedict has made it clear that he wants to continue John Paul's outreach to Eastern Orthodox Christians and to Jews. But regarding Islam and the policies of some Islamic governments and extremists, Benedict is impatient.

Mr. ALLEN: We have seen a much tougher line, a more hawkish line, if you like, under this pope. His willingness to explicitly challenge Muslim leaders on issues of terrorism and on issues of religious liberty is clearly different than the line under John Paul.

ABERNETHY: Benedict's choices for new cardinals seemed to favor men from Western Europe over those from Latin America and Africa, perhaps a sign of his belief that the most important threat facing the Church is the philosophy so prevalent in the West: relativism. You have your truth; I have mine.

Mr. ALLEN: From day one, the core ideas of his papacy, I think, you can express in three words: truth, freedom and love. Truth, meaning there is universal truth; freedom in the deepest sense, that is, freedom to become the man or woman that God intends you to be, to realize your fullest potential. And then ultimately seeing both of those things in the context of love.

ABERNETHY: Indeed, Benedict's first encyclical was on the many forms of love. Selfless Christian love, he taught, is at the heart of the Gospel.

Mr. ALLEN: He is an enormously cultured, an enormously intelligent man, an enormously reverent man who, you know, to use the slang -- he knows how to "pope."
Tomasso Gaetano
Sunday, April 30, 2006 2:10 PM
Today there were many many Poles in Piazza di San Pietro during Regina Coeli! Have you noticed that?
By the way, "Arka Noego" (Noah's Arc), a famous Polish band where play (among others) converted Polish Heavy Metal Stars along with their kids have composed their new song dedicated to Benedict: "Dobrze, ze Ciebie, Tato mam" (It so good that I've got You, Dad)!
Simone55
Sunday, April 30, 2006 2:41 PM
Re:

Scritto da: Tomasso Gaetano 30/04/2006 14.10
Today there were many many Poles in Piazza di San Pietro during Regina Coeli! Have you noticed that?



Yes, we have, Tomasso, it was wonderful to see.
Wait till Papa's visit in Poland, your whole country will become crazy !


TERESA BENEDETTA
Sunday, April 30, 2006 5:46 PM
AN ITALIAN BISHOP LOOKS AT ONE YEAR OF B16
On ZENIT's Italian service on 4/28/06, an Italian bishop talks about one year of Benedict XVI. Here is a translation:

”The strength and amiability* of Benedict XVI is in having reaffirmed the coming of Christ as a decisive event,” according to Mons. Luigi Negri, Bishop of San Marino-Montefeltro, commengint to ZENIT on the first anniversary of Benedict’s papacy.

[amabilita is the Italian word used, which translates directly to amiability, but I am inclined to translate it more literally as ‘lovableness,’ the condition of being lovable, of making oneself loved, because 'amiability' of 'friendliness' just doesn't capture the sense of what the bishop is saying]

What are the fundamental lines of this Papacy?
Above all, something I often point out to my diocese – a very specific human vibration, emotional, that this Pope offers all the time and which one sees at a glance when he meets people: his ‘amabilita’. He succeeds in making others love the Christian mystery which he carries. He succeeds in this, because it is evident that the mystery of which he is a witness and a herald constitutes the profound joy of his life and the imperturbable serenity with which a man of faith faces life. And so we are learning to love the Christian mystery, to love it as the substantial experience of life. I would say that within this amabilita is the power with which he has reaffirmed the coming of Christ as decisive.

Beyond this, that which has amazed me most of all is that the perimeter of Benedict’s teaching is totally within the perimeter of John Paul II’s magisterum. It is as if Benedict XVI is helping the Church on the one hand to love the mystery of Christ, and on the other, to understand more deeply the content of that mystery as previously conveyed by John Paul II.

Excellency, do you think this could also be the secret of the fascination that he exercises over the youth?
The secret of his fascination to the youth is also linked to something that is inherent in the youth. Incredible, when one thinks of all that is usually written about youth on the sociological level, (but) there is something in the youth which has made this mutual liking possible and which gives it its particular wavelength. And that is that Benedict XVI is at heart a great teacher; and a young person, at a certain age, feels the need for a teacher who shows him how to live and shows him how to do this in concrete ways.

One of the first pronouncements Benedict made was a call to overcome relativism as a fundamental enemy of life and of faith. The Pope speaks to us on two levels which he has distinguished with extreme clarity: relativism as an expression of weakness and therefore of a crisis in reason.

Here we touch on one of the great citations in Fides et ratio [John Paul's encyclical on "Faith and Reason"]. The crisis in reason, a consequence of the modern hypertrophy of reason, is at present satisfied by the view that rather than to define certainties, it is better to give the same value to all uncertainties, and thus preserve tolerance - that strange, extrinsic and individualistic coexistence among persons who do not want any intereference in their private life.

But the Pope has also shown that relativism masks a will to totalitarianism. In this pseudo-relativism, in which all positions are supposedly equivalent, there are (nevertheless) some views that prevail- the views held by those in power , including and especially media power.

Ultimately, who decides what is truly relative as against what is less relative? Who gets to be the guardian of this relativist system? It’s the mass media, who always serve substantially the winning side, power, therefore the view which in some way the establishment wishes to impose.

In this respect, the Holy Father has also indicated a program against relativism when he spoke of “non-negotiable values.”
Definitely. We can say with John Paul II that for a person to be able to profess religious freedom and to exert his presence in society is the expression of mission - the mission of those who bear witness to the newness of life [in Christ] in all its aspects and all the dimensions of existence. This is the fulfillment of the Church’s social doctrine, the doctine lived, which safeguards every social initiative .

You have often said that there should be an alliance between people of faith and people of reason. What do you think is the response today of people of reason?
The answer by some men of reason to Benedict XVI’s challenge can be summarized in a great saying by John Paul II: it is better to believe than not to believe; or as Paul VI said, it is better to live believing than not believing. That the hypothesis that God exists is more positive than its opposite. The future, not only of this country, but probably that of civlization as well, as Senate President Marcello Pera said, may well depend on spreading this view.



TERESA BENEDETTA
Sunday, April 30, 2006 6:50 PM
PAPAL PILGRIMAGE TO MARIAN SHRINE



Benedict XVI will visit the Sanctuary of the Madonna of Divine Love in Rome tomorrow, May 1, for a recitation of the Rosary.

“The Pope wants to begin the month of May – dedicated to the Madonna and to the rosary – with a visit to sanctuary that is very dear to Romans,” said Mons. Pasquale Filla, rector and parish priest at the sanctuary. “He has been here several times as cardinal, and now he is returning as Pope. I am very happy.”



The Pope will fly by helicopter from the Vatican to the suburban sanctuary. He will be welcomed by Cardinal Camillo Ruini, his Vicar-General in Rome, Mons. Paolo Schiavon, auxiliary bishop for the south sector of Rome, and Mons. Silla.

The Rosary will be prayed, and then the Pope will deliver some remarks. He will then visit privately the New Sanctuary which was inaugurated by John Paul II for the Jubilee celebrations of 2000.



The pulpit in the New Sanctuary was brought over from St. Ignatius Church to commemorate the 1944 prayer of the faithful for the liberation of Rome. The right photo on the 2nd row shows the baptismal 'font' sculptured from a single slab of Carrara marble. All photos are from the Sanctuary website.

The Pope will also meet with the members of the two religious orders who maintain the Sanctuary: the Daughters of the Madonna of Divine Love, and the clerical association of the Oblate Daughters of the Madonna of Divine Love.

The Pope will return to the Vatican at 7 p.m.

John Paul II visited the Sanctuary three times: on May 1, 1979, he administered Confirmation to a group of parish youth; on June 7. 1987, to open the Marian Year; and on July 4, 1999, to inaugurate the New Sanctuary.

Cardinal Ratzinger’s last visit to the Sanctuary was in June 2004 when he came to say private prayers in front of the Madonna.

The website of the Sanctuary www.santuariodivinoamore.it/
gives us this brief history of the shrine:


The history of the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Divine Love dates back to the XIII century when in this area of the Roman Campagna there stood a kind of fortress belonging to the Savelli-Orsini family.

This fortress was called Castel di Leva (Leva Castle). On one of the towers of the castle there was a votive image of the Virgin Mary, portrayed as sitting on a Throne and holding the child Jesus in her arms. A dove descends upon her as a symbol of the Holy Spirit, who is indeed the Divine Love. The image, which was frescoed in those same times, was much venerated by the local shepherds.


In the spring of 1740 a wayfarer on his way to Rome, while approaching the tower, was attacked by a pack of dogs and was on the point of being slaughtered. The wretched man saw the holy image and cried out for help to the Mother of God. Immediately the dogs calmed down and fled into the countryside.

On account of this prodigy, on 5 September of the same year the image of Mary was removed from the tower and transferred to a nearby estate called "La Falconiana", where a small church dedicated to St Mary ad Magos stood.

Five years later, on 1-9 April 1745, the image was brought back to its ancient seat, where meanwhile a church had been erected which before long was consecrated in 1750 by Cardinal Carlo Rezzonico, who later became Pope with the name of Clement XIII.

Starting from that time folk pilgrimages began, became more and more numerous and are still continuing today. Among the best known are those that take place every Saturday night between Easter and the end of October, on foot, with starting-point at the Passeggiata Archeologica, covering a distance of about 15 kilometres.


In 1944, while Rome was under Nazi occupation, aerial bombings in 1943 had destroyed the San Lorenzo Quarter and shortly thereafter occurred what is now called the massacre at the Fosse Ardeatina[in which the father of new Cardinal Andrea di Montezemolo was among the Italian patriots killed].

At the invitation of Pius XII, Romans gathered at the St. Ignatius Church (where the Madonna of Divine Love image had been brought for safekeeping) on June 4, 1944, to ask Mary to save Rome. [Because of its historical and cultural patrimony of centuries, Rome had been declared an Open City at the start of the war precisely to keep it from being the target of bombings.] The faithful promised that in reutrn, they would renew their moral conduct, renovate the Sanctuary and carry out charitable work in Castel di Leva.

Not long after, the Germans did retreat from Rome and allied troops entered the city peacefully. The Romans had their prayers answered.

It was not till 1996 that the New Sanctuary could be built. The architects, Franciscan priest Constantino Ruggeri and Luigi Leoni, designed a “grotto church” carved into the hillside, with high glass walls dominated by a large sign AVE MARIA, a big sun, and symbols for fire and wind, which represent the Holy Spirit. The main tones are in azure and deeper blue to represent sky and sea.

benefan
Sunday, April 30, 2006 7:24 PM
From the Manila Bulletin Online, a deeper look at Papa's use of eros.



Eros drives us toward God


Fr. Rolando V Dela Rosa

IS. Eliot once described eros as the "love that we feel between the desire and the spasm." The word has been unmercifully equated with sex and its many perversions, thanks to Alfred Kinsey and self-styled sex gurus who came after him. The Kinsey Report documented many forms of erotic activities and lumped these together as "sex," minus the meaning and mystery inherent in the sexual act.

Kinsey was a zoologist. He viewed the sexual act just like any other activity in the animal kingdom. Eros was thus equated with impersonal, unromantic, piston-like love which Tom Wolfe likens to a baseball game: "the boy reaches first base when he can kiss the girl; second base, he gropes and fondles her; third base meant going all the way; and home base meant learning her name."

Pope Benedict XVI’s first encyclical letter Deus Caritas Est carefully retrieves the original meaning of eros and restores it to respectability. As the title suggests, the encyclical is not about sex. It is about love. With masterful pedagogy, the Pope did not just talk about love in its most sublime form -"charity" (Latin: caritas / Greek: agape). He began with eros, which is more familiar to us. He affirmed that although love is one, it has two inseparable dimensions: eros and agape. In God, the two are identified; but in us, eros has to develop into charity.

The encyclical mentions the word eros more than Sigmund Freud did in all his works before 1920. In his 1920 book entitled Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Freud discussed eros extensively, using the word as synonymous NOT with sexual pleasure, but with the life force that conquers the death instinct. For Freud, the pleasure principle is self-defeating. Seeking pleasure for its own sake leads to death.

The Pope understood eros not in the Kinseyan or Freudian sense, but in the classical context. In Greek mythology, Eros is the god of love, the creative force that breaks old forms to make new ones. Pictured in many modern paintings as a chubby, mischievous, winged child with bow and arrow, he grew up only when his brother Anteros (Passion) was born. The word passion, as its Latin etymology suggests, means a powerful urge or drive; it also means suffering. This teaches us a deep insight about love — the creative force of love can only be sustained by passion. Without passion, Eros becomes an effete, childish Cupid. Without the willingness to sacrifice, sex is reduced to a trivial plaything — sex for convenience, sex without commitment.

The Pope declared in his encyclical: "God, the universal principle of creation is, at the same time, a lover with all the passion of a true love." I am reminded of Mel Gibson’s movie: "The Passion," a most literal depiction of the passionate love of an "erotic God" who willingly endures unspeakable suffering — for us, his beloved.

Deus Caritas Est reminds us that eros could transform us and our world — if only we took heed of its immense power. Plato considered eros as a force that pulls a person to move beyond himself. It is eros that moves a man and woman to "go beyond" their selfish interests in order to commit themselves to each other’s welfare. It is eros that drives a person to give up his convenient lifestyle to serve others. It is eros that impels people to live and die for a cause, a belief, or an ideology. Eros is the yearning for selftranscendence.

Benedict XVI’s encyclical summarizes all the foregoing succinctly: "Eros is rooted in man’s very nature. It drives us to transcend ourselves." St. Augustine wrote that ultimately, eros drives men towards God. Why? Since no earthly pleasure fully satisfies us, the ultimate object of eros is God. In his Confessions, he puts this more clearly: "Our hearts are restless until they rest in God."

TERESA BENEDETTA
Sunday, April 30, 2006 9:16 PM
Very beautiful and quite original reflection on the eros principle! Thanks, Benefan. And as the article comes from the Manila Daily Bulletin, I can only think Father De la Rosa is Filipino. Yeah!!!

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 30/04/2006 21.17]

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