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Don't lose hope, even in hardship, pope tells Middle East Christians

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  • Don't lose hope, even in hardship, pope tells Middle East Christians

    National Catholic Reporter
    March 7 2012


    Don't lose hope, even in hardship, pope tells Middle East Christians

    Mar. 07, 2012
    By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service


    VATICAN CITY -- Pope Benedict XVI urged Christians in the Middle East
    not to lose hope despite the serious difficulties they face.

    "I extend my prayerful thoughts to the regions in the Middle East,
    encouraging all the priests and faithful to persevere with hope
    through the serious suffering that afflicts these beloved people," he
    said.

    The pope made his remarks when he greeted Armenian Patriarch Nerses
    Bedros XIX Tarmouni of Beirut and Armenian bishops from around the
    world attending their synod in Rome.

    At the end of the general audience Wednesday in St. Peter's Square,
    the pope expressed his "sincere gratitude" for Armenian Catholics'
    fidelity to their heritage and traditions, and to the successor of St.
    Peter.

    Such fidelity has always sustained the faithful throughout "the
    innumerable trials in history," he said.

    The majority of Catholics in the Middle East belong to Eastern
    Catholic churches -- the Armenian, Chaldean, Coptic, Maronite or
    Melkite churches.

    In his catechesis, the pope said oftentimes it seems God is silent,
    especially during times of great trial and difficulty.

    "Often in our prayers we find ourselves before God's silence and we
    almost feel a sense of abandonment; it seems that God isn't listening
    or answering," he said.

    But that silence "is not a sign of his absence."

    "The Christian knows well that the Lord is present; he listens even in
    the darkness of pain, refusal and loneliness," he said.

    God knows what each and every person needs and desires even before
    it's voiced in prayer, and God's silence "invites us to deeper faith
    and trust in his promises," he said.

    Silence plays an important part in everyone's relationship with God, he said.

    It is only by carving out quiet time where outside disturbances are
    avoided and an inner silence is cultivated that God's voice can be
    heard and meaning found, the pope said.

    However, that is proving to be very difficult to do today, he said.

    This is not an era that fosters silence and reflection, rather
    "sometimes there's the impression that people are afraid to detach
    themselves even for a moment from the flood of words and images
    filling every day," he said.

    He said Jesus taught his disciples how to pray in silence and how to
    create a space of inner calm deep inside so that God can dwell there,
    so his word can take root there, and "so one's love for him radiates
    out to our mind, our heart and animates our life."

    At the end of his audience talk, the last of a series of talks on the
    prayer life of Jesus, the pope said he was praying for all those
    affected by a March 4 train wreck in southern Poland.

    Speaking in Polish, the pope said he was praying for those who died in
    the catastrophe and that those who were injured would have a speedy
    recovery.

    Sixteen people were killed and 58 others injured, many seriously, near
    the town of Szczekociny when two trains traveling at high speed were
    mistakenly on the same track and collided head-on.

    http://ncronline.org/news/global/dont-lose-hope-even-hardship-pope-tells-middle-east-christians

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