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Pope’s 2009: Another Big Year
Plans Include His First Trips to the Holy Land and Africa and Third Encyclical
BY EDWARD PENTIN ROME CORRESPONDENT
January 18-24, 2009 Issue |
Posted 1/12/09 at 8:02 AM
The Year of
Our Lord 2009 promises to be an especially interesting and eventful one for
Pope Benedict XVI, with possibly two landmark trips, a new encyclical,
leadership changes in the Roman Curia, and a likely meeting with U.S. President
Barack Obama.
The Holy Father is scheduled to make
his first visit to Africa this year, to Cameroon to take part in preparations
for a meeting of African bishops scheduled for October at the Vatican. No
specific dates have been officially announced, but the second leg of his journey,
to Angola to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the country’s evangelization,
is expected to take place March 20-23.
Benedict can expect a joyful
welcome: Catholicism has dramatically expanded over the past 100 years in
Africa, which is enjoying a booming number of vocations and offers much hope.
But the continent also presents many challenges for the Church, not least in
terms of social justice and inculturation, all of which will be analyzed in
depth during this fall’s Synod for Africa.
The eyes of the world will then turn
to the Pope’s next major trip: to the Holy Land.
As the Register went to press, the
visit was hanging in the balance due to the fighting in Gaza. Speaking to
reporters at the end of December, papal spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said
the Vatican was following the situation closely but that it seemed “premature
to say this incident is a determining or definitive factor.” Father Lombardi
added: “The Pope wants to make this trip,” and he stressed that plans are well
under way.
If it goes ahead as planned, reports
indicate it will take place May 8-15 and include stops in Amman, Tel Aviv,
Jerusalem, Nazareth and Bethlehem. The visit will probably be “the highlight of
2009,” according to papal biographer George Weigel.
The trip will be especially
sensitive: Pope Benedict will meet members of the Palestinian Authority (not
Hamas) in Bethlehem and visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem —
particularly poignant in view of the Holy Father’s German nationality. His
addresses will contain many calls for peace in the region and for solidarity
with Christians in the Holy Land, who are facing many hardships and emigrating
in large numbers.
The Vatican is downplaying any
political significance of the trip and is stressing its spiritual importance as
a pilgrimage. It is also hoping that the visit will ease recent tensions with
Israeli and Jewish leaders.
Pope Pius XII’s record in saving
Jews during World War II remains a hotly contested issue among some Jewish
leaders, despite evidence that suggests he probably saved more Jewish lives
than any other religious or political leader of that time.
Benedict’s long-awaited and
frequently delayed first social encyclical, Caritas in Veritate
(Love in Truth), is expected to be published this year, incorporating analysis
of the current financial crisis.
Cardinal Renato Martino, president
of the Pontifical Council of Justice and Peace, predicts it will appear in
early 2009, but the truth is no one but the Holy Father really knows when it
will be published.
Also possible this year is the
eagerly awaited second volume of the Pope’s book, Jesus
of Nazareth, covering the Passion and Resurrection, and Benedict’s
post-synodal exhortation on the word of God.
This year will also see significant
changes in a number of senior positions in the Vatican. At least three
cardinals are expected to step down having reached, or exceeded, the retiring
age of 75. These include Cardinals Martino, Javier Lozano Barragan (head of the
Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Health Care Workers), and Walter
Kasper (head of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity). As these
appointments are made and quite a number of other cardinals around the world
retire, the need for a consistory will become pressing and will most likely
take place in the fall.
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re,
prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, will also celebrate his 75th birthday
in January and is expected to request standing down at the end of the month.
Meanwhile, possible liturgical
changes could include changing the position of the sign of peace during the
Mass. This year might also see the new English translation of the ordinary form
of the Mass finally approved.
Progress in Catholic relations with
Muslims and the Orthodox is likely to continue. Special attention will focus on
the new Russian Orthodox patriarch, to be elected by June and expected to be
Metropolitan Kirill of Kaliningrad.
As for interesting papal visitors,
Barack Obama will be the one to watch. He is expected to call in at the Vatican
while attending a G8 meeting on the Italian island of Maddalena in early July.
However, the incoming president may
choose to wait until a new U.S. ambassador to the Holy See is in place —
something that sources say is not likely to happen for some time.
The incumbent ambassador, Mary Ann
Glendon, leaves Jan. 19 after a very busy and widely praised year in the post.
If they do meet, and Obama presses
ahead with anti-life legislation, they will have much to talk about, according
to Weigel.
“If the Obama administration tries
to remove conscience-clause protections for Catholic health-care professionals
and institutions in the United States,” he said, “we could very well see a
papal challenge to the new administration — which is likely in any event, given
what the Obama administration will attempt in the field of so-called
‘reproductive rights’ at the United Nations and in other international
fora.”
For his part, the Pope made it
known, during his annual address to the Roman Curia shortly before Christmas,
that his primary focus this year will be the drive to proclaim the Gospel,
energetically and unapologetically, throughout the world during the remainder
of the Pauline Year, always relying confidently on the power of the Holy Spirit
to guide the Church.
“The missionary spirit of the Church
is nothing but the impulse to communicate the joy that has been given to us [by
the Holy Spirit]”, the Pope said. “That such joy may always be alive in us and
thus irradiate the world in its tribulations — that is my wish at the end of
this year.”
Edward Pentin writes
from Rome.
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