Saturday, March 31, 2012

Holy Father's Prayer Intentions for April

His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI's general prayer intention for April is:
"That many young people may hear the call of Christ and follow Him in the priesthood and religious life".

His mission intention is:
"That the risen Christ may be a sign of certain hope for the men and women of the African continent".

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Friday, March 16, 2012

News from the Women’s Section of the Pontifical Council for the Laity

It is time once again to visit the website of the Women’s Section of the Pontifical Council for the Laity:  the March-April updates are now available at:
http://www.laici.va/content/laici/en/sezioni/donna.html

The topic of the month is “Human Ecology,” and the article by Ana Cristina Villa Betancourt is a must-read.
 

Women in the United States of America, who “stand in favor of religious liberty,” please see the news article and consider supporting the initiative by Helen M.  Alvare and Kim Daniels at:


"The Pontifical Council for the Laity, through its Women’s Section, is attentive to all that pertains to women in the world. The Section strives to advance ideas and activities that can contribute to the dignity and vocation of women in the Church and in society. We work in collaboration with associations, movements, non-governmental organisations and other dicasteries of the Roman Curia...."
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Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Mary Teaches Us the Need for Prayer

"Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word"

(Luke 1.38)

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The Dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium on the Church states: "since it has pleased God not to manifest solemnly the mystery of the salvation of the human race before He would pour forth the Spirit promised by Christ, we see the apostles before the day of Pentecost "persevering with one mind in prayer with the women and Mary the Mother of Jesus, and with His brethren",( Acts 1,14) and Mary by her prayers imploring the gift of the Spirit, who had already overshadowed her in the Annunciation. " (n. 59).

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His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI began a new cycle of catecheses during his general audience this morning, dedicated to the subject of prayer in the Acts of the Apostles and the Letters of St. Paul. The Pope focused his remarks today on the figure of Mary as she appears in the Acts, when with the Apostles she awaits the coming of the Holy Spirit.
 

Pope Benedict XVI told the more than 10,000 pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square that "it was with Mary that Jesus' earthly life began, and it was with her that the Church took its first steps. ... She discreetly followed her Son's journey during His public life, even unto the foot of the cross. Then, with silent prayer, she continued to follow the progress of the Church", he explained.
 

The stages of Mary's own journey from the house of Nazareth to the Upper Room of Jerusalem "were marked by her capacity to maintain an ongoing state of contemplation, meditating upon each event in the silence of her heart, before God. The Mother of God's presence with the Eleven after the Ascension ... has great significance because with them she shared the most precious of things: the living memory of Jesus in prayer".


Our prayers "are often dictated by difficult situations, by personal problems which cause us to turn to the Lord in search of light, comfort and aid. But Mary invites us to open prayer to other dimensions, to address God not only in moments of need and not only for ourselves, but unanimously, perseveringly, faithfully and with 'one heart and soul'".


Benedict XVI also pointed out that Mary "was placed by the Lord at decisive moments of the history of salvation, and she always responded with complete readiness as a result of her profound bond with God matured through assiduous and intense prayer. ... Between the Ascension and Pentecost, she was 'with' and 'in' the Church, in prayer. Mother of God and Mother of the Church, Mary exercises her maternity until the end of history".


The Pope concluded by saying that "Mary teaches us the need for prayer and shows us how only through a constant, intimate and complete bond of love with her Son can we courageously leave our homes ... to announce the Lord Jesus, Saviour of the world".
 

For more information please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/venerating-the-mother-of-god-means-learning-to-bec

http://www.news.va/en/news/without-mary-the-church-does-not-exist


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Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Silence is Indispensable for Prayer

During the General Audience this morning His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI concluded a series of catecheses dedicated to the prayer of Jesus. Today he turned his attention to the theme of alternating words and silence which characterised Christ's earthly life, above all on the Cross, and which is also significant in two aspects of our own lives.


Addressing the 10,000 pilgrims gathered in Saint Peter’s Square, the Pope explained that the first of these aspects "concerns accepting the Word of God. Interior and exterior silence are necessary in order to hear that Word", he said. Yet, "our age does not, in fact, favour reflection and contemplation; quite the contrary it seems that people are afraid to detach themselves, even for an instant, from the spate of words and images which mark and fill our days".


However, "the Gospels often show us ... Jesus withdrawing alone to a place far from the crowds, even from His own disciples, where He can pray in silence". Moreover, "the great patristic tradition teaches us that the mysteries of Christ are linked to silence, and only in silence can the Word find a place to dwell within us".


The Pope then turned to focus on the second important aspect of the relationship between silence and prayer. "In our prayers", he said, "we often find ourselves facing the silence of God. We almost experience a sense of abandonment; it seems that God does not listen and does not respond. But this silence, as happened to Jesus, does not signify absence. Christians know that the Lord is present and listens, even in moments of darkness and pain, of rejection and solitude. Jesus assures His disciples and each one of us that God is well aware of our needs at every moment of our lives".


Christ touches the most profound point of His prayer to the Father at the moment of His passion and death…. "His cry to the Father from the cross encapsulated 'all the troubles, for all time, of humanity enslaved by sin and death, all the petitions and intercessions of salvation history are summed up in this cry of the incarnate Word. Here the Father accepts them and, beyond all hope, answers them by raising His Son. Thus is fulfilled and brought to completion the drama of prayer in the economy of creation and salvation'".


For more information please visit:


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What worldly attachments do we allow to interfere with the silence needed to contemplate the Word of God?
During Lent can we “fast” from these attachments in order to be fully attentive to the Lord? 
May we experience the Lord’s presence in word and silence.
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Monday, March 5, 2012

Christ Gives Us Inner Light to Overcome the Trials of Life

On March 4, 2012, His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI appeared at the window of his study in the Apostolic Palace to pray the Angelus with the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square.

Before the prayer, the Holy Father recalled how the Gospel on the second Sunday of Lent (Mark 9: 2-10) recounts the episode of the Transfiguration of Christ. He noted that Matthew, Mark and Luke all agree on the essential elements of the narrative: Jesus climbed the mountain in the company of His disciples Peter, James and John, and was transfigured before their eyes. His face and clothing irradiated a dazzling light, then a cloud enveloped the summit of the mountain and the Father’s voice was heard saying: ''This is my Son, the Beloved, listen to him".

The Pope explained how the mystery of the Transfiguration must be seen in the context of the itinerary Jesus was following. At that time His mission was coming to its end, and He knew He would have to suffer the cross. He had announced as much to His followers but they had failed to understand and refused to accept. For this reason Jesus took three disciples with Him to the mountain, "to reveal His divine glory, splendour of Truth and of Love. Jesus wanted this light to illuminate the hearts of the people who would have to experience the black night of His passion and death, when the scandal of the cross would be unbearable to them.

"God is light", the Holy Father added, "and Jesus wanted His most intimate friends to experience this light, which dwelt within Him. Following that event, He would become an inner light in them, capable of protecting them from the onslaught of darkness. Even in the darkest night Jesus is the lantern which never goes out".

"We all need an inner light to overcome the trials of life. This light comes from God and it is Christ Who gives it to us. ... Let us climb the mountain of prayer with Jesus and, contemplating His face full of love and truth, let us allow ourselves to be filled from within with His light".

After the Angelus prayer, Benedict XVI invited the faithful to dedicate a moment every day during Lent to silent prayer and listening to the Word of God.
 

For more information, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/christ-gives-us-inner-light-to-overcome-the-trials




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“Prayer brings our mind into the brightness of divine light, and exposes our will to the warmth of divine love.  Nothing else can so purge our mind from its ignorance, and our will from its depraved affections.  It is a blessed fountain which, as it flows, revives our good desires and causes them to bring forth fruit, washes away the stains of infirmity from our soul, and calms the passions of our hearts.

Above all, I would recommend mental prayer, the prayer of the heart; and that drawn from the contemplation of our Saviour’s life and Passion.  If you habitually meditate upon Him, your whole soul will be filled with Him, you will learn His expression, and learn to frame your actions after His example.  He is the Light of the world, it is therefore in Him, by Him, and for Him, that we must be enlightened and illuminated…”


Saint Francis de Sales
An Introduction to the Divine Life


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Even if we cannot physically go up Mount Tabor*, the Lord gives us the light of prayer which helps us to spiritually draw near to the divine light of Christ.  "Let us climb the mountain of prayer with Jesus and, contemplating His face full of love and truth, let us allow ourselves to be filled from within with His light".  May we be inspired this Lent to devote time to silent prayer and meditation on the Word of God.

*See The Apostolic Lady post of August 6, 2011
 

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Friday, March 2, 2012

May the Truth of Christ’s Gospel Be Known and Lived

This year's meditations during the Lenten spiritual retreat of the Holy Father and the Roman Curia are being guided by Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya, archbishop of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, who is focusing on the theme of "the communion of Christians with God". Beginning with the sign of the cross, the cardinal has been reflecting upon God as light, truth, mercy and loving guide, before turning to consider love of the world, lack of faith in Christ and sin.

The sign of the cross is much more than a habit, it is an "act whereby we add the splendour of knowledge and the dynamism of freedom to our every action". It is a sign which means "sacrifice for love. It is death for resurrection". Therefore, it implies the rejection of vanity, prestige, possession and domination, and the consecration of our activity to Christ.
 
"We must walk in the light", the cardinal said. "In other words, we must choose to abandon sin" and let the Truth transform our lives via a journey of conversion. Understanding God as truth is particularly important for people "who have no awareness of their own sins, for people who have lost the sense of sin because they no longer pose themselves the problem of God", and for people who do no longer possess moral criteria and confuse good and evil. This tendency is related to "religious indifference which affirms that all religions are alike but which, in reality, is seeking a lax morality".

"To live in truth", the cardinal said, "is is to live according to the Beatitudes. It means repudiating the lies of our words and actions. It means rejecting the hypocrisy which impels us to appear other than as we are". The Church too must combat lies and deceit, both within herself and in the world, and struggle "so that the truth of Christ's Gospel may be known and lived".
 

For more information please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/the-church-must-combat-lies-and-deceit-in-herself-


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Religious Freedom

The Holy See Delegation has addressed the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on the subject of religious freedom. Archbishop Silvano M.Tomasi said in many countries “the gap is growing between widely accepted stated principles, and their daily application on the ground.” He pointed out “rising restrictions on religion affect more than 2.2 billion people.” 

Archbishop Tomasi also told the Council “religions are not a threat, but a resource. They contribute to the development of civilizations, and this is good for everyone.”
 
“The implementation of human rights is a difficult challenge today, particularly with regard to the fundamental and inalienable right of every person to “freedom of thought, conscience and religion or belief.” Among other elements, the evolving political situation, wrong perceptions of the role of religion, expediency, and subtle ambiguities in the understanding of secularism lead to intolerance and even outright persecution of people because of their faith or religion. The freedom to manifest one’s religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance, which is guaranteed by human rights law and international instruments, is disregarded in several places in the world. Such stifling policies and practices place at risk the contribution of many citizens to social life and progress in their respective countries.”
 
“Religions are not a threat, but a resource. They contribute to the development of civilizations, and this is good for everyone. Their activities and freedom should be protected so that the partnership between religious beliefs and societies may enhance the common good.”


For the complete Statement by His Excellency Archbishop Silvano M. Tomasi,
Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the United Nations and Other International Organizations in Geneva, at the 19th Session of the Human Rights Council – High Level Segment, on March 1, 2012, please visit:
http://www.news.va/en/news/holy-see-rising-restrictions-on-religion-affect-mo
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Thursday, March 1, 2012

Pope Benedict XVI's Prayer Intentions for March

Pope Benedict XVI's general prayer intention for March is:

"That the whole world may recognize the contribution of women to the development of society".



His Holiness’ mission intention is:

"That the Holy Spirit may grant perseverance to those who suffer discrimination, persecution or death for the name of Christ, particularly in Asia".

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