Posted on 09/19/2006 7:41:06 AM PDT by Pyro7480
SAN GENNARO: NEW MIRACLE
(AGI) - Naples, Sept. 19 - The miracle of San Gennaro's blood that liquefies happened again in the cathedral of Naples during the feast of the Patron Saint, which is the anniversary of the martyrdom which took place in 305 A.C. at the Pozzuoli solfatara. It was announced by the archbishop, cardinal Crescenzio Sepe, who is going to celebrate for the first time on this occasion, after the reading of the Gospel. At 9.20 the archbishop said: 'I would like to announce that a few minutes ago the blood started to melt.' The announcement was welcomed by an intense applause by the crowd in the cathedral.
Are there any men in Europe?
Some of our Roman readers will appreciate seeing this picture -- not so much for the liquified blood of St Gennaro on this, his feast, but for who's holding the vial: the new archbishop of Naples, Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe... a scenario foreseen on these pages a year ago today.
A former Assessore of the Secretariat of State, Sepe's June move to Naples from the prefect's post at the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples made him the first cardinal-head of a Roman dicastery in decades to be dispatched to a diocese -- and, in the eyes of some, the first casualty of Benedict XVI's purge of the church's central administration, which will be picking up speed following the installation of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, SDB as Secretary of State.
Now that, through Bertone, the sitting pontiff has taken the reins of his Curia's top office, the phrase "an appointment a day" has been used to describe the anticipated reshuffle of senior offices, originally slated to begin at month's end. In recent days, however, it's been foreseen that in light of the recent controversy involving the Pope's lecture at Regensburg and the necessary attention of the Holy See to handle it properly, ad intra announcements might be delayed for a brief period.
For the moment, though, one notable question of Vatican representation looms on this side of the Pond. It's UN Week in New York -- something many of you know due to the insane clogging and closures in the streets of Manhattan. And for 15 years, the international gathering was Cardinal Angelo Sodano's time to shine, as the now-retired top lieutenant held court from a table at his beloved Big Apple commissary, Le Cirque.
One drawback to the timing of the Stato shake-up is a slight to the UN plenary -- which, as many of you know, was the lure for the first papal trip to the American continent (Paul VI in 1965) and the marquee event for two US visits of John Paul II (1979 and 1995). Friday's installation of Bertone and the appointment of Archbishop Dominique Mamberti as his "foreign minister" creates the unusual scenario -- an intended signal? -- that neither the Vatican Secretary of State, nor his top deputy, is in attendance at the General Assembly.
Given the absence of the top two papal diplomats, the Holy See -- which enjoys state-observer status at the UN's dual hubs of New York and Geneva -- will ostensibly be represented this week by its Permanent Observer, Archbishop Celestino Migliore. Yesterday, the Pope received Cardinal Bertone in private audience, accompanied by the members of his family.
I see three.
The annual liquefaction of this blood is not an "article of faith," and although those who are devoted to this find consolation in it --- well and good --- still, nobody is obliged to believe in it on pain of heresy.
Is it not the same with the apparitions?
Blessed be God in His angels and in His saints. I was worried when I heard it was his feast day. Thank God again.
Yes. IF an apparition has no revelations contrary to faith and morals, the faithful may--- with the Bishop's approval --- (not "must")--- regard them as consolations from heaven. But nobody is obliged to believe in a vision or a private revelation--- even if the private revelation is made to you, personally!
The Church is, you could say, professionally conservative about this sort of thing.
Went to his feast Monday night. Good to see people are still pinning dollar bills onto the statue.
Then we have the clown who hurls obscene and racist remarks at people who are trying to dunk him, almost directly in front of St. Patrick's Old Cathedral.
So just a pious fraud.
However, I remember once when the blood didn't turn liquid, and there was a nearby disaster due to a volcano...I think it was during the 1983 problems...see LINK
So maybe
A>it's a pious fraud that can predict the future, or maybe
B>God is using this pious fraud to warn the people of Naples about their volcano, or maybe
C>it's just a coincidence, or maybe
D>there is a scientific reason that when the volcano is active the chemicals don't turn liquid.
Take your choice.
I'm a skeptic, but believe in God. I figure the answer is either B or D...
to tell you the truth, for many years i was told that he wasn't a real saint. Do they have a feast for st. rocco?
ichabod1,
There is at least one. His name is now Benedict the XVI.
The Pope looks like he has not slept much in this picture. Seriously, I saw the episode and it is just stupid, "No sir, he doesn't like it!"
They knocked St. Christopher off the dashboards too. Do we care?
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