Sent
to Fr. Joseph Mandia
Know
what? I found the book written about it. Just today in Catholic Centre. THE
FACE OF GOD, by Paul Badde. In the cover, it says "When the face of the
Shroud of Turin is laid over the face of the Veil of Manoppello, the two images
form a perfect match." Very interesting read!
On Apr 17, 2013 5:50
PM, "PEMICA" <4pemica@gmail.com> wrote:
Joey,
This is the visit I was talking about. It was in 2006 not
2009.
Peter
PILGRIMAGE TO THE
SHRINE OF THE HOLY FACE IN MANOPPELLO (ITALY)
ADDRESS OF HIS
HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Friday, 1 September
2006
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Thank you for this most cordial welcome. I see that the
Church is a large family. Wherever the Pope goes the family meets with great
joy.
For me this is a sign of lively faith, of communion and of
the peace that faith creates, and I am deeply grateful to you for this welcome.
Thus, I see on your faces the full beauty of this Region of Italy here.
A special greeting to the sick: we know that the Lord is
especially close to you, helps you and accompanies you in your sufferings. You
are in our prayers, and pray for us, too!
I offer a special greeting to the young people and
children making their First Communion. Thank you for your enthusiasm and for
your faith.
As the Psalms say, we are all "seeking the Face of
the Lord". And this is also the meaning of my Visit. Let us seek together
to know the Face of the Lord ever better, and in the Face of the Lord let us
find this impetus of love and peace which also reveals to us the path of our
life.
Thank you, and my best wishes to you all!
***
Venerable Brother in the
Episcopate,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
First of all, I must once again say a heartfelt
"thank you" for this welcome, for your words, Your Excellency, so
profound, so friendly, for the expression of your friendship and for the deeply
meaningful gifts: the Face of Christ venerated here, for me, for my house, and
then the gifts of your land that express the beauty and generosity of the
earth, of the people who live and work here, and the goodness of the Creator
himself. I simply want to thank the Lord for today's simple, family meeting in
a place where we can meditate on the mystery of divine love, contemplating the
image of the Holy Face.
I extend my most heartfelt gratitude to all of you present
here for your cordial welcome and for the dedication and discretion with which
you have supported my private pilgrimage, which nevertheless, as an ecclesial
pilgrimage, cannot be entirely private.
I greet and thank in particular, I repeat, your
Archbishop, a longstanding friend. We worked together in the Theological
Commission. And in many conversations I always learned from his wisdom, and
also from his books.
Thank you for your gifts which I very much appreciate as
"signs", as Archbishop Forte has called them.
Indeed, they are signs of the affective and effective
communion which binds the people of this beloved Abruzzi Region to the
Successor of Peter.
I address a special greeting to you, priests, men and
women religious and seminarians gathered here. I am particularly glad to see a
large number of seminarians: the future of the Church in our midst. Since it is
impossible to meet the entire diocesan Community - perhaps that will be for
another time - I am glad that you are representing it, people already dedicated
to the priestly ministry and the consecrated life or who are on the way to the
priesthood.
You are people whom I like to think of as in love with
Christ, attracted by him and determined to make your own life a continuous
quest for his Holy Face.
Lastly, I address a grateful thought to the community of
the Capuchin Fathers who are offering us hospitality and who for centuries have
cared for this Shrine, the goal of so many pilgrims.
During my pause for prayer just now, I was thinking of the
first two Apostles who, urged by John the Baptist, followed Jesus to the banks
of the Jordan River, as we read at the beginning of John's Gospel (cf. 1:
35-37).
The Evangelist recounts that Jesus turned around and asked
them: ""What do you seek?'. And they answered him, "Rabbi...
where are you staying?'". And he said to them, "Come and see"
(cf. Jn 1: 38-39).
That very same day, the two who were following him had an
unforgettable experience which prompted them to say: "We have found the
Messiah" (Jn 1: 41).
The One whom a few hours earlier they had thought of as a
simple "rabbi" had acquired a very precise identity: the identity of
Christ who had been awaited for centuries.
But, in fact, what a long journey still lay ahead of those
disciples!
They could not even imagine how profound the mystery of
Jesus of Nazareth could be or how unfathomable, inscrutable, his
"Face" would prove, so that even after living with Jesus for three
years, Philip, who was one of them, was to hear him say at the Last Supper:
"Have I been with you so long, and yet you do not know me, Philip?".
And then the words that sum up the novelty of Jesus' revelation: "He who
has seen me has seen the Father" (Jn 14: 9).
Only after his Passion when they encountered him Risen,
when the Spirit enlightened their minds and their hearts, would the Apostles
understand the significance of the words Jesus had spoken and recognize him as
the Son of God, the Messiah promised for the world's redemption. They were then
to become his unflagging messengers, courageous witnesses even to martyrdom.
"He who has seen me has seen the Father". Yes,
dear brothers and sisters, to "see God" it is necessary to know
Christ and to let oneself be moulded by his Spirit who guides believers
"into all the truth" (cf. Jn 16: 13). Those who meet Jesus, who let
themselves be attracted by him and are prepared to follow him even to the point
of sacrificing their lives, personally experience, as he did on the Cross, that
only the "grain of wheat" that falls into the earth and dies, bears
"much fruit" (Jn 12: 24).
This is the path of Christ, the way of total love that
overcomes death: he who takes it and "hates his life in this world will
keep it for eternal life" (Jn 12: 25). In other words, he lives in God
already on this earth, attracted and transformed by the dazzling brightness of
his Face.
This is the experience of God's true friends, the saints
who, in the brethren, especially the poorest and neediest, recognized and loved
the Face of that God, lovingly contemplated for hours in prayer. For us they
are encouraging examples to imitate; they assure us that if we follow this
path, the way of love, with fidelity, we too, as the Psalmist sings, will be
satisfied with God's presence (cf. Ps 17[16]: 15).
"Jesu... quam bonus te quaerentibus! -
How kind you are, Jesus, to those who seek you!". This is what we have
just sung in the ancient hymn "Jesu, dulcis memoria" [Jesus,
the very thought of you], which some people attribute to St Bernard.
It is a hymn that acquires rare eloquence in the Shrine
dedicated to the Holy Face, which calls to mind Psalm 24[23]: "Such is the
generation of those who seek him, who seek the face of the God of Jacob"
(v. 6).
But which is "the generation" of those who seek
the Face of God, which generation deserves to "ascend the hill of the
Lord" and "stand in his holy place"?
The Psalmist explains: it consists of those who have
"clean hands and a pure heart", who do not speak falsehoods, who do
not "swear deceitfully" to their neighbour (cf. vv. 3-4). Therefore,
in order to enter into communion with Christ and to contemplate his Face, to
recognize the Lord's Face in the faces of the brethren and in daily events, we
require "clean hands and a pure heart".
Clean hands, that is, a life illumined by the truth of
love that overcomes indifference, doubt, falsehood and selfishness; and pure
hearts are essential too, hearts enraptured by divine beauty, as the Little
Teresa of Lisieux says in her prayer to the Holy Face, hearts stamped with the
hallmark of the Face of Christ.
Dear priests, if the holiness of the Face of Christ
remains impressed within you, pastors of Christ's flock, do not fear: the
faithful entrusted to your care will also be infected with it and transformed.
And you, seminarians, who are training to be responsible
guides of the Christian people, do not allow yourselves to be attracted by
anything other than Jesus and the desire to serve his Church.
I would like to say as much to you, men and women religious, so that your activities may be a visible reflection of divine goodness and mercy.
"Your Face, O Lord, I seek": seeking the Face of
Jesus must be the longing of all of us Christians; indeed, we are "the
generation" which seeks his Face in our day, the Face of the "God of
Jacob". If we persevere in our quest for the Face of the Lord, at the end
of our earthly pilgrimage, he, Jesus, will be our eternal joy, our reward and
glory for ever: "Sis Jesu nostrum gaudium, qui es futurus praemium: sit
nostra in te gloria, per cuncta semper saecula".
This is the certainty that motivated the saints of your
Region, among whom I would like to mention in particular Gabriel of Our Lady of
Sorrows and Camillus de Lellis; our reverent remembrance and our prayer is
addressed to them.
But let us now address a thought of special devotion to
the "Queen of all the saints", the Virgin Mary, whom you venerate in
the various shrines and chapels scattered across the valleys and mountains of
the Abruzzi Region. May Our Lady, in whose face - more than in any other
creature - we can recognize the features of the Incarnate Word, watch over the
families and parishes and over the cities and nations of the whole world.
May the Mother of the Creator also help us to respect
nature, a great gift of God that we can admire here, looking at the marvellous
mountains surrounding us. This gift, however, is exposed more and more to the
serious risks of environmental deterioration and must therefore be defended and
protected. This is urgently necessary, as Archbishop Forte noted and as is
appropriately highlighted by the Day of Reflection and Prayer for the
Safeguarding of Creation, which is being celebrated by the Church in Italy this
very day.
Dear brothers and sisters, as I thank you once again for
your presence and for your gifts, I invoke the Blessing of God upon you and
upon all your loved ones with the ancient biblical formula: "May the Lord
bless you and keep you: may the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be
gracious to you: may the Lord lift up his countenance upon you and give you
peace" (cf. Nm 6: 24-26). Amen!
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