02-10-11

Kernramp in Fukushima allicht slechts topje van ijsberg

Michael Banach.jpgBRUSSEL (KerkNet/CNS) – De Vaticaanse vertegenwoordiger Michael Banach (foto) sprak op een bijeenkomst van het Internationale Atoomagentschap in Wenen de vrees uit dat de kernramp in Fukushima (Japan) slechts het topje dreigt te zijn van een ijsberg. De kernramp van maart 2011 en de daaropvolgende tsunami kostte 24.000 mensen het leven. Meer dan 200.000 moesten verhuizen. 

Lees meer...

23-04-11

Paus beantwoordt kijkersvragen op televisie

pape television.JPGROME (KerkNet/KatholiekNederland/RadVat) – Paus Benedictus XVI beantwoordde vrijdag in het programma ‘A Sua Immagine’ (‘in zijn beeld’) van de Italiaanse openbare omroep Rai Uno als eerste paus in de geschiedenis enkele vragen van kijkers. Het programma werd vorige week in de bibliotheek van het Vaticaan opgenomen. De 84-jarige paus ging in op zeven vragen van geselecteerde deelnemers. Er waren tweeduizend vragen. 

Lees meer...

07-04-11

COMECE over 'Arabische lente' en godsdienstvrijheid

BRUSSEL (KerkNet) – Op initiatief van de Raad van Bisschoppenconferenties van de Europese Unie (COMECE) overleggen Europese bisschoppen nog tot morgen vrijdag 8 november in Brussel over godsdienstvrijheid. Mgr. Ad van Luyn, bisschop van Rotterdam en COMECE-voorzitter, stelde in zijn openingswoord dat de vraag over de toekomst van onze energievoorziening door de recente tsunami en kernramp in Japan opnieuw brandend actueel is. Woensdagavond was er vooral aandacht voor de (r)evoluties in het Midden-Oosten en Noord-Afrika.

Lees meer...

Mgr. Léonard gaat voor in herdenkingsviering voor slachtoffers Japan

japan, malta, mechelen, brussel, st.-michiels- en st. goedelekathedraal, aardbeving, tsunami, solidariteit, andre-joseph leonard, bisschoppen

Op maandag 11 april om 18 uur in de St.-Michiels- & St.-Goedelekathedraal van Brussel

Lees meer...

21-03-11

Aartsbisschop van Tokio vraagt hulp voor buitenlanders

Peter Takeo Okada.jpgBRUSSEL (KerkNet/Ucanews) – Aartsbisschop Peter Takeo Okada (foto) van Tokio vraagt kerken, kloosters en andere katholieke instellingen in Japan om buitenlandse slachtoffers van de aardbeving en de vernietigende tsunami bij te staan. Sinds de natuurramp keerden ontelbare buitenlanders, onder wie vele katholieken, naar hun land terug. 

Lees meer...

16-03-11

Bisschoppen van Japan bezoeken Sendai

caritas japan.jpgBRUSSEL (KerkNet/RadVat) – De bisschoppen van Japan bezoeken op woensdag 16 maart het zwaar getroffen bisdom Sendai, met vijfhonderd kilometer kuststreek. ‘Radio Vaticaan’ meldt dat de bisschoppen er hun voorjaarsbijeenkomst houden om de gelovigen en de plaatselijke bevolking een hart onder de riem te steken. Zij willen ook nagaan op welke manier zij de slachtoffers best kunnen bijstaan. Volgens de bisschoppen is het land in een ‘traumatische shock’ sinds de catastrofe. 

Lees meer...

14-03-11

Paus Benedictus XVI bewondert Japanners

pape angelus.JPGROME (KerkNet/Kipa-Apic) – Paus Benedictus XVI sprak zondag na het wekelijkse Angelusgebed zijn bewondering uit voor de waardigheid en moed van de Japanners te midden van de crisis. Benedictus vertrouwde gelovigen toe dat hij bijzonder sterk onder de indruk was van de beelden over de rampzalige gevolgen van de aardbeving in Japan. De natuurramp kostte minstens 10.000 mensen het leven. “Ik bid voor de slachtoffers en hun families en ik dring aan om alle mogelijke hulp te verlenen.” 

Lees meer...

28-04-10

Enslaved by porn

We talk to a leading member of a Church-sponsored anti-pornography initiative in the U.S. who says that addiction to pornography has created a "sexual Tsunami" that is destroying families and society: >>

22:45 Gepost door Wally in ENGLISH | Permalink | Commentaren (1) | Email dit | Tags: tsunami, gezin, porn, samenleving, vs, verenigde staten, pornografie | |  del.icio.us | | Digg! Digg |  Facebook |

18-03-10

Geen Paasvieringen in Chileense kerken

BRUSSEL (KerkNet/RadVat) – Volgens de Chileense bisschoppen wordt Pasen straks noodgedwongen niet in de kerken gevierd.

 

File:Puerto varas church.jpg

De kerk van Puerto Varas voor de aardbeving


Volgens een mededeling van de bisschoppenconferentie werd het merendeel van de Chileense kerkgebouwen immers volledig vernield of te ernstig beschadigd door de zware aardbeving en de daaropvolgende naschokken. Naast vele bekende, historische kerken werden vooral kleine kerkgebouwen op het platteland en in de dorpen door de aardbeving en de tsunami getroffen.

(Kerknet)

16:24 Gepost door Wally in Actualiteit | Permalink | Commentaren (0) | Email dit | Tags: tsunami, chili, kerken, pasen, bisschoppenconferentie, paasvieringen, aardbevingen | |  del.icio.us | | Digg! Digg |  Facebook |

21-01-10

The Spiritual Side of the Suffering in Haiti, by Carl Anderson

The Spiritual Side of the Suffering in Haiti

Tragedy Can Lead to Increased Faith in God


By Carl Anderson

 

tj3001_1600_320.jpg (320×240)

Carl Anderson


NEW HAVEN, Connecticut, JAN. 18, 2010 (Zenit.org).- All of us have been horrified in recent days by the scenes of death and destruction in Haiti. Millions of us have sought way to alleviate the suffering there. No doubt thousands of homilies will be given in the coming days to help us understand how a loving God could allow such suffering.

One of the more controversial "explanations" in the United States came from a Protestant evangelist who stated that Haiti had been "cursed" ever since its founders had "sworn a pact with the devil" to achieve the nation's independence from France. His comments, as one might expect, caused a storm of controversy.

Certainly there is ample evidence in the Old Testament of nations being punished by God for idolatry and injustice and some Christians continue to look to this Old Testament history for explanations of world events.

But Catholics today are more likely to look in a different direction to understand how God deals with human sinfulness. And they need look no further than at the crucifix above the altar in their church. God has freely and lovingly united himself with human suffering in the sacrifice of his Son upon the cross.

Those evangelists who so often quote John 3:16 in their preaching might also remember what is said in the next verse: "God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved."

The tragedy in Haiti is likely to have long-lasting effects, not only for the people who have lost loved ones there, but for an entire generation that has witnessed its destruction. And it is important that we get the right understanding of what has occurred there.

Many news reports compare Haiti to the recent devastation of Hurricane Katrina in the U. S. Gulf Coast, or the 1985 Mexico City earthquake. But the tragedy in Haiti is more likely to have a long-term psychological impact closer to that of the Lisbon earthquake of 1755. That earthquake was followed by a tsunami and fire that destroyed nearly the entire city and killed nearly a million people.

The catastrophe in Lisbon changed the thinking of many of the leading intellectuals of the 18th century including Voltaire, Kant and Descartes. The earthquake occurred on the feast of All Saints in a predominately Catholic country and it caused many Christians throughout Europe to question their belief in God.

In the days to come we may see something similar. And so Haiti is today a test of our faith in God and our commitment to our fellow man.

In thinking about Haiti this week I could not help thinking also of the work of Father Damien of Molokai "the Leper Priest" who was canonized last autumn by Benedict XVI. Several years ago I had the opportunity to visit Molokai in Hawaii, and while visiting the parish church there I saw a photograph of an elderly woman taken in the 1930s. She had lost her ears and nose, and all her toes and fingers to leprosy. She was also blind. Yet every day, I was told, she prayed the rosary by holding the beads between her teeth.

 

a240194.jpg (391×580)


Not long after that, I was speaking with a missionary priest who mentioned that he had opened a home for people suffering from leprosy. Each day as he celebrates Mass there, an elderly man, also blind from the disease, says during the prayer of the faithful, "Father, God, thank you for all the good things you have given me."

Philosophers and theologians will continue to search for explanations in the hope of answering the questions we all have concerning the problem of suffering in the world. But perhaps the best answer comes from those whose suffering goes beyond what we are able to imagine, and yet these believers experience the reality that God has united himself to them in their suffering.

In his homily during the canonization Mass of Father Damien, Benedict XVI said this: "Jesus invites his disciples to the total giving of their lives, without calculation or personal gain, with unfailing trust in God. The saints welcome this demanding invitation and set about following the crucified and risen Christ with humble docility.

"Their perfection, in the logic of a faith that is humanly incomprehensible at times, consists in no longer placing themselves at the center, but choosing to go against the flow and live according to the Gospel."

Ultimately, this is the key to understand the events of Molokai and Haiti. And it will be the measure of our response as Christians.



* * *


Carl Anderson is the supreme knight of the Knights of Columbus and a New York Times bestselling author.