John Paul II, Benedict XVI and Francis modeled three different ways of following Christ
From Our Sunday Visitor
http://www.osv.com/tabid/7621/itemid/10816/Three-pontiffs-in-continuity.aspx
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THE CONCHO PADRE POSTJohn Paul II, Benedict XVI and Francis modeled three different ways of following Christ
From Our Sunday Visitor
http://www.osv.com/tabid/7621/itemid/10816/Three-pontiffs-in-continuity.aspx
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Synopsis of today’s General Audience from Catholic News Service
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHmKOpbgWiE&feature=youtu.be
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“The Catholic Church in Ireland had for far too long felt that it was safely ensconced in a ‘Catholic country,’” Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin told a New York audience in an April 24 lecture. “The Church had become conformist and controlling, not just with its faithful, but in society in general.”
In an address at Fordham University, Archbishop Martin said that the secularization of Irish society has been a lengthy process rather than a sudden development. The problems within the Catholic Church developed decades ago, he said, although there were not immediately evident. “The demographic majority which the Church enjoyed hid many structural weaknesses and the Church became insensitive to such weakness.” In fact, he suggested, the enthusiastic embrace of changes after Vatican II “probably indicated that there was already a deep dissatisfaction,” and Church leaders had failed to recognize popular sentiments.
Old conceptions of Irish Catholicism and even Irish national identity have become outdated, the archbishop said. For example, he noted that it is no longer safe to assume that in Northern Ireland, most Catholics would favor union with the Irish republic. “A very large number of Northern Irish Catholics would favor staying in the United Kingdom,” he said. Today, the task of reviving Catholic influence is complicated by the country’s economic and social difficulties, Archbishop Martin said. After years of booming economic growth based on an uncertain social foundation, “Ireland is picking up the pieces economically and paying the price socially.”
The Church in Ireland must learn to live without the comforts of majority support and state power, the Irish prelate concluded. “Renewal in the Irish Church will not come simply from imported plans and programs. Renewal must be home-grown.”
Gospel Mk 16:15-20
Jesus appeared to the Eleven and said to them:
“Go into the whole world
and proclaim the Gospel to every creature.
Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved;
whoever does not believe will be condemned.
These signs will accompany those who believe:
in my name they will drive out demons,
they will speak new languages.
They will pick up serpents with their hands,
and if they drink any deadly thing, it will not harm them.
They will lay hands on the sick, and they will recover.”
Then the Lord Jesus, after he spoke to them,
was taken up into heaven
and took his seat at the right hand of God.
But they went forth and preached everywhere,
while the Lord worked with them
and confirmed the word through accompanying signs.
O God,
who raised up Saint Mark, your Evangelist,
and endowed him with the grace to preach the Gospel,
grant, we pray, that we may so profit
from his teaching as to follow faithfully
in the footsteps of Christ.
Who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
– Amen.
Pope Francis held a General Audience today in St. Peter’s Square.
Here is an English translation of the Pope’s remarks:
http://www.zenit.org/en/articles/on-christ-s-second-coming
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Pope Francis on Wednesday called on Christians to await the coming of the Lord with trust and joy.
Speaking to crowds of pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the Wednesday General Audience, the Pope continued his catechesis on the Creed and reflected on three Gospel texts that – he said – help us to understand the mystery of the Last Judgment and the second coming of the Lord.
“Just as human history began with the creation of man and woman in the image of God” – the Pope explained – “so it will end with Christ’s return and the final judgment”.
The parables Pope Francis chose to examine are the parable of the wise and foolish virgins that, he said, reminds us that we must be spiritually prepared to meet the Lord when he comes; the parable of the talents, that emphasizes our responsibility to use wisely God’s gifts, making them bear abundant fruit, and here he said: “ I would ask the many young people present to be generous with their God-given talents for the good of others, the Church and our world”; and finally, the parable of the final judgment that “reminds us that, in the end, we will be judged on our love for others and especially for those in need”.
Pope Francis said that through these parables, our Lord teaches us to await his coming not with fear but with confident trust, ever watchful for the signs of his presence and faithful in prayer and works of charity, so that when he comes he will find us his good and faithful servants.
Vatican Radio
(Vatican Radio) The Church is not a bureaucratic organization, but a love story. This was Pope Francis’ message during Wednesday’s Mass in the Chapel of the Casa Santa Marta.
Attending the Mass this morning were employees of the Institute for the Works of Religion, commonly called the Vatican bank. Cardinal Javier Lozano Barragán, President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Health Pastoral Care, concelebrated Mass with the Holy Father.
The day’s readings tell the story of the growth of the first Christian community. In his homily, the Pope warned against being tempted to make “deals” simply to get “more partners in this enterprise.”
Instead, he said, “the road that Jesus willed for His Church is otherwise: the way of difficulties, the way of the Cross, the way of persecution . . . And this makes us wonder: what is this Church? Because it seems it is not a human enterprise.”
The Church, he said, is “something else.” The disciples do not make the Church – they are the messengers sent by Jesus. And Christ was sent by the Father: “The Church begins there,” he said, “in the heart of the Father, who had this idea . . . of love. So this love story began, a story that has gone on for so long, and is not yet ended. We, the women and men of the Church, we are in the middle of a love story: each of us is a link in this chain of love. And if we do not understand this, we have understood nothing of what the Church is.”
The temptation is to focus on the growth of the Church without taking the path of love: “But the Church does not grow by human strength. Some Christians have gone wrong for historical reasons, they have taken the wrong path, they have raised armies, they have waged wars of religion: that is another story, that is not the story of love. Yet we learn, with our mistakes, how the story of love goes. But how does it increase? Jesus said simply: like the mustard seed, it grows like yeast in the flour, without noise.”
A head of state once asked how big the Pope’s army was. The Church does not increase “through military might”, said Pope Francis, but through the power of the Holy Spirit. This is because the Church is not just another organisation: “she is Mother” he said. The Pope commented on the number of mothers present at the Mass. “How would you feel,” he asked, “if someone said: she’s a domestic administrator? ‘No, I am the mother!’ And the Church is Mother. And we are in the middle of a love story that continues thanks to the power of the Holy Spirit. All of us together are a family in the Church, who is our Mother.”
The Pope concluded his reflection with a prayer to Mary, asking that she might “give us the grace of the spiritual joy of participating in this love story.”
Vatican Radio
From Vatican Radio
http://www.news.va/en/news/card-pell-on-christ-the-church-and-group-of-8-card
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A new video from Catholic News Service:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjlIK-TzVA8&feature=youtu.be
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