Gulf Pine Catholic

4 Gulf Pine Catholic • September 17, 2021 Thank you, Jesus, Mary, St. Jude, St. Joseph, and St. Anthony, for prayers answered. CS For prayers being answered, St. Joseph, St. Anthony, Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel, and St. Jude. AC VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Re- demption is the work of God, not of human beings, so be careful and do not listen to “fundamentalists” who claim holiness comes through fol- lowing certain laws, Pope Francis said during his weekly general audi- ence. The belief that holiness comes by observing particular laws “leads us to a rigid religiosity, a rigidity that eliminates that freedom of the Spirit which Christ’s redemption gives us. Beware of this rigidity that they propose,” he said Sept. 1 to those gathered in the Paul VI audience hall at the Vatican. God’s saving grace is received through faith in the Gospel message of Christ’s death and resurrection, and God invites people to rejoice in the righteousness re- ceived through that faith in Christ, he said. The pope continued his series of talks on St. Paul’s Letter to the Galatians by looking at the apostle’s ex- planation of justification by faith and of graces flowing from the Spirit, not from works of the law. However, before beginning his catechesis, the pope spoke off-the-cuff to explain the context and purpose of the weekly audience talks, which are usually in-depth reflections on many aspects of church teaching. The pope said the teachings in St. Paul’s letter were not anything new or “my own thing.” “What we are studying is what St. Paul says during a very serious conflict” in Galatia. “They are not things that someone invented. No. It is something that hap- pened at the time and that can repeat itself,” he said, referring to the apostle’s attempts to correct those who were tempted to believe a person is justified through works of the law, not faith in Christ’s redemptive action. The pope said, “This is simply a catechesis on the Word of God expressed in the letter of St. Paul to the Galatians. It is not something else. Always keep this in mind.” Even though he did not specify the reason for mak- ing the out-of-the-ordinary opening remarks, it may be related to negative reactions to his Aug. 11 general audience talk. Rabbi Rasson Arousi, chair of the Com- mission of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel for Dialogue with the Holy See, sent a letter to the Vatican asking for clarification because the pope appeared to suggest Jewish law was obsolete, according to Reuters, which saw the letter. In that catechesis on St. Paul’s explanation that the law given to Moses did not nullify God’s promise to Abraham, the pope said, “The law does not give life, it does not offer the fulfillment of the promise because it is not in the position of being able to fulfill it.” Abraham, who preceded Moses by more than 400 years, shows that faith in God brings righteousness, he said, which St. Paul used to illustrate that the gentile Galatians heard with faith and experienced justification like Abraham and, therefore, they did not have to follow Mosaic law, such as with male circumcision, as some new preachers at the time were claiming. A Vatican source confirmed to Catholic News Ser- vice Sept. 1 that a response to the rabbi’s letter was in the works. The pope’s talk Sept. 1 continued along the same line of the danger of “these new preachers” who had convinced some Galatians “that they had to go back and take on the norms, the precepts that were observed and led to perfection before the coming of Christ.” St. Paul tries to convince these Christians they risked losing “the valuable treasure, the beauty, of the newness of Christ” if they let themselves “be enchanted by the voice of the sirens who want to lead them to a religiosity based solely on the scrupulous observance of precepts,” the pope said. They knew that their coming to faith “was the ini- tiative of God, not of men. The Holy Spirit had been the protagonist of their experience; to put him on the backburner now in order to give primacy to their own works, that is, fulfilling the precepts of the law, would have been foolish,” he said. Christians today must also reflect on how they live their faith, he said. “Does the love of Christ, crucified and risen, remain at the center of our daily life as the wellspring of salvation, or are we content with a few religious formalities to salve our consciences?” What happened in Galatia can still happen today in similar ways, the pope said, warning people not to listen to “these somewhat fundamentalist proposals that set us back in our spiritual life; try to go forward in the pas- chal vocation of Jesus.” Even when people are tempted to turn away from God with distractions and their sins, “God still contin- ues to bestow his gifts” and he “does not abandon us, but rather abides with us in his merciful love.” “Let us ask for the wis- dom to always be aware of this reality and to dismiss the fundamentalists who propose a life of artificial ascesis,” that is, the prac- tice of strict self-discipline “that is far removed from the resurrection of Christ.” Holiness does not come from following rigid rules, pope says Pope Francis The Holy Father Speaks Eucharist is source of joy, God’s presence, speakers tell global congress BY CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE BUDAPEST, Hungary (CNS) -- The ultimate purpose of the Eucharist is mis- sion, Mary Healy, a professor of Sacred Scripture at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, told the 52nd International Eucharistic Congress. More than 60 speakers from nearly 40 countries on five continents are in Budapest for the Sept. 5-12 congress, which will close with a Mass celebrated by Pope Francis. In the United States, some churches “have signs posted at the exits to the parking lot, so that you see them every time you leave the church on Sunday morning: ‘You are now entering mission territory,’” Healy said in her Sept. 6 address. “They have the right idea. In the Eucharist, the whole pattern of Christ’s redemp- tion is made present to us.” Healy is a member of the Pontifical Biblical Commission, a body of scholars that engages in research for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. At the Congress’ opening Mass Sept. 5 in Heroes Square, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, president of the Council of European Bishops’ Conferences, said the Eucharist “goes beyond all loneliness, all distance and all indifference.”

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