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#1 07-11-09 11:09 am

don
Member
Registered: 12-28-08
Posts: 1,121

The Pope and World Leaders

<b><font color="ff0000">Harper praises Benedict at Vatican meeting</font></b> <BR>  <BR>THE CANADIAN PRESS  <BR> <BR><img src="http://www.atomorrow.net/discus/messages/87/1564.jpg" alt=""> <BR><font size="-2">Prime Minister Stephen Harper looks on with son Ben and wife Laureen, left, as daughter Rachel  <BR>is helped with her gift from Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican on Saturday, July 11, 2009.</font>   <BR>   <BR>Jul 11, 2009<blockquote>VATICAN CITY, Prime Minister Stephen Harper praised Pope Benedict XVI as a moral and humanitarian leader after a private audience at the Vatican today. <BR> <BR>The meeting, which took place in the papal library, lasted about 20 minutes. <BR> <BR>&#34;It was an honour to meet Pope Benedict and hear his perspective on a number of important issues, including human rights and an ethical response to the global economic crisis,&#34; said Harper in a written release following the meeting. <BR> <BR>&#34;I expressed my deep appreciation for the Holy Father&#39;s moral and humanitarian leadership as an advocate of human dignity, peace and religious liberty, and for the spiritual leadership he provides to Catholics in Canada and throughout the world.&#34; <BR> <BR>The statement of recognition of the pope&#39;s stature as a leader is likely to be welcomed by Catholic Canadians, said Deborah Gyapong, a reporter for the Canadian Catholic News who covered the event. <BR> <BR>&#34;That is going to be very significant to Canadian Catholics because it shows the regard and stature of the Holy Father even for evangelicals, like Prime Minister Stephen Harper.&#34; <BR> <BR>&#34;There&#39;s probably no other Christian leader with the theological and intellectual heft and gravitas,&#34; she added. <BR> <BR>Harper is an evangelical Protestant, who is a member of the Christian Missionary Alliance Church. <BR> <BR>Gyapong said there was much interest in the meeting that coincided with the release on the eve of the G8 of a major papal encyclical on &#34;Charity in Truth.&#34;  <BR> <BR>That document, the third encyclical of Benedict&#39;s papacy discussed the need for a strong ethical basis for the market economy and discussed the environment and food security. <BR> <BR>The pontiff is the head of the world&#39;s more than one billion Catholics. Harper&#39;s release said Catholic Canadians number more than 14 million, although the number has generally been pegged lower than that, at about 13 million. <BR> <BR>Gyapong said Catholic Canadians have traditionally voted Liberal, although they tend to hold a range of views on issues like same-sex marriage and abortion., <BR> <BR>She suggested Harper sought an audience with the Pope more out of interest in canvassing the views of a global leader, not because there may be any political advantage. <BR> <BR>Harper and the pontiff exchanged gifts.  <BR> <BR>The Canadian prime minister presented the Pope with a pink glass vase. The pope gave him a white leather box containing a glass fountain pen, made by the Vatican Museum. It reproduces one of the four columns of the main altar of St. Peter&#39;s Basilica. <BR> <BR>It was the same gift offered to U.S. President Barack Obama, Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso, South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. <BR> <BR>Harper&#39;s wife Laureen and his children Ben and Rachel joined the prime minister and the pontiff after the private audience.  <BR> <BR>Harper introduced other members of the Canadian delegation, including Industry Minister Tony Clement, Conservative Sen. Consiglio Di Nino, two MPs Paul Calandra and Dean Del Mastro, Harper&#39;s chief of staff Guy Giorno, and press secretary Dimitri Soudas. <BR> <BR>After the departure of the Harpers, the Pope greeted the Canadian pool reporters and photographers who had covered the event.  <BR> <BR>The prime minister then met with Vatican Secretary of State Tarcisio Cardinal Bertone.  <BR> <BR>Soudas told reporters by email they discussed human rights and religious freedoms, and a range of international issues from Africa, to the G8 summit that just ended in L&#39;Aquila, and climate change – a focus of the G8 in the past week. <BR> <BR>Following his meetings, the Harper family and the Canadian delegation visited the magnificent St. Peter&#39;s Basilica. <BR> <BR>Harper&#39;s audience with the Pope had been preceeded by an awkward controversy that tailed him to Italy this past week over whether he had failed to consume a communion host that he was offered during the funeral of former governor general Romeo Leblanc. <BR> <BR>Harper angrily responded on Friday that the story was &#34;absurd&#34; and &#34;unsubstantiated.&#34;  <BR> <BR>&#34;As a Christian, I have never refused communion when offered to me. That&#39;s actually pretty important to me.&#34;  <BR> <BR><a href="http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/664618" target="_blank">http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/664618</a> <BR> <BR></blockquote><b>Questions/Observations</b> <BR> <BR>If you were one of the children, what would you say to the Pope? <BR> <BR>What is the protocol for meeting the Pope? What do you call him? Holy Father? Do you kiss his ring?  <BR> <BR>Notice the Pope dressed in white and everyone else in black. Some suggest its the Pope&#39;s way of stressing his spiritual status. <BR> <BR>Mrs. Harper wears a black scarf, or mantilla, and a long-sleeved blouse. Apparently, this is protocol. Only Catholic women of royalty may dress in white. <BR> <BR>Adventists often take note of staunch Protestants who give honour to the Pope. The whole world &#34;wondering after the beast&#34; is often cited on such occasions.  <BR> <BR>Notice what Harper said. He recognizes the Pope&#39;s role as moral and humanitarian leader; as an advocate of human dignity, peace and religious liberty, and for the spiritual leadership he provides to Catholics in Canada and throughout the world.   <BR>  <font color="ffffff"><font size="-2">.</font></font>

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