Sunday, January 01, 2012

Papal Message for World Day of Peace 2012

Pope Benedict XVI has chosen the theme "Educating Young People in Justice and Peace” for the celebration of the 45th World Day of Peace on January 1, 2012. 

The theme focuses on an urgent need in the world today: to listen to and enhance the important role of new generations in the realization of the common good, and in the affirmation of a just and peaceful social order where fundamental human rights can be fully expressed and realized.

The Message is addressed especially to parents, families and all those involved in the area of education and formation, as well as to leaders in the various spheres of religious, social, political, economic and cultural life and in the media.

The Message begins with an introductory paragraph (1) and is organized into 4 subsequent paragraphs (2-6), each of which has its own heading: (2) Educators; (3) Educating in truth and freedom; (4) Educating in justice; (5) Educating in peace; (6) Lifting one’s eyes to God. 

As the Church celebrates the World Day of Prayer for Peace, we republish the complete text of the Pope's Message below:
EDUCATING YOUNG PEOPLE IN JUSTICE AND PEACE

1. The beginning of a new year, God’s gift to humanity, prompts me to extend to all, with great confidence and affection, my heartfelt good wishes that this time now before us may be marked concretely by justice and peace. With what attitude should we look to the New Year? We find a very beautiful image in Psalm 130. The Psalmist says that people of faith wait for the Lord “more than those who watch for the morning” (v. 6); they wait for him with firm hope because they know that he will bring light, mercy, salvation. This waiting was born of the experience of the Chosen People, who realized that God taught them to look at the world in its truth and not to be overwhelmed by tribulation. I invite you to look to 2012 with this attitude of confident trust. It is true that the year now ending has been marked by a rising sense of frustration at the crisis looming over society, the world of labour and the economy, a crisis whose roots are primarily cultural and anthropological. It seems as if a shadow has fallen over our time, preventing us from clearly seeing the light of day.

In this shadow, however, human hearts continue to wait for the dawn of which the Psalmist speaks. Because this expectation is particularly powerful and evident in young people, my thoughts turn to them and to the contribution which they can and must make to society. I would like therefore to devote this message for the XLV World Day of Peace to the theme of education: “Educating Young People in Justice and Peace”, in the conviction that the young, with their enthusiasm and idealism, can offer new hope to the world. 

My Message is also addressed to parents, families and all those involved in the area of education and formation, as well as to leaders in the various spheres of religious, social, political, economic and cultural life and in the media. Attentiveness to young people and their concerns, the ability to listen to them and appreciate them, is not merely something expedient; it represents a primary duty for society as a whole, for the sake of building a future of justice and peace.

It is a matter of communicating to young people an appreciation for the positive value of life and of awakening in them a desire to spend their lives in the service of the Good. This is a task which engages each of us personally.The concerns expressed in recent times by many young people around the world demonstrate that they desire to look to the future with solid hope. 

At the present time, they are experiencing apprehension about many things: they want to receive an education which prepares them more fully to deal with the real world, they see how difficult it is to form a family and to find stable employment; they wonder if they can really contribute to political, cultural and economic life in order to build a society with a more human and fraternal face.

It is important that this unease and its underlying idealism receive due attention at every level of society. The Church looks to young people with hope and confidence; she encourages them to seek truth, to defend the common good, to be open to the world around them and willing to see “new things” (Is 42:9; 48:6).

Educators

2.
Education is the most interesting and difficult adventure in life. Educating – from the Latin educere – means leading young people to move beyond themselves and introducing them to reality, towards a fullness that leads to growth. This process is fostered by the encounter of two freedoms, that of adults and that of the young. It calls for responsibility on the part of the learners, who must be open to being led to the knowledge of reality, and on the part of educators, who must be ready to give of themselves. For this reason, today more than ever we need authentic witnesses, and not simply people who parcel out rules and facts; we need witnesses capable of seeing farther than others because their life is so much broader. A witness is someone who first lives the life that he proposes to others. 

Where does true education in peace and justice take place? First of all, in the family, since parents are the first educators. The family is the primary cell of society; “it is in the family that children learn the human and Christian values which enable them to have a constructive and peaceful coexistence. It is in the family that they learn solidarity between the generations, respect for rules, forgiveness and how to welcome others.” (1) The family is the first school in which we are trained in justice and peace.

We are living in a world where families, and life itself, are constantly threatened and not infrequently fragmented. Working conditions which are often incompatible with family responsibilities, worries about the future, the frenetic pace of life, the need to move frequently to ensure an adequate livelihood, to say nothing of mere survival – all this makes it hard to ensure that children receive one of the most precious of treasures: the presence of their parents. This presence makes it possible to share more deeply in the journey of life and thus to pass on experiences and convictions gained with the passing of the years, experiences and convictions which can only be communicated by spending time together. 

I would urge parents not to grow disheartened! May they encourage children by the example of their lives to put their hope before all else in God, the one source of authentic justice and peace. I would also like to address a word to those in charge of educational institutions: with a great sense of responsibility may they ensure that the dignity of each person is always respected and appreciated. Let them be concerned that every young person be able to discover his or her own vocation and helped to develop his or her God-given gifts. May they reassure families that their children can receive an education that does not conflict with their consciences and their religious principles.

Every educational setting can be a place of openness to the transcendent and to others; a place of dialogue, cohesiveness and attentive listening, where young people feel appreciated for their personal abilities and inner riches, and can learn to esteem their brothers and sisters. May young people be taught to savour the joy which comes from the daily exercise of charity and compassion towards others and from taking an active part in the building of a more humane and fraternal society.

I ask political leaders to offer concrete assistance to families and educational institutions in the exercise of their right and duty to educate. Adequate support should never be lacking to parents in their task. Let them ensure that no one is ever denied access to education and that families are able freely to choose the educational structures they consider most suitable for their children. Let them be committed to reuniting families separated by the need to earn a living. Let them give young people a transparent image of politics as a genuine service to the good of all.

I cannot fail also to appeal to the world of the media to offer its own contribution to education. In today’s society the mass media have a particular role: they not only inform but also form the minds of their audiences, and so they can make a significant contribution to the education of young people. It is important never to forget that the connection between education and communication is extremely close: education takes place through communication, which influences, for better or worse, the formation of the person.

Young people too need to have the courage to live by the same high standards that they set for others. Theirs is a great responsibility: may they find the strength to make good and wise use of their freedom. They too are responsible for their education, including their education in justice and peace!

Educating in truth and freedom3. Saint Augustine once asked: “Quid enim fortius desiderat anima quam veritatem? – What does man desire more deeply than truth?”(2) The human face of a society depends very much on the contribution of education to keep this irrepressible question alive. Education, indeed, is concerned with the integral formation of the person, including the moral and spiritual dimension, focused upon man’s final end and the good of the society to which he belongs. 

Therefore, in order to educate in truth, it is necessary first and foremost to know who the human person is, to know human nature. Contemplating the world around him, the Psalmist reflects: “When I see the heavens, the work of your hands, the moon and the stars which you arranged, what is man that you should keep him in mind, mortal man that you care for him?” (Ps 8:4-5). This is the fundamental question that must be asked: who is man? Man is a being who bears within his heart a thirst for the infinite, a thirst for truth – a truth which is not partial but capable of explaining life’s meaning – since he was created in the image and likeness of God. The grateful recognition that life is an inestimable gift, then, leads to the discovery of one’s own profound dignity and the inviolability of every single person. Hence the first step in education is learning to recognize the Creator’s image in man, and consequently learning to have a profound respect for every human being and helping others to live a life consonant with this supreme dignity. We must never forget that “authentic human development concerns the whole of the person in every single dimension”(3), including the transcendent dimension, and that the person cannot be sacrificed for the sake of attaining a particular good, whether this be economic or social, individual or collective.

Only in relation to God does man come to understand also the meaning of human freedom. It is the task of education to form people in authentic freedom. This is not the absence of constraint or the supremacy of free will, it is not the absolutism of the self. When man believes himself to be absolute, to depend on nothing and no one, to be able to do anything he wants, he ends up contradicting the truth of his own being and forfeiting his freedom. On the contrary, man is a relational being, who lives in relationship with others and especially with God. Authentic freedom can never be attained independently of God. Freedom is a precious value, but a fragile one; it can be misunderstood and misused. 

“Today, a particularly insidious obstacle to the task of educating is the massive presence in our society and culture of that relativism which, recognizing nothing as definitive, leaves as the ultimate criterion only the self with its desires. And under the semblance of freedom it becomes a prison for each one, for it separates people from one another, locking each person into his or her own self. With such a relativistic horizon, therefore, real education is not possible without the light of the truth; sooner or later, every person is in fact condemned to doubting the goodness of his or her own life and the relationships of which it consists, the validity of his or her commitment to build with others something in common”(4).

In order to exercise his freedom, then, man must move beyond the relativistic horizon and come to know the truth about himself and the truth about good and evil. Deep within his conscience, man discovers a law that he did not lay upon himself, but which he must obey. Its voice calls him to love and to do what is good, to avoid evil and to take responsibility for the good he does and the evil he commits(5). 

Thus, the exercise of freedom is intimately linked to the natural moral law, which is universal in character, expresses the dignity of every person and forms the basis of fundamental human rights and duties: consequently, in the final analysis, it forms the basis for just and peaceful coexistence. The right use of freedom, then, is central to the promotion of justice and peace, which require respect for oneself and others, including those whose way of being and living differs greatly from one’s own. This attitude engenders the elements without which peace and justice remain merely words without content: mutual trust, the capacity to hold constructive dialogue, the possibility of forgiveness, which one constantly wishes to receive but finds hard to bestow, mutual charity, compassion towards the weakest, as well as readiness to make sacrifices.

Educating in justice 

In this world of ours, in which, despite the profession of good intentions, the value of the person, of human dignity and human rights is seriously threatened by the widespread tendency to have recourse exclusively to the criteria of utility, profit and material possessions, it is important not to detach the concept of justice from its transcendent roots. Justice, indeed, is not simply a human convention, since what is just is ultimately determined not by positive law, but by the profound identity of the human being. It is the integral vision of man that saves us from falling into a contractual conception of justice and enables us to locate justice within the horizon of solidarity and love(6).

We cannot ignore the fact that some currents of modern culture, built upon rationalist and individualist economic principles, have cut off the concept of justice from its transcendent roots, detaching it from charity and solidarity: “The ‘earthly city’ is promoted not merely by relationships of rights and duties, but to an even greater and more fundamental extent by relationships of gratuitousness, mercy and communion. Charity always manifests God’s love in human relationships as well, it gives theological and salvific value to all commitment for justice in the world”(7). “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied” (Mt 5:6). They shall be satisfied because they hunger and thirst for right relations with God, with themselves, with their brothers and sisters, and with the whole of creation.

Educating in peace5. “Peace is not merely the absence of war, and it is not limited to maintaining a balance of powers between adversaries. Peace cannot be attained on earth without safeguarding the goods of persons, free communication among men, respect for the dignity of persons and peoples, and the assiduous practice of fraternity.”8 We Christians believe that Christ is our true peace: in him, by his Cross, God has reconciled the world to himself and has broken down the walls of division that separated us from one another (cf. Eph 2:14-18); in him, there is but one family, reconciled in love.

Peace, however, is not merely a gift to be received: it is also a task to be undertaken. In order to be true peacemakers, we must educate ourselves in compassion, solidarity, working together, fraternity, in being active within the community and concerned to raise awareness about national and international issues and the importance of seeking adequate mechanisms for the redistribution of wealth, the promotion of growth, cooperation for development and conflict resolution. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God”, as Jesus says in the Sermon on the Mount (Mt 5:9). Peace for all is the fruit of justice for all, and no one can shirk this essential task of promoting justice, according to one’s particular areas of competence and responsibility. To the young, who have such a strong attachment to ideals, I extend a particular invitation to be patient and persevering in seeking justice and peace, in cultivating the taste for what is just and true, even when it involves sacrifice and swimming against the tide.

Raising one’s eyes to God6. Before the difficult challenge of walking the paths of justice and peace, we may be tempted to ask, in the words of the Psalmist: “I lift up my eyes to the mountains: from where shall come my help?” (Ps 121:1).

To all, and to young people in particular, I wish to say emphatically: “It is not ideologies that save the world, but only a return to the living God, our Creator, the guarantor of our freedom, the guarantor of what is really good and true … an unconditional return to God who is the measure of what is right and who at the same time is everlasting love. And what could ever save us apart from love?”(9) Love takes delight in truth, it is the force that enables us to make a commitment to truth, to justice, to peace, because it bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things (cf. 1 Cor 13:1-13). Dear young people, you are a precious gift for society. Do not yield to discouragement in the face of difficulties and do not abandon yourselves to false solutions which often seem the easiest way to overcome problems. Do not be afraid to make a commitment, to face hard work and sacrifice, to choose the paths that demand fidelity and constancy, humility and dedication. Be confident in your youth and its profound desires for happiness, truth, beauty and genuine love! Live fully this time in your life so rich and so full of enthusiasm.

Realize that you yourselves are an example and an inspiration to adults, even more so to the extent that you seek to overcome injustice and corruption and strive to build a better future. Be aware of your potential; never become self-centred but work for a brighter future for all.

You are never alone. The Church has confidence in you, follows you, encourages you and wishes to offer you the most precious gift she has: the opportunity to raise your eyes to God, to encounter Jesus Christ, who is himself justice and peace. All you men and women throughout the world, who take to heart the cause of peace: peace is not a blessing already attained, but rather a goal to which each and all of us must aspire. Let us look with greater hope to the future; let us encourage one another on our journey; let us work together to give our world a more humane and fraternal face; and let us feel a common responsibility towards present and future generations, especially in the task of training them to be people of peace and builders of peace. With these thoughts I offer my reflections and I appeal to everyone: let us pool our spiritual, moral and material resources for the great goal of “educating young people in justice and peace”.

From the Vatican, 8 December 2011
BENEDICTUS PP. XVI

Catholic Church in U.S. sets week on vocations

The Catholic Church in the United States will celebrate National Vocation Awareness Week Jan. 9-14. 

The celebration is dedicated to promoting vocations to the priesthood, diaconate, and consecrated life through prayer and education.

“It is our responsibility to help children and young people develop a prayerful relationship with Jesus Christ so they will know their vocation,” said Archbishop Robert Carlson of St. Louis, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ committee on clergy, consecrated life, and vocations.

Haughey rejected proposal to stop sending official messages of congratulation to Vatican

PAPAL MESSAGES: A BREACH of protocol in 1981 meant Pope John Paul II was sent both a birthday and an anniversary message from the government, but proposals to cease sending any messages were firmly rejected by then taoiseach Charles Haughey, according to State papers from the Department of the Taoiseach.

The file, released to the National Archives, contained messages of congratulations on the anniversary of the popes inauguration from taoisigh dating back to 1948. It also showed that on three occasions, in 1948, 1951 and 1954, messages of homage were also sent to the pope on the formation of governments.

The tone of the messages changed over the years, with de Valera offering “filial loyalty and devotion” to Pope Pius XII, while Haughey offered “sincere felicitations and best wishes” to John Paul II. 

A temporary blip in the tone occurred in 1976, when then taoiseach Liam Cosgrave offered “profound homage” and fervent prayer to Pope Paul VI. 

After a flurry of messages within the department, this was corrected and in 1977 the message simply offered “congratulations and best wishes”.

The president also sent a message on the pope’s anniversary and a separate message on the pope’s birthday. But a copy of a telegram on the file, dated May 31st, 1981, from Cardinal Casaroli of Vatican City to the taoiseach’s office acknowledges receipt of the birthday greeting from Haughey, then taoiseach, a breach of protocol.

The file also shows the taoiseach’s office considered dropping the practice of sending a message to the pope on his anniversary.

A note dated October 1980 said the practice was started in 1933 by de Valera and when the first coalition came into power in 1948, under John A Costello, the Italian left-wing press referred to the link between church and State in this country as being severed.

“For this reason, the Vatican suggested that the practice should continue, to show that there was no special link,” the note said.

“From a protocol viewpoint, foreign affairs say there would be no objection to discontinuing the practice; it would probably raise an eyebrow in the Vatican. As far as I can find out no other European country sends a similar message to the pope.”

Below the text, a handwritten note said there was no “compelling reason for us to recommend to the taoiseach that the long-standing practice of sending this message be discontinued”.

And a separate note in the margin, signed with illegible initials and headed “taoiseach”, said the practice was “an outmoded gesture”.

“As the president is also sending a message, the duplication seems to be unnecessary and I suggest we don’t send it.”

Below this message, in a bolder, larger hand someone had written “Send It”.

According to the Department of Foreign Affairs, a message of congratulations is still sent from Ireland to the pope every year on the anniversary of his inauguration.

Minister says serious work to be done in reforming the protection of children

NOT LONG after she was appointed as the first Cabinet- ranking Minister for Children, Frances Fitzgerald received a worrying insight into how neglected child and family services have been.

She could not get reliable or up-to-date information on the volume of child abuse and neglect cases being handled by social services; there were no figures on the average number of cases being handled by social workers; no one seemed to know how many children were leaving foster care each year.

“I was appalled at the lack of standardised information on those kinds of issues. I could only conclude that these services just hadn’t received the kind of priority they should have had over the past 10 years or so,” Fitzgerald says.

“It showed me that the Government was right to make this post a senior ministry and that we were right to create a new agency to deal with child and family services.”

The failings of our child protection system have been exposed increasingly over recent years.

Leaked social work files show thousands of reports of suspected abuse or neglect referred to child-protection services remain unscreened and unassessed by social workers.

The result is that vulnerable young people remain at serious risk of abuse or mistreatment. 

Social work staff in many parts of the State say they are being forced to ignore these cases or simply to add them to waiting lists due to heavy workloads and under- staffing.

These concerns are nothing new. What has changed, however, is the political will to change the system.

Inquiries into child abuse over recent years have exposed the shocking inadequacy of many aspects of our child protection services. And the Government’s trenchant criticism of the Catholic Church’s failings means it, too, must ensure its house is in order.

If the church has a profound duty of care to young people, then the State’s responsibility is even greater. Under childcare legislation, social services have a legal duty to protect the welfare of vulnerable young people. The State is also, in effect, the parent of more than 6,000 children in the care system.

Fitzgerald says the Government has embarked on an ambitious reform agenda which will see a new agency responsible for dealing with abuse concerns, a new legal framework to strengthen protection for children in society and a long-promised referendum on children’s rights.

There has long been a perception that child and family issues have been eclipsed at Health Service Executive level by issues relating to more politically important problem areas such as hospitals and primary care.

Fitzgerald says a new agency, to be known as the Child and Family Support Agency, will be separate from the HSE, with a dedicated budget and clearer lines of accountability.

“This will help bring about a complete change in culture. It’s an exciting change and people within the sector know that change is afoot,” she says. “These structural changes aren’t the only answer. We also need to focus on social work practice and delivering quality services. We need to keep in mind what a child’s experiences are, what are the best outcomes, and how we can achieve that. There is serious work to be done.”

It’s ironic, she adds, that successive governments have spoken about the need to be child-centred – yet have done so little to realise that vision.

“Actually, we haven’t been child-centred at all. Look at how slow we were to put playgrounds in new property developments, for example. Or how slow we have been to get proper inter-agency co-operation on children’s issues.”

Yet, in the rush to change, some fear that this reform agenda could do more harm than good. 

There are fears that plans to introduce mandatory reporting of suspected abuse could overwhelm already overstretched social services.

Fitzgerald is aware of those concerns, but she says it is crucial to change our culture regarding child abuse and ensure we do everything possible to protect children’s wellbeing. Too often, she adds, we have neglected these important issues.

With ambition, however, comes great expectation. 

Ultimately, she will be judged on her results in office.

“You need to be impatient to get things done and you have to demand a lot of the system. I’m very fortunate that I’m working with a very good team, such as the secretary general of the department, Jim Breslin; the HSE’s head of child and family services Gordon Jeyes, and many more. We all want to move forward on these issues. At the end of the day, the people of Ireland have a common goal in protecting children. There is a new awareness – a greater sensitivity towards these issues.”

'Prime Time' priest mourns brother

The priest at the centre of the 'Prime Time Investigates' controversy has been mourning the death of his brother.

Fr Kevin Reynolds was among the chief mourners as the remains of his brother Sean Reynolds were removed to the Church of The Immaculate Conception in Tubberclaire, Co Westmeath, Friday evening.

Mr Reynolds, who died on Thursday, had been ill for some time. 

Fr Reynolds had declined to make public comment on the fallout from his defamation by the RTE current affairs programme because of the family upset at the illness of his brother.

Cloyne abuse victims will attend secret tribunal

VICTIMS of clerical abuse in Cloyne have said they will co-operate with the Church’s secret canonical tribunal into the actions of Fr Ronat, a North Cork priest who was the subject of 11 complaints of abuse in the Cloyne report. 

Archbishop of Cashel and Emly, Dermot Clifford, the apostolic administrator of the Cloyne diocese, said he intends to reconvene the secret court, which was suspended in 2009 because victims wanted to first see the outcome of the Dublin Archdiocese Commission of Investigation’s report on the handling of abuse in the diocese.

The court was established under the auspices of Archbishop Clifford and could lead to Fr Ronat being defrocked. He will be represented by an advocate qualified in canon law. The court will consist of two clerical canon lawyers and a notary.

The complainants who allege he sexually abused them will also be invited to give evidence.

The victims have questioned how many tens of thousands of euro have been spent by the state in providing free legal aid to Fr Ronat during criminal trials and in his efforts to have more of the report redacted at the High Court. 

Despite a failure by the courts to convict the priest, the victims have said they have an "all guns blazing" attitude to next year and that they will not give up their fight for justice.

"It has been a desperately hard few months for us," said a victim, described in the report as Fenella. "Words cannot express what it felt like to see him work free from court. And you know not one priest made one word of support towards us at any pulpit in Cloyne."

In recent weeks, the final chapter of the Cloyne report was published — the chapter that dealt with complaints against Ronat. This chapter was the longest in the Dublin Archdiocese’s investigations into Cloyne.

It showed how 11 complaints of abuse were made to the diocese about Fr Ronat and eight complaints were sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions, yet the priest has not been convicted.

Meanwhile, the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church has finished its report into the handling of clerical sex abuse complaints by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart. 

It is not known if the order will publish the audit which was expedited after a scandal broke out last summer about historical clerical abuse at Carrignavar College in North Cork.

Convent ‘was the only place she wasn’t president’

THE head of a vow-of-poverty order, with which former president Mary McAleese spent regular periods during her 14 years in office, has broken her silence on their unusual guest.

The abbess of the Poor Clares convent in Ennis, Sister Gabriel, said the then-president "came in and lived like one of us" for a short period every year between 1997 and 2011.

Speaking about the visits — which involved washing the dishes and cycles of prayers starting at 5.45am — Sr Gabriel said the former president formed a close bond with the women in the enclosed order.

And she added that Mrs McAleese became "such an inspiration" to the nuns by coming in with "no mobile phone, no nothing, she relinquishes everything".

Sr Gabriel said: "President McAleese would be washing your dishes and you’re embarrassed thinking ‘the president of Ireland is washing my dishes’.

"In a way this was the only place she was Mary McAleese, she wasn’t the president. She could just be Mary and feed her own inner life to recharge herself for her duties."

Mrs McAleese first revealed her link during a public visit to the convent in 2008, when she launched the Poor Clare’s golden jubilee celebrations in Ennis.

The connection began when local solicitor Michael Houlihan introduced her to the order of nuns in 1997.

"On her way out on that visit, she asked ‘could I possibly come back here for a retreat’," said Sr Gabriel.

As a result, during her stays Mrs McAleese would join the nuns in their daily regime of rising for prayer at 5.45am, as part of seven stages of prayers each day.

She also observed silence throughout each day, apart from evenings when stories were told.

Today, a photograph of Mrs McAleese hangs on the wall of the main corridor in the monastery and is signed: "Much love to my dearest sisters, Mary."

Dialogue across religious lines has a long way to go

GENERATING DIALOGUE between Christians and Muslims in Nigeria has always been difficult. 

But the rise of Boko Haram, the Islamist terrorist group that carried out Sunday’s bombings at churches across the country, makes life for people such as Sr Kathleen McGarvey “challenging” and uncomfortable.

The Irish nun, who lives in religiously divided northern Nigeria, suffers frequent brickbats for her work alongside Muslim women leaders. Some of her own church colleagues question her loyalty, while alliances she has formed with Muslim groups on issues such as women’s rights, inheritance law and community relations are always fragile.

“The truth is that dialogue here can be a lonely job since, really, it is not an area that there is as yet any great concrete involvement in,” says McGarvey, a member of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of the Apostles, from Falcarragh, Co Donegal.

A lecturer in one of Nigeria’s main Catholic seminaries at Kaduna, 160km north of Nigeria’s capital, Abuja, she woke on Christmas morning to learn that more than 30 people had been killed in a blast at St Theresa’s Catholic Church in Madala, a parish she had visited. One of her former pupils, Fr Christopher Barde, ordained two years ago,had just finished saying Mass when the bomb went off.

There is little public support for Boko Haram, but McGarvey says: “In the country right now there are very many dissatisfied people, especially youth. There is little or no employment, a very poor health and education system, very treacherous roads, great insecurity. Corruption in government continues as a way of life known to all, and little or nothing is seriously done to curtail it . . . So Boko Haram represents an expression of a very disgruntled, dissatisfied population.”

Religious strife intensified during this year’s presidential election, brought about by the death of president Umaru Yar’Adua, a Muslim from northern Nigeria. The presidency traditionally rotates between Christian and Muslim leaders, and there was bitter disagreement over the successful campaign of his former deputy, Goodluck Jonathan, last April.

Opponents of Jonathan have criticised his response to the terrorist threat. Yesterday, however, he met Nigeria’s main Muslim spiritual leader, the Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar, to discuss the crisis. Afterwards, the sultan said there was no conflict between Islam and Christianity, but rather a conflict between “evil people and good people”, the latter of whom “must come together”.

Speaking ahead of the meeting, McGarvey said: “Muslim leaders and influential personalities have not come out to loudly condemn the violence or to console the victims, and this is a sore point with many Christians.

“Whether they don’t come out because they believe it is not really a Muslim problem – since Boko Haram is not an authentic Muslim group, some say – or whether they are afraid of being attacked if they speak . . . it gives rise to bad feeling.”

People are taking new precautions. “Cars are checked entering or leaving church compounds or mosques.”

Life goes on, she says, but “there is a great sense of insecurity everywhere”.

‘Bonkers’ Tesco sells Easter choc before Xmas

Tesco was branded “bonkers” this week for putting Easter eggs on sale before Christmas.

The Sun reported: The store giant put chocolate eggs, chicks and lambs on the shelves 3½ months before Easter Sunday, which falls on April 8 in 2012.

It is thought to be the earliest they have ever appeared.

Customers who saw the treats while shopping for Christmas turkeys called the move “absolute madness”.

And the Church of England accused Tesco of driving the commercialisation of religious festivals.

Packs of Cadbury’s choc chicks seen before Christmas bear the message: “Make it a magical Easter.”

Shopper Julia Lee, 32, of Market Rasen, Lincs, said: “I couldn’t believe such a huge selection was available. It’s bonkers. Tesco is wishing us a Happy Easter.”

C of E spokesman Steve Jenkins said: “It’s too early to be selling Easter eggs. There are many of the 12 days of Christmas left. Religious festivals have been commercialised and they need to remember Easter eggs are not in shops just because they are made of chocolate.”

Tesco said they were merely giving customers what they want. 

Confectionary buyer James Marshall added: “This year we will have our largest selection of chocolate eggs ever at this time to cater for the growing annual demand.”

Decline and renewal characterise the European church

Europe is a continent marked by church decline but it is not entirely dying, says Niek Tramper.

In fact, the General Secretary of the European Evangelical Alliance believes the word “paradox” is best describes the state of the church in the region.

Just a few weeks ago he attended a service at an Anglican church in Venice – he and just six others.

“You can hardly discern a future for such a church and there are many traditional churches like this in villages and cities all over Europe,” he concedes.

Conversely, he recalls a meeting with a Ghanaian who came to Dusseldorf in Germany 20 years ago with a desire to return the love back to the continent that brought Christianity to his own country. He now pastors a 1,000-strong multinational church that holds six services every Sunday and includes many Germans among its members.

This pastor is not alone. 

There are many African pastors coming to Europe to share the Gospel – GATE (Gift from Africa to Europe) is an umbrella organisation set up specifically to support them.

What they all remark on is Europe’s undeniable material wealth and equally undeniable spiritual poverty.

“This used to be a mission sending continent. Now it has become a continent to be missionised again,” Tramper told the Mission-Net congress in Erfurt, Germany.

“No epoch has seen so many Christian newspapers, articles, conferences, websites, and so many agnostics as today.”

Tramper says he agrees with the prognosis of US sociologist Philip Jenkins, who is so pessimistic about the future of the traditional church in Europe that he told Christians to prepare for its burial.

In spite of the gloomy predictions, Tramper sees signs of renewal and revival in three areas. 

The first is in movements coming out of the established churches, such as the Alpha course and Taizé.

The second area of growth is in the migrant churches, which are the fastest growing in Europe. The continent’s two largest churches were planted by Nigerians, one in London and the other in Ukrainian capital Kiev.

“The migrant churches can help us to identify modern western idols. We can help them to recognise secularisation,” said Tramper.

The third cause for hope is the proliferation of church planting in the last decade. There are now more than 20 pan-European church planting networks and churches have been planted in every city of Europe.

Exactly why some churches in Europe have experienced exceptional growth and others haven’t though, isn’t clear.

“Are there secrets behind it? I don’t know,” says Tramper. “But real, genuine love … love cannot be replaced with activities. You share the love of Christ in your day to day living.”

He continued: “Many churches in Europe are not sure about the difference between religiosity and faith. In Europe people tend to be very religious but not very faithful. Faith is not about convictions or feelings, but we have to live it and be sure about it, not hesitating with this truth about what God has done.”

Undoubtedly, this is a time of “crisis” for Europe – both within the church and outside it – but Tramper remains optimistic.
 
As Europe’s history has often shown, at times of crisis, “revival is very near”.

For a lasting impact in missions, try going long-term

Short-term missions are popular and effective, but it takes years of commitment to make a lasting impact, says Dr Detlef Bloecher, director of the German Missionary Fellowship (DMG).

With around 400,000 Christians embarking on short-term missions trips from Western countries each year, they have never been more popular.

Although Dr Bloecher hastens to add: “It depends where you cut the line between sightseeing and short-term missions!”

He believes the soaring popularity of short-term missions has something to do with the Western worldview, individualism and the “me, myself and I” attitude.

“Everything is focussed on numbers, measurable facts, and speedy results because time is money. The Western culture also has a bearing on missions,” he told young European Christians at the Mission-Net Congress in Erfurt, Germany.

In spite of this, Dr Bloecher believes short-term missions have a “tremendous impact” and “time is short”.

According to Operation World, around 2.8 billion people have still not heard the Gospel in any meaningful way. Around 200,000 people are dying each day, many of them without knowing Christ

“So there is the urgency, people need Christ,” he said. “There is so much to do in our world. Why focus on open doors where God has already raised up a person?”

There is also a scriptural basis for short-term missions. Jonah was sent to Nineveh and Jesus sent his disciples out to Galilee and Judea for short spells.

“I’m excited young people are going out on short-term missions today, especially when they work alongside long-term projects,” he said.

“Even with short-term missions, you can touch lives and sow seeds. It is amazing what can be achieved.”

Nonetheless, he sees limitations to short-term mission trips. After the short-term mission workers have returned home, someone needs to “pick up the strings and lead on in the discipling”.

There is, he argues, also more of a scriptural basis for long-term missions. It took 40 years for Moses to prepare in Sinai, Joshua spent the same length of time mentoring there, and of course Jesus himself dedicated His life to modelling God’s love.

“Did Jesus come to earth for short-term missions?” he quipped.

For all the benefits of short-term missions, Dr Bloecher would like to see more young Christians consider going long term.

“It takes a long time to form the ambassador of Christ and it takes a long, long time to have an impact on society.”

The German tribes, he noted, took over 1,000 years to completely leave the pagan religion, animism. Equality between men and women has taken 2,000 years. Even in the US, a country founded on the principle of liberty, it took a hundred years to abolish slavery and another hundred years to overcome racial segregation.

“Most cultures are very stable so it takes a long time for change to take place and attitudes to change,” he said.

“It’s a long process and we can’t expect things to happen in a few months – there’s a reason why God sent Jesus to Earth long-term to live with the people.”

Anyone considering mission in a foreign context has to be prepared to spend a long time on their personal development and learning the language and culture, he added.

While cultural barriers are inevitable, the wisdom is to learn from them, be transformed and adapt personal experiences to the cultural context of the host country. In the end, the years of investment will have an impact.
 
He said: “It takes a long time to come alongside and build relationships … but the language of love is universal and appreciated.”

Most believers underwhelmed by Christian advertising

Christians in the UK are less than impressed by the standard of Christian advertising, a survey has found.

The ComRes poll, commissioned by Premier Christian Media, looked at the views of 559 Christian adults in the UK.

When asked what they thought of the quality of advertisements designed to promote the Christian message to non-Christians, only a third of respondents (39%) said it was favourable. 

Almost as many (31%) were unimpressed.

More than half of those polled (52%) felt that Christian adverts do not effectively engage non-Christians.

Respondents were generally positive about the 'Christmas Starts with Christ' , the UK's biggest church advertising poster campaign.

The ChurchAds group ran the ads on national radio and in newspapers just before Christmas.

They cast a different light on the nativity scene, showing trendy twenty somethings in stylish fashion offering luxury gifts to the infant in a designer crib.

Nearly half of respondents (49%) agreed that the adverts were a good way of engaging non-Christians with the Christmas message.

The campaign is supported by Premier Christian Radio and is set to run over five years, with a different design coming out each Christmas.

Francis Goodwin, of ChurchAds, said the aim of the campaign was to make the 2,000 year old story relevant to today.

"We’re living in a consumer society where the meaning of Christmas is often lost," she said. "So, while millions of people are heading to shopping centres across the UK they won’t be able to miss this backlit message: 'However you dress it up.... Christmas Starts with Christ'. It puts Christ into the heart of Christmas in a simple and effective way.”

Happy end to the year for 12 cathedrals

The year 2011 has ended on a high note for 12 cathedrals after receiving grants towards major repairs.

The grants from the Cathedral Fabric Repair Fund range from £10,000 to £118,000, and total £718,000.

They have been made possible by a partnership between the Wolfson Foundation, Pilgrim Trust and the Cathedrals Fabric Commission for England.

They are awarded to cathedrals to cover major repairs to historic fabric such as stonework and roofs. 

Cathedrals receive the awards on the basis that they obtain matched funding.

The funds will go towards a pilot project for the Chapel of Industry at Coventry Cathedral, which looks at a major building repair issue for modern architecture.

At Peterborough Cathedral, the grant will be used on a preventive approach to tackle the challenges of climate change and deal with heavier rainfall.

The grant for Portsmouth Cathedral will fund a comprehensive repair programme which includes an attractive building with a medieval quire.

Janet Gough, Director, Cathedral and Church Buildings Division of the Archbishops' Council, said: "This is a unique fund supported by several grant-giving bodies who understand the need for a strategic funding programme to support critical repairs to our historic cathedrals, which have been and continue to be immensely significant in the nation’s life. We hope this is just the start of a successful partnership and that the fund will grow with further grant-making funds and private individuals joining in”.

Paul Ramsbottom, Chief Executive, The Wolfson Foundation, said: “These are buildings of astonishing beauty and significance. We are delighted to be working in partnership with the Pilgrim Trust and CFCE to provide this funding."

Georgina Nayler, Director, The Pilgrim Trust said: “The Pilgrim Trust has been contributing towards the repair of our beautiful and important Cathedrals for nearly 82 years. We are delighted to be part of the Cathedral Fabric Repair Fund and to be working in partnership with the CFCE and the Wolfson Foundation to continue our support”.

Frank Field MP, Chair of the Cathedrals Fabric Commission for England (CFCE), added: “One of the most significant aspects of these grants is that we have included a number of cathedrals for which fund-raising is less easy, and also several with innovative solutions to problems posed by 20th century materials and climate change.”

The twelve successful applicants were Bradford, Canterbury, Chichester, Coventry, Lincoln, Norwich, Peterborough, Portsmouth, Salisbury, Southwark, Wakefield and Wells cathedrals.

Sunday school children detained in Iran

Children were among a group of Christians reportedly rounded up by the Iranian authorities when they raided a church just before Christmas.

Christian Solidarity Worldwide has received reports that the authorities barged in as Christmas celebrations were being held at a church in Ahwaz affiliated to Assemblies of God.

According to sources, authorities detained everyone in the building, including children attending the Sunday school.

They were put on two buses and the majority interrogated and threatened before eventually being released.

The church’s senior pastor, Pastor Farhad, his wife and some church leaders remain in custody.

According to CSW, the church in Ahwaz is not a part of the house church movement, but is an official and long-established church whose membership largely consists of former followers of John the Baptist who converted to Christianity.

The charity says that Pastor Farhad has been detained on several occasions in the past and warned not to allow Muslim converts into his church.

There have been raids on churches around Christmas time in the last three years.

The Iranian Church in London is concerned that the children rounded up in Ahwaz have been left traumatised by the incident and are asking for cards of encouragement to be sent to them.

The latest arrests have cast a shadow over a greeting sent to Pope Benedict XVI by the Speaker of the Iranian Parliament, Ali Larijani, wishing blessings and happiness for Christians at Christmas and in the coming year.

CSW’s Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas said, “Mr Larijani’s Christmas message may have been well intentioned, but it is entirely undermined by these arrests, which violate the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and Iran’s own constitution.

"The Iranian authorities often insist that Christians are being arrested for indulging in actions that threaten public security, however, it is difficult to conceive how children attending Sunday school or, for that matter, legitimate Christmas celebrations fit into this category. It increasingly appears as if the Iranian regime has decided to deem every act of Christian worship a threat to national security. If this is indeed the case, then the right to freedom of religion or belief is gravely under threat in Iran.”

Christians could disappear from Iraq and Afghanistan

Christianity in Afghanistan and Iraq could be eradicated in our lifetime, partially as a result of the US troop withdrawal, says Leonard Leo, chairman of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).

This is the pattern throughout the Middle Eastern region, Leo said in a video interview with Terry Jeffrey, editor in chief of CNSNews.

“The flight of Christians out of the region is unprecedented and it’s increasing year by year,” Leo said, concluding with a grim prediction that Christians might disappear altogether from Iraq, Afghanistan and Egypt.

Since the war began in March 2003, Iraq erupted into sectarian violence, leaving US troops in charge of trying to contain what threatened to become a civil war.

The situation turned out to be catastrophic for the Christian community there, as violence against Christians soared, including an attack on a church in Baghdad in October last year, in which 58 congregants were killed.

Up to 900,000 Christians have fled the country since, according to a recent study by Minority Rights Group International.

The religious freedom expert echoed many others in accusing the Iraqi government of failing to take adequate steps to protect Christians or prosecute those who attack them.

“One of the big problems from the very beginning was that our country and others were unwilling to acknowledge that the fight in Iraq was largely a sectarian conflict and there wasn’t enough emphasis placed on the flight of Christians and other religious minorities, particularly in the northern part of Iraq,” Leo told CNSNews.com.

He added that religious minorities have always been an important part of the Iraqi fabric of society, which held it together. Disappearance of these minorities would be a “serious problem”.

US troops withdrew from Iraq on December15 and the final withdrawal from Afghanistan is due by the end of December.

“I’m very, very concerned about what will happen after our presence is completely gone, and I don’t know how we continue to put pressure on the Iraqi government and on the security forces and others in Iraq to protect the Christians in the absence of any presence,” Leo said.

The agency’s annual report on religious freedom in Iraq reports "systematic, ongoing, and egregious religious freedom violations".

At least half of the Iraqi Christian community from before the US invasion is believed to have left the country, according to the report.

“In 2003, there were thought to be 800,000 to 1.4 million Chaldean Catholics, Assyrian Orthodox, Assyrian Church of the East members, Syriac Orthodox, Armenians (Catholic and Orthodox), Protestants, and Evangelicals in Iraq. 

Today, community leaders estimate the number of Christians to be around 500,000,” the report reads.

In Afghanistan “conditions for religious freedom remain problematic, despite gains in freedom of religion or belief since the ouster of the Taliban regime in late 2001”, says the USCIRF report.

A constitution that was drafted with the help of the United States government has effectively given the Afghan government license to deny religious liberty to people who adhere to minority faiths, including Christianity, Leo added in the interview.

“The constitution drafting process with which we were involved was a disaster and I’m not sure Afghanistan can ever fully recover from the damage that we inflicted by not holding the line on the kind of constitution drafting that we should have been pushing for,” he said.

In Egypt, according to Leo, anti-Christian violence and discrimination may inspire a mass migration of that nation’s Coptic Christian population, which means radical Muslims there will reach their goal. The country is headed down a similar path as Iraq and Afghanistan, Leo concluded.

“With what’s going on in Egypt, with the uncertainties that exist, there’s very little incentive for a young Coptic Christian to stay in the county,” Leo told CNSNews. “It wouldn’t surprise me in the least if you saw the same basic trajectory in Egypt that you see in quite a number of other countries which is to say they just get up and they leave.”

Even under Mubarak, authorities were not investigating and bringing to justice the persecutors of minorities properly, he added. “But then you have to compound that problem with you may actually have a government that steps up the official repression of religion,” the religious freedom expert said.

He fears the new laws in Egypt may further restrict churches, which as a result could scare away the younger members of the Coptic community.

Other countries covered by USCIRF’s report, where the non-Muslim religious minority communities are facing existential threats include Iran, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Pakistan among others.

USCIRF, as a governmental agency, makes recommendations to the president, Congress and the secretary of state regarding how to use US foreign policy to help freedom of religion across the world.

The agency is able to suggest countries that violate that freedom to be considered “countries of particular concern” by the Department of State, Leo said. 

The agency reportedly asked the Department of State to name Egypt, Iraq and Afghanistan as such, but the department refused.

Pope will visit Mexico in March, spokesman confirms

A spokesman for the Mexican bishops’ conference has confirmed details of Benedict XVI’s upcoming visit to Mexico originally published by the newspaper Reforma, which reported that the papal visit would occur on March 23-26.

The spokesman, Fr Manuel Corral, said that details of the visit “are not official”, although he said the Pope would only visit the state of Guanajuato and its environs in west central Mexico. 

Fr Corral said that specific details of the visit were likely to be made public before the end of the year.

Citing comments from the president of the bishops’ conference, Archbishop Carlos Aguiar Retes of Tlalnepantla, Reforma reported that Pope Benedict would celebrate Mass on March 25 at the Parque Guanajuato Bicentenario in Silao, near the city of Leon and 220 miles northwest of Mexico City.

Pope Benedict also is expected to visit Cuba during his trip, the first to both countries since he was elected in 2005.

Pope's 2012 to include synod, international trips, canonizations

A trip to Latin America, a Synod of Bishops on new evangelization, the start of the Year of Faith, creation of new cardinals and proclamations of new saints are all on Pope Benedict XVI's calendar for 2012.

Of particular interest to the United States, the pope will also continue his meetings with groups of U.S. bishops making their "ad limina" visits to the Vatican during the first half of the year. His talks to the bishops are expected to focus on themes of education, religious freedom and the relationship between culture and religion.

The 2012 highlights are only a small part of the pope's day-to-day schedule, which includes hundreds of meetings, speeches, messages and liturgies. The German pope, who turns 85 in April, also pursues a "private" agenda of writing whenever he gets the chance, as he works to complete the latest in his "Jesus of Nazareth" series of books -- this one on Jesus' infancy and childhood.

Pope Benedict is virtually certain to call a consistory to create new cardinals in 2012. He may do so as early as February, when there will be at least 13 "vacancies" in the roster of voting-age cardinals (those under the age of 80); or he may wait until fall, when 10 more cardinals will have turned 80.

When he does name new cardinals, the list could include one or more Americans. U.S. prelates in line for the red hat -- now or later -- include Archbishop Edwin F. O'Brien, pro-grand master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulcher of Jerusalem; and Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan of New York. From Canada, Archbishop Thomas C. Collins of Toronto is a likely choice.

Pope Benedict plans to travel to Mexico and Cuba in March, on a trip that will turn a spotlight once again on Latin America, home to nearly half the world's Catholics. It will also move the pope onto the radar of U.S. media, which have cut back on their coverage of the pope and the Vatican in recent years.

The pope may also travel to Lebanon, probably in the spring. An invitation from Lebanese leaders came a month ago, and Vatican officials have said the pope wants to deliver his follow-up document on the Synod of Bishops for the Middle East, held at the Vatican in 2010. Such a visit would give the pope a high-visibility platform to weigh in on religious freedom issues during a period of volatile political change in the region.

The fall of 2012 will bring several important events, including the world Synod of Bishops Oct. 7-28. New evangelization has become the leitmotif of almost everything Pope Benedict does these days, and the gathering of bishops will help translate the term into practical pastoral initiatives. The essential idea is to find ways to energize Catholics, reminding them of their duty to witness the faith publicly and proclaim it to others.

The synod will follow the somewhat streamlined format introduced by Pope Benedict in 2005: a shorter assembly, shorter individual speeches and more free discussion in the synod hall.

The Year of Faith was designed by the pope to help Catholics rediscover the basic content of their faith, and the Vatican's preparation materials -- due out very soon -- will have a strong doctrinal element. The special year will begin Oct. 11, 2012, which is the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council, and some Vatican sources say the pope may publish a document that connects the two events.

Sometime during 2012, the pope is expected to proclaim new saints, including two with special significance to U.S. Catholics: Blessed Marianne Cope of Molokai and Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha. Mother Marianne led a group of sisters from New York to the Hawaiian Islands in 1883 to establish a system of nursing care for leprosy patients; Blessed Kateri, daughter of a Christian Algonquin mother and a Mohawk father in upstate New York, will become the first Native American to be canonized.

The date for these two canonizations has not been set, but many think it may happen on Oct. 21, World Mission Sunday.

Documents show how pope tried to end Irish inmates' 1981 hunger strike

Declassified British documents reveal the extent to which Pope John Paul II tried unsuccessfully to intervene to end a 1981 hunger strike by Catholic prisoners in a British jail in Northern Ireland.

The documents claim that, after the pope sent a special envoy, the leader of the Provisional Irish Republican Army prisoners, Bobby Sands, was willing to suspend the fast just days before he died.

The offer was conveyed to the British authorities by the pope's secretary, Irish Msgr. John Magee, whom Pope John Paul dispatched to persuade the prisoners to call off the hunger strike.

The state papers, declassified under the 30-year-rule, claim that Sands told Msgr. Magee, who later became the bishop of Cloyne, that he would suspend his strike in return for discussions with a British government official, two priests and three other prisoners as witnesses.

However, the British rejected the offer, claiming it was an attempt to open negotiations. The prisoners, incarcerated for paramilitary activity against British rule in Northern Ireland, had begun their hunger strike in a bid to be reclassified as political prisoners, a move Britain vehemently rejected.

Sands died May 5, 1981, after 66 days on hunger strike; he was buried with a crucifix that Msgr. Magee had given him as a gift from Pope John Paul. Ten prisoners starved themselves to death before a compromise was reached that October.

The hunger strike significantly polarized tensions between the majority-Protestant and minority-Catholic communities in Northern Ireland. More than 100,000 Catholics attended Sands' funeral, and Sinn Fein, the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, began contesting elections for the first time.

Most Northern Irish Catholics want Britain to cede the region to the Irish Republic to form a single independent Ireland, while most Protestants support the region's continuation in the United Kingdom. A 1998 peace accord committed all sides to pursue their goals by purely peaceful means. As a result, Northern Ireland remains part of the United Kingdom but is governed by a cross-community power-sharing government based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

The declassified papers also reveal that Irish Prime Minister Garret FitzGerald appealed to Cardinal Tomas O Fiaich in 1981 for a change in the Catholic Church's approach to interchurch marriages.

At the time, children of interchurch marriages were required to be raised Catholic.

But FitzGerald said he believed a change would aid peace and reconciliation in Northern Ireland. He wrote the cardinal that the government wanted to "indicate concern" and "raise the possibility" that the Vatican "might not perhaps be disposed to take special account of the Irish situation if invited to do so."

"I trust that Your Eminence will appreciate and understand the motives that have led me to write to you at this time in these terms, in full recognition of the separation of church and state," he added.

Soon after, the Irish bishops decided to postpone publication of a revised directory on mixed marriages. After a meeting with British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in November 1981, FitzGerald described the bishops' postponement as "significant."

The new directory issued in November 1983 retained the promise by the Catholic partner to raise the children Catholic, but stressed that parents had joint responsibility for the religious upbringing of their children.

BENEDICT XVI'S PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR JANUARY 2012

Pope Benedict's general prayer intention for January 2012 is: "That the victims of natural disasters may receive the spiritual and material comfort they need to rebuild their lives".

His mission intention is: "That the dedication of Christians to peace may bear witness to the name of Christ before all men and women of good will".

Eucharistic Congress 2012 - Prayer


Lord Jesus,
You were sent by the Father
to gather together those who are scattered.

You came among us, doing good and bringing healing,
announcing the Word of salvation
and giving the Bread which lasts forever.

Be our companion on life’s pilgrim way.

May your Holy Spirit inflame our hearts,
enliven our hope and open our minds,
so that together with our sisters and brothers in faith
we may recognise you in the Scriptures
and in the breaking of bread.

May your Holy Spirit transform us into one body
and lead us to walk humbly on the earth,
in justice and love,
as witnesses of your resurrection.

In communion with Mary,
whom you gave to us as our Mother
at the foot of the cross,
through you
may all praise, honour and blessing be to the Father
in the Holy Spirit and in the Church,
Now and forever.

Amen