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Thursday, October 26, 2000

JOHN PAUL II RECEIVES IN AUDIENCE 3,000 SLOVENIAN PILGRIMS


VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - In the Vatican Basilica at midday today, the Pope received 3,000 pilgrims from Slovenia who have come to Rome for the Jubilee. He said that he saw in this meeting the response of the Slovenian people to his two "unforgettable apostolic trips" to their country, in 1996 and 1999.

The Pope urged the faithful present "to greater courage and a healthy awareness of your dignity, something you must also show in your public commitment. Half a century of totalitarianism has left many Christians with a feeling of inferiority and fear. It is time to overcome this timid attitude! ... Collaborate with all men and women of good faith in the fields of politics, economy, culture, schooling and the mass media."
"Finally, I call upon you," he concluded, "to implement, with all the drive of heart and soul, the conclusions of the synod of the Church in Slovenia, which is taking place on the theme: 'Choose life'. ... Above all, defend life! This is the crucial question for the survival of the Slovenian people. The synod should instill in souls a new trust and a new hope in life."

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NEW LEBANESE AMBASSADOR PRESENTS CREDENTIALS TO POPE


VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - The Holy Father this morning welcomed Lebanon's new ambassador to the Holy See, Fouad Aoun, and received his Letters of Credence.

In his address in French to the new ambassador, the Holy Father pointed to the circumstances in Lebanon and in the Middle East, stating that he was following both situations very carefully. Regarding Lebanon, the Pope said that "the temptation for a rebirth of feelings which in the past had serious consequences will be notably avoided thanks to the development of democracy and the possibility given to all citizens to participate in the life of the country, independently of their religious or community affiliation."

He stressed the need for "mutual trust ... based above all on the acceptance by everyone of universal moral values" and for "a patient and respectful dialogue. ... To succeed in this, those in charge of leading the nation must work with determination, disinterest and perseverance for the common good and favor an equal sharing of responsibilities, without seeking privileges for themselves or for their community."

"The current conjuncture in the Middle East," John Paul II stated, "is especially disquieting. ... One cannot help but note that the unleashing of violence leads always to ever great unhappiness for everyone. ... The Holy Land ... must become the place par excellence where peace and justice flourish. Jerusalem must be an especially strong symbol of unity, peace and reconciliation for the human family!"

"May the confident relations which have developed between the Holy See and the peoples of the region," the Holy Father said, "allow us to hope that the day will come when, through dialogue and negotiation, in the respect for the dignity and identity of communities, a special, internationally guaranteed statute can be established for the holiest places of the city."

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ST. THOMAS MORE, PATRON OF STATESMEN


VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - This morning in the Holy See Press Office, Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, president of the Central Committee for the Great Jubilee 2000, presided at a conference on the presentation by the Pope of St. Thomas More as patron saint of statesmen on October 31.

Cardinal Etchegaray affirmed that John Paul II is presenting "a great gift" to people in government in giving them St. Thomas More as their patron saint, "a patron of such high standing, one appropriate for all those who must manage public affairs."

St. Thomas More, born on February 7, 1478, was "a brilliant lawyer in the City of London. By the age of 27 he was a member of parliament, later becoming its speaker and then Lord Chancellor of the kingdom, the first layman to hold this high office. Thomas More was a source of fascination to his contemporaries throughout Europe. ... Author of the extraordinary 'Utopia', he cultivated the arts but also wore a cilice. He was a man submerged in public affairs but also an attentive father to his four children and a daily attendant at Mass. He fully lived the evangelical design: be in the world without being of the world. He took on the dual role of Martha and Maria."

The cardinal further recalled that "at the age of 55, at the height of his glory and power, he resigned for reasons of conscience, so as not to have to turn a blind eye to flagrant injustices. Three years later, he spent 15 months in prison during which he wrote his last book on Christ's Passion. He was beheaded for having refused, courteously but firmly, to cede to the will of his king who wanted to make the Church subject to the State. It was July 6, 1535." Fifteen days after his execution, Bishop John Fisher of Rochester met the same fate.

Cardinal Etchegaray said that "John Paul II, in proclaiming Thomas More as patron saint of government leaders and politicians, wishes to remind them of the absolute priority of God even in the heart of public affairs. At a time when consciences are eclipsed, the Pope shows us all a man who preferred death to life through loyalty to his conscience, a conscience that has not ceased to illuminate in the light of God and of wise counsel, one far from all fanaticism and bias."

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NOVEMBER 1: 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF DOGMA OF THE ASSUMPTION

VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - A communique released today by the Office of Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff states that, at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, November 1, Solemnity of All Saints and the 50th anniversary of the dogmatic definition of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a day of grace and joy for the entire Church, the Holy Father John Paul II will preside at a concelebrated Mass with the members of the College of Cardinals in St. Peter's Square.

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PAPAL TELEGRAM FOR AIR DISASTER IN GEORGIA

VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - Cardinal Angelo Sodano, secretary of state, has sent a telegram in the Holy Father's name to the apostolic nuncio for the Russian authorities, on occasion of the crash yesterday near Batumi, Georgia, of the plane of the Ministry of Defense. He expressed the Pope's condolences for the victims of the air disaster and promised his prayers for the victims and their families.

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JOINT TEAM OF JEWISH-CATHOLIC SCHOLARS IN ROME

VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - Joaquin Navarro-Valls, Holy See Press Office director, released the following declaration yesterday in mid-afternoon:

"The Joint Team of Jewish and Catholic Scholars, which was set up in 1999 by the Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews and the International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Dialogue, is in Rome to present a preliminary report on their study of the eleven volumes of Church archival material covering World War II, published by the Holy See.

"Their report expresses positive appreciation for the material made available from the archives and indicates in summary form the foundation for future study. In a series of questions the scholars indicate areas in which they consider progress in this regard would require further documentation."

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POPE PETITIONED TO NAME ST. THOMAS MORE PATRON OF STATESMEN


VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - Following is the text of the petition presented to the Holy Father on September 25 during a private meeting with Italian Senator and former President Francesco Cossiga and Senator Hilarion Cardozo from Venezuela, asking him to declare St. Thomas More the patron of statesmen. It was signed by several hundred heads of State, heads of government and ministers from numerous countries, political parties and different religious denominations.

"Holy Father,

"For centuries now, Saint Thomas More, martyr, has inspired the sincere veneration of the Christian people. He is also one of the saints whose life and works receive most attention in the worlds of culture and politics, an attention reflected in numerous scholarly studies and an ever-increasing interest both in academia and in the world of affairs. The scholarly bibliography is constantly growing and has a number of remarkable characteristics; above all, it includes authors from different churches and Christian communities (Sir Thomas More is placed in the liturgical calendar of the Anglican Church in England as a 'martyr'), different religious faiths and even authors who are agnostic. This is a sign of truly universal appeal. It reflects, moreover, an admiration which transcends the specific contributions that Saint Thomas More made in the various fields in which he worked ' as humanist, apologist, judge, legislator, diplomat and statesman ' and focuses on the man himself: the idea that holiness is the fullness of humanity appears, in this case, quite tangibly true.

"Your Holiness's predecessor in the Chair of Peter, Pope Pius XI, in the Bull of Canonization, presented Saint Thomas More as a model of proven moral integrity for all Christians and defined him as 'laicorum hominum decus et ornamentum'. Precisely among the laity, the growing appeal of this extraordinary man speaks to us of one whose presence becomes, with the passing of time, ever more vivid, more striking, and more permanently timely.
"He shines forth as an example of that 'unity of life' which Your Holiness has called a characteristic of lay holiness: 'The laity's unity of life is enormously important: for, indeed, they must sanctify themselves in their ordinary professional and social life. In order to be able to respond to their calling, then, the laity should look upon the activity of daily life as an opportunity for union with God and the fulfillment of His will and for service of their fellow man.' ('Christifideles laici', n. 17). In Saint Thomas More, there was no sign of that split between faith and culture, between timeless principles and daily life, which the Second Vatican Council laments as 'among of the gravest errors of our time' ('Gaudium et spes', n. 43).

"In the humanistic activity which found him roaming from English to Latin and to Greek, and from political philosophy to theology, he united study with piety, culture with ascetical life, and the thirst for truth with the quest for virtue through a strict but joyful interior struggle. As a lawyer and judge, he established the interpretation and formulation of laws (he is rightly considered one of the founders of the study of the English common law) which safeguard true social justice and build peace between individuals and nations. More eager to eliminate the causes of injustice than to repress it, he did not separate his passionate but prudent advocacy of the common good from the constant practice of charity: his fellow citizens called him the 'patron of the poor'. An unconditional and benevolent dedication to justice with regard to the human person and liberty was the guiding rule of his conduct as a magistrate. While serving all men, Saint Thomas More knew well how to serve his king, that is the state, but wanted above all to serve God.

"This turning toward God permeated all his actions. His family, in which he took care to provide the highest level of moral education, was defined by contemporaries as a 'Christian academy'. As a public figure, he showed himself an implacable enemy of favoritism and of the privileges of power, exercising an exemplary detachment from honors and offices, but living out, with simplicity and humility, his official position as the highest servant of the king.

"Absolutely faithful to his civic duties, he exposed himself to extreme risks for the service of his own nation. He managed to become a perfect servant of the state, because he struggled to be a perfect Christian. 'Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, but unto God the things that are God's'. (Matt. 22,21): he understood that these words of Christ, while affirming the relative autonomy of the temporal from the spiritual sphere, call upon the Christian conscience to bring the values of the Gospel to the civil sphere, rejecting any compromise, even if this means martyrdom faced with profound humility.

"His martyrdom, even given the imperfect historical judgment available to men, seems the supreme proof of this unity of values ' the fruit of a relentless search for the truth and a no-less' tenacious interior struggle ' with which Saint Thomas More managed to stamp his whole existence. His extraordinary good humor, perennial serenity, consideration of opposing views, and sincere forgiveness toward those who condemned him demonstrate that his personal convictions were wedded to a profound respect for the freedom of others.

"The timeliness of this convergence of political commitment and moral conviction, this harmony between the supernatural and the human, and this seamless unity of life have caused many public servants from various countries to join the Committee for the Proclamation of Sir Thomas More, Saint and Martyr, as Patron of Politicians. Among the signatories of this petition are numbered Catholics and non-Catholics: statesmen who work in the fields of both politics and culture, different among themselves, but all captivated by the richness of Saint Thomas More's example ' an example not only of the art of governing, but also of the virtues indispensable for good government.

"Politics was not, for him, a matter of personal advantage, but rather an often difficult form of service, for which he had prepared himself not only through the study of the history, laws and culture of his own country, but also and especially through the examination of human nature, its grandeur and weaknesses, and of the ever-imperfect conditions of social life. For him, politics was the overflow of a tremendous effort of comprehension. As a consequence, he was able to show the proper hierarchy of ends to be pursued by government, in the light of the primacy of Truth over power and Goodness over utility. He always acted from the perspective of final ends, those which the shifting sands of historical circumstance can never nullify.

"Hence the strength which sustained him in the face of martyrdom. He was a martyr of freedom in the most modern sense of the word, for he opposed the attempt of power to command the conscience: a perennial temptation ' one to which the history of the 20th century bears tragic witness ' of political regimes that do not recognize anything superior to themselves. Faithful to the institutions of his nation ' the Magna Charta reads: 'Ecclesia anglicana libera sit' ' and a careful student of history, which showed him that the Primacy of Peter constitutes a guarantee of freedom for the particular Churches, Saint Thomas More gave his life to defend the Church's freedom from the State. But in this way, he also defended the freedom and the primacy of the citizen's conscience before the power of the state.

"A martyr for freedom, then, precisely because he was a martyr for the primacy of conscience which, firmly grounded in the search for the truth, renders us responsible for our decisions, that is to say, masters of ourselves and thus free from all bonds except that bond ' proper to a creature ' which binds us to God. Your Holiness has reminded us that the moral conscience rightly understood is a 'witness of God Himself, whose voice and whose judgment penetrate the intimacy of man down to the roots of his soul' ('Veritatis Splendor', n. 58). This ' it seems to us ' is the fundamental lesson Saint Thomas More offers all statesmen: the lesson of flight from success and easy compromises in the name of fidelity to irrevocable principles, upon which depend the dignity of man and the justice of civil society ' a lesson truly inspiring for all who, on the threshold of the new Millennium, feel themselves called to expose and eradicate the snares laid by new and hidden tyrannies.
"Therefore, certain that we act for the good of future society and trusting that our petition will find a benevolent welcome with Your Holiness, we ask that Sir Thomas More, Saint and Martyr, faithful servant of the King, but God's first, be proclaimed 'Patron of Statesmen'."

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, archbishop of San Cristobal de La Habana, Cuba, as his special envoy to the National Eucharistic Congress of El Salvador which is due to be held in San Salvador on November 25 and 26.

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AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY, OCT 26, 2000 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in audience Kamil Ishkakov, mayor of Kazan, Tatarstan, Russian Federation, accompanied by his entourage.

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