Brian R Corbin's Reflections on Religion and Life

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The Splendor of Charity: Cardinal Cordes

“Deus Caritas Est” Entrusted to Pastors
Cardinal Cordes Addresses Bishops of England, Wales

LEEDS, England, MAY 4, 2008 ( Zenit.org ).- Here is an excerpt of the April 7 address given by Cardinal Paul Cordes, president of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum, to the spring meeting of the bishops’ council of England and Wales.

The talk titled “‘Deus Caritas Est’: The Splendor of Charity” can be found in its entirety on the ZENIT Web page: www.zenit.org/article-22486?l=english .

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The primary role of the pastors

There is no doubt that “Deus Caritas Est” directs itself to various groups in the Church. Nevertheless, the main burden of responsibility for its implementation in dioceses and parishes is placed squarely on the shoulders of the bishops. It is not only the pastoral realism of the Pope, but also theological reasons that make the ordained pastors the principal target group for the encyclical.

Ever since her foundation, a threefold mission has been entrusted to the Church: She must proclaim redemption through Christ; she must bear witness to this in her good deeds toward humanity; and she must celebrate the salvation offered through Christ in the liturgy.

“Martyria,” “Diakonia” and “Leitourgia” are therefore the three basic functions of the Church that express her deepest nature. In “Deus Caritas Est,” the Pope declares strongly: “The Church cannot neglect the service of charity any more than she can neglect the sacraments and the word” (No. 22).

Indeed, the three are inextricably linked. Good deeds as the expression of the evangelical love proclaimed in the word and celebrated in the sacraments, most especially the Eucharist, occupy a central place in the evangelizing mission of the Church. This connection may well warrant further reflection, given the declining numbers of indigenous Catholics in our pews. As numerous saints have shown us, most recently Mother Teresa, in the witness of love a seed of belief can be sown in the fallen away, non-Christians and even the most skeptical.

In terms of the mission of “diakonia,” Benedict speaks emphatically in the encyclical of the Bishop’s overriding responsibility. He reminds these of the rite of the sacrament of episcopal ordination, in which the bishop receives, through the imposition of hands, the full authority of the Spirit for the government of the Church. Prior to the act of consecration itself, the candidate must respond to a series of questions posed by the presiding bishop, which, as the Pope writes, “express the essential elements of his office and recall the duties of his future ministry.”

So the candidate is asked to pledge his special responsibility for individual services. He is called to promise “expressly to be, in the Lord’s name, welcoming and merciful to the poor and to all those in need of consolation and assistance.” Of course, this obligation incumbent on the bishop does not prevent him from seeking assistance from others in his charitable mission, but he cannot set aside his ultimate responsibility for this essential service, placing it simply on others’ shoulders.

Neither can those who practice the service of charity, either individually or institutionally, disregard the bishop’s burden of leadership and this ultimate responsibility that belongs to him.

Some Catholic aid agencies actively avoid acknowledging this fact and sometimes bishops themselves fail to exercise their legitimate and necessary oversight, leading to approaches that are predominantly political or economic to the neglect of revealing through love of neighbor the love of the God of Jesus Christ.

The importance that Pope Benedict attaches to this responsibility of the bishops may be further gauged by the gentle criticism he makes in “Deus Caritas Est” of the Code of Canon Law. The encyclical remarks that in the canons on the ministry of the bishop, the Code “does not expressly mention charity as a specific sector of episcopal activity” (No. 32), implying that it lacks precision on this point.

Indeed, we should remain surprised — as does the Pope — that Canon Law devotes many paragraphs to the bishop’s role in “martyria” and “leitourgia,” but nothing regarding “diakonia.” Clearly, “Deus Caritas Est” envisages a need for clarification in this important area.

The question of God

In speaking about the encyclical, it is not seldom that the administrative concern leads many [leaders] of charitable agencies to focus principally or even perhaps exclusively on the second part. Such a focus would be to grossly ignore the fundamental vision of the author.

It is not by accident that Pope Benedict, through this fantastic text about God as the source, lays down the foundation for the incontestable criteria of all charitable love. What is more: clearly, in the cultural context, he would like to establish the strongly felt love of neighbor as a way to bring contemporary man closer again to the love of God.

In his preaching, hardly an occasion goes by that he does not attempt to reach his listeners through proclaiming this love for God, the Father of Jesus Christ. Just a few weeks ago on Palm Sunday, I was in St. Peter’s Square when the Pope made exactly this point in his homily. He spoke of how Jesus entered Jerusalem and cleansed the temple atrium, where the pagans gathered, of the animal vendors and moneychangers who had occupied the place of prayer with their own business.

From this episode, Pope Benedict draws a parallel with the atria of faith today where non-Christians look for an answer to the deepest longings of their hearts. “Is our faith pure and open enough,” he asks, “so that on this basis even the ‘pagans,’ the people who today are seeking and questioning, can glimpse the light of the one God, join in our prayer in the atria of faith, and through their questioning, perhaps, become worshipers themselves? Are we aware of how greed and idolatry affect even our own hearts and way of life?”

And then the Pope turns yet again to Jesus’ saving deeds, good works that infallibly point to God even when everything else seems hopeless. “Immediately after Jesus’ words about the house of prayer for all peoples, the evangelist [Matthew] continues in this way: ‘The blind and the lame approached him in the temple area, and he cured them.’

“To the selling of animals and the business of the moneychangers, Jesus opposes his own healing goodness. This is the true purification of the temple … Jesus comes with the gift of healing. He dedicates himself to those who because of their infirmity are driven to the extremes of their life and to the margin of society. Jesus shows God as he who loves, and his power as the power of love.”

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The Splendor of Charity
Cardinal Cordes on “Deus Caritas Est”

LEEDS, England, MAY 4, 2008 ( Zenit.org ).- The text of the April 7 address given by Cardinal Paul Cordes, president of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum, to the spring meeting of the bishops’ council of England and Wales, can be found on the ZENIT Web page: www.zenit.org/article-22486?l=english .

The talk is titled “‘Deus Caritas Est’: The Splendor of Charity.”

Filed under: Caritas, Cor Unum, Social Doctrine

Female Poverty Reduction

Caritas Joins With Leaders to Fight Female Poverty
WASHINGTON, D.C., APRIL 23, 2008 (Zenit.org).- The secretary-general of the aid group Caritas Internationalis joined with other world leaders in making a pledge to end poverty among women.

Lesley-Anne Knight joined with leaders including former U.S. President Bill Clinton and former Irish President Mary Robinson in pledging to work against poverty that plagues women in particular. The pledges were made at a meeting of the Women, Faith, and Development Alliance in Washington on April 13.

According to the United Nations, women account for 70% of the world’s poor, while they are owners of just 1% of the world’s titled land; two-thirds of the world’s illiterate people are women.
The Women, Faith and Development Alliance received more than $1 billion in financial commitments. The alliance aims to boost the economic status of women and implement changes to make improvements possible.

Knight said: “Women and girls are at the center of efforts to end poverty. They are the majority of the world’s poor. Caritas is fully behind efforts seeking to increase resources for the advancement of women.

“The Women, Faith and Development Alliance is bringing attention and funding to addressing this problem. Hopefully we can work together to make progress toward achieving the [U.N.] Millennium Development Goals by lifting millions of women out of poverty.”

Filed under: Caritas

Article on Catholic Non Governmental Agencies

Feature Article, 12 April 2008

Window on the world

Patrick Nicholson

Pope Benedict’s visit to New York is expected to highlight the Vatican’s

commitment to the UN. But what of the hundreds of Catholic NGOs based in New York

which lobby on issues such as education, justice and poverty? Are they a

Catholic bloc or myriad voices for the voiceless?

On a visit to the United Nations headquarters in New York in 2006, Archbishop

John Baptist Odama, of Gulu in Uganda, poignantly addressed members of the

Security Council, telling them: “I come here to bring the cry of the children,

the cry of their mothers, and the cry of their families to the ears of the

people who matter.”

Uganda was then in the twentieth year of a long, brutal and largely

unreported civil war. Its worst feature was the abduction of 20,000 children by the

rebels to be used as forced labourers, sex slaves and soldiers. The archbishop

was asking for outside help to end the conflict and he got it. With increased

support from the international community, a peace process was launched.

Caritas Internationalis, the umbrella organisation for 162 national Catholic

relief and development charities, had helped to arrange the archbishop’s trip

to the United Nations. It is one example of a wide variety of work carried out

by Catholic organisations there.

“Every day we work in a relentless crisis of challenging opportunities and

urgent competing priorities,” says Joe Donnelly, head of the Caritas delegation

at the UN in New York, as he shuttles between meetings on Iraq, Colombia and

the Millennium Development Goals.

His office looks across to the UN, with its landmark Secretariat tower and

domed General Assembly building. It is here that the Security Council and

General Assembly meet to address urgent crises of peace, human security and

development affecting the lives of millions of people around the world.

“The General Assembly and the Security Council don’t have any windows,” Mr

Donnelly points out, “so we provide them with a window on the world. We’re a

grass-roots global organisation and so can give the diplomats and UN staff a

sense of the reality on the ground. We act as a bridge between governance and

policy to members of our network in local communities everywhere.”

Amid the jargon and the bureaucracy, reportedly not as bad in the wake of

reforms launched by the current Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, deals are struck

and international law is shaped. Hoping to affect the outcome of these

negotiations are various advocacy groups, from industry lobbyists to non-governmental

organisations (NGOs) campaigning on anything from the arms trade to the

economic crisis in Zimbabwe.

Hundreds of Catholic organisations, lay and Religious, from all over the

world are accredited to the United Nations systems in New York, Geneva, Paris,

Vienna and Nairobi. Some, like the Catholic Association for Peace, were actively

engaged with other Christian groups in San Francisco when the UN Charter was

drafted in 1945.

“Catholic organisations are very vibrant at the moment,” says Sr Dorothy

Farley, a Dominican who has headed the International Catholic Organisation

Information Centre for the past 13 years.

Her office provides Catholic agencies at the UN with accreditation details,

advises them about whom to talk to on what issues, and sets up briefings with

national Catholic staff and experts on health, education, environment, de

velopment and poverty matters, often in dialogue with diplomats and UN executives.

During her time at the centre she has seen its members double to 42. “There is

great variety,” she says. “There are Franciscans, the Catholic Medical Mission

Board, the Society of Vincent de Paul, the International Federation of

Catholic Universities. The list goes on.”

NGOs are accredited to the department of public information or to the

Economic and Social Council, or to both. “Catholic NGOs at the UN have been active

advocates on the alleviation of poverty, access to primary education,

empowerment of women and climate change,” says Isolda Oca, information officer at the

Department of Public Information. “They are effective. They come to conferences,

briefings, workshops, and high-level meetings at the General Assembly.”

Though NGOs are not allowed to address the General Assembly, those with

accreditation to the Economic and Social Council and consultative status, like

Caritas, can be called upon to speak as experts.

Sr Eileen Gannon represents the Dominican Leadership Conference at the UN.

She says her job is to bring the voice, experience and concerns of the Dominican

family to this global forum on issues around the Millennium Development

Goals, the UN’s anti-poverty targets.

“Justice, poverty, fair trade and sustainability are global issues,” she

says. “They are local issues as well, and our work at the UN complements the good

work done by our sisters and brothers where they live. Global policies are

lived locally and we make the connection.”

The nuts and bolts of being a representative mean submitting briefings to UN

committees, attending NGO working groups, meeting General Assembly and

Security Council members and, most significantly, giving them off-the-record

briefings. Achieving change can at times seem a slow, laborious process, but this has

borne fruit in the past. Caritas representatives at Special Sessions on HIV

and Aids at the UN General Assembly have helped to lobby governments to increase

funding and commit to providing universal access to prevention, treatment and

care. Their words have been incorporated in final declarations.

The key to success is not being part of a Catholic ghetto, but working in

partnership with other colleagues across the NGO spectrum. Catholic NGOs stress

that they are not part of a bloc, but are there to represent the issues that

are vital to their organisations on the ground. However, they do bring an

important moral dimension to their work.

In an interview with The Tablet, Archbishop Celestino Migliore, Permanent

Observer of the Holy See to the UN, told me that the Catholic NGOs’ relationship

with the Holy See is not merely functional: “Rather, they tend to incarnate

different charisms and calls within the Church. In this sense, their mutual

relation is based more on the sense of the ecclesial communion than on

functionality.”

He added that a healthy challenge to Catholic agencies comes from within. “If

they want to be effective, they have to team together, to show cohesion or,

rather, communion and unity on the background of their legitimate pluralism.

Because this is our strength: our word is effective only if we are united,” he

said.

At the end of November, Pope Benedict XVI addressed a Vatican meeting with 85

Catholic international NGOs and expressed support for their work as well as

for the importance of the UN system, though he did warn against “moral

relativism”.

“A growing tendency within the international organisations is to dislike and

discard in principle all semblance of a religious connotation,” said

Archbishop Migliore on the challenges faced by Catholic NGOs at the UN. “The

intolerance does not reside only in certain fundamentalist religious people, but also in

those who – not being believers – do not permit society to be a believer.”

Governments and international institutions have in the past not recognised

the vital role that faith-based organisations have to play in delivering

humanitarian assistance and promoting human development, says Caritas. For instance,

in many African countries the Catholic Church is the primary, if not the sole,

healthcare and education provider. International donors have not taken

advantage of this valuable resource as a way to deliver aid, with only a fraction of

funding going though faith-based organisations.

“We advocate first and foremost not on the basis of our beliefs,” says Dr

Ezio Castelli of the Association of Volunteers in International Service USA

(AVSI-USA), a development agency with a basis in Catholic social teaching. “We are

not advocating for a space to build a ‘Catholic’ school or hospital, but for

governments to recognise the common good of these institutions.”

The UN is beginning to see the potential of faith-based organisations,

especially their role in organising advocacy initiatives internationally, nationally

and locally. UN staff regard campaigns such as the Jubilee Debt Campaign or

Make Poverty History, with their backbone of faith-based organisations, as

setting the standard as they try to deliver on their own Millennium Development

Goals. They also look for expertise on programming from faith-based groups.

Pope Benedict’s visit to the UN in New York to address the General Assembly

will bring into focus many of these issues. Catholic NGOs are hoping for

different things from the Pope: to support their issues around poverty and

development, to maintain the Vatican’s commitment to the UN system as he has done in

the past and, in the words of Dr Castelli, “To be reminded what a Christian is

and means.”

Filed under: Caritas, Church-State, Social Justice

CHARITY WORK AS AN EXPRESSION OF EVANGELICAL LOVE VATICAN CITY,
29 FEB 2008 (VIS)
– The Holy Father today received participants in the plenary assembly of the Pontifical Council “Cor Unum”, who are meeting to reflect on the theme: “Human and spiritual qualities of people who work in Catholic charity institutions”.

“Charitable activity occupies a central position in the Church’s evangelising mission”, said the Pope. We must not forget that works of charity are an important area in which to meet people who do not yet know Christ, or who know Him only partially. It is right, then, that pastors and those responsible for pastoral charity work … should concern themselves with the human, professional and theological-spiritual formation” of people who operate in this field.

“Those who work in the many forms of charitable activity of the Church cannot, then, content themselves just with offering technical services or resolving practical problems and difficulties. The assistance they provide must never be reduced to mere philanthropy but must be a tangible expression of evangelical love”.

Charity workers, the Pope explained, must be, “above all, witnesses of evangelical love”. They achieve this “if the ultimate aim of their mission is not that of being social service operatives, but of announcing the Gospel of charity. Following Christ’s footsteps, they are called to be witnesses of the value of life in all its expressions, especially defending the life of the weak and the sick, following the example of Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta who loved and looked after the dying, because life is not measured in terms of efficiency, but has value always and for everyone”.

Ecclesial charity workers, Benedict XVI continued, are also “called to be witnesses of love, of the fact that we fully become men and women when we live for others, that no-one must die and live for themselves alone”.

And, he concluded, charity workers “must be witnesses of God, Who is fullness of love and invites us to love”.

AC/CHURCH CHARITABLE ACTIVITY/… VIS 080229 (340)

Filed under: Caritas, Cor Unum

COR UNUM CELEBRATES ITS 28TH PLENARY ASSEMBLY

COR UNUM CELEBRATES ITS 28TH PLENARY ASSEMBLY

VATICAN CITY, 28 FEB 2008 (VIS) – The Pontifical Council “Cor Unum” today begins its 28th plenary assembly. The meeting, which will end on 1 March, is dedicated to the theme: “Human and spiritual qualities of people who work in Catholic charity institutions”.

One of the aims of the assembly is to re-examine Benedict XVI’s Encyclical “Deus caritas est” and to verify if and how it has changed the attitude of those who work in the charitable arm of the Church. Attention will also be given to the question of the integral and continuous formation of managers and workers in the various Catholic charity organisations.

The 28th general assembly will begin with an address by Cardinal Paul Josef Cordes, president of “Cor Unum”, followed by a report from Msgr. Karel Kasteel, secretary of that pontifical council. Following this, representatives of the various charitable bodies will discuss their work experiences.

Friday 29 February will be dedicated to examining the principal theme of the meeting, the main contribution coming from the president of the Catholic charities of Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.A. (NOTE: I believe that they mean Fr. Larry Snyder from CCUSA — bc)

Subsequently, Professor Paul Schallenberg of the university of Fulda, Germany, will address the gathering on the subject: “The place of mercy in the welfare State. Theological-ethical observations”. At the end of the second day, participants will visit the “Comunita dell’Agnello”, a group of female religious who operate on the streets and in homes announcing the Gospel and working with the poor.

On Saturday 1 March, working groups will meet to discuss ideas and proposals for formation.
Cardinal Cordes, in the belief that the power of Christian witness among people who suffer derives from the personal conviction of those who work in the sector of charity, has invited leaders of national and diocesan Catholic charity organisations of the American continent to a week of spiritual exercises, to be held in June in Guadalajara, Mexico.

CON-CU/PLENARY ASSEMBLY/CORDES VIS 080228 (320)

Filed under: Caritas, Cor Unum