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Cardinal George Prays That Americans Will 'Choose Leaders Who Respect ... Freedom' (1536)

Bishops of Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin are in Rome for their ad limina visit.

02/10/2012 Comments (4)
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ROME (EWTN NEWS/CNA)—A bishop’s love for Jesus Christ and the Church can overcome all his fears, Cardinal Francis George of Chicago said at St. Peter’s tomb on Feb. 9.

Cardinal George is visiting the Vatican along with the bishops of Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin for their ad limina visit.

“In the responsorial Psalm we asked the Lord to protect us, to take away our fears, which means that the Psalmist and the apostles were afraid at times, as are we. There is reason to be afraid. But, nonetheless, stronger than fear is faith, and stronger than both is love,” he said.

Cardinal George was the main celebrant and homilist at the early morning Mass in the crypt of St. Peter’s Basilica. He told his brother bishops to take heart from the Psalm, which proclaims, “I sought the Lord, and he heard me; and he delivered me from all my fears.”

He also reflected upon the martyrdom of St. James the Greater and the imprisonment of St. Peter.

“We bring our local Churches to this most sacred spot; we bring our knowledge of a faith that is born of love and that is perfected by our love for our people and for Christ himself and his apostles,” said Cardinal George.

“And so we take from the tomb of Peter the mission that was given to him, and his successors, even as we prepare this morning to meet his successor, Pope Benedict XVI.”

The bishops will meet with the Pope and various Vatican departments to discuss the health of the Church in their respective dioceses and across the United States. The ad limina visit takes place every five years and also involves the bishops making a pilgrimage to the tombs of Sts. Peter and Paul.

The issue of religious freedom is likely to be near the top of the agenda throughout.

In their prayers of intercession, the bishops prayed for “all Americans during the election year,” that God may “inspire voters to choose leaders who respect the freedom of their people to worship the one true God.”

Cardinal George also recalled a comment by Cardinal-designate Timothy Dolan of New York who, at the last gathering of U.S. bishops, highlighted how “the conversion of St. Paul taught the early Christians that Jesus and his Church are one.”

“We cannot separate Jesus from the Church,” said Cardinal George. “When that is done and the Church is lost, inevitably Jesus is lost. And when Jesus is lost, God is forgotten.”

After a post-Mass breakfast at the Pontifical North American College, the bishops of Indiana and Illinois had an audience with Pope Benedict XVI. Meanwhile, the bishops of Wisconsin met with officials at the Pontifical Council for Promoting New Evangelization.

 

Filed under ad limina, religious freedom

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I have no problem with any particular bishop, but at some point don’t we have to ask our Shepards,why they don’t castigate the evils of liberalism?
The time is now or never.

I will be relieved when Cardinal George retires. Our parish, which is in the diocese of Chicago, is a model for liturgical abuse. Cardinal George has done absolutely nothing to help. I have written many times to no avail. I pray that Cardinal George is allowed to retire.

Is this the same man that honored the radical prist in the Chicago?
Chicago the church that helped foster ‘ACORN’ and financed it through
‘Campaign for Human Development’. The church has been infiltrated
by radical seculr priest with a mission to dstroy her from inside.It
is time to take our church back from these criminals and put Jesus
back on the throne.Moral Justice not social justice must prevail.

There goes Cardinal George talking out of both sides of his mouth. We are supposed to vote for freedom. nNot allowing gays or lesbians the freedom of marriage and trying to force Catholics and non-Catholics to believe the same as he in regard to Pro Choice, is not freedom. As long as you accept and believe what the Catholic Church preaches, the heirarachy calls freedom.

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