All posts by Light of Truth

Cardinal Zen Warns Pope Francis; Vatican Directives For Church In China May Lead To “Death Of True Faith”

The bishop emeritus of Hong Kong has spoken out forcefully against the Vatican’s newest “pastoral document” for the Chinese Church which gives reasons for why priests should register with the Communist government.

Joseph Cardinal Zen presented nine criticisms to Pope Francis and Pietro Cardinal Parolin on a recent trip to Rome, on July 1, that outline his concerns about the document.

“A text is signed against the faith and it is stated that the intention is to promote the good of the community, a more suitable evangelization, and the responsible management of Church assets. This general rule is obviously against all fundamental moral theology! If valid, [it] would justify even apostasy!” stated the cardinal in his criticisms which were published on his website on July 5.

“This document has radically turned upside what is normal and what is abnormal, what is rightful and what is pitiable. Those who wrote it hope perhaps that the pitied minority will die a natural death. By this minority I mean not only underground priests, but also the many brothers in the official community who have worked with great tenacity to achieve change, hoping for the support of the Holy See,” he stated later in his criticism of the pastoral document.

Cardinal Zen had been deeply involved in the recent protests that opposed the Chinese state imposition of extradition laws in Hong Kong. Many believe these laws would continue the methodical takeover of the former British colony, now acting as an independent “Special Administrative Region.”

His absence, however, was noted in the recent protests. In his statement, issued the morning of July 5, His Eminence explained what caused him to remain silent.

“On the evening of June 28, he received notice (that) the Holy See (had issued the newest pastoral document for the Church in China). As a bishop and a cardinal, I cannot accept this quietly. I must raise my doubts. It was (for this purpose) that I boarded a plane to Rome on the evening of the 29th.”

Avoid ‘evil spirit’ ritual, Vietnamese Catholics warned

Leaders of Vietnam’s most active archdiocese have urged local Catholics to follow church instructions on worship and avoid deviant ritual practices claimed to caste out evil spirits.

Bishop Joseph Do Manh Hung, apostolic administrator of Ho Chi Minh City Archdiocese in the communist nation’s south, and Auxiliary Bishop Louis Nguyen Anh Tuan, said some local Catholics have adopted unsuitable practices. They warned people against Mother Mary’s Message, a Marian devotion movement launched by a lay man named Thomas Mary Nguyen Thanh Viet. It has been claimed that Mother Mary healed him of illnesses in 2010.

Church official warns lawmakers over Duterte’s death penalty bid

A senior church official has called on Philippine legislators to work for the welfare of the people and not blindly follow what President Rodrigo Duterte wants, which is to bring back the death penalty.

Rodolfo Diamante, executive secretary of the Episcopal Commission on Prison Pastoral Care, urged members of Congress “not to pass measures just to please the president.”

The call was made after the president said during his State of the Nation address on July 22 that he wanted capital punishment reinstated.

Duterte appealed to Congress to reinstate the death penalty for “heinous crimes related to illegal drugs and plunder.”

Diamante appealed to legislators to study whether the death penalty would solve the problem of illegal drugs.

“We urge them to study this thoroughly and determine if it would really address the problems of drug trafficking and plunder,” he said.

Cardinal presents medal to nun for lifetime’s teaching in Pakistan

An Irish nun who has worked tirelessly to educate youngsters in Pakistan has been honoured in Britain.

At the St Mary’s University graduation ceremony at West-minster Cathedral on July 17, Cardinal Vincent Nichols presented the Benedict Medal, the university’s highest honour, to Sister Berchmans Conway in recognition of a lifetime’s teaching and promoting interfaith relations. The cardinal is the arch-bishop of Westminster and chancellor of St Mary’s.

Born in Ireland in 1930, Sister Berchmans joined the Convent of Jesus and Mary in 1951 in Willesden, London, and has spent over 65 years teaching, mostly in Pakistan, where she has taught students of different faiths at the Convents of Jesus and Mary in Lahore, Murree and Karachi.

Among her pupils were Benazir Bhutto, the first female Muslim Prime Minister in the world, and astrophysicist Nergis Mavalvala. Calling Sister Berchmans “a constant inspiration to many generations of teachers and students,” Cardinal Nichols said in his homily that she “is a shining example of all that is to be found at the heart of Catholic education: not a narrow self-interest but a radical openness to our human family.”

US religious freedom envoy insists Vatican-China deal should be made public

Ambassador at Large for Religious Freedom Sam Brown-back said that the Vatican’s agreement with China on the appointment of bishops ought to be made public so that it can be evaluated.

“It certainly seems to me that it’s in everybody’s interest for the agreement to be made public so that people can appraise it and it can be subject to the light of day and people understand what the parameters of it are,” Brown-back told journalists via conference call on July 12.

The deal, reached last Sept-ember, is believed to allow both Chinese officials and the Pope have to say on which bishops are named. However, the details of the agreement have not been made public, a fact that has been widely criticized.

During a visit to Hong Kong in March, Brownback said the deal had set a poor precedent for government interference with other religious communities, including Tibetan Buddhism and other Christian denominations.

Agra Christians to go for ‘one family, one grave’ practice

In a new initiative, the Agra Joint Cemeteries Committee (AJCC) has decided that henceforth one family will be buried in one grave. This decision has been taken in view of the shortage of land for cemeteries at a recent meeting of the AJCC. AJCC Chairman Father Moon Lazurus said that those who attend church services will be informed of the decision soon. The committee takes care of “Goronka  Kabristan” and the “TotakaTaal” graveyard meant for Christians. “We have decided that the graves will now be dug deeper and after the dead body is buried, a slab will be placed on which another body from the same family can be buried.

Former nun joins pro-Hindu teacher’s union

A former nun, working in a Church-managed school in Kerala, has joined the pro-Hindu-leaning National Teachers Union (NTU).

Silimol Sebastian, a teacher at St John’s Nepumsian’s Higher Secondary School, Kozhuvanal, formally took the membership of the union saying she needs the union’s support to fight for her rights.

Silimol left nunnery in August 2016 without making any public announcements for her reasons to leave her religious life.

Pakistani Christian refugee looks to Canada for help after death threats

A plea has been issued for Canada to rescue a Pakistani Christian refugee who is in hiding after a viral video calling on jihadi fighters to kill him swept through Bangkok’s refugee community. The appeal was made to Canada’s ambassador in Bangkok, Donica Pottie, after Australia rejected an emergency asylum appeal from Faraz Pervaiz, a prominent defender of Christian rights. It comes two months after Canada gave asylum to Asia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian woman forced into hiding from Muslim extremists following false accusations of blasphemy.

Pervaiz is a Pakistani Christian refugee who fled to Bangkok after being accused in Pakistan of blasphemy under laws which can result in a death sentence. He has several fatwas against him, calling for him to be killed. His location in Bangkok was revealed in a video released on social media that went viral. Following death threats by phone and text he moved his family to a secret location outside of the city.

The video posted to Facebook, YouTube and several WhatsApp groups called for jihadi fighters to travel to Bangkok and kill Pervaiz. Several mullahs attached “fatwas,” or religious rulings, to the video to endorse killing Pervaiz.

Christians the “most persecuted” religious group

The British government should consider sanctions on countries where Christians are persecuted, according an independent review for the Foreign Secretary.

The report, by the Church of England Bishop of Truro Philip Mounstephen, reco-mmends the UK “be prepared to impose sanctions against perpetrators of Freedom of Religious Belief (FoRB) abuses.”

It also recommends the government explore how social media strategies can promote religious freedom and counter religious hate, and that a standard definition of FoRB be established.

Foreign Secretary Jeremys Hunt said that if he becomes prime minister, he would make sure all the recommendations were acted on.

It is estimated 5 that one third of the world’s population suffers from religious persecution in some form, with Christians constituting “by far the most widely per-secuted religion,” the report says.

Examples include the removal of crosses, the destruction of Church buildings and other Church symbols and the killing and abduction of clergy.

The report details how the eradication of Christians and other 33 minorities on pain of “the sword” or other violent means was revealed to be the stated objective of extremist groups in Syria, Iraq, Egypt, north-east Nigeria and the Philippines.

“The main impact of such genocidal acts against Christians is internal displacement and exodus. Christianity now faces the possibility of being wiped-out in parts of the Middle East where its roots go back furthest. In Palestine, Christian numbers are below 1.5 percent; in Syria the Christian population has declined from 1.7 million in 2011 to below 450,000 and in Iraq, largely through the ‘ethnic 37 cleansing’ of ancient Christian communities from the Nineveh Plains, Christian numbers have slumped from 1.5 million before 2003 to below 120,000 today. Christianity is at risk of disappearing, representing a massive setback for plurality in the region. It is that plurality which has been a key for security and stability in the region for hundreds of years.” Christianity is at existential risk in Iraq and other Middle Eastern countries. Since 2003, over 1 million Christians fled the country, reducing the size of the Christian population by nearly 80%.

Blessed John Henry Newman to be canonized on October 13

The Vatican announced  that Blessed Cardinal John Henry Newman will be canonized on October 13 in Rome.

During a consistory of cardinals on July 1, Pope Francis decreed that New-man and four other blesseds will be canonized together in St Peter’s Square.

Indian Sister Mariam Thresia, founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Family; Italian Sister Giuseppina Vannini; Brazilian Sister Dulce Lopes Pontes, and Mar-guerite Bays, a Swiss consecrated virgin of the Third Order of St Francis will be canonized alongside Newman.

Their canonizations will take place during the 2019 Special Synod of Bishops from the Pan-Amazonian region to be held at the Vatican on Oct. 6-27.

Newman was a 19th century theologian, poet, Catholic priest and cardinal. Originally an Anglican priest, he converted to Catholicism in 1845 and his writings are considered among some of the most important Church-writings in recent centuries.