In this issue:.12 DAYS OF BLESSINGS 2003
Report by Peter Thompson
The warm sun of Italy welcomed the hundreds of
delegates as they arrived from over seventy countries to attend the 12 days of
great blessing sponsored by ICCRS. The 12 days were split into three parts. A
two day consultation for leaders in the CCR, a five day retreat followed by a
five day pilgrimage to holy sites in Italy.
Earlier this year the whole gathering was held
in the balance as to whether it would take place or not. The registrations were
a tiny trickle with the travel restrictions world wide affected by war, sars,
and a general travel malaise. With great courage and trust in the powerful
intercession of Mary, Allan Panozza the president of ICCRS said yes, we will go
ahead trusting that the Lord Jesus will gather his people. Jesus did just that,
calling delegates in their hundreds who were registering up to the last minute
and causing a tremendous pressure on the staff in Rome as they sought to arrange
accommodation, transportation and assist with the many visa difficulties. Sadly
a large number were unable to come as they missed the extended deadline or could
not get visas to travel.
The first two parts were held at the beautiful Mariopolis centre at
Castelgandolfo right behind the Pope's summer residence. We were only metres
away from his Holiness Pope John Paul II and the closeness physically prompted a
deep awareness of our call to intercede for him especially under his current
trials of sickness.
Two hundred delegates were expected for this
consultation and approximately 700 came prompting a change of plan in the
logistics as it was now impossible to break into small sharing groups. However
there were a number of opportunities for individual delegates to address the
whole gathering reporting on the action of The Holy Spirit in their particular
regions and to ask questions of the ICCRS council and Charles Whitehead (former
president of ICCRS and advisor) who gave an inspired talk on the nature of the
Catholic charismatic renewal. He reminded us again that the CCR is a sovereign
work of God, a move of The Holy Spirit. Not man made, no founder as other lay
movements within the Church. Calling to mind the centrality of the baptism in
The Holy Spirit and the call to holiness and ecclesial maturity. Charles
reminded us that we are Catholic first, charismatic second. "We stand in
humility in the beating heart of the Church". The CCR is God's work not ours. He
is in control and working at His pace and plan not ours. We must go forth as He
commanded and never to compromise the grace of the renewal.
Allan Panozza in his address to the consultation reminded us that the mandate of
ICCRS is to serve the worldwide CCR. He reminded us of the ongoing need for
conversion to sanctification and to holiness. To build up the body through the
use of the charismata, the gifts of The Holy Spirit. There can be no slackening
in our zeal for evangelization, this is the call for all of us without exception.
That we in the CCR are to be part of the pastoral life of the Church. Look to
Mary the first charismatic, she is the ark of the new covenant. In a beautiful
analogy he reminded us that we are all ( cracked pots) but God uses us even in
our brokenness and frailty.
We were then joined by 500 more delegates for the rest of our gathering at the
Mariopolis centre, a spiritual retreat. The call to holiness directed by Fr.
Raniero Cantalamessa, a Franciscan priest and preacher to the Papal household.
What a joy to sit at his feet and listen attentively to the wisdom and depth of
teaching expressed in words that we could all understand.
One of the great unifying gifts was instantaneous translation through technology
and the dedicated translators who instantaneously translated the talks into
English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and other languages. This enabled
us all to receive the God given wisdom through the instrument of Fr.
Cantalamessa.
The clarion call of the first day of the retreat was, "Christ is Risen". It is
He Jesus who calls us to holiness to perfect charity. Fr. compared holiness to a
sculptor. The artist chisels away at the stone removing all that is superfluous
until the figure is revealed. God is the divine sculptor stripping away all that
is unholy to reveal the person, truly human, created by God.
He reminded us that the Gospel is a self portrait of Jesus. Christianity is not
a doctrine it is a person, Jesus Christ the second person of The Holy Trinity.
Gandhi was mistaken in that he thought the beatitudes was all that was necessary
without the person of Jesus. Christianity is a religion of grace, what God has
done for me, not what I can do for myself. All is Christ, his grace, his gift of
himself totally for each one of us. Yes we can strive for virtue for
purification, but works are not the cause of our holiness. Good works are the
effect of holiness, grace precedes holiness, it is grace that enables us to
become holy. Holiness is a privilege, don't be afraid to aspire to holiness, all
are called to be saints, indeed unless we become saints then we have failed. A
drop of holiness is more than an ocean of genius.
These are some of the gleanings as I listened to this man of God teaching and
exhorting us to grow in holiness. The retreat continued calling us to be
reconciled, to acknowledge our sins, our need for forgiveness. How we are
assaulted on all sides especially through advertising that contain all the
elements of the seven deadly sins. The world speaks to us of sin in an appealing
and caressing manner especially through the media.
To spot the sin in my life use the Gospels as a mirror especially the Beatitudes.
One little gem of wisdom was in the use of the eye. The question was once posed
to Fr.. "Why not see the beauty in women and look upon God's creation with the
eyes." Fr. Canalamessa's response was that God also gave us eyelids to cover the
eye!
Over seventy priests were available to minister the sacrament of reconciliation
and many chose to avail themselves of the grace that comes to us through this
healing sacrament. Another image Fr. shared with us was of a stalagmite. My sin
is like limestone drops dissolved in water. They fall steadily and as I repent
some is evaporated away, but my repentance is not perfect and there is a
hardness of heart that builds up becoming like the limestone stalagmite. I
cannot obliterate it; only Christ and the solvent is the sacred blood of Christ
shed for me on the cross at Calvary. These two sacraments, Eucharist and
Confession dissolve away all the hardness of sin in my life. Let us use them
wisely and often, asking God to help us approach them with a holy and right
disposition.
The call to prayer and the need to ponder the hidden life of Jesus. His life of
prayer when he hides himself away to commune with The Father. We need to be like
Jesus to seek the Father our Abba. We have a living vein of prayer in our hearts
and we need to remove the fleshly obstructions to prayer. Allow those moments of
prayer to constantly come to the surface in our lives and offer up ejaculations
of praise to our God. Our minds wander but we can say to our body, obey. This
body is here Lord in prayer even though my mind is difficult to control. Finally
Fr. led us to the source and summit of our faith, The Eucharist, Christ Jesus
himself. The Eucharist is the door to the Trinity let us become spiritually
inebriated, a sober intoxication of the Spirit.
We do violence to Christ with our lack of love and reverence for his sacred body.
He cannot defend himself, but gives himself to us totally, into our very hands.
The celebration of the Eucharist each day of the 12 days of blessings was a
constant source of blessings beyond measure with powerful homilies by Cardinal
Stafford, Bishop Rylko, Bishop Grech, Fr. Slavik and Fr. Pereira. We were
nourished by the bread of Life and the word of life.
The final blessings came in the form of a pilgrimage. Six hundred pilgrims set
off in a fleet of buses, not without some difficulties in gathering the sheep
together but finally heading south to the shrine of San Giovanni Rotondo. Our
first shrine was the Incoronata shrine at Foggia where Our Lady made her first
apparition in Europe at the beginning of the second millennium. We then returned
to San Giovanni to pray at the tomb of St.Pio of Pietrelcina and to celebrate
the Eucharist at the beautiful Church where St Pio served. This humble
Franciscan Saint manifested so many charisms of The Holy Spirit reminding us
that the charismatic renewal is not new in the Church, for the charisms have
never left the Catholic Church, but always been present.
Another early start took us to the Cave of St. Michael the Archangel at Monte
Sant'Angelo.It was here that St. Michael appeared in the First millennium when
the Church was under grave threat from many heresies. We as pilgrims felt once
again that we are to invoke his protection for Holy Mother the Church as she is
attacked from within and without in our time. The prayer to St. Michael is very
appropriate for our time as was seen by Pope Leo XIII when he gave us this
prayer at the turn of the 19th century.
The pilgrims continued north to Lanciano, the shrine of the miracle of the
Eucharist. We look beyond the outward sign of bread and wine and in faith say
amen I believe that This is your Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity Lord. Hundreds
of years ago when a priest doubted the true presence, Jesus chose to manifest
His Real presence in that the bread became visible flesh and the wine visible
blood. To this day the flesh and blood remain, and we were able to kneel in
silent adoration. The celebration of the Eucharist here drew us into heights of
praise as we entered into the mystery of His love for us.
To Rome and an enforced much needed rest due to a total blackout with a power
failure throughout the whole of Italy. We were however able to pack into the
local Franciscan parish Church in Fiuggi and celebrate the Eucharist the same
miracle of Christ's love regardless of its location. Our final day was spent in
Rome with Mass at St. Peters Basilica, a tour of The Vatican museum and The
Sistine chapel with Michaelangelo's Frescoes of The Creation and Final Judgment
beautifully restored. The guides took us back to the Basilica for a closer look
at St Peter's and a special blessing to some was being able to kneel and
venerate the incorrupt body of Blessed Pope John XXIII.
Truly the 12 days of blessings for all who participated in full or only in part
were a profound gift of God to us. Some delegates came under great difficulties
and were not able to attend all that they had hoped for, but The Lord is
faithful to his people and as we left to return to our homes in many nations the
blessings will spread far and wide and bear much fruit.
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