Mike Curtiss (7 Feb 2013)
"Pope, 'Ignore
Prophets of Doom'"
Dear Doves,
At a time when the Pope's busy buying up the
site of the Last Supper's Upper Room in Jerusalem. The Catholic
Church cult is currently negotiating with Islamists to merge
Christianity with islam into a 'new' heresy called Chrislam, we
need to watch everything that takes place both in Rome and
Jerusalem.
I don't know why my news articles are not
being posted on Five Doves. I don't see other posters putting up
duplicates of my posts, so I'll pretend those posts are too
political. I sure wish we had better posting rules John.
Agape,
Mike Curtiss
Ignore 'prophets of doom' predicting end of religious life
Nuns hold candles as Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Mass to mark
the feast of the Presentation of the Lord and World Day for
Consecrated Life in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican Feb. 2.
(CNS/Paul Haring)
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Benedict XVI asked nuns, brothers and
priests not to listen to the "prophets of doom" who say that
consecrated life has no future or that it has no meaning in
today's world.
"Do not join the prophets of doom who proclaim the end or the
lack of meaning of consecrated life in today's church; rather
clothe yourselves with Jesus Christ and put on the armor of
light ... remaining awake and vigilant," Pope Benedict told
consecrated virgins and men and women who belong to religious
orders.
Pope Benedict XVI celebrated Mass with the religious Feb. 2,
marking the feast of the Presentation of the Lord and the World
Day for Consecrated Life.
In a darkened St. Peter's Basilica, 50 superiors of men's and
women's orders carried lighted candles and processed into the
church before Pope Benedict, who rode in on a mobile platform
carrying his own candle.
The special Mass also marked the Year of Faith. In previous
years, Pope Benedict observed the feast day either by leading
evening prayer with the religious or joining them after a Mass
celebrated by the prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of
Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life.
With thousands of consecrated men and women filling St. Peter's
Basilica, the pope said he wanted to ask three things of the
world's religious during the Year of Faith.
First, he said, they should meditate on that "'first love' with
which the Lord Jesus Christ warmed your hearts, not to be
nostalgic, but to fan that flame."
"To do this, you must spend time with him, in the silence of
adoration, and then you will reawaken the desire and the joy of
sharing his life, his choices, his obedience of faith" and "the
radical nature of his love," the pope said.
The pope also asked the religious to recognize "the wisdom of
weakness," modeling themselves after Christ who emptied himself
completely out of love for God and God's creation. "In the joys
and afflictions of the present time, when the difficulty and
weight of the cross make themselves felt," he said, recognize
that "precisely in our limits and human weakness we are called
to live in conformity with Christ."
In modern cultures that value efficiency and success, he said,
the humility and poverty of religious life are "Gospel signs of
contradiction" and ensure that religious can empathize with and
become a voice for the voiceless.
Pope Benedict's third call to religious was to "renew the faith
that makes you pilgrims moving toward the future."
Rather than listening to those who think that giving everything
to Christ is meaningless or who see the declining numbers of
religious as a sign that consecrated life will disappear
completely, he said, religious must live their lives seeking the
face of God.
"Let this be the constant yearning of your hearts, the
fundamental criterion that guides your journey, both in your
little daily steps as well as in important decisions," he said.