Benedict XVI has described Cardinal Joachim Meisner as a “passionate shepherd and pastor” in a message read out at the cardinal’s funeral.
The Pope Emeritus said he had spoken to Cardinal Meisner the previous day and at first “could not believe” he had died.
What struck him most in those last conversations, he said in the message, was the cardinal’s “natural cheerfulness” and “inner peace”.
Benedict XVI said it had been “hard for him to leave his office … at a time when the Church had a pressing need for shepherds who would oppose the dictatorship of the zeitgeist, fully resolved to act and think from a faith standpoint”.
He added: “I have been all the more impressed that in this last period of his life he learned to let go, and live increasingly from the conviction that the Lord does not leave his Church, even if at times the ship is almost filled to the point of shipwreck.”
Benedict XVI noted that two things in particular had made Cardinal Meisner “increasingly happy”. One was seeing the joy of young men experiencing forgiveness in Confession.
The other was a “perceptible increase” in Eucharistic adoration. He said the cardinal had died while praying, the breviary having “slipped from his hands”. It showed, Benedict XVI said, that he had died as he had lived: “With his face towards the Lord and in conversation with him.”
The note, translated by Bishop Michael Campbell of Lancaster, was read out by Archbishop Georg Gänswein, Benedict’s personal secretary, at Cologne Cathedral. Cardinal Meisner, who died aged 83, was one of four cardinals who had submitted a dubia to Pope Francis asking for clarification of Amoris Laetitia.
Catholics lead protests against Satanic monument
Catholics in a city in Minnesota are resisting a proposed Satanic monument in a memorial park for fallen soldiers.
A black cube with Satanic symbols and an offering bowl have been proposed for the park in Belle Plaine.
Fr Brian Lynch, parish priest at Our Lady of the Prairie, gathered for prayer in the park in June with more than 50 Catholics.
Two days later, about 40 of the faithful joined Fr Lynch as he testified against the proposed monument before the Belle Plaine city council.
Meanwhile, more than 30 Catholics, including members of the Archdiocese of St Paul and Minneapolis’ Catholic Watchmen initiative, attended Mass and prayed in Eucharistic Adoration at the parish.
“Sometimes these things which are evil can really, maybe, wake some people up. We really have to take our faith seriously and live it,” Fr Lynch told the archdiocesan newspaper, the Catholic Spirit.
The Satanic Temple, which proposed the cube, said it celebrates the “metaphorical construct” of Satan as “the ultimate rebel against tyranny”, not as a symbol of evil.
Debt hampers aspiring religious
About four in 10 people discerning religious life in the United States are barred from formation because of student debt, according to the Labouré Society, which seeks to help aspiring Religious pay off loans.
Some orders, such as the Jesuits and Paulist Fathers, offer to pay off loans once entrants have been ordained, but others, such as the Dominicans’ Eastern province, say they can no longer afford to.
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