160817

Page 1

The

S outher n C ross

August 17 to August 23, 2016

Reg No. 1920/002058/06

No 4994

www.scross.co.za

Be prepared for Fatima centenary

Page 9

Why God had to become man

Page 7

R8,00 (incl VAT RSA)

Priest’s journey from the mines to the SACBC

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Dominicans, Oblates celebrate

Dominican friars at the celebrations of the Gauteng Region of Catholic Schools under the Dominican Order at St Dominic’s in Boksburg to mark the 800th anniversary of the order. See page 3 for more Dominican celebrations. (Photo: Kerrelin Khan)

Bishop Barry Wood OMI, auxiliary of Durban, preaches the homily at the celebration of the founding of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, by St Eugene de Mazenod 200 years ago, in the Olympia Hall of the Royal Showgrounds in Pietermaritzburg. (Photo: Sydney Duval)

Bishop: We must be people of hope STAFF REPORTER

T

HE mission of Catholics today is to be people of hope, a bishop told the congregation at a Durban Mass to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the founding of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Bishop Barry Wood, auxiliary in Durban and himself an Oblate, preached on the life of Oblate founder St Eugene de Mazenod and of the order itself at the Mass in the Olympia Hall of the Royal Showgrounds in Pietermaritzburg. “Christian hope stretches far beyond the limitation of our own psychological strength, for it is anchored not just in the person or the individual but in God’s selfdisclosure in history,” the bishop said. “Our hope is rooted, grounded in the person of Jesus who came to show us the way to life and the fullness of life—in him we glance at the beauty of our human destiny.” About 3 000 clergy, religious and laity attended the bicentennial Mass for the order which was founded in the French town of

Aix in 1816 and has been active in Southern Africa for 164 years. Among the guests was Fr Louis Lougen, the superior-general of the Oblates worldwide. Large statues of St Eugene de Mazenod and the Blessed Virgin were placed on the altar. As the statue of Our Lady was enthroned before the liturgy began, Fr Sibonelo Mbanjwa OMI sang a solo. Zulu imbongi Bheki Zulu sang the praises of St Eugene, and Fr Zaba Mbanjwa OMI gave an outline of the history of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. During the Mass Speeches were made by Fr Lougen, Cardinal Wilfrid Napier of Durban, and civic leader Ben Ngubane, while Fr Freeborn Kibombwe OMI delivered the vote of thanks. Bishop Evans Chinyemba OMI of Mongu, Zambia, led the prayer for a renewed act of commitment to the evangelisation of the most abandoned and for the future of the order. In his homily, Bishop Wood recalled that more than 150 years ago, St Eugene pre-

dicted an “explosion of faith” in Africa. When the first Oblate mission in presentday KwaZulu-Natal failed in 1860, St Eugene wrote to the Oblate missionary Bl Joseph Gérard: “The time will come when the merciful grace of God will produce a sort of explosion and your African Church will be formed.” To another early missionary, Fr Barrett, the founder wrote: “Continue to plant and to water, the increase will come when it pleases the Lord to grant it.” Bishop Wood told the congregation: “Jesus is the person of hope who trusted unconditionally the One from whom he came. He entered death with nothing but hope. He died, rose again and is with us to help us translate his vision, his hope, into action. “Eugene de Mazenod grasped this vision and lived it despite the circumstances of his time, his own limitations, his own inadequacies,” the bishop said. “This is our challenge today: to be apostolic men of new hope—to stretch beyond our limited vision, our human ideologies,

our man-made philosophies,” he said. “We must lead people to act like human beings first of all, then like Christians and finally we must help them to be saints.” The bishop reminded the congregation that the Oblates’ vocation is tied to the preferential option for the poor “Today we are experiencing the best of expectations, the worst of fears. Ours is a time of oppression, a time of liberation, a time of searching for peace, a time of horrible violence,” Bishop Wood said. The Christian response to that should be to “constantly renew ourselves in the spirit of our vocation”, he said. “We give thanks today for the past 164 years of evangelisation in Southern Africa and 200 years all over the world. The local African Church which Eugene spoke of to Joseph Gérard is a reality,” Bishop Wood said. The order’s task now is to step “into a bold new world, going from a safe place into an unpredictable future”.

with special visits to the Tomb of St Teresa of Avila and the Eucharistic Miracle at Santarém


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