“Ever onward!” was one of the catchphrases of our
founder, Fr. James Alberione and co-founder Sr. Tecla Merlo. Always keeping
going forward with the most effective and rapid means of social communication
is a never-ending task for those who follow in the footsteps of St. Paul.
So the Pauline Family has come into
being since 1914 throughout the world. Like our history of the Congregation of
the Daughters of St. Paul, our countries [North and South Korea] have made much
effort, sacrifice, prayers, and initiatives with an urgent and constant dream
to realize unification through 70 years of struggles and suffering due to
separation.
Day in and day out, how have we prayed
desperately for the reconciliation and the unity of two divided parts of one
peninsula!
Truly, dreams come true. As a person
whose parents escaped from North Korea during the Korean War in 1950, our
President Moon Jae-in had a lifelong dream to climb Mount Paektu. As a
mountain trekker who visited the Himalayas twice, he longed to go to Mount Paektu.
At last, one of the things on his bucket list came true on September 20, 2018.
With the help of this celebration, I am
happy to dream to climb Mount Paektu someday. I do believe my dream will come
true in the near future. Going beyond the limits is always challenging but
worth trying.
“Arise and go on a journey” is an
evangelical call to every Christian. In fact, this urgent call has been
realized throughout the whole history of human beings. Reading and facing the
signs of the times, not only nations but also the whole Church keep going on a
journey to create a better world, living with an integral conscience.
According to “Apostolorum Apostola”
meaning the apostle of the Apostles, the Decree published by the Congregation
for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments in the Holy See on June
10, 2016, the celebration of Mary Magdalen was ascended from the obligatory
memorial day to the universal feast day on July 22.
In “Mulieris Dignitatem,” the apostolic
letter on the dignity and vocation of women published in 1988, St. John Paul II
mentioned that Mary Magdalen was “the first witness of the risen Jesus and the
first communicator who proclaimed the resurrection of the Lord to the
Apostles.”
St. Gregorius I mentioned in his homily
that Mary Magdalen was “the first witness of God’s mercy,” but some people
argued and protested against the authenticity of Mary Magdalen as the
apostle.
In fact, Mary Magdalen accompanied Jesus during his public life; she received his teachings and witnessed his activities; she was also present on the very spot of the passion and the glorification of Jesus. She truly witnessed the cross and first discovered the resurrection of Christ.
In the end, with the advice of Jesus, saying “Don’t hold on to me… Go instead to my brothers and tell them, ‘I am ascending to my Father’”(Jn 20:17), she was assigned with the mission to proclaim what she had seen and experienced. Thus, she became an evangelist announcing the central joyful message of Easter. “I have seen the Lord!”(Jn 20:18) What a joyful and consoling witness it is! “Ever onward to witness the presence of God among us!”
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/opinion/2018/10/162_256196.html
The Korea Times/ Thoughts of the Times/ Oct 5(offline)/ Oct 4(online), 2018
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