Of the Holy Father John Paul Ii on Commitment to Ecumenism
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Catholic Voyage: African Journal of Consecrated Life Vol
The Catholic Voyage: African Journal of Consecrated Life Vol. 15, 2019. ISSN: 2659-0301 (Online) 1597 6610 (Print) RELIGIOUS LIFE IN THE ORIENTATIONS OF THE CHURCH: THE CHALLENGES OF FORMATION IN NIGERIA Oseni J. Ogunu, OMV1 ABSTRACT Although expressed in different manner, the Consecrated life is often presented, essentially, as a beautiful and precious treasure, a calling and way of life rooted in our baptismal vocation and founded on the Triune God. The desire of those who are called is to follow Jesus Christ more closely by loving and serving God and fellow human persons, according to the spirit and charism of the Founder/Foundress. In order to faithfully achieve this aim, the Institutes of Consecrated life endeavour to form or educate is members. The Church has constantly showed concern and encouraged the formation of consecrated persons. She offers guidelines and directives in response to new questions and emerging difficulties, and changing situations both in the Church and in society. The article presents some orientations of the Church and, then, the challenges that face formation in religious life in an African country (Nigeria) today. Notwithstanding the real challenges, the formation in consecrated life is a call to commitment and witness to Christ in the church and in the world today. Key words: Catholic Church, Consecrated Life, Formation, Nigeria Introduction “Consecrated life is beautiful, it is one of the Church’s most precious treasures, rooted in baptismal vocation. Thus it is beautiful to be its formators, because it is a privilege to take part in the work of the Father who forms the heart of the Son in those whom the Spirit has called. -
The Holy See
The Holy See ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II TO THE BISHOPS OF SCANDINAVIA ON THEIR VISIT AD LIMINA APOSTOLORUM Saturday, 5 April 2003 Dear Brother Bishops, 1. "Grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord" (1 Tim 1:2). With fraternal affection I warmly welcome you, the Bishops of Scandinavia. Your first visit ad Limina Apostolorum in this new millennium is an occasion to renew your commitment to proclaim ever more courageously the Gospel of Jesus Christ in truth and love. As pilgrims to the tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul, you "come to see Peter" (cf. Gal 1:18) and his collaborators in the service of the universal Church. You thus confirm your "unity in the same faith, hope and charity, and more and more recognize and treasure that immense heritage of spiritual and moral wealth that the whole Church, joined with the Bishop of Rome by the bond of communion, has spread throughout the world" (Pastor Bonus, Appendix I, 3). 2. As Bishops, you have been endowed with the authority of Christ (cf. Lumen Gentium, 25) and entrusted with the task of bearing witness to his saving Gospel. The faithful of Scandinavia, with great expectation, look to you to be steadfast teachers of the faith, selfless in your readiness to speak the truth "in season and out of season" (2 Tim 4:2). By your personal witness to the living mystery of God (cf. Catechesi Tradendae, 7), you make known the boundless love of him who has revealed himself and his plan for humanity through Jesus Christ. -
Solidarity As Spiritual Exercise: a Contribution to the Development of Solidarity in the Catholic Social Tradition
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by eScholarship@BC Solidarity as spiritual exercise: a contribution to the development of solidarity in the Catholic social tradition Author: Mark W. Potter Persistent link: http://hdl.handle.net/2345/738 This work is posted on eScholarship@BC, Boston College University Libraries. Boston College Electronic Thesis or Dissertation, 2009 Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Boston College The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Department of Theology SOLIDARITY AS SPIRITUAL EXERCISE: A CONTRIBUTION TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOLIDARITY IN THE CATHOLIC SOCIAL TRADITION a dissertation by MARK WILLIAM POTTER submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy August 2009 © copyright by MARK WILLIAM POTTER 2009 Solidarity as Spiritual Exercise: A Contribution to the Development of Solidarity in the Catholic Social Tradition By Mark William Potter Director: David Hollenbach, S.J. ABSTRACT The encyclicals and speeches of Pope John Paul II placed solidarity at the very center of the Catholic social tradition and contemporary Christian ethics. This disserta- tion analyzes the historical development of solidarity in the Church’s encyclical tradition, and then offers an examination and comparison of the unique contributions of John Paul II and the Jesuit theologian Jon Sobrino to contemporary understandings of solidarity. Ultimately, I argue that understanding solidarity as spiritual exercise integrates the wis- dom of John Paul II’s conception of solidarity as the virtue for an interdependent world with Sobrino’s insights on the ethical implications of Christian spirituality, orthopraxis, and a commitment to communal liberation. -
The Practice of Law As Response to God's Call
The Practice of Law as Response to God's Call Susan J. Stabile* INTRODUCTION My writing in recent years has explored the question o f what Catholic social thought and Catholic legal theory add to our considera- tion of various legal questions. That project proceeds from the premise that faith and religion are not to be relegated to church on Sunday (or temple on Saturday, or other equivalents); rather, faith and religion are relevant to our actions in the world. In the words of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,' "There cannot be two parallel lives in [a Cath- olic's] existence: on the one hand, the so-called 'spiritual life,' with its values and demands; and on the other, the so-called 'secular' life, that is, life in a family, at work, in social responsibilities, and in the responsibili- ties of public life and in culture." 2th olAicissm is aIn 'in cahmaationval faeith ' that sees God in everything, and the oGosbpel sis ae livirng vmesesagde, in tended to be infused into the reality of the eworlld ins whiech wwe livhe." e r e3 , t" Robert andC Marion Shorta Distinguished Chair in Law, University of St. Thomas School of Law; -Fellow, Holloran Center for Ethical Leadership; Affiliate Senior Fellow. St. John's University Vin- centian Center for Church and Society; Research Fellow. New York University School of Law. Center for Labor and Employment Law; JD. 1982, New York University School of Law; B.A. 1979, Georgetown University. This Article is an expanded version of my presentation at the Seattle Uni- versity School of Law's March 7, 21)08 Symposium, Pluralism. -
Integrating Ecology and Justice: the New Papal Encyclical by Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim
Feature Integrating Ecology and Justice: The New Papal Encyclical by Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim Mat McDermott Una Terra Una Famiglia Humana, One Earth One Family climate march in Vatican City in June 2015. In Brief In June of 2015, Pope Francis released the first encyclical on ecology. The Pope’s message highlights “integral ecology,” intrinsically linking ecological integrity and social justice. While the encyclical notes the statements of prior Popes and Bishops on the environment, Pope Francis has departed from earlier biblical language describing the domination of nature. Instead, he expresses a broader understanding of the beauty and complexity of nature, on which humans fundamentally depend. With “integral ecology” he underscores this connection of humans to the natural environment. This perspective shifts the climate debate to one of a human change of consciousness and conscience. As such, the encyclical has the potential to bring about a tipping point in the global community regarding the climate debate, not merely among Christians, but to all those attending to this moral call to action. 38 | Solutions | July-August 2015 | www.thesolutionsjournal.org n June 18, 2015 Pope Francis thinking. By drawing on and develop- We can compare Pope Francis’ released Laudato Si, the first ing the work of earlier theologians and thinking to the writing of Pope John encyclical in the history of ethicists, this encyclical makes explicit Paul II, who himself builds on Pope O Rerum the Catholic Church on ecology. An the links between social justice and Leo XIII’s progressive encyclical encyclical is the highest-level teaching eco-justice.1 Novarum on workers’ rights in 1891. -
THE CORE THEMES of the ENCYCLICAL FRATELLI TUTTI St
THE CORE THEMES OF THE ENCYCLICAL FRATELLI TUTTI St. John Lateran, 15 November 2020 Card. GIANFRANCO RAVASI Preamble Let us begin from a spiritual account drawn from Tibetan Buddhism, a different world from that of the encyclical, but significant nonetheless. A man walks alone on a desert track that dissolves into the distance on the horizon. He suddenly realises that there is another being, difficult to make out, on the same path. It may be a beast that inhabits these deserted spaces; the traveller’s heart beats faster and faster out of fear, as the wilderness does not offer any shelter or help, so he must continue to walk. As he advances, he discerns the profile: a man’s. However, fear does not leave him; in fact, that man could be a fierce bandit. He has no choice but to go on, as the fear of an assault grips his soul. The traveller no longer has the courage to look up. He can hear the other man’s steps approaching. The two men are now face to face: he looks up and stares at the person before him. In his surprise he cries out: “This is my brother whom I haven’t seen for many years!” We wish to refer to this ancient parable from a different religion and culture at the beginning of this presentation to show that the yearning pervading Pope Francis’s new encyclical Fratelli tutti is an essential component of the spiritual breadth of all humanity. In fact, we find a few unexpected “secular” quotations in the text, such as the 1962 album Samba da Bênção by Brazilian poet and musician Vinicius de Moraes (1913-1980) in which he sang: “Life, for all its confrontations, is the art of encounter” (n. -
Ut Unum Sint
ENCYCLICAL LETTER UT UNUM SINT OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF JOHN PAUL II ON COMMITMENT TO ECUMENISM 25 May 1995 INTRODUCTION 1. Ut unum sint! The call for Christian unity made by the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council with such impassioned commitment is finding an ever greater echo in the hearts of believers, especially as the Year 2000 approaches, a year which Christians will celebrate as a sacred Jubilee, the commemoration of the Incarnation of the Son of God, who became man in order to save humanity. The courageous witness of so many martyrs of our century, including members of Churches and Ecclesial Communities not in full communion with the Catholic Church, gives new vigor to the Council’s call and reminds us of our duty to listen to and put into practice its exhortation. These brothers and sisters of ours, united in the selfless offering of their lives for the Kingdom of God, are the most powerful proof that every factor of division can be transcended and overcome in the total gift of self for the sake of the Gospel. Christ calls all his disciples to unity. My earnest desire is to renew this call today, to propose it once more with determination, repeating what I said at the Roman Coliseum on Good Friday 1994, at the end of the meditation on the Via Crucis prepared by my Venerable Brother Bartholomew, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. There I stated that believers in Christ, united in following in the footsteps of the martyrs, cannot remain divided. If they wish truly and effectively to oppose the world’s tendency to reduce to powerlessness the Mystery of Redemption, they must profess together the same truth about the Cross.1 The Cross! An anti-Christian outlook seeks to minimize the Cross, to empty it of its meaning, and to deny that in it man has the source of his new life. -
“The Paths of Mission”
“The Paths of Mission” Chapter V of John Paul II’s Redemptoris Missio: On the Permanent Validity of the Church's Missionary Mandate 7 December 1990 Contents of Redemptoris Missio Blessing Introduction #1 - 3 I. Jesus Christ, the Only Savior #4 - 11 II. The Kingdom of God # 12 - 20 III. The Holy Spirit, the Principal Agent of Mission #21 - 30 IV. The Vast Horizons of the Mission Ad Gentes #31 - 40 V. The Paths of Mission #41 - 60 VI. Leaders and Workers in the Missionary Apostolate #61 - 76 VII. Cooperation in Missionary Activity #76 - 86 VIII. Missionary Spirituality #87 – 91 Conclusion #92 http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/encyclicals/documents/hf_jp- ii_enc_07121990_redemptoris-missio_en.html Contents CHAPTER V - THE PATHS OF MISSION............................................................................................ 1 The First Form of Evangelization Is Witness ....................................................................................... 1 The Initial Proclamation of Christ the Savior ...................................................................................... 2 Conversion and Baptism ..................................................................................................................... 3 Forming Local Churches ...................................................................................................................... 5 "Ecclesial Basic Communities" as a Force for Evangelization ............................................................. 7 Incarnating the Gospel in Peoples' -
Mater Et Magistra and "Loyal Dissent" John E
The Linacre Quarterly Volume 73 | Number 4 Article 11 November 2006 Mater et Magistra and "Loyal Dissent" John E. Foran Follow this and additional works at: http://epublications.marquette.edu/lnq Recommended Citation Foran, John E. (2006) "Mater et Magistra and "Loyal Dissent"," The Linacre Quarterly: Vol. 73 : No. 4 , Article 11. Available at: http://epublications.marquette.edu/lnq/vol73/iss4/11 Mater et Magistra and "Loyal Dissent" by John E. Foran, M.D. The author is Director, Family Practice Residency Program, St. Joseph hospital, Chicago. In the interval between the appointment of the Birth Control Commission by Pope Paul VI in 1964 and the release of Humanae Vitae in July of 1968, my father and I engaged in joyous debate. Though we both completely agreed that the promised encyclical would again define the constant teaching of the Church opposing all forms of artificial birth control, my father insisted that since His Holiness would speak from the Chair of Peter, the encyclical would be ex cathedra. I, on the other hand, contended it would be reiteration of authentic magisterial teaching, thus binding doctrine even though not "infallible" in the strict sense of Vatican 1. Little did we realize our intense debate would become inelevant to vast numbers of Catholics worldwide. Theologians, pliests, laity and even some bishops pridefully rose in dissent from the official and unchanging magisterial tradition. Decades of "cafeteria Catholicism" were off to a running start! I trust this paper will demonstrate whether Pope Paul VI was speaking ex cathedra or restating magisterial truth. Humanae Vitae must be recognized as binding to the properly formed conscience. -
The Holy See
The Holy See LE PELERINAGE DE LOURDESENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XII WARNING AGAINST MATERIALISM ON THE CENTENARY OF THE APPARITIONS AT LOURDES TO THE CARDINALS, ARCHBISHOPS, AND BISHOPS OF FRANCE IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE Beloved Sons and Venerable Brethren, Greetings and Apostolic Benediction. Deep in our soul are profound and pleasant memories of the pilgrimage to Lourdes which We had the privilege of making when We went to preside, in the name of Our Predecessor, Pius XI, over the Eucharistic and Marian celebrations marking the close of the Jubilee of the Redemption. 2. We are particularly pleased, therefore, to learn that, on the initiative of the Bishop of Tarbes and Lourdes, this Marian city is preparing an appropriate celebration for the centenary of the apparitions of the Immaculate Virgin at the grotto of Massabielle, and that an international committee has been set up for this purpose under the presidency of His Eminence Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals. 3. We wish to join with you, Beloved Sons and Venerable Brothers, in thanking God for the great favor granted your country, and for the many graces He has bestowed on multitudes of pilgrims during the past century. 4. We wish to invite all Our children to renew in this jubilee year their confident and generous devotion to her who, in the words of Saint Pius X, deigned to establish at Lourdes "the seat of her immense kindness."[1] 5. Every Christian land is a Marian land; there is not a nation redeemed in the blood of Christ which does not glory in proclaiming Mary its Mother and Patroness. -
Pope John Paul II Shepherd for the Church and the World 1920-2005 Pope John Paul II Was Voice of Conscience for World, Modern-Day Apostle
20-PAGE SPECIAL ISSUE CCATHOLICATHOLIC Serving the People of the new york Archdiocese of New York newApril 2005 Volume XXIV, No. 7 york $1.00 Pope John Paul II Shepherd for the Church And the World 1920-2005 Pope John Paul II Was Voice of Conscience for World, Modern-Day Apostle By JOHN THAVIS cheered by millions. Pope John Paul’s personality was powerful and complicated. In his prime, he could work a crowd ope John Paul II, who died April 2 at age 84, was and banter with young and old, but spontaneity was Pa voice of conscience for the world and a not his specialty. As a manager, he set directions but modern-day apostle for his Church. often left policy details to top aides. To both roles he brought a philosopher’s intellect, a His reaction to the mushrooming clerical sex abuse pilgrim’s spiritual intensity and an actor’s flair for the scandal in the United States in 2001-02 underscored dramatic. That combination made him one of the his governing style: He suffered deeply, prayed at most forceful moral leaders of the modern age. length and made brief but forceful statements empha- As head of the Church for more than 26 years, he sizing the gravity of such a sin by priests. He con- held a hard line on doctrinal issues and drew sharp vened a Vatican-U.S. summit to address the problem, limits on dissent—in particular regarding abortion, but let his Vatican advisers and U.S. Church leaders birth control and other contested Church teachings work out the answers. -
Pope Francis' Encyclical Resources Page from Interfaith Power & Light
Interfaith Power & Light Catholic Climate Covenant POPE FRANCIS’ ENCYCLICAL FAITH CLIMATE ACTION KIT “Climate change is a global problem with grave implications. It #1 Understand the encyclical represents one of the principal chalenges facing humanity in our day. A great cultural, spiritual and educational chalenge stands before us, Find select quotes for your use from and it wil demand that we set out on the long path of renewal.” the Pope’s 184-page encyclical on ecology. In addition, find links to the Pope Francis, encyclical on ecology, June 2015 encyclical and news coverage and Laudato Si', On Care for our Common Home analysis. Interfaith Power & Light and #2 Talk about it the Catholic Climate Covenant have teamed up to bring you Use our sample Creation and climate sermons, social media graphics and this Faith Climate Action Kit sample tweets. Find guidelines for so your faith community can hosting a discussion and submitting respond to Pope Francis’ Letters to the Editor. encyclical on ecology, with its #3 Stand with Pope Francis strong environmental justice and climate theme. Join us in standing with Pope Francis This is a watershed moment by adding your name to pledges for Catholics and for people of provided by Catholic Climate Covenant and Interfaith Power & all faith traditions. Newsweek Light. observes, “the encyclical… matters because it is an #4 Start a team, go green authoritative message by one of the world's great religious leaders. The encyclical will stimulate homilies and discussions Find inspiration and tips for forming in parishes around the world. It will become a source of a green team, cutting your carbon footprint, and saving money that can inspiration and ideas for activists, preachers, teachers, be used to advance your mission.