Thursday, March 31, 2016

Pope Francis’ Exhortation on the Family Will Be Published on April 8








Pope Francis’ long-awaited apostolic exhortation on the family will be published on April 8, and will be known by its Latin name, “Amoris Laetitia” (“The Joy of Love”), on love in the family.
The Vatican announced this today and said it will be presented at a press conference in Rome on that date by Cardinals Lorenzo Baldisseri, general secretary of the Synod of Bishops, and Christoph Schönborn, O.P., the archbishop of Vienna. An Italian married couple will also be on the panel: Professor Francesco Miano, lecturer in moral philosophy at the University of Rome at Tor Vergata, and Professor Giuseppina De Simone in Miano, lecturer in philosophy at the Theological Faculty of Southern Italy in Naples.
There is enormous interest on what Francis will say in this important document that sources say is longer than “Evangelii Gaudium” (“The Joy of the Gospel”) and will be over 200 pages (in the size of Vatican texts).
In writing it, Francis has drawn on the work of the 2014 and 2015 synods of bishops on the family, and on the final report of last October’s synod, each paragraph of which gained the necessary two-thirds majority. That report reaffirmed traditional church teaching on marriage and the family and highlighted the pressing need to give greater attention to preparing couples for marriage and to the pastoral care of families. Significantly, however, it closed no doors to the development of new pastoral approaches to complex marriage situations, including those of divorced and remarried Catholics, and to the issue of homosexuality and the family. We will know next week what Francis has to say on these and other key issues.
Francis began writing the exhortation immediately after the October 2015 synod ended. Sources say he approached the task as a pastor, drawing on his own pastoral experience as a priest for 56 years in Argentina, as a bishop for 21 years in Buenos Aires (including 15 as archbishop) and now three years as pope. All that experience is likely to have had a decisive impact on his magisterial text on the family, just as St. John Paul II’s experience shaped his exhortation on the family more than 34 years ago.
The papal text is still secret. There have been no leaks so far. It is clear, however, from all that Francis has said, both at the synod and in his 2015 catechesis on the family, that there will not be any change in church doctrine. One can expect therefore that he will reaffirm marriage as a lifelong union between a man and a woman, open to having children. He is also likely to restate traditional church teaching on the indissolubility of marriage and emphasize the importance of solid preparation of couples for marriage and of ongoing pastoral accompaniment of married couples and the family.
On the other hand, in this Jubilee Year of Mercy, Francis is expected to open doors in the church’s pastoral approach to couples who are living together, to divorced and remarried Catholics and to homosexuality in the family. We have to wait for the text to see how he will do this, but it is likely to be along the lines that he outlined in his homily at Mass to new cardinals on Feb. 15, 2015, when he reminded them that “the church’s way, from the time of the Council of Jerusalem, has always been the way of Jesus, the way of mercy and reinstatement.... The way of the church is not to condemn anyone for eternity; [it is] to pour out the balm of God’s mercy on all those who ask for it with a sincere heart.”


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Taken from: http://americamagazine.org/content/dispatches/pope-francis-exhortation-family-will-be-published-april-8

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Pope Tempers Easter Sunday Message With Denunciation of Terror




Pope Francis celebrates the Easter mass on March 31, 2013 at the Vatican. Pope Francis prepared to lead his first Easter Sunday celebrations with tens of thousands of people expected in St Peter's Square for a mass marking the holiest day in the Christian calendar. ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images


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In his Easter Sunday address to the world, Pope Francis launched a message of hope for strife-torn nations in the Middle East and Africa, while denouncing “blind and brutal” violence wrought by terrorists and decrying countries that refuse “welcome and assistance” for migrants and refugees.
In his twice yearly “Urbi et Orbi” address, Pope Francis capped a Holy Week that has unfolded in the shadow of the terrorist attacks in Belgium, a deadly assault in an Iraqi stadium and deep discord over the fate of tens of thousands of migrants stranded in the Balkans and Greece.
“Our world is full of persons suffering in body and spirit, even as the daily news is full of stories of brutal crimes which often take place within homes, and large-scale armed conflicts which cause indescribable suffering to entire peoples,” said the pope.
Throughout this year’s Holy Week ceremonies, Pope Francis has used powerful words and gestures to denounce terrorism and war, while at the same time expressing faith in the power of interreligious dialogue to stop violence and heal divisions. The 79-year-old pontiff has been unwavering in his faith in the power of dialogue with Islam, once saying he would be willing to speak with Islamic State terrorists in the name of peace.
On Holy Thursday, the pope traveled to a migrant reception center outside Rome to perform the traditional Holy Thursday feet-washing ceremony. The pope washed the feet of eight men and four women, including Eritrean Coptic Christians, Nigerian Catholics, a Hindu man from India and three Muslims from Pakistan, Mali and Syria. “We are children of the same God, who want to live in peace,” he said.
During Good Friday services in Rome—which took place under heavy security—the pope used strong language to decry terrorism, alluding to the persecution of Christians and other religious minorities in recalling “our sisters and brothers killed, burned alive, throats slit and decapitated by barbarous blades amid cowardly silence.”
He blasted “terrorist acts committed by followers of some religions that profane the name of God and that use the holy name to justify their unprecedented violence.”
In his “Urbi et Orbi” address on Sunday, Pope Francis recalled not only the assault last week in Brussels that killed 28 people, but also attacks in Turkey, Nigeria and other African countries. He prayed for the success of ongoing talks to broker a solution to the Syrian war and for peace in countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan.
Even while he offered a grim inventory of violence and suffering, much of the pope’s address on Sunday morning was imbued with hope. “Weapons of love” can bring salvation “before the spiritual and moral abysses of mankind,” he said.
The pope dedicated a lengthy passage to the plight of migrants, a deeply divisive issue in Europe, where a number of countries have closed their borders to keep the new arrivals out and where migrant aid groups and some politicians have blasted a new agreement to detain migrants, including Syrian refugees, arriving in Greece and return them to Turkey. Pope Francis has frequently called for national leaders to open their doors to the migrants, a stance that has earned him some criticism from anti-immigration politicians.
During Good Friday prayers, Pope Francis said “the Mediterranean and Aegean Seas…have become insatiable cemeteries, reflections of our indifferent and anesthetized conscience.” On Sunday, he recalled “ever more numerous throngs of migrants and refugees—including many children—fleeing from war, hunger, poverty and social injustice.
“All too often, these brothers and sisters of ours meet along the way with death or, in any event, rejection by those who could offer them welcome and assistance,” said the Argentina-born pontiff.
During his appearances in the past week, the pope also reiterated his concern for the destruction of the environment, criticized corrupt public officials and denounced arms dealers—all frequent themes of his papacy.
The ceremonies have unfolded amid tight security, which has been stepped up after terrorist attacks in Paris and Brussels and in the wake of public threats by Islamic State members to attack the Vatican. But the pope delighted the crowd assembled under sunny skies Sunday morning when he toured St. Peter’s Square in his open-topped popemobile.


Write to Deborah Ball at deborah.ball@wsj.com




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Taken from: http://www.wsj.com/articles/pope-francis-celebrates-easter-sunday-mass-amid-tight-security-1459073447
                              
            

Monday, March 21, 2016

Paedophile-favouring Professor of La Trobe University



Tim Blair –, Monday, March, 21, 2016, (3:55am)

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last week ordered the Safe Schools Coalition to tone down its classroom campaign or lose millions in taxpayer funding. Defenders of the alleged anti-bullying program were outraged, as usual.
“I think it’s not the program they’ve got an issue with,” Greens leader Richard Di Natale said on Sunday, accusing conservative backbench MPs of homophobia and transphobia.
“I think it’s the behaviour and feelings (of) children who are struggling with issues of gender and sexuality — I think it’s more to do with that, and there’s no question much of this, or at least part of it, is coming from a place of homophobia.”


That certainly can’t be said of academic Gary Dowsett, a professor in the Sex, Health and Society Department at Melbourne’s La Trobe University, which helped devise the Safe Schools program.
Although Dowsett was not directly involved in Safe Schools work, his views over the years on sexuality and children deserve scrutiny.
Liberal MP George Christensen last week cited in parliament a 1982 piece by Dowsett for the quarterly newsletter Gay Information. “I also have a friend, a paedophile, who is working very hard on making sense out of his relations with boys. These relations consist of, among other things, a large amount of nurture and support for these boys, a real caring for their welfare and growth,” Dowsett wrote.
“A new political position is needed for there are significant political struggles at stake. First, we have three legal/social questions to win: custody rights for gay men and lesbians; the legal right of paedophiles and their young lovers; and finally the sexual rights of children.
“The current paedophilia debate then is crucial to the political processes of the gay movement: paedophiles need our support, and we need to construct the child/adult sex issue on our terms.”
Anyone championing the “legal right of paedophiles” and declaring that “paedophiles need our support” might have expected a few career barriers.

Not so for Prof Dowsett, however, who has since made a fortune from various research papers, many of them taxpayer-funded.
They follow a particular theme.


(Continue reading The Department of Sex, Health and Society.)




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Taken from: http://blogs.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/timblair/