QUO VADIS CHRISTIAN FAITH, CHRISTOLOGY, RELIGIOUS LIFE TODAY?

QUO VADIS CHRISTIAN FAITH, CHRISTOLOGY, RELIGIOUS LIFE TODAY?

INTERVIEW WITH DOMINICAN THEOLOGIAN

Fr. Felicisimo Martinez Diez is a Spanish Dominican (Prioro, Leon, 1943) dedicated to teaching, preaching and writing, especially on Christology and theology of religious life. He is a well-known professor, theologian and writer. His books have being translated into different languages. He is living with the Dominicans in Macau through April 2011 at St. Dominic’s Priory, I had the pleasure of interviewing him.

Question (Q): How are you doing? What brought you here to Macau this time?

Answer (A): I came to Macau this time to teach the course “God One and Triune” at the University of Saint Joseph. This is the main reason for my stay here. Moreover, to my classes at the university, other activities have come up such as a public lecture on Christology at the same university, a short formation course to our Dominican Novices in Rosaryhill, Hong Kong, and a Holy Week Retreat also in Rosaryhill for our two Dominican communities there in Hong Kong.

Q: Going over your latest writings and speaking engagements, your dominating theme is Christology – Christological themes. You wrote two books on Christology that continue to be well-received. Why this apparent “obsession” with Jesus?

Question: Fr. Fausto Gomez Berlana Op

A.: It was not my intention to write on Christology, for I was convinced that this task belonged to others better qualified than me. However, little by little I was directed to the ministry of the pen and the computer. First, I wrote with all the passion of a call, a book on Saint Dominic and his foundational project of the Order of Preachers. At the end I realized that to be a Dominican is a particular way of living the religious life. Then I was tempted to write on religious life as a project of life. Finally I became aware of the fact that religious life is only a specific form of living Christian life seriously.  Then I was “obsessed” by the need “to keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, who leads us in our faith and brings it to perfection” (Hb 12:2).

Q: Let me ask you some questions on Christology. What is new in Christology today?

A.: It is presupposed that there are no new truths or new articles in the Christian Creed. However, there are new and very fertile interpretations of the eternal truths or of the unique articles of the Christian Creed. In this sense, recent Christology is doing a great contribution to the progress of all theology and the purification of Christian piety and spirituality.  Some of the new contributions in Christology are the following: the development of studies that have permitted a better knowledge of the historical Jesus (this has a deep influence on the presentation of the Christian message); the recovery of the human condition of Jesus (this has allowed us to fight against docetism and monophysism in theology and, above all, in Christian spirituality). Other new contribution is the discovery of the salvific dimension of all the mysteries of the person and life of Jesus: the mystery of the incarnation, life, passion, death and resurrection of Jesus (in this way salvation is not connected only or principally with the suffering and sacrifice of Christ, but especially with his love and fidelity). Another important contribution of current Christology: the emphasis on the theological and salvific dimension of the resurrection, as a result of seeing more and more the resurrection of Jesus  as a revelation of what God is – the God of life and justice -, and of what God wants and can do of the human being.

Q: How could we preach Christ today?

A.: Today perhaps it is good to begin our preaching of Christ from his human dimension, from his most profound human condition, because it seems to be from this condition that his personality ends up seducing people – even before acceding to faith. It is surprising to us how significant the person of Jesus is for persons from other religions, for some atheists and agnostics. May be we must begin making clear the admirable perfection of the human being revealed in Jesus. In the long run, however, we can only preach fully of Christ by announcing frontally the Christian kerigma, the mystery of the Crucified-Risen One, which is not according to human arguments but which is effectively the supreme answer to the expectations of the human being: a life in plenitude. I do not really know if we should begin with this one or the other; I am inclined to begin with the presentation of the human condition of Jesus. Perhaps it will depend of the existential situation of the listeners. Here prudence and pastoral discernment are the deciding factors.

Q.: With St. Francis, St. Dominic was called “Christ of the Middle Ages.” If Dominic would be born today what do you think he will do? What is your guess?

A.: Probably Dominic would have done the same things but “actualized,”  that is, adapted – as Vatican II asked – “to the changing conditions of the times.” For instance, for sure he would have committed himself to the service of humanity through the ministry of preaching or evangelization in its various forms (personal dialogue, catechesis, theological teaching, preaching…). He would continue being convinced that the fundamental problem of the human being begins with the theme of sight: some people see and some do not see. The greatest number of our errors in life is not due to a bad will, but to a lack of awareness. In Christian language, and according to the writings of St. John: some people believe and some do not believe. And the principle of Christian life is not the purpose of amendment, but the experience of faith. Moreover, I am sure that Dominic would have insisted on certain values that for him were not renounceable: to be human, profoundly human with all (on this consists the mystery of the incarnation); to value and channel friendship as a form of evangelical charity; to practice compassion; to search for new forms of evangelical poverty, of real solidarity with the poor, etc, etc.

Q.: Besides Christology, another obvious theological interest you have is religious life. One of your best received books, may be the best received so far, is “Re-Founding Religious Life,” which has been translated into many languages and continues to be reprinted in its English version. How do you see religious life today?

A.: I see religious life in a critical moment. With this, I do not mean that it is in a moment of catastrophe, of apocalypses, of total disaster. Not that! Simply I want to say that we are living in a moment of deep, radical transformation. It is a moment of profound discernment, for which we need a serious practice of sincerity: we have to call things by their names instead of cheating ourselves with verbose, high-sounding and “politically correct” speeches. It is a moment in which we need to invent new institutional mediations to channel the nonnegotiable evangelical values for any model of religious life: the contemplative dimension and the experience of faith, the communitarian dimension and fraternal experience, the mission or service to this humanity. These are values of religious life, of the Christian life underlined by religious life all along its history: values we cannot renounce. A different thing is how we should organize ourselves today to be able to channel those values. Just an example: today mendicancy is penalized in some societies; therefore we must look for other versions of evangelical poverty.

Q.: With the number of religious men and women going generally down, does religious life have a future?

A.: Each one of us may draw his/her conclusions from the above given reflections to the previous question. Because what I have just said has a lot to do with the worry unveiled in this question. I continue giving examples: to be able to run many colleges, parishes, and many hospitals, many brothers and sisters are needed, unless we learn to administer them jointly with lay persons. For religious life be more significant evangelically, there is no need of so many vocations, but maybe there is a need of other type of vocations  or other type of response to that vocation. The future of religious life as an institution tasked with great works related to pastoral ministry, education, health… is not that clear.  But, why should not have a future a religious life in small communities with a more simple life and witnessing the main evangelical values: a few brothers or sisters living together, sharing their experience of faith, fraternal life, communication of goods, etc.; each one working where he or she can, and earning their bread with the work they do as any human being; giving good example of Christian life and the evangelizing and pastoral services that the circumstances demand and permit.

Q.: I have heard you say that, in general, the three most relevant themes which concern consecrated men and women today are: spirituality, community life and dedication to mission. Could you explain a bit the third, namely the motivation – or lack of it – for mission?

A.: Mission is important in life for any person, because a life without a fulfilled mission is a frustrated and failed life. This is experienced mainly at the end of life. And this is particularly true in persons who have made public profession, before the church and the world, of dedicating their life to preaching the Gospel. If the zeal for preaching the Gospel is absent then the meaning of life and fidelity to the profession made are also absent. At times the mission is lacking because there is no apostolic zeal. The apostolic zeal is made up of a deep experience of faith and of a great compassion towards suffering humanity. Speaking of preachers, Humbert of Romans, a Dominican of the 13th century, says: “It is not the same to preach and to give sermons.” Anyone can give a sermon, but preaching can only be done from the experience of faith and from the love of humanity.  There is another motive for failing in the evangelizing mission: lack of experience of faith, hope and charity. The lack of these Christian virtues implies a lack of Christian passion, a lack of “virtus,” enthusiasm, evangelical courage. This lack or absence leads to the abandonment of mission. The mission is not possible without burning out, without renouncing, without giving up little by little our life.

Q.: Among the special problems which prop up in many religious communities and formation houses today one refers to the use and abuse of internet and other technological gadgets.

How could we moderate their proper and obviously advantageous use and avoid or at least minimize their harmful abuse?

A.: The new technologies of communication will be or are already the passage to a new culture. The same has happened always with all the new inventions of humanity. Therefore, we have to learn to live in this new culture, take advantage of all the benefits they offer, and face all the dangers it entails. However, this cannot be achieved by the road of a merely disciplinary attitude, by the way of mere prohibition or external control. The experience we have from the houses of formation clearly proves this. The good use can only be achieved through a progressive and permanent education to live this new culture of the new technologies of communication. And this education focuses, above all, on SELF-CONTROL, personal discipline, the dominion over the machine and its enchantments and seductions. The new technologies of communication are very useful instruments to work, to earn time, to obtain information, to facilitate communication, to… so many other positive things! However, if that control and self-discipline are not achieved, the new technologies may be turned into a machine to kill time, in a source of information that frightens and paralyzes critical thinking, in a corridor of rumor mongering and disinformation, in a way towards experiences absolutely virtual and illusory, etc. Education, education, education! And thus progressively grow in personal discipline, self-control, the domestication of the new technologies of communication.

Q.: Any particular recipe for religious life in Asia?

A.: I have no recipe for religious life in any part of the world, and much less for Asia, a continent I know little of and with which I am not so familiarized. However, there are certain universal challenges for the future of religious life that will be more urgent in Asia, due to the fact that the model of religious life is, in general, western, European and Latin, and Asia is an oriental, Asian and not Latin continent. The challenge of inculturation is great: How religious life in community must be, or the Asian version of poverty and the communication of goods, or the model of celibacy and family relations, or the way to exercise authority and obedience…? For a genuine inculturation it is not enough to change the stoles, the habits, the decorations of our communities. There is a need to go deeply into the Christian experience and the experience of cultures. Who will be able to do this? Moreover, the challenge of inter-religious dialogue is no renounceable. Nobody like the religious should be available and prepared to put forward the radical Christian experience in dialogue with radical religious experiences of the Asian religions. Religions ought to meet together there, in the depth of the soul, where all is unified.

Q.: As a Dominican, you have been travelling all over the world giving lectures, retreats, advice to Dominican communities. How are the Dominicans in general coping with the crises of vocations and, perhaps, even with their identity and mission today in the different parts of the world?

A.: With great difficulty in all places. In some places, like in Europe, the vocational spring is, in general, exhausted for the moment. In many Provinces and Congregations, the efforts being carried out for the promotion of vocations are excessive. And the results of these efforts are limited. And perhaps, the greatest difficulty is the discernment of vocations. In one aspect, the candidates who wish to become religious are very peculiar persons and many of them – men and women – come with their personality already configured.  How may these persons be rechanneled towards the direction of Dominican life? In another aspect, the institutions – due to the lack of vocations – have the tendency to loosen up the criteria of discernment and the requirements for accepting them. Thus, at times, with the acceptance of some candidates come more problems than re-enforcements for the religious group concerned. Often, there is an abundance of vocations but insufficient number of formators and appropriate formation communities. Nevertheless, the gravest problem continues to be the problem of discernment. At times, Dominican life is considered by some candidates as an opportunity for social and economic promotion, as a unique opportunity to make an academic career, as an easy way to accede to the priesthood, and then… what?

Q: You are a member of the Dominican Province of Our Lady of the Rosary. How do you see our mission today?

A.: Very interesting and very demanding. Interesting in the sense that it is an opportunity to save what has been called “the missionary charism”. This charism or this vocation implies more than a few things, namely: leaving your country, learning new languages (sometimes very difficult and very complicated for the missionary), opening oneself to new worlds, facing new cultures and religions, making known the Gospel to “peoples that never heard the evangelical message.” I do not know nor am I the one to judge how such interesting things of the mission are lived today. The modern technologies allow us to have our soul in places different from those where our body inhabits.

Q.: Considering the multicultural context of our Province (and of many other Dominican Provinces and of religious Congregations), could you give us some advice as we face the future?

A.:  Who am I to give advice to anyone? My parents used to repeat that proverb:  “I sell advice, for me I have none” (in Spanish: “consejos vendo, para mi no tengo”). In any case, if I had to give an advice to myself to live in the new multicultural context of the Province, I would tell myself the following things: place your soul where your body is and do not be always busy and worried about the world of your origins and your dreams, because you are not in the latter; listen much and learn much before you begin to pontificate; try to accept with open and generous spirit multiculturalism, which is a fact, but do not remain there, try to practice interculturalism; do not judge more than what is necessary the other, the different one, and do not do it hurriedly; do as much as you can to make known in the most authentic form the Gospel of Jesus, but do not feel obliged to  convince others; let God decide the rhythm and the moment of the conversion of persons and peoples, let God save persons by the ways He chooses (St. Thomas said this already in the 13th century); give time to yourself and give time to others for the sprouting and reform of Dominican life… To achieve these, there is a need of contemplative depth. I do not know if I would be able to put into practice so many and so demanding advices.

Q.: Would you like to add any other comment?

A.: I always wish the best to everybody, because we human beings have the right and the duty to be happy and to help others be happy. This is a fundamental part of our mission. Why should I not desire this also to all the brothers of the Province – to all men and women religious – who work in Asia?

Thank you very much, Fr. Felicisimo. Please come back to live with us at St. Dominic’s Priory in Macau next year and share your knowledge with our students and other students at the University of Saint Joseph – to impart your wisdom, not only on the Trinity but also on Christology and the theology of religious life. It is good, very good, to have you with us. Again, muchas gracias!  (FGB)

______________________________________________________________________

NOVENA OF OUR LADY OF FATIMA

NOVENA OF OUR LADY OF FATIMA

NOVENA OF OUR LADY OF FATIMA


Intention : For the peace of the world and the renewed of the Christian Community.

PROGRAM

NOVENA

4th to 12th May

8:00 a.m – Novena with Rosary and Mass (in Chinese).

5:30 p.m – Novena with Rosary and Mass (in Portuguese).

 

ADORATION

12th May

7:00 – 8:00 p.m – Adoration for English speaking community.

8:00 – 9:00 p.m – Adoration for Chinese speaking community.

9:00 – 10:00 p.m – Adoration for Portuguese speaking community.

 

FEAST OF OUR LADY OF FATIMA

13th May

8:00 a.m -Mass (in Chinese)

3:00 p.m – Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament and Adoration.

5:00 p.m – Rosary in Portuguese.

5:45 p.m – Benediction and Consecration to Our Lady. Mass (in Portuguese).


Procession

Rosary will be recited during the Procession from S. Domingos Church

to Penha Hill Church, followed by the blessing with the

Blessed Sacrament to all the participants and the City of Macau.

Cogregation of Our Lady of Fatima

JOHN PAUL II, WE LOVE YOU

JOHN PAUL II, WE LOVE YOU

“JOHN PAUL II, WE LOVE YOU!”

(Some Personal Notes on Blessed John Paul II)

 

At University of Santo Tomas, Manila: January 1995

On February 25, 2011 I had a chance to visit again the tomb of Pope John Paul II. I was told by my friends in Rome that his tomb was the most visited by pilgrims. (From now on, it will be much easier to visit the place where his coffin will be placed: in the Basilica of St. Peter itself, near the Pieta of Michel Angelo) Although it was still early morning, dozens upon dozens of people were visiting and praying before his simple tomb in the crypt of the Vatican: some were standing, others were kneeling and many others were just passing slowly by the tomb – all were silent, some were crying. I lingered for a while there and remembered how lucky I was for having had the privilege of meeting John Paul II seven times. Nothing personal, I was just lucky! Truly lucky! In these light notes, I shall touch and comment mainly on my personal encounters with John Paul II.

 

 

From May 1, 2011, the Church has a new blessed in the person of Pope John Paul II. Millions of Catholics and men and women of good who were touched by John Paul II rejoiced! In spite of the criticism by some theologians and liberals within the Church, and with due respect, I believe history will also consider him not just a most popular and approachable Pope but a great one.

 

The first time I met Pope John Paul II was on September 5, 1980 in Castel Gandolfo. Together with twenty eight priests and eight bishops, I had the great honor to concelebrate at the Eucharist presided by the Holy Father. What impressed me most then was the contemplative attitude of the Holy Father through the Mass:  totally absorbed, following carefully the rhythm of the Mass, pronouncing each word (in Latin) slowly and distinctly, making strategic pauses of silence. Throughout his 26 years as successor of Saint Peter, John Paul II showed the primary place of prayer in his life. Some authors today consider him a modern mystic. It has been said that he made decisions on his knees. Monsignor Slawomir, the postulator of the Pontiff’s cause of beatification, was asked: What aspect of the Pope’s life particularly struck you? He answered: He was certainly a mystic, “a mystic in the sense that he  was a man who lived in the presence of God, who let himself guided by the Holy Spirit, who was in constant dialogue with the Lord, who built his whole life around the question (asked by Jesus to Peter), ‘Do you love me’.” A close collaborator said on April 30, 2011: “To see him pray was to see a person who was in conversation with God.”

I remember with special fondness the third time I met him personally. (The second time I met him took place during his first visit to the University of Santo Tomas, Manila in February 1981; in this visit, he beatified Lorenzo Ruiz and Companions Martyrs – now saints – at the Luneta Park, Manila) It was during the World Youth Day in Manila (January 1995), where the Holy Father had the greatest audience ever: more than four million people attended the Pope’s final Mass. (One Hong Kong newspaper wrote that then the multitude became a megatude). He celebrated Mass in the University of Santo Tomas for the youth delegates – 245 from all over the world – to the 5th International Youth Forum. This time after the Mass he greeted one by one the students and some others who had the great luck of attending the Mass. While the Holy Father greeted the youth he embraced them – and also some others not so young including me. While he embraced me I could hardly tell him, “Holy Father I have read your lovely book Crossing the Threshold of Hope.” He looked at me intensely and kindly, and told me “Bene, bene.” I was deeply touched and really moved – almost to tears! I remember the words of TIME when the magazine named the Pope Man of the Year (1994): “He generates electricity unmatched by anyone else in the world.”

The last time I met the John Paul II was on February 21, 2004 at the Sala Clementina in the Vatican (like my three previous encounters with him) in the company of about a hundred and fifty people, most of us members of the Pontifical Academy for Life. By that time, he was already sickly and with his Parkinson’s developing slowly. (Parenthetically, the miracle worked by Pope John Paul II that led partly to his fast-track beatification was the healing from Parkinson’s of French Sister Marie Simon-Pierre right after she asked John Paul II to cure her) He could not walk anymore and it was hard to understand his speech. But still then, and against the advice of some of his assistants, he greeted us – about 130 people – one by one: we knelt before him and kissed his ring; he blessed us and smiled.  Many writers on John Paul II underline this characteristic of the late Pope: he was concerned with the person, with each person, each one creature and image of God. This is one of the reason he touched the hearts of so many people throughout the world: the young, the children, the old, men from other religions and cultures… In his first encyclical Redemptor Hominis (1979), issued a few months after his election, the Pope explained that man is the road of the Church and Christ is the road of man: Jesus Christ as the Son of God and the Son Mary (the Pope was a faithful servant of Mary: totus tuus!), the primordial foundation of Christian morality, the Way, the Truth and the Life. John Paul II was missionary of the world: he visited about 130 countries during his papacy. He was from Poland but, indeed, the world was his parish. The well-known Catholic convert André Fossard once said: “This is not a Pope from Poland, but a Pope from Galilee.” John Paul II knew, loved and followed Jesus to the end.

More than my personal encounters with John Paul II I remember – with his holy life of dedication to Christ, Mary and the Church – some of his fundamental teachings. In particular his teachings on human life found especially in his encyclical (he wrote fourteen encyclicals) Evangelium Vitae,” or The Gospel of Life (1995), the first encyclical on bioethics, where he repeats one of his constant mottos: “Human life must be defended from the moment of conception (against abortion) to natural death (against euthanasia and the death penalty).”  I also treasure his radical and creative social teachings found in his three social encyclicals and many addresses and exhortations. It is worth noting here that John Paul II, a remarkable worker since he was a youth, was beatified on May 1, the day of labor; moreover, he wrote an important encyclical, Laborem Exercens 1981, on human work: “Capital is for labor; work is for man.”  From the social teachings, I consider this point (from his Novo Millennio Ineunte, 2001) most innovative: heretic is not only the believer who does not accept or distorts an article of the Creed but one who does not share something with the poor and weak of the world. Also I love to underline his substantial teachings on freedom and truth (in his basic encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 1994): “freedom is not freedom from the truth but freedom in the truth”; on justice and love: “love is the soul of justice”; on peace and democracy: as it is well known, the late Pope contributed immensely to the collapse of European communism in 1989. Just before the war of Iraq he shouted from the famous papal balcony in the Vatican: “No to war. War doesn’t resolve anything. I have seen war. I know what war is.” The Pope words on justice ring frequently in my ears: “No peace without justice, no justice without forgiveness.” As a religious man, I appreciate John Paul II Vita Consecrata (1996), his important apostolic exhortation in which he invites religious men and women to be holy, that is prayerful and compassionate: to go up to the mountain of prayer and to come down to the market places of the world and witness their passion for God and compassion for humanity.

(Parenthetically, let me mention here that the main criticism these days against the Pope is focused on his apparent silence regarding the terrible sexual scandal of priests and their victimizing of innocent children.  Knowing John Paul II, a really wise and holy man, I think I can truly say that he was not really aware!)

I remember once, somewhere in 2004, discussing with a friend the possibility that John Paul II might resign as Pope. Later on I read somewhere: a person asked John Paul II if he would resign. The Pope answered: “I cannot, because Jesus did not go down from the cross.” On February 21-23, 2005, the members of the Pontifical Academy for Life could not have an audience with the Holy Father. By then John Paul II was gravely ill. He would die one month and a half later, on April 2, 2005, after giving his most moving and last speech to the world:  his patient, compassionate, dignified, exemplary way of dying and facing death. Before dying, when thousands of young people were camping near the Vatican and praying for the Pope, he said to his assistants: “Tell the young, I love them.” We are told that his last words – almost inaudible – were: “Let me go… Let me go to the house of the Father.” I remember the Pope had said at the beginning of his pontificate, then with his booming voice: “Our life is a pilgrimage to the house of the Father.” His beatification means he is in the house of the father! I am sure he will remember us singing in Manila, in New York, in London, in Rome: “John Paul II, we love you!” and telling him now: “Blessed John Paul II, pray for us!” (F. Gomez Berlana, OP: Macau, May 2, 2011)

 

Pilgrims Converge in Rome for 3-Day Beatification

Pilgrims Converge in Rome for 3-Day Beatification

ZE11042908 – 2011-04-29
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-32424?l=english

Pilgrims Converge in Rome for 3-Day Beatification

 

Vatican Reiterates Details of Vigil, Liturgies

VATICAN CITY, APRIL 29, 2011 (Zenit.org).- Pilgrims arriving to Rome are looking forward to three days of events surrounding Sunday’s beatification of Pope John Paul II, who died in 2005 at the age of 84 of complications associated with Parkinson’s.

The Vatican press office held a press conference today to review the final details of the events, which begin Saturday with a vigil to take place in the Circus Maximus, presided over by Cardinal Agostino Vallini, the Pope’s vicar for Rome, and organized by the Diocese of Rome.

Monsignor Marco Frisina, director of the Office of Liturgical Celebrations of the Vicariate of Rome, revealed that the Choir of the Diocese of Rome will perform, as will the Orchestra of the Santa Cecilia Conservatory, which he will conduct. The choir of the Philippine community in Rome and the Gaudium Poloniae Choir will perform two traditional pieces.

Brief films detailing key moments of the pontificate will be shown, Monsignor Frisina said, adding that “through images we will also relive the last months of the pontificate of John Paul II, which were marked by his suffering.”

Several figures close to John Paul II will offer their testimonies: Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, archbishop of Krakow, who was the Polish Pontiff’s personal secretary; Joaquín Navarro Valls, Vatican spokesman during John Paul II’s pontificate; and Sister Marie Simon Pierre, who was miraculously cured from Parkinson’s, and whose miracle was used in the cause of beatification.

At the end of the first part “Totus tuus” will be sung, a song composed for the 50th anniversary of Karol WojtyÅ‚a’s priestly ordination.

During the second part of the vigil, Cardinal Vallini will reflect on the spiritual and pastoral personality of John Paul II. Then the mysteries the Polish Pope added to the rosary — the luminous mysteries — will be prayed, with a simultaneous video-connection to five Marian shrines: in Krakow, Tanzania, Lebanon, Mexico, and Fatima.

Each of the mysteries will be tied to a prayer intention of importance to John Paul II: at the sanctuary of Lagiewniki in Krakow, Poland, the intention will be for the youth; at the sanctuary of Kawekamo, Bugando, Tanzania, the intention will be for the family; at the sanctuary of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City, Mexico, the intention will be for hope and peace among nations; at the sanctuary of Fatima, the intention will be for the Church.

Benedict XVI, who will participate through a video connection, will recite the final prayer and impart the apostolic blessing to all the participants.

“White night”

That night, eight churches will be open along the path that leads from the Circus Maximus to St. Peter’s, in what Father Watler Insero, director of the Office of Social Communications of the Vicariate of Rome, called a “white night” of prayer.

“After the Vigil in Circo Massimo, beginning at 11:30 p.m.,” he said, “it will be possible to continue praying until dawn in eight churches in the city center that are found on the journey from Circo Massimo to St. Peter’s Basilica: Santa Anastasia, San Bartolomeo all’Isola, Santa Agnese in Agone (in Piazza Navona, which will be led by a group of Polish youth), San Marco al Campidoglio, Santissimo Nome di Gesu all’Argentina, Santa Maria in Vallicella, San Andrea della Valle, and San Giovanni dei Fiorentini.”

“The Roman youth, serving as hosts of this evening of faith, will greet the pilgrims, inviting them to enter the churches and join in the prayers,” he continued. “During the night, in keeping with the common format adopted by the churches involved, there will be an alternation of the various following moments programmed: the reading of and meditation on the Word of God; silence and Eucharistic adoration; and the reading of some texts that John Paul II addressed to the youth.

“There will also be testimonials from some young persons, songs performed by youth groups, and the recitation of the Rosary and Divine Mercy Devotion. In these eight churches … many priests will be available to hear confessions.”

Father Walter Insero also announced that Caritas’ soup kitchen for the poor and service center at Termini Station will be dedicated to Blessed John Paul II. It is “a sign of love offered by the Diocese of Rome to recall her beloved bishop and his pastoral concern for the poorest of the poor.”

Mass and veneration

The second event is the Mass of beatification in St. Peter’s Square on May 1 at 10:00 a.m. presided over by Benedict XVI. For an hour preceding the Mass, there will be prayer, including the Divine Mercy chaplet, which was introduced by St. Mary Faustina Kowalska.

The preparation will conclude with an invocation to the Mercy of God in the world, with the hymn “Jezu ufam tobie” (Jesus, I trust in you).

The readings at the beatification Mass will follow the readings of the Sunday after Easter. The Eucharist will be distributed in St. Peter’s Square by 500 priests and 300 others will do so along the Via della Conciliazione.

It will be possible to go to Communion in churches connected with screens to follow the Mass. Fourteen giant screens will be installed along the Via della Conciliazione and adjacent areas.

At the end of the rite of beatification, the Pope will pronounce the formula of beatification and the image of the new blessed will be unveiled. At the end of the Mass, a reliquary of John Paul II will be brought to the altar for the veneration of all the faithful.

Afterward, the veneration of John Paul II’s remains will begin in St. Peter’s Basilica, and will continue until everyone in the line has been able to pass through.

Thanksgiving

The third event is a Mass of thanksgiving on May 2, which will be celebrated at 10:30 a.m. in St. Peter’s Square by the Pontiff’s secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone.

The Mass will be preceded by an hour of recitation of John Paul II’s poetry performed by two actors, Dariusz Kowalski of Poland and Pamela Villoresi of Italy.

Monsignor Frisina revealed that the readings will be interspersed with symphonic pieces performed by the Choir of the Diocese of Rome with the participation of the Choir of Warsaw and the Symphonic Orchestra of the Radio of Katowice, Poland. Soprano Ewa Izykowska will also perform.

The celebration will culminate with the singing of the Regina Coeli.

FEAST OF ST. CTHERINE OF SIENA – 2011

FEAST OF ST. CTHERINE OF SIENA – 2011

Feast of St. Catherine of Siena -  2011

 


Jesus is our bridge to Heaven.

( St. Catherine’s Principal teachings and spiritual development.)

St. Catherine is well known for using images in her writings.

And so in her Dialogue, we find among other images that

of the BRIDGE, which God himself used in one of their

exchange  of  words – He said :

“I told you that I have made a bridge of the Word ( JESUS ),

My only-begotten Son, and such is the truth.  I want you to

realize, my children, that by Adam’s sinful disobedience  the road

was so broken  up  that no one could reach everlasting life.

Since  they had no share  in the good for  which I had created them,

they   did not give me the return of glory they owed me,  and so my

truth  was not fulfilled.   What is this truth ?

That I had created them in my image and likeness so that they might

have eternal life , sharing in my being and enjoying  my supreme

eternal tenderness and goodness. But because of their sin, they

never reached this goal and never fulfilled my truth,  for sin closed

heaven and the door of my mercy.

This sin sprouted thorns and troublesome vexations.  My creatures

found rebellion within themselves,  for as soon as they rebelled

against me,  they became rebels against themselves.

With sin there came at once the flood of a stormy river that beat

against them constantly with it waves,  bringing weariness and

troubles from themselves as well as from the devil and the world.

You were all drowning,  because not one of you, for all  your

Righteousness,  could reach eternal life.

But I wanted to undo these great troubles of yours.  So I gave  you

A  BRIDGE,  my Son,  so that you could cross over the river,  the stormy

sea  of this darksome life, without being drowned . “

See how indebted to me are my creatures !  And how foolish to

choose to  drown rather than accept the remedy I have given them ! “

My dear brothers and sisters in Our Holy Father St. Dominic,

I am sure we have all seen the terrible scenes of the extremely

powerful devastating  force of the Tsunami which hit Japan recently,

as a  follow-up of the earthquake.

After reflecting on these words that God spoke to Catherine,

I began to realize how serious  SIN  is in the eyes of Almighty God.

We all saw how devastating were the waters of the tsunami,

washing away everything in its path…wiping out whole cities.

My dear Brothers and Sisters ,  yes,  the tsunami is a most serious

and powerful destructive force  of Nature,  but all that is destroyed

after all  is  the material side of life, even though Man himself

was also destroyed in many cases, and human relationship were lost.

BUT  when  the storm of life  coming through  SIN caused by

our following the  temptations of the Devil and the World,

strikes us …it is  eternal life  that is lost !

We are made in the likeness and image of God, to return to Him

after we have lived this life according to HIS WILL,  that is

to KNOW,  LOVE  and  SERVE HIM.

But since the road of life was destroyed by the spiritual tsunami

caused by Adam’s first sin,   we had no means of returning to

our heavenly home…

So, God is telling Catherine…I  have built this  BRIDE – which is

My only begotten Son,  Jesus Christ himself… who is the WAY

THE  TRUTH  AND THE  LIFE…    Follow  HIM  and you will  be

saved.

Yes, my dear brothers  and sisters,  we have THIS  BRIDGE –

are we not grateful to Our Lord  Jesus Christ for having accepted

HIS  Father’s  will  in  coming into our life,  lived  the difficulties

of human life,  suffered  the  insults,  the cruelties of his persecutors,

who rejected HIM  after all THE GOOD He had done for them …

and finally   even  condemned  HIM  to the most shameful, cruel form

of death –  the  Crucifixion   ?

And  Jesus did all this simply  out  of  LOVE  FOR  US,  nothing else.

And should we be so foolish as to drown in our sins of selfishness,

obstinacy  and  pride… rather than accept  JESUS  as  OUR  BRIDGE

TO  HEAVEN ?

(Fr. Lionel Xavier, OP)