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Images of Papal Visit to Spain [Day 1: Santiago de Compostela]
Various | 11/6/10

Posted on 11/06/2010 11:16:43 AM PDT by marshmallow


Awaiting the Pope in Santiago de Compostela


Airport


En route to Santiago de Compostela


Pilgrims gathered for Mass in the Plaza Obradoiro in front of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela


Greeting pilgrims in front of the cathedral


And again............


TOPICS: Catholic; Ministry/Outreach; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 11/06/2010 11:16:46 AM PDT by marshmallow
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To: marshmallow

APOSTOLIC JOURNEY TO SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA AND BARCELONA
(NOVEMBER 6-7, 2010)

VISIT TO THE CATHEDRAL
OF SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA

ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER BENEDICT XVI

Santiago de Compostela
Saturday, 6 November 2010
 

 

Your Eminences,
Dear Brother Bishops,
Distinguished Authorities,
Dear Priests, Seminarians and Religious,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Dear Friends,

[In Galician:] I thank Archbishop Xulián Barrio Barrio of Santiago de Compostela for his kind words. I am happy to greet all of you with affection in the Lord and with gratitude for your presence in this highly significant place.

To go on pilgrimage is not simply to visit a place to admire its treasures of nature, art or history. To go on pilgrimage really means to step out of ourselves in order to encounter God where he has revealed himself, where his grace has shone with particular splendour and produced rich fruits of conversion and holiness among those who believe. Above all, Christians go on pilgrimage to the Holy Land, to the places associated with the Lord’s passion, death and resurrection. They go to Rome, the city of the martyrdom of Peter and Paul, and also to Compostela, which, associated with the memory of Saint James, has welcomed pilgrims from throughout the world who desire to strengthen their spirit with the Apostle’s witness of faith and love.

In this Holy Year of Compostela, I too, as the Successor of Peter, wished to come in pilgrimage to the “House of Saint James”, as it prepares to celebrate the eight-hundredth anniversary of its consecration. I have come to confirm your faith, to stir up your hope and to entrust to the Apostle’s intercession your aspirations, struggles and labours in the service of the Gospel. As I embraced the venerable statue of the Saint, I also prayed for all the children of the Church, which has her origin in the mystery of the communion that is God. Through faith we are introduced to the mystery of love that is the Most Holy Trinity. We are in some sense embraced by God, transformed by his love. The Church is this embrace of God, in which men and women learn also to embrace their brothers and sisters and to discover in them the divine image and likeness which constitutes the deepest truth of their existence, and which is the origin of genuine freedom.

Truth and freedom are closely and necessarily related. Honestly seeking and aspiring to truth is the condition of authentic freedom. One cannot live without the other. The Church, which desires to serve unreservedly the human person and his dignity, stands at the service of both truth and freedom. She cannot renounce either, because what is at stake is man himself, because she is moved by love for man, “the only creature on earth which God has wanted for its own sake” (Gaudium et Spes, 24), and because without this aspiration for truth, justice and freedom, man would lose his very self.

From Compostela, the spiritual heart of Galicia and at the same time a school of unbounded universality, allow me to exhort all the faithful of this beloved Archdiocese, and those of the Church in Spain, to live their lives enlightened by the truth of Christ, confessing the faith with joy, consistency and simplicity, at home, at work and in their commitment as citizens.

May the joy of knowing that you are God’s beloved children bring you to an ever deeper love for the Church and to cooperate with her in her work of leading all men and women to Christ. Pray to the Lord of the harvest that many young people will devote themselves to this mission in the priestly ministry and in the consecrated life: today, it is as worthwhile as ever to dedicate one’s whole life to the proclamation of the newness of the Gospel.

I cannot conclude without first expressing my appreciation and gratitude to the Catholics of Spain for the generosity with which they support so many institutions of charity and of human development. Continue to maintain these works which benefit society as a whole, and whose effectiveness has been shown in a special way in the present economic crisis, as well as when grave natural disasters have affected certain countries.

[In Galician:] With these sentiments, I ask Almighty God to grant all of you the boldness which Saint James showed in bearing witness to the Risen Christ. In this way, may you remain faithful in the ways of holiness and spend yourselves for the glory of God and the good of our brothers and sisters in greatest need. Thank you.

 

2 posted on 11/06/2010 11:26:40 AM PDT by markomalley (Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus)
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To: marshmallow
Pope Benedict XVI is well loved and the pictures in Spain reinforce this! Contrast the One in Mumbai hiding from the throng under bomb/bullet proof armor?
3 posted on 11/06/2010 11:40:47 AM PDT by zbogwan2
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To: zbogwan2
Well loved? Can you read Spanish? The comments that people are posting about the Pope's visit will chill you to the bone. Just read HERE and HERE.

That said, I am very pleased that he spoke against abortion, Spain is going down the slippery slope faster than you can imagine!

4 posted on 11/06/2010 11:57:55 AM PDT by Former Fetus
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To: Former Fetus

We can imagine. After all it already happened once before in the 1930s.


5 posted on 11/06/2010 12:00:31 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Part of the Vast Catholic Conspiracy (hat tip to Kells))
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To: markomalley

I am not a Catholic, but any Christian should applaud these wonderful words of Benedict XVI.


6 posted on 11/06/2010 12:35:10 PM PDT by hellbender
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To: Former Fetus

Both pieces are by the same author, but in the first one he repeatedly refers to the pope as Ratzinger. That seems intentionally disrespectful.


7 posted on 11/06/2010 7:07:53 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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