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News
"Millennium Offers"
"Catholics' millennium offers opportunity for forgiveness"
Honolulu Advertiser
November 28, 1998
Associated Press
Vatican City - Calling Christianity's 2,000th anniversary a year
of mercy, new decrees from Pope John Paul II offer
the faithful an opportunity for forgiveness - and say the church will
seek forgiveness as well.
John Paul's papal bull, to be issued tomorrow, upholds a 700-year-old tradition of celebrating church anniversary
years, or Jubilees, by offering "indulgences" - acts of penance allowing forgiveness for sins.
For individuals, John Paul says, the penance can be as simple as giving up smoking for a day. Expanding the
tradition, the pope also is inviting such acts of atonement by the church and its clerics - and by nations, in the
form of forgiving Third World debt.
Papal Bulls are solemn edicts. The word derives from bulla, the lead seal affixed to the document.
The Vatican released copies of the bull yesterday.
John Paul wants the church to enter the third millennium with a clear conscience. He has expressed regret for
some past actions of Catholics, including the church's overall failure to do more to help Jews against the Nazis.
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"Pope Says Church To Seek Pardon For Past Errors"
Philip Pullella
September 01, 1999
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope John Paul said Wednesday the Catholic
Church would start a new page of its
history in 2000 by publicly seeking forgiveness for the errors,
injustices and human rights offences it committed in
the past. Speaking at his weekly general audience, the Pope did not
specifically list the Church's past errors but
previous Vatican documents have spoken of seeking forgiveness for
its treatment of Jews, the Inquisition and
human rights abuses.
As the Church looks to the great Jubilee of the year 2000,
she is aware of her continual need of purification and
penance,'' he said. ``She therefore wishes to ask pardon for the sins
and weaknesses of her children down the
ages.'' The Pope said the church intended to use the millennium to
''start a new page of history.'' Among the
Church's past sins, he said, was ``the use of force in order to impose
the truth'' -- an apparent reference to forced
conversions of Jews and Native peoples. He also mentioned seeking pardon
for ``the failure to respect and defend
human rights.'' Catholics around the world are due to mark a day of
''Request for Forgiveness'' on March 8,
2000. It is one of the dozens of theme days the Church has chosen for
millennium celebrations, which begin on
December 24 and end on January 6, 2001. ``In seeking God's forgiveness
at the threshold of the third
millennium, the Church wishes to learn from the past,'' he said, adding
that it did not fear the truth.
In a major document last year, the Vatican apologized for Catholics who
failed to do enough to help Jews against
Nazi persecution during the Holocaust and acknowledged centuries of
Catholic preaching of contempt for Jews.
In an apparent reference to the Holocaust, the Pope Wednesday spoke of
``the failure of not a few Christians to be discerning
regarding situations of violations of human rights.
``The request for forgiveness is valid for what was not
done or for the failure to speak out,'' he said. Mitigating
historical factors could not exonerate the Church from being
``profoundly sorry for the weaknesses of so many of
its sons and daughters which disfigured its image,'' he said.
The Pope has said in documents and speeches in the past that the
Church needed to assume responsibility for the
Inquisition, marked by the torture and killing of people branded
as heretics. One of the first steps of John Paul's papacy, which
began in 1978, was to begin procedures leading to the
rehabilitation in 1992 of Galileo, the Italian astronomer persecuted
by the Church for teaching that the Earth
revolved around the sun.
The Inquisition condemned Galileo in 1633 because his teachings
clashed with the Bible, which read: ``God
fixed the earth upon its foundation, not to be moved forever.
'' Galileo was rehabilitated after 359 years.
Copyright 1999 Reuters
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