Monday, May 24, 1999

"TO BE A MISSIONARY CHURCH": A CHALLENGE FOR THE WHOLE WORLD


VATICAN CITY, MAY 22, 1999 (VIS) - This evening, the vigil of Pentecost, the Pope presided at a Eucharistic celebration in St. Peter's Square to mark the closing of the Citizens' Mission of Rome.

John Paul II thanked all the "missionaries, priests, religious and, above all, lay people who have been the first beneficiaries of the grace of the Mission. The generous commitment with which you have prepared yourselves and carried the Gospel into homes and into the urban environment has opened new paths for evangelization."

The Holy Father exhorted priests to be "judicious guides and attentive teachers of faith in the community," asked religious to continue to support the Mission through prayer and entreated lay people to "give life to a great and permanent missionary movement in the city and in all its environments." He also recalled the contribution made to the Citizens' Mission by the sick with the offer of their suffering and by cloistered nuns through their constant prayer.

The Pope proposed that a meeting take place that may serve to draw "the guide lines for a permanent commitment to missionary evangelization," in order that the seed sown in the three years of the Mission "not be lost" but produce fruit. "To be a missionary Church: This is the great challenge in the coming years for Rome and for the whole world."

He exclaimed: "The Gospel that Jesus entrusted to us is the Gospel of peace. How can we keep it to ourselves, especially at this moment when oppression and war are sowing destruction and death in the neighboring region of the Balkans? The Spirit urges us to proclaim and to work for peace in justice and reconciliation. It is in this sense that I would like, in the forthcoming feast of Corpus Christi, a single choral invocation for peace to arise from the Church of Rome. I invite everyone ... to join me" in the Mass and Eucharistic procession of June 3 "to entreat together the gift of peace in the Balkans."

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POPE THANKS MACEDONIA FOR AID GIVEN TO REFUGEES

VATICAN CITY, MAY 22, 1999 (VIS) - Pope John Paul this morning welcomed a delegation from the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and thanked the country and its people for offering "a haven of safety" to the refugees from the war in Yugoslavia. The delegation was led by Prime Minister Ljubco Georgievski.

In greeting them, he recalled that they were in Rome because "every year the feast of the Apostles of the Slavs, Cyril and Methodius, brings a delegation ... to Rome to honor the relics of Saint Cyril in the Church of St. Clement."

"For many weeks now," the Pope added, speaking English, "you and your people have been caught up in the terrible crisis which day after day is bringing untold suffering, death and destruction to the Balkans, leaving hundreds of thousands of human beings mourning the loss of their family members, their property, and their basic human rights. Despite the enormous difficulties involved, your own country has become a haven of safety for many refugees and you are bravely and generously trying to alleviate their immediate distress and misery.

"In expressing to you and your fellow citizens my own and the Church's appreciation of all that you are doing," the Holy Father continued, "I again appeal with all my heart to those responsible to bring an end to the violence and to engage in an open and sincere dialogue aimed at creating a just and lasting basis for agreement and peace.

"My earnest prayer," he concluded, "is that, through the intercession of the two holy Brothers, the entire region will rediscover the brotherly communion of all its peoples, so that when the present violence and distrust have been overcome it may be for the rest of Europe and the world a clear example of just and peaceful coexistence in mutual respect and liberty."

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THREE PRIESTS ARE ORDAINED IN RUSSIA, FIRST TIME IN 82 YEARS


VATICAN CITY, MAY 23, 1999 (VIS) - Today, Solemnity of Pentecost, three seminarians from Queen of the Apostles Major Seminary in St. Petersburg, Russia were ordained as priests, the first Catholic priests to have prepared and been ordained in Russia since 1917. Two of the new priests were born in Russia and the third was born in Estonia.

Archbishop Tadeusz Kondrusiewicz, apostolic administrator of European Russia, presided at the ordination Mass, which took place in the seminary's Dormition of the Virgin Church. Though the newly ordained priests are of the Latin rite, Cardinal Achille Silvestrini, prefect of the Congregation for Oriental Churches, attended the ceremony.

The original seminary was opened in 1877. It was confiscated by authorities at the start of the communist revolution and used as a military hospital. Only the top floor of the seminary's building complex has since been returned to the Church. It was re-inaugurated as a seminary on September 1, 1993 and in 1996 was recognized by the ministry of education as an institute of higher education.

The seminary's Church of the Dormition was closed in June 1930, returned to the Catholic Church several years ago and was re-consecrated on May 24, 1998. It is one of only four buildings of the original 50 Church structures which existed before the revolution to have been returned to the Church.

When the seminary re-opened in 1993, there were 12 students. Today there are 48.

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PENTECOST TRANSFORMED THE DISCIPLES INTO FEARLESS WITNESSES

VATICAN CITY, MAY 23, 1999 (VIS) - Speaking from his study window to the faithful gathered in St. Peter's Square to pray the Regina Coeli, the Pope said that today's solemnity of Pentecost, "makes us relive the extraordinary experience that the Apostles had fifty days after Christ's Resurrection," when they were "transformed from fearful followers into fearless witnesses, courageously announcing the Good News to all peoples."

"Gathered in unified prayer in the Cenacle, with Mary," he went on, "they are sent by the Spirit of truth to transform the entire world into a cenacle of love and truth. Both dimensions - prayer and apostolate, communion and mission - are indispensable for the life of the Church in every time and place."

"We prepared for this great feast last evening, here in St. Peter's Square, with a solemn vigil which concluded the Citizens' Mission of Rome," the Holy Father stated. "What an extraordinary experience! It reminded us of last year's great meeting with ecclesial movements and new communities, which are a true gift of the Spirit of the Church at the end of the millennium and one of the new signs which came from Vatican Council II." He remarked that "last year's meeting produced a precious harvest. In fact, what has multiplied are the initiatives aimed at nourishing a sense of communion among movements and communities, whose scope is to increase mutual collaboration."

"Let us thank the Lord for this promising springtime of the Church," the Pope said in conclusion. "The secularized world asks each Christian to reinvigorate his own missionary impulse, basing it on a radical experience of faith in Christ, an experience made of prayer, unity and proclamation."

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STS. CYRIL AND METHODIUS, PRECURSORS OF A UNIFIED EUROPE

VATICAN CITY, MAY 24, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father this morning received a delegation from Bulgaria, as he does each year when they come to Rome to pay tribute to the Saints and brothers, Cyril and Methodius. The delegation was led by Bulgaria's Prime Minister Ivan Kostov.

"With the presence here today of Catholic and Orthodox pastors," noted John Paul II, quoting "Slavorum Apostoli," "'we clearly see that the legacy of the brothers of Salonika is and remains ... deeper and stronger that any divisions', showing that both traditions, western and eastern, were born within the one Church of Christ. In fact, Saints Cyril and Methodius contributed to establishing and spreading the faith and Christian culture in the Slavic world."

The Pope remarked that "the brother saints, in proclaiming the Gospel, knew how to be respectful of authentic moral and human values, and of cultural diversity, allowing all peoples their unique characteristics and opening the way for unity among different cultures." He said they were thus, in a way, precursors of a unified Europe, built on peace and reconciliation, having created "the foundations for a new way of coexistence, respecting differences, which are in no way obstacles to unity."

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, MAY 24, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed:

- Cardinal Edmund C. Szoka, president of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State, as his special envoy at the closing celebrations for the 450th anniversary of the first evangelization of Japan which will take place at Kagoshima on 11th October.

- Fr. Stanislaw Wielgus, former rector of the Catholic University of Lublin, as bishop of Plock (area 9,108, population 1,137,694 Catholics 1,076,094, priests 1,087, religious 1,066), Poland. The bishop-elect was born in Wieszchowiska, Poland in 1939 and was ordained a priest in 1962.

On Saturday, May 22 it was made public that he appointed:

- Bishop Edmundo M. Abaya of Laoag as metropolitan archbishop of Nueva Segovia (area 2,570, population 591,197, Catholics 502,046, priests 61, religious 128), Philippines. The archbishop-elect was born in Candon, Philippines in 1929, was ordained a priest in 1953 and a bishop in 1979.

- Msgr. Nikola Eterovic, nunciature councilor in the Section for Relations with States, as apostolic nuncio in Ukraine. The archbishop-elect was born in Pucisca, Croatia, in 1951, was ordained a priest in 1977 and made a councilor in 1993.

- Archbishop Luigi Pezzuto, apostolic nuncio in the Congo and Gabon, as apostolic nuncio in Tanzania.

- Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, president of the Committee for the Great Jubilee Year of 2000, as his special envoy to the National Eucharistic Conference of Portugal which will take place at Braga from June 3 to 6.

- Msgr. Konrad Krajewski, of the clergy of the diocese of Lodz, Poland, as assistant master of liturgical ceremonies.

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AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, MAY 24, 1999 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in separate audiences:

- Bishop Jaume Camprodon Rovira of Gerona, Spain on his "ad limina" visit.
- Five prelates from the Cameroon Episcopal Conference on their "ad limina" visit:
- Cardinal Christian Wiyghan Tumi, archbishop of Doula, accompanied by his auxiliary, Bishop Dieudonne Bogmis.
- Archbishop Lambertus Johannes van Heygen C.S.Sp., of Bertoua.
- Archbishop Paul Verdzekov of Bamenda.
- Archbishop Antoine Ntalou of Garoua.
- Arcbishop Paul Josef Cordes and Msgrs. Karel Kasteel and Francisco Azcona San Martin, respectively president, secretary and under-secretary of the Pontifical Council "Cor Unum."

On Saturday May 22, he also received:

- Manzi Bakuramutsa, ambassador of Rwanda on his farewell visit.
- Ambassador Jean-Bernard Raimond.

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SPAIN'S NATIONAL EUCHARISTIC CONGRESS STARTS MAY 26

VATICAN CITY, MAY 24, 1999 (VIS) - Made public today was the Letter from Pope John Paul to Cardinal Antonio Maria Rouco Varela, archbishop of Madrid, Spain, in which he named him as his special envoy to the celebrations of the National Eucharistic Congress in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, from May 26 to 29. The Letter was dated March 26 and is written in Latin.

Also published today were the names of the two priests who will accompany the cardinal: Fathers Andres Pardo Rodriguez, canon of Almudena Cathedral in Madrid, and Salvador Domato Bua, personal secretary of Cardinal Rouco.

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