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Sunday August 28, 2005 FRONT PAGE NEWS
Pope urges more than a million youths:
Join true revolution of holiness

 

In back-to-back encounters with more than a million young people from around the world, Pope Benedict XVI urged them to discover the transforming power of the faith and join the “true revolution” of personal holiness.

At a World Youth Day vigil Aug 20 and a closing Mass the next day, the pope preached about the inspiration of the saints and the mystery of the Eucharist, encouraging the youths to change themselves if they want to change the world.

“Only from the saints, only from God does true revolution come,” he told a vast candlelit crowd spread across a field outside Cologne .

The pope was presiding for the first time over World Youth Day, and he did so in a solemn and dignified style. At the vigil, he sat quietly as he watched slow liturgical dancing and listened to Scripture readings.

Unlike similar mega-meetings with Pope John Paul II, there was no papal bantering with the crowd or light-hearted silliness. At the end of the long evening, dressed in a golden cope, Pope Benedict led the crowd in adoration of the Eucharist.

In his talk, he retold the simple story of the Wise Men who found Jesus in a manger, thus discovering an unworldly kind of power.

The pope's emphasis on the saints -- old ones like St Francis of Assisi and more recent figures of holiness like Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta -- resonated with many in his young audience.

“We agree with him,” said 16-year-old Mackenzie Gilpin,

“What he said was just so beautiful. The saints were normal people just like us,” Gilpin said. She looked a little bleary-eyed after a night on the plain of Marienfeld, or “Mary's Field,” where she was camped.

Members of the Trinidad and Tobago contingent wave flags outside the Cologne Cathedral in Germany . One hundred and seventeen persons represented Trinidad and Tobago at the just concluded World Youth Day Pilgrimage in Germany .

Members of the Trinidad and Tobago contingent wave flags outside the Cologne Cathedral in Germany . One hundred and seventeen persons represented Trinidad and Tobago at the just concluded World Youth Day Pilgrimage in Germany. Adanna James photo

Her friend, 15-year-old Meg Palermo, said the pope had impressed her with his traditional approach.

“I like that a lot. A lot of things in the world are corrupted, and it's nice to have a strong pope who will stay (true) to the Church's traditions. I think he's going to be a great pope,” she said.

The young people at Marienfeld had spent a week visiting German parishes, listening to catechetical talks, attending musical and theatrical performances and joining in prayers and processions through the streets of Cologne .

They all came together for the first time at the evening vigil, where the pope's appearance in his pope-mobile set off cheers and camera flashes.

His first act was to bless a huge bronze bell dedicated to the memory of Pope John Paul, who founded World Youth Day. As the bell tolled deeply, many in the crowd broke into chants of “Giovanni Paolo” -- John Paul's name in Italian.

The vigil was heavier on prayer and lighter on entertainment than previous such events. Spiritual dances by young women from India and Ghana alternated with brief testimonials and the singing of hymns.

As a clarinet played a haunting melody, the pope accepted a candle lit from fire that came from Bethlehem, West Bank, and thousands of smaller candles lit the darkness as far as the eye could see.

The pope said the saints represent “the shining path which God himself has traced throughout history.” They are the world's true reformers and have taught Christians that love, not ideologies, will save the world, he said.

The pope also cautioned young people to avoid constructing a “private God” or a “private Jesus”, but to trust the Church as the place where believers come together in a real communion.

“There is much that could be criticised in the Church,” but it remains the “great family of God” that unites all peoples and cultures, he said.

As the pope left the area for the evening, young people joined in singing a hymn of the ecumenical Taizé community, Stay With Me . The official programme ended at that point, but youths talked, prayed and sang in small groups through much of the night.

At a closing Mass the next morning, the pope, dressed in gold vestments, was joined by more than 900 bishops, 9,000 priests and a much smaller number of male and female altar servers.

The sleep-deprived crowd of young people came to life as the pope-mobile appeared through a light fog, escorted by a heavy security contingent. Youths in feathered headdresses played congas in welcome.

In a sermon delivered alternately in five languages, the pope explained two essential concepts of the faith: the Eucharist and mission.

At the Last Supper, he said, Christ transformed the bread and wine into his body and blood, anticipating his own death and transforming it into an action of love. It was destined to set in motion a series of changes that will ultimately transform the world, he said.

To bring it home to his young audience, he compared this series of transformations to nuclear fission, calling it an “intimate explosion of good conquering evil.”

The pope said that with so much at stake, attending Sunday Mass becomes very important for young people -- even if it may seem inconvenient.

“Let us pledge ourselves to do this -- it is worth the effort,” he said.

His words may have carried special significance in his native Germany , where only about 15 percent of Catholics are estimated to attend Mass regularly.

The pope then spoke about the duty of Christians to evangelise, spreading the joy of their own encounter with Jesus. In contemporary society, he said, this missionary impetus has led to a “new explosion of religion” but also brought a tendency to market Christianity.

“If it is pushed too far, religion becomes almost a consumer product. People choose what they like, and some are even able to make a profit from it. But religion constructed on a do-it-yourself basis cannot ultimately help us,” he said.

The pope said true Christians demonstrate their faith in their daily lives. The Eucharist, for example, should inspire people to share, to look after the elderly and not to pass by people who are suffering, he said.

Neither of the pope's talks, however, explored specific forms of contemporary injustice, poverty or oppression. The young people, many of whom listened on radios to running translations of the papal talks, said they were more interested in his words about the faith.

Many at the Mass site huddled in blankets in the cool morning air, relighting votive candles from the night before and rolling up sleeping mats and tents. A group of Nigerians said they kept warm overnight by wearing sweaters and blankets given them by their host families in Germany .

About 50 Vietnamese Catholics had trouble understanding the radio translations, but said they were thrilled to see the pope anyway.

“He is like a king in the Catholic kingdom. We all love him. ... We feel he represents someone who is so near to God,” said Cao Hong Phuk of Ho Chi Minh City .

At the end of the Mass the pope prayed the Angelus in Latin and spoke a few sentences of greeting in nine languages, including Swahili and Tagalog.

“May the light of Christ, which you have followed on your way to Cologne , shine ever more brightly and strongly in your lives,” he said in English.

The pope also announced that, as expected, the next World Youth Day will take place in Sydney , Australia , in 2008. Cardinal George Pell of Sydney told Catholic News Service he was delighted with the news and said the pope has told him he would like to come to Australia for the event “if providence permits.”

(CNS)

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FRONT PAGE PHOTO >

David Constantine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Paramin waves the flag as members of the Trinidad and Tobago contingent participate in praise and worship in Trier in Germany . The Trinidad and Tobago pilgrims spent one week in the Diocese of Trier before moving off to Cologne Germany for the Papal Mass and Vigil. Adanna James photo

David Constantine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Paramin waves the flag as members of the Trinidad and Tobago contingent participate in praise and worship in Trier in Germany . The Trinidad and Tobago pilgrims spent one week in the Diocese of Trier before moving off to Cologne Germany for the Papal Mass and Vigil. Adanna James photo

OTHER STORIES
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  Pope pledges ecumenical progress
   
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