Monsignor Romero:A Bishop for the
Third Millennium
Oscar Andrés Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiaga, SDB,
Archbishop of Tegucigalpa, Honduras
"Much
has been said about Monsignor Romero as a prophet and a martyr, and the
testimony of his life has, without a doubt, inspired millions of men and
women of all ages, even beyond the Church’s borders. Here I wish
to take up another, less publicized aspect of his life but one which has
come to the fore after the recent General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops,
the theme of which was: “The Bishop, Servant of Jesus Christ for
the Hope of the World.” I would like to share with you some contours
of Monsignor Romero’s rich personality, which will serve as a basis
for presenting him as a model bishop for the third millennium."
To read and
download the whole lecture, please click here.
Martyrs,
Heroes, and the Contemporary Church: Latin America and the United States
Archbishop Luciano Mendes de Almeida, S.J., President,
Brazilian Conference of Catholic Bishops
"Sisters
and brothers, I was eyewitness to the facts of March 30, 1980 which happened
at the funeral of Bishop Romero in San Salvador. Suddenly we heard and
saw the explosion of a big bomb in the square in front of the Cathedral.
We have been witness to the suffering and an-guish of the Salvadorian
people, but also to their courage and maturity. El Salvador has suffered
a long agony. The assassination of Bishop Romero on March 24, 1980, shocked
the world. He was a faithful wit-ness to the Gospel and he sealed that
witness with his blood. Bishop Romero’s life is a vivid reminder
of the price that Christians are sometimes called upon to pay for their
faith."
To read and
download the whole lecture, please click here.
The
Empowering Spirit of Archbishop Romero: A Personal Testimony
Dr. Rubén Zamora, Secretary-General, Democratic
Convergence of El Salvador
"All of that changed when Romero became the bishop of Santiago de
Maria and began to know the poor not simply as beggars in the street but
as working people struggling to survive inhuman conditions. His diocese
was flooded every year during the coffee-picking season with peasants
who came from all over the country to work in the cafetales, and who,
after a hard day’s labor, would have to sleep on the ground. Appalled,
Romero provided them with shelter in empty seminary build-ings and began
to wonder how the owners of the coffee fincas — Christian families
who would go to church on Sundays and partake of the Eucharist —
could treat their workers in such a manner. These reflections led him
to examine the structural roots of poverty."
To
read and download the whole lecture, please click here.
Monseñor Oscar Romero: Human
Rights Apostle
Roberto Cuéllar M., Executive Director, Interamerican
Institute of Human Rights
"We were waiting for him at the cancer clinic, where he lived during
his three years as Archbishop of San Salvador, but he arrived too late
to join our working lunch. We talked by telephone and, for the last time,
I heard his voice. It was 3:30 in the afternoon of March 24, 1980. Monseñor
Romero had asked me to meet with a high-level delegation from the National
Conference of Bishops, the National Council of Churches, and the United
States Catholic Con-ference. His final interview, focusing on the violence
then over-whelming El Salvador, was with these same delegates. A few minutes
after 6:30 p.m. two nuns from the clinic shouted the news of his assassination
through the main door of the Jesuits’ Academy in San Salvador. I
ran to the building where he had been taken. Just by lifting his left
arm, I knew that he was already dead."
To
read and download the whole lecture, please click here.
Archbishop
Romero and His Commitment to the Church
Margaret Swedish, Religious Task Force on Central America
and Mexico.
"The
pastor, the bishop understood as a “good shepherd” in a real
gospel sense, was sharing a word that ignited faith in the hearts of his
hearers. The institutional leader embodied in his role as bishop and in
the structures of the archdiocese a word that his people recognized as
the authentic reflection of their own truth. The institution was put at
the service of this truth. The result was a flourishing, vibrant Church,
willing to follow Jesus even to death on the cross."
To
read and download the whole lecture, please click here.
Romero
of the Americas: Seen Through Paraguayan Eyes
Margaret Hebblethwaite, Latin American Correspondent for
the London Tablet
"Who,
then, is this great Romero of the Americas, and why does he matter so
much to me? I first heard of him the day after he was shot, in March 1980.
At the time, I was studying at the Gregorian University in Rome. We came
into class that morning to be told that a bishop had been shot, and that
there would be prayers for him in the big Aula during the morning break.
I went along with my classmates, not knowing anything about the archbishop
but struck by something in the atmosphere. I don’t expect there
were many there who knew much about Romero. But there was something both
deeply committed and very matter-of-fact about all those people—priests
and sisters from mission territories all around the world, some from quite
dangerous places-singing the Salve Regina and praying together for a brother
murdered in the course of his pastoral work. As I went back to class,
something in me had begun to respond to Romero."
To
read and download the whole lecture, please click here.
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