Meet challenges by
focusing on Jesus, says Pope
By JOHN THAVIS
APARECIDA, Brazil (CNS)
-- On a five-day visit to Latin America, Pope Benedict XVI
identified a host of social and religious challenges and said the
Church should respond by focusing more clearly on the person of
Jesus Christ.
"This is the faith that has made America the `continent of hope,'
not a political ideology, not a social movement, not an economic
system: faith in the God Who is love, Who took flesh, died, and rose
in Jesus Christ," the Pope said on the final day of his May 9-13
visit to Brazil.
It was a comment echoed in many of his encounters, which included a
rally with young people, the canonization of the first
Brazilian-born saint, and the inauguration of the Fifth General
Conference of the Bishops of Latin America and the Caribbean.
Crowds enthusiastic in soccer stadium, basilica
The Pope cited inroads by secularism, threats against the family and
the institution of marriage, and an erosion of traditional Latin
America values and said that in response the Church needs to put
greater emphasis on the religious education of its own members.
One big reason the evangelical sects have attracted Catholics, he
told Brazilian bishops, is that many Catholics are insufficiently
evangelized and their faith is weak, confused, and easily shaken.
In a country where televangelists have had great success with
simplistic religious messages, the Pope did not hold out any easy
solutions.
Instead, he said, the Church should conduct "a methodical
evangelization aimed at personal and communal fidelity to Christ."
Firm doctrinal content is essential to faith formation, he said, and
at nearly every stop he suggested wider use of the Catechism of the
Catholic Church.
The crowds that showed up for papal events were enthusiastic, but
smaller than foreseen by trip planners in Brazil, the largest
Catholic country in the world. There were empty spaces at both of
his outdoor Masses, and the crowds along some of his motorcade
routes were sparse.
In Brazil, where pressures have been growing for legalized abortion,
the Pope mentioned protection of the unborn at several of his
events.
On May 10, the Pope joined some 40,000 young people in a Sao Paulo
soccer stadium for song, dance, prayer and a lengthy papal speech
that laid out arguments for Christian virtue.
He warned against sexual infidelity, drug use, and unethical routes
to success and told the youths to live their lives "with enthusiasm
and with joy, but most of all with a sense of responsibility."
At a Mass May 11 on a Sao Paulo airfield, the Pope canonized St.
Antonio Galvao, an 18th-century Franciscan known for his charitable
work among the poor and sick. The Pope said the saint's dedication
to God and purity should be exemplary in a modern age "so full of
hedonism."
"The world needs transparent lives, clear souls, pure minds that
refuse to be perceived as mere objects of pleasure. It is necessary
to oppose those elements of the media that ridicule the sanctity of
marriage and virginity before marriage," he said.
On May 12 the Pope rode deep into the Brazilian countryside to visit
Fazenda da Esperanca, or Farm of Hope, a church-run drug
rehabilitation centre, where he listened to emotional testimonials
from recovering addicts.
The Pope looked at ease at the farm, where he was cheered by 3,000
volunteers and residents and given a group hug by four children.
That evening, he was even more animated when he met with thousands
of priests, seminarians, religious, and lay movement members in the
Basilica of Our Lady Aparecida, Latin America's biggest Marian
shrine. He gave a spiritual pep talk that was repeatedly interrupted
by applause.
Before leaving Brazil, the Pope delivered a lengthy opening address
to the bishops' general conference, a speech that was greatly
anticipated by the more than 260 participants.
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