Friday, February 7, 2014

Living Catholic: Catholic Devotions by the Month.



"During the Middle Ages the public functions of the Church and the popular devotions of the people were intimately connected. The laity assisted at the daily psalmody, the sacrifice of the Mass, the numerous processions, and were quite familiar with the liturgy. Those few religious practices outside of official services, e.g. the Rosary (a substitute for the 150 Psalms) originated in the liturgy. Later, however, especially since the sixteenth century, popular devotion followed its own channels; unliturgical practices like the Stations of the Cross, the Quarant 'Ore, various litanies and rosaries (coronae), prevailed everywhere; novenas and series of Sundays and week-days in honour of particular saints or mysteries were instituted. Entire months of the year were given over to special devotions. Following is a list of the more common devotions." 

Thank you www.newadvent.org

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Guest Post Alert. Oregon Taxpayer Funded Sexuality Conference for Our Kids.

VOCAL will keep you informed regarding this assault on the morals of our teens and the misuse of our taxpayer monies. Not only are we paying for abortions now, but paying for more moral decay and damage of immortal souls.  e

Here us the "Steering Committee"


There will be bus loads of teens descending for a "spring break" atmosphere paid by us.  Just take a look at this website. Oregon Adolescent Sexuality Conference.   Thank God for this concerned Catholic.

Guest Post

For many years a cancer has been festering in the City of Seaside. It is the annual Taxpayer funded event known as the Oregon Adolescent Sexuality Conference.

Several of your fellow citizens in Seaside have decided to take action to rid Seaside of this conference. We are asking for your support.

We are not going to make this an activity of any one group or church organization as we wish to involve a wide spectrum of our NW Oregon Coast communities and also to enlist statewide help from all who value Life and Morality.

We ask for your support in this endeavor. There will be a lot of work ahead but this is where the rubber hits the road.

What has gone on in these conferences is almost beyond belief. We will continue update you on our progress. If we truly care about our youth then we must work to get this event out of Seaside (and indeed anywhere in Oregon).

If you agree this conference must not return, we ask that you forward our appeal to those who you feel would support and assist us. Can you imagine if we could get 200-300 people ringing the Convention Center and its parking lot with signs describing what is going on inside the Center? I think it would be a shot heard round the state.

We already have over twenty organizations on our mailing list throughout the state. Below is our first flyer (200 distributed yesterday at the Annual Right to Life Rally in Portland): 
 
SAVE OUR CHILDREN PROTEST

On April 7 and 8, 2014, the Seaside Convention Center will again be hosting the annual Oregon Adolescent Sexuality Conference. This gathering is the largest event of its kind in Oregon specifically targeting adolescents regarding sexual activities.

 A group of citizens from Northwest Oregon has decided to organize a peaceful gathering on April 7 to make known their opposition to this sexual abuse of our school-age children masquerading as “health education”.

Your tax dollars, paid to the State of Oregon, are paying for this event. Your school district resources (buses) are also being used to bring adolescents to this conference. A Google search of  “Oregon Adolescent Sexuality Conference” will give you a very good idea of what takes place at this conference.

We are just beginning to organize this protest so we would be interested in any help that would be offered. Remember this is not just something that only concerns the North Oregon Coast. This is the premier adolescent sexuality event that occurs each year in the state of Oregon. Why do they choose Seaside? Everyone likes to go to the beach. It’s a great hook to get students from all over Oregon to attend. The organizers of this event know that almost every teenager likes to go the beach.

We are hoping to have several hundred people join us to make known what is going on inside the walls of the Seaside Convention Center.

Hopefully a large presence of protesters will cause the media, print and broadcast, to cover this event. The organizations that are sponsoring the event do not want the public to know what is going on. We intend to shine the light of day on their activities.

Anyone wishing to join us or offer help in organizing this protest should call Mike Kelly at (360) 713-8414 or email him at mcgrathfx@charter.net
 
 

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

LOOK. Archdiocese of Portland Job Opportunity. "Don't Hide Your Light Under a Bushel Basket."

Monsignor Buxman is in need of an Office Supervisor.  If you know of a good applicant, please apply.  The Vicar for Clergy assists the Archbishop in all matters pertaining to clergy, including parish assignments and ongoing formation.
 

Office Supervisor (Archdiocese of Portland) (28th and Burnside)

© craigslist - Map data © OpenStreetMap
2838 E Burnside
The Office Supervisor facilitates the work of the Archdiocese of Portland Clergy/Personnel Department, providing administrative assistance to the Vicar for Clergy and his subordinates. The position also supervises 1 administrative assistant resolving workflow conflicts for three other smaller offices as necessary. The office supervisor requires excellent organizational and communications skills with the ability to produce accurate correspondence and reports in a timely fashion, as well as organize files, events, and materials in a successful manner. The ideal candidate will possess excellent verbal and written communication skill with a high level of accuracy and attention to detail.

Applicants must possess a high school diploma or equivalent along with demonstrated experience with the Microsoft suite of products. Professional training or advanced degree in administration, communication, organization, and office and personnel management preferred. Candidates must have a minimum of 8 years' secretarial experience with proven administrative ability. Preference given to applicants will have 5 years' experience as Administrative Assistant to senior executive or equivalent, with some supervisory experience and at least 1 year of experience working in religious organization. Applicants are required to be a practicing Catholic with a thorough knowledge and understanding of Catholic teachings, practices, and organizational structure. Valid driver's license preferred. Bilingual in Spanish preferred

For consideration please send resume and cover letter highlighting how your experience and education meet the above requirements to hr@archdpdx.org with Office Supervisor in the subject line by February 1, 2014.
2838 E Burnside (google map) (yahoo map)
  • Location: 28th and Burnside
  • Compensation: 44K to 48K DOE plus benefits
  • This is at a non-profit organization.
  • Principals only. Recruiters, please don't contact this job poster.
  • do NOT contact us with unsolicited services or offers



Monday, January 13, 2014

Bill Diss on The Christmas Season, "Life" Events and a Revealing PPS Video and Public Hearing

 



For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government will be upon his shoulder, and his name will be called "Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace."
Isaiah 9:6 RSV: Courtesy of Harmony Media

Dear Brothers and Sisters for Life, Purity and Healing,

Again and again I want to thank all of you for your prayers and help.  I know many have been praying for my work situation and our work at Precious Children of Portland (PCOP).  My wife and I and all at PCOP appreciate your prayers.  They are so necessary and are so appreciated.

I know this letter is long, but please take the time to read it as there are many key events.

Before I list the events and an update on the situation at school, I wanted to share some thoughts on the Holy Family as we savor another Christmas season.


I bring you good news of a great joy which will come to all the people; for to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.
Luke 2:10,11
I was thinking of how we all love to hold a little baby and that is why the Lord came to us as a baby.  He wanted to make sure that we would love him.  He loves us so much and what a great way to give thanks by loving him.


... an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, "Rise, take the child and his mother, and flee to Egypt
Matthew 2:13 
It sometimes seems that the role of St. Joseph is sometimes forgotten just as the role of fathers is commonly forgotten today.  If you think about it we Jesus the "Mighty God" and "Everlasting Father" and we have Mary who conceived Jesus while remaining a Virgin and she tells her cousin Elizabeth that, "all generations will call me blessed."  In spite her greatness and that of her son, she follows her husband.


In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city of Galilee named Nazareth, to a virgin ...
                                     Luke 1:26,27
I often think of the name of, "Holy Family," is an understatement; both spouses are visited by angels and their son is the savior of the world.  What is the lesson?  I think all spouses need to be holy and pray for each other; just think if we wives would pray that their husbands would be great protectors like St. Joseph.  What is husbands would pray that all would see their wives as being blessed and treat them as such?

 Events : 
Abby Johnson Former Manager at Planned Parenthood in Keizer, Saturday, January 11, 2014
Please come and hear Abby Johnson at St. Edwards church in Keizer, Oregon (near Salem) on Saturday, January 11, 2013 at 7:00 PM (map)  Abby Johnson has formed a group to help people escape the atrocities of abortion centers.  Read more about her organization And Then There Were None.


Portland's Rally and March for Life, Sunday, January 19, 2014
Please come to largest rally and march in Oregon on Sunday, January 19, 2014 at Pioneer Court House Square at 701 SW 6th Avenue in Portland, Oregon at 2:30 PM.  The rally is from 2:30 to 3:30 and then there will be a march in downtown Portland returning to Pioneer Court House Square starting at 3:30 PM.  Please bring the entire family.  (map)  More information is available here.

Hispanic Event for Purity and Life on Monday, January 13, 2014 in Silverton, Oregon
Please come to St. Paul's church to hear members and volunteers of PCOP speak to the community on purity and life at 7:00 PM at 1410 Pine St. in Silverton, Oregon (map)


Bus Available to Take People to West Coast Walk for Life in San Fransisco [Trip is Jan. 23 to Jan. 28, 2014]

Holy Rosary Parish in Portland and Fr. Eric Anderson have chartered a bus that will be leaving from the parking lot of Holy Rosary after the 7am mass on Thursday, January 23, 2014 and will will arrive at San Fransisco that evening.  Participants will have a free day on Friday, the Walk for Life on Saturday and driving back on Sunday, January 28th.  Please contact Holy Rosary Church at 375 N.E. Clackamas, Portland, Oregon  97232, 503.235.3163.  (map)  More information on the walk in San Fransisco is found here. 


Great Help is Required to Stop Public Funding of Abortions
 
Did you know that nearly half of the abortions in the the state are funded by your tax dollars?  Did you know that tax dollars kill 11 babies a day in Oregon.  That means that you and I are paying to kill babies and wound their mothers for life.  Please check out this link, obtain sheets and get the signatures.  Thousands are needed.  Please read the last newsletter

Update on Battle with Planned Parenthood and Portland Public Schools

Again thanks to all of you for your help.  People are very interested in all of this and it is a bit strange writing about it.  I do not want to draw attention to myself but to the evil of Planned Parenthood and their supporters like Portland Public Schools (PPS) and PDC and others.  I think the school will really work hard on this case to send a message to all employees that you cannot and must not disagree with the ideological thoughts and procedures of PPS.  I think many terrible things will be said about me and many will do much more than just slander me.   I just hope that the all of the evil will result in Planned Parenthood being removed from PPS and from all schools.

I am tutoring in math, electronics, computer science, English as a second language, and other courses.  Do not hesitate to call or email me [503-334-6183 or mr.diss@gmail.com].

A young adult group will be sponsoring an information and support night for my family on January 17, 2014 at Holy Trinity at 13715 SW Walker Rd, in Beaverton, OR 97005. (map) The event will start at 7:00.  Please bring a dish of food to share and I will be available for questions and will present some information about Planned Parenthood, what happened at school and what actions are being planned.   There is Facebook information.

When I last wrote about the situation before Christmas,  I had mentioned that I was going to be on national news.  I have included the FOX video at the bottom of the message.  Many thanks to Christian Radio KPDQ and the other local stations that covered the story.

Many of you have asked how you can help and again, please pray.  We are fighting the demons of hell and we need to pray and pray.  Please pray for the lawyers helping me.

Another great way to help is to be involved in the big rally in Portland and to help in the effort to stop abortion funding in Oregon.  As my mother would say when we would ask how we could help, she would reply, "Be Good."  I can't think of another way to be good then to work for life and purity.

Tough Words
Many of us would really like to tell the school board of what we think about their relationship with Planned Parenthood.  Well someone finally did it.   She quoted quoted parts of Planned Parenthood's video and the school board has commented out her words on the saved video.  In spite of the efforts of the school board, the video is worth seeing.  Please watch the three minute video here.   You can also watch other speakers at the board meeting.


Life News has been doing a great job keeping track of the action we are taking regarding the religious discrimination.   Please visit the following links.

Pro-Life Teacher Fired After Opposing Planned Parenthood in His Class Files EEOC Complaint

and many more.   (Thanks Life News!)

A pro life group in Washington DC has also started a fund to help my family.  The money will be sent to me and I am so so thankful for the group for their help.  Other may also contribute by going to http://www.gofundme.com/5t3foc

Some of you were at the hearing where the administration stated that I had a student burning in a 12 story building in a test question.  Here is the test with the student's name changed to my name.  You will also notice that is was a make up test to give students another chance on the material.

Life Legal Defense Fund (LLDF) will also be doing fund raising to fund their legal fight to assist me.  More details will follow.  Press Release from LLDF

Links from TV stories.  Please do not hesitate to thank reporters.  I think the KOIN story was very good.

KOIN:
http://www.koin.com/news/portland/teacher-fired-politics-or-performance Ã‚ 



Fox: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wqouKvQUmc

God Bless you,

Bill Diss
Precious Children of Portland
503-334-6183  
.









 

Sunday, January 12, 2014

New Year and New Cardinals on the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord.


These new cardinals will be among those that vote for the new Pontiff when we need one.  The choices made by the pope help us to understand more about him.  At the end of this post are his remarks on this day of baptisms and naming cardinals.

Robert Moynihan is the founding editor of Inside the Vatican magazine, a journal on Church and world affairs published every month in Rome.  His email address is http://themoynihanletters.com/.

January 12, 2014, Sunday – New Cardinals
Feast of the Baptism of the Lord

Pope Francis today in Rome at his noon Angelus announced the names of 19 new cardinals, 16 "electing" cardinals under the age of 80, and three "honorary" cardinals above the age of 80, and so not eligible to vote in a Conclave.
The ceremony to create these news cardinals will be in Rome on February 22, Feast of the Chair of St. Peter. It will be the first Consistory to create cardinals of Pope Francis.
Are there surprises? Yes, a number -- except that most of these "surprises" have been rumored for many weeks, so we cannot really consider them "surprises" at all. But the choices are different than ones that might have been made by another Pope. 
Pope Francis in general has chosen "lesser-known" men (for example, a lesser known prelate from the Philippines, Orlando B. Quevedo, O.M.I., Archbishop of Cotabato) and overlooked several prelates who might normally have been "expected" to have been named cardinals, especially Archbishop Francesco Moraglia, Patriarch of Venice, originally from Genoa (he was ordained a priest by Cardinal Giuseppe Siri of Genoa).
That is, Francis, by his choices, continues to give a powerful signal that he wants the Church to think less about herself -- in his signature phrase, to not be "auto-referential" -- and instead to think more about the poor and suffering in our world, to go increasingly "out of the sacristy" and into the "peripheries" to encounter those who are often forgotten and without hope.
So, under Francis, we are in a period when old schemes of ecclesial power and authority, and promotion, are being set aside in favor of a new emphasis on pastoral care in support of the marginalized and the suffering.
There are no Americans on the list (some had expected one or two American archbishops might be chosen). There is one from Great Britain: Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Westminster.
The personal secretary of Pope John XXIII, Loris Capovilla, who is now 98, was chosen. He was present in 1959 when Pope John, at Catsel Gandolfo, asked for the Third Secrect of Fatima to be brought to him to read.

Here are the names:
1. Pietro Parolin, Titular Archbishop of Acquapendente, Secretary of State.

2. Lorenzo Baldisseri, Titular Archbishop of Diocleziana, Secretary General of the Synod of Bishops.

3. Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, Archbishop-Bishop emeritus of Regensburg, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

4. Beniamino Stella, Titular Archbishop of Midila, Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy.

5. Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster, United Kingdom.

6. Leopoldo Jose Brenes Solorzano, Archbishop of Managua, Nicaragua.

7. Gerald Cyprien Lacroix, Archbishop of Quebec, Canada.

8. Jean-Pierre Kutwa, Archbishop of Abidjan, Ivory Coast.

9. Orani Joao Tempesta, O.Cist., Archbishop of Rio de Janeiro.

10. Gualtiero Bassetti, Archbishop of Perugia-Citta della Pieve, Italy.

11. Mario Aurelio Poli, Archbishop of Buenos Aires, Argentina.

12. Andrew Yeom Soo jung, Archbishop of Seoul, South Korea.

13. Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, S.D.B., Archbishop of Santiago del Cile, Chile.

14. Philippe Nakellentuba Ouedraogo, Archbishop of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.

15. Orlando B. Quevedo, O.M.I., Archbishop of Cotabato, Philippines.

16. Chibly Langlois, Bishop of Les Cayes, Haiti.
The three over the age of 80:

17. Loris Francesco Capovilla, Titular Archbishop of Mesembria.

18. Fernando Sebastian Aguilar, C.M.F., Archbishop emeritus of Pamplona.

19. Kelvin Edward Felix, Archbishop emeritus of Castries.
Perhaps the two most noticeable omissions are two Italians: Francesco Moraglia, Patriarch of Venice (recall that Pope John XXIII and Pope John Paul I were both Patriarchs of Venice before being elected Popes in 1958 and 1978, so Venice has been a very prominent see in the Church) and Cesare Nosiglia, Archbishop of Turin.
Two other important names not on the list: (1) The Vatican Librarian, the French Dominican scholar Jean-Louis Bruguès. When he was secretary of the
Vatican's Congregation for Catholic Education, had opposed then-Cardinal Bergoglio's choice to be Rector of The Catholic University of  Buenos Aires, Father  Victor Manuel Fernández, who is said to be very close to Pope Francis and one of his "ghost-writers" for papal documents; and (2)
the Archbishop of Malines-Bruxelles, Belgium, André Léonard, considered a "conservative" and one of the "rising stars" in the Church in Western Europe.
Here is a brief commentary on the first three choices of Pope Francis:
1. The first name on the list is that of the new Vatican Secretary of State, an Italian, Archbishop Pietro Parolin. This was a "necessary" choice, as Parolin, as Secretary of State, would (barring a complete revolution) have to be a cardinal.
But this simply reinforces the idea the Francis respects and trusts Parolin — that is, that he knew already when he named him Secretary of State at the end of the summer that he would, in consequence of that, make him a cardinal.
Parolin has spent his life in the service of the Holy See, first in Nigeria, then in Mexico, then in the Vatican Curia, and most recently in Venezuela as the Pope's nuncio (ambassador) there, under the difficult circumstances of the presidency of Hugo Chávez (who died on March 5, almost one year ago).
So Parolin, who is fluent in Spanish, is very well-informed about the situation in Latin America today.
Parolin has also, over the years, followed closely events in Vietnam, and in China. He is well-informed on Asia.
Moreover, he was for a number of years the Vatican's lead negotiator at nuclear arms reduction talks in Vienna. So he understands well the situation of global armaments and their control. He has been at the forefront of Vatican efforts to approve and implement the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Addressing the International Atomic Energy Agency on September 18, 2006, at its headquarters in Vienna, Austria, Parolin referred to this treaty as "the basis to pursue nuclear disarmament and an important element for further development of nuclear energy applications for peaceful purposes." He said: "Since this treaty is the only multilateral legal instrument currently available, intended to bring about a nuclear weapons-free world, it must not be allowed to be weakened. Humanity deserves no less than the full cooperation of all states in this important matter."
Parolin is a courteous, friendly man, very well-trained, profoundly dedicated to his work (he often works into the evening, 12-hour days), and he is exceptionally calm and balanced: key attributes for the delicate work of diplomacy, which seeks to find a way to resolve problems and disputes between contending, and sometimes unreasonable, parties.
Parolin is now the key "filter" between Pope Francis and the world's diplomatic and political communities, where the worldly interests of nations and interest groups contend and clash.
He has said was taken by surprise when Pope Francis named him his Secretary of State, but Pope Francis clearly trusts him and will be relying greatly on him in the months ahead.
2. The second name is that of the new head of the Synod of Bishops, also an Italian, Lorenzo Baldisseri. Pope Francis, moments after his election on March 13, famously removed his own cardinal's cap and placed it on the head of then-Archbishop Baldisseri, who was acting as the Secretary of the Conclave. Vatican watchers immediately interpreted that as a sign that Baldiserri would be made a cardinal in the Pope's first Consistory, and that has turned out to be a true forecast.
Born in Pisa, Italy, Baldisseri served in the Vatican's diplomatic service in Guatemala, Haiti, Paraguay, India and -- for 10 years -- in Brazil.
So Baldiserri, who speaks Spanish and Portuguese fluently (and also English), has decades of personal experience in Latin America.
For the past two years, he has been the Secretary of the Congregation of Bishops, the body which studies the choices of bishops from around the world for the Latin-rite Church, so he knows well the process to choose bishops, and the more recent choices as bishops.
He is also an accomplished pianist, and has played in concerts in and out of the Vatican.
3. The third name, Gerhard Mueller, is another "necessary" choice. Pope Benedict named Mueller head of the Vatican's chief doctrinal office, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Mueller, who is a very tall, powerfully-built man, was trusted by Benedict in part because he has been handling the editing of Benedict's collected works (Opera Omnia).
Mueller has been a close personal friend of Father Gustavo Gutierrez of Lima, Peru, considered to be the "father" of Liberation Theology. Mueller met Guttierrez in 1988 and has often visited him, spending weeks in Lima in study programs. “The Latin American ecclesial and theological movement known as 'Liberation Theology,' which spread to other parts of the world after the Second Vatican Council, should in my opinion be included among the most important currents in 20th century Catholic theology,” Mueller has said.

Mueller is also known for having said that the Church's position on admitting to divorced and remarried Catholics to the sacrament of Communion is not something that can or will be changed. But other German Church leaders, including Cardinal Walter Kasper, have recently gone on record saying the teaching may and will be changed. So this is one important area of discussion and potential tension in coming months, leading up to the Synod on the Family in October.
The Patriarch Not Chosen
There are only three Patriarchates in the Latin Church: Lisbon in Portugal, Jerusalem in the Holy Land, and Venice in Italy.
(Photo: Francesco Moraglia of Venice; he was not made a cardinal)
The Emeritus Patriarch of Lisbon, José da Cruz Policarpo, is a cardinal. (The current Patriarch of Lisbon is Don Manuel José Macário do Nascimento Clemente, officially referred to as Manuel III; he was appointed by Pope Francis in May 18, 2013, replacing Policarpo who was resigned due to old age, and solemnly installed on July 6, 2013 at the Patriarchal Cathedral of St. Mary Major.)
Patriarch Faoud Twal of Jerusalem is not a cardinal.
And, for the moment, the Patriarch of Venice, Moraglia, will not be a cardinal.
Venice is referred to as the "See of St. Mark" because the relics of St. Mark were brought to Venice from Alexandria in the early 800s. (The story of St. Mark is interesting and worth recalling also because it reveals how early the Gospel of Mark probably is. We know that St. Peter went to Antioch about seven or eight years after the death of Christ, in c. 40-41 A.D., and from there traveled through Asia Minor (as mentioned in 1 Pet 1:1), arriving in Rome in the second year of Emperor Claudius (42 A.D.) as Eusebius tells us in his Ecclesiastical History (2.14.6). Somewhere on the way, Peter picked up Mark and took him as travel companion and interpreter. Mark is believed to have written down the sermons of Peter (much like a reporter), the raw material for the Gospel According to St. Mark (Eccl. Hist. 15–16), before he left Peter and went to Alexandria in the third year of Claudius (43 A.D.). If this reconstruction is accurate, the words of the Gospel of Mark were written down within 10 years of the death of Jesus. In any case, relics believed to be the body of St. Mark were stolen from Alexandria in 828 A.D. by Venetian merchants and taken to Venice. A mosaic of the event in St Mark's Basilica depicts sailors covering the relics with a layer of pork and cabbage leaves. Since Muslims are not permitted to touch pork, this was done to prevent Muslim guards from inspecting the ship's cargo too closely. “History records no more shameless example of body snatching...” as John Julius Norwich put it. And thus the relics of St. Mark came to Venice.)
Moraglia was named Patriarch of Venice two years ago, in January, 20912, by Pope Benedict XVI, succeeding Cardinal Angelo Scola on the throne of St. Mark. He took up his post in March 2012.

Moraglia was born in Genoa on May 25, 1953 and was ordained priest by Cardinal Giuseppe Siri on June 29, 1977. A doctor in dogmatic theology, he worked a director of the office of Culture and at the University of the Diocese of Genoa, as a professor of Christology, anthropology, the sacramentary and history of theology at the Theological Faculty of Northern Italy and as dean and professor at the Higher Institute of Religious Studies of Liguria.

Moraglia was considered a "Ratzingerian," both from a theological and liturgical point of view. However, on more than one occasion, the bishop took a supportive position on behalf of unemployed factory workers.
========================
Here is the text of the Pope's remarks today:

Dear brothers and sisters, hello!

Today is the feast of the Baptism of the Lord. This morning I baptized 32 newborns. I thank the Lord with you for these babies and for every new life. I like to baptize children. I really enjoy it! Every child who is born is a gift of joy and hope, and every child who is baptized is marvel of the faith and a festival for the family of God.

Today’s Gospel reading highlights the fact that, when Jesus received baptism from John in the Jordan River, “the heavens opened for him” (Matthew 3:16). This fulfills the prophecies. In fact, there is an invocation that the liturgy has us repeat during Advent: “O that you would rend the heavens and come down!” (Isaiah 63:19). If the heavens remain closed, our horizon in this earthly life is dark, without hope. But, celebrating Christmas, the faith has once again given us the certainty that the heavens have been opened by Jesus’coming. And on the day of Christ’s baptism we again contemplate the opened heavens. The manifestation of the Son of God on earth is the beginning of the great time of mercy, after sin had closed the heavens, making a barrier between human beings and their Creator. With Jesus’ birth the heavens are opened! God gives us in Christ the guarantee of an indestructible love. From the moment the Word was made flesh it is possible to see the heavens opened. It is possible for the shepherds of Bethlehem, for the magi from the East, for the Baptist, for the Apostles of Jesus, for St. Stephen, the first martyr, who exclaimed: “I see the heavens opened!” (Acts 7:56). And it is also possible for each one of us, if we let ourselves be invaded by God’s love! This is the great time of mercy! Do not forget it. This is the great time of mercy!

When Jesus received the of baptism repentance from John the Baptist, entering into solidarity with the repentant people – he who is without and without a need to convert – God the Father made his voice heard from heaven: “This is my beloved Son. In him I am well pleased” (Matthew 3:17). Jesus received the heavenly Father’s approval, who sent him precisely to share our condition, our poverty. Sharing is the true way to love. Jesus does not disassociate himself from us. He considers us brothers and shares with us. And in this way he makes us sons, together with him, of God the Father. This is revelation and the source of true love. And this is the great time of mercy!

Does it not seem to you that in our time there is a need for more fraternal sharing and of love? Does it not seem to you that we all need more charity? I am not talking about that charity that contents itself with extemporaneous help and does not get involved, does not put itself into play, but that charity that shares, that takes on our brother’s hardships and suffering. What flavor life has when we let ourselves be flooded with God’s love!

Let us ask the Holy Virgin with her intercession to sustain us our effort to follow Christ along the way of faith and charity, the way traced out by our Baptism.

[Following the recitation of the Angelus, the Holy Father continued:]



 Dear brothers and sisters,

I offer all of you my cordial greeting, especially the families and the faithful from different parishes in Italy and other countries along with the associations and various groups who are present.

Today I would like to address a special thought to the parents who have had their children baptized and those who are preparing for the Baptism of a child. I join in the joy of these families, I thank the Lord with them, and I pray that the Baptism of their children with help the parents themselves to rediscover the beauty of faith and to return in a new way to the Sacraments and to the community.

As has already been announced, on February 22, the Feast of the Chair of St. Peter, I will have the joy of holding a consistory, during which I will name 16 new cardinals, who – belonging to 12 nations from every corner of the world – represent the profound ecclesial relationship between the Church of Rome and the other Church’s dispersed throughout the world.

On the following day I will preside at a solemn celebration with the new cardinals while on February 20-21I will hold a consistory with all of the cardinals to reflect on the theme of the family.
(Here the Pope gave the names in the order listed above)

Let us pray for the new cardinals that, clothed in the virtues and sentiments of the Lord Jesus, the Good Shepherd, they can more efficaciously assist the Bishop of Rome in his service to the universal Church.

I wish everyone a good Sunday and a good lunch. Goodbye!


"Think nothing else but that God ordains all, and where there is no love, put love, and you will draw love out." --St. John of the Cross