Sunday, 10 February 2013

Season of the Lent Entrance to Lent Sunday - The wedding of Cana

A message from Fr. Dr. Antoine Tarabay:

Dear parishioners and friends of St Charbel’s Parish,
On this Sunday of the Wedding of Cana, where Jesus turned water into wine, we prepare to enter the Season of Lent asking the Lord to look upon us and hear our prayers  during this holy season. By the good works He inspires, may we discipline our bodies and be renewed in spirit.

To read our edition of Kadishat for this week with Arabic translations, please click on the link below:

Please click here to view/download the full Kadishat newsletter.


Feast of St Maroun 
Today, we celebrate the feast of our spiritual father, St Maroun. St Maroun lived a life of poverty preaching the Gospel to the hermits who lived with him and all the faithful in the area who came to seek his counsel. He lived his life knowing that he was not born for this world, but for heaven.
On this feast, we ask St Maroun to intercede for us and to protect the Maronites all over the world and especially in Lebanon and the Middle East. May he always inspire us to set our gaze on heaven alone knowing that everything else perishes.

Ash Monday
Ash Monday is the first day of Lent for the Maronite Church. As Catholics, we are required to fast on Ash Monday and abstain from eating meat.

Mass times at St Charbel's Parish are 6.30am, 7.30am, 6pm and 8pm (English).

May this Season of Lent be blessed and bring you closer to Jesus.

In God’s Love,
Fr. Dr. Antoine Tarabay

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21st Year—Number 1047 Sunday 10/02/2013
Season of the Lent
Entrance to Lent Sunday—The wedding of Cana

Sunday’s Readings: Roma 14: 14-23 & John 2: 1-11

Revealed his glory
“ ‘On the third day there was a wedding in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there. Jesus and his disciples had also been invited to the wedding. When the wine gave out, the mother of Jesus said to him, ‘They have no wine.’ And Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, what concern is that to you and to me? My hour has not yet come.’ His mother said to the servants, ‘Do whatever he tells you.’ Now standing there were six stone water-jars for the Jewish rites of purification, each holding twenty or thirty gallons. Jesus said to them, ‘Fill the jars with water.’ And they filled them up to the brim. He said to them, ‘Now draw some out, and take it to the chief steward.’ So they took it. When the steward tasted the water that had become wine, and did not know where it came from (though the servants who had drawn the water knew), the steward called the bridegroom and said to him, ‘Everyone serves the good wine first, and then the inferior wine after the guests have become drunk. But you have kept the good wine until now.’ Jesus did this, the first of his signs, in Cana of Galilee, and revealed his glory; and his disciples believed in him.’ ” John 2: 1-11

Reflection of the Week

Our bond with God
Today we begin the season of Lent with the marriage at Cana in Galilee where Jesus changed water into wine. So, at the beginning of his ministry, Christ is embarking on a new and intimate relationship with his people – like a marriage. Here Jesus miraculously provides wine where later he will provide his own blood.

This Gospel reminds us that God will provide all that we need – better than we might imagine possible. It also invites us to take an active look into our communities and our families to know how effectively we are responding to the call to be united with one another and with Christ our Saviour.
Jesus was invited

Jesus would not come unless he is invited; he never forces himself in. Sometimes we fail to invite Jesus yet we expect Him to do something new in our lives. The fact remains that Jesus can only save those who have invited him to come into their situations and circumstances. If Jesus was not invited to the wedding the account of a miracle at a wed-ding in Cana would not have been a reality. This also explains the words of the Saviour as re-corded by John in the book of Revelation (3:20) where we see the Lord standing and knocking at the door and expecting us to open and have him invited for dinner not at our table but in your hearts.

Mary
Mary is the catalyst for the beginning of Jesus’s ministry. It is in response to her appeal for help that his work begins. Jesus’s ministry is a response to basic human needs. The celebrants at the wedding actually represent all of us. Sometimes in our lives we are at zero point in various ways; we are thrown into chaos, gloom, scarcity and grieving of all that makes life worthwhile. We just need to go to Mary who invites us to be a catalyst in the lives of those we love.

The miracle
The little miracle - water turned into wine - points to the big miracle - life resourced from its divine source. The little miracle is possible be-cause God's creation is not closed off from its Creator; it's open to God's influence and activity within it. Even more, the big miracle - salvation - means that God's creation is not closed off from its Creator; its life can be reconnected with its divine source, it can begin to live out of God; it can begin to become the new creation when there will be no more death because all creation will be alive with God's life.

Our bond with God
The wedding at Cana points to our marriage with God which is all about being one and connected with Him. This is where the first letter of St. Paul to the Corinthians (1 Cor.12:4-11) draws its strength. For St. Paul we are different parts making up a body and to each a special function is given. We are simply instructed that as members of the body of Christ we should be responsive to our particular callings and to contribute our share in the growth of the church. Our unity as members of the Church is reflective of the marriage union where a man and a woman becomes one.


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 Wine

Wine gives everything just that little bit more vitality, people enjoy everything a little more, it enhances the experience of life. So if one wants to imagine life enlivened, enhanced, lifted to a new level, given a new quality, lived with a new joy and intensity and awareness and openness to God and to people and to creation - wine is a good image.

That's why the prophets so often imagined abundance of wine as a feature of the messianic age to come. This is why the miracle of the wine at Cana is the first of Jesus' miracles. It declares: the messianic age has come. Jesus is introducing into the ordinary life of people like those at the wedding feast that messianic enhancement of life that the prophets predicted. The luxury of the miracle - the extravagant abundance of remarkably good wine - is the whole point. This is God's extravagantly generous provision for human salvation.

                                                                                                 Ref: frbonnie.wordpress.com
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 Saints of the Week

Saint Valentine,
Priest and Martyr (+268)

Maronite Feast Day: February 14

St Valentine was a holy priest in Rome, who, with St Marius and his family, assisted the martyrs in the persecution under Claudius II. He was apprehended, and sent by the emperor to the prefect of Rome, who, on finding all his promises to make him renounce his faith ineffectual, commanded him to be beaten with clubs, and afterward to be be-headed, which was executed on the 14th of February. Pope Julius I, is said to have built a church near Ponte Mole to his memory.
Valentine's Day or Saint Valentine's Day is a holiday celebrated on February 14 by many people throughout the world. In the West, it is the traditional day on which lovers express their love for each other by sending Valentine's cards, presenting flowers, or offering confectionery. The holiday is named after two among the numerous Early Christian martyrs named Valentine. The day became associated with romantic love in the circle of Geoffrey Chaucer in the High Middle Ages, when the tradition of courtly love flourished.


Saint Charbel’s Entering
the Hermitage (1875)
Maronite Feast Day: February 15

Only one thing mattered to St Charbel — to obey the voice of the One who summons: Come, follow Me. When his uncle and tutor, Tanios, tried to persuade him to return from entering religious life, he could not succeed; and his mother, who had accompanied her brother, taking his hand in hers, and shaking it energetically, said to him: “Well then, if you should not be-come a good religious, return with me to the house!” He received the habit one week after entering the monastery, and chose the name of Charbel, a martyr of the Antioch church in the year 107.

There followed two years of a severe novitiate, completed in the monastery of Annaya, which on its mountaintop seemed to breathe the stars. The young monk was sent to prepare for the priesthood farther away, at Saint Cyprian of Kfifan, where he was ordained six years later at the age of 31.

He returned to Annaya afterwards, where for sixteen years he was in every way a model of perfection.

In 1875, at forty-seven years of age, he retired to its nearby hermitage, where he would remain until his death. In that hermitage, he grew closer to God each day through his prayers and fasting. He desired to be there alone with God more than anything else and each day he lived a special union with Jesus. In the silence he heard the word of God and it guided him ever closer to a perfect relationship with Him

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COMMUNION AND WITNESS
APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION for the MIDDLE EAST (17)

 
PART TWO (7)

Young people and children

62. I greet with paternal solicitude all the children and young people of the Church in the Middle East. My thoughts turn to the young who are searching for long-term human and Christian direction for their lives. At the same time I think of all those whose youth has been marked by a gradual move away from the Church, leading them to abandon the practice of religion.

63. Dear young people, I encourage you to cultivate a true and lasting friendship with Jesus (cf.
Jn 15:13-15) through the power of prayer. The firmer that friendship becomes, the better it will serve as a beacon to protect you from youthful failings (cf. Ps 25:7). Personal prayer is strengthened by frequent recourse to the sacraments, which make possible an authentic encounter with God and with one’s brothers and sisters in the Church. Do not be afraid or ashamed to bear witness to your friendship with Jesus among your family and in public. In doing so, always be respectful to-wards other believers, Jews and Muslims, with whom you share belief in God, the Creator of heaven and earth, as well as lofty humane and spiritual ideals. Do not be afraid or ashamed to be a Christian. Your relation-ship with Jesus will help you to cooperate generously with your fellow citizens, whatever their religious affiliation, so as to build the future of your countries on human dignity, which is the source and foundation of freedom, and on equality and on peace in justice. By loving Christ and his Church, you will come to discern wisely those values in modern culture that will bring you fulfilment and those evils that gradually poison your life. Try not to be seduced by materialism and by some social net-works whose indiscriminate use can lead to a distortion of genuine human relations. The Church in the Middle East counts greatly on your prayer, enthusiasm, creativity, know-how and deep commitment to serving Christ, the Church, society and especially the other young people of your age.[64] Do not hesitate to take part in every initiative that will help you to strengthen your faith and to respond to the particular call that the Lord addresses to you. Do not hesitate to follow Christ’s call by choosing priestly, religious or missionary life.

64. Dear children, need I remind you that, in your journey with the Lord, particular honour is due to your parents (cf. Ex 20:12; Dt 5:16)? They are your educators in faith. God has entrusted you to them as a marvellous gift, for them to care for your health, your human and Christian education, and your intellectual formation. For their part, parents, teachers and guides, and the public institutions have a duty to respect the rights of children from the moment of their conception.[65] As for you, dear children, learn how to obey God here and now by obeying your parents, as the child Jesus did (cf. Lk 2:51). Learn also to live the Christian life in your families, at school and elsewhere. The Lord does not forget you (cf. Is 49:15). He is always at your side and he wants you to walk with him by being responsible, courageous and kind (cf. Tob 6:2). Bless the Lord God in everything, ask him to guide your steps and to make your paths and plans prosper; always remember his commandments and do not let them fade from your heart (cf. Tob 4:19).

65. Once again I would like to stress the education of children and young people, which is a matter of the utmost importance. The Christian family is the natural setting for children and young people to grow in faith, their first school of catechesis. In these troubled times, educating a child or a young person is not easy. This indispensable task is made all the more complex by the particular socio-political and religious situation of the region. That is why I want to assure parents of my support and my prayers. It is important that children grow up in a united family that lives its faith simply and with conviction. It is important for children and young people to see their parents pray. It is important that they go with them to church, and that they see and understand that their parents love God and wish to know him better. And it is especially important that children and young people see their parents’ charity towards those in need. In this way they will understand that it is good and beautiful to love God; they will enjoy going to church and be proud to do so, for they will have experienced personally that he is the solid rock on which they can build their lives (cf. Mt 7:24-27; Lk 6:48). For those children and young people who do not have this good fortune, my hope is that they will find authentic witnesses on their journey through life, friends who will help them to meet Christ and to discover the joy of following him.

Next Sunday: PART THREE

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Sunday, 3 February 2013

Season of the Epiphany - Faithful Departed Sunday

A message from Fr. Dr. Antoine Tarabay:

Dear parishioners and friends of St Charbel’s Parish,

On this Sunday of the Faithful Departed in the Maronite Church, we pray for all the members of our Church and all those who have reposed in the hope of resurrection to eternal life. Give them repose, O Lord, with Your saints where the light of Your face shines and have mercy on us, for You are good and the Lover of mankind.

To read this week's Kadishat in PDF with Arabic translation, please click on the link below:
Please click here to download the full Kadishat newsletter.

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Adult Faith Formation Classes
St Charbel’s Parish is launching its Adult Faith Formation Classes for 2013 on Saturday 23 February 2013 at 4pm at St Charbel’s Youth House.

This program is aimed at people from the non-Catholic faith wanting to learn about Catholicism in order to receive the Sacrament of Baptism and become members of the Catholic Church.

We are also inviting any Catholic adults who would like to learn more about the faith to attend these classes which run on Saturday afternoons.

If you are interested or if you know somebody who would like to be baptised, please contact St Charbel’s Monastery on 9740 0998.

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St Charbel's Youth Association
On Wednesday 30 January, St Charbel's Youth Association held its Annual General Meeting and Elections for 2013.

We thank the 2012 committee for their contribution to the life of the youth on our parish and we congratulate the new committee asking the Lord to bless them with graces as they work together to serve in His Church.

I encourage all young people to become more involved with our youth groups to learn more about the faith and to grow in holiness.

As Pope Benedict XVI said addressing the thousands of youth gathered in Bkerke, Lebanon on 15 September 2012:

"You have a special place in my heart and in the whole Church, because the Church is always young! The Church trusts you. She counts on you! Be young in the Church! Be young with the Church! The Church needs your enthusiasm and your creativity!"

In God’s Love,
Fr. Dr. Antoine Tarabay

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21st Year—Number 1046 Sunday 03/02/2013
Season of the Epiphany
Faithful Departed Sunday
Sunday’s Readings: 1 Thessalonians 5: 1-11 & Luke 16: 19-31

He is comforted here
“‘There was a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and who feasted sumptuously every day. And at his gate lay a poor man named Lazarus, covered with sores, who longed to satisfy his hunger with what fell from the rich man’s table; even the dogs would come and lick his sores. The poor man died and was carried away by the angels to be with Abraham. The rich man also died and was buried.

In Hades, where he was being tormented, he looked up and saw Abraham far away with Lazarus by his side. He called out, "Father Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue; for I am in agony in these flames."

But Abraham said, "Child, remember that during your lifetime you received your good things, and Lazarus in like manner evil things; but now he is comforted here, and you are in agony. Besides all this, between you and us a great chasm has been fixed, so that those who might want to pass from here to you cannot do so, and no one can cross from there to us." He said, "Then, father, I beg you to send him to my father’s house for I have five brothers that he may warn them, so that they will not also come into this place of torment." Abraham replied, "They have Moses and the prophets; they should listen to them." He said, "No, father Abraham; but if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent." He said to him, "If they do not listen to Moses and the prophets, neither will they be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.’ ” Luke 16: 19-31

Reflection Of The Week

My Choices
In today’s Gospel Jesus warns the self-righteous money-loving Pharisees about the consequences of trusting in the traditions of man and worldly riches rather than in the Word of God. He also made it clear that people cannot be convinced of the truth through miracles such as someone being raised from the dead, but are to be convicted of the truth through the agency of God’s Word. This Gospel warns us also as Christians and makes us take a choice... my choice as a Christian with resources is to extend my hand, and offer my voice and my advocacy for people like Lazarus in a world which doesn't see their faces or recognise their presence.

In this story, the rich man was clothed in purple and fine linen, illustrating his desire to spare no expense for his own personal desires. The rich loved to be clothed in purple; it was the colour of royalty and seen as a luxury only for the very rich. Fine linen was a woollen garment worn as a status symbol. This man feasted every day, his feasting was so common he hardly even thought of it as feasting. The rich man had a daily supply of fattened calves.

Could you be clothed in the finest clothing and feasting sumptuously every day while fifty feet away a man lay in tattered clothing, sick and starving? Could this rich man not even send a servant out to help this poor man in and bathe, feed, and tend to him?

However, Lazarus has a name; the rich man doesn't. Lazarus means "God helps," and that's what the Bible says consistently about the poor. God cares about them, helps them. In the Bible, God sides with those in need. Making the beggar a man with a name and leaving the rich man nameless turns the world's standard on its ear! In our world, the wealthy have names and the poor are anonymous and faceless. If this story tells us how Jesus looks at things, the name Lazarus may surprise us, if not disturb us.

After all his worldly glories, there he is, in hell, and there's a "chasm." Now, what's that -- a distance between heaven and hell? Or is it a chasm dug by the rich man? All his days he's distanced himself from Lazarus and his kind, and now he's got permanent distance -- not only from Lazarus, but from God.

The rich man’s sin is not that he caused Lazarus' hunger, or that he kicked him as he walked through the gate every day, or that he mistreated him in any way. His sin is not that he did bad things to Lazarus but that he did nothing. He goes to hell, not because of crimes against the poor, hungry man but because he just didn't care.

In God’s eyes, to be rich is not always a bad thing as we can use the riches we have to help others. It is essential that if we are blessed with success, talents and fortune, we should not take all of these for granted but ac-knowledge that God has given us an opportunity to better ourselves spiritually while physically helping others.

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9th February
Feast day of St. Maroun
Father and Patron Saint of
the Maronite Church

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Thought of the Week
 
Do you use an alarm clock to wake you up in the morning? A lot of alarm clocks have a button on them called a snooze alarm. When your alarm goes off, you can hit that button and go back to sleep. In about ten minutes, the alarm will go off again. You can just keep on doing this and go right on sleeping.

Maybe it is nice to get that extra sleep, but there are two problems with snooze alarms. The first is that if you keep on hitting the snooze alarm, you may be late or miss out on something completely. The second problem is that if you keep hitting the snooze alarm, you may get so used to the sound of the alarm that you don’t even hear it at all and you will sleep right through the alarm.
 
Did you know that God sometimes sounds a "wake up" alarm in our lives? He speaks to our heart and says, "It is time to wake up and follow me." Some people hit the snooze button and say, "Not now Lord, call me again -- a little bit later." Some people hit that "snooze button" so many times that they get to where they don’t even hear God’s voice. When they finally wake up, they find out that it is too late.

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 Saint of the Week

Saint Maroun,
"Historia Religiosa", written by Theodoret of Cyrrhus around 440 A.D. is our only source on St. Maroun's biography. The author describes the life of hermits in Cyrrhus and vicin-ity. In chapter 16 the author men-tions that St. Maroun was one of those hermits. He had a tremendous influence on his disciples.

The diocese of Cyrrhus is in northern Syria. In those days, the Romans had divided Syria into three administrative regions: Syria Prima (Ca.le-Syria), Syria Secunda (Salutaris) and Syria Tersa (Euphratia) with Antioch, Apamea, and Hierapolis (or Membej) as their capitals respectively. The regions between south of Apamea and the southern Lebanese borders were divided into two parts: Lebanese Phoenicia with Homs - and then Damascus - as the metropolis, and Maritime or coastal Phoenicia with Tyre as the metropolis. The Diocese of Cyrrhus, with Theodoret as its bishop, was west of Euphratia. Cyrrhus was at a distance of two days north east of Antioch and about 70 kms north west of Aleppo. This diocese seat was Antioch founded by St. Peter prior to his departure to Rome. Theodoret mentions that when St. Maroun decided to lead a life of isolation, he went to a rugged mountain halfway be-tween Cyrrhus and Aleppo. There was a huge pagan temple for god Nabo of which was derived the name of the mountain and the neighboring village Kfarnabo.

St. Maroun consecrated the temple for divine christian worship. The pattern of his life had a great influence on his disciples who followed suit and were "as plants of wisdom in the region of Cyrrhus"

St. Maroun's sainthood became known throughout the Empire. St. John Chrysostom sent him a letter around 405 A.D. expressing his great love and respect and asked St. Maroun to pray for him.

St. Maroun died around 410 A.D. and willed to be buried in St. Zabina's tomb in Kita in the region of Cyrrhus. However, his will was not executed because people from different villages wanted to have him buried in their towns.

Theodoret's description of St. Maroun's burial place points to the populous town of Barad in the proximity of Kfarnabo. A huge church was built in that town around the beginning of the fifth century A.D. (25).

Inside this church there was a sarcophagus, which possibly contained St. Maroun's body. According to a Maronite tradition, the followers of St. Maroun carried the relics of the Saint, especially the skull, to St. Maroun's Monastery or "Beit Maroun" built in 452 A.D. between Hama and Aleppo in Syria.

The skull was carried to St. Maroun's Monastery in Kfarhai, Batroun - Lebanon around the turn of the eighth century. Patriarch Douaihy mentions: "When Youhanna (John) Maroun settled in Kfarhai, he built an altar and a monastery after St. Maroun's name and put St. Maroun's skull inside the altar to heal the faithful. That's why the monastery is called "Rish Mro" (Syriac) meaning "Maroun's head".

Later St. Maroun's skull was taken to Italy. In 1130 A.D. one of the Benedictine monks came to the region. This monk was the rector of the Cross Afonastery near Foligno-Italy. During his visit he heard about St. Maroun's skull, and upon returning home he publicized St. Maroun's virtues. As a matter of fact, a church was built after St. Maroun's name in Foligno. The Bishop of Foligno carried the skull to the city in 1194 A.D. and put it in the church of the diocese. The faithful in the city made a statue of silver for St. Maroun and put the skull in it. During his stay in Italy in 1887, Bishop Youssef el-Debs was given some relics of St. Maroun's skull by the Bishop of Foligno.

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COMMUNION AND WITNESS
APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION for the MIDDLE EAST (16)

PART TWO (6)

The family
 
58. The family, a divine institution founded on marriage as willed by the Creator himself (cf. Gen 2:18-24; Mt 19:5), is nowadays exposed to a number of threats. The Christian family in particular is faced more than ever before with the issue of its deepest identity. The essential properties of sacramental marriage – unity and indissolu-bility (cf. Mt 19:6) – and the Christian model of family, sexuality and love, are in our day, if not called into question, at least misunderstood by some of the faithful.

There is a temptation to adopt models contrary to the Gospel, under the influence of a certain contemporary culture that has spread throughout the world. Conjugal love is part of the definitive covenant between God and his people, fully sealed in the sacrifice of the cross. Its character as mutual self-giving, even to the point of martyrdom, is clearly expressed in some of the Eastern Churches, where each spouse receives the other as a “crown” during the marriage ceremony, which is rightly called a “liturgy of coronation”. Conjugal love is not a fleeting event, but the patient project of a lifetime. Called to live a Christ-like love each day, the Christian family is a privileged expression of the Church’s presence and mission in the world. As such, it needs to be accompanied pastorally[58] and supported in its problems and difficulties, espe-cially in places where social, familial and religious bearings tend to grow weak or to be lost.[59]

59. Christian families of the Middle East, I invite each of you to be constantly reborn through the power of God’s word and the sacra-ments, so as to become more fully a domestic Church which is a place of formation in faith and prayer, a seedbed of vocations, the natural school of virtues and ethical values, and the primary living cell of society. Always look to the Holy Family of Nazareth,[60] which had the joy of receiving life and demonstrating its piety by the observance of the Law and the religious practices of the time (cf. Lk 2:22-24, 41). Look to this family which knew anxiety when the child Jesus was lost, as well as the pain of persecution, emigration and hard daily labour (cf. Mt 2:13ff.; Lk 2:41ff.). Help your children to grow in wisdom, in stature and in grace under the watchful eye of God and of men (cf. Lk 2:52); teach them to trust the Father, to imitate Christ, and to let themselves be guided by the Holy Spirit.

60. After these brief reflections on the shared dignity and vocation of man and woman in marriage, my thoughts turn in a particular way towards women in the Middle East. The first creation account shows the essential equality of men and women (cf. Gen 1:27-29). This equality was damaged by the effects of sin (cf. Gen 3:16; Mt 19:4). Overcoming this legacy, the fruit of sin, is the duty of every human person, whether man or woman.[61] I want to assure all women that the Catholic Church, in fidelity to God’s plan, works to advance women’s personal dignity and equality with men in response to the wide variety of forms of discrimination which they experience simply because they are women.[62] Such practices seriously harm the life of communion and witness. They gravely offend not only women but, above all, God the Creator. In recognition of their innate inclination to love and protect human life, and paying tribute to their spe-cific contribution to education, healthcare, humanitarian work and the apostolic life, I believe that women should play, and be allowed to play, a greater part in public and ecclesial life.[63] In this way they will be able to make their specific contribution to building a more fraternal society and a Church whose beauty is ever more evident in the genuine communion existing among the baptized.

61. In those unfortunate instances where litigation takes place between men and women, especially regarding marital questions, the woman’s voice must also be heard and taken into account with a respect equal to that shown towards the man, in order to put an end to certain injustices. Here there needs to be a more sound and fair implementation of Church law. The Church’s justice must be exem-plary at every level and in every field in which it is exercised. It is absolutely vital to ensure that litigation on marital questions does not lead to apostasy. Christians in the region must also have the opportunity to apply their proper law in the area of marriage and in other areas without restriction.

Next Sunday: Young people and children

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