Thursday, January 1, 2009

On True Poverty & The Family

I wanted to share this timely and moving message from Pope Benedict XVI on poverty, both material and spiritual. I thought it was well stated and is a powerful reminder for us all, especially in this time of economic struggle.

Solution to Poverty Is Poverty, Pope Proposes
Makes Distinction Between Evangelical Spirit and Misery


VATICAN CITY, JAN. 1, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is inviting the world to combat poverty that offends human dignity with sobriety and solidarity, fruit of the evangelical poverty chosen by Jesus.

The Pope made this distinction between poverty that offends God and the poverty chosen by God during his homily today at a Mass in St. Peter's Basilica for the feast of Mary, Mother of God, and World Peace Day.

His homily was dedicated to his message for the world day, which focused on combating poverty as a means to achieving peace.

The Holy Father noted the distinction between evangelical poverty and the poverty "that God doesn't want," making an invitation to fight the latter with the former.

The Pontiff explained that in becoming man, Jesus wanted to be poor: "The birth of Jesus in Bethlehem reveals to us that God chose poverty for himself in his coming to be among us. Love for us has moved Jesus not only to become man, but to become poor."

Nevertheless, he continued, there is "a poverty, an indigence, that God does not want and that must be fought."

This, the Bishop of Rome said, is "a poverty that impedes people and families from living according to their dignity, a poverty that offends justice and equality, and as such, threatens peaceful coexistence."

He affirmed that such poverty is not just material, but also includes the forms of poverty found in rich and developed nations: phenomena such as marginalization and relational, moral and spiritual misery.

Globalizing solidarity

Benedict XVI said this poverty is reflected in things such as pandemic infirmity, the poverty of children and the food crisis. And the solution, he said, requires nations to "maintain a high level of solidarity."

The Pope specifically denounced the arms race, which he defined as "unacceptable" and "against human rights."

He went on to suggest that the current economic crisis implies a test: "Are we prepared to read it, in its complexity, as a challenge for the future, and not just an emergency to give short-term answers? Are we ready to do together a deep review of the dominant model of development, to correct it in a systematic and long-term way?"

"This is demanded, in reality, beyond the immediate financial difficulties, by the ecological state of health of the planet and, above all, the moral and cultural crisis, whose symptoms have been evident for some time now all over the world," the Holy Father continued.

School of life


He thus made a call for a "virtuous circle" between the poverty "to be chosen" and the poverty "to be fought," such that "to combat iniquitous poverty, which oppresses so many man and women and threatens everyone's peace, it is necessary to rediscover sobriety and solidarity, as evangelical values that are at the same time universal."

"Misery cannot be efficaciously fought, if there is no attempt to 'make equality,' reducing the unevenness between those who waste the superfluous, and those who don't even have the necessary," the Pontiff said.

He affirmed: "The poverty of the birth of Christ in Bethlehem, besides an object of adoration for Christians, is also a school of life for man. It teaches us that to combat misery, both material and spiritual, the path to take is that of solidarity, which has moved Jesus to share our human condition."

Christ brings a "peaceful revolution," Benedict XVI affirmed, "not ideological, but spiritual, not utopian, but real, and because of this, requiring infinite patience, perhaps a very long time, avoiding every break and taking the most difficult path: the path of consciences maturing in responsibility."

So, true 'poverty' is one where we as humans are bereft of moral dignity and truth; the other poverty - one which cleanses us and keeps our lives simple, our hearts pure, and our minds sharp - is to live with few material amenities: the poverty into which God chose to become Incarnate - with Mary and Joseph - a simple life of material poverty, but one which was abundant in love, truth, and service.



Here's Pope Benedict on the Holy Family and family life:

Pontiff: Family Reveals Nature of God
Says It Manifests Gratuitous Love


VATICAN CITY, JAN. 1, 2009 (Zenit.org).- On the feast of the Holy Family, Benedict XVI said that families reveal what God himself is: love.

The Pope affirmed this during the address he gave before praying the midday Angelus last Sunday in St. Peter's Square.

"Jesus," the Holy Father noted, "wanted to be born and grow up in a human family; he wanted the Virgin Mary to be his mom and Joseph to fulfill the role of father. They raised and educated him with immense love."

He said that Jesus' family "truly merits the title of 'holy,' since it is entirely focused on the desire of fulfilling the will of God, incarnated in the adorable presence of Jesus."

Alike and different

The Pontiff went on to suggest that the Holy Family is both alike and different than other families.

"In one sense it is a family like all others, and as such, it is a model of conjugal love, collaboration, sacrifice, confidence in divine providence, a spirit of work and solidarity," he said. "At the same time, though, the family of Nazareth is unique, different from all others, because of its singular vocation, linked to the mission of the Son of God.

"Precisely because of its unique character, it presents to every family, and in the first place to Christian families, the horizon of God, the sweet and demanding priority of his will, the perspective of heaven, to which we are destined."

Benedict XVI continued: "The family is certainly a grace from God, which reveals what he, himself, is: love. A love that is entirely gratuitous, that sustains fidelity without limits, even in the moments of difficulty or dejection. [...]

"Dear families, do not allow the love, openness to life, and the incomparable bonds that unite your homes to be spoiled. Ask this constantly of the Lord, pray together, so that your resolutions are enlightened by faith and extolled by divine grace in the path toward sanctity."

He assured that "the Pope is at your side, praying especially to the Lord for those in each family who have greatest need of health, work, consolation and company."

And the Holy Father urged the faithful to pray for the upcoming World Meeting of Families, scheduled for Jan. 14-18 in Mexico City.

"Let us pray starting now for this important ecclesial event," he said, "and entrust to the Lord every family, especially those most tried by the difficulties of life and the wounds of misunderstanding and division."

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