The Georgia bulletin (Atlanta) 1963-current, April 11, 1963, Image 13

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GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY APRIL 11, 1963 PAGE 9 TO THE WORLD Pope Addresses Encyclical To ‘All Men Of...! VATICAN CITY-NC Pope John XXIII's new encyclical on world peace is addressed to all men of good will. In a television broadcast made the day before publicat ion of his long document deal ing with problems of peace in the world, the Pope himself noted that the encyclical called Pacem in Terris in unusual because it is “addressed not only to the episcopate of the Universal Church and to the clergy and faithful of the whole world, but also to 'all men of goodwill.' ” The telecast recorded the Pope’s signing of five copies of the document and was wit nessed by Amleto Cardinal Ci- cognani, Papal Secretary of State, and his two top aides, Archbishop Antonio Samore and Angelo Dell'Acqua, and other leading Vatican officials, other leading Vatican officials. It was shown on Italian tele vision that evening. IN HIS brief commentary, Pope John declared: “The encyclical letter Pa cem in Terris is about to tra verse the vast roads of the world and its understandable that Our mind is full of deep emotion, mainly because of the very theme of the document- peace—which answers the pri mary longing of the human family, and because of the date We have given it, that is Holy Thursday, the day of the Lord's Supper. Oh, how tender were the words of Jesus to His dis ciples before His passion and death ‘pro mundi vita'—for the redemption and salvation of all men. “The light of divine Reve lation which gives living sub stance to thought shines upon the encyclical. But its doctri nal lines are derived also from the intimate knowledge of hu man nature and, for the greater part, come within the sphere of the natural law. This ex plains a characteristic diffe rence of this document, that is that it is addressed not only to the episcopate of the Uni versal Church and to the cler gy and faithful of the whole world, but also to ‘all men of good will*. “Universal peace is a bless ing which interests everyone without exception and it is for that reason that We have ad dressed Ourselves to every one.” MSGR. Jan Willebrands Secretary of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity and a leading figure in the ecumenical movement, took part in a four-day Protestant- Catholic colloquim at the Di vinity School of Harvard Uni versity, Cambridge, Mass. HELPED NEEDED AT ONCE '’DOLLARS for BRICKS*’ TO BUILD ST. PATRICK’S SCHOOL PHENIX CITY, ALABAMA c/o SISTER MARY JAMES “THE encyclical is divided into five parts: relations bet ween men; relations of men and public authority; relations of political communities among themselves; relations between men and individual political co mmunities with the world com munity; and last, a fifth part dealing with immediately un derstood pastoral norms. “In this manner We have sought not only to illustrate the basis of the structure of peace—that is to say the re spect of the order established by God and the protection of the dignity of the human being— but We have also indicated the different levels on which this structure is to be built and, almost, the stones necessary for its construction, excluding no one from the invitation to make his personal contribut ion to it. “But above all, to the sons of the Church, vibrantly echoing the command” of Christ—‘Go and teach’—We say with apost olic zeal: Carry forth peace and spread its benefits. “WE TRUST that men will give a joyful welcome and open their hearts to the message of the encyclical Pacem in Ter ris. Meanwhile We shall follow its progress with Our prayers and with most lively affection which embraces all peoples.” The Pope signed the copies of the encyclical with a pen presented to him on behalf of various Catholic labor organi zations. The copies were to be deposited with the Secretariat of State and die Secretariat of Iriefs to Princes. One remains the personal possession of the Pope. YOUR ADVERTISERS SUPPORT YOUR PAPER SUPPORT YOUR ADVERTISERS “Xr Q, racious & (Convenient oCivin^ n THE HOWELL HOUSE APARTWEHTS 710 P.achlreo. N. E. TR. 4-8638 THE DARLINOTOH APARTMENTS 2025 Peachtree RcL N. E. TR. Efficiencies and One Bedroo Furnished and Unfurnished Buildings Completely Air Condh LONG REALTY CORPORATION. AGI TR. 5-4791 ATLANTJ TO RED AREAS Radio Free Europe Beams Easter Rites GROUP of Holy Name Men following the Communion Breakfast at Sacred Heart, Griffin. Coach Ray Boussard, of Chattanooga, former decatholon champion (1952) was the guest speaker. LOS ANGELES Archdiocese Denies Kueng Cancellation LOS ANGELES (NC) —The Tidings, official newspaper of the Los Angeles archdiocese, has denied that a lecture by Father Hans Kueng at UCLA was “canceled” and that the Swiss theologian was “over ruled” by archdiocesan autho rities. The Tidings acknowledged in an editorial (April 5) that Fat her Kueng had applied to the archdiocese, “in conformity with the ordinary prescriptions of canon law ” for permission to speak at UCLA ” on theolo gical matters.” It said, however, that he ap plied so soon before the tent ative date of the talk that “shortness of time...precluded the processing of the necessari- papers attendant on such per mission.” “The simple fact of the mat ter is that no scheduled talk was canceled. None was actu ally scheduled,” the newspaper said. It added that Father Kueng “in all docility and gracious ness of spirit... assented to the decision.” many, is in this country on a lecture tour. He has received widespread attention for his pleas for greater freedom w ith in the Church. A national controversy was touched off when it was dis closed that officials at the Cat holic University of America, Washington, D. C., had refused to consider Father Kueng and three other prominent the ologians for invitations to speak in a student-sponsored lecture series. St. Nicholas, the fill century NEW YORK (NC) —Special Religious programs, including Pope JohnXXII’s Eastermess- AUTHOR SAYS BY BARRY ULANOV Where do we look for hope when we need it most, In time of distress, in time of danger, in time of crisis? Do we look to our neighbor to supply it, in conversation? Do we ask it of ourselves, in meditation? Do we turn to God, in prayer? Or do we go where all these means are provided — conversation, meditation, prayer — to the great books in which hope is always accessible, in time of peace as in time of war, in time of comfort as of tribula tion? Hope bounds across the cen turies and over the borders of nations in books such as these. Every country, every period can offer its moving parables of hope. But each makes its point in a different way — and none glibly. Lasting comfort doesn't come in the choice of a tablet or a liquid formula. It comes, rather, this way: IN THE “Odessey” of Ho mer, in the tale of a man who must triumph over every pos sible obstacle because of his driving determination to get back to his wife and family, after the terrors of war. In the “Confessions” of St. Augustine, in a searching self- examination that reveals in tu multuous detail the soul of a saint. In Dante's •‘'Hie New Life,” in the extraordinary concep tion of a woman's role in a man’s life, including some of the elements of romantic love, but reaching far beyond these in its noble vision. age, are being broadcast behind the Iron Curtain by Radio Free Europe in connection with Holy In Cervantes’ “DonQuixote,” in the compassionate portrait of the title character, the model for all time of all those hai> rassed little men, all those chi valrous little men, whose urge to do good does not stop at tilting at windmills and who, for all the little they seem to ac complish, make the world a much better place for their be ing in it. In Sir Thomas More's “Uto pia”, in the good order and gracious life the saintly author shows man capable of achiev ing just by using his reason alone. In Pascal’s “Thoughts”, in the range and depth of wisdom which we are shown can come just in random thoughts and fleeting, fragmentary Impres sions. In Fielding's "Joseph An drews,” in the character of Parson Abraham Adams, the most rounded of human beings, the most pugnacious In the ser vice of others, the most titil lating, the most human. In Newman’s “The Idea of a University,” in the glowing tes tament to the place of knowledge in the world, as an end In it self, not as a competitive wea pon in the international market place. In Dostoevsky's ‘"Hie Bro thers Karamazov," most com plex of narratives, most simple in its constant assertion of the resilience of man and of his resistance to rot, Inner and outer. Week and Easter. The RFE Easter season re ligious programs are being be amed to Poland, Czechoslova kia, Hungary, Rumania and Bul garia, the Radio Free Europe Fund said here. BESIDES Pope John's Easter message, the programs origi nating from RFE headquarters in Munich will include Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox ser vices, liturgical music, ser mons and other special fea tures. RFE’s Polish section has or ganized special coverage of Holy Week ceremonies in Rome for broadcast to Poland. In ad dition, a Mass, Polish sermon and Polish hymns will be broad cast from a Polish church in Munich. Other Polish programs will include a morality play, Bible discussions and readings from a 16th century account of a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Czechoslovak programs will include Mass, Pope John’s message and programs for JUNE 23 PHILADELPHIA (NC) —The date for the beatification of Bishop John Neupomucene Neu mann, C. S. S. R., has been set definitely for Sunday June 23. This was announced by Arch bishop John Krol of Philadel phia after receipt of the for mal document from the Sacred Congregation of Rites in Rome. THE ARCHBISHOP, who will head a pilgrimage to the beati fication ceremony, said that three days of prayers in thanks giving will be held in Rome after the event. Eastern Rite Catholics. Pro testant services in New York will be broadcast, as will a spe cial series of 25 religious musi cal programs. THE HUNGARIAN section is broadcasting 15-minute Easter messages three times daily from April 7 to April 16. On Good Friday a special program on Easter customs is being pre sented. A program of religious med itation is being broadcast daily during Holy Week for REF’s Rumanian audience. In keeping with Rumanian Orthodox trad ition, an Easter midnight Mass is being broadcast at midnight April 13. Cardinal Named NEW YORK (NC)—Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, will receive the Gen. Douglas MacArthur Award of the New York commandery of the Military Order of the Foreign Wars in a ceremony here April 16. Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Secretary of State and former Apostolic Delegate in the United States, has agreed to offer one of the Masses of the triduum for the Philadel phia pilgrimage, he said. Bishop Neumann, a 19th century Redemptorist, was a missionary in western New York who became Bishop of Philadelphia in 1852 and during an eight-year reign was famed for establishing Catholic schools into a diocesan system and befriending immigrants. Good Reading Has Spiritual Source 4 Bishop Neumann Beatification Set FOUR PROTESTANT clergymen and two Jewish rabbis were among those on hand at the Catholic University of America, Washington, to honor Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., (center) after he received an honorary doctorate of Sacred Theology. Cardinal Bea, president of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, returned to Germany following the convo cation. The other religious leaders with the Cardinal are: (from the left) Bishop Smallwood E. Cousins of the Bible Way Church, retired Bishop Angus Dun of the Episcopal Church, the Rt. Rev. William F. Creighton, Episcopal Bishop of Washington; Cardinal Bea, the Rev. James B. Ficklen, executive secretary of the Presbytery of Potomac; Rabbi Harry J. Kaufman of Beth Sholom Congregation and Rabbi Lewis A. Weintraub of Temple Israel. The Tidings described Father Kueng as “a scholar of inter national repute and in good ec clesiastical standing.” It said that “to imply, even indirectly, that he is under disapproval of Church authorities is to vio late the basic standards of just ice as well as charity.” The newspaper pointed out that he was given permission “in proper time" several months ago to speak at Loyola University here. It also noted that last year It published a favorable review of his book, "The Council, Reform and Re union." It said “those who would con strue a matter of customary canonical procedure as an in stance of ecclesiastical dis approbation do a profound dis- dervice to a priest of un blemished personal reputat- i __ M ion. 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