Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 8 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1963
INCLUDING PONTIFF
Most Edifying Audience
Hears Apostolic Preacher
FROM COUNCIL
Lutheran Cleric
Sees Unity Hope
A cloakroom attendant outside the Vatican’s Hall of Bene*
dictions arranges a cape and camauro (winter hat worn by
popes) left by His Holiness Pope John XXIII on his way to
an audience. Pope John checks his hat and cloak with the
rest of the prelates, priests and people—but he is given no
ticket.
PROMOTING CATHOLIC PRESS
‘Penance Reading’
Urged by Priest
VATICAN CITY -NC— The
only man who by right and
duty may preach to the supreme
teacher of the Church, Pope
John XXIII, is a bright and
bearded little friar from Milan.
He is Capuchin Father Ilar-
ino da Milano, O.F.M. Cap.,
Apostolic Preacher. He is the
48th man to hold that office
since it was instituted over
four centuries ago.
"YOU HAVE no idea how
difficult it is,” confided the
58-year old priest whose re
gular audience includes not only
the Pope but all the cardinals
in Rome, the prelates of the
Church’s centeral administrat
ive staff and the superiors gen
eral of the religious orders in
Rome.
“They are an edifying audi
ence,” he says.’’They all listen
to me like so many novices.”
But he can never forget the
towering dignity and intelli
gence of his listeners, and it is
because of this that he finds the
greatest difficulty in his duties.
WHEN he delivers a sermon,
he is constantly aware that he
is "speaking of the divine truths
to the Teaching Church.”
Therefore, he says, "the tone
of the sermon may not be court
ly,' but must be prudent and
practical.”
It is such a delicate and
exacting task to address spirit
ual exhortations to the highest
personalities of the Church that
Father llarlno will sometimes
spend days debating the use of
a single expression in his ser
mons.
Working in his study at the
generalate of the Capuchin
Fathers in Rome, he spends the
Leroy's Auto
Service
Tune Up - Front End
Alignment
Automatic Transmission
4011 P’tree Rd. CE. 7-12S8
IT
COSTS
SO LITTLE
TO PLACE A
CLASSIFIED AD
IN THE
GEORGIA
BULLETIN
PHONE 231-1281
FATHER DA MILANO
whole year studying and medi
tating to prepare a relatively
small number of sermons. He
normally will give no more
than 20 sermons in a year’s
time.
THE SCHEDULED sermons
of the Apostolic Preacher are
given on the Fridays in Lent,
once a week during Advent and
during the annual spiritual re
treat which is usually in the
fall. By exception he preached
May devotions in 1960 and 1961.
Pope John has ordered
several improvements in the
circumstances of the Apostolic
Preacher’s activities which
Father Ilarino says have in
creased their effectiveness.
The time for the sermons was
changed from 11 a.m. to 9 a.m.
so that the office hours in the
Vatican would not have to be
broken. The Pope also had them
moved to the Matilda Chapel,
which is larger than the Throne
Room where they were usually
given, and had loudspeakers in
stalled.
THESE changes together with
the Pope’s own good example
have greatly Increased the
attendance at the conferences,
according to Father Ilarino.
Before beginning his ser
mons, the Apostolic Preacher
kneels before the Pope and
asks for his blessing. The Pope
sits in the doorway of the
chapel’s sacristy, hidden from
view. This is done according to
tradition. For centuries the
popes sat for these sermons
in what is called a "bussola,”
which is a small, screened-off
room.
After receiving the Pope’s
blessing, the Apostolic Preach
er goes to the pulpit, genuflects
before the crucifix mounted
there and recites the Hail Mary
with those attending the con
ference. He always remains
seated while he delivers his
sermons. He seldom speaks
for more than 30 minutes.
Father Ilarino, like his seven
predecessors, has published his
sermons to this distinguished
audience in book form. The
book, entitled "The Church in
its Hierarchy,” gives a rare
insight into the duties of those
involved in the universal
government of the Church.
WHEN THE Apostolic
Preacher has finished, he goes
again to the Pope and kisses
his slipper in ceremonial sign
of reverence. On these occas
ions Pope John often makes
some comment on the sermon.
Once the Pope said to Father
Ilarino: "What was wrong with
you this morning? You were
going as fast as an automo
bile." The Capuchin then had
to explain to the Pope that
one of the cardinals kept
looking at his watch and, sup
posing that he had some ap
pointment to keep, he hurried
through his sermon.
The Institution of the office
of the apostolic preacher dates
back to the reign of Pope Paul
IV (1555-1559). A historian of
these times wrote:
"This great Pontiff had the
question of the reform of the
Church greatly at heart and
he preached the reform of the
ecclesiastical hierarchy in the
consistories and congregations
and other meetings of the cardi
nals and prelates.”
THE regular practice of the
sermons was begun in 1558
and was called "an odious pro
vision” by the cardinals, who
attended them only under com
pulsion.
The apostolic preachers
since that time have come from
many different religious ord
ers, but chiefly from the Jesuits
and the Capuchins. An apostolic
brief published by Pope Bene
dict XIV on March 2, 1743,
assigned the post permanently
to the Capuchins.
A Jesuit historian relates
how Father Benedetto Palmi,
S.J., Apostolic Preacher during
the reign of St. Pius V (1566-
1572), was disliked by the pa
pal court because of his frank
criticisms. When some prelates
went to the Pope to complain
of the Apostolic Preacher’s
"excessive liberties,” the Pope
replied: "It is precisely Our
wish that Our preacher have
this confidence. This is why
We call on him to preach:
that he may admonish Us and
you frankly concerning our dut
ies."
FATHER Ilarino, named
Apostolic Preacher by Pope
John XXIII in 1959, combines
learning with wit. Those who
know him well say that he
comes honestly by his name,
Ilarino, which is the diminut
ive form of a word said to
denote a cheerful character
(Latin "hilaris,” English
"hilarious”).
Freshmen
At Cullman
CULLMAN, Ala.—Three At- ,
lanta area students at Sacred
Heart College have been se
lected for membership in the
International Relations Club.
They are the Misses Christina
Rauberts of Atlanta, and Ro
berta Rae White and Lois Jane
Woytych, Decatur.
Miss Rauberts is the daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. K. L.
Rauberts, 4089 Navajo Trail N.
E. in Atlanta and a member of
Our Lady of Assumption Pa
rish. She is majoring in speech
and drama.
Miss White, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William R. White, 331
Glendale, Decatur, is a mem
ber of St. Thomas More Parish
and majoring in elementary
education.
Miss Woytych's parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. Woy
tych of 2189 Tanglewood Road.
She is a member of Immacu
late Heart of Mary Parish and
also majoring in elementary
education.
SUSAN Farran is the Outstand
ing Freshman Woman in jour
nalism for the fall quarter at
the University of Georgia. Su
san was member of *62 gradu
ating class at St. Pius X. She
was on the school newspaper,
Golden Lines, in the position
of the news bureau director.
Theta Sigma Phi, professional
sorority for women in jour
nalism, made the award to Su
san at the Georgia Press In
stitute.
PROVIDE PRIESTS
Continued From Page 1
Franciscans engaged in the uni
versity work here just as in the
high Middle Ages; the Redemp-
torists covering miles of mis
sionary territory in the foot
steps of their latest saint, Bles
sed John Nepomucene Neu
mann; and the Jesuits provid
ing the spiritual exercises of
Saint Ignatius Loyola at the
Retreat House, - you realize
that is the logical place for
the inspiration and dreams of
these great men to come true.
Building a bridge betweenwhite
and Negro Christians, just as
many of their earlier fathers
did, are the Passionist Fathers
and the Society of African Mis-
sioners. The Verona Fathers
who come from northern Italy
find Northern Georgia a fertile
field for their work, and the
young Glenmary community at
Dahlonega is a welcome exten
sion southward of the Ameri-
FBI EXPERT
SOMERVILLE, N. J. (NC)—
American schools must play a
larger role in teaching youth
about communism, an authority
on the subject told educators
here.
AT VATICAN
The Ninth Congress of the
International Federation of Lit
tle Singers to be held next July
in Spain at Santiago deCompos-
tella and Madrid provides an
opportunity for area choir boys
to mix their music with a little
world travel.
On June 28, a delegation rep
resenting the American Fede
ration of Catholic Boys’ and
Men’s Choirs will leave New
York by air for a two-week
tour of Portugal and Spain which
will include attendance at the
two sessions of the Congress,
the first in Santiago de Com-
postella, the second in Madrid.
MSGR. THOMAS W. Lyons,
assistant director of education
for the Washington Archdiocese
and director of the American
Federation of Little Singers,
will lead the group. The last
congress, held two years ago in
Rome, was attended by 4,500
boys and men from more than
20 countries, including a dele
gation of 92 from the Ameri
can Federation in the United
States. Sixty of the group were
boys between nine and 15.
Reservations may be made
by sending a deposit of $50 to
Card Party
Home and School Association
of St. Plus X High School will
sponsor a card party, Tuesday
8 p.m. March 19, 1963 at the
school cafetorium for the bene
fit of the Athletic Association
Stadium fund. All parents are
cordially invited to attend.
Continued from page 1
with "the respect of the Pope
for the fact that non-Catholics
share certain Divine truths and
also practice them.”
"The Pope has shown open
dislike of dogmatism and con-
fessionalism that faces only
the past,” he said. "He is giv
ing up, of course, nothing of
the Church’s concern—the Pope
is a Catholic, surely.
"But he obviously expects
from some bishops an intellec
tual and spiritual attitude that
is quite difficult or impossible
for them to acquire. His pri
mary goal is truth, spoken with
charity.”
"IN CONVERSATION with
Orders
can home mission Impetus first
felt in the Ohio River Valley.
"In addition, two of our down
town parishes are in the care
of the Marists and Francis
cans where so many of the
problems of urbanization find
their solution in the compas
sionate welfare of these two
great orders.
"In all, the religious orders
working side by side with gene
rations of diocesan priests have
added a rich Catholic diversity
to the Church. We are grateful
for their zeal, and pray that
they will share fully In the re
ligious vocatldns that God Is
planting in the spiritual red
clay of young lives ,*»
Next week The Georgia Bul
letin will relate the contribution
made to the Archdiocese by the
various congregations of sia-
Willlam C. Sullivan, assistant
director of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, said "it is ap
palling that so many noncom
munists remain woefully unin
formed about communism.”
Monsignor Lyons, 1721 Rhode
Island Avenue, N.W., Washing
ton, D. C.
Founder Dead
PARIS (NC)—A thousand Lit
tle Singers of Paris sang at a
Requiem here for their founder
and director, Msgr. Fernand
Maillet.
one Council Father, the Pope
professed himself as ’a learn
er,* —one who daily learned by
listening to the opinions of oth
ers in the council,” Pastor
Lackmann added.
"When I was a young man,
it was quite impossible for me
to believe that a Pope could
learn,” he said.
Beyond the role of Pope John,
Pastor Lackmann cited the
openness of council delibera
tions and the authority granted
the college of all bishops, as
well as regional episcopal con
ferences, as indications of "a
decentralization of great mag
nitude which has already be-
gun.
"THE POPE kept himself
almost entirely in the back
ground,” he said. "He was
never present in the council
hall during the deliberations.
When he intervened, it was for
the sole purpose of giving gui
dance to the council’s opera
tions and bringing to a satis
factory conclusion the opinion
of a majority which was not
quite the required two-thirds."
The ecumenical orientation of
the Council Fathers’ speeches
indicated that "Catholic mono
logue has been replaced by dia
logue,” Pastor Lackmann stat
ed.
HE NOTED that Augustin
Cardinal Bea, president of the
Secretariat for Promoting
Christian Unity, had maintained
close contact with non-Catholic
observers, given than seats of
honor at the council sessions
and furnished them with copies
of all topics to be covered in
deliberations.
"There were about 20 speak
ers every day of the session,”
he said. "When Council Fath
ers spoke, one could hardly
assume they would forget the
separated brethren who were
listening from seats right be
hind their backs.”
On Reds
"IN FACT, one erf the funda
mental strengths of its true na
ture and aims”, he told the New
Jersey Council of Education
(March 8).
Sullivan said "education is
the ultimate answer, because in
the final analysis the struggle
against communism will not be
decided on the battlefield or in
the courts. This conflict will end
where it began—in the minds of
men.”
"Our young people,” he said,
"must not only be anticommu
nist, but also understand why
they oppose communism, how
best to combat it, and what, as
citizens of a free society, they
stand for.
"And there is no group more
influential, more dedicated, and
more qualified for this task than
the members of the teaching
profession,” he concluded.
MILAN (NC)—Penance could
be added to other means of pro
moting the Catholic press, if the
counsels of a theologian here
ever gain popularity.
An article in the Rivista del
clero It alia no published here
and signed by Father Giovanni
Cereti holds that priests in the
confession may be yeildlng to
the temptation of "easy and
standardized penances turned
out almost mechanically.”
BASING himself on directives
issued by the Council of Trent,
Father Cereti suggests that the
penance should be made to fit
the fault by opposites.
He says, for example, that
businessmen and industrialists
might be given the encyclical
Mother and Teacher to read as
a penance.
Penances given according to
opposites, he declared, could
include such things as saying
something good about a person
who was slandered, practicing
mortification for a sin of glut
tony, or giving alms for a sin
of avarice.
PENITENTS who give evi
dence of "tepidity and mater
ialism”, he recommended,
might be urged to subscribe to
some Catholic publication.
Place Your Classified Ad Today
In The Georgia Bulletin
Phone: 231-1281
★ ★■A****** *★★★★★*
RESERVED SEATS
AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL
”Brilliant, exciting, spectacular and totally absorbing/”
—McCalls magazine
METRO GOLDWYN MAYER
00000003
PRESENT
HOWTHE
SEATS AT BOX OFFICE OR BY MAIL
STARTS
FRIDAY
March 15 th
/ffa/ifi+i
eaaaaazaa
Ml MACMmt »»»*! N I
All INU • OA OIA1 <u > )*»\
BOX OFFICE
OPENS
Daily: 10 a.m.
Sunday: 1 p.m.
•SCHEDULE OF RESERVED SEAT PERFOR
MANCES AND PRICES:
NIGHTS at 8:00 - Sun. Thru Thurs.: Orchestra
$2.20 Balcony $1.75, Fri., Sat. and Holidays:
Orchestra $2.50, Balcony $2.00.
MATINEES at 2:00 - Wednesday: Orchestra
$1.75, Balcony $1.25, Sat,, Sun. and Holidays:
Orchestra $2.20, Balcony $1.75.
• ALL PRICES INCLUDE TAX
MONASTERY
MILK AND EGGS
Pet Milk Dairy
Buys The Entire Production of Fresh Milk
Produced by The Purebred Jersey Herd
on The Dairy Farm of Our Lady Of
The Holy Ghost Monastery, Conyers.
For Convenient Home Delivery In
Atlanta Call 636-8677
PET MILK CO.,
DAIRY DIVISION
IT’S A LONG WAY TO ERITREA...
No, ERITREA isn’t TIPPERARY spelled backwards. It’s a
hot, tropical country along the Red Sea ... At TESSENEI, near
/vSt 4116 Sudan border » the Pastor is try-
^ ing to make do with one poor build-
■ ^ ing for a church, rectory and school.
The Catholics are ashamed not to
have a decent church . . . They are
trying to build one with little money
and their own labor. The pastor glad*
ly accepts the torrid climate, the ex
posure to insects, reptiles and tropical
disease . . . Will you make a sacrifice
to give him a proper church? $3,000
is needed to complete the building
. . . Your help in any amount is earn
estly asked.
The Holy Father's Mission Aid
for the Oriental Church
THE COMING OF PATRICK
“God’s ear to hear me,
God’s word to speak for me,
God’s hand to guard me,
God s way to lie before me . . .
With this spirit ST. PATRICK landed in Ireland in 432 A.D.
to begin one of the most amazing missionary apostolates of all
time. In 30 years, he and his helpers built 700 chapels and
churches, consecrated 700 bishops, ordained 3,000 priests . . .
We feel a strong missionary kinship with him, for our ASSO
CIATION, with your generous help, has been building churches
and chapels for almost forty years, sometimes at the rate of 200
a year . . . Would you like to build one as a MEMORIAL TO A
LOVED ONE?
EASTER FIRE
HIGH ON A HILL at Tara, PATRICK boldly kindled the
Paschal fire before the Druid high-priest cou’.d light his pagan
blaze. Thus the FIRE OF FAITH was lit In Ireland never to burn
out . . . You can help this same fire burn in our Near East lands
through an EASTER GIFT to the missions. If you give in some
one else’s name, we shall notify them with our special EASTER
GIFT card . ..
MISSION CHAPELS: Vestments ($50), .Monstrance
($40), Chalice ($40), Ciborium ($40), Tabernacle ($25),
Stations of the Cross ($25), Censer ($20), Sanctuary
Lamp ($15). Altar Linens ($15), Sanctuary Bell ($5).
FOR SISTERS: A nun’s habit costs $12.50; her shoes,
$5: incidentals for a year. $7.50.
MEDICAL NEEDS FOR A MISSION: $75 provides a
complete MEDICAL KIT. For $5, $10, $20. S25, you can
provide DRUGS, SPLINTS. INOCULATIONS.
SCHOOL SUPPLIES: A desk costs $4. A mission school
BLACKBOARD costs $1.50. For $5 we can provide
BOOKS. CATECHISMS or SCHOOL SUPPLIES.
A STRINGLESS GIFT enables us to place the help
where most needed.
MASS STIPENDS: Often the priest’s only daily support.
FOR PALESTINE REFUGEES: $10 buys a FOOD
PACKAGE which lasts for a month. $2 provides a
warm blanket.
FIRST COMMUNOX: It costs $10 to outfit a child for
FIRST COMMUNION.
Select the GIFT you prefer. SEND US. with your check or
money order, the NAME and ADDRESS of the person in whose
favor you are making the gift. WE’LL SEND A GIFT CARD
TO THAT PERSON IMMEDIATELY, enclosing a card with
pressed flowers from the HOLY LAND
lMl1}earSst0lfesios^j^ji
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPcLLMAN, President
Ms«r. Joseph T. Ryan, .‘iat’l Sec’y
Send oil communication to:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WEIFARO ASSOCIATION
480 Lex inf ton Ave. at 46th St. New York I 7, N. Y.
Religious
Assist Archdiocese
ters.
School Role Urged
Little Singers Meet
In Spain In Summer