Year of Missions in Kenya, 2019

ROAD MAP ON ANIMATING THE YEAR OF MISSSION IN KENYA, 2019
 

  1. Preamble

Following the promulgation of the Extra-Ordinary Mission Month 2019 by Pope Francis, the Catholic Church in Kenya has taken that opportunity to review and interrogate her missionary actions and activities.

The Bishops’ through the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops, (KCCB), saw the need to extend this period from one month to one year in order to help the Christ’s faithful in Kenya to come to the realization that the Church in Kenya has grown and it should move towards becoming a missionary Church by now.
 
The Church in Kenya is poised to make a step forward to become a sending Church so that we can have missionaries from Kenya going to evangelize other parts of the World; the Fidei Donum Clergy and Lay faithful should be ready to go to parts of Kenya that are still under primary evangelization. This can be enhanced when the Church in Kenya embraces the missionary spirit and discipleship.

This occasion forms a good background to remind ourselves and other Catholic Faithful that we received faith from the Missionaries who overcame many hardships, obstacles, pains and sufferings in order to evangelize our Nation. It is time we need to give back to the society having received the faith and now being strong in faith. This was the basis for extending the one month to one year celebration. We are, however, aware that we are handicapped in the resource mobilization to facilitate all the programmes laid forth to do the animation work.
 
It is on this background that we are calling upon all the baptized persons of the Catholic Faith to rally behind the Papal call to be missionaries and be ready to be sent to the peripheries of the Country to proclaim the Gospel to all Nations. This entails four key principles, namely:
 

  1. That we shall encounter Jesus Christ through the Word and Sacrament.
  2. We shall be the authentic Witnesses of the Gospel through our life and faith sharing.
  3. We shall be formed and informed in the teachings and traditions of the Church to be able to share with others what we are convinced of, hence, believe what we read, and read what we teach and live what we teach.
  4. We shall be more generous with our resources, time, energy and effort to do the missionary work in our own small ways through acts of mercy and charity

        2. Why should we celebrate the Year of Mission?

 

  1. To have a renewed missionary commitment that will renew the Church, revitalize the faith and the Christian Identity and then offer fresh enthusiasm and new incentive that will make Jesus Christ the centre of our Mission.
  2. To realize through the missionary outreach programmes paradigm shift in the Church’s activities by devoting necessary efforts in pastoral and missionary conversion.
  3. To focus more on the transformation and change in the life of humankind, in the making of nationhood, building of cultures and shaping the form and quality of the socio-political and economic systems

 

  1. What should we do in the Year of Mission?

 

  1. Become outward looking rather than inward looking in the Church’s ministerial programme (analogy of the Noah’s Ark versus the boat of Peter cfr. Lk 5:1-11). This can be achieved by focusing on the proclamation of the Word by all Christians. We need to be oriented towards the Mission.
  2. The Church has to shift its focus now from programme development to people development with a deep focus on our core mandate which is the ministry of the Word and Sacraments. Our pastoral activity should be inclusive and friendly.
  3. The Church has to focus more on the agenda about how to encounter Jesus Christ and not just our own idea of who Jesus is. This can be achieved if we focus more on the message of the Kingdom of God.
  4. The Church’s missionary spirit should inspire a sense of constant exile, and hence, we need to undertake constant pilgrimages across the various deserts of life towards our final destination poised between the ‘already’ and ‘not yet’ of the Kingdom of Heaven.
  5. We should be challenged to go forth from our comfort zones in order to reach the peripheries of life and Nations in need of the Gospel message.

 

  1. What do we intend to achieve at the end of the programme?

 

  1. The baptized person will be able to share his/her faith boldly and courageously.
  2. Reawaken in all Christians the burden and Grace of Baptism.
  3. Rekindle in all the Christ’s faithful the spirit of generosity, dedication and selfless giving to mission work and charity.
  4. There will be more dialogue between cultures, groups and peoples to answer the deep seated questions disturbing humanity.

 

  1. Some guidelines to be used to animate the Year of Mission in Kenya.

 

  1. Organize National and Diocesan Celebrations for the opening of the Year in 2019
  2. Celebrate the Vigils focusing on the Theme: Baptised and Sent: The Church of Christ on the Move in the World, 
  3.  Celebrate the Most Holy Eucharist at the Diocesan and Parish levels during the period of the celebration. Where possible have a Diocesan Celebration of the Mass on Vocation Sunday and World Mission Sunday.
  4.  Small Christian Communities and Family units to come together in each other’s, houses to pray the Holy Rosary with the intention for the Missionary work of the Church.
  5. Promote Pilgrimages to a Marian Shrine or to a Church of a Missionary Saint or Martyr.
  6.  Promote the collection of funds to support the apostolic work of the Missio  ad Gentes and Missionary Formation.
  7. Organize a public activity by which young people are involved in proclaiming the Gospel.
  8. Organize a diocesan and National Celebration for the Closing of the year of Mission in Kenya.

 

  1. Some guidelines to be used in Dioceses and Religious houses.

 

  1. Each month to be guided by a specific theme, action points for discussion and activities, with the aim of encountering Jesus Christ through the Saints or Feasts of the Church.
  2. To produce Animation materials on particular topics that will assist the people of God to deepen their knowledge and understanding about our Faith in the Year of Mission
  3. For more effectiveness, every Diocese, is to develop a symbol of faith that can unite the entire Diocese so as to address the year of Mission and make the people of God appreciate the work of the Missionaries, as well as recognize that they are the missionaries of today.

It should be noted that, the life of Saints is good to enhance the power of witness among the people. The people should be encouraged to talk about their own heroes and heroines of faith who witness and lived well the faith among them. They can be mentors and model for emulation because they are real and concrete examples of how we can live our faith within our context. Let us also emphasis more on the African Saints who are closer to us.

Above all, let there be a formation programme in the parishes and Small Christian Communities in biblical, spiritual and catechetical formation among the baptized persons to empower them to boldly share their faith with others.
 

  1. Who are our target groups?

 

  1. The baptized Catholics
  2. The nominal Catholics
  3. The non-believers and Atheists
  4. The Ecclesial Christian communities
  5. The young people
  6. The Children
  7. The neglected, forsaken and down trodden people of the society

What is the message? You are baptized, you have been appointed and sent to the peripheries of the Nations to proclaim Jesus Christ as an authentic witness.
 

  1. Conclusion.

The year of Mission programme was launched on 6th October, 2018 by the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops in the Village of Mary Shrine in Subukia. The process of creating awareness and conscientizing the people is ongoing as Dioceses launch the programme during the first part of the year. From the month of March 2019, we shall embark on a uniform format of animation using the programme set.
The trainings are meant to help the pastoral coordinators and religious superiors to understand and adopt the national programme which can be customized to respective diocesan pastoral plan or religious communities programme.

20th March 2019

We live in a world that often equates ‘greatness’ with position, power, possessions. But, as followers of Jesus, we are promised neither!

While he prepares the disciples for what lies ahead, Jesus is sidetracked by a mother’s understandable desire to see her children acknowledged. She would like them to have the prized positions in the kingdom. However, Jesus did not come to establish a kingdom where power prevails. His life was a witness to servant leadership where humility and service are essential, and suffering could follow. This was what happened to Jeremiah, who pleads with God for the people, and yet they plot to strike him down. Jesus, too, will soon drink the cup of betrayal.

This mandate – to minister to the community, without aspiring to position or control – was handed down through the disciples. Understanding this is crucial to the Christian way of life.

When we pray ‘make me a servant like you Lord’, are we committing to all that it entails?

One who Guarded God’s Treasure

The One Who Guarded God’s Treasure

We are all perfectly well aware that to hold something in trust is to fulfil a sacred duty, one that not only calls upon our honour, but even requires a kind of religious observance. Saint Ambrose tells us of the pious custom of the faithful bringing their most valued possessions to the bishops and clergy for safekeeping before the altar. Theirs was a kind of holy intuition that treasures could not be better kept than where God had placed his own sacred mysteries. This custom was handed down from the synagogue of old. In the sacred history, we read that the venerable Temple of Jerusalem was a place of safekeeping for the Jews; from profane writers we learn that the pagans paid the same honour to their false gods by placing their treasures in their temples and by confiding them to their priests. It is as if nature were teaching us that the obligation to keep a trust is a religious one and that precious objects cannot be safer than where the divinity is revered and in hands consecrated to religion.

Yet if ever there were a trust that was worthy of the name sacred and of being guarded in a holy manner, it is the one of which I speak today, the one that the providence of the eternal Father committed to the faith of that just man, Joseph. His very house became a kind of temple that God deigned to inhabit. To guard such a treasure, Joseph himself had to be consecrated. And truly he was, for his body was consecrated by purity and his soul by all the gifts of grace….

In my plan of basing the praise of Saint Joseph not upon doubtful conjectures, but upon a solid doctrine drawn from the Holy Scriptures and the Fathers, I cannot better observe the solemnity of this day than by presenting this great saint to you as a man singled out to guard God’s treasure and to be his trustee here below.

Bishop Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet

Bishop Bossuet († 1704) was a French bishop and theologian. [From Meditations for Advent, Christopher O. Blum, Tr. © 2012, Christopher Blum, Sophia Institute Press, Manchester, New Hampshire. http://www.sophiainstitute.com. Used with permission.]

Living by faith and the golden rule

Living by Faith and the Golden Rule

Faith is the fulcrum of our moral and spiritual balance. The problems of evil or of sin, of injustice, of sufferings, even of death, cannot upset the man of faith or shake his trust and confidence in God. His powerlessness to solve such problems will not be a cause of despair or despondency for him, no matter how strong his concern and anxiety may be for himself and for those around him. At the core of his being there exists an unshakable confidence that God will provide, in the mysterious ways of his own divine providence.

And yet faith also teaches him that he cannot be indifferent, that he cannot just shrug his shoulders and sigh, “God will provide.” He knows that he must, in the words of one spiritual maxim, “work as if everything depended upon him and pray as if everything depended upon God.” He recognizes that it was by the Incarnation that the Kingdom of God was established. For it was in the mystery of his Incarnation that God became man in order to set us the most perfect example—and to teach us by this example how his kingdom must be extended on earth. The Kingdom of God will grow upon earth, will be brought to fulfillment, in the same way it was established: by the daily and seemingly hidden lives of those who do always the will of the Father.

Servant of God Walter J. Ciszek, s.j.

Because we belong to Christ

Because We Belong to Christ

Every day ask God to pour love for your brothers

into your heart and to put love for you into theirs.

God can deny nothing to a community that prays this

way, because it is his will that we love one another as

he has loved us.

Where there is no love, put love and you will

harvest love. Susceptibility is charity’s worst enemy,

humility its best ally. You should be intelligent and

holy enough to be the first to give way in a quarrel;

and never let squabbles over trifles harm your deep

union with your brothers. You may be in the right,

but your duty is not to let the sun go down on your

anger. Resolve each day anew to pray for your brothers. Pray that you may love, and love while you pray,

and the grace of his love will find a way in.

Look on the call to brotherly love as the entry into

an immense mystery, since it is your gateway into

God himself. Where love is, there is God. You, with

your brethren, give God a body, express his presence, and signify his action. Let your whole community become in this way a theophany of his love.

To express this love in authentic action, you must

live sharing. Share your time, table, roof, salaries, and

belongings. Possess nothing so that one day you

may, like Christ, be enriched by all you have given

away. Likewise, you should be able to say to each

community member: all that is mine is yours.

THE JERUSALEM COMMUNITY RULE OF LIFE

Why is Good Friday good?

Why Is Good Friday Called “Good?”

God is holy and the Bible tells us his holiness is incompatible with sin. Humans are sinful and our sin separates us from God. The punishment for sin is eternal death. But human death and animal sacrifices are insufficient to atone for sin. Atonement requires a perfect, spotless sacrifice, offered in just the right way.

Jesus Christ was the one and only perfect God-man. His death provided the perfect atoning sacrifice for sin. Only through Jesus can our sins be forgiven. When we accept Jesus Christ’s payment for sin, he washes away our sin and restores our right standing with God. God’s mercy and grace make salvation possible and we receive the gift of eternal life through Jesus Christ. This is why Good Friday is good.

Gospel of Matthew by Scott Hahn

Reading the Old Testament in the New: The Gospel of Matthew by Scott Hahn

April 16, 2014 by richardconlin Leave a Comment

The following is what I learnt from Scott Hahn’s free Scriptural Study on the Gospel of Matthew from http://www.salvationhistory.com (quotes taken directly from the Bible study course).

Lesson One: Learning to Listen for Echoes: A New Approach to the New Testament

3 important assumptions for all interpreters of the Old Testament (and New Testament):

1. Scripture, read as a whole, is totally self-consistent.

2. Every detail in scripture is significant.

3. Scripture is always understood according to its context.

Understanding typology:

From the Greek word, typos, (“model” or “pattern“) – is the major difference between the New Testament and other writings from the first-century Jewish writings. Everything in Scripture was seen as pointing to the coming of Jesus and His establishment of the Church. The entire Old Testament served as a kind of “narrative sub-structure” for the New Testament, as well as for the dogmas, creeds and sacraments of the early Church. Prophecy is nothing but the typological reading of history. In fact, even Jesus Himself taught the apostolic writers to read “typologically” (see Luke 24: 27-45).

It’s important to understand what typology is and isn’t. Typology isn’t a technique by which New Testament writers mechanically read the Old Testament like a fortune-teller. Typology, really, is a whole new worldview, a way of seeing all of reality – past, present and future – according to the certain patterns, patterns of God’s consistent dealings with His people.

As readers of the New Testament, we have to pay close attention, not only to direct quotes from Old Testament sources, but also to echoes, allusions, and other more subtle references to the Old Testament.

Lesson Two: Son of David, Son of Abraham (Matthew Chapters 1 & 2)

The Old Testament isn’t just the background for Matthew’s Gospel – it forms the backbone, the structure of his Gospel. Matthew’s prologue tells us who Jesus is and how He came into the world.

Matthew reads like a “mini-Penteteuch” – that it seems deliberately arranged to resemble the first five books of the Old Testament, known as the Law. Each book is composed of a narrative introduction followed by His commandments or teachings. Each of the five books ends with a formula-like statement – “And when Jesus had finished…” The five books of Matthew’s “Book of the Law” are “book-ended” by a prologue that describes Jesus’ birth and an epilogue that describes His death and Resurrection.

Prologue: The Birth of Jesus

Matthew 1-2

Book I: John the Baptist / Early Ministry of Jesus

Narrative: 3:1-4:25

Discourse: 5:1-7:27 (Sermon on the Mount)

Formula: 7:28-29: “When Jesus finished….”

Book II: Miracles and Commissioning of Apostles

Narrative: 8:1-9:35

Discourse: 9:36-10:42 (Missionary Sermon for Apostles)

Formula: 11:1: “When Jesus had finished….”

Book III: Controversy and the New Kingdom

Narrative: 11:2-12:50

Discourse: 13:1-52 (Teaching on the Kingdom of Heaven)

Formula: 13:53: “When Jesus finished….”

Book IV: Teaching the Church

Narrative: 13:54-17:21

Discourse: 17:22-18:35 (On Life in the Church)

Formula: 19:1: “When Jesus finished…”

Book V: Jesus Enters Jerusalem

Narrative: 19:2-22:46

Discourse: 23:1-25:46 (On End Times, Farewell)

Formula: 26:1: “When Jesus finished all these words…”

Epilogue: Passion and Resurrection of Jesus

Matthew 26:3-28:20

Who Jesus is:

Matthew’s prologue does two things – it tells us Who Jesus is and how He came into the world. And for Matthew, the Old Testament background is critical to understanding both.

St. Jerome’s translation of Matthew 1:1, “The book of the new genesis wrought by Jesus Christ, Son of David, Son of Abraham.” What’s happening with Jesus is a new creation, a new beginning for creation, for the world and the human race. Matthew wants us to see Jesus as the fulfillment of God’s covenant with Abraham and also heir to “David the King.” Note also that in the genealogy only Jesus and David are identified by their titles – David as King (1:6), Jesus as Messiah (1:16). Matthew wants us to see that Jesus is the promised Royal Messiah and Davidic King.

How He came into the world:

The “how” is a miracle. Here, Matthew describes the virgin birth of Jesus to Mary “through the Holy Spirit” as fulfilling a prophecy of Isaiah (see Matthew 1:18,22-23; Isaiah 7:14).

A question remains: How is the prophecy of a child prophesied to be named Emmanuel, fulfilled in a child who Joseph has been ordered to name Jesus? (see Matthew 1:21).

Emmanuel, which Matthew translates for his reader as “God is with us” is who Jesus is (see Isaiah 43:5; Ezekiel 37:27; Zechariah 8:23). And we will see in Matthew numerous places where Jesus describes how He will be “with us” for all time (see Matthew 18:20, 25:40,45), most especially in instituting the Eucharist (see Matthew 26:26-28). And in the very last lines of Matthew’s Gospel, we’ll hear an echo of Isaiah’s Emmanuel prophecy, as Jesus promises: “And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age” (see Matthew 28:20).

In his second chapter, Matthew deepens his identification of Jesus as the son of David and the Messiah. But his focus shifts. In this chapter he wants us to remember that the Messianic Son of David was to be the “King of the Jews” (see Matthew 2:2). As Matthew presents them, the Magi are the first to recognize Jesus as the Lord of all nations, again fulfilling Israel’s expectation that the restored Davidic Kingdom would be not only a nation-state, but a worldwide empire.

Lesson Three: ‘Not to Abolish, But to Fulfill’ (Matthew Chapters 3 to 7)

With the baptism of Jesus in the Jordan River and his temptation in the wilderness, Matthew returns to the “new Moses” symbolism he introduced in his prologue to the Gospel. Remember that in the prologue Jesus, like Moses, is born under perilous circumstances – all the male Hebrew children are under a despotic ruler’s death threat. Like Moses, he is saved in Egypt.

Jesus, as Matthew tells the story, is going to relive the experience of Israel – which was born as a new people of God in its miraculous crossing of the waters of the Red Sea, then tested in the desert, before finally being given a new law and a new covenant brought down by Moses from Mount Sinai.

The three temptations put to Jesus roughly correspond to those endured by Israel in the wilderness. [1] He is first confronted with hunger and tempted, as Israel was, to grumble against God (see Exodus 16:1-13). [2] Next, he is dared to put God to the test – challenged to question God’s care and concern for Him. This, too, recalls the quarreling of the Israelites with Moses at Massah (see Exodus 17:1-6; Numbers 20:2-13; Psalm 95:8). [3] Finally, Jesus is tempted to worship a false god, which Israel actually did in creating the idol of the golden calf (see Exodus 32).

As Moses climbed a mountain and brought the people the Law of the Old Covenant (see Exodus 24:12-18), Jesus too goes up to a mountain and begins to teach. But unlike Moses, Jesus doesn’t bring to the people a Law written by God. He is more than a i covenant-mediator and a new law-bringer. Jesus is the New Covenant (see Isaiah 42:6) and the new Law – in Him we will see modeled perfectly the commandments of God, the words that He preaches.

Jesus then pronounces some of the most crucial words in Matthew’s Gospel: “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets. I have come not to abolish but to fulfill” (see Matthew 5:17). No longer is the Law of God’s people to be a simple prescription for external behavior. It is now an interior law, to be written in the hearts of believers. In the Sermon on the Mount, He gives us not written commandments, but His Law to be written in our hearts. God will no longer be our “Master” but our Father.

Lesson Four: Healing and Restoration (Matthew Chapters 8 to 10)

On the surface, these stories demonstrate Jesus’ command over sickness, the demons, the forces of nature, and even death. But Matthew provides a deeper Old Testament context for Jesus’ actions. In effect, he is offering an inspired commentary on what Jesus is doing, showing how His actions relate to God’s redemptive plan for Israel and the nations.

The most dramatic events in this second book are the healings. Jesus not only heals, but touches people whom, under the Law, were considered ritually impure or “unclean” – a leper (see Matthew 8:2-4), a dead girl (see Matthew 9:18-19,23-25) , a woman with chronic menstrual hemorrhaging (see Matthew 9:20-22). By His touch of the untouchables, Matthew explains, Jesus is “fulfilling” Isaiah’s prophesy that God would send a Suffering Servant to take on Israel’s infirmities and diseases (see Matthew 8:16). In Isaiah’s prophesy, the physical infirmities borne by the Servant are a sign of Israel’s sin (see Isaiah 53:6,12; Psalm 107:17). In the same way, then, Matthew wants us to see these healings of Jesus as signs that Jesus is taking on the sin of Israel and extending to Israel God’s mercy and forgiveness.

In this conflict, Matthew wants us to see that the ritual prescriptions of Moses’ Law were originally meant as means to an end – [1] to purify Israel of the idolatry it was so prone to (see Joshua 24:14; Ezekiel 20:7-8; Acts 7:39-41),[2] to draw the people closer into their covenant relationship to God, [3] and to prepare them for their vocation as a light to the nations (see Isaiah 42:6; 49:6). But this restoration is not to be one based on blood or family lines, but on belief in Jesus and the Gospel. He makes this clear in telling the Apostles to shake the dust from their feet of any house or town that will not receive them (see Matthew 10:14).

Lesson Five: Riddles of Rejection, Rock of Foundation (Chapters 11 to 18)

A parable is comparison that uses everyday images and stories to illustrate deeper truths. Speaking in parables, Jesus is pronouncing judgment on those who refuse to hear Him, to recognize in His words and deeds, the Messiah promised by the prophets & also given for the benefit of the faithful.

Walking on the water:

Remember that Israel was “born” in a dramatic rescue at sea – the night crossing of the Red Sea and the drowning of Pharaoh’s army (see Exodus 14:10-15:21). In the Old Testament, God alone has the power to walk on water. “He alone…treads upon the crests of the sea,” we read in the Book of Job (see Job 9:8; Habakkuk 3:15).

And He assures the Apostles with the words: “Take courage, it is I, do not be afraid.” The phrase “do not be afraid” appears often in Jewish and Christian stories of divine revelation (see Matthew 17:7; 28:5; Revelation 1:17). But we want to pay particular attention to the phrase, “it is I.”

Ego eimi, the Greek words translated as “it is I,” literally mean “I am.” This is the same phrase that God used to reveal Himself to Moses (see Exodus 3:14) and in the Old Testament is a sign of divine identity and authority (see Isaiah 41:4,10,14; 43:1-13). With his careful use of Old Testament references, Matthew is showing us the divine identity of Jesus (compare John 4:26; 8:24,28).

Upon This Rock I Will Build:

With Peter’s confession that Jesus is the Messiah and Jesus’ establishment of His Church “on this rock” we reach one of the highest peaks of Matthew’s Gospel.

Matthew presumes we understand all of this Old Testament background. Indeed, the key concepts and images in these verses – the Messiah, the Son of God, rock, building, gates of Hades, keys, and kingdom- are all drawn from Old Testament traditions surrounding the Davidic Kingdom.

And in the later Old Testament tradition, the Messiah was expected to be a single figure – a priest, prophet and king – who would fulfill God’s promises, restore the kingdom of David, and usher in a new and everlasting covenant (see Isaiah 9:7; 61:1-11; Matthew 21:9-11; Mark 12:35).

With Peter’s confession, Jesus for the first time acknowledges that He is the Davidic Messiah. He blesses Peter, saying that this insight into His Messianic identity must have been revealed to him by the “heavenly Father.” Then Jesus gives Peter a new name (his name had been Simon; see Matthew 4:18) and a new God-given role in salvation history – to be “the rock” upon which the Church of Jesus will be built.

The Key to the Kingdom:

The final blessings that Jesus gives to Peter are the “keys to the kingdom of heaven” and the powers to “bind and loose.” In Davidic Kingdom, the king appointed a prime minister to handle the day-to-day affairs of the Kingdom. He was variously called the royal “vizier,” the “major-domo,” the “superintendent” or “master of the palace.” He is considered to be “a father to the inhabitants” of the Kingdom (see 1 Kings 4:1-6; 16:9; 18:3; 2 Kings 15:5; 18:18,37; 19:2; Isaiah 22:22).

Peter is here being appointed prime minister of the restored Kingdom of David, the Kingdom of Heaven that Jesus proclaimed, the Church He called His own. The “keys” are a symbol of the King’s power, authority, and control. The reference to “binding” and “loosing” is a familiar allusion the powers of the rabbis to declare what is permitted and what is not permitted. As prime minister of the Kingdom of Heaven, Peter is the chief rabbi, with the ultimate teaching authority, the ability to declare what will be allowed and what will not.

Lesson Six: David’s Son, David’s Lord

Jesus, as King, takes possession of His capital peacefully, as Solomon did. His first action is to reclaim the sanctuary, the Temple, and to call Israel’s religious leaders back to their original sacred purpose (see Matthew 21:12-16).

What Matthew has been subtly trying to show throughout his narrative, Jesus finally reveals at the end. He does this through a skillful interpretation of Psalm 110. Jesus asks how Psalm 110 could describe David calling the Messiah “my Lord.” How could the Messiah be both David’s son and David’s lord? To understand His question, we have to know that Psalm 110 was believed to have been written by David and to be a Psalm about the Messiah. It describes the Messiah as begotten by God and seated at His right hand in heaven as both a princely ruler over the nations and as a priest.

Matthew carries the Son of God and Davidic King images through into the last scene of his Gospel (see Matthew 28:16-20).

Pope Francis in UAE

A DOCUMENT ON

HUMAN FRATERNITY

FOR WORLD PEACE AND LIVING TOGETHER

INTRODUCTION

Faith leads a believer to see in the other a brother or sister to be supported and loved. Through faith in God, who has created the universe, creatures and all human beings (equal on account of his mercy), believers are called to express this human fraternity by safeguarding creation and the entire universe and supporting all persons, especially the poorest and those most in need.

This transcendental value served as the starting point for several meetings characterized by a friendly and fraternal atmosphere where we shared the joys, sorrows, and problems of our contemporary world. We did this by considering scientific and technical progress, therapeutic achievements, the digital era, the mass media, and communications. We reflected also on the level of poverty, conflict, and suffering of so many brothers and sisters in different parts of the world as a consequence of the arms race, social injustice, corruption, inequality, moral decline, terrorism, discrimination, extremism, and many other causes.

From our fraternal and open discussions, and from the meeting that expressed profound hope in a bright future for all human beings, the idea of this Document on Human Fraternity was conceived. It is a text that has been given honest and serious thought so as to be a joint declaration of good and heartfelt aspirations. It is a document that invites all persons who have faith in God and faith in human fraternity to unite and work together so that it may serve as a guide for future generations to advance a culture of mutual respect in the awareness of the great divine grace that makes all human beings brothers and sisters.

DOCUMENT

In the name of God who has created all human beings equal in rights, duties, and dignity, and who has called them to live together as brothers and sisters, to fill the earth and make known the values of goodness, love, and peace;

In the name of innocent human life that God has forbidden to kill, affirming that whoever kills a person is like one who kills the whole of humanity and that whoever saves a person is like one who saves the whole of humanity;

In the name of the poor, the destitute, the marginalized and those most in need whom God has commanded us to help as a duty required of all persons, especially the wealthy and of means;

In the name of orphans, widows, refugees and those exiled from their homes and their countries; in the name of all victims of wars, persecution and injustice; in the name of the weak, those who live in fear, prisoners of war and those tortured in any part of the world, without distinction;

In the name of peoples who have lost their security, peace, and the possibility of living together, becoming victims of destruction, calamity, and war;

In the name of human fraternity that embraces all human beings, unites them and renders them equal;

In the name of this fraternity torn apart by policies of extremism and division, by systems of unrestrained profit or by hateful ideological tendencies that manipulate the actions and the future of men and women;

In the name of freedom, that God has given to all human beings creating them free and distinguishing them by this gift;

In the name of justice and mercy, the foundations of prosperity and the cornerstone of faith;

In the name of all persons of good will present in every part of the world;

In the name of God and of everything stated thus far; Al-Azhar al-Sharif and the Muslims of the East and West, together with the Catholic Church and the Catholics of the East and West, declare the adoption of a culture of dialogue as the path; mutual cooperation as the code of conduct; reciprocal understanding as the method and standard.

We, who believe in God and in the final meeting with Him and His judgment, on the basis of our religious and moral responsibility, and through this Document, call upon ourselves, upon the leaders of the world as well as the architects of international policy and world economy, to work strenuously to spread the culture of tolerance and of living together in peace; to intervene at the earliest opportunity to stop the shedding of innocent blood and bring an end to wars, conflicts, environmental decay and the moral and cultural decline that the world is presently experiencing.

We call upon intellectuals, philosophers, religious figures, artists, media professionals and men and women of culture in every part of the world, to rediscover the values of peace, justice, goodness, beauty, human fraternity and coexistence in order to confirm the importance of these values as anchors of salvation for all, and to promote them everywhere.

This Declaration, setting out from a profound consideration of our contemporary reality, valuing its successes and in solidarity with its suffering, disasters and calamities, believes firmly that among the most important causes of the crises of the modern world are a desensitized human conscience, a distancing from religious values and a prevailing individualism accompanied by materialistic philosophies that deify the human person and introduce worldly and material values in place of supreme and transcendental principles.

While recognizing the positive steps taken by our modern civilization in the fields of science, technology, medicine, industry and welfare, especially in developed countries, we wish to emphasize that, associated with such historic advancements, great and valued as they are, there exists both a moral deterioration that influences international action and a weakening of spiritual values and responsibility. All this contributes to a general feeling of frustration, isolation, and desperation leading many to fall either into a vortex of atheistic, agnostic or religious extremism or into blind and fanatic extremism, which ultimately encourage forms of dependency and individual or collective self-destruction.

History shows that religious extremism, national extremism and also intolerance have produced in the world, be it in the East or West, what might be referred to as signs of a “third world war being fought piecemeal”. In several parts of the world and in many tragic circumstances these signs have begun to be painfully apparent, as in those situations where the precise number of victims, widows, and orphans is unknown. We see, in addition, other regions preparing to become theatres of new conflicts, with outbreaks of tension and a build-up of arms and ammunition, and all this in a global context overshadowed by uncertainty, disillusionment, fear of the future, and controlled by narrow-minded economic interests.

We likewise affirm that major political crises, situations of injustice and lack of equitable distribution of natural resources – which only a rich minority benefit from, to the detriment of the majority of the peoples of the earth – have generated, and continue to generate, vast numbers of poor, infirm and deceased persons. This leads to catastrophic crises that various countries have fallen victim to despite their natural resources and the resourcefulness of young people which characterize these nations. In the face of such crises that result in the deaths of millions of children – wasted away from poverty and hunger – there is an unacceptable silence on the international level.

It is clear in this context how the family as the fundamental nucleus of society and humanity is essential in bringing children into the world, raising them, educating them, and providing them with solid moral formation and domestic security. To attack the institution of the family, to regard it with contempt or to doubt its important role, is one of the most threatening evils of our era.

We affirm also the importance of awakening religious awareness and the need to revive this awareness in the hearts of new generations through sound education and adherence to moral values and upright religious teachings. In this way, we can confront tendencies that are individualistic, selfish, conflicting, and also address radicalism and blind extremism in all its forms and expressions.

The first and most important aim of religions is to believe in God, to honor Him and to invite all men and women to believe that this universe depends on a God who governs it. He is the Creator who has formed us with His divine wisdom and has granted us the gift of life to protect it. It is a gift that no one has the right to take away, threaten or manipulate to suit oneself. Indeed, everyone must safeguard this gift of life from its beginning up to its natural end. We, therefore, condemn all those practices that are a threat to life such as genocide, acts of terrorism, forced displacement, human trafficking, abortion, and euthanasia. We likewise condemn the policies that promote these practices.

Moreover, we resolutely declare that religions must never incite war, hateful attitudes, hostility and extremism, nor must they incite violence or the shedding of blood. These tragic realities are the consequence of a deviation from religious teachings. They result from a political manipulation of religions and from interpretations made by religious groups who, in the course of history, have taken advantage of the power of religious sentiment in the hearts of men and women in order to make them act in a way that has nothing to do with the truth of religion. This is done for the purpose of achieving objectives that are political, economic, worldly and short-sighted. We thus call upon all concerned to stop using religions to incite hatred, violence, extremism and blind fanaticism, and to refrain from using the name of God to justify acts of murder, exile, terrorism, and oppression. We ask this on the basis of our common belief in God who did not create men and women to be killed or to fight one another, nor to be tortured or humiliated in their lives and circumstances. God, the Almighty, has no need to be defended by anyone and does not want His name to be used to terrorize people.

This Document, in accordance with previous International Documents that have emphasized the importance of the role of religions in the construction of world peace, upholds the following:

 The firm conviction that authentic teachings of religions invite us to remain rooted in the values of peace; to defend the values of mutual understanding, human fraternity and harmonious coexistence; to re-establish wisdom, justice and love; and to reawaken religious awareness among young people so that future generations may be protected from the realm of materialistic thinking and from dangerous policies of unbridled greed and indifference that are based on the law of force and not on the force of law;
 Freedom is a right of every person: each individual enjoys the freedom of belief, thought, expression and action. The pluralism and the diversity of religions, color, sex, race, and language are willed by God in His wisdom, through which He created human beings. This divine wisdom is the source from which the right to freedom of belief and the freedom to be different derives. Therefore, the fact that people are forced to adhere to a certain religion or culture must be rejected, as too the imposition of a cultural way of life that others do not accept;
 Justice based on mercy is the path to follow in order to achieve a dignified life to which every human being has a right;
 Dialogue, understanding and the widespread promotion of a culture of tolerance, acceptance of others and of living together peacefully would contribute significantly to reducing many economic, social, political and environmental problems that weigh so heavily on a large part of humanity;
 Dialogue among believers means coming together in the vast space of spiritual, human and shared social values and, from here, transmitting the highest moral virtues that religions aim for. It also means avoiding unproductive discussions;
 The protection of places of worship – synagogues, churches, and mosques – is a duty guaranteed by religions, human values, laws and international agreements. Every attempt to attack places of worship or threaten them by violent assaults, bombings or destruction, is a deviation from the teachings of religions as well as a clear violation of international law;
 Terrorism is deplorable and threatens the security of people, bethey in the East or the West, the North or the South, and disseminates panic, terror and pessimism, but this is not due to religion, even when terrorists instrumentalize it. It is due, rather, to an accumulation of incorrect interpretations of religious texts and to policies linked to hunger, poverty, injustice, oppression, and pride. This is why it is so necessary to stop supporting terrorist movements fuelled by financing, the provision of weapons and strategy, and by attempts to justify these movements even using the media. All these must be regarded as international crimes that threaten security and world peace. Such terrorism must be condemned in all its forms and expressions;
 The concept of citizenship is based on the equality of rights and duties, under which all enjoy justice. It is, therefore, crucial to establish in our societies the concept of full citizenship and reject the discriminatory use of the term minorities which engenders feelings of isolation and inferiority. Its misuse paves the way for hostility and discord; it undoes any successes and takes away the religious and civil rights of some citizens who are thus discriminated against;
 Good relations between East and West are indisputably necessary for both. They must not be neglected so that each can be enriched by the other’s culture through fruitful exchange and dialogue. The West can discover in the East remedies for those spiritual and religious maladies that are caused by a prevailing materialism. And the East can find in the West many elements that can help free it from weakness, division, conflict and scientific, technical and cultural decline. It is important to pay attention to religious, cultural and historical differences that are a vital component in shaping the character, culture, and civilization of the East. It is likewise important to reinforce the bond of fundamental human rights in order to help ensure a dignified life for all the men and women of East and West, avoiding the politics of double standards;
 It is an essential requirement to recognize the right of women to education and employment and to recognize their freedom to exercise their own political rights. Moreover, efforts must be made to free women from historical and social conditioning that runs contrary to the principles of their faith and dignity. It is also necessary to protect women from sexual exploitation and from being treated as merchandise or objects of pleasure or financial gain. Accordingly, an end must be brought to all those inhuman and vulgar practices that denigrate the dignity of women. Efforts must be made to modify those laws that prevent women from fully enjoying their rights;
 The protection of the fundamental rights of children to grow up in a family environment, to receive nutrition, education, and support, are duties of the family and society. Such duties must be guaranteed and protected so that they are not overlooked or denied to any child in any part of the world. All those practices that violate the dignity and rights of children must be denounced. It is equally important to be vigilant against the dangers that they are exposed to, particularly in the digital world, and to consider as a crime the trafficking of their innocence and all violations of their youth;
 The protection of the rights of the elderly, the weak, the disabled, and the oppressed is a religious and social obligation that must be guaranteed and defended through strict legislation and the implementation of the relevant international agreements.

To this end, by mutual cooperation, the Catholic Church and Al-Azhar announce and pledge to convey this Document to authorities, influential leaders, persons of religion all over the world, appropriate regional and international organizations, organizations within civil society, religious institutions and leading thinkers. They further pledge to make known the principles contained in this Declaration at all regional and international levels, while requesting that these principles be translated into policies, decisions, legislative texts, courses of study and materials to be circulated.

Al-Azhar and the Catholic Church ask that this Document become the object of research and reflection in all schools, universities, and institutes of formation, thus helping to educate new generations to bring goodness and peace to others, and to be defenders everywhere of the rights of the oppressed and of the least of our brothers and sisters.

In conclusion, our aspiration is that:

this Declaration may constitute an invitation to reconciliation and fraternity among all believers, indeed among believers and non-believers, and among all people of good will;

this Declaration may be an appeal to every upright conscience that rejects deplorable violence and blind extremism; an appeal to those who cherish the values of tolerance and fraternity that are promoted and encouraged by religions;

this Declaration may be a witness to the greatness of faith in God that unites divided hearts and elevates the human soul;

this Declaration may be a sign of the closeness between East and West, between North and South, and between all who believe that God has created us to understand one another, cooperate with one another and live as brothers and sisters who love one another.

This is what we hope and seek to achieve with the aim of finding a universal peace that all can enjoy in this life.

Abu Dhabi, 4 February 2019

His Holiness Pope Francis    Great Imam of Al-Azhar Ahmad Al-Tayyib

 

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Fasting

8th March 2019

Many of us do what is expected not out of genuine desire but because we want to be respected and admired. During the season of Lent, however, God reminds us to be true to ourselves and to Him.

In today’s first reading, Isaiah warns against making a great show of observing the rules of fasting and penance while continuing to live sinful lives. He calls us to live the commandment of love by treating others more justly, sharing our bread with the hungry and sheltering the homeless.

The theme of fasting is continued in the Gospel. Jesus’ disciples do not fast and others are quick to point this out. They fail to recognise Jesus, in whose presence there can be only rejoicing just as at a wedding feast when the bridegroom is present.

Today, we fast not so much because the bridegroom is not with us but because we have strayed from his presence. May the penance we undertake be both authentic and productive so as to gladden the heart of God.