Those were the words of Cardinal Ravasi in preparation for a new initiative to be called "The Courtyard of the Gentiles" after a suggestion by Pope Benedict XVI; an opportunity for believers and non-believers to speak to one another without judgement or condemnation.
Catholics, blessed with the way of Jesus Christ, the Way the Truth and the Life, have a responsibility before all others do to speak and act in love, inviting others to Faith. Pope John Paul II, to be beatified in Rome this May, said it well: "The Church proposes, the Church does not impose".
Pope Benedict used the phrase in a recent address as a suggestion.
As John L. Allen Jr., describes it: "Inspiration came from Benedict XVI’s speech to Roman Curia in December 2009, when the pontiff looked back on his trip that year to the Czech Republic -- statistically, at least, the most secularized society in Europe, with the highest percentage of avowed atheists and agnostics.
"Reflecting on the experience, Benedict said: 'I think the church today should open a sort of "Courtyard of the Gentiles,” ' referring to the space in the ancient Jerusalem temple where non-Israelites could enter."
In photo: Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Culture.
No comments:
Post a Comment