2006 Consistory | Credit: Franco Origlia/Getty Images

Earlier today, reports began emerging that the much talked about November 20th Consistory will be announced at Pope Benedict XVI’s General Audience this coming Wednesday. It’s about time; I was beginning to think no 2010 consistory would ever be announced.

While U.S. Catholics had been hoping for a surprisingly high number of new American princes, only two names seem to be getting the nod: Archbishop Raymond Burke and Archbishop Donald Wuerl. According to our favorite Catholic whisperer, Italian nominees are said to “comprise almost half of the open voting-age spots.”

With the conferring of this new batch of scarlet hats, Benedict will have named a majority of the current voting age cardinals.

On a personal note, if this all pans out, this will be the first time that I will cover a Vatican consistory. Needless to say, it is going to be a tremendous learning experience for me. In fact, the past few months have been new experiences for me and I have already learned quite a bit.

I am positive that I have made mistakes; I am human, what can I say? I thank you all for providing me with the opportunity to learn a lot about my faith and for facilitating an increase in my love for the church. I appreciate it more than you know.

That being said, it’s going to be an interesting end to the year. Let’s travel the road together, shall we?


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PRAYER VIGIL ON THE EVE OF THE BEATIFICATION
OF CARDINAL JOHN HENRY NEWMAN

ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI

Hyde Park – London

Saturday, 18 September 2010

Pope Benedict at Hyde Park | Photo: Felipe Trueba/EPA

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

This is an evening of joy, of immense spiritual joy, for all of us. We are gathered here in prayerful vigil to prepare for tomorrow’s Mass, during which a great son of this nation, Cardinal John Henry Newman, will be declared Blessed. How many people, in England and throughout the world, have longed for this moment! It is also a great joy for me, personally, to share this experience with you. As you know, Newman has long been an important influence in my own life and thought, as he has been for so many people beyond these isles. The drama of Newman’s life invites us to examine our lives, to see them against the vast horizon of God’s plan, and to grow in communion with the Church of every time and place: the Church of the apostles, the Church of the martyrs, the Church of the saints, the Church which Newman loved and to whose mission he devoted his entire life.


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VISIT TO ST PETER’S RESIDENCE, A HOME FOR OLDER PEOPLE

ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI

London Borough of Lambeth

Saturday, 18 September 2010

My dear Brothers and Sisters,

I am very pleased to be among you, the residents of Saint Peter’s, and to thank Sister Marie Claire and Mrs Fasky for their kind words of welcome on your behalf. I am also pleased to greet Archbishop Smith of Southwark, as well as the Little Sisters of the Poor and the personnel and volunteers who look after you.

As advances in medicine and other factors lead to increased longevity, it is important to recognize the presence of growing numbers of older people as a blessing for society. Every generation can learn from the experience and wisdom of the generation that preceded it. Indeed the provision of care for the elderly should be considered not so much an act of generosity as the repayment of a debt of gratitude.

For her part, the Church has always had great respect for the elderly. The Fourth Commandment, “Honour your father and your mother as the Lord your God commanded you” (Deut 5:16), is linked to the promise, “that your days may be prolonged, and that it may go well with you, in the land which the Lord your God gives you” (Deut 5:16). This work of the Church for the aging and infirm not only provides love and care for them, but is also rewarded by God with the blessings he promises on the land where this commandment is observed. God wills a proper respect for the dignity and worth, the health and well-being of the elderly and, through her charitable institutions in Britain and beyond, the Church seeks to fulfil the Lord’s command to respect life, regardless of age or circumstances.

At the very start of my pontificate I said, “Each of us is willed, each of us is loved, each of us is necessary” (Homily at the Mass for the Beginning of the Petrine Ministry of the Bishop of Rome, 24 April 2005). Life is a unique gift, at every stage from conception until natural death, and it is God’s alone to give and to take. One may enjoy good health in old age; but equally Christians should not be afraid to share in the suffering of Christ, if God wills that we struggle with infirmity. My predecessor, the late Pope John Paul, suffered very publicly during the last years of his life. It was clear to all of us that he did so in union with the sufferings of our Saviour. His cheerfulness and forbearance as he faced his final days were a remarkable and moving example to all of us who have to carry the burden of advancing years.


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EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION

Cathedral of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ
City of Westminster
Saturday, 18 September 2010

Salute of the Holy Father to the youth

Pope Benedict XVI speaks with young people gathered outside Westminster Cathedral | Credit: Filippo Monteforte/AFP

Mr Uche, dear young friends,

Thank you for your warm welcome! “Heart speaks unto heart” – cor ad cor loquitur – as you know, I chose these words so dear to Cardinal Newman as the theme of my visit. In these few moments that we are together, I wish to speak to you from my own heart, and I ask you to open your hearts to what I have to say.

I ask each of you, first and foremost, to look into your own heart. Think of all the love that your heart was made to receive, and all the love it is meant to give. After all, we were made for love. This is what the Bible means when it says that we are made in the image and likeness of God: we were made to know the God of love, the God who is Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and to find our supreme fulfilment in that divine love that knows no beginning or end.

We were made to receive love, and we have. Every day we should thank God for the love we have already known, for the love that has made us who we are, the love that has shown us what is truly important in life. We need to thank the Lord for the love we have received from our families, our friends, our teachers, and all those people in our lives who have helped us to realize how precious we are, in their eyes and in the eyes of God.


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2009 Pallium Mass in Rome | REUTERS

Sorry for the lack of posts over the last couple of days, which have been rather eventful for me. On Friday morning I flew out of Orlando International Airport bound for Los Angeles to celebrate the coming together of my brother and his fiancé in matrimony. I flew home last evening. Needless to say, I am a bit tired but still kickin’. So, in case you have been out of the loop in recent days or weeks with your vacation plans, here is a bit of a look at the week ahead (well, at least the first couple of days of it).

This evening, the Holy Father will celebrate vespers for tomorrow’s Feast of Ss. Peter and Paul with the newly installed Metropolitan Archbishops from throughout the world. Tomorrow, a Mass will celebrated where the palliums will be conferred on the new metropolitans, all 38 of them, by Pope Benedict XVI. The pallium is a wool band about “two inches wide, worn about the neck,


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