The Year of Faith is an Invitation to Encounter the Risen Christ Anew and Become Missionaries
Benedict. Some, pining for the past, will watch for what they hope will be a return to some perceived pre-conciliar "purity." Others will try to squeeze the clarity of his commitment to the dignity and sanctity of every human life, his unwavering insistence on the unchangeable truth concerning marriage and family, and his love for human freedom into their particular political mold.
"However, he will not fit any political mold. He will not lead the Church backwards but rather forward to a future of hope and into a true and desperately needed reform. Under his leadership we will see new forms of Christian life and community emerging in an analogous way to what happened to the world at the time of St. Benedict."
"From those Benedictine monasteries, an entire monastic movement was birthed which led to the evangelization of Europe and the emergence of an authentically Christian culture. This led to the birth and flourishing of the academy, the arts and the emergence of what later became known as Christendom. One of the greatest hopes of Pope John Paul II, and of Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger- now Pope Benedict, was for Europe to rediscover her Christian roots as it did at the time of St Benedict. Now we have "another Benedict" to lead the recovery and reform."
I continued "Pope Benedict XVI will surprise many, particularly in the area of ecumenism, reaching to heal the divide between eastern and western Christianity so that the "two lungs" of the full Christian Church can breathe together again and animate the entire Church so that she can become again the soul of the world."
"We will witness the beginnings of the coming full communion of the Church during his pontificate. We will witness the recovery of the authentically Catholic academy through the rebuilding of some institutions almost lost to the Church and the building of new ones. We will see the flourishing of good, solid theological and philosophical work alongside of a flourishing of the arts and human culture, led by the Church, as it has been in ages past. He will be like his namesake and help to bring the Christian influence back to Europe and beyond."
I believe this has already resulted from the extraordinary Pontificate of Pope Benedict XVI. He turned 85 years old on April 16, 2012. Some early observers indicated his age would make him some sort of caretaker Pope. His pace has demonstrated those observers were wrong. He has proven to be an indefatigable and tireless missionary of a Pope. He has continued the pastoral visits of his predecessor, Blessed John Paul II, with amazingly fruitful travels around the world. The youth of the world still flock to World Youth days and his genuine love for them - and they for him - is evident. He has pastorally and decisively dealt with serious matters concerning the need for a purification of the Church.
He is exactly what he told us when he was when began his service, a "simple, humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord." Clearly, to this successor of Peter; it is not about him, but about the Lord whom he serves. His diminutive size and humble manner reveal the holy heart of a man totally given over to the Lord. His encyclicals, apostolic exhortations and books show that he is a teacher and scholar of the highest order, yet able to communicate with simplicity and beauty because he is a man of deep prayer. He has given continual teaching to the faithful - including some of the finest hagiography in centuries - during his Wednesday Catechesis.
He made Church history when, on his own authority, he released of the Apostolic Constitution on Groups of Anglicans which has begun the healing of the divided Western Church. The fruits of these Ordinariates will be recounted by future historians as among the most important events in the Third Millennium of the Church. He has earned the great respect of Patriarchs and leaders of the Orthodox Church and is making progress toward some form of communion between Eastern and Western Christianity.
He has championed the rechristianizing of Europe and passionately promoted the New Evangelization of the Church - even establishing a new Pontifical Council on the New Evangelization. He has been a champion of the New Ecclesial movements and helped to ensure that they are rooted in the heart of the Church and received as gift for the missionary work of the Church in this hour.
He has doggedly defended the Christian roots of the West and religious freedom as a fundamental human right. He has courageously engaged the Islamic world on the ground of a dialogue in truth. He began the "Courts of the Gentiles" outreach engaging atheists and agnostics. Clearly, this is a missionary Pope. And, it looks like he is just getting warmed up. Indeed, another Benedict is here, and the Church is truly blessed to have him at the helm of the Barque of Peter as she sails into the Third Christian Millennium.
The Year of Faith is an invitation to each one of us to encounter anew the Risen Lord Jesus, find our home in the heart of His Church and say "yes" to his invitation into the Mission of the Third Millennium of Christianity as loyal sons and daughters of that Church. Let us together, following the successor of Peter, open the door, enter in, and witness the wonders of God anew.
- - -
Pope Benedict XVI's Prayer Intentions for January 2013
General Intention: The Faith of Christians. That in this Year of Faith Christians may deepen their knowledge of the mystery of Christ and witness joyfully to the gift of faith in him.
Missionary Intention: Middle Eastern Christians. That the Christian communities of the Middle East, often discriminated against, may receive from the Holy Spirit the strength of fidelity and perseverance.
Keywords: Year of Faith, Porta Fide, New Evangelization, Missionary, Synod, Bishops, conversion, evangelization, witness, Pope Benedict VI, Deacon Keith Fournier
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Blessed Be GOD in this year of 'FAITH' and FORVER~
I am going to really embrace this call to deepen my faith. I need less politics and more faith.
Along with prayer and studying the Catechism we should be taking time to study the bible. I think a great idea would be to do a bible study for the Year of Faith. Fr. Mitch Pacwa has one. My friends and I are doing the Companion Journal to Teresa Tomeo & Cheryl Dickow’s Wrapped Up: Gods Ten Gifts for Women http://www.teresatomeo.com/Books-And-Media/ because it has great sections about women in the bible and how they followed God's will. We will get out of the Year of Faith what we put into it.
Indeed Pope Benedict XVI is a holy man and a great teacher. We will have to wait for history to determine the meaning of his pontificate. Your comments about the Pope are mostly focused on Europe and the United States. It is good to remember that half the world is in Asia. The mission of the Catholic Church in Asia has not succeeded. Asians for the most part consider the Catholic Faith a religion of the West. This despite the fact that Jesus was Asian. The Catholic Church is not limited to the Western ways upon which it was founded. Pope Benedict XVI wrote in the Apostolic Exhortation the Church in Asia:
"Following the lead of the Second Vatican Council, the Synod Fathers drew attention to the multiple and diversified action of the Holy Spirit who continually sows the seeds of truth among all peoples, their religions, cultures and philosophies. This means that these religions, cultures and philosophies are capable of helping people, individually and collectively, to work against evil and to serve life and everything that is good. The forces of death isolate people, societies and religious communities from one another, and generate the suspicion and rivalry that lead to conflict. The Holy Spirit, by contrast, sustains people in their search for mutual understanding and acceptance. The Synod was therefore right to see the Spirit of God as the prime agent of the Church's dialogue with all peoples, cultures and religions."
We would all do well not only to dialogue with all peoples, cultures and religions, but also with one another to discover with the help of the Holy Spirit the ecclesial communion necessary for effective witness to the truth of Jesus Christ.
Christ anew is man renew, by every generation in the continuation unbroken, like to the words of Joshua in the congregation "As for me & my house we will serve(Worship) God", a commitment of Faith through His generations - The Light of "A Father's word" unto all Fathers.