Sunday, November 25, 2007

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Cardinals Meet with Pope on Ecumenism

Posted:

Sat Nov 24, 2007 4:36 pm (GMT -5)
Cardinals Say Meeting with Pope Shows His Emphasis on Christian Unity


By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
November 24, 2007

Link to Original

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The importance Pope Benedict XVI places on the search for Christian unity was evident in his decision to focus on ecumenism during a Nov. 23 meeting with members of the College of Cardinals, said two U.S. cardinals.

Cardinal William H. Keeler, the retired archbishop of Baltimore who has been involved in ecumenical and interfaith activities for years, said the fact that the pope chose ecumenism as the theme for the meeting shows "that this is a very vital thing for the church worldwide."

Cardinal Keeler, who was one of 33 cardinals to speak during the meeting, told Catholic News Service the discussion demonstrated that there are different experiences and levels of ecumenical dialogue.

"Different ecumenical forms have evolved in different parts of the world, and the progress in each region is different," he said.

"For the pope, ecumenism is not a subject for discussion, but a mandate," German Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and the main speaker chosen by the pope to address the meeting, told journalists afterward.

The meeting brought together 120 cardinals and the 23 men Pope Benedict inducted into the College of Cardinals the following day. Sixteen prelates from the U.S., including the two to be inducted, participated; Cardinal Adam J. Maida of Detroit was ill and did not come to Rome.

While the discussion about ecumenism was planned for only the morning session, the Vatican said so many cardinals asked to comment on the topic that the discussion extended into the evening session.

The Vatican said that "collaboration among Christians of different confessions for the defense of the family in society and in the juridical order," the importance of prayers for Christian unity and the central role of friendships for promoting ecumenism were among the points raised.

Cardinal Roger M. Mahony of Los Angeles told CNS: "A big part of any dialogue is the personal relationship. We are not going to bring about Christian unity through theology, but through our personal relationships with Jesus Christ and with each other. That is what we will build unity on."

In the area of dialogue, the cardinals also spoke about relations with the Jewish community and with Muslims, the Vatican said.

The cardinals discussed "the encouraging sign represented by the letter of the 138 Muslim scholars," who wrote in October to Pope Benedict and other Christian leaders proposing a dialogue based on a common belief in one God, in God's love for humanity and in the obligation to love one another, the Vatican said.

Cardinal Mahony said the cardinals did not make recommendations on how the pope should respond to the letter, but rather spoke about "the next step," which is likely to be "an invitation to open a new level of dialogue" with Muslim leaders.

At the end of the evening session, Pope Benedict summarized what he had heard "and announced the upcoming publication of his new encyclical dedicated to hope," a virtue that needs to be emphasized in the modern world "in response to the deepest expectations of our contemporaries," the Vatican said.

In his formal presentation, released by the Vatican, Cardinal Kasper told the cardinals that the overall status of ecumenism highlighted "the action of divine providence, which leads separated Christians toward unity in order to make their witness an increasingly clear sign before the world."

Still, the cardinal said, looking at all the ecumenical dialogues under way there is a sense of "fragmentation and centrifugal forces at work" with progress coming in some areas and differences deepening in others.

"While on one hand we work to overcome old controversies, on the other hand there emerge new differences in the field of ethics," particularly regarding human life, the family and homosexuality, Cardinal Kasper said.

While differences on moral questions are pushing Catholics and some Anglican and mainline Protestant communities further apart, they also are providing new terrain for improved relations with some evangelical and Pentecostal communities, he said.

Taken together, the charismatic and Pentecostal groups have an estimated 400 million members around the world and, among Christian communities, are second in size only to the Catholic community, Cardinal Kasper said.

Some of the communities are open to dialogue with the Catholic Church, he said, while others are hostile to Catholicism and aggressive in trying to win Catholic members.

The Pentecostals, he said, are responding to a desire among modern men and women for a strong spiritual experience.

Rather than talk about what is wrong with the Pentecostals, "it is necessary to make a pastoral examination of conscience and ask ourselves in a self-critical way why so many Christians are leaving our church," Cardinal Kasper said.

He told the other cardinals that in any ecumenical endeavor, dialogue makes sense only if it is based on a solid faith and a common search for truth.

"We must not offend the sensitivity of others or discredit them; we must not point the finger at that which our ecumenical partners are not or at what they do not have," he said. "Rather, we must witness to the richness and beauty of our faith in a positive and welcoming way."

But most of all, Cardinal Kasper said, Christians must realize that unity is a work of the Holy Spirit and will be a gift from God.

Duplessis Orphans want an apology from Cardinal Ouellet

Posted:

Sat Nov 24, 2007 3:53 pm (GMT -5)

Surprised by reactions, cardinal insists apology was an 'act of peace'

Last Updated: Thursday, November 22, 2007 | 4:06 PM ET
CBC News

Cardinal Marc Ouellet said he's a bit stunned by the negative reaction to his public apology for the Catholic Church's past "errors," but he said he stands by his mea culpa, which he called the "first step in a journey."

The archbishop's open letter of apology, published in Quebec francophone newspapers Wednesday, set off a storm of criticism from gay groups to women's organizations, who downplayed the act of contrition.

Even elected politicians reacted politely to the cardinal's words of remorse, with Quebec Finance Minister Monique Jérôme-Forget reminding that sorry doesn't change the past.

Speaking from Rome on Thursday, Ouellet insisted his gesture was made in the hopes of launching a new dialogue with lapsed Quebec Catholics.

"I am aware that some people are not satisfied with what I did, or maybe they criticize what I did," he told CBC News. "But it is a first step in a journey of dialogue in order to understand each other better. "

In his letter, Ouellet seeks forgiveness for the church's darkest deeds committed prior to 1960, including sexual abuse by priests, discrimination against women and homosexuals, and attitudes toward First Nations.

But he didn't name the Duplessis Orphans in the letter, an omission that was nothing else but a snub, according to a spokesman for the group.

The Duplessis Orphans, a group of Quebecers who were systemically abused in Roman Catholic institutions in the 1940s and 1950s, have long sought an apology from the church.

Ouellet said his open letter wasn't the right forum to address their concerns.

"I did not want to include them because I covered a lot of ground, and you saw the reactions," the cardinal said in a French portion of his interview.

"I didn't want to touch that question. I think we have enough material to reflect upon and talk about."

The open letter is an "act of peace," he said. "If we want to reconcile, and go further, we need to remove obstacles, and we need to beg for pardon."

Video story:
http://www.cbc.ca/clips/rm-hi/halton-cardinal-071122.rm


demographic_crash wrote:
Reese wrote:
How odd that this Cardinal would apologize for things that were not done wrong at all, and bypasses the one thing they did do wrong here. As I understand it, Catholic orphanages here were prone to abuse of its charges in the province of Quebec...


No cardinal has apologized yet for the Duplessis Orphans

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplessis_Orphans

Quote:
Beginning in the 1940s and continuing into the 1960s, Quebec Premier Maurice Duplessis in cooperation with the Roman Catholic Church which ran the orphanages, developed a scheme to obtain Federal funding for thousands of children, most of whom had been orphaned through their abandonment by an unwed mother. In some cases the Catholic orphanages were relabelled as health-care facilities and in other cases the children were shipped from orphanages to existing insane asylums...


http://www.roymaj.com/english/pages/sectionphoto/orphelin02.html


More videos in this story:

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20071121/archbishop_quebec_071121/20071121?hub=CTVNewsAt11
_________________
http://www.geocities.com/demographic_crash

A Radical Solution to Vocation Crisis: TRADITION

Posted:

Sat Nov 24, 2007 1:06 pm (GMT -5)
Here is a most interesting article about the exploding grown of traditional orders:

http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/features_opinion/features_1.html


The return of the tonsure, wimple and soutane
With the quiet support of the Pope, France is seeing an explosion of traditional religious communities...