Posted on 04/17/2011 6:42:30 AM PDT by rickmichaels
Pope Benedict led Roman Catholics into Holy Week celebrations, telling a Palm Sunday crowd that man will pay the price for his pride if he believes technology can give him the powers of God.
Under a splendid Roman sun, the German pope presided at a colourful celebration where tens of thousands of people waved palm and olive branches to commemorate Jesus entry into Jerusalem the week before he was crucified.
The pope, who turned 84 on Saturday, wove his sermon around the theme of mans relationship with God and how it can sometimes be threatened by technology.
From the beginning men and women have been filled and this is as true today as ever with a desire to be like God, to attain the heights of God by their own powers, he said, wearing resplendent red and gold vestments.
Mankind has managed to accomplish so many things: we can fly! We can see, hear and speak to one another from the farthest ends of the earth. And yet the force of gravity which draws us down is powerful, he said.
While the great advances of technology have improved life for man, the pope said, they have also increased possibilities for evil, and recent natural disasters were a reminder, if any were needed, that mankind is not all-powerful.
If man wanted a relationship with God he had to first abandon the pride of wanting to become God, said the pope, celebrating his sixth Easter season as the leader of the worlds some 1.2 billion Roman Catholics.
After the mass, the pope appealed for peace in Colombia, calling for wide participation in a day of prayer for the victims of violence to be held there on Friday. Enough of violence in Colombia. May she live in peace, he said.
START OF HOLY WEEK
Palm Sunday, a movable feast that is marked on the Sunday before Easter, is celebrated throughout the Christian world to commemorate Jesus entry into Jerusalem on a donkey, a symbol of peace in the ancient world.
At the ceremony a cantor recounted all the events in Jesus life between Palm Sunday and Easter. Via Della Conciliazione, the broad boulevard leading to the Vatican, was bedecked with olive trees and bronze statues depicting the stations of the cross, or the last events in Jesus life.
For the pope and Christians around the world, it marks the start of a hectic week of events leading to Easter Sunday.
On Holy Thursday, Benedict will preside at two traditional services in the Vatican, including one in which he will wash and kiss the feet of twelve men in a gesture of humility toward his apostles the night before he died.
On Good Friday he will preside at services in the Vatican and then lead a traditional torch-lit Via Crucis, or Way of the Cross, around the ruins of Romes ancient Colosseum.
Holy Week services at the Vatican culminate on Easter Sunday, the most important day in the liturgical calendar, when the pope delivers his twice-yearly Urbi et Orbi(to the city and the world) blessing and message.
Lemme have a couple of miracles to go and some water walking shoes....love you too dad.
The Pope is right on spot with that. Far to many have made technology their god.
c. 30 AD: “Those with ears, let them hear...”
2011: “Can you hear Me now?”
The same things were said in the 15th century about the then state of the art communication technology that would spread the Word to the unwashed masses. It was called the printing press and its first product was a bible.
Note that the Pope says that technology gives us tools. True, technology is amoralistic -- it is neither good nor evil, it is what man does with it that is the problem, for example, guns, another technology is neither good nor evil.
Or the processing we do with wheat and other grains and food. Homogenizing milk is a big problem too, it kills off all kinds of enzymes. Eating these foods in a limited amount isn't a problem. But, when a whole diet is made up of them or mostly made up of them, your asking for all kinds of health problems.
Btw, I don't think it's "hybrid plants", more cloned plants that don't have seeds (but I'm no farmer!)
If you take a heirloom plant and take the seeds from it at the end of the season and dry them. You can plant them in the spring and you will again get whatever plant that was, tomato, beans, rutabagas whatever. If however you do this with a hybrid, you get nothing, like a mule, it can’t reproduce. Once the plant is gone that plant is not ever coming back. Also, if you plant hybrids with heirlooms they will cross pollinate and again after a season you will get a none reproducing plant. This is not a good thing. Also, you have to replace the seeds with hybrids year after year. However if you have a heirloom plant, you can get the seeds and replant year after year for decades.
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