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![]() Mass with WYD Cross, St. Patrick's Cathedral
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| Author | Topic: Mass with WYD Cross, St. Patrick's Cathedral | ||
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Ferdinand Velasco FYA Member |
[This message has been edited by Michael (edited 02-25-2002).] IP: Logged | ||
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Peter Mercado FYA Member |
Seeing the WYD cross and meeting some of the Canadians last night reminded me of the spirit of WYD back in Rome. The church is universal and that we, as youth and young adults, are not alone in our faith. It was quite an honor as well to carry the cross out of St. Patrick's Cathedral! IP: Logged | ||
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Michael Administrator |
"You are the salt of the earth... You are the light of the world" - Mt. 5, 13.14 That is the message for WYD. You, everybody, me. What is salt to the earth? What is light to the world? Think about it. Anyhow, the mass was awesome. I think our choirs did a job well done. It was an honor to sing "The Light of The World" and carry the WYD cross...Unforgettable... ~Mike IP: Logged | ||
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Ferdinand Velasco FYA Member |
Press release regarding the recent visit of the WYD Cross to New York: Young Canadians Visit Ground Zero with World Youth Day Cross New York City, February 25, 2002 – Today, a group of 100 young Canadians took the World Youth Day (WYD) Cross to Ground Zero to express their solidarity with the people of New York and the United States. The group conducted a simple prayer service at Ground Zero with the WYD Cross in remembrance of the people who died there, their survivors, and to pray for peace. Gillian Girodat, 23, of Saskatchewan said: “My hope is that the prayers of millions of people from around the world who have touched the World Youth Day Cross will reach the hearts and homes of those whose lives were so greatly changed on that tragic day of September 11.” The Canadian group arrived yesterday and attended a Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral along with hundreds of young people from the New York area. Many others from elsewhere in the United States came to attend and see the Cross. Ross Emerson, 32, of Toronto said: “As someone from the financial services world, I can relate to many of the professionals working in this part of New York. I came to convey a message of hope to the people of New York and in particular to young professionals, in the hope of helping them develop a stronger sense of spirituality.” Fr. Thomas Rosica, C.S.B., National Director of WYD, said: “Our presence at Ground Zero was a deeply moving experience for me, and for each person in the Canadian delegation. We came here to pray for all of those who were victims of the terrorist attack on September 11. We also pray for all of those who suffer and are victims of terrorism of any kind throughout the world. The World Youth Day Cross is a powerful reminder of the radiant light of God’s presence in the deepest darkness and despair.” Renée Anne Poulin, 20, of Val Caron in northern Ontario, said: “I hope to bring a bit of the joy and peace of Jesus where the world needs it the most. I hope to give a bit of meaning to suffering by carrying the cross, which is the sign of God’s love for us.” The WYD Cross is a gift from Pope John Paul II to the young people of the world in 1984. It is the symbol of WYDs, which bring together hundreds of thousands of young people from around the world to celebrate their Catholic faith and be with the Pope. The Cross, which has been around the world, is traveling to every corner of Canada in preparation for WYD which will take place in Toronto from July 18-28, 2002. The Canadians in New York include representatives of the WYD National Office; youth from across Canada; personnel from the Police, Fire and Emergency Medical Service of Toronto; Bishop Anthony Meagher, Auxiliary Bishop of Toronto and Chair of the Canadian Bishops’ Episcopal Committee for WYD and Fr. Thomas Rosica, C.S.B., National Director of WYD. The World Youth Day (WYD) Cross What is the WYD Cross? The WYD Cross is a simple wooden cross that stands four meters tall and weighs 31 kg. Often compared to the Olympic torch, it has been crisscrossing Canada to prepare the country for WYD 2002. The Journey of the WYD Cross Since the WYD Cross arrived in Ottawa April 11, 2001 it has traveled by commercial airline, light aircraft, dog sled, pick-up truck, tractor, sail boat and fishing boat. It had been to the Maritimes, Quebec, Ontario, the Far North, British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Apart from visiting parish churches, the WYD Cross has been to youth detention centres, prisons, schools, universities, national historic sites, shopping centres, downtown streets, nightclub districts and parks. In April 2002, it will arrive in Montreal. After spending five days there, a walking pilgrimage to Toronto will begin. It will arrive in Toronto on June 9 and stay until the conclusion of WYD 2002. Significance of the WYD Cross During the Jubilee Year of the Redemption in 1984, Pope John Paul II entrusted this cross to the young people of the world. The Pope had these words for the young people: “I entrust to you the very symbol of this Jubilee Year: the Cross of Christ! Bear it in the world as the sign of the love of the Lord Jesus for humanity, and proclaim to everyone that it is only in Christ, who died and rose from the dead, that salvation and redemption are to be found.” Article Published in the Toronto Sun, February 24, 2002 The Olympic Torch of World Youth Day 2002: Twelve-foot simple wooden cross brings unity and peace wherever it goes By Fr. Thomas Rosica, C.S.B. New York City -- At the heart of the World Youth Day is a very simple, powerful, ancient Christian symbol that is taking Canada by storm: two large planks of wood, known as the World Youth Day Cross that not a few journalists and onlookers have called the “Olympic Torch” of the huge Catholic Festival that will arrive in Canada this July. Seventeen years ago, at the close of the Holy Year of the Redemption at the Vatican, Pope John Paul II entrusted to the young people of the world this simple, twelve-foot wooden Cross, asking them to carry it across the world as a sign of the love which the Lord Jesus has for humankind and to proclaim to everyone that only in Christ who died and is risen is there salvation and redemption. Since that day, carried by generous hands and loving hearts, the Cross has made a long, uninterrupted pilgrimage across the continents, to demonstrate, as Pope John Paul II has stated so well, that “the Cross walks with young people and young people walk with the Cross.” Last year in a very moving Palm Sunday papal ceremony in St. Peter’s Square, attended by Canadian youth representing 35 dioceses from throughout our country, and before a crowd of nearly 80,000 people, the cross was handed over to us by Italian youth who had hosted the last World Youth Day in August, 2000. Since April 11, 2001, the World Youth Day Cross has literally touched the three oceans that border Canada. It has visited our cities, towns and rural areas, drawing huge throngs of people into the streets for processions, prayers, all-night vigils, tears, moments of reconciliation and peace. Such expressions of popular piety have been absent for far too many years. From main streets and highways to the Vancouver harbour, from ferries to pick-up trucks to dog sleds in the north, to prisons, hospitals, nursing homes, schools, “Pizza Corner” in downtown Halifax, and sites of tragic car accidents on Manitoulin Island, from Peggy’s Cove on the Atlantic to the Alaska Highway in the west, the pilgrim Cross has been a witness to the power of reconciliation and peace that World Youth Day can bring to the world. Later this spring, during the final leg of its pilgrimage to World Youth Day 2002, the Cross will be carried to Toronto on foot by relay teams of young people from Montreal, along the St. Lawrence and along Lake Ontario. It will then spend forty days visiting the parishes and institutions of the Archdiocese of Toronto before becoming a centerpiece of the great events that will take place in Toronto. But in the midst of a carefully orchestrated pilgrimage throughout the 72 dioceses of Canada, the Cross is taking a detour today and tomorrow on a journey that is not normally part of the Youth Day preparations in a given country. Early this morning, two motor coaches filled with representatives of many Canadian Dioceses, together with representatives of police, ambulance and fire fighters, set out with the Cross in tow to New York City for the next 48 hours. After a vigil mass in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in the heart of Manhattan this evening with hundreds of young people from the Archdiocese of New York and the neighboring dioceses, and an early morning mass tomorrow, we will carry the cross on pilgrimage to Ground Zero, to pray for the victims of last year’s great tragedy at the World Trade Centre and elsewhere throughout the United States. This visit is to be a sign of hope to the people of America, and the entire world, who struggle to understand the terror, violence and death-dealing forces that humanity experienced on September 11, 2001. No one has described the pilgrimage of the Cross better than Sebastien Lacroix, the young 21 year-old man from Sherbrooke, Quebec, on the national team of World Youth Day 2002, who has organized the pilgrimage of the World Youth Day Cross throughout our country. He told a spellbound audience last summer: "I am the agent of the cross. I see to its goings and comings, from sea to sea to sea. I make sure that the cross is left alone as little as possible, and that the people of this land open wide the doors of the most distant churches to receive it. This cross accompanies thousands of young people on their journey to Jesus Christ. The cross has stood in vigil throughout entire nights, and in parks close to young people who are wounded. It has stood silently in chapels allowing for quiet contemplation. The cross transforms. The cross heals. The cross touches hearts. Let us allow ourselves to be touched by the cross." When all the commotion and noise of World Youth Day is over, I am convinced that one of the lasting memories that will remain in our country will be this simple, wooden Cross that has been a huge blessing and a source of consolation, healing, strength and peace to the hundreds of thousands of people who have embraced it, touched it, kissed it, and allowed themselves to be touched by the awesome message and memory of the one who died upon it. ------------------ IP: Logged |
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