Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

St. Paul Year To Put Turkey In Limelight

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • St. Paul Year To Put Turkey In Limelight

    ST. PAUL YEAR TO PUT TURKEY IN LIMELIGHT
    By Nieves San Martín

    Zenit News Agency
    Jan 8 2008
    Italy

    Tarsus Needs Church to Accommodate Pilgrims, Says Bishop

    ROME, JAN. 8, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Turkey will have a strategic role in
    the year of St. Paul, since Tarsus was the birth place of the saint,
    reported the coordinators of the jubilee.

    Benedict XVI proclaimed a jubilee year of St. Paul from June 28,
    2008, to the same date in 2009, marking the 2,000th anniversary of
    the apostle's birth.

    An information bulletin about the year said the Church in Turkey is
    preparing "with spirit and a special determination they derive from
    feeling 'one' with the apostle born in Tarsus."

    According to Bishop Luigi Padovese, apostolic vicar of Anatolia,
    Turkey, "St. Paul can be considered the apostle of Christian identity,
    in an era like today when any type of religion can be embraced,
    in a moment in which the many paths toward God are ranked on the
    same level."

    The Turkish episcopal conference, formed by seven bishops, three of
    the Latin rite, two Armenians, one Syrian Catholic and one Chaldean,
    is considering the program for the celebrations.

    The bishops already planned a letter to the faithful of the various
    rites as well as a pilgrimage to Rome.

    The conference has established contact with Greek Orthodox Patriarch
    Bartholomew I of Constantinople and with the Syrian Orthodox and
    Armenian Gregorian Metropolitan Archbishops, in order to organize
    common ecumenical initiatives dedicated to St. Paul, as Benedict XVI
    has suggested.

    "The bi-millennium will serve also to call the attention of the Church
    to the Christian minority communities in Turkey, making them conscious
    of the situation," added Bishop Padovese.

    One of the first goals for Catholics is to obtain permission from
    the Turkish authorities in Tarsus to make a permanent place for
    Christian worship to accommodate the pilgrims who will arrive from
    the entire world.

    Today, there is only one church-museum without a cross. To use the
    building for liturgy, previous permission must be obtained and payment
    must be given to the civil authorities.

    "I asked Prime Minister Erdogan that access to the building, the
    only Christian place in the city which has not been transformed into
    a mosque, may be permitted not only to Catholics, but also to all
    Christians; or that the Christians might be able to acquire land to
    build a church," Bishop Padovese said. "In Tarsus the museum-church
    is not needed, but a church where faithful and pilgrims can feel at
    home and pray."

    "The authorities of Tarsus," he added, "have mixed sentiments: They
    are conscious of the importance of the city for Christians; they are
    proud to be fellow citizens with a first-rate person. But at the same
    time, they show perplexity and discomfort when it comes to handling
    a situation implying religious tourism with special demands."

    --Boundary_(ID_BM3x6GDW4qxma57P0oD JEg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X