Pope honours late clergy with parable of 10 bridesmaids

Pope Francis arrives to celebrate a Mass for late cardinals and bishops at St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican on Nov. 3.

For every Christian, but especially for those called to ministry, God’s gift of life is a call to serve others, Pope Francis said at a memorial Mass for bishops and cardinals who have died in the past year.

“The meaning of life is found in our response to God’s offer of love. And that response is made up of true love, self-giving and service,” the Pope said on Nov. 3 during Mass at the Altar of the Chair in St Peter’s Basilica.

The memorial Mass is an annual fixture on the Pope’s calendar for November, the month the church dedicates to remembering the dead.

The Vatican said that over the last 12 months some 154 bishops and nine cardinals, including U.S. Cardinal Bernard F. Law, have passed away.

“As we pray for the cardinals and bishops who have passed away in this last year,” the Pope said in his homily, “let us beg the intercession of all those who lived unassuming lives, content to prepare daily to meet the Lord.” For the gospel reading, he chose the parable of the 10 bridesmaids and their oil lamps from Matthew 25.

Ugandan archbishop asks government to collect taxes for Church

The Catholic archbishop of Kampala has requested the Ugandan government to deduct 10 percent from the salary of all Catholic government workers and forward the funds to the Church

The issue of tithing, namely the financial contribution of a tenth of the income of a member of the faithful, is often debated in African churches.

Archbishop Cyprien Kisito Lwanga of Kampala has now requested the Ugandan government to deduct 10 percent from the salary of all Catholic government workers and forward the funds to the Church as a means of ensuring its financial autonomy.

Jesuit youth movement marks 12 years in Bangladesh

Magis Bangla, the Bangladeshi chapter of an international Catholic youth movement sponsored by the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), is marking its 12th anniversary in the country.

The Nov. 8-10 celebrations at Jesuit-run Novojyoti Niketan (Home of New Light) in Gazipur district near capital Dhaka include a gathering of more than 150 current and former members of the movement, meditation, formation sessions and cultural programs. “Go for the Greater” is the theme of the celebrations.

Over the years, Magis Bangla has aimed to transform and transmit Christian values and spirituality with cultural and intellectual foundations for Bangladeshi Catholic youth, said Father Pradeep Perez, the movement’s coordinator.

“Our aim is to embody and present Christian life and living in an alternative and extraordinary way, which breaks away from traditional classroom formation but is close to our daily living of life. Our formation is based on the teachings of Jesus with an emphasis on knowledge and culture,” Father Perez told ucanews.com.

Year-long Magis programs including youth camps, a carol and photography competition, musical drama on the life of Jesus, and celebrations of national and cultural festivals encompass the true spirit of Christian values, he said.

“Magis wants young people to have a better life, a life in fullness, for the greater glory of God,” Father Perez added.

Magis Bangla members say the movement has changed their lives for the better.

“I have made some great friends since I joined the movement more than four years ago. Magis has taught me essential values including equal respect for everyone including women,” photographer Amit Leonard, told.

Manila welcomes impunity index ranking on press freedom

The Philippines welcomed what officials described was the country’s “improved ranking in this year’s Global Impunity Index on press freedom based on a report by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). The Global Impunity Index report, which was released in time for the observance of International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists on Nov. 2, calculates the number of unsolved murders of journalists as a percentage of each country’s population.

The Philippines ranked fifth this year on an index topped by Somalia followed by Syria, Iraq and South Sudan. It remains ahead of Afghanistan in sixth spot, followed by Mexico, Colombia, Pakistan, Brazil, Russia, Bangladesh, Nigeria and India. Joel Sy Egco, head of the government’s Presidential Task Force on Media Security welcomed the Philippines’ “improved status,” saying that it was “an interesting development.”

“We note with optimism that the Philippines, while remaining at its 2017 ranking as fifth, was noted to have improved its status,” said Egco. From 2011 to 2014, the Philippines ranked third on the list before improving to fourth in 2015 and 2016. Last year, the country moved into fifth place.

The CPJ report noted that at least 324 journalists have been killed worldwide in the past decade with 85 percent of the cases remaining unsolved.

“The fact that impunity continues to thrive in many of these countries year after year is a disturbing sign of how deeply rooted the problem is,” according to Elisabeth Witchel, author of the report and CPJ’s consultant for the Global Campaign Against Impunity.

The report noted the ratings got worse in Syria, Mexico, Brazil and India but improved in the Philippines, Somalia, Iraq, South Sudan, Pakistan, Russia and Nigeria.

Sri Lankan Church urges nation to resolve political crisis peacefully

The Catholic bishops of Sri Lanka are calling on the nation’s government, political parties and the people to resolve the political and constitutional crisis peace-fully, keeping in mind the good of the people. The political turmoil engulfed Sri Lanka after Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena sacked Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and swore in ex-president Mahinda Rajapaksa to replace him.

Wickremesinghe said his sacking was illegal and he maintained that he was still prime minister, leading to a standoff between his party and labour unions loyal to Sirisena.

The following day, Sirisena suspended Parliament until November 6, in an apparent move to give Rajapaksa time to muster enough support to survive any no-confidence vote.

“Everyone should keep in mind that, if there is instability in the country, it is the people who suffer,” said a statement signed by Bishop Winston S. Fernando of Badulla, the President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Sri Lanka. “We sincerely appeal to all political parties to put aside their interests and respect the Constitution of the Republic of Sri Lanka to resolve the ongoing conflict,” Bishop Fernando wrote in the statement which he forwarded to the Vatican’s Fides news agency.

Two Chinese priests placed in detention

Two priests of the under-ground Catholic Church in China have been detained by authorities in Hebei Province, a source told.

The priests from Xuanhua Diocese are Father Su Guipeng and Father Zhao He.

The source said Father Zhao, who serves in the Dongcheng Catholic Church, was taken away by the personnel of the United Front Work Department of Yan-gyuan County on Oct. 24.

Seven unidentified people who went to the church said that they would take the priest to talk to local government officials, but the priest had not returned.

The source said that the priest had been placed in detention at a hotel. His mobile phone had been confiscated and he was under constant guard.

The priest was reportedly asked to study newly revised regulations on religious practice and to recognize the state-controlled Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association (CCPA).

The government officials were said to have warned that the Catholic Church in China was required to be autonomous from the Vatican. This was not withstanding a provisional Vatican-Beijing agreement signed two months ago, covering sensitive issues such as the appointment of new bishops in China.

Zen presents letter to pope warning him on China

The Hong Kong emeritus bishop on Nov. 8 told ucanews. com that underground clerics have cried to him since the Vatican-China deal on the appointment of bishops.

“They said officials have forced them to become open, to join the Chinese Catholic Patri-otic Association and to obtain a priest’s certificate with the reason that the Pope has signed the Sino-Vatican provisional agreement,” said Cardinal Zen.

He said some parts of the agreement had not been made public, meaning that brothers and sisters of the underground church did not know what they should do. “Some priests have escaped, and some have disappeared because they do not know what to do and are annoyed. The agreement is undisclosed, and they do not know if what officials say is true or not,” he said.

Cardinal Zen said the China Church was facing new persecution and the Holy See was helping the Chinese Communist Party suppress the underground community.

He flew to Rome from Oct. 29 to Nov. 1 to hand his letter to the Pope. “I want to talk to the Pope again and hope he will consider again, but this may be the last time,” he said.

In his letter he described how the underground church had seen money confiscated, with clergy having relatives disturbed by the authorities, going to jail or even losing their lives for the faith.

“But the Holy See does not support them and regards them as trouble, referring to them causing trouble and not supporting unity. This is what makes them most painful,” said Cardinal Zen.

The letter also stated that the Chinese Church did not have the freedom to elect bishops.

“The pope has said that members of the Chinese Church should be the prophets and sometimes criticize the government. I feel very surprised that he does not understand the situation of the Chinese Church,” Cardinal Zen said.

On Sept. 26, four days after the provisional agreement was signed, the pope wrote a message to Chinese Catholics and the universal church explaining the reasons for signing the agreement: to promote the proclamation of the Gospel, and to establish unity in the Catholic community in China.

In addition, after his pastoral visit to Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia from Sept. 2-25, the pope told the media on his flight home that people should “pay tribute to those who suffered for faith,” especially in those three countries brutally trampled by the Nazis and the Communist Party.

Cardinal Zen told ucanews.com that the pope’s words made him feel that “he does not seem to know that their history is also the history of the Chinese Church and the current situation.” He suspects the pope was deceived by people around him who did not tell him the real situation faced by the Chinese church.

Cardinal Zen criticized the Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, who negotiated with the Chinese government.

Pope says peace begins at home by saying ‘no’ to rivalry

Pope Francis holds a Mass for the cardinals and bishops who have died over the course of the year at St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on Nov. 3. He says people must reject pride and rivalry.

World peace must begin in individuals’ hearts and in their families by saying “no” to pride and rivalry, Pope Francis says.

“When we read news about wars — think about the starvation of children in Yemen, which is a fruit of war — ‘it’s far away, poor babies,’ but why don’t they have anything to eat?” the Pope asked during his homily on Nov. 5 during Mass in the chapel of his residence in the Vatican City.

The Mass was celebrated just days after news media reported the death of 7-year-old Amal Hussain, a Yemeni girl whose photo by Tyler Hicks in The New York Times in mid-October brought renewed attention to the devastating impact the war in Yemen is having on innocent civilians.

“The same war that we make in our homes, in our institutions” by engaging in rivalry and gossip grows exponentially and leads to real wars that kill people, the Pope said at his morning Mass.

“So,” he said, “peace must begin there: in the family, in the parish, in institutions, at the workplace by always seeking unanimity and agreement and not one’s own interests.”

In the day’s gospel story from St Luke, Jesus tells a leading Pharisee that when he hosts a banquet he should not invite his friends and relatives, who will feel obliged to repay him, but invite the poor and needy.

“Blessed indeed will you be because of their inability to repay you,” the Pharisee says. Jesus’ point, the Pope said, is to avoid acting only out of one’s self interest and choosing friends only based on the benefits they can bring.

Thinking only of how a relationship can be a benefit is a form of selfishness, he said, while Jesus preached the exact opposite: gratuity, which “broadens one’s horizons because it is universal.”

In fact, he said: “Jesus came to us not to collect things or form an army. No, no. He came to serve us, to give us everything freely.” In the day’s first reading, the Pope said, St Paul advised the Philippians to be “of the same mind, with the same love, united in heart,” because choosing one’s friends based on what one can gain always divides a community.

“Rivalry and vainglory,” or excessive pride, are the two things that always run counter to harmony and agreement in a family or community, the Pope said.

In families and even in parishes, he said, gossip often is born of rivalry because people think the easiest way to grow in importance in the eyes of others is to “diminish someone else through gossip.”

French bishops tackle structural reform

The Bishops Conference of France (CEF) has devoted several working sessions of its latest plenary assembly, which concludes on Nov. 8, to discussing its current system of organization with a view of simplifying its national level operations and strengthening those at the provincial level.

How is it possible in a single program to evaluate meetings organized by the bishops’ conference in Paris, consultations at the “provincial level” and the ongoing work in each diocese?

These are the growing tensions that the French bishops are currently facing. As a result, the bishops have now established a small working group tasked with proposing a new schema of organization for the work of the conference.

“The objective is to restore provincial level structures, which were neglected by the previous reform, and which the bishops now feel are relevant to enable consultations to take place in a simpler manner,” said one assembly participant.

“It is clear that the work of the various episcopal commissions and councils is functioning badly and is actually just eating up time,” he said.

On the other hand, bishops generally agree that the smaller dioceses – and even certain provinces – cannot do without “national” support.

Indian appointed to new international Charismatic renewal body

The Vatican has appointed an Indian lay leader to the 18-member Catholic Charismatic Renewal International Services, known as CHARIS.

Cyril John, a former Indian bureaucrat, is one of the two Asians appointed by the Vatican’s Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life. The other Asian is Brother James Shin San-Hyun from South Korea.

The dicastery, a department of the Roman Curia, on October 31 announced that Pope Francis has erected a new body, CHARIS, to provide a new, single, international service for the needs of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in the Church.

Rome has appointed Dr Jean-Luc Moens, a member of the Emmanuel Community from Belgium, as the moderator of the new entity, and Capuchin Father Raniero Cantalamessa, papal preacher from Italy, as its Ecclesiastical Advisor. Shayne Bennett from Australia represents Oceania in the worldwide body.

John, a native of Kuravilangad in Kerala, got involved in Charismatic renewal movement in 1982. He has been the chairman of the renewal in the Archdiocese of Delhi, chair-man of Indian National Service Team, Chairman of ICCRS Sub-Committee for Asia-Oceania since 2006 and was Vice-President of ICCRS Council from 2007 to 2015, according to a press release from K P Shaji, administrator of the National Charismatic Office based in New Delhi.

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