The Vatican press-organisation Zenit published this:
Charismatic Renewal Is Gift of Spirit to
Church, Pope Says
Celebrates 30th Anniversary of Its
Advent in Italy
VATICAN CITY, MARCH 14, 2002 (Zenit.org).- John Paul II celebrated the 30th
anniversary of the advent of the Charismatic Renewal in Italy, when he received
a delegation of members of this ecclesial movement.
"Yes! The Renewal in the
Spirit can be considered as a special gift of the Holy Spirit to the Church in
our time," the Holy Father said enthusiastically, when he welcomed the
"Charismatics," as they are commonly known.
In Italy, the Renewal in the Holy
Spirit has 200,000 members in 1,800 communities or prayer groups. Vatican Radio
(http://www.radiovaticano.org/)
says the movement embraces at least 80 million Catholics worldwide.
The Pope was grateful for the spirit in
which the Renewal is growing in Italy, characterized by "collaboration
with the hierarchy and with those responsible for other movements, associations
and communities."
"Born in the Church and for the
Church, in your movement one experiences in the light of the Gospel the living
encounter with Jesus, the faithfulness of God in personal and community prayer,
confident listening to the Word, the vital discovery of the sacraments, as well
as courage in trials and hope in tribulations," the Pope said.
"Love of the Church and adherence
to its magisterium, in a way of ecclesial maturation supported by a permanent
solid formation, are the eloquent signs of your commitment to avoid the risk of
remaining, unwittingly, in a merely emotional experience of the divine,"
the Bishop of Rome added.
This risk can be appreciated "in
an exaggerated quest for the 'extraordinary,' and a private withdrawal that
avoids apostolic commitment," the Holy Father continued.
At the end of the meeting, John Paul II
blessed three projects launched by the Charismatic Renewal in Italy.
The first is support for the
establishment of the Church in Moldova, in cooperation with the Regina Pacis
Foundation of the Italian Archdiocese of Lecce. Among other things, this
institution has freed hundreds of young Moldovan women in Italy from
enslavement to prostitution.
The second project is the spiritual
leadership of members of the Charismatic Renewal in Marian shrines. The Pope
called them "favorite places of the Spirit who gives you the opportunity
to offer pilgrims ways to deepen their faith and spiritual reflection."
Lastly, the Pope encouraged the
"Burning Bush" project (see http://www.zenit.org/english/archive/0105/ZE010507.htm,
ZENIT, May 7, 2001), an invitation to a perpetual novena. This initiative
invites Christians to "return to the Cenacle" to obtain full unity
and the conversion of sinners.
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