Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus

Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus
St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori, ora pro nobis!
Showing posts with label Church of Vatican II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church of Vatican II. Show all posts

Newchurch of Mercy: Proclaiming jubilee, Francis envisions non-judging, non-condemning church!



God is Merciful, but He is also Just!
'I am just and merciful',  but sinners regard me only as merciful. – St. Bridget

Officially proclaiming the upcoming jubilee year of mercy, Pope Francis has powerfully called on the entire Catholic church to refashion itself as a place not of judgment or condemnation but of pardon and merciful love.

Officially proclaiming the upcoming jubilee year of mercy, Pope Francis has powerfully called on the entire Catholic church to refashion itself as a place not of judgment or condemnation but of pardon and merciful love.
Writing in an extensive document convoking the year, which will begin Dec. 8, the pontiff states that the church’s “very credibility is seen in how she shows merciful and compassionate love.”
“Perhaps we have long since forgotten how to show and live the way of mercy,” writes Francis in the document, released Saturday evening with the Latin title Misericordiae Vultus (“The Face of Mercy”).
“The temptation … to focus exclusively on justice made us forget that this is only the first, albeit necessary and indispensable step,” the pope continues.
“The time has come for the Church to take up the joyful call to mercy once more,” he states.
“It is time to return to the basics and to bear the weaknesses and struggles of our brothers and sisters,” writes the pontiff. “Mercy is the force that reawakens us to new life and instills in us the courage to look to the future with hope.”
Francis also notes that Dec. 8 will mark the 50th anniversary of the closing of the Second Vatican Council and says: “The Church feels a great need to keep this event alive.”
Francis’ document, released Saturday during a prayer service at St. Peter’s Basilica for the celebration of Divine Mercy Sunday, officially proclaims the extraordinary jubilee year the pontiff first announced last month.
The jubilee, which is to be called the Holy Year of Mercy, will begin on this year’s Catholic feast of the Immaculate Conception. It will close on Nov. 20, 2016, the day celebrated that year as the feast of Christ the King.
Explaining his reasons for calling the mercy jubilee with the some 9,500-word document Saturday, the pontiff firmly identifies mercy as the central function of the church and the key aspect of Jesus’ ministry and work.
Exhaustively citing from the teachings of previous popes and stories from the Old and New Testaments, Francis also says mercy is a key attribute of God’s actions towards human beings and that our own exercise of pardon will determine how we will eventually be judged.
In one section, the pope quotes from Peter’s question in Matthew’s Gospel about how many times it is necessary to forgive, where Jesus responds: “I do not say seven times, but seventy times seventy times.”
“This parable contains a profound teaching for all of us,” states Francis. “Jesus affirms that mercy is not only an action of the Father, it becomes a criterion for ascertaining who his true children are.”
“In short, we are called to show mercy because mercy has first been shown to us,” he continues. “Pardoning offences becomes the clearest expression of merciful love, and for us Christians it is an imperative from which we cannot excuse ourselves.”
Later in the document, the pope mentions that every holy year involves a process of pilgrimage for people — whether it be in coming to Rome to celebrate the year or in personal prayer.
Then, quoting from Luke’s Gospel, Francis outlines two steps everyone needs to make on their own pilgrimages.
“The Lord asks us above all not to judge and not to condemn,” states the pontiff. “If anyone wishes to avoid God’s judgment, he should not make himself the judge of his brother or sister.”
“Human beings, whenever they judge, look no farther than the surface, whereas the Father looks into the very depths of the soul,” writes Francis.
A jubilee year is a special year called by the church to receive blessing and pardon from God and remission of sins. The Catholic church has called jubilee years every 25 or 50 years since the year 1300 and has also called special jubilee years from time to time, known as extraordinary jubilee years.
The pope begins Saturday’s document by explaining the process of the holy year, saying that on Dec. 8 he will be opening the special holy door of St. Peter’s Basilica to mark the beginning of the jubilee.
Francis states that he hopes that with its opening, the door “will become a Door of Mercy through which anyone who enters will experience the love of God who consoles, pardons, and instills hope.”
To emphasize that the special year is just not for those able to come to Rome, the pontiff says he is going to ask every diocese to identify a similar “Door of Mercy” at a cathedral or other special church to be opened during the year.
“Every Particular Church, therefore, will be directly involved in living out this Holy Year as an extraordinary moment of grace and spiritual renewal,” writes the pope.
Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre  we are not of this religion

Vatican II Rotten Fruits…  Church of the past was Judgmental and Condemning… 

Francis notes that the holy year will begin on the 50th anniversary of the closing of the Second Vatican Council.

“With the Council, the Church entered a new phase of her history,” writes Francis. “The Council Fathers strongly perceived, as a true breath of the Holy Spirit, a need to talk about God to men and women of their time in a more accessible way.

“The walls which too long had made the Church a kind of fortress were torn down and the time had come to proclaim the Gospel in a new way,” he continues. “It was a new phase of the same evangelization that had existed from the beginning.”
Among other special initiatives for the holy year, Francis also announces Saturday that during the 2016 season of Lent he will be asking some priests to serve as special “Missionaries of Mercy.”
** The pontiff says he will ask those priests to go around the world to hear confessions and that he will grant them “the authority to pardon even those sins reserved to the Holy See!” (??)
With that authority, the pope states, the priests will be “living signs of the Father’s readiness to welcome those in search of his pardon.”
“I ask my brother Bishops to invite and welcome these Missionaries so that they can be, above all, persuasive preachers of mercy,” writes Francis.
The pontiff also says he is giving the holy year a motto taken from Luke’s Gospel: “Merciful like the Father.”
‘God’s justice is his mercy’ (??!!)
Francis spends about two pages in the document addressing the relationship between mercy and justice, which he says, “are not two contradictory realities, but two dimensions of a single reality that unfolds progressively until it culminates in the fullness of love.”
Mentioning the Bible’s frequent use of the image of God as a judge, Francis says that in many passages, “justice is understood as the full observance of the Law and the behavior of every good Israelite in conformity with God’s commandments.”
But he continues: “Such a vision … has not infrequently led to legalism by distorting the original meaning of justice and obscuring its profound value.”
“To overcome this legalistic perspective, we need to recall that in Sacred Scripture, justice is conceived essentially as the faithful abandonment of oneself to God’s will,” writes the pope.
Quoting Jesus’ response to the Pharisees in Matthew’s Gospel — “Go and learn the meaning of ‘I desire mercy not sacrifice.’” — Francis says, “Jesus is bent on revealing the great gift of mercy that searches out sinners and offers them pardon and salvation.”
“One can see why, on the basis of such a liberating vision of mercy as a source of new life, Jesus was rejected by the Pharisees and the other teachers of the law,” he continues. “In an attempt to remain faithful to the law, they merely placed burdens on the shoulders of others and undermined the Father’s mercy.”
Meditating then on Paul’s letter to the Philippians, Francis states that, “Paul’s understanding of justice changes radically. He now places faith first, not justice.”
“Salvation comes not through the observance of the law, but through faith in Jesus Christ, who in his death and resurrection brings salvation together with a mercy that justifies,” writes the pope.
“God’s justice now becomes the liberating force for those oppressed by slavery to sin and its consequences,” he continues. “God’s justice is his mercy.”
Continuing on that theme by exploring the words of the prophet Hosea, Francis states: “If God limited himself to only justice, he would cease to be God, and would instead be like human beings who ask merely that the law be respected.”
“But mere justice is not enough,” he writes. “Experience shows that an appeal to justice alone will result in its destruction. This is why God goes beyond justice with his mercy and forgiveness.”
Jesus: ‘Nothing but love’
Earlier in the document, Francis focuses on Jesus’ ministry during his earthly life as a sign of the centrality of mercy in the Christian faith.
Citing St. Thomas Aquinas, Francis says that “God’s mercy, rather than a sign of weakness, is the mark of his omnipotence.”
“The mercy of God is not an abstract idea, but a concrete reality through which he reveals his love as that of a father or a mother, moved to the very depths out of love for their child,” states the pope.
“It is hardly an exaggeration to say that this is a ‘visceral’ love,” he says. “It gushes forth from the depths naturally, full of tenderness and compassion, indulgence and mercy.”
Francis mentions how the Gospel of Matthew’s account of Jesus’ passion states that before his death Jesus sung a hymn that may have been Psalm 136: “For his mercy endures forever.”
“While he was instituting the Eucharist as an everlasting memorial of himself and his paschal sacrifice, he symbolically placed this supreme act of revelation in the light of his mercy,” writes Francis.
“Within the very same context of mercy, Jesus entered upon his passion and death, conscious of the great mystery of love that he would consummate on the cross,” he continues.
“Knowing that Jesus himself prayed this psalm makes it even more important for us as Christians, challenging us to take up the refrain in our daily lives by praying these words of praise: ‘for his mercy endures forever.'”
Jesus’ person, says Francis, “is nothing but love, a love given gratuitously.”
“The relationships he forms with the people who approach him manifest something entirely unique and unrepeatable,” states the pope. “The signs he works, especially in the face of sinners, the poor, the marginalized, the sick, and the suffering, are all meant to teach mercy. Everything in him speaks of mercy.”
“Nothing in him is devoid of compassion,” he says.
Jesus, Francis says, also reveals God’s nature “as that of a Father who never gives up until he has forgiven the wrong and overcome rejection with compassion and mercy.”
Mentioning the fifth beatitude — “Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy” — the pope states that is the beatitude “to which we should particularly aspire in this Holy Year.”
Speaking of how God acts with humans, the pope says, “mercy is a key word that indicates God’s action towards us.”
“The mercy of God is his loving concern for each one of us,” writes Francis. “He feels responsible; that is, he desires our wellbeing and he wants to see us happy, full of joy, and peaceful.”
“This is the path which the merciful love of Christians must also travel,” he continues. “As the Father loves, so do his children. Just as he is merciful, so we are called to be merciful to each other.”
Applying that attribute to the level of the church, Francis states: “Mercy is the very foundation of the Church’s life.”
“All of her pastoral activity should be caught up in the tenderness she makes present to believers; nothing in her preaching and in her witness to the world can be lacking in mercy,” writes the pope.
‘Opening our hearts’
The pontiff also asks that people live the Holy Year by “opening our hearts to those living on the outermost fringes of society: fringes modern society itself creates.”
“How many uncertain and painful situations there are in the world today!” exhorts Francis. “How many are the wounds borne by the flesh of those who have no voice because their cry is muffled and drowned out by the indifference of the rich!”
“Let us not fall into humiliating indifference or a monotonous routine that prevents us from discovering what is new!” he continues. “Let us ward off destructive cynicism!
“Let us open our eyes and see the misery of the world, the wounds of our brothers and sisters who are denied their dignity, and let us recognize that we are compelled to heed their cry for help!” he exhorts, again.
Francis also says that is his “burning desire” that during the jubilee year people reflect on the corporal and spiritual works of mercy, Christian actions and practices attributed to Jesus’ directive in Matthew’s Gospel for how his followers should act.
“We cannot escape the Lord’s words to us, and they will serve as the criteria upon which we will be judged: whether we have fed the hungry and given drink to the thirsty, welcomed the stranger and clothed the naked, or spent time with the sick and those in prison,” states Francis.
Inter-religious dimension
Francis also refers the practice of the mercy jubilee to Judaism and Islam, saying: “There is an aspect of mercy that goes beyond the confines of the Church.” (??)
The pope notes both that “the pages of the Old Testament are steeped in mercy” and that Muslims often refer to the creator as “Merciful and Kind.”
“I trust that this Jubilee year celebrating the mercy of God will foster an encounter with these religions and with other noble religious traditions,” states Francis.
“May it open us to even more fervent dialogue so that we might know and understand one another better; may it eliminate every form of closed-mindedness and disrespect, and drive out every form of violence and discrimination,” he asks.
Francis’ document proclaiming the holy year, officially known as a bull of induction, was released by the Vatican in six languages.
During the prayer service Saturday, Francis symbolically gave the bull to the four cardinal archpriests of the Papal Basilicas. He also gave a copy to Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, for distribution to bishops around the world.
The document is signed by Francis with the title “Bishop of Rome, Servant of the Servants of God,” and has an invocation “to all who read this letter grace, mercy, and peace.”

 BULL OF INDICTION






Pope Francis meets with Joel Osteen at the Vatican!!!!


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On the same day his wife took 300 school kids to the Bronx Zoo, Joel Osteen, the pastor of Houston’s Lakewood Church, was meeting Thursday with Pope Francis at the Vatican.
Osteen said Friday it was a great honor to represent the pastors of America in the meeting with the pontiff, whom he described as warm, personable and full of joy.
“I like the fact that this pope is trying to make the church larger, not smaller,” Osteen said. “He’s not pushing people out but making the church more inclusive. That resonated with me.”
The unofficial meeting also included Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah; former U.S. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne; Tim Timmons, a pastor and author based in Newport Beach, Calif.; and Gayle D. Beebe, president of Westmont College in Santa Barbara, Calif., according to the Deseret News of Salt Lake City.
“We had very little time with him,” Osteen said. “We were going to have more time, but a cardinal died that morning.”
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Father Manelli’s Pastoral Report to the Franciscans of the Immaculate

From: Rorate-caeli.blogspot.ca

Father Manelli’s Pastoral Report to the Franciscans of the Immaculate

The following is a translation of the fourth part of Fr. Stefano Manelli’s Pastoral Report to the Franciscans of the Immaculate titled “The Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum for the growth of the Religious Life," issued after the promulgation of Summorum Pontificum. The first parts are available in Italian on Chiesa e postConcilio.  Fr. Manelli, in his Introduction, using St. Ambrose’s image of the Church as the moon that reflects the light of Christ the sun, speaks as follows: 

Mindful of the words and thoughts of the holy Archbishop of Milan let us now turn our attention to the real situation of the Church in which we live.  Let us say first of all that it is certainly not difficult to admit that today the splendor of the Bride of Christ is passing through an eclipse of perhaps singular proportions in her two thousand year history.  This crisis, that embraces the entire inner life of the Bride of Christ, according to the Holy Father Benedict XVI, ‘depends in great part of the collapse of the liturgy’ that happened not in the Council but in the post-Conciliar time.

Father Manelli goes on to offer concrete numbers that show the precipitous decline in the major religious orders.  The main part of the Pastoral Report, using patristic, medieval and post-Tridentine sources, lays out clearly the relationship of the Religious Life and the Liturgy, the Religious Life and the Mass, and the Religious Life and the Divine Office.  Part 4 deals with the consequences of the liturgical reform after the Second Vatican Council.

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The Motu Proprio “Summorum Pontificum” for the growth of the Religious Life 

 Fr. Stefano M. Manelli, F.I.
(Founder and Minister General of the Franciscans of the Immaculate)

4.  What happened in the decade of the 1960s?

Until the decade of the 1960s, the liturgical patrimony that characterized every single Religious Order remained nearly unchanged, save for the appropriate marginal modifications regarding, for example, the liturgical calendar, which has always been enriched or trimmed under the watchful supervision of the official Church.  In those years the Church still enjoyed an extraordinary fecundity of religious vocations, an accompanying growth in the Missions, and a solidity and maturity of the Christian life of the people of God.

What happened, instead, from the ‘60s and afterwards?  In effect, it happened that after the celebration of the Second Vatican Council, which was an assemblage the likes of which the Church had never had in her past, there was an expectation of liturgical reform. In the actual carrying out of the reform, rather than go about the reform with the purpose of a hoped for increase and growth in the Christian life, the process of reform took a very different  turn, which, when one looks at the facts, has negatively affected the Church, and, even more, has negatively affected above all the framework itself of the Religious Life (especially in the West).

More devastating—let us note this again—has been the negative influence of the Novus Ordo on the Religious Life, as already referenced above (with respect to the devastating losses in nearly all the Orders and Religious Institutes).  And here we cannot fail to mention as well the sadness caused by the closing of so many monasteries and religious houses,  as well as the closing of the greater part of the seminaries for priests and brothers, with the consequence of an aging clergy, the drop in the Missions without a turnover of missionaries, and the continual increase in the number of towns that even in Italy remain without a pastor,  again because of lack of vocations.

And if we want to ask ourselves why the negative influence of the Novus Ordo has been such a problem for the Church and has been even more a problem above all for the Religious Life, the answer is very simple:  because the whole Church lives from the Liturgy, as even Vatican II taught, and as Pope John Paul II said in his letter to the bishops, Dominicae Coenae of February 1980, when he spoke of the “close and organic bond between the renewal of the Liturgy and the renewal of the whole life of the Church.  The Church does not only act in the liturgy, she also expresses herself in the liturgy.  She lives by the liturgy and receives from the liturgy the strength for her life.” (75)  And Pope Benedict XVI affirms that in the liturgy “the Christian finds the Church as such, putting into action her essence, as She who believes and the mediatrix of Grace.  All the rest is secondary.” (76).

The Religious Life, then, has been subjected even more to the negative influence of the Novus Ordo, because it is above all a life that is “liturgical”, as explained above, and as a consequence, the Religious Life has not been able and is not able to be shaped by the Liturgy in its most vital foundations.  It is with the liturgy that the Religious Life has a relationship of simbiosis and synergy, whether in times of fecundity or times of barrenness. One could also say that the Liturgy and the Religious Life stand or fall together.  This is the perennial supernatural dynamic of the Religious Life grafted on to the Liturgy and the Liturgy grafted on to the Religious Life.

As a consequence, a Liturgy well grounded, stable, and solid is proven and assured as such above all by the vitality and fecundity of the monastic and religious life; and, in turn, a monastic and religious life that is solid and fruitful in growth, is proof and guarantees in the most secure way the authenticity of the Liturgy of the Mystical Body of Christ.  But a monastic and religious life that is in the devastating condition of in reverse gear, so to speak, of not walking forward, as is the case today, can only be a testimony to a Liturgy that lacks that foundational consistency and “vital force”, according to the precise expression of Pope John Paul II.

74.  If one looks at the reality of the situation regarding the people, it is by now obvious to all that the attendance of the people of God at Holy Mass on days of obligation, in the past 40 years, in our Italy, has literally fallen from a precipice: from an average of 60% in attendance at Mass that was the average in the ‘50s to 9-10% today (this is without speaking of the median Mass attendance in Europe of 5%!).  And what does one say about the collapse in the number of those going to the Sacrament of Confession, of the delaying of or refusal to baptize children, of the striking increase in marriages that are only civil, of the frightful increase in contraception and abortion (without even speaking of homosexuality or pedophilia)?  But it is easy when discussing this phenomenon to feel the obligation to oppose this line of thinking with the counter argument that it is not the fault of the Liturgy if society has taken this disastrous path.  To offer that argument, however, shows a rejection and a putting down of what is the great salvific mission of the Liturgy in the world.  We must not forget that the threefold basis of the true Christian life is built on the three “Lex”: Lex orandi, Lex credendi, Lex vivendi. The link between these three laws is ab intus, from within.  One cannot stand without the others.

As a consequence:  a soild Lex orandi (namely, daily prayer that is constant and faithful; liturgical, Eucharistic, Marian; vocal, mental, affective, contemplative), is the matrix for a solid Lex credendi.  A solid Lex credendi (namely, to believe all the truths of faith that the Church sets forth to be believed; to receive the Sacraments, to follow the Magisterium of the Church, in obedience to the Pope), is the matrix for a solid Lex vivendi.  A solid Lex vivendi(namely, living a life of Grace, avoiding sin, combatting vices, practicing the Christian virtues in familial obligations and those owed to society) is the matrix of a Christian life that is holy and sanctifying!

But if the Lex orandi is not genuine and solid, what does one find? One finds the fruits according to the gospel teaching of Jesus: “A good tree cannot bear bad fruit”. (Mt. 7,18).  One sees the poisonous fruits of a faith that is confused and fragile, of a faith perhaps syncretistic or distorted to the point of denying the truths of the Catholic faith concerning the Most Holy Trinity, the Incarnation, most holy Mary, the doctrine of Hell (closed or nonexistent), the Eucharist, Confession, etc…One sees the poisonous fruits of a Christian life that is disordered and misled by the passions and the world, that gives assent to moral deviations (divorce, abortion, euthanasia, contraception, concubinage, homosexual acts, indecent ways of dressing, pornography, etc…..)

One finds, more and more in the social sphere, the profanation of Sunday (against the Third Commandment) in mass culture, the shocking fall in Mass attendance and practice of the Sacraments (Confessions, Communion, but also Baptism for infants), while at the same time there is a proliferation of drugs, discos and gay bars, with crowds of people at stadiums, at “festivals” of all sorts, in theaters, slaves to the TV, suffering from the disease of hedonism with all of its terrible costs.  Poor society, poor humanity!

75.  John Paul II, Dominicae Coenae, 1980
76.  Benedict XVI, Davanti al Protagonista. Alle radici della liturgia, Ed. Cantagalli,
         Siena

Translation and Introduction by Father Richard G. Cipolla