Jesus had questionable citizenship, says Indian Jesuit chief

Jesus was born with questionable identities of citizen-ship, place of origin and even parenthood, points out Father George Pattery, the head of more than 4,000 Jesuits in In-dia, where a recent amendment to the citizenship law has provoked countrywide uproar.

“In fact (Jesus) was born in a makeshift manger while his ‘parents’ were struggling to get themselves registered according to the newly introduced and unquestioned Citizenship Amendment Act of Augustus Caesar,” notes Father George Pattery, provincial of South Asia Jesuits, in a Christmas message on December 20 as the protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and National Register of Citizens of India (NRC) entered the fifth day.

Reports of violence continue to trickle in from various parts of the country, despite a government advisory asking private satellite television channels to not air content likely to instigate violence or affect the national integrity. The protests erupted after a police crackdown on demonstrators in Delhi’s Jamia Millia Islamia University on December 15.

A colourful Christmas convoy for peace in India

More than 500 Christians from various denominations took part in a vehicle convoy that stretch-ed ten kilometres in the Hindu heartland of Bhopal on Dec. 15 to share the Christmas message of peace and harmony. Abp Leo Cornelio of Bhopal, based in the capital of Madhya Pradesh state in central India, took part in the rally and urged people across the country to become a bridge between God and nature in a joint quest for harmonious coexistence.

The procession began on the grounds of the Jesuit-run Campion School and passed through significant locations in the city during the three-hour rally, which ended at the Church-run St Joseph School.

The convoy containing 58 vehicles decorated with balloons and stars created quite a stir among passers-by, shop owners, and apartment dwellers on the route.

Carol singing was among its major attractions- 20 vehicles carried tableaux depicting events related to Christmas, including the Annunciation, the Three Kings, Nativity, Santa Clause, and a Christmas tree.

Calcutta archdiocese honours Loreto Sisters’ green initiative

The Archdiocese of Calcutta has honoured the Loreto congregation for planting nearly 140,000 trees and adopting solar power for all their educational institutions.

Sister Sabrina Edwards, provincial of the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary, or Loreto Sisters, on December 14 received the award for her congregation’s green efforts at the All Faith Climate Conference held at Seva Kendra, the archdiocese’s social service wing. The conference on “Caring for Our Family: An Inter-and Intra-Religion Task” was attended by representatives of all major religions in Kolkata, the capital of West Bengal state.

Abp Thomas D’Souza of Calcutta and Seva Kendra director Fr Franklin Menezes hosted the meet Sister Edwards recalled that the national meeting of her congregation’s Justice, Peace, Integrity of Creation of Loreto schools decided in September 2016 to take up environmental issues in a serious way in India.

For this, the meet made two commitments “to spearhead climate change: one was to plant 100,000 trees by 2020 and second to make the Loreto network of schools across India carbon neutral,” Sister Edwards told Matters India on December 16.

Arunachal Bishop appointed Chairman for Evangelization in Asia

Asian Bishops conference has appointed Bishop George Pallipparambil of Miao Diocese, Arunachal Pradesh, to lead the Office of Evangelization in Asia for a period of three years starting from 1 January 2020.

The appointment of Bishop PK, as he is fondly called by the people around the North East Region, comes close on the heels of the appointment of Cardinal Tagle of Manila Philippines as Prefect of Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples by Pope Francis.

Salesians appoint first Santhal provincial

Calcutta, the oldest Salesian province in India, on December 15 announced the appointment of a Santal priest as its 17th provincial. The communique said, “The Rector Major, Fr Angel Fernandez Artime, has appointed Fr Joseph Pauria, the present Vice Provincial, as the 17th Provincial of the Province of Calcutta.” Father Pauria was born on January 14, 1965, at Azimganj in Murshidabad district of West Bengal to Thomas and Rita Pauria.

Indian Jesuit gets Australian Hall of Fame Award

Jesuit Father Felix Raj, vice chancellor of St Xavier’s University, Kolkata, on December 16, was given the Hall of Fame award of Australia for his outstanding contribution and lifetime achievements in the field of education and management. The award was given at the International Conference on “Frontiers in Accounting” organized jointly by the Institute of Certified Management Account-ants, Australia, and the Indian Jesuit university.

“The ICMA Australia applauds the ground-breaking value creation and achievements of Father Felix Raj,” D’Souza said while presenting the award to the Jesuit priest. He said his institute was honoured to induct Father Raj to the global Management Accounting Hall of Fame for his services to the profession in India.

German Dioceses Push for Major Changes During Upcoming ‘Synodal Path’

According to a joint open letter released in Germany, vicars general say ‘fundamental reform’ is ‘essential’ and ask that accusations that participants are ‘lacking orthodoxy’ be avoided during the two-year synodal process. Now that the Pan-Amazonian Synod is over, attention is turning to the German bishops’ “synodal path” whose latest development is the publication of a joint letter from vicars general representing 10 German archdioceses which strongly endorses the synodal process that begins Dec. 1.

The letter, was addressed to the German bishops’ conference and the largest and most influential lay group in the country, the Central Committee of German Catholics.

The vicars general, representing the archbishops of Berlin, Essen, Hamburg, Hildesheim, Limburg, Magdeburg, Münster, Osnabrück, Speyer and Trier, wrote that they considered “fundamental reform of the Church in Germany to be urgently necessary, indeed essential.” According to Katholisch.de, a news portal administered by the German bishops’ conference, they said they wanted a Church “in which plurality and diversity are desired and permitted” as only an open and diverse church has the chance to “remain effectively present” in society. And they see the “synodal path” as means to achieve this.

In new interview, Cardinal Marx speaks on same-sex blessings

Cardinal Reinhard Marx has expressed the view that homosexual couples can receive a Church blessing “in the sense of a pastoral accompaniment” in the Catholic Church, but not in a manner that resembles marriage.

In an interview with the German magazine Stern, the Archbishop of Munich and Freising was asked, “What do you do when a homosexual couple asks you for an episcopal blessing?” Marx responded: “I can bless them both in the sense of pastoral accompaniment, we can pray together. But theirs cannot be a marriage-like relationship.”

Pope lifts ‘pontifical secret’ rule in sex abuse cases

The Pope has declared that the rule of “pontifical secrecy” no longer applies to the sexual abuse of minors, in a bid to improve transparency in such cases. The Church previously shrouded sexual abuse cases in secrecy, in what it said was an effort to protect the privacy of victims and reputations of the accused. But new papal documents on Dec. 17 lifted restrictions on those who report abuse or say they have been victims.

Church leaders called for the rule’s abolition at a February Vatican summit. They said the lifting of the rule in such cases would improve transparency and the ability of the police and other civil legal authorities to request information from the Church.

Thai police round up dozens of Christian Pakistani refugees

A group of Pakistani Christian asylum seekers were arrested Dec. 19 by Thai immigration authorities in an early morning raid on a low-rise condominium in eastern Bangkok. An estimated 36 people, including around 12 women and an equal number of children, were detained after immigration officials showed up at the doors of several low-rent units of asylum seekers.

The immigration officers “came knocking on doors and when the people inside didn’t open up, the officers broke the doors down,” said Joseph, a Pakistani Christian refugee from Karachi, who learned of the details by communicating with arrestees via social media. One 20-year-old Christian man who sought to escape being arrested by jumping out of a window ended up with a broken leg. “The authorities took them all — even the kids and women,” Joseph (not his real name) said.

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