Saturday, April 19, 2008

The Scope Today+In New York, Pope calls for 'time for purification'

Leo (July 23 — Aug. 22)

Make a deliberate decision not to fuss about something that has recently taken up far too much of your time and energy. It may not be sorted out yet, but it is on course to a natural resolution.

Gemini (May 21 — June 21)

The passage of time dramatically changes our expectations and desires. What you want now is what will make you happiest in the long run. You're getting that.

Scorpio (Oct. 24 — Nov. 22)

Our most poignant moments tend to come not when something new or unexpected occurs, but when we suddenly look at something that we think we know well and discover a whole new layer of meaning.

Pisces (Feb. 20 — March 20)

There is nothing you can do that is so final and so dramatic that it can fix a certain problem forever more. Time will eventually take care of this issue, with or without you.

Read Phil Booth at boothstars.com or at thestar.com/horoscope.

In New York, Pope calls for 'time for purification'
REUTERS
Pope Benedict XVI smiles as he celebrates Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York April 19, 2008.
April 19, 2008
The Associated Press

NEW YORK – Pope Benedict returned to the clergy sex abuse scandal as he preached today in St. Patrick's cathedral, assuring priests and nuns that he was close to them as they battled the damage left by the scandal.

Addressing some 3,000 people, most of them clergy, he called it a "time for purification" and healing.

"I simply wish to assure you, dear priests and religious, of my spiritual closeness as you strive to respond with Christian hope to he continuing challenges that this situation presents," Benedict said.

He also urged them to co-operate with bishops, who he said were working to resolve the crisis.

Today was the third anniversary of Benedict's election as Pope and he was feted by cardinals and bishops, priests and nuns who jammed the magnificent Gothic church on Fifth Avenue.

He was met outside by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, while former mayor Rudy Giuliani was inside.

Benedict blessed the cathedral with holy water before making his way to the altar of the landmark church. As he walked down the centre aisle, nuns clutched at his robes, showing an enthusiasm for his presence that has been mirrored by much of the American public.

Later today, Benedict was scheduled to speak to seminarians at a youth rally. Then on Sunday, the final day of his trip, he will visit ground zero and participate in a mass at Yankee Stadium.

The Vatican said the German-born Pope came outside from his residence on the Upper East Side Friday night to greet a crowd of more than 500 people who had lined up for hours. He shook hands and blessed the crowd before returning inside.

At the cathedral, Benedict touched on the theme of his trip – Christian hope – saying he wanted to communicate the joy born of faith to a cynical world.

But since the start of his trip Tuesday, Benedict has concentrated on the clergy sex abuse scandal that has shaken the U.S. church. He has said that it is more important to have good priests than many priests.

A top Vatican official now said the Roman Catholic Church is weighing a further change to clean up the clergy: revising church law so predators could be more easily removed.

"It's possible," said William Cardinal Levada, head of the Vatican office that reviews abuse claims against priests worldwide.

"There are some things under consideration that I'm not able to say," Levada told reporters Friday, in a meeting at Time magazine's offices.

It is the latest signal during Benedict's first papal visit to America that he is intent on purifying the priesthood as he affirms traditional Catholic practices and teaching.

He has also spoken privately with some victims in what is believed to be the first time a pontiff has met with people who had been abused by priests.

And he has told bishops the problem had sometimes been "badly handled" – an indirect but clear papal admonition.

Still, Benedict has offered support to America's clergy during his visit.

He said priests who had done nothing wrong had been unfairly tarred by the crisis. More than 4,000 clergy have been accused of molesting minors in the U.S. since 1950.

Abuse-related costs have surpassed $2 billion in that period, with much of the payouts in just the last six years. But most of the recent claims concern wrongdoing that occurred decades ago.

At the height of the scandal, which erupted in 2002 with the case of one predator in the Archdiocese of Boston, the shame was so intense that some priests took off their clergy collars before going out in public. Benedict compared their suffering to "Christ in his Passion."

However, morale has been improving as the intensity of the crisis has eased.

Seminary rectors say that their students are eager to show through their service to parishioners that the priesthood can still be a noble calling.

Yet Catholic clergy face other challenges beyond fallout from the abuse problem.

The priesthood has been shrinking for decades. More than 3,200 of the 18,600 U.S. parishes don't have resident priests, according to the Center for Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.

Dioceses have been hiring recruiters to travel overseas to find clergy candidates. The number of priests from other countries has grown so steadily that some seminaries are adding English classes, hiring accent reduction tutors and providing courses on American culture.

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