VIS news – Holy See Press Office: CARDINALS PREPARE FOR IMMINENT CONCLAVE

VIS news – Holy See Press Office: CARDINALS PREPARE FOR IMMINENT CONCLAVE.

The DisEase

 

How many
i wonder
will touch the hand
of the man
infected
with poverty
flannel shirt worn
frayed against the cold
 
oak pews glisten
in somber candle light
as he sits
still remembering
the music
he has only heard
in his birth cry
silenced

©2013 Susan Graf
All rights reserved

“He Once Was Dan”

I received this poem from a friend whose heart aches for a friend.  Lighten the burden with a prayer of your own.

“He Once Was Dan”

they rode a blue moon pale
down a dirt covered snow melt
street where windows stood
taunting empty
vacant souls riding
past glimpses
of a strong man yesterday
setting sail
riding yachts into the ocean
deep tides
laid waste on the beach
He stood waiting
alone
in a grey Kansas town
for the small
box of belongings
needed
for another day.
©2013 Susan Graf
All rights reserved

Whispers in the Loggia: Habemus Datam – Conclave Starts Tuesday

Whispers in the Loggia: Habemus Datam – Conclave Starts Tuesday.

FRIDAY, MARCH 08, 2013

Habemus Datam – Conclave Starts Tuesday

25 days since Benedict XVI announced his resignation, eight days into this sede vacante, we finally have an election date: the Conclave will begin on Tuesday, 12 March.

Related just before 6pm in Rome – an hour ahead of schedule – the decision by the College of Cardinals emerged toward the end of this fifth day of General Congregations, little more than 24 hours after the last of the 115 electors who’ll participate arrived at the Vatican.

While the governing meetings – which have been attempting to shape the desired “profile” of the next Pope – will continue at least into tomorrow, the appointed day for the voting will begin with the Mass Pro Eligendo Pontifice (for the Election of the Roman Pontiff) concelebrated by all the cardinals at midmorning in St Peter’s Basilica.

Pope Benedict Sees Beauty at the Service of Truth 

‘Art and the saints are the greatest apologetic for our faith.’

BY Elizabeth Lev

Of the many great gifts Pope Benedict XVI has left the Church, one remains perhaps less apparent, but has great potential: the recognition of the role of beauty in finding Truth. Detractors often underestimate how well Benedict understood contemporary society, mistaking his continuity of Church teaching on moral issues as a sign of a backward old man out of touch with the times.

But Benedict, in his incisive and lucid way, sought not to treat the symptoms of wanton and widespread licentiousness, but to address the underlying disease: the inability to recognize authentic beauty.

Now, this may strike us as strange. If there ever was a culture obsessed by “beauty,” it is ours. Millions spent on diets, clothes and beauty treatments, the proliferation of eating disorders and costly, superfluous surgery are but a few examples of our almost pathological quest for “beauty.” We might think we are surrounded by beauty. Everywhere we turn, we run upon clothes, shoes, movie stars, manicured gardens, pretty packaging and glossy magazines. But Benedict reminds us that this is but an illusion.

Describing our impoverished notion of beauty, Pope Benedict addressed artists in 2007, saying, “The beauty that is thrust upon us is illusory and deceitful, superficial and blinding, leaving the onlooker dazed.” Instead of bringing him out of himself, Benedict observes, this false beauty “imprisons him within himself and further enslaves him, depriving him of hope and joy.” And Benedict concludes that it is “a seductive but hypocritical beauty that rekindles desire, the will to power, to possess and to dominate others; it is a beauty which soon turns into its opposite, taking on the guise of indecency.”

As people grow to understand the emptiness of what they have become accustomed to calling beauty, these prophetic words will help identify the cause of this modern malaise.

Firmly focused on the here and now of the modern, then-Cardinal Ratzinger identified another cause of our numbness to beauty. In 2002, addressing a crowd in Rimini, Italy, he said, in almost shocking terms, that, today, “the message of beauty is thrown into complete doubt by the power of falsehood, seduction, violence and evil. Can the beautiful be genuine, or, in the end, is it only an illusion? Isn’t reality perhaps basically evil? The fear that in the end it is not the arrow of the beautiful that leads us to the truth, but that falsehood, all that is ugly and vulgar, may constitute the true ‘reality’ has at all times caused people anguish.”

The obsession with scandal — the “dirty little secret” as truth, the idea that wisdom is believing the worst of man, and the casting down of heroes can all be identified as symptoms of this error.

Pope Benedict, who has seen all kinds of ugliness — from his childhood during World War II to the sex-abuse files he was obliged to study — urges us not to look downwards at filth and baseness to find Truth, but to gaze upon the wounded, suffering image of the crucified Christ and to see through his bloody face to the beauty of his enduring love for us.

Benedict brought the battle for the soul of the world to the cultural front, to the very turf so hard-won by Hollywood and policed by advertising, media and the capricious gods of fashion. He dared to expose the clay feet of the giant and has been hated for it. But so certain is he that Christianity has the strength to enter this arena that he raised the status of the Pontifical Council of Culture, naming its president to the Cardinalate.

In 2008, at the Cathedral of Bressanone, he reprised a refrain he had first enunciated in the Ratzinger Report of 1985, saying that, to him, “art and the saints are the greatest apologetic for our faith.” The 1 million people packed into St. Peter’s Square for the beatification of Pope John Paul II in 2011 proved his point well, as do the record number of entrances at the Vatican Museums in the last few years.

To help us even further, Benedict issued a challenge, daring us to engage true beauty, if we have the courage for it. Beauty is not as innocuous as it may seem, but threatens to shake up our comfortable worldview and make us rethink many of our prejudices.

“The encounter with the beautiful can become the wound of the arrow that strikes the heart and in this way opens our eyes,” said Cardinal Ratzinger at Rimini.

That wound, that opening in our hardened opinions, our complacent convictions, leaves us exposed. As the Pope said to artists, that dart “draws [man] out of himself, wrenches him away from resignation and from being content with the humdrum — it even makes him suffer, piercing him like a dart; but, in so doing, it ‘reawakens’ him, opening afresh the eyes of his heart and mind, giving him wings.”

That awakening can make man thirst for truth, to reject the false, the superficial and illusory. Beauty is dangerous. If it captures the heart, it can make one change. Ovid knew it; Dante knew it. And Benedict has spent his pontificate telling us we have resources we haven’t even begun to tap.

Thanks to art and the exceptional lives of saintly men and women, the Church — the custodian of beauty and Truth for the past 2,000 years — still has a powerful voice in the world of culture. In the great cultural battlefield of our era, Pope Benedict has shown future generations how to get into the trenches and win with grace, in every sense of the word.

As he said last August, at a general audience at Castel Gandolfo, “Art is capable of making visible our need to go beyond what we see, and it reveals our thirst for infinite beauty, for God.”

There are “artistic expressions that are true paths to God, the supreme Beauty,” which “help nurture our relationship with him in prayer. These are works that are born of faith and express faith.”

The Pope recalled a concert of Johann Sebastian Bach’s music: “After the last piece of music, one of the Cantate, I felt, not by reasoning, but in my heart, that what I heard had conveyed to me truth, something of the truth of the great composer’s faith — and this pressed me to praise and thank the Lord.”

He reminded the faithful that visiting churches, art galleries and museums can be “where we can stop and contemplate, in the transition from simple, external reality to a deeper reality, the ray of beauty that strikes us, that almost wounds us in our inner selves and invites us to rise towards God.”

Elizabeth Lev is an art historian

based in Rome.

http://www.ncregister.com/site/article/pope-benedict-sees-beauty-at-the-service-of-truth

Blessed are the Clean of Heart

From the book addressed to Autolycus by Saint Theophilus of Antioch, bishop

divineoffice.org

If you say, “Show me your God,” I will say to you, “Show me what kind of person you are, and I will show you my God.” Show me then whether the eyes of your mind can see, and the ears of your heart hear.

It is like this. Those who can see with the eyes of their bodies are aware of what is happening in this life on earth. They get to know things that are different from each other. They distinguish light and darkness, black and white, ugliness and beauty, elegance and inelegance, proportion and lack of proportion, excess and defect. The same is true of the sounds we hear: high or low or pleasant. So it is with the ears of our heart and the eyes of our mind in their capacity to hear or see God.

God is seen by those who have the capacity to see him, provided that they keep the eyes of their mind open. All have eyes, but some have eyes that are shrouded in darkness, unable to see the light of the sun. Because the blind cannot see it, it does not follow that the sun does not shine. The blind must trace the cause back to themselves and their eyes. In the same way, you have eyes in your mind that are shrouded in darkness because of your sins and evil deeds.

A person’s soul should be clean, like a mirror reflecting light. If there is rust on the mirror his face cannot be seen in it. In the same way, no one who has sin within him can see God.

But if you will you can be healed. Hand yourself over to the doctor, and he will open the eyes of your mind and heart. Who is to be the doctor? It is God, who heals and gives life through his Word and wisdom. Through his Word and wisdom he created the universe, for by his Word the heavens were established, and by his Spirit all their array. His wisdom is supreme. God by wisdom founded the earth, by understanding he arranged the heavens, by his knowledge the depths broke forth and the clouds poured out the dew.

If you understand this, and live in purity and holiness and justice, you may see God. But, before all, faith and the fear of God must take the first place in your heart, and then you will understand all this. When you have laid aside mortality and been clothed in immortality, then you will see God according to your merits. God raises up your flesh to immortality along with your soul, and then, once made immortal, you will see the immortal One, if you believe in him now.