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(Vatican Radio) The prime minister of the Netherlands has condemned comments by Turkey's president holding Dutch U.N. peacekeepers responsible for the massacre by Serb forces of some 8,000 Muslim men and boys in 1995. Relations between Turkey and the Netherlands have rapidly deteriorated in recent days after the Dutch government blocked two Turkish ministers from campaigning in a referendum.The diplomatic standoff comes hours before polls open in Dutch elections that could see an anti-Islam party win most seats in Parliament. Listen to the report by Stefan Bos: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has now accused the Netherlands of the worst massacre since World War Two after the mayor of Rotterdam said police had permission to shoot at guards of the Turkish family minister who was blocked in the port city of Rotterdam on Saturday. "We know the Netherlands and the Dutch from the Srebrenica massacre. We know how rotten their character is from their massac...
(Vatican Radio) The prime minister of the Netherlands has condemned comments by Turkey's president holding Dutch U.N. peacekeepers responsible for the massacre by Serb forces of some 8,000 Muslim men and boys in 1995.
Relations between Turkey and the Netherlands have rapidly deteriorated in recent days after the Dutch government blocked two Turkish ministers from campaigning in a referendum.
The diplomatic standoff comes hours before polls open in Dutch elections that could see an anti-Islam party win most seats in Parliament.
Listen to the report by Stefan Bos:
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has now accused the Netherlands of the worst massacre since World War Two after the mayor of Rotterdam said police had permission to shoot at guards of the Turkish family minister who was blocked in the port city of Rotterdam on Saturday.
"We know the Netherlands and the Dutch from the Srebrenica massacre. We know how rotten their character is from their massacre of 8,000 Bosnians there," he said.
It was a reference to outgunned Dutch United Nations peacekeepers. They were forced to leave Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia by Bosnian Serb forces who carried out the massacre.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte condemned the Turkish president's remarks. "His comments are a falsification of history. It's unacceptable."
'HYSTERICAL EXPRESSIONS'
Referring to the president, Rutte added that it "shows that the man is every hour increasingly hysterical in his expressions. The man is already several days busy with accusing us of fascism and Nazism and not accuses us of killing many people in the former Yugoslavia. It is acting like an idiot. It is totally unacceptable."
The prime minister also recalled that Erdogan "said most horrific things" about Germany. "Every hour we hear more and more horrible things from Ankara. I advise him to moderate his tone. This is bad for the image of Turkey. It's a proud nation that ends up looking bad on the map."
Ankara is furious that the Dutch government blocked two Turkish ministers over the weekend. They wanted to campaign in Rotterdam among Turkish immigrants for a 'Yes' vote in a referendum on extending the powers of President Erdogan.
The tensions come just hours before polls open in the Netherlands for elections that are seen as a barometer for the influence of populist parties in Europe.
The Dutch government is expected to lose many seats to the anti-Islam Party of Freedom of outspoken politician Geert Wilders amid an ongoing debate about migration and Dutch identity in the Netherlands.
(Vatican Radio) Anglicans and Catholics must not simply recall the legacy of great saints from the past, but must pass on to others “what we have received ourselves in the hope of a reunited Christendom.”That was the message from English Archbishop Arthur Roche, Secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, to a historic celebration of Anglican Choral Evensong in St Peter’s Basilica.Archbishop David Moxon, director of the Anglican Centre in Rome, presided at the March 13th liturgy. The choir of Merton College, Oxford, sang motets by the English Renaissance composer William Byrd, as well as more contemporary works and some well-loved Anglican hymns.The celebration took place the day after the Church traditionally marked the feast of St Gregory the Great, who has become an unofficial patron of relations between the Anglican and Catholic Churches. St Gregory was the pope who sent Augustine, the prior of a Benedictine monaster...

(Vatican Radio) Anglicans and Catholics must not simply recall the legacy of great saints from the past, but must pass on to others “what we have received ourselves in the hope of a reunited Christendom.”
That was the message from English Archbishop Arthur Roche, Secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, to a historic celebration of Anglican Choral Evensong in St Peter’s Basilica.
Archbishop David Moxon, director of the Anglican Centre in Rome, presided at the March 13th liturgy. The choir of Merton College, Oxford, sang motets by the English Renaissance composer William Byrd, as well as more contemporary works and some well-loved Anglican hymns.
The celebration took place the day after the Church traditionally marked the feast of St Gregory the Great, who has become an unofficial patron of relations between the Anglican and Catholic Churches. St Gregory was the pope who sent Augustine, the prior of a Benedictine monastery in Rome, to evangelise the English in the year 595 AD.
During the sermon, Archbishop Roche highlighted the humility and missionary zeal of Pope Gregory the Great, describing his ministry as being one of a “remarkable ecumenical nature”.
Please find below the full text of Archbishop Arthur Roche’s sermon for Anglican Evensong of St Gregory the Great, celebrated at the Altar of the Chair of St Peter.
We stand at a moment of historic note. Here, in this great basilica built over the tomb of St Peter on whom Christ built his Church, below St Peter’s Chair encased within Bernini’s reredos, we find ourselves in the very place where St Gregory the Great, the Apostolus Anglorum, was consecrated bishop and proclaimed Successor of St Peter and whose own tomb is nearby. The Altar that he built over the tomb of his predecessor is still used today by Peter’s successors and has born witness to some of the most important events in Church history: the inauguration of popes, the canonization of saints, an Ecumenical Council, the crowning of the Holy Roman Emperors.
Today is no less historic, although of its nature humbler. It is the first time that Evensong, Anglican Evening Prayer, has been celebrated here. I say ‘humble’, not because this event lacks the grandeur of the commencement of the Papal office or the crowning of emperors, but because to worship God is of its nature an act of humility by creatures before their Creator for which reason we sang, Come into his presence with singing! … he is God! It is he who made us, and we are … his people, the sheep of his pasture. (Ps 100) The love of God and our desire to worship Him is what beings us together as Christians, Anglicans and Catholics alike, a people on pilgrimage, retracing our steps and setting our sites anew on a terrain of ecumenical challenge and hope. But the word ‘humble’ also marks the ministry of Pope Gregory whose memory we commemorate this evening. As Pope Francis said at All Saints in Rome two weeks ago, humility is not just a beautiful Christian virtue, it is also a matter of our identity. (26 February 2017)
Few popes in history have had as great an influence on the shaping of the Church as St Gregory. Even today his teachings and example speak to us in our challenging world. He was Pope for only 14 years, but what he achieved during those years and the legacy which he left was the fruit of what he had become during the previous 50 years of his life. Besides his many qualities he was above all a disciple of the Lord – following his paths and resisting his own.
He came from a wealthy patrician family in Rome, born around 540. His father, Gordianus, a Senator, was also one of the Seven Deacons of Rome and his mother, Sylvia, a virtuous woman whose sanctity is recognized in the East as well as in the West. They used their wealth and their influence for the care of others as well as in strengthening the local Christian communities by establishing monastic settlements. The home of Gregory was built on that of Nazareth, a hidden life of prayer and tenderness, yet overwhelmingly generous and hospitable.
Gregory was well educated and rose to prominence within the Roman government. Highly regarded as a distinguished speaker and writer, he established himself as a person well versed in imperial law and the subjects of the day.
Although he rose to the rank of Prefect of Rome, with all that this promised him, he turned instead to the monastic life of seclusion, dedicated prayer and contemplation, fasting and humble service.
His talents, and even more so his character, for he was readily loved by all, could not be hidden and he was sent by Pope Pelagius II as the Pope’s ambassador to Constantinople to plead for imperial assistance to help end the suffering being endured by the great city of Rome from the ravishing diseases within and the threatening invasions without.
Unsuccessful, he returned to the monastery of St Andrew on the Caelian Hill to resume a life of contemplation and study of the Scriptures.
However, this would not be for long. On the death of the Pope, Gregory was elected to the Chair of Peter and after much protestation, indeed attempted avoidance, he was consecrated Bishop of Rome in the Confessio of St Peter’s now below that great Altar, on 3 September, 590.
His pontificate was marked not only by remarkable administrative skills and depth of teaching, wisdom of judgement, and zeal for proclaiming the gospel everywhere, but also by outstanding pastoral care for the poor and the sick, the refugee, the slave and the criminal – care for the needs of both their bodies as well as their souls. In all his undertakings there was nothing about St Gregory that was partisan as can be seen by his rigorous restoration of the synagogues to the Jews. His direct application of the gospel was as challenging then as it is today which made him a prominent figure both spiritually and politically.
Amongst his many achievements and those things for which he is remembered there are two which I think are particularly pertinent to us as the inheritors of the ministry of Gregory and Augustine today as we walk together in search of greater unity.
The first can be seen in the remarkable ecumenical nature, in both the original and modern sense of that word, of his Petrine ministry. One example serves above all. At a time when other Churches were beginning to claim what was perceived as an exaggerated independence by creating distinguishing titles, St Gregory with considerable gentleness described his role as Successor of Peter as the Servus servorum Dei - the servant of the servants of God - a title retained still. It seems to me that this example serves us well. Our journey, our walking together on this pilgrimage in search of the ecumenical quest of unity invites us also to become servants one to another acknowledging that we are all unprofitable servants (Lk 17,10). Our love for each other must always be humble and unstinting. One servant encouraging another to become ever more faithful to Christ. In the end it is God’s grace which achieves that for which we work and long for, but it is Jesus Christ we proclaim and not ourselves. Triumphalism of any sort is always a wall and never a bridge.
The second, and perhaps the greatest of Saint Gregory’s achievements as pope, and one in which we find inspiration today, was his missionary zeal.
His passion for evangelization is reflected in the immense record of his writings. The story of his discovery of the three “non Angli sed angeli” is well known. On discovering that they came from a land known as Deira – the North of England - he said, “Then, they must be truly saved from de ira Dei - the wrath of God!” And on asking further who their ruler was and being told it was “Aella”. “Then”, he replied, “Alleluia must be sung in Aella’s land!”
As we know, he sent St. Augustine, abbot of his former monastery, to preach the faith of an undivided Christendom in England. Augustine’s mission, despite initial challenges and setbacks, was so successful that it led to the later conversion of Northern Europe to Christianity. “How beautiful” indeed, “are the feet of those who bring good news,” (Isaiah 52,7). We rightly reverence those who have brought the gospel to us, who have taught us the faith by their preaching, their teaching and their holiness of life. But we must never forget, as Pope Francis recently said that, “The Church was born as outgoing. It was closeted in the refectory [till the day of Pentecost] and then came out. And it must remain in the outside world. It must not shut itself off again.” (25 November 2016) We can encourage each other in that and indeed support each other in this important imperative for all times and places.
Later on there was, as part of this missionary enterprise to England, a group of cantori - choristers, who were to charm Anglo-Saxon ears with Gregorian chant! Indeed, as we have seen in recent years in the reciprocal invitations and the coming together of the Sistine Choir with Anglican Choirs here and elsewhere liturgical music also serves the ecumenical venture. (St Bede’s History of the English Church & People, Book IV, ch. 18)
In giving thanks for our Christian faith which comes to us from the same font, it is for us not only to remember but together to pass on in faithfulness what we have received ourselves in the hope of a reunited Christendom. The young men from Deira must have seemed very foreign indeed to the Roman monks, as perhaps some parts of our society and culture today may seem foreign to us, but the gospel still needs to be proclaimed in those peripheries, in those byways of the world, as well as among the most materially disadvantaged as has been referred to by Pope Francis and Archbishop Welby. It is not enough for us to simply remember the ministry of St Gregory to our land, but also to give thanks for what we have received by becoming ourselves missionary Christians proclaiming the joy of the gospel and avoiding remaining “huddled in closed circles, in ecclesial “micro-climates” which would bring us back to the days of clouds and thick darkness” - in the words of Pope Francis - “Together let us ask God for the grace to imitate the spirit and example of the great missionaries, through whom the Holy Spirit revitalized the Church.” (Vespers, St Andrew’s Monastery, 6 October 2016)
We are here below the great window of the Holy Spirit this evening which reminds us that the iconographic depiction of St Gregory is the Holy Spirit whispering in his ear. We pray that, like St Gregory, we too will remain open to the whispering of God’s Holy Spirit so that in our day we may have the courage and faith to continue praying and working to surmount the barriers that remain, to break down the walls of separation and division so that in God’s good time the unthinkable, or what seems now to be so difficult, may be made possible in Christ Jesus our Lord. The words from a letter of St Gregory to St Augustine and his fellow missionaries seem apt also for us this evening: “It is better never to undertake any high enterprise than to abandon it when once begun. So with the help of God you must carry out this holy task which you have begun. Do not be deterred by the troubles of the journey or by what men say. Be constant and zealous in carrying out this enterprise which, under God’s guidance, you have undertaken: and be assured that the greater the labour, the greater will be the glory of your reward … And although my office prevents me working at your side, yet because I long to do so, I hope to share in your joyful reward.” (St Bede’s History, Book I, chapter 23) There is no doubt that the prayers of this great Apostle of the English then, remain with us now in this holy work.
IMAGE: CNS photo/Katie BreidenbachBy Katie BreidenbachMEDINA,Ohio (CNS) -- Dozens of little wax flowers lay on the table in front of her.With a gentle grip, Judy Hamrick picks up each one and covers the back in glue."It'svery peaceful work," Hamrick said. "I've worked here 24 years and every paschalseason I've been out here and we enjoy it out here."Nearbyare countless other wax decorations in the shape of lambs, crosses, numbers andGreek letters. Tubs of wax, rulers, brushes and boxes of pins lay strewn onHamrick's desk and the desks of her co-workers."It'sexciting when you put it all together," added another decorator, Rose MarieDixon.Eachelement is carefully measured and attached, by hand, to a long wax pillar. Afterabout 45 minutes, the women finish decorating one paschal candle. Their factory,the A.I. Root Co. in Medina, will create over 1,500 of these liturgical worksof art and ship them to churches across the country."Weprobably make about 25 to 30 a day," said Brad Root, pre...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Katie Breidenbach
By Katie Breidenbach
MEDINA, Ohio (CNS) -- Dozens of little wax flowers lay on the table in front of her. With a gentle grip, Judy Hamrick picks up each one and covers the back in glue.
"It's very peaceful work," Hamrick said. "I've worked here 24 years and every paschal season I've been out here and we enjoy it out here."
Nearby are countless other wax decorations in the shape of lambs, crosses, numbers and Greek letters. Tubs of wax, rulers, brushes and boxes of pins lay strewn on Hamrick's desk and the desks of her co-workers.
"It's exciting when you put it all together," added another decorator, Rose Marie Dixon.
Each element is carefully measured and attached, by hand, to a long wax pillar. After about 45 minutes, the women finish decorating one paschal candle. Their factory, the A.I. Root Co. in Medina, will create over 1,500 of these liturgical works of art and ship them to churches across the country.
"We probably make about 25 to 30 a day," said Brad Root, president and chairman of the A.I. Root Co. "It's the 15 weeks leading up to Easter that the majority of the paschal candles are made and shipped."
The paschal candle is a central part of the Easter season, placed in a prominent location in each church's sanctuary to symbolize Christ and the light of his resurrection. During the Easter Vigil, the celebrant will light the candle for the first time and insert five grains of incense into the wax to recall Christ's five wounds. He will then carry the flame through the darkened church, spreading the light as he processes.
When the Easter season concludes, the paschal candle will be present at baptisms and funerals, recalling the new life given by Christ.
"It's supposed to be a candle that shows a certain amount of dignity within the church," Root told Catholic News Service. "It's an important part of the spiritual message not only at Easter with the Resurrection, but to each person's funeral throughout the year."
The origin and traditions associated with the paschal candle date back to at least the fourth century and are described in writings by St. Jerome and the historian Venerable Bede. For the Medina factory, the ancient tradition has become a family tradition. The A.I. Root Co. was founded in 1869 by Amos Ives Root and is still owned by his direct descendants.
"I'm the fifth generation of the business," explained Root, who is the founder's great-great-grandson. "The company actually started up in the town square where A.I. was a jeweler and a bunch of bees landed on his window."
The providential insects launched A.I. Root into the beekeeping business and inspired him to build the first bee supply company in America. The oldest part of the brick factory is still emblazoned with a huge stone beehive surrounded by the words "In God We Trust" and the year it was built, 1878.
The Roots shifted from beekeeping to candle-making after another providential encounter. A local priest told the founder's son, Huber Root, that he needed quality candles for his worship space. Gleaning beeswax from the family hives, the young Root hand-rolled the company's first liturgical candles.
Now seasoned experts with a whole line of church and consumer products, the Root family has modernized and expedited the candle-making process. Today, paschal candles are molded by machines through a process called extrusion.
"(Wax) shavings are being forced under a tremendous amount of pressure to push out a candle almost like a Play-Doh machine," described Root. The resulting pillars of wax are cut to size, then sharpened or melted into a pointed candle.
Though most of the process is mechanized, paschal candle decoration still requires the touch of craftsmen. Decorators pour colored wax into tiny molds and, once cooled, pop them out and coat them with glue. The workers then carefully place each item on the candle and tack it down with pins. Sometimes foil is rubbed against the candle to create a metallic background, or hot wax is brushed on just like paint.
The decorations themselves are steeped in tradition and symbolism. The cross figures prominently, as does the current year, reminding the faithful that Christ is present in the here and now. The candle also includes the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet -- alpha and omega -- recalling that Jesus is the beginning and the end of all.
"The ladies that decorate these candles take pride in these candles," said Hamrick. "They do their very best with them."
Carefully wrapped and boxed, the completed waxen works of art are finally shipped to churches across the country. In the coming weeks, the company will dedicate long hours to completing all the paschal candles before Easter.
"I think he'd be very proud," said Root, speaking of the factory's founder. "We're providing something that's important to the spiritual needs of people."
"It gives off love, you know," summarized Hamrick. "It's just something that's beautiful and something that God wants us to do to make the occasion special."
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