SUMMARY:
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EUCHARISTIC ADORATION AND EVANGELIUM VITAE DAY: KEY YEAR OF FAITH
EVENTS
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DEFENDING RIGHTS OF CHRISTIANS IN EUROPEAN SOCIETIES
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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS
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EUCHARISTIC
ADORATION AND EVANGELIUM VITAE DAY: KEY YEAR OF FAITH EVENTS
Vatican
City, 28 May 2013 VIS – This morning, in the Holy See Press Office,
Archbishop Rino Fisichella, president of the Pontifical Council for
Promoting the New Evangelization, together with Archbishop Jose
Octavio Ruiz Arenas and Msgr. Graham Bell, respectively secretary and
undersecretary of the same dicastery, presented two major events of
the Year of Faith: a worldwide Eucharistic Adoration and the Day
Celebrating the Evangelium Vitae.
The
first of these events, the Worldwide Eucharistic Adoration, will be
broadcast from St. Peter’s Basilica next Sunday, 2 June from
5:00pm-6:00pm local time. Its theme is: “One Lord, One Faith”,
which was chosen to testify to the deep unity that characterizes it.
“It will be an event,” Archbishop Fisichella explained,
“occurring for the first time in the history of the Church, which
is why we can describe it as ‘historical’. The cathedrals of the
world will be synchronized with Rome and will, for an hour, be in
communion with the Pope in Eucharistic adoration. There has been an
incredible response to this initiative, going beyond the cathedrals
and involving episcopal conferences, parishes, lay associations, and
religious congregations, especially cloistered ones.”
From
the Cook Islands to Chile, Burkina Faso, Taiwan, Iraq, Bangladesh,
the United States, and the Philippines, the dioceses will be
synchronized with St. Peter’s and will pray for the intentions
proposed by the Pope. The first is: “For the Church spread
throughout the world and united today in the adoration of the Most
Holy Eucharist as a sign of unity. May the Lord make her ever more
obedient to hearing his Word in order to stand before the world ‘ever
more beautiful, without stain or blemish, but holy and blameless.’
That through her faithful announcement, the Word that saves may still
resonate as the bearer of mercy and may increase love to give full
meaning to pain and suffering, giving back joy and serenity.”
Pope
Francis’ second intention is: “For those around the world who
still suffer slavery and who are victims of war, human trafficking,
drug running, and slave labour. For the children and women who are
suffering from every type of violence. May their silent scream for
help be heard by a vigilant Church so that, gazing upon the crucified
Christ, she may not forget the many brothers and sisters who are left
at the mercy of violence. Also, for all those who find themselves in
economically precarious situations, above all for the unemployed, the
elderly, migrants, the homeless, prisoners, and those who experience
marginalization. That the Church’s prayer and its active nearness
give them comfort and assistance in hope and strength and courage in
defending human dignity.”
The
Day Celebrating the Evangelium Vitae, entitled “Believing May They
Have Life”, will take place from 15 to 16 June. ”We have given it
this name to testify to the grand theme that revolves around the
Church’s commitment to the promotion, respect, and dignity of human
life,” said Archbishop Fisichella. “Pope Francis will preside at
Sunday Mass at 10:30am with the entire ‘people of life’ to
address his message and to show his care to them as well as to all
the ill who will be present at the celebration. Like the other
events, it will follow the traditional pattern of the Year of Faith:
pilgrimages to St. Peter’s tomb will take place on Saturday
afternoon, from 2:00pm until 5:00pm, while at the same time those who
wish may go to confession and adore the Blessed Sacrament. There will
also be catechesis for the various language groups in several
churches around Rome on Saturday morning.”
In
the evening of that same day, Saturday 15 June, starting at 8:30pm,
“a silent, candle-lit procession will be held along Via della
Conciliazione in order to call attention to the theme of human life
and its intangible value. It will conclude in St. Peter’s Square
where several meaningful testimonials will be given. … Already,
groups from the United States, Germany, Japan, Hungary, Romania,
Spain, France, Canada, New Zealand, Argentina, Britain, Belgium,
Slovakia, Costa Rica, Portugal, and Australia have registered their
participation. There will also be families, representatives from
episcopal conferences, dioceses, parishes, religious orders,
seminaries, humanitarian and health organizations like the Order of
Malta, ecclesial movements, associations like Unitalsi and the Red
Cross, and pro-life groups as well as many people interested in the
promotion and defense of life who aren’t affiliated with a
particular association or religion.”
DEFENDING
RIGHTS OF CHRISTIANS IN EUROPEAN SOCIETIES
Vatican
City, 28 May 2013 VIS – Bishop Mario Toso, S.D.B., secretary of the
Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, delivered an address at the
Conference on Tolerance and Non-Discrimination (Including Human
Rights Youth Education) in Tirana, Albania, on 21 May. The conference
was organized by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in
Europe (OSCE). The second plenary session dealt with the issue of
combating intolerance and discrimination against Christians and
members of other religions.
“At
the last High-Level Conference on tolerance and non-discrimination,
held three years ago in Astana,” the prelate said, “the
participating States committed, among other things, to counter
prejudice, discrimination, intolerance, and violence against
Christians and members of other religions, including minority
religions, which continue to be present in the OSCE region. They were
also called to address the denial of rights, exclusion, and
marginalization of Christians and members of other religions in our
societies. Unfortunately, examples of intolerance and discrimination
against Christians have not diminished but rather increased in
various parts of the OSCE region despite a number of meetings and
conferences on the subject organized also by the OSCE and Office for
Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR).”
“It
is regretful, therefore, to note that across the OSCE region a sharp
dividing line has been drawn between religious belief and religious
practice, so that Christians are frequently reminded in public
discourse (and increasingly even in the courts), that they can
believe whatever they like in their own homes or heads, and largely
worship as they wish in their own private churches, but they simply
cannot act on those beliefs in public. This is a only deliberate
twisting and limiting of what religious freedom actually means, and
it is not the freedom that was enshrined in international documents,
including those of the OSCE beginning with the 1975 Helsinki Final
Act, stretching through the 1989 Final Vienna Document and the 1990
Copenhagen Document, and including the 2010 Astana Summit
Commemorative Declaration.”
“Participating
OSCE States,” Bishop Toso emphasized, “must therefore guarantee
that intolerance and discrimination against Christians is ended,
enabling Christians to speak freely on issues that the government or
others may find disagreeable and act on their consciences in the
workplace and elsewhere. Discrimination against Christians – even
where they are a majority – must be faced as a serious threat to
the whole of society and therefore should be fought, as it is done,
and rightly so, in the case of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.
OTHER
PONTIFICAL ACTS
Vatican
City, 28 May 2013 VIS – Today the Holy Father:
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appointed Bishop Rodolfo Cetoloni, O.F.M., as bishop of the Diocese
of Grosseto (area 1,239, population 134,340, Catholics 124,936,
priests 73, permanent deacons 5, religious 50), Italy. Bishop
Cetoloni was previously bishop of Montepulciano-Chiusi-Pienza, Italy.
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appointed Fr. Jorge Estrada Solorzano as auxiliary bishop of the
Archdiocese of Mexico (area 1,429, population 8,997,000, Catholics
8,038,000, priests 1,789, permanent deacons 146, religious 7,211),
Mexico. The bishop-elect was born in Mexico City in 1961 and was
ordained a priest in 1995. Since 2008 he has been the director of the
Assistance Centre for Priests. He was previously pastor of St. Peter
the Apostle parish in the Archdiocese of Mexico.
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accepted the resignation from the office of auxiliary of the
Archdiocese of Mexico presented by Bishop Francisco Clavel Gil, upon
having reached the age limit.
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