Wednesday, October 31, 2012

United To Jesus and Those Who Walk Along His Path


During the general audience on 31 October 2012 His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI, continuing his catecheses on the subject of Catholic faith, began by posing certain important questions: "Is the nature of faith merely personal and individual? ... Do I live my faith alone?”
 

"Certainly, the act of faith is an eminently personal act", he told the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square. "It is something which happens in the most intimate depths of my being and causes a change of direction, a personal conversion.... But the fact that I believe is not the result of solitary reflection ... it is the fruit of a relationship, a dialogue ... with Jesus which causes me to emerge from my 'I' ... and to open myself to the love of God the Father. It is like a rebirth in which I discover that I am united not only to Jesus but also to all those who have walked and continue to walk along His path. And this new birth, which begins with Baptism, continues throughout the course of a person's life.”

 
"I cannot construct my personal faith in a private dialogue with Jesus", the Pope added, "because faith is given to me by God through a believing community which is the Church. And faith makes me part of a multitude of believers bound by a communion which is not merely sociological, but rooted in the eternal love of God.... The Catechism of the Catholic Church states this very clearly: 'Believing is an ecclesial act. The Church's faith precedes, engenders, supports and nourishes our faith. The Church is the mother of all believers'".

 
"The tendency, so widespread today, to relegate the faith to the private sphere contradicts its very nature.... We need the Church in order for our faith to be confirmed and to experience the gifts of God together.... In a world in which individualism seems to regulate dealings between people, making them ever more fragile, the faith calls us to be People of God, to be Church, bearers of the love and communion of God for the entire human race", the Holy Father concluded.
 
For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/the-church-is-the-place-where-faith-is-transmitted


 
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 Holy Father Prays for Victims of Hurricane Sandy

"Conscious of the devastation caused by the hurricane which recently struck the East Coast of the United States of America, I offer my prayers for the victims and express my solidarity with all those engaged in the work of rebuilding", said the Holy Father at the end of his catechesis during today's general audience.

For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/pope-prayers-and-support-for-hurricane-sandy-victi

 
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Monday, October 29, 2012

In Need of God's Light, the Light of Faith


On 28 October 2012 in the Vatican Basilica, His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI presided at a celebration of the Eucharist with Synod Fathers for the closure of the thirteenth Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, which began on 7 October and has been examining the theme: "The New Evangelisation for the Transmission of the Christian Faith".

Extracts from the Holy Father's homily are given below.

"The whole of Mark’s Gospel is a journey of faith, which develops gradually under Jesus’ tutelage. The disciples are the first actors on this journey of discovery, but there are also other characters who play an important role, and Bartimaeus is one of them. His is the last miraculous healing that Jesus performs before His passion, and it is no accident that it should be that of a blind person, someone whose eyes have lost the light. We know from other texts too that the state of blindness has great significance in the Gospels. It represents man who needs God’s light, the light of faith, if he is to know reality truly and to walk the path of life. It is essential to acknowledge one’s blindness, one’s need for this light, otherwise one could remain blind forever.

"Bartimaeus, then, at that strategic point of Mark’s account, is presented as a model. He was not blind from birth, but lost his sight. He represents man who has lost the light and knows it, but has not lost hope: he knows how to seize the opportunity to encounter Jesus and he entrusts himself to Him for healing. ... And when Jesus calls him and asks what he wants from Him, he replies: 'Master, let me receive my sight!' ... In the encounter with Christ, lived with faith, Bartimaeus regains the light he had lost, and with it the fullness of his dignity: he gets back onto his feet and resumes the journey, which from that moment has a guide, Jesus, and a path, the same that Jesus is travelling".

“... I would like here to highlight three pastoral themes that have emerged from the Synod. The first concerns the Sacraments of Christian initiation. It has been reaffirmed that appropriate catechesis must accompany preparation for Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist. The importance of Confession, the Sacrament of God’s mercy, has also been emphasised....”

"Secondly, the new evangelisation is essentially linked to the 'Missio ad Gentes'. The  Church’s task is to evangelise, to proclaim the message of salvation to those who do not yet know Jesus Christ. During the Synod, it was emphasised that there are still many regions in Africa, Asia and Oceania whose inhabitants await with lively expectation, sometimes without being fully aware of it, the first proclamation of the Gospel. So we must ask the Holy Spirit to arouse in the Church a new missionary dynamism, whose protagonists are, in particular, pastoral workers and the lay faithful".

"A third aspect concerns the baptised whose lives do not reflect the demands of Baptism. ... Such people are found in all continents, especially in the most secularised countries. The Church is particularly concerned that they should encounter Jesus Christ anew, rediscover the joy of faith and return to religious practice in the community of the faithful. Besides traditional and perennially valid pastoral methods, the Church seeks to adopt new ones, developing new language attuned to the different world cultures, proposing the truth of Christ with an attitude of dialogue and friendship rooted in God Who is Love".

"Bartimaeus, on regaining his sight from Jesus, joined the crowd of disciples, which must certainly have included others like him, who had been healed by the Master. New evangelisers are like that: people who have had the experience of being healed by God, through Jesus Christ. ... Let us put away, then, all blindness to the truth, all ignorance and, removing the darkness that obscures our vision like fog before the eyes, let us contemplate the true God".

For more information, please visit:




 

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May Jesus’ healing hand be upon all those who are suffering in body, mind or spirit.  May our encounter with Jesus Christ help us to see the truth with eyes of faith.  May our experience inspire us to share the Good News of God’s love with those we meet on our journey.

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Sunrise over the Sea of Galilee


Year of Faith Pilgrimage to the Holy Land

Join Fr. Joseph Gotwalt as we follow in the footsteps of Jesus from March 9 – 19, 2013.  The scriptures will come alive on this journey to the roots of our faith. Tour includes:  Daily Mass at holy sites, licensed Christian guide, accommodation in First Class hotels (five nights in Jerusalem, three nights in Tiberias, on the shore of the Sea of Galilee), breakfast and dinner daily, land transportation by deluxe motorcoach, roundtrip motorcoach transportation from Harrisburg to New York JFK, roundtrip airfare from JFK on nonstop flights with Delta Airlines, and more, for $3,150 per person/double occupancy.

For complete details on this pilgrimage, please contact:  George’s International Tours, (800) 566-7499, sales@georgesintl.com, or Karen Hurley, k.m.hurley1@gmail.com.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Blessed is the One Who Encounters Christ


The Synod of Bishops on New Evangelisation for the Transmission of the Christian Faith draws to a close as over 260 Church leaders from around the globe come up with a final list of propositions to present to His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI for inclusion in his apostolic exhortation. On 26 October 2012, the bishops presented a concluding message which they hope will inspire all those involved in promoting evangelization. 

Excerpts follow:

Let us draw light from a Gospel passage: Jesus' encounter with the Samaritan woman (cf. John 4:5-42). There is no man or woman who, in one's life, would not find oneself like the woman of Samaria beside a well with an empty bucket, with the hope of finding the fulfillment of the heart's most profound desire, that which alone could give full meaning to existence. Today, many wells offer themselves to quench humanity's thirst, but we must discern in order to avoid polluted waters. We must orient the search well, so as not to fall prey to disappointment, which can be disastrous.

Like Jesus at the well of Sychar, the Church also feels obliged to sit beside today's men and women. She wants to render the Lord present in their lives so that they could encounter him because he alone is the water that gives true and eternal life. Only Jesus can read the depths of our heart and reveal the truth about ourselves: “He told me everything I have done”, the woman confesses to her fellow citizens. This word of proclamation is united to the question that opens up to faith: “Could he possibly be the Messiah?” It shows that whoever receives new life from encountering Jesus cannot but proclaim truth and hope to others. The sinner who was converted becomes a messenger of salvation and leads the whole city to Jesus. The people pass from welcoming her testimony to personally experiencing the encounter: “We no longer believe because of your word; for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this is truly the savior of the world”….

...Faith determines everything in the relationship that we build with the person of Jesus who takes the initiative to encounter us. The work of the new evangelization consists in presenting once more the beauty and perennial newness of the encounter with Christ to the often distracted and confused heart and mind of the men and women of our time, above all to ourselves. We invite you all to contemplate the face of the Lord Jesus Christ, to enter the mystery of his existence given for us on the cross, reconfirmed in his resurrection from the dead as the Father's gift and imparted to us through the Spirit. In the person of Jesus, the mystery of God the Father's love for the entire human family is revealed. He did not want us to remain in a false autonomy. Rather he reconciled us to himself in a renewed pact of love.

The Church is the space offered by Christ in history where we can encounter him, because he entrusted to her his Word, the Baptism that makes us God's children, his Body and his Blood, the grace of forgiveness of sins above all in the sacrament of Reconciliation, the experience of communion that reflects the very mystery of the Holy Trinity, the strength of the Spirit that generates charity towards all….

In the path opened by the New Evangelization, we might also feel as if we were in a desert, in the midst of dangers and lacking points of reference. The Holy Father Benedict XVI, in his homily for the Mass opening the Year of Faith, spoke of a “spiritual 'desertification'” that has advanced in the last decades. But he also encouraged us by affirming that “it is in starting from the experience of this desert, from this void, that we can again discover the joy of believing, its vital importance for us, men and women. In the desert we rediscover the value of what is essential for living” (Homily for the Eucharistic celebration for the opening of the Year of Faith, Rome, 11 October 2012). In the desert, like the Samaritan woman, we seek water and a well from which to drink: blessed is the one who encounters Christ there!

We thank the Holy Father for the gift of the Year of Faith, an exquisite portal into the path of the new evangelization. We thank him also for having linked this Year to the grateful remembrance of the opening of the Second Vatican Council fifty years ago. Its fundamental magisterium for our time shines in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which is proposed once more as a sure reference of faith twenty years after its publication. These are important anniversaries, which allow us to reaffirm our close adherence to the Council's teaching and our firm commitment to carry on its implementation.

The figure of Mary guides us on our way. Our work, as Pope Benedict XVI told us, can seem like a path across the desert; we know that we must journey, taking with us what is essential: the company of Jesus, the truth of his word, the Eucharistic bread which nourishes us, the fellowship of ecclesial communion, the impetus of charity. It is the water of the well that makes the desert bloom. As stars shine more brightly at night in the desert, so the light of Mary, Star of the New Evangelization, brightly shines in heaven on our way. To her we confidently entrust ourselves.

 

For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/concluding-message-from-synod-of-bishops


 
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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

An Authentic Encounter with God


The faith, its meaning and significance in the modern world, were the main themes of His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI's catechesis during his weekly general audience held 24 October 2012 in Saint Peter's Square. "In our time", the Pope said, "we need a renewed education in the faith. Certainly this must include a knowledge of its truths and of the events of salvation, but above all it must arise from an authentic encounter with God in Jesus Christ".

"I believe we should meditate more often - during our daily lives often marked by problems and dramatic situations - on the fact that Christian belief means abandoning oneself trustingly to the profound meaning which upholds me and the world, the meaning which we cannot give to ourselves but only receive as a gift, and which is the foundation upon which we can live without fear. We must be capable of announcing this liberating and reassuring certainty of the faith with words, and showing it with our Christian lives".

"Underpinning our journey of faith is Baptism, the Sacrament which gives us the Holy Spirit, makes us children of God in Christ, and marks our entry into the community of faith, into the Church. A person does not believe alone, without God's grace, nor do we believe by ourselves, but together with our brothers and sisters...."

Our Holy Father concluded: "The faith is a gift of God but it is also a profoundly free and human act. ... It does not run counter to our freedom or our reason. ... Believing means entrusting oneself in all freedom and joy to God's providential plan for history, as did the Patriarch Abraham, as did Mary of Nazareth".

 

For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/faith-means-believing-in-the-love-of-god-which-red

 
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Monday, October 22, 2012

United in the Mystery of Salvation


On Sunday, 21 October 2012 in St. Peter's Square, some eighty thousand people participated in a papal Mass for the canonisation of seven new saints: Jacques Berthieu, French martyr and priest of the Society of Jesus (1838-1896); Pedro Calungsod, Filipino lay catechist and martyr (1654-1672); Giovanni Battista Piamarta, Italian priest and founder of the Congregation of the Holy Family of Nazareth and of the Congregation of the Humble Sister Servants of the Lord (1841-1913); Maria del Carmen (born Maria Salles y Barangueras), Spanish foundress of the Conceptionist Missionary Sisters of Teaching (1848-1911); Marianne Cope, nee Barbara, German-American religious of the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis in Syracuse U.S.A. (1838-1918); Kateri Tekakwitha, American laywoman (1656-1680), and Anna Schaeffer, German laywoman (1882-1925).

His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI drew attention in his homily to the "happy coincidence" between the current assembly of the Synod of Bishops on New Evangelisation, World Mission Sunday, and the readings during the day's Mass which, he said, show us "how to be evangelisers, called to bear witness and to proclaim the Christian message, configuring ourselves to Christ and following His same way of life….

"These new saints, different in origin, language, nationality and social condition, are united among themselves and with the whole People of God in the mystery of salvation of Christ the Redeemer. ... May the witness of ... their lives generously spent for love of Christ, speak today to the whole Church, and may their intercession strengthen and sustain her in her mission to proclaim the Gospel to the whole world", the Holy Father concluded.

For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/sanctity-arises-from-the-well-spring-of-redemption


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Mary, Star of Evangelization, pray for us!
 
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Thursday, October 18, 2012

In the Hands of the Mother of God


 
I wish to entrust to the Most Holy Mother of God all the difficulties affecting our world as it seeks serenity and peace, the problems of the many families who look anxiously to the future, the aspirations of young people at the start of their lives, the suffering of those awaiting signs or decisions of solidarity and love. I also wish to place in the hands of the Mother of God this special time of grace for the Church, now opening up before us. Mother of the “yes”, you who heard Jesus, speak to us of him; tell us of your journey, that we may follow him on the path of faith; help us to proclaim him, that each person may welcome him and become the dwelling place of God. Amen!

 
His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI

Homily
Loreto, 4 October 2012

 

 
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A web site for the Campaign of Prayer for Evangelization of the world is now online at http://www.ppoomm.va/evangelizzazione/en/index.html , prepared by the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples and the Pontifical Mission Societies.   This is a worldwide campaign to pray the Holy Rosary in order to accompany the work of evangelization in the world and also for the intention that many of the baptized will rediscover and deepen their faith. This is truly a way that each and every one may fully participate in the mission of evangelization. Of course, the first prayer of the Rosary is the Creed upon which we are called to meditate especially during the Year of Faith.

 
Our Blessed Mother Mary will always show us the way to do the will of God.
 
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During this Year, it will be helpful to invite the faithful to turn with particular devotion to Mary, model of the Church, who “shines forth to the whole community of the elect as the model of virtues.” Therefore, every initiative that helps the faithful to recognize the special role of Mary in the mystery of salvation, love her and follow her as a model of faith and virtue is to be encouraged. To this end it would be proper to organize pilgrimages, celebrations and gatherings at the major Marian shrines.

Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
Note with Pastoral Recommendations for the Year of Faith, I.3
 


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Please prayerfully consider a Year of Faith pilgrimage to Marian Shrines in Portugal, Spain and France from July 15-26, 2013.  Our time in Fatima and Lourdes comprises special free days for private devotions.  Other sites to be visited on the pilgrimage include Coimbra, Salamanca, Alba de Tormes, Avila, and Burgos.  In Paris we will visit the Chapel of the Miraculous Medal at Rue de Bac, Shrine of Saint Vincent de Paul, Notre Dame Cathedral, and the Basilica of Sacre Coeur.  Roundtrip airfare and airline taxes/fuel surcharges, 10 nights accommodation in First Class/4 star hotels, breakfast and dinner daily, land transportation by private deluxe motorcoach, train tickets from Lourdes to Paris, all entrance fees, Daily Mass, and more. 

For complete details on this or other pilgrimages, please contact:  George’s International Tours, (800) 566-7499, sales@georgesintl.com  or Karen Hurley, k.m.hurley1@gmail.com.
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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

We Must Go Back to God


During the General Audience on 17 October 2012, His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI began a new series of catecheses which will cover the period of the Year of Faith. The Year, he said, is intended "to renew our enthusiasm at believing in Jesus Christ, ... to revive the joy of walking along the path He showed us, and to bear concrete witness to the transforming power of the faith".

 
With his catecheses over coming months our Holy Father hopes to help people understand that the faith "is not something extraneous and distant from real life, but the very heart thereof. Faith in a God Who is love and Who came close to mankind by taking human flesh and giving Himself on the cross to save us and open the doors of heaven for us, is a luminous sign that only in love does man's true fullness lie", he said.

 
The essential formula of the faith, the Pope explained, is to be found in the Creed, in the Profession of the Faith, whence develops "the moral life of Christians, which there has its foundation and its justification. ... It is the Church’s duty to transmit the faith, to communicate the Gospel, so that Christian truths may become a light guiding the new cultural transformations, and Christians may be able to give reasons for the hope that is in them.

 
Pope Benedict XVI went on: "We must go back to God, to the God of Jesus Christ, we must rediscover the message of the Gospel and cause it to enter more deeply into our minds and our daily lives.

 
"In these catecheses during the Year of Faith I would like to help people make this journey, in order to regain and understand the central truths of faith about God, man, the Church, and all social and cosmic reality, by reflecting upon the affirmations contained in the Creed. And I hope to make it clear that these contents or truths of the faith are directly related to our life experience. They require a conversion of existence capable of giving rise to a new way of believing in God".

For more information, please visit:
 
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Glory in his holy name;
let the hearts that seek the Lord rejoice.
Turn to the Lord and his strength;
remember the wonders he has done.
 
     Mass for the New Evangelization
     Entrance Antiphon Cf. Ps 105 (104): 3-4, 5

 
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Thursday, October 11, 2012

Making the Truth and Beauty of the Faith Shine Out in Our Time


"Today, fifty years from the opening of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, we begin with great joy the Year of Faith", said His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI during the course of a Mass celebrated this morning in St. Peter's Square.

Extracts from Pope Benedict XVI's homily are given below.

"The Year of Faith which we launch today is linked harmoniously with the Church’s whole path over the last fifty years: from the Council, through the Magisterium of the Servant of God Paul VI, who proclaimed a Year of Faith in 1967, up to the Great Jubilee of the year 2000, with which Blessed John Paul II re-proposed to all humanity Jesus Christ as the one Saviour, yesterday, today and forever…. Jesus is the centre of the Christian faith. The Christian believes in God Whose face was revealed by Jesus Christ. He is the fulfilment of the Scriptures and their definitive interpreter".

"Vatican Council II did not wish to deal with the theme of faith in one specific document. It was, however, animated by a desire, as it were, to immerse itself anew in the Christian mystery so as to re-propose it fruitfully to contemporary man. ... In his opening speech Blessed John XXIII presented the principal purpose of the Council in this way: “What above all concerns the Ecumenical Council is this: that the sacred deposit of Christian doctrine be safeguarded and taught more effectively. … Therefore, the principal purpose of this Council is not the discussion of this or that doctrinal theme, a Council is not required for that, ... [but] this certain and immutable doctrine, which is to be faithfully respected, needs to be explored and presented in a way which responds to the needs of our time”.

"In the light of these words, we can understand what I myself felt at the time: during the Council there was an emotional tension as we faced the common task of making the truth and beauty of the faith shine out in our time, without sacrificing it to the demands of the present or leaving it tied to the past: the eternal presence of God resounds in the faith, transcending time, yet it can only be welcomed by us in our own unrepeatable today. Therefore I believe that the most important thing ... is to revive in the whole Church that positive tension, that yearning to announce Christ again to contemporary man. But, so that this interior thrust towards the new evangelisation neither remain just an idea nor be lost in confusion, ... I have often insisted on the need to return, as it were, to the “letter” of the Council - that is to its texts - also to draw from them its authentic spirit, and why I have repeated that the true legacy of Vatican II is to be found in them".

"The Council did not formulate anything new in matters of faith, nor did it wish to replace what was ancient. Rather, it concerned itself with seeing that the same faith might continue to be lived in the present day, that it might remain a living faith in a world of change. ... The Council Fathers wished to present the faith in a meaningful way; and if they opened themselves trustingly to dialogue with the modern world it is because they were certain of their faith, of the solid rock on which they stood….”

"Recent decades have seen the advance of a spiritual “desertification”.... But it is in starting from the experience of this desert ... that we can again discover the joy of believing, its vital importance for us".

"In the desert we rediscover the value of what is essential for living; thus in today’s world there are innumerable signs, often expressed implicitly or negatively, of the thirst for God, for the ultimate meaning of life. And in the desert people of faith are needed who, with their own lives, point out the way to the Promised Land and keep hope alive. Living faith opens the heart to the grace of God which frees us from pessimism. Today, more than ever, evangelising means witnessing to the new life, transformed by God, and thus showing the path".

"The journey is a metaphor for life, and the wise wayfarer is one who has learned the art of living, and can share it with his brethren…. This, then, is how we can picture the Year of Faith: a pilgrimage in the deserts of today’s world, taking with us only what is necessary: ... the Gospel and the faith of the Church, of which the Council documents are a luminous expression, as is the Catechism of the Catholic Church, published twenty years ago.

"May the Virgin Mary always shine out as a star along the way of the new evangelisation".

 
For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/the-holy-father-inaugurates-the-year-of-faith

 
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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

A Compass Guiding the Ship of the Church

 

"We have reached the eve of the day on which we will celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Vatican Council II and the beginning of the Year of Faith", said His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI at the start of his catechesis during this morning's general audience in St. Peter's Square. "And it is about the great ecclesial event of the Council that I wish to speak", he explained.

"The documents of Vatican Council II are, even in our own time, a compass guiding the ship of the Church as she sails on the open seas, amidst tempests or peaceful waves, to reach her destination". Vatican II, in which Pope Benedict participated as a young professor of fundamental theology at the University of Bonn, was, he said, "a unique experience" during which "I was able to witness the living Church ... which places herself at the school of the Holy Spirit, the true driving force behind the Council. Rarely in history has it been possible, as it was then, to touch almost physically the universality of the Church at a moment of peak fulfilment of her mission to carry the Gospel into all ages and unto the ends of the earth".

"The age in which we live continues to be marked by forgetfulness and deafness towards God. I believe, then, that we must learn the simplest and most fundamental lesson of the Council: that the essence of Christianity consists in faith in God, ... and in the individual and community encounter with Christ Who guides our lives. ... The important thing today, as was the desire of the Council Fathers, is for us to see - clearly and anew - that God is present, that He concerns us and responds to us. And when faith in God is lacking our essential foundations give way because man loses his dignity. ... The Council reminds us that the Church ... has the mandate to transmit God's salvific word of love, so that the divine call which contains our eternal beatitude may be heard and accepted".

The Pope then went on to mention the four conciliar Constitutions, describing them as "the four cardinal points of our guiding compass": "Sacrosanctum Concilium" on the sacred liturgy, which speaks of the centrality of the mystery of Christ's presence in the Church; "Lumen Gentium" which highlights the Church's fundamental duty to glorify God; "Dei Verbum" on Divine Revelation, which speaks of the living Word of God that unites and animates the Church throughout history, and finally "Gaudium et Spes" which deals with the way the Church transmits to the world the light it received from God.

"Vatican Council II", Benedict XVI concluded, "is a powerful appeal to us to make a daily rediscovery of the beauty of our faith, to understand it deeply through a more intense relationship with the Lord, and to live out our Christian vocation to the full".

 
For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/conciliar-documents-a-compass-to-guide-the-ship-of



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On Wednesday, 10 October 2012, the eve of celebrations for the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council, the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, published a special edition. It opens with an article written by His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI on his personal memories of the great ecumenical gathering. Penned this past summer in Castel Gandolfo, the article is in fact the preface to a collection of writings by the young Professor Joseph Ratzinger at the time of the Council, which, however, have never been published.

For more information, please visit:
http://en.radiovaticana.va/articolo.asp?c=628717

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CREDO, DOMINE
 Hymn for the Year of Faith

 
1. Pilgrims we, full of expectation,
 searching in the darkness.
 Lord, you come, revealing the Father,
 You for us are Son of the Most High.
 Credo Domine, credo!
 With the saints who are walking with us,
 O Lord, we ask:
 Adauge, adauge nobis fidem!
 Credo Domine, adauge nobis fidem!
 

2. Pilgrims we, lost and despairing,
 what bread for our journey?
 Lord, your Birth feeds us with your light,
 You for us are the Morning Star.
 Credo Domine, credo!
 With Mary, the first of all believers,
 O Lord, we pray:
 Adauge, adauge nobis fidem!
 Credo Domine, adauge nobis fidem!
 

3. Pilgrims we, broken and exhausted,
 our wounds open still.
 Lord, you heal those who seek you in the desert
 You for us are the hand that heals.
 Credo Domine, credo!
 With the poor who are yearning for help,
 O Lord, we implore:
 Adauge, adauge nobis fidem!
 Credo Domine, adauge nobis fidem!
 

4. Pilgrims we, your cross on our shoulders,
 we follow in your footsteps.
 You arise in the morning of Easter,
 You for us are life everlasting.
 Credo Domine, credo!
 With the humble who wish to be born anew,
 O Lord, we plead:
 Adauge, adauge nobis fidem!
 Credo Domine, adauge nobis fidem!
 

5. Pilgrims we, gathered by your call
 for each new Pentecost.
 You recreate the breath of the Spirit,
 You for us are the Word of the future.
 Credo Domine, credo!
 With the Church which proclaims your Gospel,
 O Lord, we invoke:
 Adauge, adauge nobis fidem!
 Credo Domine, adauge nobis fidem!
 

6. Pilgrims we, thankful and united
 each day that you give.
 Lord, you guide us on the pathway of life
 You for us are the hope of salvation.
 Credo Domine, credo!
 With the world where your kingdom is among us,
 O Lord, we cry:
 Adauge, adauge nobis fidem!
 Credo Domine, adauge nobis fidem!
 

For more information, please visit:
http://www.annusfidei.va/content/novaevangelizatio/en/annus-fidei/inno-musicale.html

 
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