Thursday, March 23, 2006

As promised, a beautiful photo of Cardinal Schonborn in Rome


"Italian Archbishop of Bologna Carlo Caffarra (L) talks with Austrian Cardinal Christoph Schonborn as they arrive at the Synod Hall at the Vatican. [AFP/Patrick Hertzog]"

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

An important Cardinal Schonborn resource


Kathpedia has an information page on Cardinal Schonborn (translated into rough English here) that we previously overlooked when creating this site.

It includes, in addition to a short biography, a geneology of the other Church prelates in the Von Schonborn family tree, a list of the Cardinal Schonborn's works, as well as his contact information in Vienna.

Thanks to Roland of Kath.net for the tip.

Cardinal Schonborn to attend first Consistory of Pope Benedict


Cardinal Schonborn will presumably be attending the first consistory called by Pope Benedict this week, in which case it is safe to assume he is already in Rome.

We here at Schonborn Sightings will be watching news coverage of the event to find any pictures or interviews with the Cardinal during his time with his fellow Princes of the Church.

In the meantime, here is an informative article on the consistory:

ROME (UCAN) -- Cardinals from 67 countries are arriving in Rome for a one-day extraordinary meeting, a consistory at which Pope Benedict XVI has invited them to make "free interventions on the problems that most interest the Church and the world."

The March 23 event, sources say, is a kind of "brainstorming" session for the cardinals to discuss contemporary hot issues in the Church and the world.

The German-born pontiff introduced this kind of event at the World Synod of Bishops last October when participants were invited to intervene freely during a one-hour session at the end of each working day. The exercise met with such approval that the pope seems to have extended it to the College of Cardinals. He views it as an exercise in collegiality at the Church's highest levels.

His predecessor, John Paul II, called six extraordinary sessions of the College of Cardinals to discuss major problems facing the Church, but they usually lasted more than one day. Convened in 1979, 1982, 1985, 1991, 1994 and 2001, they were an important instrument in his government of the Church.

At those meetings, the cardinals focused on problems ranging from the reform of the Roman Curia and the Holy See's financial situation, to the Church and contemporary culture, celebration of the Great Jubilee in 2000 and prospects for the Third Millennium.

On Feb. 22, when Pope Benedict announced his call for this gathering of cardinals, he did not refer to it as a consistory, but simply called it a one-day "meeting for prayer and reflection" in advance of the public consistory on March 24 at which he will create 15 new cardinals, including three from Asia.

Even so, few in Rome take his description of the meeting at face value. Most find it hard to believe the pope would convene the Church's 193 cardinals, including the cardinals-elect, for a simple day of prayer and reflection.

Observers in Rome sense the Holy Father has something else in mind for the participants, including the 20 from Asia: Hong Kong (1), India (5), Indonesia (1), Japan (2), Korea (2), Lebanon (1), Philippines (3), Syria (1), Taiwan (1), Thailand (1) and Vietnam (2).

This intuition was confirmed within two weeks when Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the College of Cardinals and the Vatican's secretary of state, sent a letter informing all the cardinals that Pope Benedict does indeed have a specific purpose for the gathering. Cardinal Sodano explained that the pope wants them to speak freely at the consistory, to be held behind closed doors, on problems of "most interest" to the Church and the world.

Read the rest.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Cardinal Schonborn's Fifth Catechetical Lecture on Creation and Evolution now available in German


The Fifth Lecture was delivered on 12 February at St. Stephansdom, Vienna.

Click here to read it in German.

(as always, we will be linking to the English translation once it is made available.)

Looking for good devotional reading this Lent?


Perhaps Cardinal Schonborn's book "Loving the Church" is perfect for you! It is an excellent way to grow closer to Jesus, to the Church, and to the thought of his Eminence this Lent.

It is currently available from Amazon.com for under $10!

Read a review of this book by James Likoudis.

Read an excerpt from this book.


Book Description:

"In this series of retreat meditations preached to Pope John Paul II and the papal household during a Lenten retreat, Cardinal Christoph Schonborn uses the Catechism of the Catholic Church (of which he was the general editor) and Sacred Scripture to lead us to a deeper union with Christ by helping us to understand and love the Church, His bride. To love the Church, which the Catechism calls "a living communion with Jesus Christ", we must see her with the eyes of Jesus, who "loved the Church and gave Himself up for her."As he draws us into a deeper understanding of the Church, who she is and where the deepest wellsprings of her being lie are the theme of his meditations. He also illustrates many points by using the thoughts of the new doctor of the Church, St. Therese of Lisieux. She found her vocation to be "love in the heart of the Church" and can offer us a renewed and vital vision of the Church." - From the Publisher

Endorsement:

"It is an awesome task to preach a retreat in the presence of the Pope. Cardinal Schonborn does it successfully by presenting the methods of St. Ignatius Loyola's famous retreat in a fresh way using the new Catechism, the Bible, and St. Therese of Lisieux." - Fr. Ken Baker, S.J., Editor, Homiletic and Pastoral Review

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Homosexual Couples blessed at St. Stephansdom?


A report began circulating a week or so ago claiming that "the rector of Vienna's Catholic cathedral has instituted a ceremony to bless 'couples, fiances and people in love' including homosexual partners."

The story was quickly spread by several popular news outlets, including Rueters News Service which categorized the story as an "Oddly Enough" entry (often bearing the title, "Valentine's Day or April Fool's? Vienna gays unsure," and similar phrases).

However, this event has been mischaracterized greatly by the news media.

Gerald Augustinus, an Austrian native, has a post on his weblog that clarifies what actually did occur based upon the original German-language report published on the Archdiocese of Vienna's website.

As Augustinus explains, a Valentine's Day blessing - not a Mass - was celebrated for "people in love," engaged couples, about-to-be-wed-couples, and married couples. However, homosexual couples and heterosexual couples not among the last three categories mentioned were blessed as individuals and not as couples.
Augustinus also responds to the spin put on the story by several commentators:

"The point Sullivan and Palmo made was that Cardinal Schoenborn had given his tacit [consent] to the official blessing of homosexual (non-marital/non-engaged in general) relationships, so to speak. Given the rules of the bishops conference [of Austria] and Cardinal Schoenborn's being a part of it, that is simply not true, unless of course you think that Cardinal Schoenborn, editor of the Catechism, does not abide by Catholic teaching that he helped set forth in the Catechism. However, there is no evidence for such a stance, on the contrary.

It is proper to bless homosexual individuals[,] of course. The Austrian bishops did in fact not distinguish between homo[sexual] and hetero[sexual individuals] but between [those] married/engaged and non-married/non-engaged."