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VATICAN
Pope:
just as in Aryanism, today there is the
temptation to deny Christ’s divinity
Benedict XVI
dedicated his 100th general audience to
Saint Cyril of Jerusalem, the author of
a catechism for true Christians, for
whom “doctrine and life are not two
distinct entities but one existential
journey”. The Church’s position on adult
stem cell research

Vatican City (AsiaNews)
– “Denying Christ’s divinity”, which was
at the centre of Aryan heresy, “is still
today a temptation for Christians”. In
order to counter this “integral
catechesis” is needed, through which the
faithful can teach Christianity “which
truly involves our entire existence and
which makes us credible witnesses of
Jesus Christ, truly God and truly man”.
That was the objective which Saint
Cyril of Jerusalem aimed to achieve in
the IV century but which is still valid
today, and which was also at the heart
of the Pope’s reflection during his
general audience today, centred on the
figures of the early Church and the
relevant aspects of their teachings in
today’s world.
Cyril of Jerusalem, a
fundamental figure above all for his
catechesis, was the early father of the
Church to whom Benedict XVI dedicated
his one hundredth general audience of
his pontificate. Encounters which have
given him the opportunity to speak
directly to 2, 280,100 people.
The over 10 thousand
people, who took part in the audience,
where spared the June heat and divided
between St. Peter’s basilica and the
Paul VI audience hall.
The Pope recalled
that Cyril bishop of Jerusalem in the IV
century, “against his will”, was
involved in the “controversies” of the
Eastern Church, but the Pope
particularly underlined his work as a
teacher of the faith, author of 24
catechesis, a true “introduction to
Christianity” and “still today model of
the journey to being Christian”.
Cyril, unjustly
accused of Aryanism, while he was
instead “a man full of faith”, met with
exile three times before he was allowed
to return for good to Jerusalem in 378
“bringing peace and unity once again
among the faithful”.
His catechesis was
not only intellectual but “a journey of
learning how to live in the Christian
community” and his teaching is “an
integral catechesis which involves the
body, soul and spirit, an emblem even
for the Christians of today”. In short
in his teaching “doctrine and life are
not two distinct entities but one
existential journey”. The objective
which we must attempt to reach even
today remains: “learning a Christianity
that really involves our entire
existence”.
At the end of his
audience, greeting the diverse groups
present the Pope reaffirmed his stance
on the subject of stem cell research:
“the position of the church is clear and
supported from science and reason – that
scientific research is promoted and
encouraged, as long as it does not cause
the destruction of human beings, whose
dignity is inviolable from the first
moment of existence”.
PHOTO: Credit CPP |