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IMAGE: CNS photo/Massimiliano Migliorato, Catholic Press PhotoBy Carol GlatzVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The story of how an Albanian priestendured decades of imprisonment, torture and forced labor during his country'scommunist crackdown against the church brought Pope Francis to tears.During the pope's 2014 visit to Tirana,Cardinal-designate Ernest Simoni moved many listeners when he described thebrutality a militant atheist regime wielded against people of every faith, andpaid tribute to God's infinite goodness, grace and love for allowing him tosurvive.Dedicating his life to drawing people away from hatredand revenge, the octogenarian priest will be one of 17 prelates elevated tocardinal in a consistory Nov. 19 at the Vatican. Of the group, 13 are eligibleto elect Pope Francis' successor in a conclave. Cardinal-designate Simoni isone of four who are older than 80 and, therefore, ineligible to vote.Cardinal-designate Simoni, whose 88th birthday is Oct.18, told Vatican Radio he heard the...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Massimiliano Migliorato, Catholic Press Photo

By Carol Glatz

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The story of how an Albanian priest endured decades of imprisonment, torture and forced labor during his country's communist crackdown against the church brought Pope Francis to tears.

During the pope's 2014 visit to Tirana, Cardinal-designate Ernest Simoni moved many listeners when he described the brutality a militant atheist regime wielded against people of every faith, and paid tribute to God's infinite goodness, grace and love for allowing him to survive.

Dedicating his life to drawing people away from hatred and revenge, the octogenarian priest will be one of 17 prelates elevated to cardinal in a consistory Nov. 19 at the Vatican. Of the group, 13 are eligible to elect Pope Francis' successor in a conclave. Cardinal-designate Simoni is one of four who are older than 80 and, therefore, ineligible to vote.

Cardinal-designate Simoni, whose 88th birthday is Oct. 18, told Vatican Radio he heard the news of his elevation while watching television as the pope prayed the Angelus Oct. 9.

When he heard the pope say his name at the end of the Angelus, he said, "it was a huge surprise for me. I never would have thought" such a thing would happen.

"I have to thank the Lord for the life he gave me and for the graces, the many graces I have had," he told the radio Oct. 10. It is through Jesus, he said, that he, "a poor missionary, a little missionary of Jesus," prays every day that God's love would penetrate the hearts of all people.

Born to a Catholic family in Troshani, Albania, Oct. 18, 1928, the cardinal-designate went to a Franciscan-run minor seminary and novitiate until it was shut down after the Stalinist dictator Enver Hoxha came to power in 1944 and sought to cleanse the country of all religion.

The military drafted the young man in an effort to "make me disappear. I spent two years there, years that were worse than any prison," he has said.

Despite the risks, he studied theology underground and was ordained a priest in 1956, on the feast of Divine Mercy. But the worst was yet to come as the regime, which was set to become the first officially atheist nation in the world, intensified its war against religion in the 1960s.

On Christmas Eve 1963, the priest was arrested while celebrating Mass and was sentenced to death by firing squad. He was beaten, placed for three months in solitary confinement under inhumane conditions, then tortured because he refused to denounce the church.

He was eventually freed, but later arrested again and sent to a prison camp, where he was forced to work in a mine for 18 years and then 10 more years in sewage canals.

All the time he was imprisoned, he has said, he celebrated Mass from memory in Latin, heard confessions and distributed Communion to other prisoners -- all clandestinely. Albania had fewer than 200 priests and almost all of them had been jailed; scores of priests were killed. Countless laypeople and religious faced arrest, torture, firing squads, concentration camps and forced labor while thousands of places of worship were confiscated and demolished or turned into movie theaters, gyms and meeting halls.

When the regime collapsed in 1991, Cardinal-designate Simoni returned to ministry by serving isolated mountain villages, urging Christians caught up in a cycle of revenge to let go of their hatred and embrace God's love.

Pope Francis said learning how severe the religious persecution was what prompted him to make Albania the first country in Europe he visited.

During a vespers service in Tirana's cathedral, the pope listened to Stigmatine Sister Marije Kaleta and Father Simoni talk about holding onto their faith and sharing it with others despite the cost.

The pope was so moved by the priest's testimony that he removed his glasses and the men briefly rested their foreheads against each other; the pope then put his arm around the priest's neck and held him.

Pope Francis called Albania a land of heroes and martyrs and said Father Simoni and Sister Kaleta "performed a service for us: consoling us" by showing that God always provides the strength and hope to confront and overcome the tiniest inconveniences and the worst atrocities.

The cardinal-designate has said he bore those decades of trial because Christ said that those who wished to follow him would have to carry his cross.

He has said he never felt any animosity toward anyone -- not even those who harmed him -- because "Jesus' love is infinite" and he commanded his followers to love and pray for their enemies.

"Whoever loves Jesus, enjoys all of his riches" and receives his "burning flame" of love that overflows and spreads to everyone no matter what.

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court on Tuesday seemed likely to rule that racial bias in the jury room provides a limited basis for breaching the centuries-old legal principle of secrecy in jury deliberations....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court on Tuesday seemed likely to rule that racial bias in the jury room provides a limited basis for breaching the centuries-old legal principle of secrecy in jury deliberations....

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LES CAYES, Haiti (AP) -- People throughout Haiti's devastated southwest peninsula formed makeshift brigades Tuesday to clear debris and try to regain some semblance of their pre-hurricane lives as anger grew over the delay in aid for remote communities more than a week after the Category 4 storm hit....

LES CAYES, Haiti (AP) -- People throughout Haiti's devastated southwest peninsula formed makeshift brigades Tuesday to clear debris and try to regain some semblance of their pre-hurricane lives as anger grew over the delay in aid for remote communities more than a week after the Category 4 storm hit....

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LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) -- A North Carolina state trooper shot and killed an armed man during a search and rescue operation, authorities said Tuesday, and thousands of people were told to get to higher ground as the flooding from Hurricane Matthew moved downstream....

LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) -- A North Carolina state trooper shot and killed an armed man during a search and rescue operation, authorities said Tuesday, and thousands of people were told to get to higher ground as the flooding from Hurricane Matthew moved downstream....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court raised serious doubts Tuesday about a $399 million judgment against smartphone maker Samsung for illegally copying parts of the patented design of Apple's iPhone....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court raised serious doubts Tuesday about a $399 million judgment against smartphone maker Samsung for illegally copying parts of the patented design of Apple's iPhone....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Hacked emails show that Hillary Clinton's campaign was slow to grasp the seriousness of the controversy over her use of a homebrew email server and believed it might blow over after one weekend....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Hacked emails show that Hillary Clinton's campaign was slow to grasp the seriousness of the controversy over her use of a homebrew email server and believed it might blow over after one weekend....

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DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Hillary Clinton is bringing in Al Gore as her closer on climate change as she struggles to appeal to young voters who consider the issue a priority....

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Hillary Clinton is bringing in Al Gore as her closer on climate change as she struggles to appeal to young voters who consider the issue a priority....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The "shackles" of civility gone, Donald Trump stepped up his fierce attacks on his own party leaders Tuesday, promising to teach Republicans who oppose him a lesson and fight for the presidency "the way I want to."...

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The "shackles" of civility gone, Donald Trump stepped up his fierce attacks on his own party leaders Tuesday, promising to teach Republicans who oppose him a lesson and fight for the presidency "the way I want to."...

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(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis said Jesus asks us to perform good deeds with humility and reject a "cosmetics" (maquillage) religion that is merely concerned with its outward appearance and pretending to be what it’s not. The Pope was speaking at his morning Mass on Tuesday celebrated in the Santa Marta residence. Listen to this report by Susy Hodges that includes clips of the Pope's voice:   The inspiration for the Pope’s homily was taken from the day’s readings of St Paul’s letter to the Galatians and the Gospel account of where Jesus rebukes a Pharisee for being totally concentrated on the outward appearance of cleanliness rather than on the inner substance of his faith. Pope Francis noted that Jesus’s answer to that same Pharisee who criticized him for not observing the prescribed washing before the meal was unequivocal.“'Oh you Pharisees! Although you cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, ins...

(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis said Jesus asks us to perform good deeds with humility and reject a "cosmetics" (maquillage) religion that is merely concerned with its outward appearance and pretending to be what it’s not. The Pope was speaking at his morning Mass on Tuesday celebrated in the Santa Marta residence. 

Listen to this report by Susy Hodges that includes clips of the Pope's voice:  

The inspiration for the Pope’s homily was taken from the day’s readings of St Paul’s letter to the Galatians and the Gospel account of where Jesus rebukes a Pharisee for being totally concentrated on the outward appearance of cleanliness rather than on the inner substance of his faith. 

Pope Francis noted that Jesus’s answer to that same Pharisee who criticized him for not observing the prescribed washing before the meal was unequivocal.

“'Oh you Pharisees! Although you cleanse the outside of the cup and the dish, inside you are filled with plunder and evil.'” And Jesus repeats this many times in the Gospel to these people: Your interior is wicked, is not good and is not free. 'You are slaves because you have not accepted the justice that comes from God, the justice that Jesus has given us.'"

Mentioning another passage from the Gospel, the Pope noted that Jesus urges us to pray without being seen, without being show-offs or like those cheeky and shameless people who pray and give alms so they can be admired. Our Lord, he stressed, instead shows us the path of humility.

Pope Francis went on to explain that, as Jesus said, what is important is the freedom given to us by redemption. 

No to a “cosmetics” religion, avoid outward show

“That inner freedom, that freedom to do good deeds in secret without blowing our trumpets because the path of true religion is Jesus’ path: humility and humiliation. And as Paul says to the Philippians, Jesus humiliates himself, empties himself. This is the only way to remove egoism, cupidity, arrogance, vanity and worldliness from ourselves. On the contrary, these people that Jesus rebukes are people who follow a “cosmetic” religion: (about) show, appearance and pretending to be something but inside… Jesus uses a very strong image to describe these people: “You are like whitewashed tombs that look handsome on the outside but inside are full of the bones of the dead and every kind of corruption.”

Ask the Lord to reject a religion of outward show

Continuing his reflections, Pope Francis pointed out that Jesus asks us to perform good deeds with humility. He said you can do all the good deeds you want but if you don’t do them with humility, as Jesus taught us, these good deeds count for nothing because they are born from you and your self-assurance rather than from the redemption that Jesus gave us.This same redemption comes via “the path of humility and humiliations because humility never comes without humiliation. And we see Jesus humiliated on the Cross.”

“Let us ask the Lord for us never to get tired of journeying along this path, to never get tired of rejecting this religion of show, of appearance, of pretending. And let us journey silently doing good, freely just as we freely received our inner freedom. And may HE guard this inner freedom for all of us. Let us ask for this grace.”

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The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India on Monday offered its hearty felicitations to all Hindu brethren, in India and abroad, on the occasion of  the festival of Dusshera.A press release issued by the Catholic Bishops’ Conference reads as follows: The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India offers its hearty felicitations to all Hindu brethren, in India and abroad, as they celebrate tomorrow the festival of Dusshera. May the celebrations of this sacred feast which symbolizes the triumph of good over evil rekindle  in us- believers of all faiths and people of good will, the spirit of promoting, both individually and collectively, all that is good, beautiful and true, for peace and well-being of everyone in the society.May the Almighty bless us and our Country with his abundant blessings.Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas SFXSecretary General, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India 

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India on Monday offered its hearty felicitations to all Hindu brethren, in India and abroad, on the occasion of  the festival of Dusshera.

A press release issued by the Catholic Bishops’ Conference reads as follows:

 

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India offers its hearty felicitations to all Hindu brethren, in India and abroad, as they celebrate tomorrow the festival of Dusshera. May the celebrations of this sacred feast which symbolizes the triumph of good over evil rekindle  in us- believers of all faiths and people of good will, the spirit of promoting, both individually and collectively, all that is good, beautiful and true, for peace and well-being of everyone in the society.

May the Almighty bless us and our Country with his abundant blessings.

Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas SFX

Secretary General, 

Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India

 

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