Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
sfocommunicationcenter · SFO Communication Center - a place for secular franciscans to meet,talk
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Message search is now enhanced, find messages faster. Take it for a spin.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Messages 1457 - 1486 of 1486   Newest  |  < Newer  |  Older >  |  Oldest
Messages: Show Message Summaries   (Group by Topic) Sort by Date v  
#1486 From: margaret-marie maines <angelafraternity@...>
Date: Mon Dec 28, 2009 4:18 am
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] needs prayer
angelafrater...
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
peace.....you and your family especially your dad, are in our prayers!  God Bless, margaret+


From: Kristen <franciscan12000@...>
To: Connie Barrera <connie_barrera@...>; Frank Bartletta <ambfpb@...>; Sonia Bernardo <soniabernardo70@...>; Debbie C. <outhome@...>; albert Carver <a.413@...>; Cary c. Coffing <C_Coffing@...>; ANN Corro <anncorro@...>; Greg Davis <gldavis_hm@...>; Eric De la Pena <paxetbonum2000@...>; Andra Doherty <andra64@...>; Carlos Duarte <cdd245@...>; Genie Dutton <ggdutton@...>; Judy Fruits <judyfruits@...>; diane H. <dhalal@...>; Helen Hillstrom <helenhillstrom@...>; Julian C.S. Jagudilla <fpsnyusa@...>; dan and maria Kessler <dankess@...>; Maggie Lewis <magsf77@...>; RoseMary Mazzaglia <rmmazz85@...>; Cammett Oelman <cammettoelman@...>; James s. <jim.schoen@...>; Dick Schaefer <dschaefer@...>; Mary Shipp <emaryshipp@...>; carol smith <carolsmith1616@...>; Beverly Stoner <rrstoner@...>; Bret P Thoman <bthoman@...>; Alina Zygmunt <alinazee@...>; sfocommunicationcenter@yahoogroups.com; susan <susa730@...>; Wineriter Nick <nzw52@...>; jennifer <reddock_jennifer@...>; dorothy <djsteff2@...>; Friar Nick <ncsofmconv@...>; Mark <solankowy@...>; lilianisoriano@...; mftchida@...; Casanova Annette <cosmic@...>; bjlange58@...; Jim Mcintosh <Jim@...>; Ed <eflan4409@...>; Issaac mary <brisaacmary@...>; Tom <tom@...>; Diane <dandbkelly@...>; pat <pdkisicki@...>; Fr. Bill <wwinkler.francomm@...>
Sent: Sun, December 27, 2009 5:31:04 PM
Subject: [SFO Fraternity] needs prayer

 

Hello  Everyone- Please pray  for  my   father John.  He  has been  injured. He  was  sledding with my nephews  the   other  day  and  flew  off the sled.  He  fractured  3 ribs on his  right side and also  injured  his back.  He can still walk but it  is hard for him to get  up from sitting position.  He  is  very soar.  Thank you and  God Bless.  Kristen Doherty, SFO



The new Internet Explorer® 8 - Faster, safer, easier. Optimized for Yahoo! Get it Now for Free!

#1485 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Mon Dec 28, 2009 3:11 am
Subject: Rép. : [SFO Fraternity] needs prayer
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
I pray for father John and you Kristen 

Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


--- En date de : Dim, 27.12.09, Kristen <franciscan12000@...> a écrit :

De: Kristen <franciscan12000@...>
Objet: [SFO Fraternity] needs prayer

Date: dimanche 27 Décembre 2009, 20 h 31

 

Hello  Everyone- Please pray  for  my   father John.  He  has been  injured. He  was  sledding with my nephews  the   other  day  and  flew  off the sled.  He  fractured  3 ribs on his  right side and also  injured  his back.  He can still walk but it  is hard for him to get  up from sitting position.  He  is  very soar.  Thank you and  God Bless.  Kristen Doherty, SFO



Offrez un compte Flickr Pro à vos amis et à votre famille. Allez-y!

#1484 From: dick bonini <retiredboss962@...>
Date: Mon Dec 28, 2009 2:04 am
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] needs prayer
retiredboss962
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
He (and you) are in my prayers tonite.  Hopefully he will not suffer overmuch.
Peace and All Good. dick sfo

--- On Sun, 12/27/09, Kristen <franciscan12000@...> wrote:

From: Kristen <franciscan12000@...>
Subject: [SFO Fraternity] needs prayer
To: "Connie Barrera" <connie_barrera@...>, "Frank Bartletta" <ambfpb@...>, "Sonia Bernardo" <soniabernardo70@...>, "Debbie C." <outhome@...>, "albert Carver" <a.413@...>, "Cary c. Coffing" <C_Coffing@...>, "ANN Corro" <anncorro@...>, "Greg Davis" <gldavis_hm@...>, "Eric De la Pena" <paxetbonum2000@...>, "Andra Doherty" <andra64@...>, "Carlos Duarte" <cdd245@...>, "Genie Dutton" <ggdutton@...>, "Judy Fruits" <judyfruits@...>, "diane H." <dhalal@...>, "Helen Hillstrom" <helenhillstrom@...>, "Julian C.S. Jagudilla" <fpsnyusa@...>, "dan and maria Kessler" <dankess@...>, "Maggie Lewis" <magsf77@...>, "RoseMary Mazzaglia" <rmmazz85@...>, "Cammett Oelman" <cammettoelman@...>, "James s." <jim.schoen@...>, "Dick Schaefer" <dschaefer@...>, "Mary Shipp" <emaryshipp@...>, "carol smith" <carolsmith1616@...>, "Beverly Stoner" <rrstoner@...>, "Bret P Thoman" <bthoman@...>, "Alina Zygmunt" <alinazee@...>, sfocommunicationcenter@yahoogroups.com, "susan" <susa730@...>, "'Wineriter Nick'" <nzw52@...>, "jennifer" <reddock_jennifer@...>, "dorothy" <djsteff2@...>, "Friar Nick" <ncsofmconv@...>, "Mark" <solankowy@...>, lilianisoriano@..., mftchida@..., "'Casanova Annette'" <cosmic@...>, bjlange58@..., "Jim Mcintosh" <Jim@...>, "Ed" <eflan4409@...>, "Issaac mary" <brisaacmary@...>, "Tom" <tom@...>, "Diane" <dandbkelly@...>, "pat" <pdkisicki@...>, "Fr. Bill" <wwinkler.francomm@...>
Date: Sunday, December 27, 2009, 8:31 PM

 

Hello  Everyone- Please pray  for  my   father John.  He  has been  injured. He  was  sledding with my nephews  the   other  day  and  flew  off the sled.  He  fractured  3 ribs on his  right side and also  injured  his back.  He can still walk but it  is hard for him to get  up from sitting position.  He  is  very soar.  Thank you and  God Bless.  Kristen Doherty, SFO



#1483 From: Kristen <franciscan12000@...>
Date: Mon Dec 28, 2009 1:31 am
Subject: needs prayer
franciscan12000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Hello  Everyone- Please pray  for  my   father John.  He  has been  injured. He  was  sledding with my nephews  the   other  day  and  flew  off the sled.  He  fractured  3 ribs on his  right side and also  injured  his back.  He can still walk but it  is hard for him to get  up from sitting position.  He  is  very soar.  Thank you and  God Bless.  Kristen Doherty, SFO


#1482 From: "Valerie Moreno" <spiritwind@...>
Date: Fri Dec 25, 2009 9:21 am
Subject: FW: Sapienza-page two
spiritwind@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Original Message:
From: Valerie Moreno <spiritwind@...>
To: spiritwind@...
Subject: Sapienza-page two
Date:
Thu, 24 Dec 2009 02:28:35 -0600

(Sapienza-story  page two)

"You want me to go with you?  I am curious, I admit, to see this unusual
man."
A smile lit Fabritsa's face as she brushed tears from her pale cheeks.
Voices sounded in the street with the ringing of bells and shouts of
excitment.  Rudolfo found himself swirling in a growing crowd of neighbors
and strangers all carrying candles and colorful baskets.  "God's peace,
Rudolfo!"  There were hugs and smiles everywhere he turned, old and young
faces alight with joy.  Moonshadows danced in the flickering candleglow as
the throng began to sing, making their way up the mountainside.  Fabritsa
was beside him, her sweet high voice ringing with the others.
As they neared a cave brightly lit, a cry spread through the crowd.
"Aaaoohh!"  It was a sound of surprise and wonder.
An ox and donkey were quiet in a cave corner, candlelight and the bright
moon eluminated a manger filled with straw below an altar of rock.  A
slight figure in deacon's robe stood nearby, his vibrant dark eyes aflame
with joy that seemed to glow about him.  Rudolfo was startled as he
studied
the beaming smile and signs of weariness on the man's face.  Ordinary,
Rudolfo mused, yet there was something...something.
"Peace and all Good, dear friends!"  The man's voice seemed like music
filling the night.  "Come to the manger of the King of Heaven and earth,
Jesus the Lord!"
Rudolfo heard little of the little poor man's speaking, staring in to the
compassionate eyes ablaze in the candlelight.  He met the warm, dark gaze,
feeling a suddenurge to cry.  Images flashed in his mind, a blood-splashed
landscape strewnwith crushed and broken bodies.
Something pulled him from the horror in his mind, the cry of a child.
Opening his eyes, he took in the awe and wondervisible on every face.  The
flow of time seemed suspended as the kneeling figure lifted a small
sleeping infant in hisarms, his sweet and melodeous voice filling the
mountainside.
Many were weeping as still others began to sing praise to God.  Rudolfo
stared transfixed as the baby opened his eyes, his tiny hand on the
poverello's sparse beard.
Fabritsa was kneeling beside him as he sank to his knees, sobs filling
his heart and spilling out as tears streaming in hot relief down his face
and beard.  Had he felt something in his spirit looen and shift, a wall of
pain crumbling?  He didn't know, but now his voice lifted with those
aroundhim, his eyes meeting those of the Poverello who stood, still
holding
the baby.
"How can he know?" Rudolfo murmered as the gentle eyes rested on him.
Did it matter?  Rudolfo thought not.  All he knew was something had
awakened in his soul and tomorrow was once more a promise of hope.

Valerie Moreno
12-24-09
-

#1481 From: "Valerie Moreno" <spiritwind@...>
Date: Fri Dec 25, 2009 9:20 am
Subject: FW: Sapienza-page one
spiritwind@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Original Message:
From: Valerie Moreno <spiritwind@...>
To: spiritwind@...
Subject: Sapienza-page one
Date:
Thu, 24 Dec 2009 01:17:01 -0600

Christmas Story
SAPIENZA
SFO, St. John Vianney Fraternity, Colonia, NJ

    Gift Of The Heart
(based on Christmas crib, Greccio, Italy, 1223)

   Fabritsa's brow creased as her soft blue eyes studied her husband
worriedly.
"Is there something I can do, Rudolfo?  Please talk to me about what's
troubling you.  I love you.  Please."
Rudolfo's stormy dark gaze softened a little.  "It has nothing to do with
you, Britsa.  It's something in me.  Since the battles I am lost.  I see
and hear them in my mind again and again and it doesn't stop.  I must be
weak.  It's inconceivable to see anything but hate, blood and suffering
around me."
"There is only calm and love around you now," she said, tears filling her
words.  "You are home.  It's Christmas, dearest.  No one fights here."
Rudolfo looked away, saying nothing.  How could she understand when he
hardly did himself.  After a heavy silence, Fabritsa said slowly, "Il
Poverello is speaking at Mass, in the mountain cave at Midnight."  She
brushed back long, gleaming curls.  "The whole town is going and..."
He looked up as her voice trailed off, hurt and anguish darkening her
tear-filled gaze.
---next page---
-

#1480 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Thu Dec 24, 2009 4:10 pm
Subject: Pope Considers St. Francis' Role in Christmas
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Pope Considers St. Francis' Role in Christmas
Notes How Feast Developed in Middle Ages

VATICAN CITY, DEC. 23, 2009 (Zenit.org).- While the celebration of Easter focuses on God's power, the Christmas feast shows a God who comes without weapons or strength in the hopes that man will receive him, Benedict XVI says.


And this image of God made a Child is particularly visible in the Nativity scene, a tradition that has marked the Christian celebration of Christmas and which can be traced to St. Francis of Assisi. In Greccio, Italy, he made the first Nativity scene in 1223.

The Holy Father reflected on St. Francis' role in the development of the Christmas celebration during the general audience today in Paul VI Hall.

"With St. Francis and his nativity, the defenseless love of God was shown, his humility and goodness, which in the incarnation of the Word is manifested to man so as to teach a new way to live and to love," he said.


The Pontiff explained how a biographer of the saint recounts a vision Francis was given at the famous Christmas celebration in Greccio: "He saw a little child lying still in a manger; the child woke up because Francis approached. And [the biographer] adds: 'This vision was not different than real life, since through the work of his grace acting by way of his holy servant Francis, the Child Jesus was resurrected in the hearts of many.'"


So near

Benedict XVI affirmed: "Thanks to St. Francis, the Christian people have been able to perceive that at Christmas, God truly has become Emmanuel, God-with-us, from whom no barrier or distance can separate us. In this Child, God has come so near to each one of us, so close, that we can address him with confidence and maintain with him a trusting relationship of deep affection, as we do with a newborn.

"In this Child, in fact, God-Love is manifested: God comes without weapons, without strength, because he does not aim to conquer, we could say, from without, but rather wants to be welcomed by man in liberty. God becomes a defenseless Child to conquer man's pride, violence and desire to possess. In Jesus, God took up this poor and defenseless condition to conquer with love and lead us to our true identity."


The Pope invited the faithful to pray to the Father, "so that he concedes to our hearts this simplicity that recognizes the Lord in this Child, precisely as Francis did in Greccio."

"Then," he said, "we too can experience what [...] happened to those present [...] 'Each one returned to his house filled with an ineffable joy.'"


To all, have a Merry Christmas (see the joint file)

Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Devenez un meilleur amigo grce Yahoo! Courriel

1 of 1 Photo(s)


#1479 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Wed Dec 16, 2009 5:24 pm
Subject: From: Valerie Moreno
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Original Message:
From: Valerie Moreno <spiritwind@...>
To: spiritwind@...
Subject: Message sent by Net-By-Phone
Date: Mon, 14 Dec 2009 09:30:51 -0600

I Feel You Dancing
To our beloved Franciscan Fraternity and our new brother and sisters,
Jim, Eileen and Dolores...new candidates, Carlos, Celia and Antoinette.

I feel you watching
guiding my heart
with your gentle protection
and rezilliance.

I feel you dancing
as the wild winds come
taking my hand
to lift me from the terbulance.

I feel your voice
vibrant with singing
deep in my soul
chasing away darkness.

I feel your love
in sun and rain
simplicity that dispells doubt

I feel you dancing
father Francis
amid the tears and clamour
of a world needing the dance
  of your joy

Valerie Moreno, SFO
12-14-09
-



Dcouvrez les photos les plus intressantes du jour!

#1478 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:05 am
Subject: Benedict XVI Shares Secret of True Joy
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Benedict XVI Shares Secret of True Joy
Underlines Lessons from the Creche
VATICAN CITY, DEC. 13, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is encouraging families to go to the Baby Jesus in the Manger, and to learn from him the way to authentic Christian joy.

As is tradition on this Third Sunday of Advent, the Pope addressed the children of Rome who came to St. Peter's Square for a blessing on their little statues of Baby Jesus that will be placed in the family crches.

In an address to the pilgrims gathered for a blessing and the praying of the midday Angelus, the Pontiff affirmed that the Church "helps us to rediscover the sense and the taste of Christian joy, so different from the world's joy."

He acknowledged the "many children and young people" present, stating, "It is a cause of joy for me to know that in your families you continue the custom of making the crche."

The Holy Father continued: "But it is not enough to repeat a traditional gesture, however important. It is necessary to try to live every day what the crche represents, that is, Christ's love, his humility, his poverty."

We must follow the example of St. Francis, who "represented the scene of the Nativity to try to contemplate and adore it, but above all to know better how to put into practice the message of the Son of God, who left everything behind and became a little child out of love for us," Benedict XVI said.

The "secret of true joy," he affirmed, "does not consist in having a lot of things, but in feeling loved by the Lord, in making oneself a gift for others, in loving."

The Pope explained: "The Madonna and St. Joseph do not seem to be a very fortunate family; they had their first child in the midst of great hardships; and yet they are full of deep joy, because they love each other, they help each other and above all they are certain that God is at work in their history, God who made himself present in the little Jesus."

God's promises

As well, he added, the shepherds have a special reason to rejoice, even though "that newborn certainly would not change the facts of poverty and marginalization in their lives."

Rather, the Pontiff said, "faith helps them to recognize in the 'child wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger' the 'sign' of the accomplishment of God's promises for all men, 'whom he loves,' even them!"

True joy, he affirmed, consists in "feeling that our personal and communal existence is visited and filled by a great mystery, the mystery of God's love."

The Holy Father said: "To be joyful we do not just have need of things, but love and truth: We need a God who is near, who warms our heart, and responds to our profound desires.

"This God is manifested in Jesus, born of the Virgin Mary. This is why that Baby, whom we place in the stable or the cave, is the center of everything, the heart of the world."


Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les photos les plus intressantes du jour!

#1477 From: acpg@...
Date: Sat Oct 3, 2009 11:33 pm
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] SFO information
acpg1
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
To Deacon Luis and all members of the group,
 
Please check out this wonderful short film about the SFO by the National Minister of the Order.    http://secularfranciscans.blip.tv/
 
I hope you'll find it informative.
 
Happy feast day to all,
Pax,
Anna
 


May the Lord be above you to inspire you,
beneath you to support you.
May the Lord go ahead of you to guide you
and be behind you to protect you.
May the Lord be alongside of you to accompany you today and always!

#1476 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Sat Oct 3, 2009 1:42 pm
Subject: Feast of S. Francis of Assisi, October 4
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

Feast of S. Francis of Assisi, October 4


  "Francis will, repair my church which, as you see it falling apart."


This is the call that Francis received contemplating the crucifix of San Damiano after a long search to find meaning in his life.


And what he saw around him there was only ruins ... he did not hesitate a moment, he began the task, but not alone, he sought help people of Assisi, who gave him stones and other essential materials in exchange for prayers and blessings Francis gives us the example of "make whole" have an innate sense of fraternity lived there.


For you, those who will, for many reasons remain only where they are now, you can through prayer you to join the Franciscan family around the world to give thanks to the Father of us have given Francis and Jesus, who guided us to the FATHER LOVE all of which Francis was distressed that so few people appreciated this LOVE when he reportedly said "LOVE IS NOT LIKED"

Convent of San Damiano

  In this day of the Feast of our guide Francis of Assisi, as a suggestion, take advantage of those moments of celebration to renew itself, or in a group our commitment to the evangelical life, and why not tell each other how God made us discover our Christian and Franciscan vocation?


  "Good St. Francis, you Franciscans and Franciscan
and friends from anywhere on earth!


(Original in french, traducted by Google)

Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les photos les plus intressantes du jour!

#1475 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Wed Sep 30, 2009 2:50 pm
Subject: Pope to Youth: Christ Wants to Make You Happy
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
header_original_mod

Pope to Youth: Christ Wants to Make You Happy

Encourages Them to Have Open Hearts

STARA BOLESLAV, Czech Republic, SEPT. 28, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is telling youth that Christ wants to make them happy, and that his voice is not difficult to hear for those who have their hearts open.

The Pope reflected on Christ's call today when he spoke with young people gathered on the third and last day of his visit to the Czech Republic.

"As he did with Augustine, so the Lord comes to meet each one of you," he said. "He knocks at the door of your freedom and asks to be welcomed as a friend. He wants to make you happy, to fill you with humanity and dignity. 

"The Christian faith is this: encounter with Christ, the living Person who gives life a new horizon and thereby a definitive direction. And when the heart of a young person opens up to his divine plans, it is not difficult to recognize and follow his voice."

The Holy Father reflected on the Lord's specific call for each person, and he urged them to holiness in their vocations.

"Many of you he calls to marriage, and the preparation for this sacrament constitutes a real vocational journey," he said. "Consider seriously the divine call to raise a Christian family, and let your youth be the time in which to build your future with a sense of responsibility. Society needs Christian families, saintly families!"

"And if the Lord is calling you to follow him in the ministerial priesthood or in the consecrated life," the Pontiff continued, "do not hesitate to respond to his invitation. In particular, in this Year of Priests, I appeal to you, young men: Be attentive and open to Jesus's call to offer your lives in the service of God and his people."

"The Church in every country," he reflected, "including this one, needs many holy priests and also persons fully consecrated to the service of Christ, Hope of the world."




Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Devenez un meilleur amigo grce Yahoo! Courriel

#1474 From: "Richard" <richard.chamberland@...>
Date: Wed Sep 30, 2009 2:55 pm
Subject: Hi Dick---SFO information
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Hi Dick, how are you, here very well. do you now this french site I have build ?
http://ofs-de-sherbrooke.over-blog.com/ 

Pax Richard

--- In sfocommunicationcenter@yahoogroups.com, dick bonini <retiredboss962@...> wrote:
>
> Peace and all good.  This group was started a number of years ago in order that Secular Franciscans and others interested in the Franciscan charism  could have a place to "meet and greet and exchange information".  It was set up to be as unstructured as possible so that all might share and learn in an unrestricted setting. Welcome to all and the blessings of Francis and Claire enfold all who come here.
> dick SFO
>
> --- On Tue, 9/29/09, Diacono Luis R.O'Neill luisraon@... wrote:
>
> From: Diacono Luis R.O'Neill luisraon@...
> Subject: [SFO Fraternity] SFO information
> To: sfocommunicationcenter@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Tuesday, September 29, 2009, 5:34 AM
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  
>
>
>
>
>
> Peace and Good: My brothers.Please send me more information about you fraterity.I am a SFO here in Puerto Rico and Permanent Deacon.
>  
> In the name of the Lord and Our Father Fancis
>  
> Deacon Luis R. O'Neill,OFS
>

#1473 From: dick bonini <retiredboss962@...>
Date: Wed Sep 30, 2009 2:22 am
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] SFO information
retiredboss962
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Peace and all good.  This group was started a number of years ago in order that Secular Franciscans and others interested in the Franciscan charism  could have a place to "meet and greet and exchange information".  It was set up to be as unstructured as possible so that all might share and learn in an unrestricted setting. Welcome to all and the blessings of Francis and Claire enfold all who come here.
dick SFO

--- On Tue, 9/29/09, Diacono Luis R.O'Neill <luisraon@...> wrote:

From: Diacono Luis R.O'Neill <luisraon@...>
Subject: [SFO Fraternity] SFO information
To: sfocommunicationcenter@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, September 29, 2009, 5:34 AM

 

Peace and Good: My brothers.Please send me more information about you fraterity.I am a SFO here in Puerto Rico and Permanent Deacon.
 
In the name of the Lord and Our Father Fancis
 
Deacon Luis R. O'Neill,OFS


#1472 From: canon603@...
Date: Tue Sep 29, 2009 7:42 pm
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] SFO information PICS AND INFO. CONTINUED
sfo.hermitage
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Note:  These are miscellaneous items that are not in any particular order; some older some newer.
 

#1471 From: canon603@...
Date: Tue Sep 29, 2009 5:30 pm
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] SFO information PICS AND INFO. CONTINUED
sfo.hermitage
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
#1470 From: canon603@...
Date: Tue Sep 29, 2009 4:47 pm
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] Thank you. TO Hermits
sfo.hermitage
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Good to hear from you sister.  I am at a hermitage now.  I am sending another SFO permanent deacon a number of items.  I notice that they go to an email mailing list which you are on.  How many are on the list?
 
Pax et bonum
 
Christopher

#1469 From: canon603@...
Date: Tue Sep 29, 2009 4:36 pm
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] SFO information
sfo.hermitage
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Greetings brother,
 
We have much information in accordance with your request.
 
I can start to insert items into email and also attach files.  You can let me know if the attachments are viewable and /or printable.  I will attempt to do some downloading each day until you get the bulk of information.  This takes time so the process needs to be spaced out so as not to take up too much time in one sitting.
 
Pax et bonum!
 
Christopher
 

#1468 From: "Diacono Luis R.O'Neill" <luisraon@...>
Date: Tue Sep 29, 2009 9:34 am
Subject: SFO information
luisraon
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Peace and Good: My brothers.Please send me more information about you fraterity.I am a SFO here in Puerto Rico and Permanent Deacon.
In the name of the Lord and Our Father Fancis
Deacon Luis R. O'Neill,OFS

#1467 From: margaret-marie maines <angelafraternity@...>
Date: Tue Sep 29, 2009 2:01 am
Subject: Re: [SFO Fraternity] Thank you. TO Hermits
angelafrater...
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
peace.....tks so much for the photos; they are great!  are you in a hermitage now?  I am living in a franciscan capuchin retreat cottage in Ontario, called Little Portion.....I have had quite a winding journey and hope it settles down now.....God Bless, sr. margaret-marie+


From: "canon603@..." <canon603@...>
To: sfocommunicationcenter@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2009 2:14:55 PM
Subject: [SFO Fraternity] Thank you. TO Hermits

 
 


Yahoo! Canada Toolbar : Search from anywhere on the web and bookmark your favourite sites. Download it now!


#1466 From: canon603@...
Date: Mon Sep 28, 2009 5:14 pm
Subject: Thank you. TO Hermits
sfo.hermitage
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
#1465 From: Kristen <franciscan12000@...>
Date: Mon Sep 28, 2009 7:39 pm
Subject: hello etc.
franciscan12000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Hello Everyone-  I  just  want to tell you that i  prayed  for all of you while i was in italy.  Are your families okay there in the Philippines?  I  heard and saw flooding on the  news and newspapers and the   flooding was  in Manila area.   I will  be  praying for you as well as your  families to be  safe. Take care and May the Lord  give you his peace.  Kristen Doherty, SFO.


#1464 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Tue Sep 15, 2009 2:48 am
Subject: Florida Bishop Weighs in on Health Care Reform
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

Florida Bishop Weighs in on Health Care Reform

Says US Prelates Aren't Giving up the Debate

ORLANDO, Florida, SEPT. 11, 2009 (Zenit.org).- The bishop of Orlando is affirming that the U.S. prelates are not going to give up the debate and the appeal for "genuine" health care reform that respects life.

Bishop Thomas Wenski affirmed this in an article published Wednesday in the Orlando Sentinel.

He addressed the current national debate over health care reform, which has "generated much heat and little light."

The prelate underlined the position of the U.S. Catholic bishops, affirming the need for "reform that leads to health care for all."

"Any reform should aim at health care that is accessible, affordable and respects the life and dignity of every human being from the moment of conception to the moment of natural death," he asserted.

The prelate stressed the Church's knowledge in the field, as "an employer and thus a purchaser of health care" as well as "a provider of health care."

Furthermore, he stated, "in our parishes, our pantries, our Catholic Charities offices, we strive to help the people who have fallen through the cracks -- those who are not served or who are underserved by our present system of health care delivery."

Thus, the bishop said, "we bring no little experience to the debate."

Fundamental issue

He affirmed: "We support truly universal access to health care. We want care accessible and affordable to the poor and vulnerable. 

"We champion efforts to improve efficiency and quality while restraining costs and applying them equitably across the spectrum of payers."

Bishop Wenski stated, "For the Church, the fundamental issue is one of human life and dignity."

For this reason, he explained, the bishops' conference "has remained engaged in the current debate" so that, "through dialogue over principles and policies" they can "ensure that any enacted legislation will be something positive."

"At any rate," the prelate said, "we continue to insist that health care reform is too important and legitimate a goal to allow it to be hijacked by destructive agendas."

"As the debate continues," he stated, "the bishops will continue to advocate for health care reform that is truly universal and that protects human life at every stage of development."

Bishop Wenski concluded: "Our government and laws must also retain explicit protection for the freedom of conscience of health care workers and health care institutions. 

"Genuine health care reform that protects the life and dignity of all is a moral imperative and a vital national obligation.


Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les styles qui font sensation sur Yahoo! Qubec Avatars

#1463 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Tue Sep 8, 2009 11:52 pm
Subject: Pope Urges Discovering Beauty of Creation
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

Pope Urges Discovering Beauty of Creation

Reflects on Bonaventure's Gift to Church

BAGNOREGGIO, Italy, SEPT. 7, 2009 (Zenit.org).- St. Bonaventure, like his spiritual father, St. Francis, has a message for today, according to Benedict XVI: Creation should be appreciated in the light of God.

The Pope reflected on this aspect of Bonaventure's teachings when he visited the saint's birthplace on Sunday.

The Holy Father, who studied Bonaventure as a doctoral student, acknowledged that the "rich cultural and mystical patrimony" left by the saint is difficult to summarize. 

He thus reflected on just a few points of Bonaventure's legacy: his testimony as a seeker of God, his love for creation, and his witness to hope.

Regarding this second point, the Pontiff called Bonaventure a "seraphic singer of creation" who "learned to 'praise God in all and through all creatures.'" 

He added: "St. Bonaventure presents a positive vision of the world, gift of God's love to men. [...] How useful it would be if also today we rediscovered the beauty and value of creation in the light of divine goodness and beauty! 

"In Christ, observed St. Bonaventure, the universe itself can again be the voice that speaks of God and leads us to explore his presence; exhorts us to honor and glorify him in everything."

The Bishop of Rome also pointed to the saint as "a messenger of hope."

He observed, "We find a beautiful image of hope in one of his Advent homilies, where he compares the movement of hope to the flight of a bird, which spreads its wings as far as possible, and employs all its energies to move them. [...] To hope is to fly, says St. Bonaventure."

Drawing from his second encyclical, the Holy Father said that when we are sustained by the hope that God gives, "we never run the risk of losing the courage to contribute, as the saints did, to the salvation of humanity, and 'we can open ourselves and open the world so that God will enter, God, who is truth, love and goodness.'"


Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les photos les plus intressantes du jour!

#1462 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Wed Sep 2, 2009 10:40 pm
Subject: Edward Kennedy's Last Letter to Pope
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

Edward Kennedy's Last Letter to Pope

Message Is Unveiled at Funeral

WASHINGTON, D.C., SEP. 1, 2009 (Zenit.org).- At Saturday's funeral of U.S. Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy, a letter was revealed in which the dying man wrote to Benedict XVI, confessing his imperfections and asking for prayers.

In Arlington National Cemetery, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, former archbishop of Washington, read parts of the letter that Kennedy wrote to the Pope shortly before his death.

The letter, which was hand delivered to the Pontiff by U.S. President Barack Obama last June, stated, "I am writing with deep humility to ask that you pray for me as my own health declines."

The senator explained: "I was diagnosed with brain cancer more than a year ago and although I continue treatment, the disease is taking its toll on me. I am 77 years old and preparing for the next passage of life."

The gift of faith, Kennedy affirmed, "has sustained and nurtured and provides solace to me in the darkest hours."

He acknowledged, "I know that I have been an imperfect human being, but with the help of my faith I have tried to right my path."

The senator underlined his belief "in a conscience protection for Catholics in the health field," and emphasized his commitment to "continue to advocate for it as my colleagues in the Senate as I work to develop an overall national health policy that guarantees health care for everyone."

His letter concluded: "I have always tried to be a faithful Catholic, Your Holiness, and though I have fallen short through human failings, I have never failed to believe and respect the fundamental teachings of my faith.

"I continue to pray for God's blessings on you and on our church and would be most thankful for your prayers for me."

Cardinal McCarrick noted that the Holy Father sent a response with Obama to give to Kennedy, who died Aug. 25.

The prelate read excerpts of it, in which the Pontiff expressed a prayer for that the senator would be "sustained in faith and hope, and granted the precious grace of joyful surrender to the will of God, our merciful Father."




Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les photos les plus intressantes du jour!

#1461 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Sat Aug 29, 2009 2:49 am
Subject: 68 Protestant Leaders Applaud Encyclical
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

68 Protestant Leaders Applaud Encyclical

Call on All Christians to Respond to "Caritas in Veritate"

WASHINGTON, D.C., AUG. 28, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI's latest encyclical was lauded by 68 Evangelical Protestant community leaders from the United States, Canada, England, the Netherlands, Sri Lanka and New Zealand.

In a message released last month, titled "Doing the Truth in Love," a group of university leaders and professors, press editors and presidents of various institutions signed a message to "applaud" the Pope's encyclical, "Caritas in Veritate."

The message called on Christians everywhere to "read, wrestle with, and respond to 'Caritas in Veritate' and its identification of the twin call of love and truth upon our lives as citizens, entrepreneurs, workers and, most fundamentally, as followers of Christ."

It commended the way in which the encyclical "considers economic development in terms of the true trajectory for human flourishing."

The evangelicals echoed the call for "a new vision of development that recognizes the dignity of human life in its fullness, and that includes a concern for life from conception to natural death, for religious liberty, for the alleviation of poverty, and for the care of creation."

They underlined the document's analysis of global affairs that "rejects the oversimplifying polarization of free market and active government solutions."

"Economic institutions," they added, "including markets themselves, must be marked by internal relations of solidarity and trust."

The message affirmed the encyclical's emphasis on "business efforts guided by a mutualist principle that transcends the dichotomy of for-profit and not-for-profit and that instead pursues social ends while covering costs and providing for investment."

Economy of charity

It called on other evangelicals to "rethink who must be included among corporate stakeholders and what the moral significance of investment is."

The evangelicals endorsed "the affirmation that an economy of charity demands space for myriad human communities and institutions, not just for the state and the market, but also families and the many relationships of civil society."

"Ethical globalization," they wrote, "demands of evangelical churches everywhere that we attend to the call to do the truth in love, as we continue to respond to the great commission to 'disciple the nations.'"

They affirmed a shared fear about the "growth of an overweening welfare state, which degrades social and civic pluralism," and agreed that "subsidiarity and solidarity must be held in tandem."

The message voiced a commitment to be, as "Caritas in Veritate" stated, protagonists in the effort for "global solidarity, economic justice, and the common good, as norms that transcend and transform the motives of economic profit and technical progress."

It concluded with a call for "serious dialogue among all Christians and with many others to make these goals practical realities."

Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les styles qui font sensation sur Yahoo! Qubec Avatars

#1460 From: "retiredboss962" <retiredboss962@...>
Date: Thu Aug 27, 2009 3:53 am
Subject: Annual International Congress of the Pilgrims of St. Michael
retiredboss962
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Brothers and Sisters:
Peace and all Good


I have been asked to share the following with you.  I am doing so.  I do not
know about the group and thus do not necessarily espouse their positions or
philosophy. I leave those decisions to God and Holy Mother the Church.  My only
purpose is to make you aware of them.
Information concerning them is available on the web to any who wish to know
more.







    Annual International Congress of the
         Pilgrims of St. Michael

         Louis Even Institute
         for Social Justice


         Louis Even founder
         1885-1974



         September 5-6-7, 2009

         in the House of the Immaculate
         1101 Principale St., Rougemont, QC, Canada  J0L 1M0


         CANADA: Rougemont: (450) 469-2209

         U.S.A.:  (413) 665-5052 (phone & fax)
                      (888) 858-2163 (toll free)

         mail@...
          www.michaeljournal.org



         August 28-Sept. 4: Week of study

         on the Social Doctrine of the Church
         and its application
         to overcome the crisis and poverty

         All our subscribers are welcome! Bring newcomers!



         Rougemont is located 50 km. east of Montreal, on Highway 112

         There will be representatives from the five continents present, as well
as several Bishops and priests from various nations; all our subscribers and
their friends are invited to this very important meeting, which will be preceded
by a week of study on Social Credit. For meals, each one brings his own food.
There are also restaurants not far from our grounds. And all those who come to
our Congress are put up, free of charge. Here is the program for the weekend:

         Program of the Congress

          Saturday, September 5, 2009

         1:30 p.m.: Opening - Rosary - Introduction
         2:30 p.m.: Conferences
         4:00 p.m.: Holy Mass
         5:30 p.m.: Supper
         7.00 p.m.: Presentation of the United States, Mexico, Canada

         Sunday, September 6, 2009

         9 a.m.: Rosary
         Conferences: Presentation of France and Poland,
         South America and Central America
         Noon: Lunch time
         1:30 p.m.: Presentation of Africa, Madagascar, the Ivory Coast, Congo,
Togo
         16:30 p.m.: Procession in the street
         17:00 p.m.: Holy Mass  Supper
         19:30 p.m.: Apostles of MICHAEL and the distributers
         of leaflets from around the world.

         Monday, September 7, 2007

         9:00 a.m.: Holy Mass
         10 a.m.: Projects for the future from each country
         14:00 p.m.: Pilgrimage to St. Joseph's Oratory

         Tuesday, September 8th: Pilgrimage to Our Lady of the Cape

         Modesty in dress

         The Pilgrims of St. Michael are defenders of the dignity of the human
person, created in the image and likeness of God. We must dress as dignified men
and women of God. We must give a good example. The women do not wear trousers,
but must wear a dress, with a length past the knees, with sleeves and a collar.
In the norms of the Church, it is recommended that the sleeves go at least up to
the elbow. Mini-skirts, shorts, bermudas are forbidden on our grounds and in our
houses, and the men must wear a jacket.






     __________ Information provenant d'ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version de la base
des signatures de virus 4367 (20090825) __________

     Le message a &#65533;t&#65533; v&#65533;rifi&#65533; par ESET NOD32
Antivirus.

     http://www.eset.com

#1459 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Wed Aug 26, 2009 2:40 am
Subject: Testimony of Michele Canone, OFS
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 

SFO International Council - Quarterly edition
  Vol. 4- N. 1 - 2009 - February

Testimony of Michele Canone, SFO

“If you cut a photograph in half, each part only shows a fraction of the complete image. But if you divide a hologram, each part shows the whole picture in its entirety. No matter how small the subdivisions are, each piece still shows the whole image.” (P. Senge, The Fifth Discipline)

Dear brothers and sisters,

This fascinating ‘image of the hologram’ is, in my opinion, at this historic time, the best illustration of the International ‘vision’ of the SFO. Basically, the hologram fascinates me because it leads me inevitably to think of the ‘particle’, to which the same principle of ‘indivisible wholeness’ applies. No matter how small the consecrated bread is, each granule will always contain the same body of Jesus.

Today’s Franciscan Secular Order needs to reacquire the true sense of identity and belonging. Emanuela De Nunzio reminded the capitulars that “Every discussion of belonging, for every individual, is closely linked to that of identity and presupposes it. […] There is no identity without belonging and there is no belonging without identity: they are distinct, yet forever fundamentally joined. It is, therefore, obvious that to talk of belonging, it is necessary to talk of identity: to have self-awareness and to distinguish oneself dialogically from others”.
You know, the hologram divided into so many pieces does indeed show the same image, but it keeps letting us see it from a different angle and this is exactly what we notice on occasions like the General Chapter. Pausing with many of the capitulars to exchange ideas, opinions and experiences, I became more and more aware of how they represent for me the unique identity of the SFO, enriched by its very own outlook and perspective. The sense of belonging is so alive in the brothers, whose commitment is such that the unique ‘vision’ of the Order is for them the ‘background music’ to all that they do in their lives.

Attending the Chapter was for me a gift of infinite grace! Today I would like to thank the Presidency Council, not only for giving me the opportunity to be there, at the Chapter, but especially for giving me the honour of giving witness of the wonder of belonging to a Family so rich in its many forms and colours.

In Budapest, I was pleasantly surprised to have all my expectations proved wrong. Let me be honest with you. I confess that at thirty years of age, fifteen years of which I have devoted to Franciscan Youth, I found it difficult to imagine that I could find men and women aged 50 to 60 so full of light and charged with energy. I was always convinced that the light received by the thousands of young people I have met during these years with Franciscan Youth was unique and unrepeatable. I was wrong; today I know that that light, if it be real, cannot fade; indeed it must assume a nature determined enough to eliminate any shadow which might threaten the complete vision of the world.

The Lord has been generous to me. He has enabled me to experience the internationalism of Francis since my earliest years in Franciscan Youth. The first time I encountered Franciscan brothers and sisters outside Italy was in 1995, on the occasion of the III Interobediential Franciscan Youth Chapter (unity was still a long way off) in Pinarella di Cervia, a chapter linked to the European event EUROHOPE (Euro-hope of peace), strongly wished for by John Paul II during the years of the war in ex-Yugoslavia. I was barely 17, and you can imagine what it meant for a young man in love with Francis, a lover of foreign languages and cultures (I was specialising in languages at high school), to be able to share with young people like myself from Great Britain, Malta, Poland, France…. however, in those days Franciscan Youth did not have a proper ‘international impetus’ and so that meeting was just a one-off.

The true light, the one that allowed me to discover the furthest corners of the room, was lit in 2003, thanks to the “III European Congress of Franciscan Youth” in Croatia and Slovenia. There are no words to express fully the type of joy one experiences in ‘reciprocal universal sharing’. There then followed the “I International Meeting” in Cologne in 2005, the “IV European Meeting” in Assisi, the “I International Assembly” in Barcelona in 2005 and finally the “II International Meeting” in Sydney.

Thanks to this close collaboration with Brothers Ivan Matic, ofm and Xavi Ramos, sfo, Assistant and International Counsellor of Franciscan Youth respectively, I met some brothers and sisters of the Council of Presidency. In particular, Encarnacion del Pozo, an incredibly ‘maternal’ and ‘fraternal’ lady:  we are in good hands and it is no coincidence that she was re-elected almost unanimously.

However, what was I doing in Budapest? 
I have to laugh, because, in spite of the fact that it was 10 days’ hard work, what with secretarial work, musical activities, translating the proceedings and press releases and the coordination of the communication & web commission, I am convinced more than ever that, when it comes to giving and receiving, I surely have done much more receiving.

I would like to convey the emotions which packed my heart when each of the capitulars was called to confirm their own availability. So much peace and serenity. Both Encarnación Del Pozo, and the Canadian, Doug Clorey, elected vice-Minister General, actually appeared before everyone hand in hand with husband and wife respectively,  confirming not only their own, but also their whole family’s availability to support the Order. Do you realize how involved their family, work and everything else must be in such a mission?

Today I feel I should tell you about how much consideration Ciofs is giving to certain aspects.
Personally, I like the direction it is intended to take in the next in the next six years. Reflecting once more on the ‘sense of identity and belonging’ in the light of the grace of the Profession is truly a responsible gesture against the relativism and subjectivism prevalent in this century. Entering into dialogue to create a shared vision will make us more genuine in the spirit of our mission. Today, belonging no longer means ‘taking part in’ but ‘being part of’. The emphasis needs to be placed on ‘being’ rather than ‘doing’, because it is identity which leads to action and not the other way round; on being opposed to the fashion of ‘believing but not belonging’, or believing without commitment, because we know that we believe in a God who asks no more of us than that we ‘remain part of his kingdom’. What article 30.1 of our Constitutions expresses in this regard is very beautiful: ‘Brothers are jointly responsible for the life of the Fraternity to which they belong and of the SFO as an organic union of all Fraternities throughout the world’. And like the hologram, wherever we are, we are part of the whole.

Concentrating on our presence throughout the world, Encarnita’s words, directed even towards the Ministers General of the First Order, stress the following: “I am convinced that the First Order, the Second and the Third Order Regular need, at all levels, the knowledge that we can offer” as people completely immersed “in situations of daily life and in problems relating to work, the family, politics, and education and science, not forgetting situations of extreme poverty and all types of misfortune”. We must be proud and aware of our being salt mixed through every situation of daily living.

The outcome of the Capitulars’ reflections has been condensed into a programme of 5 priorities:

  1. Formation/Training
  2. Communication
  3. Franciscan Youth
  4. Presence in the world
  5. Emergent National Fraternities

I would like to pay particular attention to communication and Franciscan Youth
Communication: in the past, this meant to the Order little more than issuing a ‘circular’ which informed everyone about important events. Today, communication is ‘action’, communicating means living communion and making this known so that others can live it. This is the greatest challenge. Not to separate the two at the very outset, as Training will be necessary in Communication, which is the soul of sharing!

Franciscan Youth: it is nice to see Ciofs paying attention to Franciscan Youth. What surprises me is not so much that it does so, but how it does so. Encarnita has definitively asserted that “Franciscan Youth is not the future of the Order, but its present”. The youthful expression of Franciscanism which enables it to spread its presence in the world not only geographically but at a generational level. This is among the priorities since, although in the last six years a lot has been done, now is the time to involve the International Fraternity through the setting up of a coordinating committee to help heighten the sense of belonging and identity among young people as well.

Thanks to Elizabeth, Francis and Claire and overall thanks to the Father because he keep giving me such any chances to grow up in a very incredible and unique way and even if I don’t feel like deserving all of this but I’m sure He knows the reason to let me do this.


Source: www.ciofs.org



Offrez un compte Flickr Pro à vos amis et à votre famille. Allez-y!

#1458 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Mon Aug 24, 2009 2:42 am
Subject: Cardinal Bertone on "Caritas in Veritate"
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
An important document, I think...
 
Cardinal Bertone on "Caritas in Veritate"
"It Is Also Possible to Do Business by Pursuing Aims That Serve Society"

ROME, AUG. 22, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of a speech Benedict XVI's secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, gave to the Italian Senate last month. The July 28 discourse was a reflection on the Pope's third encyclical, "Caritas in Veritate."
* * *
Benedict XVI begins his Encyclical with a deep, comprehensive introduction in which he reflects on and analyzes the words of the title which closely link "caritas" and "veritas": love and truth. This is not only a sort of "explicatio terminorum", an initial explanation which seeks to point out the fundamental principles and perspectives of his entire teaching. Indeed, like the musical theme of a symphony, the theme of truth and charity then recurs throughout the document precisely because, as the Pope writes, in it is "the principal driving force behind the authentic development of every person and of all humanity" [1].
But, we ask ourselves, which truth and which love are meant? There is no doubt that today these very concepts give rise to suspicion especially the term "truth" or are the object of misunderstanding, and this is especially the case with the term "love". This is why it is important to make clear which truth and which love the Pope is addressing in his new Encyclical. The Holy Father explains that these two fundamental realities are neither extrinsic to man nor even imposed upon him in the name of any kind of ideological vision; rather, they are deeply rooted within the person. Indeed, "love and truth", the Pope says, "are the vocation planted by God in the heart and mind of every human person" [2], the person who, according to Sacred Scripture, has been created precisely "as an image of the Creator", in other words of the "God of the Bible, who is both "Agpe" and "Lgos": Charity and Truth, Love and Word [3].
This reality is testified to us not only by biblical Revelation but can be grasped by every person of good will who uses right reason in reflecting on himself [4]. In this regard, several passages of an important and meaningful Document that came out just before Caritas in veritate seem to illustrate this view clearly. The International Theological Commission in recent months has given us a text entitled "The Search for Universal Ethics: A New Look at Natural Law". It addresses topics of great importance which I wish to point out and to recommend especially in this context of the Senate, that is, an institution whose main function is legislative. Indeed, as the Holy Father said to the United Nations Assembly in New York during his Visit last year to their headquarters [5], sometimes called the "glass palace", speaking about the foundation of human rights: These rights "are based on the natural law inscribed on human hearts and present in different cultures and civilizations. Removing human rights from this context would mean restricting their range and yielding to a relativistic conception, according to which the meaning and interpretation of rights could vary and their universality would be denied in the name of different cultural, political, social and even religious outlooks". These reflections do not apply solely to human rights. They apply to every intervention by the legitimate authority called to regulate the life of the community in accordance with true justice by means of legislation that is not the result of a mere conventional agreement but aims at the authentic good of the person and of society and hence refers to this natural law.
Now, expounding on the reality of natural law, the International Theological Commission describes precisely how truth and love are essential requirements of every person and are deeply rooted in his being. "In his search for moral good, the human person should recognize what he is and be aware of the fundamental inclinations of his nature" [6], which orient him toward the goods necessary for his moral fulfilment. As is well known, "a distinction has traditionally been made between three important forms of natural dynamism.... The first, in common with every essential being, is comprised of the fundamental instinct to preserve and develop one's own existence. The second, which is shared by all living beings, includes the inclination to reproduce in order to perpetuate the species. The third, which is proper to man as a rational being, constitutes the inclination to know the truth about God and to live in society" [7]. Examining in depth this third form of dynamism which is found in every individual, the International Theological Commission declares that it is "specific to the human being as a spiritual being, endowed with reason, capable of knowing the truth, of entering into dialogue with others and of forming social relationships.... His integral well-being is thus closely linked to community life, which is organized in a political society by virtue of a natural inclination and not a mere convention. The person's relational character is also expressed in his tendency to live in communion with God or the Absolute....
Of course, it may be denied by those who refuse to admit the existence of a personal God, but it remains implicitly present in the search for truth and for meaning that is present in every human being" [8].
Man, therefore, through the "breadth of reason" [9], is made to know the truth in its full depth by "broadening [his] concept of reason", in other words, not limiting himself to acquiring technical knowledge in order to dominate material reality but rather opening himself to the very encounter with the Transcendent and to living fully the interpersonal dimension of love, "the principle not only of micro-relationships (with friends, with family members or within small groups) but also of macro-relationships (social, economic and political ones)" [10]. "Veritas" and "caritas" themselves point out to us the requirements of the natural law which Benedict XVI places as a fundamental criterion for moral reflection on the current socio-economic reality: "'Caritas in veritate' is the principle around which the Church's social doctrine turns, a principle that takes on practical form in the criteria that govern moral action" [11].
Using a cogent expression, the Holy Father thus affirms that "the Church's social teaching... is "caritas in veritate in re sociali": the proclamation of the truth of Christ's love in society. This doctrine is a service to charity, but its locus is truth" [12].
What the Encyclical suggests is neither ideological nor exclusively reserved to those who share belief in the divine Revelation. Rather, it is based on fundamental anthropological realities such as, precisely, truth and charity properly understood or, as the Encyclical itself says, given to the human being and received by him, but neither planned nor willed by him [13]. Benedict XVI wants to remind everyone that it is only by being anchored to this double criterion of "veritas" and "caritas", inseparably bound together, that it is possible to build the authentic good of the human being who is made for truth and love. According to the Holy Father, "only in charity, illumined by the light of reason and faith, is it possible to pursue development goals that possess a more humane and humanizing value" [14].
After this indispensable introduction, of which I have chosen to highlight some of the anthropological and theological aspects of the Papal text that may have attracted fewer comments from journalists, I would now like to explain just a few points, without claiming to cover the vast content of the Encyclical. Moreover, authoritative commentators have already published specific reflections on it in L'Osservatore Romano and elsewhere.
An important message that comes to us from Caritas in veritate is the invitation to supersede the now obsolete dichotomy between the financial sphere and the social sphere. Modernity has bequeathed to us the idea on the basis of which, if we are to be able to operate in the field of the economy, it is essential to achieve a profit and to be motivated chiefly by self-interest; as if to say that if we do not seek the highest profit we are not proper entrepreneurs. Should this not be the case, we must be content with belonging to the social sphere.
This conceptualization, that confuses the market economy that is the genus with its own particular species which is the capitalist system, has led to identifying the economy with the place where wealth or income is generated, and society with the place of solidarity for its fair distribution.
Caritas in veritate tells us instead that it is also possible to do business by pursuing aims that serve society and are inspired by pro-social motives. This is a practical way, if not the only one, of bridging the gap between the economic and the social spheres, given that an economic activity which did not incorporate the social dimension would not be ethically acceptable. It is likewise true that a social policy concerned only with redistribution, that failed to reckon with the available resources, would not be sustainable in the long run: in fact, production must precede distribution.
We should be particularly grateful to Benedict XVI for wishing to emphasize the fact that economic action is not separate from or alien to the cornerstones of the Church's social teaching such as: the centrality of the human person, solidarity, subsidariety, the common good.
It is necessary to supersede the current concept which expects the Church's social teaching and values to be confined to social activities, while experts in efficiency would be charged with guiding the economy. It is the merit and certainly not a secondary one of this Encyclical to contribute to remedying this gap which is both cultural and political.
Contrary to what people think, efficiency is not the fundamentum divisionis for distinguishing between what is business and what is not, for the simple reason that "efficiency" is a category that belongs to the order of means and not of ends. Indeed, efficiency is indispensable in order to achieve as well as possible the purpose one has freely chosen to give one's action. The entrepreneur who gives priority to efficiency that is an end in itself risks being caught by one of the most frequent causes of the destruction of wealth today, as the current economic and financial crisis sadly confirms.
To expand briefly on this theme, to say "market" means saying "competition", in the sense that the market cannot exist where there is no competition (even if the opposite is not true). And there is no one who can fail to see that the fruitfulness of competition lies in the fact that it implies tension, the dialectic that presupposes the presence of another and the relationship with another. Without tension there is no movement, but the movement this is the point to which tension gives rise can also be fatal; in other words it can generate death.
If the purpose of economic action is not synonymous with striving for a common goal as the Latin etymology "cum-petere" would clearly indicate but rather with Hobbes' theory, "mors tua, vita mea" [your death is my life], then the social bond is reduced to commercial relations and economic activity tends to become inhuman, hence ultimately inefficient. Therefore, even in competition, "the Church's social doctrine holds that authentically human social relationships of friendship, solidarity and reciprocity can also be conducted within economic activity, and not only outside it or "after" it. The economic sphere is neither ethically neutral, nor inherently inhuman and opposed to society. It is part and parcel of human activity and precisely because it is human, it must be structured and governed in an ethical manner" [15].
Well, the advantage by no means small that Caritas in veritate offers us is to give special consideration to the concept of market, typical of the tradition of the thought of civil economics, according to which it is possible to live the experience of human sociality within a normal economic life and not outside or beside it. This concept might be defined as an alternative, both regarding the concept that sees the market as a place for the exploitation and abuse of the weak by the strong, and the concept which, in line with anarchic-liberalistic thought, sees it as a place that can provide solutions to all the problems of society.
This way of doing business is differentiated from that of the traditional Smithian economy, which sees the market as the only institution truly necessary for democracy and freedom. The Church's social doctrine, on the other hand, reminds us that a sound society is certainly the product of the market and of freedom, but there are needs that stem from the principle of brotherhood that can neither be avoided nor be referred solely to the private sphere or to philanthropy. Rather, the Church's social doctrine proposes a humanism with various dimensions, in which the market is not combated or "controlled" but is seen as an important institution in the public sphere a sphere which far exceeds State control which, if it is conceived of and lived as a place that is also open to the principles of reciprocity and of giving, can construct a healthy civil coexistence.
I shall now examine one of the themes in the Encyclical which seems to me to have attracted some public interest because of the newness of the principles of brotherhood and free giving in economic activity. "Social and political development, if it is to be authentically human", Pope Benedict XVI says, needs "to make room for the principle of gratuitousness" [16]. "Internal forms of solidarity" are essential. The chapter on the cooperation of the human family is significant in this regard. In it the Pope stresses that "the development of peoples depends, above all, on a recognition that the human race is a single family", which is why "thinking of this kind requires a deeper critical evaluation of the category of relation". And further: "The theme of development can be identified with the inclusion-in-relation of all individuals and peoples within the one community of the human family, built in solidarity on the basis of the fundamental values of justice and peace" [17].
The key word that today expresses this need better than any other is "brotherhood". It was the Franciscan school of thought that gave this term the meaning it has retained over the course of time and that constitutes the complement and exaltation of the principle of solidarity. In fact, whereas solidarity is the principle of social organization that permits those who are unequal to become equal through their equal dignity and their fundamental rights, the principle of brotherhood is that principle of social organization which permits equals to be different, in the sense that they are able to express their plan of life or their charism in different ways.
Let me explain more clearly. The periods we have left behind us, the 19th century and especially the 20th century, were marked by great battles both cultural and political in the name of solidarity. This was a good thing; only think of the history of the trade union movement and of the fight to obtain civil rights. The point is that a society oriented to the common good cannot stop at solidarity because it needs a solidarity that reflects brotherhood, given that while a fraternal society also shows solidarity, the opposite is not necessarily true.
If one overlooks the unsustainability of a human society in which the sense of brotherhood is lacking and in which everything revolves around improving transactions based on the exchange of equivalents or to increasing transfers actuated by public structures for social assistance it then becomes clear why, in spite of the quality of the intellectual forces at work, we have not yet found a credible solution to the great trade-off between efficiency and equity. Caritas in veritate helps us to realize that society can have no future if the principle of brotherhood is lost. In other words, society cannot progress if the logic of "giving in order to have" or of "giving as a duty" is the only one that exists and develops. This is why neither the liberal-individualistic vision of the world, in which (almost) everything is exchange, nor the State-centred vision of society, in which (almost) everything is based on obligation, are reliable guides to lead us out of the shallows in which our societies today have run aground.
Then we ask ourselves the question: why is the perspective of the common good as it has been formulated by the Church's social doctrine, which was banished from the scene for at least two centuries, re-emerging like an underground river? Why is the transition from national markets to the global market that has taken place over the last 25 years rendering the topic of the common good timely once again? I note in passing that what is occurring is part of a broader movement of ideas in economics, a movement whose goal is the link between a religious sense and economic performance. On the basis of the consideration that religious beliefs are of crucial importance in forging people's cognitive maps and in shaping the social norms of behaviour, this movement of ideas is seeking to investigate how far the prevalence in a specific country (or territory) of a certain religious matrix influences the formation of categories of economic thought, welfare programmes, educational policies and so forth. After a long period, during which the celebrated theses of secularization appeared to have had the last word on the religious question at least insofar as the economic field is concerned what is happening today appears truly paradoxical.
It is not difficult to explain the return to the contemporary cultural debate in the perspective of the common good, a true and proper symbol of Catholic ethics in the social and economic field. As John Paul ii explained on many occasions, the Church's social teaching should not be considered as yet another ethical theory as regards the numerous theories already available in literature. Instead it should be seen as their "common grammar", since it is based on a specific viewpoint, the preservation of the human good. In truth, while the various ethical theories are rooted either in the search for rules (as happens in the positivist doctrine of natural law), or in action (as in Rawls' neo-contractualism or neo-utilitarianism), the social doctrine of the Church embraces "being with" as its Archimedean point. The ethical sense of the common good explains that in order to understand human action we must see it from the perspective of the acting person [18] and not from the viewpoint of the third person (as does natural law) or of the impartial spectator (as Adam Smith had suggested). In fact since the moral good is a practical reality, it is known first and foremost by those who practise it rather than by those who theorize about it. They can identify it and hence choose it unhesitatingly every time it is questioned.
Next, let us speak of the principle of free giving in the economy. What would be the practical consequence of applying the principle of free giving in economic activity? Pope Benedict XVI replies that the market and politics need "individuals who are open to reciprocal gift" [19]. The consequence of acknowledging that the principle of gratuitousness has a priority place in economic life has to do with the dissemination of culture and of the practice of reciprocity.
Together with democracy, reciprocity defined by Benedict XVI as "the heart of what it is to be a human being" [20] is a founding value of a society. Indeed, it could also be maintained that democratic rule draws its ultimate meaning from reciprocity.
In what "places" is reciprocity at home? In other words, where is it practised and nourished? The family is the first of these places: only think of the relationships between parents and children and between siblings. It is in the context of one's family that the relationship characteristic of brotherhood and based on giving develops. Then there are the cooperative, the social enterprise and associations in their various forms. Is it not true that the relationship between family members or the members of a cooperative are relations of reciprocity? Today we know that a country's civil and economic progress depends fundamentally on the extent to which reciprocity is practised by its citizens. Today there is an immense need for cooperation: this is why we need to extend the forms of free giving and to reinforce those that already exist. Societies that uproot the tree of reciprocity from their land are destined to decline, as history has been teaching us for years.
What is the proper role of the gift? It is to make people understand that beside the goods of justice are the goods of gratuitousness and, consequently, that the society whose members are content with the goods of justice alone is not authentically human. The Pope speaks of "the astonishing experience of gift" [21].
What is the difference? The goods of justice are those that derive from a duty. The goods of giving freely are those that are born from an obbligatio. That is, they are goods born from the recognition that I am bound to another and that, in a certain sense he is a constitutive part of me. This is why the logic of gratuitousness cannot be simplistically reduced to a purely ethical dimension. Indeed, gratuitousness is not an ethical virtue. Justice, as Plato formerly taught, is an ethical virtue, and we are all in agreement as to the importance of justice; but gratuitousness concerns rather the supra-ethical dimension of human action because its logic is superabundance, whereas the logic of justice is the logic of equivalence. Well, Caritas in veritate tells us that to function well and to progress, a society needs to have in its economic praxis people who understand what the goods of gratuitousness entail, in other words, who understand that we must let the principle of gratuitousness circulate anew in the channels of our society.
Benedict XVI asks us to restore the principle of gift to the public sphere. The authentic gift affirming the primacy of relationship over its reciprocation, of the inter-subjective bond over the good that is given, of personal identity over assets must find room for expression everywhere, in every context of human action, including the economy. The message that Caritas in veritate offers us is to think of gratuitousness hence brotherhood as a symbol of the human condition and thus to see the practice of giving as the indispensable prerequisite for the State and the market to function, with the common good as their goal. Without the widespread practice of giving, it would still be possible to have an efficient market and an authoritative (and even just) State, but people would certainly not be helped to achieve joie de vivre. Because, even if efficiency and justice are combined, they are not enough to guarantee people's happiness.
In Caritas in veritate Pope Benedict XVI reflects on the profound (and not on the immediate) causes of the current crisis. It is not my intention to review them and I shall limit myself to summing up the three principal factors of the crisis, identified and examined.
The first concerns the radical change in the relationship between finance and the production of goods and services which has gradually been consolidated in the past 30 years. From the mid-1970s various Western countries have based their promises of pension funds on investments that depended on the sustainable profitability of the new financial instruments, thereby exposing the real economy to the caprices of finance and generating the growing need to earmark value-added quotas to the remuneration of savings invested in these. The pressure on businesses deriving from stock exchanges and private equity funds have had repercussions in various directions: on directors, obliged to continuously improve the performance of their management in order to receive a growing number of stock options; on consumers, to convince them to buy more and more, even in the absence of purchasing power; on businesses of the real economy to convince them to increase the value for the shareholder.
And so it was that the persistent demand for increasingly brilliant financial results had repercussions on the entire economic system, to the point that it became a true and proper cultural model.
The second factor that contributed to causing the crisis was the dissemination in popular culture of the ethos of efficiency as the ultimate criterion of judgement and the justification of the financial reality. On the one hand, this ended by legitimizing greed which is the best known and most widespread form of avarice as a sort of civic virtue: the greed market that replaces the free market. "Greed is good, greed is right", preached Gordon Gekko, who starred in Wall Street, the famous 1987 film.
Lastly, in Caritas in veritate the Pope does not omit to reflect on the cause of the causes of the crisis: the specificity of the cultural matrix that was consolidated in recent decades on the wave of the globalization process on the one hand, and on the other, with the advent of the third industrial revolution, the revolution of information technology. One specific aspect of this matrix concerns the ever more widespread dissatisfaction with the way of interpreting the principle of freedom. As is well known, there are three constitutive dimensions of freedom: autonomy, immunity, and empowerment.
Autonomy means freedom of choice: one is not free unless one is in a position to choose. Immunity, on the other hand, means the absence of coercion by some external agent. It is substantially negative freedom (in other words it is "freedom from"). Lastly, empowerment (literally: the capacity for action) means the capacity to choose, that is, for achieving the objectives, at least in part or to some extent, that the person has set himself. One is not free even if one succeeds (even only partially) in realizing one's plan of life.
As can be understood, the challenge is to bring together all three dimensions of freedom: this is the reason why the paradigm of the common good appears as a particularly interesting perspective to explore.
In the light of what has been said above, we can understand why the financial crisis cannot claim to be an unexpected or inexplicable event. This is why, without taking anything from the indispensable interventions in a regulatory key or from the necessary new forms of control, we shall not succeed in preventing similar episodes from arising in the future unless the evil is attacked at the root, or in other words, unless we intervene by dealing with the cultural matrix that supports the economic system. This crisis sends a double message to the Government authorities. In the first place, that the sacrosanct criticism of the "intervening State" can in no way ignore the central role of the "regulatory State". Secondly, that the public authorities at different levels of government, must allow, indeed enhance, the emergence and reinforcement of a pluralist financial market. A market, in other words, should allow different people to work in conditions of objective parity to achieve the specific aim they have set themselves. I am thinking of the regional banks, of cooperative credit banks, ethical banks, of various ethical foundations. These are bodies that not only propose creative finance to their branches but above all play a complementary, hence balancing, role with regard to the agents of speculative finance. If in recent decades the financial authorities had removed the many restrictions that burden agents in alternative finance, today's crisis would not have had the devastating power that we are experiencing.
Before concluding, I would like to thank Hon. Mr Renato Schifani, President of the Senate of the Italian Republic, for permitting me to explain to this qualified audience several features of Benedict XVI's latest Encyclical.
In a certain way it is as if today the Holy Father were returning to the Headquarters of the Senate of the Republic, where, in the Library of the Senate on 13 May 2004, the then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger gave an unforgettable "lectio magistralis" on the theme: "Europe. Its spiritual foundations yesterday, today and tomorrow".
It is interesting to note how, in that discourse, among other things the future Pontiff touched on certain topics that we rediscover today in his most recent Encyclical. Let us think, for example, of the affirmation of the profound reason for the dignity of the person and of his rights: "they are not created by the legislator", the then- Cardinal Ratzinger said, "nor are they conferred upon citizens, "but rather they exist through their own law, they are always to be respected by the legislator, they are given to him in advance as values of a superior order". This validity of human dignity prior to any political action and any political decision refers ultimately to the Creator; he alone can establish values that are based on the essence of the human being and are intangible. That there are values that cannot be manipulated by anyone is the true and proper guarantee of our freedom and of human greatness; the Christian faith sees in this the mystery of the Creator and of the condition of the image of God who has conferred them on man". In Caritas in veritate Benedict XVI repeats that "human rights risk being ignored" when "they are robbed of their transcendent foundation" [22], that is, when people forget that "God is the guarantor of man's true development, inasmuch as, having created him in his image, he also established the transcendent dignity of men and women" [23].
Further, in the "lectio magistralis" given five years ago, the current Pontiff recalled that "a second point in which the European identity appears is marriage and the family. Monogamic marriage, as a fundamental structure of the relationship between a man and a woman and at the same time as a cell in the formation of the State community, was forged on the basis of biblical faith. It has given its special features and its special humanity to Western and Eastern Europe, also and precisely because the form of fidelity and renunciation outlined here must always be acquired anew, with great effort and much suffering.
Europe would no longer be Europe if this fundamental cell of its social edifice were to disappear or to be essentially altered". In Caritas in veritate this warning is extended until it becomes universal, we might say global, and reaches all who are responsible for public life; we read in it, in fact: "It is thus becoming a social and even economic necessity once more to hold up to future generations the beauty of marriage and the family, and the fact that these institutions correspond to the deepest needs and dignity of the person. In view of this, States are called to enact policies promoting the centrality and the integrity of the family founded on marriage between a man and a woman, the primary vital cell of society, and to assume responsibility for its economic and fiscal needs, while respecting its essentially relational character" [24].
Of course, Caritas in veritate is addressed, as it says in its official title, to all the members of the Catholic Church and to "all people of good will". Yet, because of the principles it illumines, the problems it tackles and the guidelines it offers, it seems to me that this Papal Document which gave rise to so many expectations beforehand and then to so much attention and appreciation, especially in the social, political and economic contexts can find a special echo in this institutional Headquarters of the Senate of the Republic. I am convinced that, over and above differences in training and in personal conviction, those who have the delicate and honourable responsibility of representing the Italian people and of exercising legislative power during their mandate, may find in the Pope's words a lofty and profound inspiration for carrying out their mission so as to respond adequately to the ethical, cultural and social challenges which call us into question today and which, with great lucidity and completeness, the Encyclical Caritas in veritate sets before us. My hope is that this document of the ecclesial Magisterium which I have endeavoured to describe to you today, at least in part, may find here the attention it deserves and thus bear positive and abundant fruit for the good of every person and of the entire human family, starting with the beloved Italian Nation.
--- --- ---
Notes
[1] Caritas in veritate, n. 1
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid., n. 3.
[4] "Truth is the light that gives meaning and value to charity. That light is both the light of reason and the light of faith, through which the intellect attains to the natural and supernatural truth of charity" (ibid.).
[5] Discourse to the General Assembly of the United Nations Organization, 18 April 2008.
[6] The Search for Universal Ethics: A New Look at Natural Law, n. 45.
[7] Ibid., n. 46.
[8] Ibid., n. 50.
[9] Discourse to the University of Regensburg, 12 September 2006.
[10] Caritas in Veritate, n. 2
[11] Ibid., n. 6.
[12] Ibid., n. 5.
[13] "Truth which is itself a gift, in the same way as charity is greater than we are, as St Augustine teaches. Likewise the truth of ourselves, of our personal conscience, is first of all given to us. In every cognitive process, truth is not something that we produce, it is always found, or better, received. Truth, like love, 'is neither planned nor willed, but somehow imposes itself upon human beings'" (Caritas in Veritate, n. 34).
[14] Ibid., n. 9.
[15] Ibid., n. 36.
[16] Ibid., n. 34.
[17] Ibid., nn. 53-54.
[18] Cf. Veritatis Splendor, n. 78.
[19] Cf. ibid., nn. 35-39.
[20] Ibid., n. 57.
[21] Ibid., n. 34.
[22] Ibid., n. 56.
[23] Ibid., n. 29.
[24] Ibid., n. 44.
Source: www.zenit.org

Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les photos les plus intressantes du jour!

#1457 From: Richard C ofs <richard372000@...>
Date: Fri Aug 21, 2009 5:56 pm
Subject: Sri Lankan Amputee Meets Pope
richard372000
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

Sri Lankan Amputee Meets Pope

Receives Prosthetic Limbs Through Solidarity Campaign

CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, AUG. 19, 2009 (Zenit.org).- An 18-year-old Sri Lankan youth who lost his arms and legs had a wish come true today as he met and spoke personally with Benedict XVI.

Rajiv Janine, whose limbs were amputated after a rail accident, was able to meet with the Pope after the general audience at the Pontiff's summer residence of Castel Gandolfo.

Janine told the Holy Father his story, and asked for a blessing on himself and his brother, who will soon be ordained a priest, and his sister, who is a religious in the Philippines. Another sister was with him to assist him on the trip to Italy.

The youth stood with prosthetic limbs, bought with money raised by a solidarity campaign in Italy, L'Osservatore Romano reported.

The Vatican newspaper reported that this campaign was initiated by an Italian priest, Father Giuseppe Iasso, pastor in Mercogliano, in the Avellino province of Southern Italy.

For 25 years he has been promoting initiatives like this to help the needy in Sri Lanka.

Father Iasso told the newspaper that over the years they have been working in two villages to advance interreligious dialogue among the Buddhists, Hindus and Muslims.

He noted that they have been collaborating closely with the civil and religious authorities in supporting schools and hospitals in the area.

Exceptional generosity

The priest affirmed that these projects have been made possible thanks to many Italians whose generosity "reached exceptional levels" after the tsunami that struck Sri Lanka in 2004.

He stated that the money for Janine had been collected by sending letters and knocking on the doors of parishes and families.

In the end, Father Iasso reported, an amount of 40,000 euro [$57,000] was gathered, from many benefactors, including children who emptied their banks and one elderly woman in a wheelchair who gave up her life savings.

After this successful campaign, the priest wrote to the Pontiff in order to tell him about Janine.

"I opened my priestly heart to the Pope," Father Iasso said, and Benedict XVI expressed the desire to receive this youth personally "in order to encourage him."

The priest concluded, "The testimony of Rajiv, with his serenity in spite of the pain and disability, is an invitation for all who suffer to not be discouraged and to never lose hope."



Paix et joie, Richard ofs
 

 
 


Dcouvrez les photos les plus intressantes du jour!

Messages 1457 - 1486 of 1486   Newest  |  < Newer  |  Older >  |  Oldest
Advanced
Add to My Yahoo!      XML What's This?

Copyright 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help