Vatican today – December 2, 2011

BENEDICT XVI ATTENDS FIRST SERMON OF ADVENT

VATICAN CITY, 2 DEC 2011 (VIS) – At 9 a.m. today, the Pope and the
pontifical family attended the first sermon of Advent delivered by Fr.
Raniero Cantalamessa O.F.M. Cap., preacher of the Pontifical Household, on
the theme: “Go into all the world and proclaim the good news”.

This year’s sermons, which are taking place in the “Redemptoris Mater”
chapel of the Vatican Apostolic Palace, focus on the general topic of
evangelisation, in view of next year’s Synod of Bishops on the same subject.
Particular attention will be given to four historical periods in which
missionary efforts accelerated or resumed: (1) The second half of the third
century when vast sectors of the Roman empire were converted thanks to the
efforts of bishops. (2) The sixth to ninth centuries during which the monks
worked for the re-evangelisation of Europe following the barbarian
invasions. (3) The sixteenth century with the discovery and conversion of
the peoples of the New World through the apostolate of the friars. (4) Our
own day, when the Church is committed to re-evangelising a secularised West
though the commitment of the lay faithful.

HOLY FATHER ADDRESSES INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS

VATICAN CITY, 2 DEC 2011 (VIS) – Over recent days, the Pontifical Council
for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant Peoples, which is presided
by Archbishop Antonio Maria Veglio, has been holding its third World
Congress for the Pastoral Care of International Students. The participants
were received this morning by the Holy Father who remarked that the theme
chosen for the congress, which focused on the meeting of cultures, is “a
fundamental aspect of our age, and is vital for the future of humanity and
of the Church”.

“Today more than every the openness of cultures to one another is the most
fertile terrain for dialogue among people committed to seeking authentic
humanism. The meeting of cultures in universities must, then, be encouraged
and supported. … Thanks to their intellectual, cultural and spiritual
formation, international students have, in fact, the potential to become
architects and protagonists of a more human world”.

The Pope noted that international students are an increasingly large group
within the broader phenomenon of migration. This, he said, can be due to a
lack of high-quality education and suitable structures in their countries of
origin, the presence of social and political tensions, or the availability
of economic support to study abroad. “It is important”, he went on, “to
offer them a healthy and well-balanced intellectual, cultural and spiritual
formation, so that they do not get absorbed into the ‘brain drain’ but
become a socially and culturally relevant group in view of their return as
future leaders to their countries of origin” where they can “help to build
cultural, social and spiritual ‘bridges’ with their host nations”.

Universities are a vital field for the evangelisation of the Church,
because “the spread of ‘weak’ ideologies in various sectors of society is a
call to Christians to make fresh efforts in the academic world, to encourage
the new generations in their search for and discovery of the truth about man
and God”. In this context, Benedict XVI used the example of Blessed John
Henry Newman whose life, “so strongly associated with the world of academe,
confirmed the importance and beauty of promoting an educational environment
in which intellectual formation, ethics and religious commitment walk hand
in hand”.

“Young Christians, who come from different cultures but belong to the one
Church of Christ, can show that the Gospel is the Word of hope and salvation
for men and women of all peoples and cultures, of all ages and epochs”, the
Holy Father concluded.

TRINITARIAN MONOTHEISM IS THE SOURCE OF PEACE

VATICAN CITY, 2 DEC 2011 (VIS) – Today in the Vatican, the Holy Father
received participants in the annual plenary session of the International
Theological Commission, which has just completed its work under the
direction of its president, Cardinal William Joseph Levada, prefect of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The Holy Father dedicated his remarks to three themes the Commission has
been examining in recent years, turning first to consider the question of
God and the understanding of monotheism. Benedict XVI recalled how “behind
the Christian profession of faith in the one God lies the daily profession
of faith of the People of Israel”. However, with the incarnation of Jesus
Christ, “the monotheism of the one God came to be illuminated with a
completely new light: the light of the Trinity, a mystery which also
illuminates brotherhood among men”. For this reason theology “can help
believers to become aware of and bear witness to the fact that Trinitarian
monotheism shows us the true face of God, … and is the source of personal
and universal peace”.

The Commission has also been studying the criteria whereby a particular
form of theology may be considered as “Catholic”. On this subject the Pope
explained that “the starting point for all Christian theology lies in
personal acceptance of divine revelation, of the Word made flesh”, in
“listening to the Word of God in Holy Scripture”. Nevertheless, the history
of the Church shows that “recognition of this starting point is not enough
to achieve the unity of the faith. The Bible is always necessarily read in a
certain context, and the only context in which the believer can be in full
communion with Christ is the Church and her living Tradition”.

Catholic theology, as it has always done over the course of its history,
must continue to pay particular attention to the relationship between faith
and reason. Today this is more important than ever, said Pope Benedict, “in
order to avoid the violent consequences of a religiosity which opposes
reason, and a reason which opposes religion”.

Thirdly, the International Theological Commission has been examining the
Church’s Social Doctrine in the broader context of Christian doctrine. “The
Church’s social commitment is not a merely human activity”, Benedict XVI
explained, “nor is just a social theory. The transformation of society by
Christians over the centuries has been a response to the coming of the Son
of God into the world. … The disciples of Christ the Redeemer know that no
human community can live in peace without concern for others, forgiveness,
and love even for one’s enemies. … In our indispensable collaboration for
the common good, even with those who do not share our faith, we must explain
the true and profound religious motivations for out social commitment. …
People who have understood the foundation of Christian social activity may
also find therein a stimulus to consider faith in Jesus Christ”.

In conclusion, the Pope highlighted the Church’s great need for
theologians’ reflections “on the mystery of God in Jesus Christ and of His
Church. Without healthy and vigorous theological activity the Church risks
failing to give full expression to the harmony between faith and reason”.

NATIVITY SCENE IN ST. PETER’S SQUARE TO BE DEDICATED TO MARY

VATICAN CITY, 2 DEC 2011 (VIS) – This Christmas, the nativity scene in St.
Peter’s Square will be dedicated Mary, the Mother of God, also in view of
the beatification earlier this year of John Paul II, who was profoundly
devoted to Our Lady.

Standing next to the manger in the nativity scene, which will be
inaugurated on 24 December, are a number of buildings recreated in the
architectural style of biblical Palestine, where the events of Mary’s life
took place, such as the Annunciation, the meeting with her cousin Elisabeth
and the presentation of Jesus in the Temple. The figures in the grotto
itself come from the nativity scene created by St. Vincent Pallotti for the
Roman church of Sant’Andrea della Valle in 1842.

The Christmas tree, which will be raised next to the obelisk, is a spruce
from the Zakarpattia region in Ukraine, 30.5 metres high and with a trunk of
56 centimetres in diameter. Its more than 700 branches will be decorated
with 2,500 silver- and gold-coloured baubles illuminated by white and yellow
lights.

The tree, a gift from the Republic of Ukraine, will be raised on 5
December and inaugurated on 16 December in the presence of the bishops of
that nation.

AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, 2 DEC 2011 (VIS) – The Holy Father today received in audience:

- Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for
Inter-religious Dialogue.

- Archbishop Giuseppe Betori, archbishop of Florence, Italy.

Vatican Information Service

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