Wednesday, August 2, 2000

AUGUST 12 - 15: INTERNATIONAL YOUTH FORUM


VATICAN CITY, AUG 2, 2000 (VIS) - For the occasion of World Youth Day, the 7th International Youth Forum is to be held from August 12 to 15 in Rome's Casa Maria Mater Ecclesiae. The Forums are organized by the youth section of the Pontifical Council for the Laity.

The theme of the meeting has been taken from John Paul II's Letter concerning pilgrimage to the places linked to the history of salvation (June 29 1999): "I say it to everyone: Let us set out in the footsteps of Christ!"

Each episcopal conference will send two young people as representatives to the forum. Delegates from the most important Catholic youth groups, movements and associations have also been invited. The average age of participants is 23-24 years. Alongside them, around 30 people who work in the field of pastoral ministry to youth will also attend; they will follow the work as 'observers.'
During the course of the meeting, delegates will prepare a message addressed to young people all over the world. This will be read during World Youth Day, in the presence of the Holy Father.

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PRESENCE OF THE HOLY TRINITY IS REFLECTED IN CREATION


VATICAN CITY, AUG 2, 2000 (VIS) - "Listening to the Word and the Spirit in cosmic revelation" was the theme of John Paul II's catechesis during today's general audience which was held in St. Peter's Square.

The Pope affirmed that "in creation, many have recognized, though still imperfectly, the presence of its Architect and Lord." Muslim and Jewish tradition have also discovered God's presence in creation.

"Biblical revelation is placed in the setting of humanity's broad experience of religious sentiment and prayer, giving it a divine seal. By communicating to us the mystery of the Trinity, revelation helps us to comprehend, in creation itself, not only the sign of the Father, source of all life, but also that of the Son and of the Spirit."

The Holy Father highlighted that "if it is in fact true that 'the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are not three principles of creation but one principle,' it is also nonetheless true that 'each divine Person performs the common work according to His unique personal property'."

"In the light of Christian faith," he concluded, "the creation particularly evokes the Holy Spirit in the dynamism that marks the relationship between things, within the macrocosm and the microcosm, and that is manifest above all wherever life is born and develops. ... Christians well know that such evocation of the Spirit would be unacceptable if it referred to a kind of 'anima mundi' in the pantheistic sense. However, aside from this error, it remains true that all forms of life, of animation and of love lead back, in the final analysis, to that Spirit which, Genesis says, moved 'over the face of the waters'."

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