An Indian
Priests Congress, organised by the Clergy Commission of the
Conference of Catholic Bishops of India, was inaugurated at
Velankanni, one of world’s most popular Christian pilgrim
centres.
Over a
thousand priests from more than 140 dioceses across India gathered
here to mark the Year of Priests.
Welcoming
the gathering, Bishop Devadass Ambrose of Thanjavur said the
congress, with a such a large gathering of priests, was a unique
event in the annals of India, the Thanjavur diocese and the
Velankanni Shrine, during the Year of Priests.
The prelate,
recalling the history of the Basilica of Our Lady of Health
Velankanni, said the shrine came to prominence at the end of
16th century with three recorded miracles. It became a parish
in 1771 and was elevated to the status of Basilica in 1961.
He said
thousands of pilgrims from across the country and abroad flock
to Velankanni, a place of prayer 24x7 with Adoration of the
Blessed Sacrament and daily Mass in different languages. It
is also a place of theological study, he added.
The bishop said in his welcome address that priests were the
backbone of the Church--to administer the Sacraments, preach
the Word of God and catechise people.
“Today,
priests are working in difficult terrain, face opposition within
and outside. This congress should enable us to retreat from
work, retrospect and reorganise our lives,” he said.
Prefect,
Congregation for Clergy, Vatican, Claudio Cardinal Hummes, in
his keynote address said: “The Year of Priests presents
the Church with an opportunity to say yet again to all her priests
that she loves them, venerates them, and being proud of them,
recognises what they are and all that they do, both in the local
ecclesial communities, in the midst of the people, and in the
forefront of the mission.
Stating
statistics, the Cardinal said: “According to the latest
figures published by the Vatican, there were around 408,000
priests in the world by the end of 2008, an increase of one
thousand over the preceding year. As we know, in many so-called
Christian countries, especially in the West, there is a notable
fall in the number of priests and also of seminarians, a phenomenon
which carries with it a few problems for the Church in the future.
“However,
notwithstanding the fact that there has been a small rise in
the number of priests and seminarians in the world, such an
increase is not in proportion nor is it adequate to the growth
in the world population, even of Catholics,” he said.
The Cardinal
spoke about India and its rich tradition “With regard
to India, the Vatican statistics demonstrate an increase of
priests and seminarians, thanks be to God. The same fact is
shown in many mission lands. The origins of Christianity in
India, of course, according to ancient tradition, allow us to
consider the history as far back as the Apostle Thomas, who
preached to the Parthans, Medians, Persians, Ircanians, and
then reached India, where he preached the Gospel and established
Christian communities, and later was martyred and buried. In
the succeeding centuries, his remains were taken to Edessa and
finally to Ortona in Italy, while in India a group known as
the Thomas Christians endured through the centuries.”
He said
a new phase began with the arrival of the Portuguese explorers
and with the extraordinary missionary work of St. Francis Xavier
in the sixteenth century.
Today the
Church in India encompasses the Latin Catholic Church, the Syro-Malabar
Church and the Syro-Malankara Church. These various liturgical
and spiritual traditions make the Church really beautiful, and
this richness will be able to contribute to the evangelisation
of this great land.
“We
see here a flowering Church today, though not without serious
challenges. However, notwithstanding the two thousand years’
presence of Christianity in India, there is much to do here;
there are still great apostolic and missionary challenges to
confront. Only 2 per cent of the population is Catholic,”
he added.
“Something
which I would like to highlight here is the recent canonisation
of the first woman saint of India, Saint Alphonsa, a simple
religious nun who lived in our tines and showed to the universal
Church that holiness is attainable through ordinary life and
patient suffering,” the prelate said.
The beatification
of the Albanian born missionary, Blessed Teresa of Calcutta,
who became an adopted daughter of India and is one of the most
admired figures of the contemporary world due to her solidarity
with the poor and the marginalised, has brought to the limelight
the authenticity of the missionary Church in India, he said.
The Cardinal
appealed to the gathering: “Dear priests, following in
the footsteps of so many missionary men and women, continue
to be true missionaries both towards the non-Christians and
towards the baptised of your own parishes who have grown distant
and thus need to be re-evangelised. One must, as a good shepherd,
go out in search of the sheep that are far away. The mission
will certainly renew you in the understanding and realisation
of your priestly identity and of your ministry.”
Archbishop
Malayappan Chinnappa of Madras-Mylapore appreciated the noble
initiative to bring the priests together by organising the congress.
The three-day
meet was inaugurated with a concelebrated Mass presided by Claudio
Cardinal Hummes in the Velankanni shrine. Elaborate arrangements
were in place to accommodate the participants.