'Christians must commit themselves to society'
Photo: Darrin Zammit Lupi.
The feast of Christ the King was celebrated yesterday in Swatar, where a congregation gathered outside the parish church on a mild enough evening to allow for an outdoors activity.
The feast, the last one in the liturgical calendar before Advent, was attended by President George Abela and Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi, among others, and involved singing, acting and other animation.
The theme of the celebration - Open To God; Open To Our Brothers - invited everyone to take on their responsibility towards justice and solidarity wherever they were.
It was chosen because the celebration focused on Pope Benedict XVI's encyclical Caritas In Veritate. In fact, the programme included a feature explaining its main points, with emphasis on globalisation, the financial crisis, immigration and the environment.
Archbishop Paul Cremona told the congregation that "we have to build a world that strongly resembles the one we are waiting for", characterised by peace, happiness, love and the presence of Jesus Christ.
Christians had a responsibility towards human beings because everyone was the image of Christ - "the rest, colour, culture and religion, is just shell" - and also towards the environment, which is the creation of God, Mgr Cremona said.
The Church's special mission was to mediate the love God had for everyone in this world, following the example of Jesus Christ, he continued.
Mgr Cremona augured that the yearly feast of Christ the King would be "a meeting of Church's social commitment... I propose that we leave from here as Christians, who want to commit ourselves to society".
A couple of houses in Swatar displayed lit crucifixes on their façades, possibly following a priest's e-mailed appeal to do so.
Fr Paul Camilleri urged the Maltese to display the crucifix in windows and doorways on the feast of Christ the King in reaction to the controversial judgment by the European Court of Human Rights, which ruled that the presence of the crucifix in Italian classrooms violated parents' rights to a secular education for their children.
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Franco Farrugia
Nov 25th 2009, 08:08
@ Mr Di Bernardino: 'Viva Kristu Re'? Even those who crucified Him, a few moments before, were welcoming him into Jerusalem with palms in their hands, remember? I hardly think it is a question of speaking about 'Catholic Europe' or 'Catholic country' because these do not exist and they should not exist! We have 'Catholics' and we have 'people' and we have 'country' and we have 'Europe' but not 'Catholic this and Catholic that'! And let's be thankful for this because I am one of those who believe that at the end of the day, it will be religion which will bring this world into its final crisis!
Joseph Di Bernardino
Nov 24th 2009, 14:33
Finally a truly Catholic and traditional message from our Archbishop! Alas, how sad that believing that Catholic must commit themselves to society, he and most of his European confreres, not the least of which included the late Pontiff, Pope John Paul II, seemed to temporarily suspend their commitment to Catholic Europe in the insane rush to join the godless EU, which as even Pravda has described of late, is a reincarnation of the Old Soviet Union. This shameless organization was even in 2005, as Malta rushed headlong into this political abyss, threatening legal action against Pope Benedict XVI for "crimes against woman", the secularist kulturkampf for being against the murder of the unborn. How an undemocratic pro-abortion pro-sodomy socialist elite would serve the causes of Christ the King will go down in history as one of the great faux's of the Successors of Peter. The EU has now shown its true colours, and Malta should call their bluff and leave claiming breach of contract. With Italy, Polan, Czech, the Pope should now call for a League of Catholic Europe - perhaps in a few years Spain and perhaps even Portugal will wake up and join. Viva Kristu Re!