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By Carol GlatzVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis will visit Sweden inOctober to participate in an ecumenical service and the beginning of a year ofactivities to mark the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation.Leaders from the Catholic Church and the Lutheran WorldFederation had already been set to meet Oct. 31, 2016, for the ecumenicalcelebration in Lund, Sweden, where the LWF was founded in 1947.Pope Francis "intends to participate" in thejoint ceremony to commemorate next year's anniversary, the Vatican press officesaid in a written communique. The announcement came Jan. 25, the feast of theconversion of St. Paul -- "an important day with regard toecumenism," said Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman. It isthe last day of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.Pope Francis will lead the ecumenical commemoration inLund alongside Bishop Munib Younan, president of the Lutheran World Federation,and the Rev. Martin Junge, federation general secretary, said a joi...

By Carol Glatz

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis will visit Sweden in October to participate in an ecumenical service and the beginning of a year of activities to mark the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation.

Leaders from the Catholic Church and the Lutheran World Federation had already been set to meet Oct. 31, 2016, for the ecumenical celebration in Lund, Sweden, where the LWF was founded in 1947.

Pope Francis "intends to participate" in the joint ceremony to commemorate next year's anniversary, the Vatican press office said in a written communique. The announcement came Jan. 25, the feast of the conversion of St. Paul -- "an important day with regard to ecumenism," said Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman. It is the last day of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.

Pope Francis will lead the ecumenical commemoration in Lund alongside Bishop Munib Younan, president of the Lutheran World Federation, and the Rev. Martin Junge, federation general secretary, said a joint press release by the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and the LWF.

"The event will include a common worship based on the recently published Catholic-Lutheran 'Common Prayer' liturgical guide," and will highlight ecumenical developments between Catholics and Lutherans over the past 50 years, the press release said.

Cardinal Kurt Koch, council president, said in the press release, "By concentrating together on the centrality of the question of God and on a Christocentric approach, Lutherans and Catholics will have the possibility of an ecumenical commemoration of the Reformation, not simply in a pragmatic way, but in the deep sense of faith in the crucified and resurrected Christ."

Rev. Junge said in the joint statement that the federation "is approaching the Reformation anniversary in a spirit of ecumenical accountability."

"By working toward reconciliation between Lutherans and Catholics, we are working toward justice, peace and reconciliation in a world torn apart by conflict and violence," he added.

The common prayer document, released Jan. 11, is the first jointly developed liturgical material prepared by a task force made up of representatives of the official Lutheran-Catholic Commission on Unity.

Catholic bishops' conferences and Lutheran churches around the world are invited to use the Common Prayer as part of local commemorations of the Reformation anniversary in 2017. The prayer includes materials to be adapted to the local liturgical and musical traditions of the Catholic Church and Lutheran communities.

Martin Luther posted his "95 Theses" on a church door Oct. 31, 1517, which is usually marked as the beginning of the Reformation. While the Reformation fractured Western Christianity, Catholics and Lutherans have been committed to dialogue the past 50 years in an effort to restore full unity.

The Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and the Geneva-based Lutheran World Federation released a joint document in June 2013 titled, "From Conflict to Communion," which outlined ideas for joint commemorations in 2017.

The document looks at the central points of Luther's call for the reform of the church, the points addressed later by the Council of Trent and, especially, the Second Vatican Council and issues that still divide Catholics and Lutherans.

"Luther had no intention of establishing a new church but was part of a broad and many-faceted desire for reform," the document said. "In 2017, when Lutheran Christians celebrate the anniversary of the beginning of the Reformation, they are not thereby celebrating the division of the Western church. No one who is theologically responsible can celebrate the division of Christians from one another."

In a meeting in October 2013 with representatives of the Lutheran World Federation and members of the Catholic-Lutheran international theological dialogue, Pope Francis said commemorations of the beginning of the Reformation must take place in a spirit of dialogue and humility.

"Catholics and Lutherans can ask forgiveness for the harm they have caused one another and for their offenses committed in the sight of God," he said.

"I believe that it is truly important for everyone to confront in dialogue the historical reality of the Reformation, its consequences and the responses it elicited," the pope told the group.

While theological dialogue is important, he said, the key to unity lies in prayer and trying to follow more closely the teachings of Jesus.

In other news regarding papal travel, the president of Colombia's Catholic bishops' conference told reporters Jan. 23 that Pope Francis would visit their country early in 2017.

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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By Carol GlatzVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis told a group ofseminarians that seeking a so-called "normal" life in the priesthoodwould turn them into pastors who were "mediocre or worse."A priest who is tempted to live the way most people livetoday "begins to settle for getting some attention, judges his ministry onthe basis of his achievements and eases into seeking what he likes -- becominglukewarm and without any real concern for others," he said."Instead, 'normalcy' for us is pastoral holiness,giving one's life," Pope Francis said. "If a priest chooses to bejust a regular person, he will be a priest who is mediocre or worse."The pope's remarks came during an audience Jan. 25 withseminarians and staff of Rome's Sts. Ambrose and Charles Pontifical Seminary,which trains priests for Italy's Lombardy region. Cardinal Angelo Scola ofMilan, metropolitan of Lombardy, also attended the private audience. The pope told the men that preparing for the priesthoodin Rome wasn't just about ...

By Carol Glatz

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis told a group of seminarians that seeking a so-called "normal" life in the priesthood would turn them into pastors who were "mediocre or worse."

A priest who is tempted to live the way most people live today "begins to settle for getting some attention, judges his ministry on the basis of his achievements and eases into seeking what he likes -- becoming lukewarm and without any real concern for others," he said.

"Instead, 'normalcy' for us is pastoral holiness, giving one's life," Pope Francis said. "If a priest chooses to be just a regular person, he will be a priest who is mediocre or worse."

The pope's remarks came during an audience Jan. 25 with seminarians and staff of Rome's Sts. Ambrose and Charles Pontifical Seminary, which trains priests for Italy's Lombardy region. Cardinal Angelo Scola of Milan, metropolitan of Lombardy, also attended the private audience.

The pope told the men that preparing for the priesthood in Rome wasn't just about completing their studies, but was also a time for "true and genuine priestly formation" that included deep inner conversion.

By following the Holy Spirit, they would be the future of the church "according to God's heart," and according to the demands of the Gospel, he said, "not according to individual preferences or current trends."

St. Charles Borromeo, he said, saw his ministry as a continual journey of conversion. He wanted priests to be servants of God and fathers for the people, especially the poor, the pope said.

Priests need to have an active, personal relationship with God and live in constant dialogue with his word, "or better, with God who speaks," he said.

This dialogue entails taking what was learned during their studies and applying it when speaking to God during prayer and to others.

The pope urged the seminarians not to pigeonhole their pursuits but to consider prayer, culture and pastoral ministry as "cornerstones of one building."

Evangelization today requires that priests live and speak simply and be preachers not "of complex doctrine, but proclaimers of Christ." The pope said they must avoid "every form of duplicity and worldliness" and be someone "for whom genuine communion with the Lord and others is enough."

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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IMAGE: EPABy Simone OrendainCEBU, Philippines (CNS) -- The 51stInternational Eucharistic Congress kicked off with Pope Francis'representative, Cardinal Charles Bo of Yangon, Myanmar, declaring war onpoverty."The Eucharist calls for... a third world war against poverty," said Cardinal Bo, "a thirdworld war against the cruelty of dogs getting fed with sumptuous, organic food,while poor children scramble for scraps from the table."Tens of thousands of peoplewaited at least an hour under a punishing sun to attend the Jan. 24 openingMass led by Cardinal Bo at the Plaza Independencia in Cebu. He opened hishomily with a plea for the crowd to "be patient with the heat." "Soon it will be all right. Themoon is too hot in Cebu," the cardinal quipped, as the sun was just minutesfrom setting. For a couple of hours, until the seats were opened up to the public, Lermalyn Otida, an office workerfrom Cebu, stood outside of the fenced-off area that enclosed seating fordelegates."You see the people ar...

IMAGE: EPA

By Simone Orendain

CEBU, Philippines (CNS) -- The 51st International Eucharistic Congress kicked off with Pope Francis' representative, Cardinal Charles Bo of Yangon, Myanmar, declaring war on poverty.

"The Eucharist calls for ... a third world war against poverty," said Cardinal Bo, "a third world war against the cruelty of dogs getting fed with sumptuous, organic food, while poor children scramble for scraps from the table."

Tens of thousands of people waited at least an hour under a punishing sun to attend the Jan. 24 opening Mass led by Cardinal Bo at the Plaza Independencia in Cebu. He opened his homily with a plea for the crowd to "be patient with the heat."

"Soon it will be all right. The moon is too hot in Cebu," the cardinal quipped, as the sun was just minutes from setting.

For a couple of hours, until the seats were opened up to the public, Lermalyn Otida, an office worker from Cebu, stood outside of the fenced-off area that enclosed seating for delegates.

"You see the people around still coming over, they don't mind if it's very hot," Otida told Catholic News Service afterward. "They don't mind if no seats (are) available. They don't mind if (it's) too much traffic. No. That's faith. It's the faith that comes up in everyone."

With greetings in the Visaya dialect and the national language of Tagalog, Cardinal Bo told the faithful that Pope Francis loved them "very much."

He called Filipinos the "beacon of Catholicism" to the world, saying that having a Philippine presence in any country means there will be Catholicism. Close to 10 million Filipinos live and work outside the Philippines, with most practicing their Catholic faith, often in countries that do not have majority Christian populations.

Cardinal Bo remarked on the Philippine church and its people being "the only church in the world that welcomed" priests from his country, which he said was a "suffering church" for more than five decades under military rule.

"You have shared the bread of hospitality, the bread of knowledge, the bread of your love."

Cardinal Bo said the Eucharist strips the faithful of their social status, as people of all walks of life take Communion.

"The Eucharist calls us to justice. No other religion elevates justice to this level. No other religion elevates the poor to this level," he said. He called it the major challenge in a world that "kills children in the womb" and "spends more on arms than on food."

The cardinal emphasized that the mystery of the Eucharist is twofold: presence and mission. The Eucharist is the true presence of Jesus, while it was the mission of the faithful to share that presence with others.

"From eucharistic celebration to eucharistic commitment: mission," he said.

Cardinal Bo said being devoted to eucharistic adoration was good and so was being devoted to Santo Nino, the child Jesus, a strong devotion in Cebu.

"Christ is calling us to be disciples, to carry his cross," he said. "The Mass of the devotee ends in an hour, but the Mass of the disciple is unending. The Eucharist of the devotee is confined to the clean altars of the church. The Eucharist of the disciple continues with the streets as altar."

Once the sun had fully set and Mass ended, fireworks exploded in one section of the sky above the plaza.

After the Mass, Sacred Heart Sister Yasuko Taguchi of Sapporo, Japan, a delegate from her country, put her hand on her heart and told CNS, "We are so, so, so overcome by this wonderful opening Mass."

She said she was struck by the cardinal's homily, the music and "everything."

Sister Taguchi said it reminded her that when Christ died, he "left himself as a legacy for reconciliation and love and sharing and caring for one another. He is not here, but he is here. He is risen in us. ... This (Mass) brought us such a realization, that he is here present among us ... this was possible only in the Philippines."

Diane Abigail Canate, 17, a college student from the neighboring island province of Leyte, called Cardinal Bo's message "inspiring."

"He said that Filipinos have really strong faith in God by what we witness today," she told CNS.

Cebu Archbishop Jose Palma welcomed Cardinal Bo at the start of the opening Mass with a reference to the Congress' theme.

He said, "Indeed it is perhaps symbolic that we open this 51st International Eucharistic Congress here at Plaza Independencia as we proclaim true independence by acknowledging our total dependence on Christ, recognizing that Christ crucified and risen is truly in us, our hope of glory."

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A video to accompany this story can be found at https://youtu.be/dbWDI4oHP30

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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NEW YORK (AP) -- A gruesome highway accident followed by months of pain and rehab. That's no laughing matter....

NEW YORK (AP) -- A gruesome highway accident followed by months of pain and rehab. That's no laughing matter....

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SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) -- Carlos Gonzalez already had noticed the growing number of empty chairs and increasingly quiet slot machines at the Puerto Rico casino where he worked as he mulled a job offer in the Dominican Republic....

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) -- Carlos Gonzalez already had noticed the growing number of empty chairs and increasingly quiet slot machines at the Puerto Rico casino where he worked as he mulled a job offer in the Dominican Republic....

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NEW YORK (AP) -- More than 1,800 flights remain delayed or cancelled in the aftermath of a massive weekend blizzard that slammed into the eastern U.S., wreaking havoc on travel in the nation's busiest cities....

NEW YORK (AP) -- More than 1,800 flights remain delayed or cancelled in the aftermath of a massive weekend blizzard that slammed into the eastern U.S., wreaking havoc on travel in the nation's busiest cities....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- A homemade bomb left behind by the husband and wife who perpetrated a mass shooting at a California social services center failed to detonate because it was poorly constructed, two law enforcement officials told The Associated Press....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A homemade bomb left behind by the husband and wife who perpetrated a mass shooting at a California social services center failed to detonate because it was poorly constructed, two law enforcement officials told The Associated Press....

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NEW YORK (AP) -- The latest on recovery efforts following the blizzard that slammed a large swath of the United States (all times local):...

NEW YORK (AP) -- The latest on recovery efforts following the blizzard that slammed a large swath of the United States (all times local):...

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NEW YORK (AP) -- East Coast residents clobbered by the weekend blizzard trudged into the workweek Monday amid slippery roads, spotty transit service and mounds of snow that buried cars and blocked sidewalks after some cities got an entire winter's snow in two days....

NEW YORK (AP) -- East Coast residents clobbered by the weekend blizzard trudged into the workweek Monday amid slippery roads, spotty transit service and mounds of snow that buried cars and blocked sidewalks after some cities got an entire winter's snow in two days....

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 WASHINGTON-Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York called on everyone "concerned about the tragedy of abortion" to recommit to a "vision of life and love, a vision that excludes no one" on January 14. His statement marks the 43rd anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion. Cardinal Dolan chairs the Committee on Pro-Life Activities of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops."Most Americans oppose a policy allowing legal abortion for virtually any reason - though many still do not realize that this is what the Supreme Court gave us," wrote Cardinal Dolan. "Most want to protect unborn children at later stages of pregnancy, to regulate or limit the practice of abortion, and to stop the use of taxpayer dollars for the destruction of unborn children. Yet many who support important goals of the pro-life movement do not identify as 'pro-life,' a fact which should lead us to examine how we present our pro-life vision to others.""Even as Americans rema...

 WASHINGTON-Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York called on everyone "concerned about the tragedy of abortion" to recommit to a "vision of life and love, a vision that excludes no one" on January 14. His statement marks the 43rd anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion. Cardinal Dolan chairs the Committee on Pro-Life Activities of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

"Most Americans oppose a policy allowing legal abortion for virtually any reason - though many still do not realize that this is what the Supreme Court gave us," wrote Cardinal Dolan. "Most want to protect unborn children at later stages of pregnancy, to regulate or limit the practice of abortion, and to stop the use of taxpayer dollars for the destruction of unborn children. Yet many who support important goals of the pro-life movement do not identify as 'pro-life,' a fact which should lead us to examine how we present our pro-life vision to others."

"Even as Americans remain troubled by abortion," wrote Cardinal Dolan, a powerful and well-funded lobby holds "that abortion must be celebrated as a positive good for women and society, and those who cannot in conscience provide it are to be condemned for practicing substandard medicine and waging a 'war on women'." He said this trend was seen recently when President Obama and other Democratic leaders prevented passage of the Abortion Non-Discrimination Act, "a modest measure to provide for effective enforcement" of conscience laws.

"While this is disturbing," said Cardinal Dolan, "it is also an opportunity." Pro-life Americans should reach out to "the great majority of Americans" who are "open to hearing a message of reverence for life." He added that "we who present the pro-life message must always strive to be better messengers. A cause that teaches the inexpressibly great value of each and every human being cannot show disdain or disrespect for any fellow human being." He encouraged Catholics to take part, through prayer and action, in the upcoming "9 Days for Life" campaign, January 16-24. More information on the campaign is available online: www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxJwfcefUiU

He also cited the Year of Mercy called by Pope Francis as a time for women and men to find healing through the Church's Project Rachel post-abortion ministry.

The full text of Cardinal Dolan's message is available online.
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Keywords: Roe v. Wade, anniversary, Pro-Life, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, 9 Days for Life, USCCB, U.S. bishops, U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Year of Mercy, Project Rachel, Pope Francis
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