Tribulation Times
George Cardinal Pell
Cardinal Prefect Secretariat for the Economy
Prayer request? Send an email to: PrayerRequest3@aol.com
October 29, 2014
(Mat
16:18-19) And I say to thee: That thou art Peter; and upon this rock I
will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against
it. And I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And
whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven:
and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth, it shall be loosed also in
heaven.
CHIESA: “Renunciation of the Truth is Lethal to Faith" by Benedict XVI
Ratzinger has broken his silence once again. To caution that a dialogue that renounces the truth “is lethal” to the propagation of the Christian faith. And therefore also to the spread of that “joy of the Gospel” which is in the program of Pope Francis
by Sandro Magister
CHIESA: “Renunciation of the Truth is Lethal to Faith" by Benedict XVI
Ratzinger has broken his silence once again. To caution that a dialogue that renounces the truth “is lethal” to the propagation of the Christian faith. And therefore also to the spread of that “joy of the Gospel” which is in the program of Pope Francis
by Sandro Magister
TEXT OF FULL HOMILY:Traditional Mass Ss. Trinità Church, Rome 10th Anniversary Iuventutem and Summorum Pontificum Pilgrimage 24 October 2014
We
Catholics have strange beliefs; our planet earth is like a grain of
sand in an unbelievably vast universe and we believe God’s Son came to
live on this tiny speck to teach us and redeem us.
We
believe in angels, spiritual beings outside our physical universe; in
Raphael one of the seven who stands before God, who brought Tobias
healing and taught him the truth.
We
want to know and love the truth and we hope to spread these truths,
which are costly, but life-giving. We too want to be cured by Raphael as
we come out of the troubled waters.
Tonight
on your pilgrimage to the Urbs Aeterna we should remember St. Peter and
St. Paul, founders of the Church in the city of Rome.
Peter
of course was the first head of the Christian community in this capital
of the Roman Empire which lasted for over over 600 years in the West
and for another 1000 years in the East. Peter was the first Pope.
Peter of course was the first head of the Christian community in the capital of the Roman Empire, the first bishop of Rome.
And
on this occasion a few words on the Papacy would not be inappropriate
because the Pope is the successor of St. Peter as head of the Church and
bishop of Rome, and because the papacy is one of the most amazing
institutions in history; the oldest surviving office or ruler.
China
did have an emperor a couple of hundred years before Rome had a bishop,
but China has emperors no more! Hundreds of years before there was a
King of England there was a Pope in Rome. Even in secular terms the
papacy is extraordinary, but for us the Catholic religious significance
is infinitely more important.2 Peter’s office or role is well attested
in the New Testament writings.
In
chapter 16 from Matthew’s gospel, after Peter had affirmed that Our
Lord was the Son of God, he was declared to be the rock man on whom the
Church is built. Jesus is of course the only central figure in the
Catholic dispensation, but Peter is the main foundation stone in the
apostolic foundations of the universal church communion.
The
Church is not built on the rock of Peter’s faith, as a popular hymn
claims, but on Peter himself despite his faults and failings. It was
Jesus who gave Simon the additional name of Peter, the rock man. In
English the words “Peter” and “rock” have different derivations, but in
Greek, Latin and Italian they are almost the same word. In this passage
Peter was given the Keys of the Kingdom and the power to bind and loose.
The sense of this passage is not unique in the New Testament as in
chapter 21 of John Peter is exhorted to feed the sheep and in chapter 22
of Luke he is commissioned to strengthen his brothers. He always heads
the list of the apostles.
Over
2,000 years these theological foundations have been developed and
changed. The Second Vatican Council (1962-65) set out to complete the
work of the First Vatican Council (1870), by recognizing that as Peter
was one of the twelve apostles, so the Pope is assisted by the other
bishops throughout the world, forming the College of Bishops.
This college and all synods work by consensus and teachings and pastoral practice can only be changed by consensus.
Pope
Francis is the 266th Pope and history has seen 37 false or anti-Popes.
From the eighth to the nineteenth century the Popes ruled most of
central Italy, an area known as the Papal States. For the last 150
years, plus or minus, the Church has been led by Popes, who were better,
wiser, holier and more learned, than the historical papal average for
the two millennia.
There
were three particularly difficult periods; first of all in the tenth
century when a succession of Popes were dominated by a local noble woman
called Marozia; secondly in the 14th century when the Popes were based
in Avignon, Southern France and were followed by 3 multiple claimants to
the papacy when they came back to Rome; and in the 16th century, the
time of the Protestant Reformation and the Renaissance, when many of the
Popes were formidable rulers and patrons of the arts, but none of them
were over-interested in religion.
Earlier
on the role of the Popes was a significant factor in the final break in
1054 between the Eastern and Western churches, between Catholicism and
Orthodoxy.
The
role of the successor of St. Peter has always been vital to Christian
and Catholic life, especially as a touchstone of doctrinal fidelity and
as a resolver of disputes, pastoral as well as doctrinal.
Today
we are inclined to judge communities, institutions and individuals
according to the criterion of modernity. No one wants to be accused of
being old fashioned and nearly everyone likes to be thought “up to
date”. In the ancient world they didn’t quite think like that, and much
public opinion tended to look back to golden ages, real or imagined.
The
early Christians’ questions were somewhat different, because they
wanted to know whether the teachings of their bishops and priests were
in conformity with what Christ taught.
In
an age before books and radio, long before you could look up
information on Google, Christians used to ask what the churches founded
by the apostles regarded as apostolic, genuinely early Christian
teaching. Jerusalem, Antioch, Alexandria and Rome were such churches and
Constantinople was added in the fourth century, although certainly not
founded by an apostle.
Among
those churches however, Rome had pride of place as the principal
guarantor of orthodoxy, because both Peter and Paul had been martyred
there and of course because Peter had been appointed the rock man by
Christ himself. The apostolic tradition, announced first by Christ and
founded in the scriptures is the touch stone for truth and genuine
pastoral practice. Doctrine does develop – we understand truth more
deeply – but there are no doctrinal back-flips in Catholic history.4
Often our enemies recognize better than us the importance of the papacy.
In every country where the Communists gained power, they tried to
separate the local Catholics from the Pope into national, so called
“patriotic” Churches. We know from Hitler’s table talk that if he had
won the Second World War he would have set up a Pope in every Catholic
country. Napoleon imprisoned two Popes, one of whom died in captivity.
The
story of the Popes is stranger than fiction, but the contribution of
the many good Popes far outweighs the sins and mistakes of the minority.
Today
we have on of the more unusual popes in history, enjoying almost
unprecedented popularity. He is doing a marvelous job backing the
financial reforms.
We
all have an important task during the next twelve months i.e. to
explain and build a consensus out of the present divisions. We will be
counter productive if we have anger or hate in our hearts, if we lapse
into sterile polemics against a surprisingly small number of catholic
opponents. Our task is to explain the necessity of conversion, the
nature of the Mass, the purity of heart Scriptures requires to receive
Holy Communion. We, and especially you young people, must live this in
love, giving reason for your hope. This is a unique opportunity which we
must seize in God’s name.
So
I conclude with the prayer I was taught as a child. “May the Lord
preserve the Holy Father, Pope Francis, and give him life, keep him safe
on earth and deliver him not into the hands of his enemies”.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
George Cardinal Pell
Cardinal Prefect Secretariat for the Economy
The Desert Fathers: sayings of the Early Christian Monks: Discretion
93. A hermit said, 'Anyone who wants to live in the desert ought to be a teacher and not a learner. If he still needs teaching, he will come to harm.'
93. A hermit said, 'Anyone who wants to live in the desert ought to be a teacher and not a learner. If he still needs teaching, he will come to harm.'
Prayer request? Send an email to: PrayerRequest3@aol.com
This month's archive can be found at: http://www. catholicprophecy.info/news2. html.
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