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Thursday, December 30, 1999

POPE TO CONFER EPISCOPAL ORDINATION ON TWELVE PRESBYTERS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 30, 1999 (VIS) - According to a communique made public today by the Office of Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff, on Thursday January 6, 2000, Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord, at 9 a.m. in the Vatican Basilica, John Paul II will confer episcopal ordination on the following twelve priests:

1. Msgr. Joseph Wesolowski, of the clergy of the archdiocese of Krakow, Poland, born July 15, 1948, ordained a priest May 21, 1972, elected titular archbishop of Slebte and appointed apostolic nuncio in Bolivia, November 3, 1999.

2. Msgr. Giacomo Guido Ottonello, of the clergy of the diocese of Acqui, Italy, born August 29, 1946, ordained a priest June 29, 1971, elected titular archbishop of Sasabe and appointed apostolic nuncio in Panama, November 29, 1999.

3. Msgr. George Panikulam, of the clergy of the diocese of Irinjalakuda of the Syro-Malabars, India, born October 26, 1942, ordained a priest March 11, 1967, elected titular archbishop of Arpaia and appointed apostolic nuncio in Honduras, December 4, 1999.

4. Msgr. Alberto Bottari De Castello, of the clergy of the diocese of Treviso, Italy, born July 5, 1942, ordained a priest September 11, 1966, elected titular archbishop of Foraziana and appointed apostolic nuncio in Gambia, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, December 18, 1999.

5. Msgr. Ivo Baldi, of the clergy of the diocese of Citta di Castello, Italy, born March 27, 1947, ordained a priest October 9, 1971, elected bishop of Huaraz, Peru, December 14, 1999.

6. Msgr. Gabriel Mbilingi C.S.Sp., of the Holy Ghost Fathers, born January 17, 1958, ordained a priest February 26, 1984, elected coadjutor bishop of Lwena, Angola, November 13, 1999.

7. Msgr. David Laurin Ricken, of the clergy of the diocese of Pueblo, U.S.A., born November 9, 1952, ordained a priest September 12, 1980, elected coadjutor bishop of Cheyenne, U.S.A., December 14, 1999.

8. Msgr. Anton Cosa, of the clergy of the diocese of Iasi, Romania, born November 23, 1961, ordained a priest June 25, 1989, apostolic administrator of Moldova, elected titular bishop of Pesto, October 30, 1999.

9. Msgr. Andras Veres, of the clergy of the archdiocese of Eger, Hungary, born November 30, 1959, ordained a priest August 2, 1986, elected titular bishop of Cissa and appointed as auxiliary of the archdiocese of Eger, November 5, 1999.

10. Msgr. Peter Erdo, of the clergy of the archdiocese of Esztergom-Budapest, Hungary, born June 25, 1952, ordained a priest June 18, 1975, elected titular bishop of Puppi and appointed as auxiliary of the bishop of Szekesfehervar, Hungary, November 5, 1999.

11. Msgr. Giuseppe Pasotto C.S.S., of the Congregation of the Blessed Stigmata, born July 6, 1954, ordained a priest May 12, 1979, apostolic administrator of the Caucasus, elected titular bishop of Musti, November 9, 1999.

12. Msgr. Franco Croci, of the clergy of the diocese of Crema, Italy, born June 25, 1930, ordained a priest September 30, 1961, secretary of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, elected titular bishop of Potenza Picena, December 3, 1999.

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HOLY FATHER'S PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR JANUARY

VATICAN CITY, DEC 30, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father's general prayer intention for January is: "That believers in Christ, of every nation and culture, may increasingly live in communion and reciprocal respect for one another."

His missionary intention is: "That the international Year for the Culture of Peace, drawing inspiration from the Christian mystery of Christmas, may be a source of authentic and lasting peace for all men and women."

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COMMUNIQUE ON THE APPOINTMENT OF THE BISHOP OF SALTILLO


VATICAN CITY, DEC 30, 1999 (VIS) - Made public today was a communique regarding the appointment of Bishop Raul Vera Lopez O.P., as the new bishop of Saltillo, Mexico. Up until now Bishop Vera Lopez has been coadjutor of San Cristobal de las Casas, Mexico,

The communique indicates that "Bishop Vera Lopez's transfer is motivated by purely ecclesiastical reasons, both as regards San Cristobal de las Casas and Saltillo."

"The fact that Bishop Vera Lopez is leaving San Cristobal de las Casas will in no way diminish the Church's commitment to supporting civil peace and the spiritual and human promotion of the entire population of Chiapas. Also on this occasion, the Holy See cannot fail to express once more the hope that all the sides involved in the tensions that exist in the region may find, in dialogue and law, the harmony to which they justly aspire."

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THE CHILDREN'S JUBILEE TO TAKE PLACE ON JANUARY 2


VATICAN CITY, DEC 30, 1999 (VIS) - On Sunday January 2, 2000, the Children's Jubilee will be held in Rome. After the celebration of Mass at 9 a.m. in the Vatican Basilica, the 45,000 participants - boys and girls between the ages of 6 and 14 years from 30 countries - will participate in a gathering in St. Peter's Square.

John Paul II will cross the square by popemobile, and stop in front of the basilica. Bishop Agostino Superbo, coordinator of the event, together with a number of children will greet the Holy Father who, in his turn, will respond with a brief message. The Pope will then award the "International John XXIII Peace Prize" for the year 2000 to the non-governmental organization, "ATD-Quart Monde" for its constant evangelical commitment in the struggle against extreme poverty, its active interest in the field of human rights and the work it does in support of children.

At 6 p.m. in the Paul VI Hall, a show will take place where groups from different continents will sing and dance in the presence of 7,000 children.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, DEC 30, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father:

- Appointed Bishop Raul Vera Lopez O.P., coadjutor of San Cristobal de las Casas, Mexico, as bishop of Saltillo (area 129,100, population 1,585,170, Catholics 1,400,490, priests 151, permanent deacons 2, religious 479), Mexico. He succeeds Bishop Francisco Raul Villalobos Padilla, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached the age limit.

- Erected the diocese of Wiawso (area 11,240, population 641,500, Catholics 136,036, priests 41, religious 11), Ghana, with territory taken from the diocese of Sekondi-Takoradi, making it a suffragan of the Metropolitan Church of Cape Coast. He appointed Fr. Joseph Francis Kweku Essien of the clergy of Sekondi-Takoradi, military chaplain to the Ghanaian armed forces, as first bishop of Wiawso. The bishop-elect was born in Apowa, Ghana, in 1945 and ordained a priest in 1977.

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Wednesday, December 29, 1999

THE JUBILEE: A TIME OF GRACE FOR FAMILIES


VATICAN CITY, DEC 29, 1999 (VIS) - The last general audience of 1999 was held today. It took place first in the Vatican Basilica and then in the Paul VI Hall, due to the large numbers of pilgrims who have come to Rome for the Great Jubilee.

To the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Basilica, the Pope recalled that "the Jubilee is a time of rejoicing that should be lived in prayer and in thanksgiving to the Lord for the gift of the Incarnation. It is a time in which we, with our lives, are called to more intensely and profoundly glorify the Trinity."

The Pope then moved to the Paul VI Hall, where he addressed another numerous group of faithful. John Paul II stated that "in the western world, Christmas is considered as a family celebration. ... (The family is) a communion of love between individuals, founded on truth, on charity, on the unbreakable faithfulness of husband and wife, on the welcoming of life."

"We pray," continued the Pope, "that the Great Jubilee, which has just begun, may truly be a time of grace and redemption for all the families of the world. May the light of the Word Incarnate help them to better understand and carry out their original vocation, the project that the God of life has reserved for them, in order that they become the living image of His love."

The Holy Father indicated that the Jubilee will also be a "suitable occasion to reinforce the bonds of affection in each family and to reconstruct divided family units. May all Christian families become ever more aware of their exalted mission in the Church and in the world! Today, there is a great need for the individual protection of each family, especially the poorest and most problematic. Budding life must be promoted and welcomed, for each child who comes into the world is a gift and a hope for all."

Finally, the Pope expressed his wish that, for all families, the Great Jubilee be "a time to courageously open their doors to Christ, man's only Redeemer."

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AUDIENCE

VATICAN CITY, DEC 29, 1999 (VIS) - Yesterday, Tuesday December 28, the Holy Father received Cardinal Stephen Kim Sou-hwan, archbishop emeritus of Seoul, Korea.

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1999: 1,500,000 PEOPLE PARTICIPATED IN MEETINGS WITH THE POPE

VATICAN CITY, DEC 29, 1999 (VIS) - During 1999, more than one and a half million people took part in meetings and ceremonies presided over by the Holy Father. This information was made public today in a communique released by the Prefecture of the Papal Household.

The prefecture gives as 570,000 the number of people who participated in general audiences. Those who took part in audiences with various different groups are numbered at 240,030, while the number of those who attended other ceremonies is given as 735,100.

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MESSAGE TO MUSLIMS FOR THE END OF RAMADAN


VATICAN CITY, DEC 29, 1999 (VIS) - Made public today was the traditional message to Muslims for the end of Ramadan, from the president of the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue, Cardinal Francis Arinze. The feast is known as 'Id al-Fitr,' the breaking of the fast and this year falls in 1420 a.h./2000 a.d. The message is entitled: "Jesus, a model and message for humanity."

Cardinal Arinze invites Muslims to join the Christian celebration of the two thousandth anniversary of the birth of Jesus. "For Christianity," he writes, "Jesus is the Word of God made flesh, born of the Virgin Mary. He is a prophet, but more than a prophet."

"As in other fields," he continues, "we are called as Christians and Muslims to know and respect the religious convictions of the other, to discover that which unites us and what makes us different. Knowing and respecting these convictions does not necessarily imply sharing them. To be able to speak about them objectively and with respect forms part of the way we should behave as persons of belief. Cannot the social and spiritual message of Jesus be considered to constitute a common heritage?

"We think that all people, but especially Muslims, can share with us the values that we have received from Jesus: total obedience to the will of God, witness given to the truth, humility in behavior, control of one's speech, justice in one's actions, mercy shown in deeds, love towards all, pardon granted for wrong done, maintaining peace with all brothers and sisters."

Cardinal Arinze concludes his message by affirming: "At the moment of entering into the new Millennium, we Christians and Muslims, together with the followers of other religions and all men and women of good will, all have something to receive from the message of Jesus: a message of mercy and pardon, of charity and fraternity, of justice and peace."

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, DEC 29, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father gave his blessing to the election by the Synod of Bishops of the Syrian-Catholic Church, meeting at Charfe, Lebanon, on May 8, 1999, of Fr. Georges Kassab, patriarchal administrator of Homs of the Syrians (Catholics 10,000, priests 15, religious 2), Syria, as archbishop of the same archeparchy. The archbishop-elect was born at Zaidal, Syria, in 1946 and ordained a priest in 1974.

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Tuesday, December 28, 1999

URBI ET ORBI: JUBILEE HIGHLIGHTS THE SACREDNESS OF CHRISTMAS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 25, 1999 (VIS) - In the traditional Christmas day message, 'Urbi et Orbi' (to the city and the world), John Paul II made a call from St. Peter's Square against "the senseless use of arms" and condemned war, racism, death camps and the denial of fundamental human rights. Furthermore, he requested leaders of nations to commit themselves to respecting the right to life and highlighted the fact that this year the Great Jubilee accentuates the sacred nature of Christmas.

From the balcony of the central 'loggia' in the recently restored facade of the basilica, John Paul II quoted the prophet Isaiah: "'To us a child is born, to us a son is given'," words which reveal, he said, "in all its fullness, the mystery of Christmas."

"Remembering the birth of Christ on this holy day, we live, together with this event, the 'mystery of man's divine adoption' through the work of Christ who comes into the world. For this reason, Christmas night and Christmas day are perceived as sacred by those who seek the truth."

Yet the sacred nature of Christmas this year is even more marked because "it is the beginning of the Great Jubilee." John Paul II highlighted this fact, mentioning the opening, prior to Midnight Mass, of the Holy Door in the Vatican Basilica: "A symbolic act, which inaugurates the Jubilee Year, a gesture which highlights with singular eloquence something already present in the mystery of Christmas: Jesus, born of Mary in the poverty of Bethlehem (is) the eternal Son given to us by the Father. ... (He is) the Door of our salvation, the Door of life, the Door of peace."
"Christ," explained the Pope, is "the Door of our salvation. (We must thank Him) for all the good of the years, centuries and millennia which have passed," although humanity has at times "invented false certainties, ... chased after deceptive ideologies" and "refused to respect and love" brothers and sisters from other races and creeds.

Christ is the Door of life "for the wonders with which (He) has enriched every generation." In His name, the Pope requested "that legislators and political leaders, men and women of good will (commit themselves) to welcoming human life as a precious gift."

Finally, said the Holy Father, Christ is the "Door of peace, as pilgrims in time we visit all the places of grief and of war, the resting places of the victims of brutal conflicts and cruel slaughter. You, Prince of Peace, invite us to ban the senseless use of arms, and the recourse to violence and hatred which have doomed individuals, peoples and continents."

"'To us a son is given'," the Pope concluded, "You, Father, have given us your Son. You give Him to us again today, at the dawn of the new millennium. ... You, O Christ are the same yesterday, today and forever."

Following his message, John Paul II gave Christmas greetings to the world in 58 languages.

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POPE OPENS HOLY DOOR OF ST. PETER'S BASILICA


VATICAN CITY, DEC 24, 1999 (VIS) - At 11:27 p.m. today John Paul II opened the Holy Door of the Vatican Basilica. After pronouncing the words: 'Aperite mihi portas iustitiae,' (open for me the doors of justice), and hearing the reply: 'Ingressus in eas, confitebor Domino,' (I wish to enter and give thanks to the Lord), he pushed the door with both hands and thus inaugurated the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000.

Sixty-five thousand people were present at the ceremony; 8,200 filled the basilica while 56,000 in St. Peter's Square were able to follow the Mass on giant screens. The event was transmitted to 58 countries worldwide with a potential audience of 1.5 billion people.

In the atrium of St. Peter's Basilica the opening ceremony was attended by religious and civil authorities, among them Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, president of the Italian Republic, accompanied by his wife.

The moment the door was opened, the basilica was completely illuminated and the choir sang the Gloria. The Pope, who was wearing a pink, green, purple, red and white cape embroidered in gold, knelt in prayer for a few seconds before entering the basilica. Faithful from Asia and Oceania, wearing traditional dress, placed flowers around the door and scattered perfumes.

The Pontiff took the book of the Gospel and, after showing it to those present, crossed the Holy Door and walked towards the basilica's major altar. At the same time, faithful from Africa blew on ivory trumpets in a sign of joy and others from Europe and America accompanied the Holy Father to the altar, which stands under Bernini's baldachin. Once there, the Pope proclaimed the Great Jubilee to the world while the choir sang the Gloria and the bells rang out.

In the homily during Mass, John Paul II said: "You O Christ, are the Only-begotten Son of the living God, come among us in the stable of Bethlehem! After two thousand years, we re-live this mystery as a unique and unrepeatable event. Among all the children of men, all the children born into the world down the centuries, You alone are the Son of God. In an ineffable way, Your birth has changed the course of human events.

"This is the truth which on this night the Church wants to pass on to the third millennium. May all you who will come after us accept this truth, which has totally changed history. Ever since the night of Bethlehem, humanity knows that God became Man: He became Man in order to give man a share of His divine nature."

On the threshold of the third millennium the Church greets the Son of God "and with You she wishes to enter the third millennium. You are our hope. You alone have words of eternal life. ... You O Christ, the Son of the living God, be for us the Door! Be for us the true Door, symbolized by the door which on this night we have solemnly opened!

"Be for us the Door which leads us into the mystery of the Father. Grant that no-one may remain outside His embrace of mercy and peace! 'Hodie natus est nobis Salvator mundi': It is Christ who is our only Savior! This is the message of Christmas 1999: The 'today' of this Holy Night begins the Great Jubilee."

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CALL FOR PEACE IN CHECHNYA AND IVORY COAST


VATICAN CITY, DEC 26, 1999 (VIS) - After praying the angelus with the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square, the Pope made a call for peace in Chechnya and the Ivory Coast:

"During this period, when the Christmas spirit calls upon men and women to become better and more fraternal, we must pray for those peoples who live amidst great suffering.

"In particular, we feel close to the inhabitants of Chechnya, nor can we forget the many peoples of Africa, among whom I would like to mention the citizens of the Ivory Coast who are traversing a difficult moment in their history.

"To all those who work on the road to harmony and peace I say: Have the courage of faithful and enduring dialogue in order that the fraternity, which Jesus made man came to offer as a gift to all humanity, may finally become a reality for everyone."

ANG;CHECHNYA; IVORY COAST;...;...;VIS;19991228;Word: 160;

PROTECT THE RIGHTS OF THE FAMILY AND OF LIFE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 26, 1999 (VIS) - In the angelus today, feast of the Holy Family of Nazareth, John Paul II stated that this moment offered him "a suitable occasion, at the start of the Holy Year 2000, to renew an appeal in support of the rights of the family, of life and of infancy."

"The family," he reminded pilgrims who had gathered in St. Peter's Square, "is a community of life and love, that comes into being when a man and a woman totally give themselves the one to the other in matrimony, ready to accept the gift of children. The fundamental right to life pertains to man from the moment of conception. This is in keeping with the essence of natural law and the tradition of the great religions, as well as with the spirit of article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights."

The Holy Father highlighted that "the union between the mother and the newborn and the irreplaceable role of the father necessitate that the child be welcomed into a family that guarantees, as far as possible, the presence of both parents. The specific contribution they offer to the family and, through that institution, to society, is worthy of the highest respect."

"The family today," he concluded, "requires special protection from the public authorities, who not infrequently are placed under pressure by interest groups to admit as a right that which in reality is the fruit of an individualistic and subjective mentality. ... May God enlighten legislators, politicians and all people of good will to promote the effective protection of the rights of the family, of life and of children."

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OPENING OF THE HOLY DOOR AT ST. JOHN LATERAN


VATICAN CITY, DEC 25, 1999 (VIS) - At 6 p.m. this evening the Holy Father travelled from the Vatican to St. John Lateran. There, he opened the Holy Door of the basilica and presided at the celebration of the second vespers of the birth of the Lord.

At the start of his homily, the Holy Father affirmed that "God entered human history, He came to follow the paths of this world in order to give to all the capability of becoming children of God."

John Paul II recalled that the Lateran Basilica is the "mother and head of all Roman Churches throughout the world, as well as being the cathedral of the Bishop of Rome. Here in 1300, Pope Boniface VIII solemnly inaugurated the first Holy Year in history. Here in the Jubilee of 1423, Pope Martin V first opened the Holy Door."

"We have passed through that door," he continued, "which represents Christ Himself. In fact, He alone is the Savior sent by God the Father, who makes us pass from sin to grace, and introduces us to the full communion that unites Him to the Father in the Holy Spirit. We give thanks to God, rich in mercy, who gave his only Son as man's Redeemer."
The Pope concluded by underlining that the Holy Year "invites us to respond with joy and generosity to the call to sanctity, in order (for us) to become an ever greater sign of hope in modern society, as it heads towards the third millennium."

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TAIZE COMMUNITY MEETS IN WARSAW


VATICAN CITY, DEC 28, 1999 (VIS) - Made public today was a message from the Pope to Frere Roger, prior of the Taize community, on the occasion of that organization's 22nd European meeting. The event is being held in Warsaw, Poland, from December 28, 1999 to January 1, 2000.

In the message, dated November 30 and written in French, John Paul II expresses the hope that the meeting of young people in Poland "be a privileged moment of mutual greeting and fraternity, of prayer and contemplation, that brings about a greater openness to God and to others."

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Thursday, December 23, 1999

PRESS BRIEFING ON OPENING CEREMONY FOR JUBILEE 2000


VATICAN CITY, DEC 23, 1999 (VIS) - Holy See Press Office Director Joaquin Navarro-Valls held a briefing this afternoon for journalists on several aspects of the ceremony at St. Peter's Basilica tomorrow evening during which Pope John Paul will open the basilica's Holy Door and inaugurate the Jubilee Year 2000.

He recalled that, as the Pope wrote in the Bull of Indiction for the Holy Year, "we are getting ready to cross the threshold of the Third Millennium." He added that the Holy Father's thoughts and prayers tomorrow night - as well as those of 1.7 billion people in the world who believe that Christ is the Son of God - will be on Christ and the start of a year long celebration marking the 2,000th anniversary of His birth.

Navarro-Valls also underscored the "signs" which the Pope believes should mark this Jubilee, such as the moratorium on the death penalty and the forgiveness of debts of poorer countries.

Then, turning to the ritual of opening the Holy Door, he briefly reviewed the process outlined on December 14 by Bishop Piero Marini, master of papal liturgical ceremonies. He recalled that the Holy Father will join a procession in the atrium of St. Peter's Basilica, stop in prayer when he arrives at the Holy Door where the Gospel of Luke will be read, as well as several verses from Psalms, then proceed to simply push open the two bronze panels of the Holy Door. He said a "dress rehearsal" had been held on opening the door.

Among those in the atrium will be the cardinal, archbishop and bishop concelebrants of the Mass as well as the Orthodox Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II of Istanbul, who wished to be present for this ceremony as he could not attend the ecumenical service on January 18 at St. Paul's Outside-the-Walls.

The procession will continue inside the Vatican Basilica until it reaches the papal altar where John Paul II will proclaim the start of the Jubilee Year. The Christmas vigil Mass will then start.

Navarro-Valls pointed out that, at the moment that the Pope proclaims the Jubilee open in St. Peter's, Latin patriarch Michel Sabbah will, in the grotto in Bethlehem, proclaim open the Jubilee in the Holy Land.

The only head of State who will be present at tomorrow's opening door rite and Mass will be Italian President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi.

The director then gave some statistics for tomorrow evening's ceremony: 8,200 people will be seated in St. Peter's Basilica where television monitors will allow them to better see the actual opening of the Holy Door; 40,000 will be seated in St. Peter's Square where there will be mega-screens; 58 countries will provide live television coverage, including Cuba. He pointed out that poorer countries unable to provide satellite linkup will be helped financially by the Knights of Columbus.

As is customary, said Navarro-Valls, the Holy Father will spend some time after Christmas at the residence at Castelgandolfo.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, DEC 23, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Archbishop Mar Varkey Vithayathil C.SS.R., apostolic administrator "sede vacante et ad nutum Sanctae Sedis" of Ernakulam-Angamaly of the Syro-Malabars (area 1,500, population 4,315,000, Catholics 449,860, priests 613, religious 4,560), India, as major archbishop of the same archeparchy.

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AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, DEC 23, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received:

- His Beatitude Mesrob II Mutafyan, Armenian patriarch of Istanbul.
- Virgil Dechant, supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus, accompanied by his wife.

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CLARIFICATION REGARDING A CAR GIVEN TO THE POPE

VATICAN CITY, DEC 23, 1999 (VIS) - This afternoon Holy See Press Office Director Joaquin Navarro-Valls made the following declaration:

"There is some erroneous information that I must rectify in a news item that appeared yesterday (in an Italian newspaper), referring to the gift of a car that might be used by the Pope.

"(The article) mentions the cost of this car as being billions of Italian lire. Although no reference is made to the source of this information, I must clarify that the car in question is the prototype of a series that will soon be in production."

"To attribute the research costs for the entire series to the prototype model is erroneous and misleading.

"I would be glad if the information published today could be corrected in the sense I have mentioned."

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NOTICE

VATICAN CITY, DEC 23, 1999 (VIS) - The Vatican Information Service wishes its subscribers a very happy and blessed Christmas and joyful start of the Jubilee Year 2000. As previously advised, the next VIS service will appear on Tuesday December 28.

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Wednesday, December 22, 1999

OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, DEC 22, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Bishop Aloisio Hilario de Pinho F.D.P., of Tocantinopolis, Brazil, as bishop of Jatai (area 62,698, population 380,000, Catholics 359,000, priests 27, permanent deacons 19, religious 62), Brazil.

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AUDIENCE

VATICAN CITY, DEC 22, 1999 (VIS) - This evening, the Holy Father is scheduled to receive Cardinal Jozef Tomko, prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples.

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LIVE THE CHRISTMAS EVENT OF SALVATION WITH INTENSITY


VATICAN CITY, DEC 22, 1999 (VIS) - In today's general audience, which was held in the Paul VI Hall, John Paul II spoke about Christmas, recalling that Holy Night marks the start of the Great Jubilee of the year 2000, "for which the Church has been preparing itself over a considerable time."

The Pope said, "from this moment, let us ready ourselves to live the Christmas event of salvation with profound involvement, starting the Holy Year with deep joy. In the poverty of the manger, let us recognize the great 'event' of the Incarnation: God made himself man in order to meet each of us. Let us allow this great mystery to transform our lives during the hold period of grace of the Jubilee."

"May the Virgin Mary," he continued, "who was the first to prepare a worthy home for the promised Messiah, and who still today presents Him to the world, teach us to open, indeed to throw wide open, the doors of our heart to the Christmas message of light and peace."

The Holy Father wished a happy Christmas to everyone and recalled those who are suffering, those "who must support the burdensome consequences of war and those who are facing special difficulties."

At the end of the audience, John Paul II addressed some special remarks to his fellow Poles who, every year, exchange greetings with the Pope on the eve of Christmas.

"For my native land," he said, speaking Polish, "I hope that the spirit of the Great Jubilee may pervade all hearts with the sacred fire of love. May mercy, goodness and human solidarity reign in our homes."

"I embrace in prayer the Church in Poland, together with all her pastors led by the Cardinal primate, and our entire society, without exception. I would like to be close to each of you, to each Polish family, to each Polish home, especially where there is suffering and pain, where the loneliness and embitterment of abandonment are felt."

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IN MEMORIAM

VATICAN CITY, DEC 22, 1999 (VIS) - The following prelates died in recent weeks:

- Archbishop Cyrille Emmanuel Benni, emeritus of Mossul of the Syrians, Iraq, on December 9, at the age of 78.
- Archbishop Augustin Fataki Alueke, emeritus of Kisangani, Democratic Republic of the Congo, on December 15, at the age of 87.
- Bishop Manuel Menendez, emeritus of San Martin, Argentina, on December 15, at the age of 84.
- Bishop Gustavo Posada Pelaez M.X.Y., emeritus of Istmina-Tado, Colombia, on December 8, at the age of 82.
- Archbishop Enea Selis, emeritus of Cosenza e Bisignano, Italy, on December 14, at the age of 89.
- Bishop Alois Stoger, former auxiliary of Sankt Polten, Austria, on December 12, at the age of 95.
- Bishop Joseph Vu Duy Nhat of Bui Chu, Vietnam, on December 11, at the age of 88.

...;DEATHS;...;... ;VIS;19991222;Word: 130;

Tuesday, December 21, 1999

HOLY FATHER EXTENDS CHRISTMAS GREETINGS TO ROMAN CURIA


VATICAN CITY, DEC 21, 1999 (VIS) - This morning at 11:30 in the Clementine Hall, Pope John Paul met with members of the College of Cardinals and the Roman Curia, and reminded them that today is the last time this century and millennium that they meet for this traditional exchange of Christmas greetings.

"We wish to live this encounter," he began his talk, "in the awareness that we constitute a most special community, that of the closest collaborators of the Bishop of Rome, the successor of the Apostle Peter. ... If the vocation of the Successor of Peter, surrounded by his collaborators, has a particular meaning in the Church, it is precisely because it is a ministry, a service. Christ said to Peter: 'Confirm your brothers'."

In St. Luke's account, continued the Holy Father, "Peter emerges in all his fragility. The power 'to confirm' does not therefore come from his own capacities: it comes from the power of Christ, who prays for Him. And it is thanks to the power of Christ that he can sustain his brothers notwithstanding his personal weakness. It is necessary to keep in mind this truth about the 'ministerium petrinum'. He who is the Successor of Peter and exercises such a ministry can never forget this, and those who, in whatever capacity, participate in this ministry must never forget it."

"May today's meditation (on the petrine ministry) cross the threshold of the third millennium and be received by those who will come after us, who after us will assume, as Successors of Peter and their collaborators, the 'ministerium petrinum', to exercise it according to the will of Christ."

Pope John Paul then reviewed the three-year period of preparation for the now imminent Great Jubilee of the year 2000. He highlighted initiatives in churches, at both the local and universal levels, including the five continental synods and the consignment in 1999 of two Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortations ("Ecclesia in America" and "Ecclesia in Asia").

Other important events of this past year, he added, include his trips to Mexico City, St. Louis, Romania, Poland, India and Georgia. On the ecumenical level, he underscored the trips to Romania and Georgia, and the signing of the document on justification with the Lutherans. He also mentioned initiatives in the area of inter-religious dialogue, emphasizing the October meeting in St. Peter's Square with representatives of other religions.

"The announcement of salvation," remarked Pope John Paul, "cannot fail to be accompanied by an active witnessing to charity." And he underlined the Holy See's efforts "to support the path of the People of God who, in their local pastoral realities in a thousand ways are charged with caring for the person and being at the service of the most needy."

"May this Christmas which starts the Jubilee Year celebrations," the Pope said in closing, "be for each of us an ascent to the mountain of the Lord. ... Yes, with faith we will hasten our steps towards the extraordinary Jubilee Year, full of grace and especially expressed by the gift of the indulgence."

AC;CHRISTMAS GREETINGS CURIA;...;...;VIS;19991221;Word: 500;

FATHER DEZZA SERVED CHRIST IN THE PERSON OF HIS VICAR


VATICAN CITY, DEC 21, 1999 (VIS) - Yesterday afternoon in The Vatican Basilica, the Holy Father presided at the funeral of Cardinal Paolo Dezza S.J., who died in Rome on the night of Friday, December 17. The members of the College of Cardinals concelebrated the event with John Paul II.

In his homily, the Holy Father recalled that Father Dezza "was born in Advent, on the day of St. Lucy, and died during Advent, closer to Christmas. For him, death was a 'holy door,' the last
passage that opens onto eternity."

"Beyond death, and accompanying him to full communion with God," the Pope continued, "I like to think that Father Paolo Dezza found three greatly loved faces, Mary, Peter and Ignatius, with whom Providence had wished to unite his spiritual journey."

Pope John Paul affirmed that, "the ideal of St. Ignatius to 'serve Christ in the person of His vicar' was the rule to which the late cardinal dedicated his entire life; he did so generously and disinterestedly, with intelligence, prudence, faith and kindness. He was not unaware of the defects of the Church and those within her, but with great dedication, rich in love and faith, he contributed to alleviating the effects of these shortcomings, working for true renewal of the Church."

HML;FUNERAL;...;DEZZA;VIS;19991221;Word: 220;

OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, DEC 21, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Bishop Luis del Castillo Estrada S.J., auxiliary of Montevideo, Uruguay, as bishop of Melo (area 25,000, population 174,000, Catholics 125,000, priests 22, permanent deacons 1, religious 44), Uruguay.

NER;...;...;DEL CASTILLO ;VIS;19991221;Word: 40;

AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, DEC 21, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in audience Cardinal Camillo Ruini, vicar general for the diocese of Rome and president of the Italian Episcopal Conference, with Bishop Agostino Superbo, emeritus of Altamura-Gravina-Acquaviva delle Fonti, general ecclesiastical assistant of Italian Catholic Action, and Paola Bignardi, president of Italian Caholic Action.

This evening he is scheduled to receive Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

AP;...;...;...;VIS;19991221;Word: 90;

HELP DISCOVER THE TRUE SPIRIT OF THE HOLY YEAR


VATICAN CITY, DEC 21, 1999 (VIS) - At midday today in the Consistory Hall, John Paul II received a group of young people from Italian Catholic Action who come to Rome every year to exchange Christmas greetings with the Pope.

"Christmas," said the Pope, "is a special day that calls us to solidarity and love, it invites us to open our hearts to our brothers, especially to those in need. ... (May) each of you and the various groups of Catholic Action you represent rediscover the divine love that envelops and gives full meaning to human existence. May the virgin, who in Bethlehem brought the Redeemer into the world, help you to accept Him in your hearts."

In closing, the Holy Father referred to the Jubilee, asking the young people, "to fully live this special time of grace. Be apostles of other young people, helping them to receive the true spirit of the Holy Year and to live it profoundly."

AC;CHRISTMAS;...;ITALIAN CATHOLIC ACTION;VIS;19991221;Word: 170;

Monday, December 20, 1999

CHRIST IS THE LIGHT THAT CAN CHANGE THE HUMAN HEART

VATICAN CITY, DEC 18, 1999 (VIS) - This morning, John Paul II received a group of pilgrims from the Czech Republic, led by President Vaclav Havel. It is his government that this year has donated the Christmas tree that adorns St. Peter's Square.

Apart from the fir tree, that comes from the mountain of Beskydy in the region of Ostrava-Opava, "you have wished to offer other smaller fir trees," said the Holy Father, "which will be placed in various places in the Apostolic Palace and the Curia. ... Furthermore, you have brought three statues, dressed in the traditional costume of Valassko, which have been placed next to those customarily used in the nativity scene in St. Peter's Square.

"The Christmas tree together with the nativity scene creates the typical Christmas atmosphere and can help us to better understand the message of salvation that Christ brought to us with His incarnation. From the manger in Bethlehem to the Cross of Golgotha, He gave witness with His whole life to God's love for man. He is, in the words of John the Evangelist, 'the true light that enlightens every man'."

The Pope concluded: "As a symbol of this light, the lights on the tree shine at Christmas to reinforce our awareness of the great mystery: Present in Christ is the light that can change the heart of man."

AC;CHRISTMAS TREE GIFT;...;HAVEL;VIS;19991220;Word: 240;

PAPAL TELEGRAM FOR FLOODS IN VENEZUELA


VATICAN CITY, DEC 18, 1999 (VIS) - Given below is the text of a telegram sent, in the Pope's name, by Cardinal Secretary of State Angelo Sodano to Archbishop Leonardo Sandri, apostolic nuncio in Venezuela, for the floods that have recently devastated that country:
"The Holy Father John Paul II, profoundly grieved upon hearing of the sad news of the floods and mudslides caused by torrential rain, that have provoked a great number of victims, injured and serious material damage, offers his prayers for the eternal repose of the deceased. He also entreats the Lord to grant consolation to those affected by the tragedy and to inspire in everyone sentiments of solidarity, with the aim of assisting the injured and the afflicted and of overcoming the calamity. Furthermore, His Holiness expresses his sincere condolences to the families of the deceased and his closeness to those who have lost relatives, home and goods. At the same time he encourages public bodies, institutions and men and women of good will to contribute, with a generous spirit and in Christian charity, effective aid in these difficult moments of great suffering. Moreover, he imparts a heartfelt and comforting apostolic blessing upon the beloved people of Venezuela."

TGR;FLOODS;...;SODANO; SANDRI;VIS;19991220;Word: 210;

OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 18, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father:

- Accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the archdiocese of Guayaquil, Ecuador, presented by Auxiliary Bishop Jose Gabriel Diaz Cueva, in accordance with canons 411 and 401, para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law.

- Appointed Msgr. Alberto Bottari de Castello of the diocese of Treviso, Italy, presently rector of the John XXIII minor seminary in the diocese of Ebolowa-Kribi, Cameroon, as apostolic nuncio in Gambia, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, at the same time elevating him to the dignity of archbishop. The archbishop-elect was born in Montebelluna, Italy, in 1942 and ordained a priest in 1966.

RE; NN;...;...;DIAZ; BOTTARI;VIS;19991220;Word: 110;

FUNERAL MASS FOR CARDINAL PAOLO DEZZA


VATICAN CITY, DEC 18, 1999 (VIS) - On Monday, December 20, at 5:30 p.m. in St. Peter's Basilica, Pope John Paul will preside at the concelebrated funeral Mass for Cardinal Paolo Dezza, S.J. who died yesterday. Cardinal Dezza had just celebrated his 98th birthday on December 13.

OCL;FUNERAL DEZZA;...;...;VIS;19991220;Word: 50;

POPE EXPRESSES HIS CLOSENESS TO PEOPLE OF VENEZUELA


VATICAN CITY, DEC 19, 1999 (VIS) - At midday today, after praying the angelus with the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square, the Pope asked that generosity be shown towards the citizens of Venezuela who are suffering the consequences of torrential rains:

"I am following with grief the news that arrives from Venezuela, where the numbers of dead, missing and displaced, victims of torrential rains that have also caused great material damage, continues to grow. I reaffirm my closeness to the beloved people of Venezuela, and at the same time call upon institutions and people of good will to generously contribute in order to alleviate the suffering and repair the tragic consequences of this huge natural disaster. May the Virgin of Coromoto intercede on behalf of this people that honor her as Mother and Patroness.

ANG;RAINS VENEZUELA;...;...;VIS;19991220;Word: 150;

ANGELUS: WE MUST WELCOME THE MESSIAH AS MARY DID


VATICAN CITY, DEC 19, 1999 (VIS) - At today's angelus, on this last Sunday of Advent, Pope John Paul reflected on the imminent Christmas vigil Mass in St. Peter's Basilica on December 24 and the opening of the Holy Door, which officially inaugurates the Jubilee Year 2000.

He also spoke of today's Gospel where we see "the Virgin Mary in the act of welcoming the announcement of the birth of the Messiah. Her actions are for every Christian and for every person of good will a model of how to prepare oneself for Christmas and the Great Jubilee. She performed an act of faith, of listening to the Word of God, in order to assent to it with complete submission of mind and heart."

"Opening the Holy Door," observed the Pope, "the Church is symbolically expressing how God has opened the path of salvation to everyone. Each one is expected to answer, as Mary did, with a personal and sincere 'yes,' opening up in turn their own life to the love of God."

The Holy Father pointed out that "the lights on the streets bring to mind one aspect of the holiday season, a more external one which, while it is not negative in itself, risks however distracting us from the authentic spirit of Christmas. If in fact, and rightly so, Christmas has become the feast of gifts, it is because we are celebrating the gift par excellence that God gave mankind in the person of Jesus. However this tradition should be lived in harmony with the meaning of the event, in a simple and sober style."

ANG;CHRISTMAS; HOLY YEAR;...;...;VIS;19991220;Word: 270;

NEW SWEDISH AMBASSADOR PRESENTS LETTERS OF CREDENCE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 20, 1999 (VIS) - Sweden's new ambassador to the Holy See, Bo Enrikson, presented his Letters of Credence to the Holy Father this morning, who welcomed him by recalling the Swedish royal family's November 13 visit to the Vatican, the ecumenical service in St. Peter's Basilica that same day, and the Pope's own pastoral visit to Sweden 10 years ago.

The Pope said his "joy about the recent proclamation of Sweden's Saint Bridget as co-patroness of Europe, with Saints Catherine of Siena and Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, is still very alive in my heart. (St. Bridget is) an illustrious daughter of Sweden and pilgrim of Christ, guided by extraordinary mystical graces." He added that the proclamation "was a providential occasion to reflect on the common responsibility to pursue the path to full unity."

"The Holy See," observed John Paul II, "knows and esteems Sweden's action in favor of peace, collaboration and respect for human rights at regional and international levels, as well as concretely demonstrated generosity in favor of the poorest nations." Such actions, he said, combined with "authentic ethical and religious values, will contribute to the affirmation of a civilization of peace and mutual comprehension among peoples."

Building Europe's common house, he said, must have a foundation which includes "the dignity of the person, respect for the sacred nature of life, the benefit of the central role of the family,, recognition of the importance of education, and safeguarding basic freedoms, starting with that of religion. ... The Church will play her part in this process, placing at the disposition of modern man the riches of her faith."

CD;LETTERS CREDENCE;...;SWEDEN; ENRIKSON;VIS;19991220;Word: 270;

AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, DEC 20, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in separate audiences:

- Archbishop Jose Saraiva Martins C.M.F., prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.
- Archbishop John Patrick Foley and Bishop Pierfranco Pastore, respectively president and secretary of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications.

On Saturday, December 18, he received in separate audiences:

- Vaclav Havel, president of the Czech Republic, accompanied by his entourage.
- Cardinal Achille Silvestrini, prefect of the Congregation for Oriental Churches. - Cardinal Lucas Moreira Neves O.P., prefect of the Congregation for Bishops.

AP;...;...;... ;VIS;19991220;Word: 90;

Friday, December 17, 1999

NEW AMBASSADRESS OF PARAGUAY PRESENTS LETTERS OF CREDENCE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 17, 1999 (VIS) - This morning the Pope received the Letters of Credence of Blanca Elida Zuccolillo de Rodriguez Alcala, the new ambassadress of the Republic of Paraguay.

In his talk, the Holy Father encouraged the political leaders of that country to respond "to the most noble aspirations of all citizens." In order to do so, it is necessary to "improve the living conditions of the most unprotected, put a halt to corruption among the powerful which harms the weak, and prevent the slow impoverishment of large sectors of the population. Moreover, in this way it will also be possible to combat the lack of confidence in democratic institutions," and citizens will "have the opportunity to elect and control their own political leaders."

John Paul II emphasized that "the pastors of the Church in Paraguay ... have not ceased to make their voices heard, even in moments of difficulty, of anxiety, of breakdown of values and of moral confusion. Without doubt, this has contributed towards the Church's being considered as one of the institutions that is most credible and deserving of the general trust of citizens."

The Pope concluded by saying that the contribution of the Church "to the good of the community as a whole cannot be underestimated or relegated to the sphere of the merely private, as is maintained by various presently fashionable trends of thought. ... In fact, the proclamation of the Gospel would not be completely faithful if it excluded certain essential human aspects, such as social life and the need to construct together a more just, fraternal and cohesive society."

CD;LETTERS OF CREDENCE;...;PARAGUAY; ZUCCOLILLO;VIS;19991217;Word: 280;

AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, DEC 17, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in separate audiences:

- Alwi Shihab, Indonesian foreign minister. - Msgr. Marcelo Sanchez Sorondo, chancellor of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences.

AP;...;...;...;VIS;19991217;Word: 30;

PRESENTATION OF THE NEW INDEX OF THE CAUSES OF SAINTS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 17, 1999 (VIS) - In the Holy See Press Office today, Archbishops Jose Saraiva Martins and Edward Nowak, respectively prefect and secretary of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, presented the "Index ac status causarum" (Index and Status of Causes).

Archbishop Saraiva explained that the "Index," prepared by his dicastery, is the "list of the causes for beatification and canonization, including those that have just started and are still in the diocesan phase, those that are more or less advanced and being examined by the congregation and, finally, those that have completed their 'iter' with the canonization of the Servants of God concerned." The book presented today is the 15th edition. The first was published in 1890 and the most recent in 1988; it comprises all the work undertaken by the dicastery from 1588 up to and including 1999.

Speaking of the selection of candidates for sainthood, the prefect affirmed that this "reflects the sensitivity and the spiritual and pastoral needs of the Church, who is the promoter the causes." Whenever there is a serious and spontaneous rising of "a popular movement, not only of respect but also of admiration and of veneration" towards a Christian, then we must confirm whether, behind this, there truly lies "the finger of God. Verification consists in checking whether the fame of sanctity truly exists and whether it is founded on the heroic exercise of virtue (or) on popular emotion and credulity."

Archbishop Nowak pointed out that the preface of the "Index" gives information on the history and procedure of the causes of saints. In the first part, which is 402 pages long, mention is made of 1921 causes, "most of which are following their 'iter' at a speed in keeping with their complexity."

The second part, he continued, contains the list of "early 'blesseds' or 'saints', whose cults have been confirmed by the Holy See given that they pre-date 1534, in keeping with the provisions of Urban VIII (1634). ... The official recognition of their cult places them at the same level as formally declared blesseds. ... In order for them to be canonized, the heroic nature of their virtues and a miracle attributed to their intercession must be recognized. At the present time, the number of these blesseds is 1430."

Archbishop Nowak added that the third part comprises the "list of blesseds, which at present numbers 1742, going from the year 1609 to 1999." On this matter he recalled that up until now John Paul II has proclaimed 940 blesseds and 295 saints. The fourth section, concluded the archbishop, comprises "the catalogue of saints canonized from the congregation's foundation (1588) up until today, a total of 591."

...;INDEX CAUSES SAINTS;...;SARAIVA; NOWAK;VIS;19991217;Word: 450;

THE TRUTH ABOUT HISTORY MAKES US FREE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 17, 1999 (VIS) - Participants in the international symposium on Jan Hus - priest, preacher, theologian, reformer and Bohemian national hero - were welcomed this morning by the Holy Father who, in his speech to them, highlighted Hus' "moral courage in facing adversity and death, that has made him a figure of special significance to the Czech people."

Speaking in Czech and Italian, the Pope noted that this symposium will publish its results "so that as many people as possible will have an insight into not only a remarkable man but also an important and complex period of Christian and European history. Today, on the eve of the Great Jubilee, I feel the need to express deep regret for the cruel death inflicted on Jan Hus and for the consequent wound of conflict and division which was thus imposed on the minds and hearts of the Bohemian people."

"The writing of history," continued John Paul II, "is sometimes beset by ideological, political and economic pressures, so that the truth is obscured and history itself becomes a prisoner of the powerful. Genuinely scientific study is our best defense against such pressures and the distortions they can bring. It is true that it is very difficult to attain an absolute objective account of history. ... Yet this does not mean that we cannot offer an account of history which is in a very real sense impartial and therefore true and liberating. ... The truth which sets us free from error is also the truth which sets us free for love."

Concluding, the Pope pointed out that "at a time when many are working to create a new kind of unity in Europe, studies such as yours can help to inspire people to go beyond narrow ethnic and national confines to genuine openness and solidarity. ... It is clear then that your work is an important service not only to the historical figure of Jan Hus, but also to Christians and European society more generally. This is because, in the end, it is a service to the truth about man."

AC;JAN HUS;...;...;VIS;19991217;Word: 340;

Thursday, December 16, 1999

THANKS EXPRESSED TO CHRISTMAS CONCERT ARTISTS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 16, 1999 (VIS) - This morning the Pope received the artists who will participate in the traditional "Christmas in the Vatican" concert, which will take place on Saturday, December 18, in the Paul VI Hall.

John Paul II recalled that this concert is "a cultural demonstration that aims to sensitize public opinion to the need for further places of worship and of catechesis in the diocese of Rome."

After thanking the artists for their generosity in contributing to the solution of this problem, "that is close to the heart of the Bishop of Rome," he said "parish communities urgently need their own pastoral structure, especially in the outskirts where these facilities are lacking."

"The objective to construct fifty sacred buildings before the year 2000 has, thanks to God, almost been achieved. ... The city of Rome, which is preparing to play the leading role in the Great Jubilee of the year 2000, may count on the opening of places of worship, of meeting, of catechesis and of structures for social, cultural and sporting activities. ... Thank-you for your precious contribution."

AC;VATICAN CHRISTMAS CONCERT;...;...;VIS;19991216;Word: 190;

POPE WELCOMES FIVE NEW AMBASSADORS TO THE HOLY SEE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 16, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father this morning welcomed five new ambassadors to the Holy See during a ceremony in which they collectively presented their Letters of Credence. He addressed the new ambassadors as a group, then met personally with each one, consigning a speech which accented the particular situation in their country.

The new ambassadors are: Bjarne Bladbjerg of Denmark, Aloys Mbonayo from Burundi, Ampalavanar Selverajah of Singapore, Jacques Bihozagara from Rwanda and Tayyab Siddiqui of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

In his speech in French, he pointed out that "the approach of the new millennium is an invitation for all men," especially leaders in the economic, political and social realms, "to bring greater attention to their brothers and sisters."

"Globalization," underlined the Pope, "should not lead to a growing impoverishment of the most disadvantaged peoples, often constrained to bend to the economic rules of the rich countries. Economies should be determined by social politics on the national and international level, and not just subjected to financial factors."

"Those nations which have a long democratic and technical history, and an old economic and social vitality," he added, "have acquired knowledge and know-how. They can put these at the service of those countries which have difficulty in running the infrastructures and organizations which are indispensable to economic growth, to the needs of health and the basic needs of persons."

The Holy Father stressed that "it is also important to develop aid for countries committed to pursuing the fight against poverty and injustice, sources of numerous centers of violence and violations of human rights." A "concrete and tangible solidarity, for a better sharing of the world's riches and goods" is imperative.

Turning to another subject, Pope John Paul observed that "in this year in which we celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Charter for Children, it would be good to become mobilized in order to give young people all that is necessary for their growth and to do everything possible so that they will not be subjected to violence and to work which prevents them from going to school, so that they might have a normal life for their age."

He said that young people must be "inserted into social and economic networks ... in order to make them protagonists of social life." If marginalization can be reduced, then "exacerbated forms of violence, drugs and delinquency" can be reduced or eliminated.

"It is intolerable," John Paul II said in closing remarks, "that children and young people are the objects of corrupt trade, whether this is to satisfy adults who have no morals or to feed the illegal networks of adoption or organ donations." And he lauded all persons and organizations who work to combat these scourges.

CD;LETTERS OF CREDENCE;...;...;VIS;19991216;Word: 460;

OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, DEC 16, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Fr. Philippe Gueneley, episcopal vicar of Saint-Claude, France, as bishop of Langres (area 6,250, population 200,000, Catholics 180,000, priests 81, permanent deacons 11, religious 139), France. The bishop-elect was born in Dole, France, in 1938 and ordained a priest in 1964. He succeeds Bishop Leon Taverdet whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached the age limit.

NER; RE;...;...;GUENELEY; TAVERDET ;VIS;19991216;Word: 80;

AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, DEC 16, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in separate audiences:

- Archbishop Giovanni Lajolo, apostolic nuncio in the Federal Republic of Germany.
- Archbishop Francisco-Javier Lozano, apostolic nuncio in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
- Anders Thunborg, ambassador of Sweden, accompanied by his wife, on a farewell visit. - Cardinal Jorge Arturo Medina Estevez, prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments, accompanied by Archbishop-bishop Francesco Pio Tamburrino and Msgrs. Vincenzo Ferrara and Mario Marini, respectively secretary and under-secretaries of the same congregation.

AP;...;...;...;VIS;19991216;Word: 90;

Wednesday, December 15, 1999

CONSTRUCT THE CIVILIZATION OF LOVE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 15, 1999 (VIS) - "Commitment to building a 'civilization of love'," was the theme of John Paul II's catechesis during the general audience which was held this morning in the Paul VI Hall.

The Pope recalled that over the past few decades, the loss of a sense of God has coincided with "the advance of a nihilistic culture" that relativizes fundamental values, such as those of the family and the respect for life. "Paradoxically, the State is required to recognize as 'rights' many modes of behavior that threaten human life." Furthermore, "the ever greater refusal of the diverse simply because of its diversity, tests our conscience as believers."

In the face of the "culture of death," he went on, "our responsibility as Christians is expressed in the commitment of the 'new evangelization', one of whose most important fruits is the civilization of love." The center of this concept "is the recognition of the value of the human person and, concretely, of all human beings. ... The Christian view of the human being as the image of God entails that individual rights, by their nature, be respected by society, which does not create but simply recognizes them."

John Paul II said that, in order for this doctrine to go beyond mere words, social life must "be animated by the breath of authentic religious experience."

The Pope concluded: "Christianity makes its contribution towards the construction of a society of human proportions, safeguarding its soul and proclaiming the requirements of God's law, in which all the organizations and legislation of society must be anchored. ... This contribution of the Church comes about, above all, through the witness offered by Christians, especially the laity in their everyday lives."

AG;CIVILIZATION OF LOVE;...;...;VIS;19991215;Word: 290;

TRADITIONAL PAPAL MASS FOR UNIVERSITY STUDENTS, TEACHERS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 15, 1999 (VIS) - Last evening in St. Peter's Basilica, the Holy Father celebrated Mass for the 20th consecutive year for Rome's university students and teachers, continuing a tradition he established at the start of his pontificate. Joining them were delegations from nine European universities twinned with nine Roman universities.

In his homily the Holy Father spoke of the imminence of the Jubilee Year and the opening of the Holy Doors in Rome and in dioceses around the world. Opening the door at St. Peter's, he said, "is a highly significant event: it represents the opening of a universal passage, as a meeting point towards which all men and peoples are invited to move, to enter in love, justice and peace in the Kingdom of God."

"The Jubilee theme chosen for the university world: 'The University for a New Humanism'," he said, "invites us to develop and increase the rich scientific patrimony of mankind according to a project which places man at the center. ... Serving mankind is the duty which, on the threshold of the third millennium, is entrusted in a special way to you of the university world." And he pointed to two important Holy Year meetings which will involve university teachers and students: World Youth Day and the World Meeting of University Professors.

Jubilees, stated John Paul II, are pilgrimages in faith towards God and they call for, above all else, conversion, "An essential prerequisite of faith, in fact, is conversion, ... an interior movement of oneself to God, which allows us to discover ourselves in a new and authentic way. The departure point is becoming aware of one's own poverty, of one's own need of salvation. What impedes or slows down conversion are pride, presumption, and trusting in oneself, which translate into arrogance, lies and iniquity."

Reiterating the universal aspect of the Jubilee, the Pope recalled that five continental synods had been held in recent years to prepare the Church to enter the year 2000. He said that the synods too were a kind of pilgrimage of peoples to God.
In closing, he urged the teachers and students to "love study, love knowledge which becomes broader and deeper with research, which becomes richer through engagement, showing the splendor of truth. Love life, respect it always, especially where it is fragile and defenseless."

HML;UNIVERSITIES;...;...;VIS;19991215;Word: 390;

CZECH REPUBLIC DONATES TREE FOR ST. PETER'S SQUARE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 15, 1999 (VIS) - At 4:30 p.m. on Saturday December 18, a ceremony will take place during which the Christmas tree in St. Peter's Square will be illuminated. This year the tree has been donated by the Czech Republic.

Vaclav Havel, the president of the Czech Republic, will take part in the ceremony, as will Cardinal Miloslav Vlk, archbishop of Prague and various representatives from Vatican City State.

The 26-meter high fir tree comes from the Beskydy forest near Moravia. The Czechs have also donated 30 other smaller fir-trees to the Vatican, two of which will be placed in the Holy Father's own apartment, one in the Paul VI Hall and the rest in the offices of the Roman Curia. All the trees will be decorated with straw, dried flowers, sweets and bows created by people from the Ostrava-Opava region.

...;CHRISTMAS TREE;...;CZECH REPUBLIC;VIS;19991215;Word: 160;

PRESS OFFICE ON RELATIONS BETWEEN HOLY SEE AND CHINA


VATICAN CITY, DEC 15, 1999 (VIS) - Following reports that China and the Holy See would establish diplomatic relations in the coming year, Holy See Press Office Director Joaquin Navarro-Valls said in a declaration released this afternoon:

"With regard to news reports today on relations between the People's Republic of China and the Holy See, I must make it clear that what was reported contains nothing new with respect to the news which was disseminated last October, which I also had to clarify.

"Since then there have been no new developments except for the Holy Father's Message to the Catholics in China and in the diocese of Macao."

On October 25, 1999 Dr. Navarro-Valls had stated: "We take note of this news that arises from various sources. It is well known that the Holy See wishes to have good relations with all countries. Consequently, this includes China where a Catholic community exists. However, I cannot be any more specific on news that we have not received through bilateral channels."

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AUDIENCE

VATICAN CITY, DEC 15, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father received today in audience Archbishop Francois Xavier Nguyen Van Thuan, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.

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Tuesday, December 14, 1999

OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 14, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed:

- Fr. Arnold Orowae, vicar general of Wabag (area 10,790, population 240,000, Catholics 62,079, priests 18, religious 39), Papua New Guinea, as auxiliary bishop of the same diocese. The bishop-elect was born in Aiopa, Papua New Guinea, in 1955 and ordained a priest in 1983.

- Fr. David Laurin Ricken, of the clergy of the diocese of Pueblo, U.S.A., official of the Congregation for the Clergy, as coadjutor bishop of Cheyenne (area 252,552, population 481,400, Catholics 48,911, priests 57, permanent deacons 8, religious 45), U.S.A. The bishop-elect was born in Dodge City, U.S.A., in 1952 and ordained a priest in 1980.

- Fr. Ivo Baldi of the diocese of Citta di Castello, Italy, vicar general of the prelature of Huari, Peru, as bishop of Huaraz (area 13,618, population 285,000, Catholics 261,628, priests 36, permanent deacons 1, religious 48), Peru. The bishop-elect was born in Citta di Castello in 1947 and ordained a priest 1971.

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CONTINENTAL ASPECT TO MARK OPENING OF ST. PETER'S HOLY DOOR


VATICAN CITY, DEC 14, 1999 (VIS) - Pope John Paul II, in an unprecedented move, and breaking with centuries of tradition, will officially start the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 by personally opening the Holy Doors of Rome's patriarchal basilicas of St. Peter's, St. John Lateran, St. Mary Major and St. Paul's Outside-the-Walls.

The surprise announcement was made on October 15 when the Office of the Liturgical Ceremonies of the Supreme Pontiff revealed the Pope's calendar of liturgical celebrations, up to and including the January 1, 2000, opening of the Holy Door at St. Mary Major.

The celebration of Jubilees began in 1300 with Pope Boniface VIII, but it was only in 1423 that Martin V first opened a Holy Door, doing so at the Pope's cathedral basilica of St. John Lateran. Three quarters of a century later, for the Jubilee Year 1500, Alexander VI became the first pontiff to open a Holy Door at St. Peter's on Christmas Eve, designating cardinal legates to open the doors on the other basilicas. For this Jubilee, Alexander created a new opening in the portico of St. Peter's and commissioned a door made of marble for the occasion. It was 3.5 meters high and 2.2 meters wide (11 by 7 feet) and lasted until 1618 when another door was installed. That door, the last to the right of the five doors found in the atrium, was replaced in 1950 by the current one, a bronze door donated by Swiss Catholics.

This newest door, consisting of two bronze panels, was inaugurated on December 24, 1949, by Pope Pius XII. It was sculpted by Siena artist Vico Consorti and replaced the wood panels of the inner door which had been inaugurated on the vigil of Christmas 1749 by Benedict XIV.

Each of the two bronze doors is divided into eight smaller panels. Fifteen of these 16 panels represent scenes from the Old and New Testaments: a cherubim at the gates of Paradise, the expulsion from the Garden of Eden, the Annunciation, the Baptism of Christ, the Good Shepherd, the Prodigal Son, the resurrection of Lazarus, the healing of the paralytic, the adulteress, Peter's denial of the Lord, the good thief, doubting Thomas, the sacrament of Penance, the conversion of St. Paul, the Resurrection. The last panel depicts the 1949 opening of the Holy Door by Pius XII.
These doors are called Holy Doors not only because of the symbolism - doors opening to allow the faithful to physically enter a church, as well as to "enter" a year dedicated to sanctifying their soul through prayer, good works, reconciliation and penance - but because the materials used to make them are blessed.

Pope John Paul II, in his 1994 Apostolic Letter on the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, "Tertio Millennio Adveniente," wrote: "The Holy Door of the Jubilee of the Year 2000 should be symbolically wider than those of previous Jubilees, because humanity, upon reaching this goal, will leave behind not just a century, but a millennium."

Bishop Piero Marini, who has served in the Roman Curia for all but three months of his 34 years as a priest and who was appointed by the Holy Father as master of liturgical ceremonies in 1987, gave an insight into how the Jubilee Year 2000 will be different from past Holy Years, during a press conference today in the Holy See Press Office.

Explaining why Pope John Paul had decided to break with tradition and personally open all four Holy Doors, he said that, in addition to opening the door at St. Peter's, an established papal tradition, the Holy Father had some time ago indicated a desire to also open the door at St. Paul's Outside-the Walls on January 18, 2000. "January 18," said Bishop Marini, "is the customary start of the annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, and is always marked by services at St. Paul's. Given the Pope's solicitude for ecumenism, and his desire for this Jubilee to have an ecumenical character, upon reflection he felt it fitting that he should open that Holy Door."

"As to the doors at St. John Lateran and St. Mary Major," Bishop Marini continued, "Pope John Paul has constantly referred to the 2000 Holy Year as 'the Great Jubilee'. A 'great Jubilee' should, therefore, be marked by events and liturgies that set it apart from other Jubilees. Since, in the past, the Holy Doors of cathedrals - and St. John Lateran is the Pope's cathedral church - were opened on December 25, it was decided that he would open the door at St. John's on Christmas Day. Then, to complete the special nature of this millennium Jubilee, and to give a Marian aspect to this Holy Year, the Pope felt it was important that he personally open the Holy Door at St. Mary Major, the oldest Marian shrine on the West."

The rites involving the Holy Doors during Jubilee years from 1500 to 1975 remained essentially unchanged in several ways: During that period the Holy Doors of the four basilicas were closed on the outside by a wall, not a door, and on the inside were covered by a wooden door; The Pope used a hammer to open the doors and a trowel to close them; Bricks were often used to seal a door, and on occasion gold and silver bricks were sealed within the wall; Since 1500 coins have been placed within the wall, first by themselves, later in special boxes: this custom is still observed today.
A number of changes in the ceremony of opening Holy Doors will mark the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, in particular at St. Peter's, the first door to be opened.

Bishop Marini explained that "until the Holy Year 1975, when Paul VI opened the door at St. Peter's, the door was cemented shut and opened only by breaking down the mason work. Theoretically the mason wall was to fall back in one piece but that year, several pieces of debris fell very close to the pope, causing some concern. A new system was tried for the extraordinary Holy Year in 1983, the Jubilee celebrating the 1950th anniversary of our redemption, and it is that system which will be used again."

He then illustrated the rite of "recognitio" or the on-the spot-inspection which is made at each basilica's Holy Door, formally preparing the way for the Pope to open them. Taking part in this rite, led by the master of papal liturgical ceremonies, are the archpriest of each basilica, representatives of the Chapter and a papal master of ceremonies.

The "recognitio" at St. Peter's will take place tomorrow at 4:30 p.m, at St. John Lateran on December 16 at 4:30 p.m., St. Mary Major on December 17 at 4:30 p.m. and St. Paul's Outside-the-Walls on December 21 at 4 p.m.

Bishop Marini detailed this rite for St. Peter's Basilica. "I will be involved in this, as will the prefect of the papal household and other prelates and officials. Prayers will be said and then workers will remove the internal cementing, not a wall as before. There are receptacles within this that will be removed and their contents later examined in the sacristy and then given to the Holy Father. These receptacles contain items such as coins, stamps and other memorabilia from the previous Holy Year, the year the door was last sealed. There are also bricks inside the cemented portion, and these too will be removed."

Pointing to one of the ways the Pope will depart from centuries of tradition for this year's ceremonies, Bishops Marini said that a hammer will not be used this year to open the Holy Doors.

In early years popes simply took hammers from workmen at the church and, in a symbolic gesture, knocked three times on the door, before actually opening it. Later on this ritual was performed with hammers that were made of gold, silver or other precious materials, usually commissioned by high-ranking ecclesiastics and donated to the pope.

For the start of the Jubilee Year 2000 Pope John Paul will simply open the Holy Door at St. Peter's Basilica.

The Holy Door ceremonies and the Mass which open the Jubilee Year 2000 will commence at 11 p.m. on December 24 with a procession in the atrium of St. Peter's Basilica. Taking part will be members of the Curia and other high-ranking Church officials, lay persons from the five continents, deacons and the cardinal concelebrants. The Pope, leaving the sacristy where he has vested, will join the procession.
Seated in the atrium will be bishops, representatives of the Chapter and Penitentiaries of the basilica, heads of State, the dean and vice-dean of the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See and the papal choir. The procession will stop at the Holy Door for a moment of prayer, the singing of the Alleluia and a reading from the Gospel of Luke (4:14-21).

Pope John Paul, approaching the Holy Door in silence, will then read three verses from the Psalms (118:20; 5:8; 118:19). Ascending the steps, the Pope will open the Holy Door by pushing its sides with both of his hands. From inside the basilica two "sampietrini," workmen responsible for the maintenance of St. Peter's Basilica, will open the door completely.

As soon as the door is open, the interior of the basilica is fully illuminated. The Pope will kneel on the threshold for a few moments in prayer.

The papal master of ceremonies then highlighted what he termed "the international character of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000. At the opening of the Holy Door in St. Peter's," he said, "we will get a glimpse of this, reflecting the continental synods that have been held in preparation for the Holy Year, as called for by Pope John Paul in 'Tertio Millennio Adveniente.' There will be groups participating in the opening ceremony which represent each of the continents. For example, we will see Africans, dressed in native costumes and performing their music on native instruments. Another example: As the Pope enters the basilica, faithful from Asia and Oceania will adorn the jambs of the Holy Door with flowers and perfumes. Members of the laity from America and Europe will join the procession inside the basilica, holding lamps and flowers."

Once Pope John Paul enters St. Peter's through the Holy Door, carrying the Book of Gospels, Bishop Marini said, he will process to the main altar, where there will be the enthronement of the Book of Gospels on a special throne. The laity place their lamps and flowers in front of the Gospel book which the Holy Father then incenses. The proclamation of the start of the Great Jubilee is then chanted. The celebration of Mass follows as usual.

The opening door ceremonies at St. John Lateran on December 25, St. Mary Major on January 1 and St. Paul's Outside-the Walls on January 18 will be similar, though not identical. The doors will be opened but there will be no reading of the Gospel of Luke, no announcement of the Jubilee - having already been done at St. Peter's - and there will be no continental aspect. There will be a Mass at St. Mary Major, while vespers will be celebrated on St. John's and St. Paul's.

The first part of this article on the history of Holy Doors was written for and appeared in the English-language edition of the December 1999 Messenger of St. Anthony.

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Monday, December 13, 1999

JOHN PAUL II INAUGURATES COMPLETELY RESTORED SISTINE CHAPEL


VATICAN CITY, DEC 11, 1999 (VIS) - Pope John Paul this morning inaugurated the Sistine Chapel, completely restored after 20 years of work on the renowned ceiling and Last Judgement by Michelangelo and the frescoes on the side walls, depicting scenes from the lives of Christ and Moses and painted by Perugino, Botticelli, Pinturicchio, Ghirlandaio, Rosselli and Signorelli.

He spoke to the invited guests of the "full splendor" of this chapel which "is very dear to the faithful of the world, not only for the masterpieces it houses but for the role it has in the life of the Church. Here, in fact - I recall with emotion - the election of the Successor of Peter takes place."

The Pope mentioned the completion, in 1994, of the restoration of the ceiling and the Last Judgment, "the works of Michelangelo which undoubtedly give the tone to this room and which in a certain sense consume it, such is their grandeur. They go right up to the ultimate horizon of Christian theology, pointing to the alpha and the omega, the beginning and the judgement, the mystery of creation and that of history, all of which converge on Christ, Savior and judge of the world."

John Paul II then spoke specifically of the final phase of restoration in the Sistine Chapel, that of the frescoes on the side walls which depict, six to a side, parallel scenes from the life of Moses and that of Christ. These walls were completed in 1482, and in fact, predate by 30 years the ceiling by Michelangelo, which was finished in 1512. He began the Last Judgement in the spring of 1536 and completed it on October 31, 1541. He termed the 12 scenes depicted "a sort of 'lectio divina' in which, even more than the single biblical episodes, what emerges is the unity of Scriptures, the Old and the New Testaments."

"What is evident," he added, "is that everything gravitates around Christ. ... These decorations are, therefore, a hymn to Christ. Everything leads to Him. Everything finds its fullness in Him."

The Holy Father observed that "the centrality of Christ is not overshadowed, but rather highlighted by the role He attributes to the apostles, and to Peter in particular." Perugino's painting, he said, underlines not only "the fullness of authority conferred on the first of the apostles," but "the touching expression of humility on Peter's face when he receives the sign of his ministry."

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PROMOTE MORAL VALUES AND SOLID ETHICAL PRINCIPLES


VATICAN CITY, DEC 11, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received prelates from the Dominican Episcopal Conference, who have just completed their "ad limina" visit.

In his address the Pope made reference to the bishops' quinquennial reports in which they have underlined the need to "keep lay adults well formed in order that they be true witnesses to the Gospel, ... willing to intervene in the fields most suited to them such as the family, the workplace, the world of culture or of politics."

For this reason, he continued, what is required is "continuous and systematic formation (of lay adults) making them aware of their dignity as baptized Christians and the commitment that this brings with it, as well as giving them a solid knowledge of the Church's doctrine and Magisterium. In fact, you can only promote moral values through solid ethical principles. This is especially so in a society where a high percentage of the population lives in conditions of extreme poverty, where there is high unemployment, especially among youth, and where there is an increase in violence and corruption." These factors have repercussions "in phenomena such as adolescent single mothers or child labor and exploitation."

The Holy Father affirmed that in the face of the weakening of the family, there is a need for incisive catechesis "that gives deep roots to the Christian ideal of faithful and indissoluble conjugal communion, true path of sanctity and open to procreation." Furthermore, "it is also necessary to recall the need to respect women's inalienable dignity and, moreover, to recognize their vital role in the home as well as in the Church and in society. In fact, it is sad to note how 'women still meet forms of discrimination', especially when they are the frequent victims of sexual abuse and male dominance."
The Pope recalled the presence, in the Dominican Republic, of "particular ideologies or schools of thought that, in one way or another, deny God or advocate a distancing from Him (and) relativize moral values. ... Consequently, in her evangelizing work, the Church feels the pressing need, not just to defend the truth about man, his primacy over society and his openness to the transcendent, but also to speak and teach in such a way that 'the Gospel is proclaimed in the language and in the culture of its hearers.' At the same time, in this task, she must avoid the risk that excessive attachment to certain cultures and traditions ends up relativizing the Christian message or rendering it void of meaning."

At the close of his talk, John Paul II entreated the prelates to make the Jubilee, "this year of grace, become a strong impulse to spiritual renewal, both individual and communal."

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POPE JOHN PAUL BLESSES BABY JESUS STATUES


VATICAN CITY, DEC 12, 1999 (VIS) - In what has become a traditional pre-Christmas event, Pope John Paul today blessed the statues of Baby Jesus, brought to St. Peter's Square by the children of Rome. The statues will then be placed in the nativity scenes set up in their homes.

The Pope said that "today's liturgy invites us to joy because 'the Lord is near'. His birth is very close, as is the Great Jubilee, which will be like spreading out through an entire year the feast of the mystery of the Incarnation, at a distance of 2,000 years of the coming of the Son of God in the humility of our human nature."

"One of the most popular expressions of the much-awaited joy of Christ is the preparation of the nativity scene within a family. In Christian homes," said the Pope before blessing the statues, "a special place is chosen to place the statues, leaving space between Mary and Joseph, for the Child Jesus. ... May Christmas, which is now imminent and is the start of the Great Jubilee, motivate you and all believers in every part of the world to prepare a worthy home to receive Jesus."

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JOHN PAUL II MAKES LAST PARISH VISIT BEFORE THE JUBILEE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 12, 1999 (VIS) - This morning the Pope made his last pastoral visit to a parish community in Rome before the start of the Holy Year, visiting the parish of Sts. Urban and Lawrence at Prima Porta.

Making reference in his homily to John the Baptist's call to prepare the way for the Lord, the Holy Father said: "With a light heart, let us hasten towards the Great Jubilee, towards the year of grace in which the whole Church will ring out with a great hymn of praise to God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit."

John Paul II went on to recall that many elderly people live in the neighborhood. "They frequently welcome their married children into their homes, children who have difficulty in finding homes elsewhere. In this way, a broad and rich family community comes into being, one in which grandparents, children and grandchildren live together. I hope that this communal existence may, as well as offering reciprocal material support, also favor the transmission of those human and Christian values that constitute the precious heritage of the beloved Italian nation."

"In this third Sunday of Advent," he went on, "the whole diocese of Rome is celebrating the day for new churches. ... Let us pray to the Lord that, through the support of everyone, those areas of Rome presently without an adequate parish center may, as soon as possible, have a new place of worship. Let us also pray that each parish will be always, but especially during the coming Jubilee year, a community capable of bearing witness to the Gospel, attentive to people's problems, open and hospitable."

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TELEGRAM FOR THE DEATH OF PRESIDENT TJUDMAN OF CROATIA


VATICAN CITY, DEC 11, 1999 (VIS) - Following is the text of the telegram sent by Pope John Paul II to the president of the parliament of Croatia, Vlatko Pavletic, upon the death of the president of the republic, Franjo Tudjman:

"Having learned of the death of His Excellency Franjo Tudjman, president of the Republic of Croatia, I join in the pain felt by the authorities and the entire people. I ask the Lord to give him eternal peace and happiness. and to bring to those close to him the comfort which they need in this moment of trial. In recalling our meetings I salute the memory of this statesman who led Croatia on the path of independence, I hope that the country, at the point of having a new legislature, will continue to build its future while maintaining its stability in promoting peace, justice, unity and dialogue in the heart of the national community and in the region. I ask for an abundance of divine grace upon the family of the deceased, on the country's leaders and on all the inhabitants of Croatia."

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CHILD JESUS HOSPITAL CELEBRATES 130 YEARS


VATICAN CITY, DEC 13, 1999 (VIS) - The personnel of Bambino Gesu (Child Jesus) Hospital was welcomed by the Pope this morning who recalled that the hospital, "one of the most prestigious European institutions" of pediatric medicine, is celebrating the 130th anniversary of its founding. He also recalled that the hospital was given to the Holy See 75 years ago by a Roman noble family.

"In modern society," he said, "attention for the world of the child is growing, as is the consolidation of the dutiful respect for his inalienable right to life, family, health and to religious and civil education, and the rigorous defense of his innocence. Notwithstanding this, all too often children undergo very serious affronts and violence, especially in the world's poorest regions and in those countries struck by war and hunger, They are threatened by egoism and by the race to material well-being, which so often absorbs parents, taking them away from the duty of a educative presence, which consists of a caring closeness to their children and listening to the problems linked with their growth and insertion into society."

John Paul II pointed out that "the Church continues to proclaim far and wide the centrality of the child, an object of particular love by Jesus. ... The Child Jesus Hospital plays a role in this context, undertaking precious work in favor of children who are ill."

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HOLY FATHER ASKS THAT DEATH PENALTY BE ABOLISHED


VATICAN CITY, DEC 12, 1999 (VIS) - Today, after praying the angelus with the pilgrims gathered in St. Peter's Square, Pope John Paul appealed for the abolition of the death penalty.

"This evening, at the Colosseum," he said, "there will be a demonstration which is part of a worldwide campaign for a moratorium on the death penalty. The Great Jubilee is a privileged occasion to promote around the world ever more mature forms of respect for the life and dignity of each person. I therefore renew my appeal to all leaders to reach an international consensus to abolish the death penalty, given that (according to the Catechism of the Catholic Church) 'the cases of absolute necessity for executing malefactors are by now so rare, if not practically non-existent'."

During the Holy Year, the Colosseum will be lit up during the day with special gold lights each time that a condemned person is spared the death penalty.

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MESSAGE FOR THE 33RD WORLD DAY OF PEACE


VATICAN CITY, DEC 13, 1999 (VIS) - "Peace on Earth to those whom God Loves!" is the title of Pope John Paul II's message for the 33rd World Day of Peace. The document, dated December 8 and published today, is written in Italian, Spanish, French, English, Polish and Portuguese, is 22 pages long and is divided into ten sections. Given below are some excerpts:

"Looking to a year so filled with meaning, I once more offer everyone my good wishes for peace. ... The problems which make the path to peace difficult and often discouraging are many and complex, but peace is a need deeply rooted in the heart of every man and woman. The will to seek peace must not therefore be allowed to weaken. This seeking must be based on the awareness that humanity, however much marred by sin, hatred and violence, is called by God to be a single family. This divine plan needs to be recognized and carried out through the search for harmonious relationships between individuals and peoples, in a culture where openness to the Transcendent, the promotion of the human person and respect for the world of nature are shared by all. This is the message of Christmas, this is the message of the Jubilee, this is my hope at the beginning of a new Millennium.

"WAR IS A DEFEAT FOR HUMANITY. In the century we are leaving behind, humanity has been sorely tried by an endless and horrifying sequence of wars, conflicts, genocides and 'ethnic cleansings' which have caused unspeakable suffering: millions and millions of victims, families and countries destroyed, an ocean of refugees, misery, hunger, disease, underdevelopment and the loss of immense resources. At the root of so much suffering there lies a logic of supremacy fuelled by the desire to dominate and exploit others, by ideologies of power or totalitarian utopias, by crazed nationalisms or ancient tribal hatreds. ... The twentieth century bequeaths to us above all else a warning: wars are often the cause of further wars. ... Wars generally do not resolve the problems for which they are fought and therefore, in addition to causing horrendous damage, they prove ultimately futile. War is a defeat for humanity."

"Against the backdrop of war in the twentieth century, humanity's honor has been preserved by those who have spoken and worked on behalf of peace."

"CALLED TO BE ONE FAMILY. ... Will the new century be one of peace and a renewed sense of brotherhood between individuals and peoples? ... There will be peace only to the extent that humanity as a whole rediscovers its fundamental calling to be one family, a family in which the dignity and rights of individuals ' whatever their status, race or religion ' are accepted as prior and superior to any kind of difference or distinction."

"CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY. This principle has an immensely important consequence: an offense against human rights is an offense against the conscience of humanity as such, an offense against humanity itself. ... Crimes against humanity cannot be considered an internal affair of a nation. Here an important step forward was taken with the establishment of an International Criminal Court to try such crimes. ... All too many and horrifying are the macabre scenarios in which innocent children, women, and unarmed older people have become intentional targets in the bloody conflicts of our time; too many, in fact, for us not to feel that the moment has come to change direction, decisively and with a great sense of responsibility.

"THE RIGHT TO HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE. ... In the face of such tragic and complex situations and contrary to all alleged 'reasons' of war, there is a need to affirm the preeminent value of humanitarian law and the consequent duty to guarantee the right to humanitarian aid to suffering civilians and refugees. ... Negotiation between parties, with appropriate attempts at mediation and pacification by international and regional bodies, is of the greatest importance. Negotiation is necessary in order to prevent such conflicts and to end them once they have broken out."

"'HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION'. Clearly, when a civilian population risks being overcome by the attacks of an unjust aggressor and political efforts and non-violent defense prove to be of no avail, it is legitimate and even obligatory to take concrete measures to disarm the aggressor. ... What is needed without delay is a renewal of international law and international institutions, a renewal whose starting-point and basic organizing principle should be the primacy of the good of humanity and of the human person over every other consideration."

"PEACE IN SOLIDARITY. No one should be deceived into thinking that the simple absence of war, as desirable as it is, is equivalent to lasting peace. ... Failure awaits every plan which would separate two indivisible and interdependent rights: the right to peace and the right to an integral development born of solidarity."

"THE URGENT NEED TO RETHINK THE ECONOMY. ... Perhaps the time has come for a new and deeper reflection on the nature of the economy and its purposes. What seems to be urgently needed is a reconsideration of the concept of 'prosperity' itself, to prevent it from being enclosed in a narrow utilitarian perspective which leaves very little space for values such as solidarity and altruism. ... An economy which takes no account of the ethical dimension and does not seek to serve the good of the person ' of every person and the whole person ' cannot really call itself an 'economy', understood in the sense of a rational and constructive use of material wealth.

"WHICH MODELS OF DEVELOPMENT? The fact that humanity ... is still tragically split in two by poverty - at the beginning of the twenty-first century, more than a billion four hundred million people are living in a situation of dire poverty ' means that there is urgent need to reconsider the models which inspire development policies. ... These processes call for rethinking international cooperation in terms of a new culture of solidarity. ... In particular it is necessary to find definitive solutions to the long-standing problem of the international debt of poor countries, while at the same time making available the financial resources necessary for the fight against hunger, malnutrition, disease, illiteracy and the destruction of the environment.

"Today more than in the past there is an urgent need to foster a consciousness of universal moral values in order to face the problems of the present. ... A way must be found to discuss the problems posed by the future of humanity in a comprehensible and common language. The basis of such a dialogue is the universal moral law written upon the human heart."

"WORKING GENEROUSLY FOR PEACE. ... Peace is a building constantly under construction. The building up of peace involves:
' Parents who are examples and witnesses of peace in their families, and who educate their children for peace.
' Teachers who are able to pass on genuine values. ...
' Working men and women, who are committed to extending their age-old struggle for the dignity of work. ...
' Political leaders who put at the heart of their own political activity and of that of their countries a firm and unwavering determination to promote peace and justice. ...
' Those in international organizations who ... work in the front line. ...
' Members of Non-Governmental Organizations. ...
' Believers who, convinced that authentic faith is never a source of war or violence, spread convictions of peace and love through ecumenical and interreligious dialogue.

"I am thinking particularly of you, dear young people ... In your schools and universities, in the work-place, in leisure and sports, in all that you do, let yourselves be guided by this constant thought: peace within you and peace around you, peace always, peace with everyone, peace for everyone. To the young people who, unfortunately, have known the tragic experience of war and who harbour sentiments of hatred and resentment I address this plea: make every effort to rediscover the path of reconciliation and forgiveness."

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