• By Carol Glatz

    VATICAN CITY (CNS) — With the birth of Jesus, God came to the world as a defenseless child to conquer human pride, violence and greed with his love, Pope Benedict XVI said.

    “God conquers our hearts not by force, but by love, and thus teaches us the way to authentic freedom, peace and fulfillment,” he said during his general audience in the Vatican’s Paul VI hall Dec. 23.

    The pope dedicated his audience talk to the importance of the mystery of Christ’s birth and the tradition of the Nativity scene.

    St. Francis of Assisi was particularly devoted to the incarnation and “the God among us,” the pope said. The 13th-century saint wanted to recreate “the humble grandeur of the event of Jesus’ birth in a concrete, living and topical way and to communicate this joy to everyone,” he said.

    During a visit in 1223 to the Italian town of Greccio to celebrate Christmas, St. Francis preached to the local residents at a mountainside grotto where he assembled a hay-filled manger and an ox and ass to represent the scene of Christ’s birth.

    The people were so moved by the ceremony they went home with hearts “filled with ineffable joy,” the pope said.

    Soon the tradition of recreating a Nativity scene representing the mystery of the Incarnation spread and became one of the most beautiful and intense parts of Christmas celebrations, he said.

    The Nativity teaches believers to warmly welcome God’s message “and to love and adore Christ’s humanity,” he said.

    While Easter celebrations focus on “the power of God which conquers death, ushers in a new life and teaches hope in the world to come,” the pope said, the Christmas creche helped give the Christian faith “a new dimension.”

    St. Francis and his creche highlighted “the defenseless love of God, his humility and his harmlessness,” showing humanity that there is a new way to live one’s life and to love, he said.

    God, by becoming man, could not ever be separated or secluded from the rest of humanity, said the pope.

    “God is manifested in that baby as love; God came unarmed, without force because he did not intend to conquer from the outside, but intended instead to be freely welcomed by mankind” and to win people over with love and lead them to new life, he said.

    “God became a defenseless child in order to conquer human pride, violence and the desire to possess,” he said.

    The pope said the Nativity scene also shows the faithful how they can meet God and bask in his presence. As Jesus said, “Unless you change and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven,” so Jesus must be welcomed with the humble, simple heart of a child, the pope said.

    At the end of his talk, the pope wished everyone a Merry Christmas in six languages and called on young people to be inspired by the Christmas season to generously serve others in their lives.

    Posted on December 23, 2009, to:

  • By Nancy Frazier O’Brien

    WASHINGTON (CNS) — The Senate should not approve its current health reform bill “without incorporating essential changes to ensure” that it “truly protects the life, dignity, consciences and health of all,” the chairmen of three committees of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said.

    In a letter sent late Dec. 22, about 36 hours before the expected Senate vote Christmas Eve morning, the USCCB urged opposition to the Senate bill and pledged continued efforts to incorporate needed changes during the work of the House-Senate conference committee.

    “For many months, our bishops’ conference has worked with members of Congress, the administration and others to fashion health care reform legislation that truly protects the life, dignity, health and consciences of all,” said the letter signed by Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston and Bishops William F. Murphy of Rockville Centre, N.Y., and John C. Wester of Salt Lake City.

    The three chair the USCCB committees on Pro-Life Activities, on Domestic Justice and Human Development and on Migration, respectively.

    “We regret to say that in all the areas of our moral concern, the Senate health care reform bill is deficient,” the three chairmen added. “Therefore we believe the Senate should not move this bill forward at this time but continue to discuss and approve changes that could make it morally acceptable. Until these fundamental flaws are remedied the bill should be opposed.”

    The bishops said their biggest problem with the Senate bill was its treatment of abortion funding, which “not only falls short of the House’s standard but violates long-standing precedent in all other federal health programs.”

    In addition to not maintaining the legal status quo on abortion funding that has been supported by President Barack Obama and by the majority of Americans in many polls, the abortion provisions in the manager’s amendment to the Senate bill would require purchasers of some health insurance plans “to pay for other people’s abortions in a very direct and explicit way,” the USCCB letter said.

    “There is no provision for individuals to opt out of this abortion payment in federally subsidized plans, so people will be required by law to pay for other people’s abortions,” it added.

    The Senate bill also fails to include provisions to prevent “discrimination against health care providers that decline involvement in abortion” and would not protect the rights of Catholic and other institutions “to provide and purchase health coverage consistent with their moral and religious convictions on other procedures,” the chairmen said.

    The letter also urged changes in the Senate bill’s provisions barring undocumented immigrants from purchasing health insurance from an exchange with their own money and banning legal immigrants from federal health benefit programs for five years.

    The USCCB chairmen said the Senate bill would leave more than 23 million people without health insurance, falling short “of what is needed in both policy and moral dimensions.”

    They urged expansion of Medicaid eligibility, at a minimum, to those living at 133 percent or more of the federal poverty level (about $30,000 for a family of four in 2009) and an increase in subsidies provided to low-income households.

    Regardless of the outcome of the Dec. 24 Senate vote, “we will work vigorously to incorporate into the final legislation our priorities for upholding conscience rights and long-standing current prohibitions on abortion funding; ensuring affordability and access; and including immigrants,” the Dec. 22 letter said. “We hope and pray that the Congress and the country will come together around genuine reform.”

    In an earlier statement, Cardinal DiNardo said the USCCB would continue to oppose the Senate legislation “unless and until” it is amended to “comply with long-standing Hyde restrictions on federal funding of elective abortions and health plans that include them.”

    The Hyde amendment prohibits federal funding of abortion except in cases of rape, incest or threat to the woman’s life.

    On abortion, the USCCB had backed a bipartisan amendment sponsored by Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., and others. Similar to a House-passed measure sponsored by Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., the amendment would have incorporated the Hyde amendment protections into the health reform bill.

    When the Senate tabled Nelson’s amendment in a 54-45 vote Dec. 8, Cardinal Francis E. George of Chicago, USCCB president, and the three USCCB chairmen called it “a grave mistake and a serious blow to genuine health reform.”

    Nelson joined with the 57 other Senate Democrats and two independents in voting Dec. 19 to end debate on the health reform legislation, ending a Republican filibuster.

    Two other procedural votes — each needing 60 votes — were required in the Senate before a vote on final passage could take place. The final vote, requiring only a simple majority, was expected Dec. 24.

    Several Nebraska religious leaders praised Nelson for supporting the Senate health reform bill.

    “Your efforts ensure that we can move ahead with health care reform that protects the dignity of life at every stage and provides critical support for pregnant women and children,” said a letter signed by five Catholic priests, a Sister of Mercy and leaders of Lutheran, African Methodist Episcopal, Disciples of Christ, Methodist, Episcopal and Jewish congregations.

    “Your willingness to work to make health care more accessible and affordable shows a deep commitment to the moral and ethical principles of the common good,” the letter added. “As Nebraskans we are both proud of and grateful for all your difficult work of negotiating pressure from both sides of this extremely important issue; we commend you for making the right decision.”

    Posted on December 22, 2009, to:

  • By John Thavis

    VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI advanced the sainthood causes of Pope John Paul II and Pope Pius XII, declaring that both had lived lives of “heroic virtues.”

    In signing the decrees Dec. 19, the pope confirmed the recommendations of Vatican officials who have studied the causes for several years. Both popes can be beatified once a miracle is attributed to their intercession.

    The decree on Pope John Paul was expected, and it fueled hopes for a beatification ceremony sometime next year. Church experts are already studying a possible miracle, the cure of a French nun from Parkinson’s disease, the same disease from which Pope John Paul suffered.

    The decree on Pope Pius came as a surprise. His sainthood cause has been a point of contention with some Jewish groups and others who say he failed to do enough to protect Jews during World War II — an accusation strongly rejected by Vatican historians.

    After the Congregation for Saints’ Causes unanimously recommended the heroic virtues decree for Pope Pius in 2007, Pope Benedict put the cause on hold and put out the word that both critics and supporters should stop pressing the issue.

    In the end, Pope Benedict paired the announcement of Pope Pius’ “heroic virtues” with that of Pope John Paul, who is remembered for his acts of friendship and bridge-building with the Jewish community.

    That does not mean, however, that both popes would be beatified together. There is no Vatican timetable for verification of a miracle, and in some cases sainthood causes have waited many years for that step.

    In 2005, Pope Benedict set Pope John Paul on the fast track to beatification by waiving the normal five-year waiting period for the introduction of his sainthood cause. That seemed to respond to the “Santo subito!” (“Sainthood now!”) banners that were held aloft at Pope John Paul’s funeral.

    In April, the church will mark the fifth anniversary of Pope John Paul’s death. The initial diocesan phase of his sainthood cause was completed in April 2007.

    In November 2008, a team of theological consultors to the Congregation for Saints’ Causes began studying the 2,000-page “positio,” the document that made the case for Pope John Paul’s beatification. After their favorable judgment, the cardinal and bishop members of the sainthood congregation met last month and gave their go-ahead for the decree of heroic virtues.

    The presumed miracle for the Polish-born pontiff, meanwhile, is being studied in a five-step process that involves medical experts, a medical board, theological consultors, the members of the congregation and, finally, Pope Benedict.

    The advancement of Pope Pius XII’s cause prompted immediate criticism from Jewish representatives in the United States, Israel and Europe.

    In Italy, Jewish leaders suggested the decision was premature, since the Vatican’s archives on the World War II period remain sealed. An Israeli Foreign Ministry official also said it was difficult for historians to reach a judgment about Pope Pius until archives were opened, but he added that beatification of the wartime pope was an internal issue of the Catholic Church.

    World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder said beatification of Pope Pius XII was “inopportune and premature” as long as the Vatican archives from 1939 to 1945 remain closed, and until a consensus on his actions concerning the Holocaust is established.

    Bishop Sergio Pagano, prefect of the Vatican archives, said in 2008 that the Vatican’s five archivists would need another five or six years to catalog documents from Pope Pius’ 1939-58 pontificate.

    According to church officials, the Vatican’s sainthood congregation had assembled the necessary documents for Pope Pius’s beatification cause in 2004. Subsequent evaluations by historians, theologians and a panel of cardinals and bishops resulted in the recommendation in 2007 to proceed with the advancement of the beatification process.

    But later that year, in a highly unusual step, Pope Benedict appointed a commission to look at new archival information about Pope Pius and study how his beatification would affect Catholic-Jewish and Vatican-Israeli relations.

    Pope Pius has been criticized by Jewish groups who said he did little to mobilize the church in defense of Jews against the Nazi extermination campaign. Other experts have published evidence to show that the late pope worked quietly but effectively to save the lives of thousands of Jews and others during World War II.

    Late in 2008, marking the 50th anniversary of Pope Pius’ death, Pope Benedict praised the late pope for his extraordinary intelligence, excellent memory, great fluency in foreign languages, “remarkable sensitivity,” an unwavering dedication to God and a deep love for Christ, the church and humanity.

    Pope Benedict said at the time that the church was “praying that (his) beatification cause may proceed happily.”

    Posted on December 22, 2009, to:

  • By Carol Glatz

    VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Christians are called to be like a brightly adorned Christmas tree and shine forth Christ’s brilliant light to the world, Pope Benedict XVI said.

    The faithful must show with their “good fruits” of living a Christian life that the world was “truly visited and redeemed by the Lord,” he told representatives of Belgium’s Wallonia region who donated the 98-foot spruce tree adorning St. Peter’s Square.

    The pope held an audience Dec. 18 at the Vatican with a large group of civil and religious leaders from the Belgian region — a region that produces up to 4 million Christmas trees each year and exports 80 percent of them.

    The pope said that of the multitude of trees in the forest, one was chosen to stand majestically in St. Peter’s Square, be lit and “covered with glittering decorations, which are like marvelous fruit.”

    “Leaving behind its dark dress for a sparkling glow, (the tree) is transformed, it becomes the bearer of a light that is not its own but gives witness to the true light that comes to this world,” he said.

    The tree, like the shepherds, keeps watch in the dark night, “illuminated by the angels’ message” of Jesus’ birth, said the pope.

    “The destiny of this tree is also comparable to ours, we who are called to bear good fruits in order to show the world that it has been truly visited and redeemed by the Lord,” he said.

    Together with the Nativity scene, the tree shows “the presence of a great mystery” that took place in the poor and simple birthplace of Jesus in Bethlehem, he said.

    The 90-year-old tree was trimmed with yellow and white lights and some 2,000 gold and silver ornaments.

    In addition to donating the towering tree for the square, the delegation from Wallonia also gave 40 smaller Christmas trees to decorate various rooms and offices throughout Vatican City.

    The tree was lighted by a Belgian boy and girl during an early evening ceremony in St. Peter’s Square with Cardinal Giovanni Lajolo, president of the commission governing Vatican City State. A choir from Belgium sang carols and the Vatican police band played the anthems of the Vatican, Belgium and Wallonia.

    Posted on December 22, 2009, to:

  • VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI has accepted the resignation of Archbishop Daniel E. Pilarczyk, 75, as head of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. He is succeeded by Coadjutor Archbishop Dennis M. Schnurr, 61.

    The resignation and succession were announced at the Vatican Dec. 21.

    Pope Benedict named Archbishop Schnurr coadjutor archbishop of Cincinnati Oct. 17, 2008. As coadjutor, he automatically becomes head of the archdiocese upon Archbishop Pilarczyk’s retirement.

    Archbishop Pilarczyk turned 75 in August, the age at which bishops are required by church law to submit their resignations to the pope. He had been archbishop for 27 years, longer than any other currently serving archbishop in the United States.

    He said the archdiocese “is blessed to be getting such a skilled, dedicated and spiritual pastor” as Archbishop Schnurr. “‘Floreat,’” Archbishop Pilarczyk added. “May he flourish.”

    His successor was bishop of Duluth, Minn., for seven years until being named to his new job. In the past year Archbishop Schnurr has maintained a heavy schedule of activities taking him to all corners of archdiocese.

    The Cincinnati Archdiocese has almost 500,000 Catholics, covers 19 counties in southwest Ohio, and has 220 parishes and 113 primary and secondary schools.

    “One year ago, when Pope Benedict XVI appointed me coadjutor archbishop of Cincinnati, I was humbled and honored,” Archbishop Schnurr said.

    “Today, after having had the opportunity to visit so many of our parishes, schools, and other institutions over the past months, I feel even more grateful and privileged,” he said. “The welcome has been overwhelming, and I look forward to working with our priests, deacons, religious and laypeople in building upon the solid foundation of faith that is so evident in our communities.”

    Before being named to Duluth in 2001 by Pope John Paul II, then-Msgr. Schnurr served for six years as the general secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops-U.S. Catholic Conference in Washington, now called the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

    He played a major role shepherding efforts to combine the twin conferences into the USCCB. The name change and new statutes reorganizing the bishops’ national structures took effect in July 2001.

    In 1993 he organized World Youth Day in Denver, which brought Pope John Paul II to the United States.

    A native of Sheldon, Iowa, Archbishop Schnurr was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Sioux City, Iowa, in 1974. He studied for the priesthood at the Pontifical North American College and the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. In 1980, he earned a doctorate in canon law from The Catholic University of America in Washington.

    In the Sioux City Diocese, he served in several parish assignments and as vice chancellor and chancellor. He was subsequently assigned to the staff of the apostolic nuncio in 1985 in Washington, where he gave advice on canon law, monitored financial affairs and researched issues of interest to the church.

    Then-Father Schnurr joined the bishops’ conference in 1989 as associate general secretary and was elected general secretary in 1995.

    Archbishop Pilarczyk was named archbishop of Cincinnati Oct. 30, 1982. He also served as president of the U.S. bishops’ conference in 1989-92 and as vice president in 1986-89. He also served as a consultant to the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs.

    He has been chairman of the Catholic Common Ground Initiative since 2003. Cardinal Joseph L. Bernardin of Chicago launched the initiative shortly before his death in 1996 in an effort to end polarization in the U.S. church and bring reconciliation and healing.

    A native of Dayton, Ohio, Archbishop Pilarczyk holds a doctorate in sacred theology from the Pontifical Urbanian University in Rome and a doctorate in classics from the University of Cincinnati. He was ordained a priest of the Cincinnati Archdiocese Dec. 20, 1959.

    He served the archdiocese as chancellor and was on the faculty of St. Gregory Seminary. He was named an auxiliary bishop of Cincinnati in 1974.

    He has written more than a dozen popular books and many pamphlets and articles. His commentary on the daily Mass readings is heard on Catholic radio stations around the country, on the Sirius/XM Satellite network and online at http://franciscanradio.org/sharingtheword.

    In retirement, he will continue to live in Cincinnati and celebrate the sacraments.

    Posted on December 22, 2009, to: