Showing posts with label Benedict XVI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benedict XVI. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

Again HUGE news: Pope Francis explicitly endorses Benedict XVI’s “hermeneutic of continuity” | Fr. Z's Blog

Again HUGE news: Pope Francis explicitly endorses Benedict XVI’s “hermeneutic of continuity” | Fr. Z's Blog

Again HUGE news: Pope Francis explicitly endorses Benedict XVI’s “hermeneutic of continuity”


You will want to read this carefully and put it in your “IMPORTANT” file.
This is, again, HUGE news.
The 450th anniversary of the closing of the Council of Trent is coming up on 4 December.  We like to celebrate these great milestones in salvation history.  So, there are great doings in Trent, in the northern area of Italy which is part of the (also) German-speaking Tirol.  As is customary, Pope Francis will send a Cardinal as his personal representative.  Who better than His Eminence Walter Card. Brandmüller?
When the Pope sends a Cardinal off on one of these missions, he sends him a formal letter, charging him with his task and indicating something of his own hopes for the occasion.  The anniversary of the closing of the Council of Trent is no exception.
In his letter to Card. Brandmüller, Pope Francis explicitly cites Pope Benedict XVI pontificate-defining address in 2005 to the Roman Curia in which he spoke about the “hermeneutic of discontinuity and rupture” (e.g., the Karl Rahner crowd and their descendants, still active today) and the “hermeneutic of reform”, or “hermeneutic of continuity”.
In this explicit reference Francis is aligning himself with Benedict and that key moment and concept underlying Benedict’s pontificate.
This comes in the wake of Francis writing to Archbishop Marchetto (refresh your memory HERE), a critic of one of the powerhouses of the ”hermeneutic of discontinuity and rupture”, the so-called “Bologna School” of interpretation of the Council.  Francis surely broke a lot of liberal hearts when he referred to Marchetto (who in this matter is completely aligned with Benedict) as one of the best interpreters of the Council that he knows.
The letter of Francis to Card. Brandmüller is available in the Latin original in the Bollettino.  Here is my rapid translation of the first part of the letter, which is the important part.  I scaled down some of the flowery stuff. The second part is the usual boilerplate and of less interest.
To our Venerable Brother
Walter Cardinal (of the Holy Roman Church) Brandmüller
Deacon of St. Julian of the Flemish
Since the 450th anniversary of the day on which the Council of Trent drew to its favorable end, it is fitting that the Church recall with readier and more attentive eagerness the most rich doctrine which came out of that Council held in the Tyrol. It is certainly not without good reason that the Church has for a long time given such great care to that Council’s decrees and canons which are to be recalled and heeded, seeing that, since extremely grave matters and questions sprang up in that period, the Council Fathers employed all their diligence so that the Catholic faith should come into clearer view and be better understood. Without a doubt as the Holy Spirit inspired and prompted them, it was the Fathers’ greatest concern not only that the sacred deposit of Christian doctrine be defended, but also that mankind be more brightly illuminated, in order that the saving work of the Lord could be diffused throughout the entire globe and the Gospel be spread through the whole world.
Harking closely to the same Spirit, Holy Church in this age renews and meditates on the most abundant doctrine of the Council of Trent. In fact, the “hermeneutic of renewal” [interpretatio renovationis] which Our Predecessor Benedict XVI explained in 2005 before the Roman Curia, refers in no way less to the Council of Trent than to the Vatican Council. To be sure, this mode of interpretation places under a brighter light a beautiful characteristic of the Church which is taught by the Lord Himself: “She is a ‘subject’ which increases in time and develops, yet always remaining the same, the one subject of the journeying People of God” (Address of His Holiness Benedict XVI to the Roman Curia offering them his Christmas greetings – 22 December 2005).
[...]
This is a significant letter.
First, it affirms that we can indeed, and rightly, Read Francis Through Benedict.
Second, it affirms that Francis is, and rightly, reading Francis Through Benedict.
Third, it strikes me that Pope Francis is making some course corrections.  He may have perceived that some in “the world” (e.g., liberals, the MSM) are not reading him accurately.  His experience with the “interview” by Scalfari ought to have made that evident.  In addition to liberal misperceptions and distorted interpretations, he has also been misjudged by many on the more conservative side of the spectrum.
As I have said all along, Pope Francis – like every Pope – has to learn how to be Pope.  He had less of an advantage coming to the See of Peter because he had not been in or around the Roman Curia.  But he is adjusting, learning, transforming.  Francis, as you can see everyday, is not static in his job.  He isn’t simply on cruise control.
Continue to pay close attention to Pope Francis, not just in sound-bites, but in the larger arcs of his talks and speeches and written documents.
This is not a bone thrown to conservatives.  This is the real deal.  This is Francis
=========================================================================

38 Responses to Again HUGE news: Pope Francis explicitly endorses Benedict XVI’s “hermeneutic of continuity”

  1. ChrisRawlings says:


    His orthodoxy is readily apparent in the ecclesial tall grass–bishop appointments, magesterial teaching in encyclicals, for example, these crucial but little known theological dispositions on conciliar hermeneutics. But the masses pay attention to interviews with atheists instead. What shapes the future and doctrinal grounding of the Church? The tall grass! So I am thrilled that the pope is a closer when it matters most. But nobody notices because they are locked in a small, insular pop cultural bubble where the New York Times is a more reliable papal interpreter than Absp. Mueller or even Francis himself. They are fawning over a façade they created for themselves. It makes me so angry and resentful, but the pope doesn’t seem to be nearly as bothered. So I trust and pray that he, if I’m correct about his approach, is right.
  2. lsclerkin says:


    :)
  3. CatholicMD says:


    Simon, Simon, behold Satan has demanded to sift all of you like wheat, but I have prayed that your own faith may not fail; and once you have turned back, you must strengthen your brothers.”
  4. TNCath says:


    Another step in the right direction. I wonder if his visits with Pope Emeritus Benedict (by phone or in person) have increased in the last few weeks? Nonetheless, I hope his “learning how to be Pope” continues.
  5. Priam1184 says:


    For the most lovable and fluffiest pope evuh to have even mentioned the Council of Trent must have the ‘hermeneutic of discontinuity and rupture’ crowd spitting blood. Viva Papa Francisco! Veni Sancte Spiritus!
  6. tcreek says:


    1. Pope Francis – “It is certainly not without good reason that the Church has for a long time given such great care to that Council’s decrees and canons which are to be recalled and heeded …”
    2. Saint Pope Pius V implemented the reforms of the Council of Trent and promulgated the 1570 Roman Missal that was abandoned in 1970.
    3. Return to line 1.


  7. ” . . . he is adjusting, learning, transforming” . . . sounds eerily familiar
    [Whatever that means.]
  8. HighMass says:


    Well Fr. Z. You advised us all along since Pope Francesco was elected……to be patient…..This is indeed wonderful news……it is music to our ears!
  9. marcpuckett says:


    I was about to skip that item in the Bollettino this morning, and then was so pleased that I didn’t. Thanks, Father, for this post! I was a bit puzzled by haud minus ad Tridentinum quam ad Vaticanum Concilium refert– I suppose it’s obvious in context that his Holiness means the Second, not the First, Vatican Council.
  10. frjim4321 says:


    I guess that’s one way to spin it.
    Obviously one letter does not an entire papacy define.
    Meanwhile the Catholic tour operators are pulling their collective hairs out over the newly promulgated policy for seating during the upcoming canonization mass.
    So its definitely a mixed bag.
  11. Andrew says:


    So the Pope is a Catholic?
  12. Tom in NY says:


    Don’t forget the direction in the third paragraph: “With this letter, we appoint you to celebrate the EXTRAORDINARY FORM for the 450th anniversary of the day on which the Council Fathers finished the work of the Council of Trent.”
    In the second paragraph, can we conclude he teaches that the spirit of Vatican II is the spirit of the Council of Trent? Viz., “SE….refert.”
    Salutationes omnibus..
    [I think you got out over your skis. Those words in capital letters indicates that Francis appointed the Cardinal as his Extraordinary Legate or Envoy for the event. Don't confuse missus and missa.]
  13. av8er says:


    Let’s see, the praise of Archbp Marchetto, who opposes the Bologna School of VII interpretaion, the removing of the interview with Scalfari from the Vatican’s website, now this.
    I would categorize this as a trend and not spin.
    Very good news indeed.
  14. kpoterack says:


    Tom in NY,
    Are you sure about that (Extraordinary Form?)?
    Rorate Caeli translates it as:
    “We, therefore, name You in these letters OUR EXTRAORDINARY ENVOY [Right.] to the celebrations of the 450th anniversary of the day on which the Conciliar Fathers completed the works of the Council of Trent.”
  15. ClavesCoelorum says:


    And His Holiness says “Our”! :)
  16. Inigo says:


    Pope Francis is also suprisingly, like many of his venerable predecessors, Catholic.
    I’m saying since day one, that something like these statements, he’s been doing the past few weeks would come sooner or later, but nobody believes me.
    Just for the record, some other things I’ve been saying since day one:
    1. This pope will issue a document on how to interpret and truly implement VII word for word. Call it an official hermeneutical manual for the council.
    2. He will promulgate new missals for both forms of the roman rite (deleting many options in the NO, and adding prefaces and saints to the EF as BXVI suggested)
    3. At some (rather later) point in his pontificate, he will celebrate the EF publicly. I wouldn’t even be surpised if he did this on an anniversary of the future death of BXVI in form of a requiem mass.
    4. The Pope will remain Catholic.
    5. The gates of Hell will still not prevail against the Church.
  17. Tom in NY says:


    RP Moderatori et lectoribus:
    Erravi; causa patientiae vobis gratias persolvo.
  18. Geoffrey says:


    “And His Holiness says ‘Our’! :)”
    As far as I can tell, even Bl. John Paul II used the “royal we / our” in official Latin texts, but it was often translated into the vernacular as “I” / “my”, etc.
  19. jacobi says:


    We must have a Syllabus of Errors as called for by Bishop Schneider, and another Council to deal with misinterpretations of Vatican 11.
    Now I thought both were yet a long way off. After these two letters, to Marchetto and now to Brandmueller, perhaps not so far!
  20. Gratias says:


    This is a HUGE relief. I was not on board with reading Francis through Benedict.
  21. VexillaRegis says:


    Encouraging news indeed! May I make a humble suggestion regarding the abreviations for the second Vatican council: please write *Vat(ican) II* , not VII = 7 (?) or Vatican 11 (?!?) – that one would be held in a rather distant future, like a thousand years or so, LOL!
  22. Supertradmum says:


    Bishop Schneider is a wonderful man. I had the great pleasure of meeting him a few years ago, and he is correct. A Syllabus of Errors would be a great idea.
    I hope to see more hermeneutic of continuity from Pope Francis. His words and actions are way more measured than a few months ago. God bless him. And, as pointed out, he used the royal “we” as well-good sign. Very good sign.
  23. Gratias says:


    Concerning abbreviations for the Vatican Council II, I prefer V2 because it brings to mind the destructive ballistic missile used by the wicked against the free during WW2.
  24. Lin says:


    In his letter to Card. Brandmüller, Pope Francis explicitly cites Pope Benedict XVI pontificate-defining address in 2005 to the Roman Curia in which he spoke about the “hermeneutic of discontinuity and rupture” (e.g., the Karl Rahner crowd and their descendants, still active today) and the “hermeneutic of reform”, or “hermeneutic of continuity”.
    Our pastor is enamored with Karl Rahner. And today he announced he will be holding a native American liturgy to be held on Thanksgivng. He shows no signs of believing that Pope Francis is not the progressive for which he has been yearning. He once told our parish that JPII and Benedict XVI set the church back many years.
    I, for one, am somewhat relieved by your recent postings!
    [Make sure your local bishop knows about the plans for a "Native American" liturgy. What would that involve?]
  25. Legisperitus says:


    Deo gratias! May Francesco become another Pio Nono.
  26. Imrahil says:


    it is fitting that the Church recall with readier and more attentive eagerness the most rich doctrine which came out of that Council held in the Tyrol.
    I wonder whether die-hard Italians will like that part.
    Trent is situated in the region which was once called “Welschtirol” i. e. Romance-language-speaking Tyrol, or, perhaps, also South Tyrol, and is now named the Trentino after its capital. The Trentino, which speaks Italian, was claimed as “unredeemed territory” in World War I by the Italians (while, it is said, they were quite happy under the Austrian Emperor), though they ended up securing for themselves a quite big portion of German-speaking Tyrol we now know as South Tyrol (and the Italians as Upper Adige).
    Calling Trent a city in Tyrol is… in fact… shall I use the word?… traditionalist. It recalls the times of Emperor Francis Joseph.
  27. joan ellen says:


    I love reading words about Pope Francis that are in concert with my thoughts.
  28. Priam1184 says:


    A syllabus of errors a propos Vatican II would be a good idea, I suppose, but am forced to ask just how effective was Bl. Pius IX’s original Syllabus of Errors?
  29. asperges says:


    This is heartening news indeed. Now will someone please convince the Holy Father of the need to reassume a liturgical style more in keeping with his role as Pope?
    One feels he has been knocked about a bit by the (wholly predictable) reaction to ill thought out statements and interviews of the early days and the worldwide opinion that he is the long-awaited liberal pope, which is still the daily mantra of the press of the UK and the BBC. It must be a steep learning curve for him and we must still have patience. There is no clear job description after all.
  30. S.Armaticus says:


    Pop quiz sports fans.
    Q: Who wrote the following:
    “…it cannot be excused in the way that one sees it being done, under the erroneous pretext that the seemingly shocking affirmations in one place are further developed along orthodox lines in other places, and even in yet other places corrected; as if allowing for the possibility of either affirming or denying the statement, or of leaving it up the personal inclinations of the individual – such has always been the fraudulent and daring method used by innovators to establish error. ”
    A: ?
    The answer can be found here: http://mundabor.wordpress.com/2013/09/17/some-words-from-auctorem-fidei/
    If you figured out that the passage is from Auctorem Fidei, give yourselves a pat on the back. :)
  31. SimonR says:


    I agree that there does appear to have been something of a course direction recently.
    Even Archbishop Nichols of Westminister has said that ‘The results of the English and Welsh Bishops questionnaire on family life will not be used to change the Church’s teaching, the Archbishop of Westminster said.
    And I also find that I am liking Pope Francis more and more. His homilies are reading better and better.
    And yet the prevailing image in the media appears to be of a liberal Pope who intends to change everything. Sky News review the papers daily and here is their review from Sunday 17 November.
    They also appear to believe that the Synod of Bishops “survey” is a survey which has beent sent from Rome to every parishioner imaginable! This link should take you to where the piece on the Pope begins at around 5minutes:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0BMt-6z-pc&feature=player_embedded#t=312
    We know the finer details of Archbishop Muller’s intervention on divorce, the implications of the Pope’s letter about Vatican II and the recent condemnation of adolescent progressivism by Francis. The media generally neither see this nor care. For them, Francis the great liberal Pope who will change Catholicism to fit into the secular agenda. They love him for all the wrong reasons.
  32. JoseTomas says:


    @SimonR
    “The media generally neither see this nor care. For them, Francis the great liberal Pope who will change Catholicism to fit into the secular agenda. They love him for all the wrong reasons.”
    Unfortunately, it is not only the MSM who does that. RadTrads like Fratres in Unum, the Mundabor site linked above, Rorate (until very recently), and many other do exactly the same think. Let me paraphrase you:
    “Tre RadTrads generally neither see this nor care. For them, Francis the great liberal Pope who will change Catholicism to fit into the secular agenda. They hate him for all the wrong reasons.”
    In particular NONE of these recent good news was reported in the above mentioned sites, with the exception of Rorate, who seems to be coming to its senses (very) recently.
  33. e.davison49 says:


    JoseTomas: Yes, Rorate seems to be coming to its senses. At least they aren’t attacking the Pope all the time anymore.
    If they are coming to their sense about Fr. Z, they seem to be having a selfconscious meltdown about our priestly blogger host. What is their problem? Jealousy? Fr. Z used to quote them with cordial references all the time. He probably put them on the blogosphere map. These days, however, it seems that they waste no opportunity to make snide comments about him. “RadTrads” can be so unattractively bitter. Fr. Z don’t quote them very often anymore.
    We don’t need this.
  34. JoseTomas says:


    @ e.davison49
    Regarding Rorate, I believe that closing their combox did them a lot of good.
    And yes, “unattractively bitter” is a heluva good adjective for that spirit (“Spirit of Trent”? :-)
  35. Bosco says:


    @jo ellen,
    “I love reading words about Pope Francis that are in concert with my thoughts.”
    For my part I would say: I am grateful for the rare opportunity to actually read the words of Pope Francis in their entirety so that I can square them with what I have been taught.


  36. Deo Gratias, let us continue to pray for Our Holy Father Francis, Pope of Rome, reading this is very encouraging…While I do believe that Pope Francis can stand on his own words and not need to be read through anyone else, it is very encouraging to see explicit support for the hermeneutic of reform in continuity!
  37. JoseTomas says:


    An American nun read the first reading today at the Pope’s Mass.
    Did not look like an LCWR nun ! :-)
  38. Fr Jackson says:


    This is a good occasion to throw in a reminder that there is more than one “hermeneutic of continuity” – remember, someone like a Brunero Gherardini subscribes to a hermeneutic of continuity, but does not accept Benedict XVI’s hermeneutic of continuity.
    [He was one my profs.]

 

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Something to lift your spirits! - Papa Francis

Something to lift your spirits! - Papa Francis

Something to lift your spirits!...


Perhaps many of you have already heard about this, but it has only just come to my attention.  Back on the 24th of September, extracts of a letter from Pope Emeritus Benedict to an Italian atheist mathematician, Piergiorgio Odifreddi, were published in the Italian newspaper, La Republica.  The letter was a response to Odifreddi’s 2011 book entitled Dear Pope, I am writing you, which was itself a reply to Benedict’s book, Introduction to Christianity.
It is really wonderful and edifying to read such a clear and precise defence of the Faith against the attacks of of an atheist. What has been published is only extracts of what must be quite a long letter.  I would very much like to see the whole thing!
Thank you very much to Fr Gashwin Gomes for making this translation and for making it available on HIS BLOG.
Respected Professor Odifreddi, (…) I would like to thank you for engaging with my book in such detail, and so also, with my faith; this is precisely what I had intended to do, for the large part, in my discourse to the Roman Curia in the Christmas of 2009. I must also thank you for the fair treatment you have given my text, seeking sincerely to do it justice. 

My judgment concerning your book, on the whole is, however, in itself rather mixed. I have read some parts of it with enjoyment and profit. In other parts, instead, I marveled at a certain aggressiveness and recklessness of argumentation. (…) 

Many times it [your text] pointed out to me that theology would be science fiction. In this respect, I marveled that you still considered my book worth of such a detailed discussion. Please permit to propose with respect to such questions, four points. 


It is correct to affirm that only mathematics is “science” in the narrowest sense of the word; and meanwhile I have learned from you that even here one must distinguish again between arithmetic and geometry. In all specific subjects, in any case, the scientific character [la scientificità] has its own form according to the uniqueness of its object. What is essential is that one applies a verifiable method, excludes arbitrariness, and ensures rationality in each of their different modalities. 
One should at least acknowledge that in the area of history, as well as that of philosophy, theology has produced lasting results. 
An important function of theology is that of keeping religion linked to reason, and reason, to religion. Both these functions are of essential importance to humanity. In my dialogue with Habermas, I have shown that there exist pathologies of religion and – not less dangerous – pathologies of reason. Each has a need of the other, and to keep them continually connected is one of the tasks of theology. 
Science fiction exists, on the other hand, in the ambit of many sciences. That which you explain about theories concerning the beginning and the end of the world in Heisenberg, Schrödinger, etc., I would designate as science fiction in the good sense of that phrase: they are visions and anticipations, in order to reach a true knowledge, but they are also, precisely, only imaginations with which we seek to come close to reality. There indeed exists, science fiction in a grand style, for instance, within the theory of evolution. The “selfish gene” of Richard Dawkins is a classic example of science fiction. The great Jacques Monod wrote some sentences that he himself has certainly inserted in his work only as science fiction. I quote, “The emergence of tetrapod vertebrates … draws its origin from the fact that a primitive fish ‘chose’ to go and explore the land, on which, however, it was unable to move except by jumping clumsily and thus creating, as a result of a modification of behavior, the selective pressure due to which the sturdy limbs of tetrapods would develop. Some of the descendants of this bold explorer, this Magellan of evolution, can run at a speed of 70 miles per hour … ” (“Chance and Necessity.” Italian edition. Milan 2001. p. 117.)

In all the subjects we have discussed so far, one is dealing with a serious dialogue, for which I – as I have already said repeatedly – am grateful. Things are different in the chapter about the priesthood and Catholic morality, and even more different in the chapters about Jesus. With respect to what you say about the moral abuse (sic) of minors by priests, I  – as you know – take note only with deep concern. I have never tried to conceal these things. That the power of evil penetrates to such an extent in the interior world of faith is for us a suffering which, on one hand, we have to endure, and on the other, we must, at the same time, do everything possible so that cases of this type are not repeated. Nor is it at all any source of comfort to know that, according to the research of sociologists, the percentage of priests guilty of these crimes is not higher than those present in other similar professional categories. In any case, one must not ostentatiously (sic) present this deviation as if it were a filth specific to Catholicism. 

If it is not licit to keep silent about evil in the Church, one should not also, however, keep silent about the great wake of goodness and purity that the Christian faith has carried [tracciato, tracked] down the centuries. One needs only remember the great and pure figures the faith has produced – from Benedict of Nursia and his sister, Scholastica, to Francis and Clare, to Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross, and the great saints of charity such as Vincent de Paul and Camillus de Lellis, all the way to Mother Theresa of Calcutta, and the great and noble figures of 19th century Turin. And it is true even today that the faith pushes many persons to love disinterestedly, to the service for others, to sincerity and to justice. (…) 

What you say about Jesus is not worthy of your rank as a scientist. If you pose the question whether, in the end, we know nothing of Jesus as a historical figure, that there is nothing ascertainable, then I can only invite you to become a little more competent from a historical point of view. I recommend to you for this, above all, the four volumes that Martin Hengel (exegete of the Protestant Theological Faculty of Tübingen) has published with Maria Schwemer: it is an excellent example historic precision and of the widest historical information. In light of this, what you say about Jesus is reckless speech which must not be repeated. That in exegesis there have also been written many things with a lack of seriousness is, of course, incontestable. The American seminary you cite on p. 105 (and ff.) concerning Jesus, only confirms once again what Albert Schweizer had noted with respect to the Leben-Jesu-Forschung (The Quest for the Life of Jesus), and that is that the so-called “Historical Jesus” is no more than a mirror of the ideas of the authors. Such forms of botched historical works, however, do not compromise the importance of serious historical research, which has led us to true and reliable knowledge about the proclamation and figure of Jesus. 

(…) I have also to forcefully reject your claim (p. 126), that I have presented historical-critical exegesis as a tool of the Antichrist. In treating the story of Jesus’ temptations, I have only taken Soloviev’s thesis, according to which the historical-critical method can also be used by the Antichrist – a fact which is indisputable. At the same time, however – and particularly in the preface to the first volume of my book on Jesus of Nazareth – I explained clearly that historical-critical exegesis is necessary for a faith that does not propose myths with historical images, but calls for a genuine historicity and therefore must present the historical reality of its claims in a scientific manner. For this reason, it is not even correct that you tell me I would be interested only in metahistory: on the contrary, all my efforts aim to show that the Jesus described in the Gospels is also the real historical Jesus; that they deal with a story [storia] that actually took place. (…) 

With the 19th chapter of your book, we turn back to the positive aspects of your dialogue with my thinking. (…) Even if your interpretation of John 1:1 is very far from what the evangelist intended to say, there exists, still, a convergence that is important. If you, however, want to replace God with “Nature,” the question remains as to who or what this nature is. Nowhere do you define it, and thus it appears as an irrational deity who explains nothing. I would like, however, to note further that in your religion of mathematics, three fundamental themes of human existence are not considered: freedom, love and evil. I marvel that you, with one nod, liquidate freedom, which has been, and remains, the core value of the modern epoch. Love does not appear in your book, and there is no information concerning evil. Whatever neurobiology might say or not say concerning freedom, in the real drama of our history [storia], it is present as a determining reality and must be taken into consideration. However, your religion of mathematics has no information concerning evil. A religion that omits these fundamental questions, remains empty. 

Most respected Professor, my critique of your book is, in parts, harsh. But frankness is a part of dialogue; only thus can knowledge grow. You have been very frank, and therefore you will accept that I will also be. In any case, however, I value very much the fact that you, through your engagement with my “Introduction to Christianity,” have sought such an open dialogue with the faith of the Catholic Church and, notwithstanding all the disagreements in the main part, convergences have also not been missing.  

With cordial greetings and every good wish for your work … 


Pope Emeritus Benedict continues to feed the faithful and the stray sheep alike
- See more at: http://papafrancis.net/2013/10/something-to-lift-your-spirits-2/#sthash.f3uzeM2C.dpuf

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Totus Tuus - Totus2us

Totus Tuus - Totus2us

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Totus2us is giving voice to faith, hope and love from all around the world, especially among Blessed John Paul II's, Benedict XVI's & Papa Francisco's 'carissimi giovani' (dearest young people), is highlighting what's good & beautiful, and helping us to pray & to be not afraid. There are voices from 102 countries so far, here on Totus2us's 35 mp3 audio podcasts and on iTunes. All free, all with music, most episodes are under 10 minutes and fall broadly into 3 areas: Catholic teaching (faith / way), prayer (hope / truth) & witness (love / life).
There's Something about Mary, In Memory of Me, Go in Peace, To be a Pilgrim, World Youth Days, The Incredibles, Blessed JPII We Love You, Papa Benedetto We Love You too, Viva Papa Francisco, Man for Others, In the Family, Word on the Street, TOP CHAT & Does God have a sense of humour. Then there's 3 2us, Sunday Evangelium, Philosophy & Faith, Talks 2us, Catholic Catechism, Mission Jesus & Catechesis with Pope BXVI. The prayer podcasts are the Rosary (in English, French, Italian & Spanish), the Stations of the Cross (in English, French, Spanish), Novenas (16 so far, mainly including the writings of JPII / BXVI) & Jesus I trust in you (the Divine Mercy chaplet is in 12 languages).
1st October - Feast of St Thérèse of the Child Jesus, Doctor of the Church & Patron of the Missions
2nd October - Feast of our Guardian Angels; 4th October - Feast of St Francis of Assisi
5th October - Feast of St Faustina Kowalska, the Apostle of Divine Mercy
7th October - Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary; 9th October - Feast of Bl John Henry Newman
13th October - Consecration of the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary - by Pope Francis
15th October - Feast of St Teresa of Avila; 16th October - Feast of St Margaret Mary Alacoque;
22nd October - Feast of Blessed John Paul II

Today's something about Mary

is by Anne from Ireland    
"Mary to me is a life lived without fear, a life totally in the trust and care of God. A yes beyond all yeses, a yes without a second thought, a total trust and faith in the providence and care of God. Forever, throughout the whole world, throughout the whole Church, till the end of time, Mary stands alone: God’s great yes, humanity’s great yes."
In June 1981 (just a month after the assasination attempt on JPII on the Feast of Our Lady of Fatima), the Blessed Virgin Mary first appeared to 6 children in Medjugorje (in what was then communist Yugoslavia), introducing herself to them as the 'Queen of Peace'. She has been appearing in Medjugorje every day since.


New podcast - Journeys of Faith

with Erin-Thérèse from the United States      
"I think what changed at this time was that God was no longer a philosophical question, He was a personal presence in my life and would only grow to be more so.  I would call it a mutual inbreathing, He was visiting me, stretching out His hand to me, filling me up with His Spirit, and there was such a sense of intimate communion that I discovered God to be not a ‘what’ but a ‘who.’  This was the turning point and this was what enabled me to become a Christian, encountering God became the great romance of my life, and it was from here that I fell in love with Jesus Christ, who is the incarnate Presence of God among us."

WYD / JMJ Rio de Janeiro 2013      

Alex, who's 19 & from the UK: "When I was in Rio, the thing that blew me away was just the way that you could see the Holy Spirit was really working alongside the event. The thing that gave it away completely for me was when we had to change the location of the final event from Campus Fidei to Copacabana beach, and this whole operation happened in a matter of just two or three days."
Patrick, who's 28 & half Brit, half Swiss: "It was great to be in Rio with Pope Francis and to hear the messages he had for us. He instructed us to put Christ on, to not just stay in the institutions or the Church but to really go out and make disciples of all nations. One of the things that he asked us to do was to create havoc, which is quite a strong word but one which probably appeals a lot to young people and something that hopefully we can do with our faith. Obviously in a positive way, a constructive way, but not to be afraid to cause shock waves and to really get out and make Jesus known and the Catholic faith known and the beauty that exists within it to others."
Pope Francis: "Let us ask Our Lady to help us too to give Christ’s joy to our families, our companions, our friends, to everyone. Never be afraid to be generous with Christ. It is worth it! Go out and set off with courage and generosity, so that every man and every woman may meet the Lord."

Papa Benedetto, We Love You!      

Collette, who's 25 & from Birmingham: "Three years ago I was a lapsed Catholic, living a life at complete odds to the Church, very far away from the Church. Pope Benedict came to England on his visit and through his words and his actions, Christ's love really broke through into my life and I had a really powerful conversion experience. I'll never forget his words at Bellahouston Park where he asked the young people to lead a life worthy of their vocation. He didn't just ask, he urged the young people to lead a life worthy of their vocation. And for me in my heart I knew there was something more in my life. A few days later I felt Christ's love in such a powerful way through his instrument Pope Benedict, when he told the young people at Twickenham, 'Dear young people, God loves you so much more than you could ever imagine and by far the best thing for you is to grow in holiness because God wants what's best for you.' And in that moment, through God's servant Benedict XVI, through Peter here on earth, I learnt the two greatest loves of my life: 1) that I am loved by God, that I am his child and He loves me and 2) that I am called to holiness and this has completely changed my life."

In Memory of Me with Joseph & Ronald      

Joseph, who's 20 & from England: "The Eucharist is such an on-going, worldwide and hourly thing where the presence of Jesus Christ is truly here in his sacrifice. I think it's a misconception by many and people sort of think that it's taking away from the crucifixion. But it's not. It's making us present with Jesus and it's the way we can receive Jesus on earth. And ideally we all want to go to heaven and to be with Jesus in the future, so why not receive Jesus now and learn to have a relationship with him? It's one of the most beautiful parts of my faith and something that I really relish and whenever I get the chance I go to Mass so I can receive the Eucharist."
Ronald, who's 30 & from Kenya: "The Eucharist to me is very important because that is Jesus Christ with us right here. Jesus Christ did not leave us with a Bible, but he left us with the Eucharist and he said it plainly, and he said 'This is my body and this is my blood.' Plain and simple. It is because of that that, technically and literally, the world and the universe revolves around it: that has been our source of civilization, that has been the source of our time on the calendar. So to me the Eucharist is the holy grail of civilization and it's my great joy that I receive it."


Visit JMJ Rio's Flickr page / Vatican youtube channel to relive the events with Papa Francisco.
If you were there (or at another WYD/JMJ), please will you share something of your experience for the World Youth Days podcast - just contact Ruth to learn more :o)

Go in Peace ... Confession

Jack, who's 26 & a seminarian from Washington in the US      
"One of the beautiful things that I remember about it that I will never forget is as I was leaving, I told Father Mahoney 'That's why I came into your office last night and this morning was for this confession.' That was the only time that he got angry, was he said 'Never again put off confession.' He just knows the power and showed me the power that is the forgiveness of sins that is granted to a priest through the Holy Spirit and through the Church. It's not always easy, it didn't make me perfect (far from it), but it did in a real way introduce me to Christ's love and his compassion for all of us. So thanks be to God for that."

Man for Others - JMJ Paris

Father Fabien Lambert, who's 36 & from Belgium      

"Little bit by little bit during these days at World Youth Day Paris I started to be struck by something. I saw that ‘how come all these people can be in this joy? And how come this old man, John Paul II, can attract so many young people? There is no one else in the world who has such a big influence like this.' And I thought maybe there is something more and maybe God really does exist. It was the beginning of a little openness in my heart."

Blessed John Paul II

""Fear not to welcome Christ and accept his power. Help the Pope and all those who wish to serve Christ and by his power to serve the human person and the whole of mankind.
Do not be afraid. Open wide the doors to Christ. To his saving power open the frontiers of states, economic and political systems, the vast realms of culture, civilization, and development.
Do not be afraid. Christ knows 'what is in humans'. He alone knows!"
(16th October 1978)

Papa Benedetto XVI

'When we entrust ourselves to the Lord completely, everything changes. We are children of a Father who loves us, and never leaves us.'

'Following Christ's example, we have to learn to give ourselves completely. Anything else is not enough.'

@Pontifex tweet - 2 & 9 Jan 2013

All around the world - our universal Catholic faith

You can listen by country to the witness given, by young people in particular, on Totus2us's podcasts. Countries represented so far are: Albania, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bahamas, Belgium, Benin, Bermuda, Bosnia Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, Cayman Islands, Chile, China, Colombia, Congo-Brazaville, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, DR Congo, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Gibraltar, Greece, Grenada, Guyana, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Ivory Coast, Jamaica, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Latvia, Lebanon, Liberia, Lithuania, Madagascar, Malaysia, Malta, Mauritius, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Norway, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Romania, Saint Lucia, Samoa, Senegal, Serbia, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, SwedenSwitzerland, Syria, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Togo, Trinidad & Tobago, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, UK, USA, Venezuela, Vietnam, Zambia & Zimbabwe.
The countries not included above which Papa Benedict XVI, Blessed John Paul II &/or Paul VI have visited are: Angola, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Belize, Bolivia, Botswana, Burkino Faso, Burundi, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Curaçao, Denmark, East Timor, El Salvador, Equatorial Guinea, Estonia, Fiji Islands, Finland, Gabon, Gambia, Guam, Guatemala, GuineaGuinea-Bissau, Haiti, Honduras, Iceland, Iran, Jordan, Lesotho, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malawi, Mali, Morocco, MozambiquePakistan, Palestinian Territories, Papua-New Guinea, Paraguay, La Réunion, Rwanda, San Marino, Sao Tome & PrincipeSolomon Islands, Sudan, Swaziland, Tunisia & Uruguay.

Medjugorje, 25 July 2013

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{ OOPS!  MEDJUGORJE IS NOT APPROVED BY THE CHURCH. AND pilgrimages based on  claims of apparitions are not permitted. }

 
For theological reasons, Popes generally don't make direct statements about apparition cases, but support the local bishop's judgment. This is what has been happening with the Medjugorje case, as the Holy See's doctrinal office (CDF) Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, has asked Italian bishops to help spread the 2006 statement of Bishop Ratko Peric, since Italy is so near Bosnia-Herzegovina.
To summarize it very briefly:
  1. No one should call Medjugorje a shrine, since only Church authority can do that.
  2. The Church has stated that it could not confirm the claimed apparitions as supernatural.
  3. Priests serving at Medjugorje or visiting there are not permitted to express opinions contrary to the bishops' official position.
  4. The faithful have no obligation to believe in the claimed apparitions, and pilgrimages based on  claims of apparitions are not permitted.
  5. The Church has not accepted even one of the claimed apparitions as supernatural.
=========================================================================

Our Lady of Medjugorje's message to Marija Pavlović:
“Dear children! Also today I call you to prayer. May your relationship with prayer be a daily one. Prayer works miracles in you and through you, therefore, little children, may prayer be a joy for you. Then your relationship with life will be deeper and more open and you will comprehend that life is a gift for each of you. Thank you for having responded to my call.”
“Queridos hijos! También hoy los invito a la oración. Que vuestra relación con la oración sea cotidiana. La oración hace milagros en ustedes y a través de ustedes, por eso hijitos, que la oración sea alegría para ustedes. Así entonces, su relación con la vida será más profunda y más abierta, y comprenderán que la vida es un don para cada uno de ustedes. Gracias por haber respondido a mi llamado."
"Cari figli! Anche oggi vi invito alla preghiera. Il vostro rapporto con la preghiera sia quotidiano. La preghiera opera miracoli in voi e attraverso di voi perciò figlioli la preghiera sia gioia per voi. Allora il vostro rapporto con la vita sarà più profondo e più aperto e comprenderete che la vita è un dono per ciascuno di voi. Grazie per aver risposto alla mia chiamata.”

Totus Tuus, Totus2us   

Totus Tuus - All Yours - was Blessed John Paul II's motto, having entrusted his life, his priesthood, his 'all' to Mary. Totus2us is being built with the same intention: to be all Mary's. The play on lettering gives Totus2us a 2nd meaning - Everything2us - as that is what Mary means to us.
This mosaic of the Madonna and Christ Child is on the front of the Apostolic Palace in St Peter's Square (near the Pope's window for the Angelus prayer). Beneath it is John Paul II's coat of arms and his motto, Totus Tuus; and beneath this is written MATER ECCLESIAE - Mother of the Church.
It is a tribute John Paul II wanted to make to Mary for her having saved his life in the assassination attempt on 13th May 1981, the Feast of Our Lady of Fatima. Just 6 months later, on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, John Paul II blessed the mosaic, a "sign of the heavenly protection of the Sovereign Pontiff, of the Church and of those who are in St Peter's Square."

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