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WHAT IS A HOLY YEAR?
In the Roman Catholic tradition, a Holy Year, or Jubilee is a great
religious event. It is a year of forgiveness of sins and also the punishment due
to sin, it is a year of reconciliation between adversaries, of conversion and
receiving the Sacrament of Reconciliation, and consequently of solidarity, hope,
justice, commitment to serve God with joy and in peace with our brothers and
sisters. A Jubilee year is above all the year of Christ, who brings life and
grace to humanity.
The origin of the Christian Jubilee goes back to Bible times. The Law of
Moses prescribed a special year for the Jewish people: "You shall hallow
the fiftieth year and proclaim the liberty throughout the land, to all its
inhabitants; it shall be a jubilee for you when each of you shall return to his
property and each of you shall return to his family. This fiftieth year is to be
a jubilee year for you: you will not sow, you will not harvest the un-gathered
corn, you will not gather the untrimmed vine. The jubilee is to be a holy thing
to you, you will eat what comes from the fields."(The Book of
Leviticus 25, 10-14) The trumpet with which this particular year was
announced was a goat's horn called Yobel in Hebrew, and the origin of the word
jubilee. The celebration of this year also included the restitution of land to
the original owners, the remission of debts, the liberation of slaves and the
land was left fallow. In the New Testament, Jesus presents himself as the One
who brings the old Jubilee to completion, because he has come to "preach
the year of the Lord's favour" (Isaiah 61: 1-2).
It is interesting to note that in almost every country, time is counted as
before and after Christ's coming into the world, although today few people may
realise the reasons for this calculation. For Christians then, the Jubilee of
the year 2000 is especially important because it will be a celebration of the
2000th anniversary of the birth of Christ (apart from differences of exact
chronological count.) What is more, it will be the first Holy Year which marks
the turn of a millennium, since the first Jubilee was proclaimed by Pope
Boniface VIII in 1300. For Christians then, the Jubilee of the Year 2000 should
be a great prayer of praise and thanksgiving to God for the gift of the
Incarnation of His Son and the Redemption He brings.
The Jubilee is called Holy Year, not only because its begins, is marked, and
ends with solemn holy acts, but also because its purpose is to encourage
holiness of life. It was actually convoked to strengthen faith, encourage works
of charity and brotherly communion within the Church and in society and to call
Christians to be more sincere and coherent in their faith in Christ, the only
Saviour.
A Jubilee can be "ordinary" if it falls after the set period of
years, and "extraordinary" when it is proclaimed for some outstanding
event. There have been twenty-five "ordinary" Holy Years so far: the
Year 2000 will be the 26th. The custom of calling "extraordinary"
Jubilees began in the 16th century and they can vary in length from a few days
to a year. There have been two extraordinary jubilees in this century: 1933
proclaimed by Pope Pius XI to mark the 1900th anniversary of Redemption and 1983
proclaimed by Pope John Paul II to mark 1950 years since the Redemption carried
out by Christ through his Death and Resurrection in the year 33. In 1987 Pope
John Paul II also proclaimed a Marian year.
THE HISTORY OF THE JUBILEE
The first ordinary Jubilee was proclaimed in 1300 by Pope Boniface VII a
member of the noble Caetani family, with a Bull, "Antiquorum Habet Fida
Relatio". Throughout Christendom (the known world at that time) there
was great suffering, caused by wars and diseases such as the plague and all
kinds of ills: among the people there was a great desire to return to a more
holy way of living. So with great faith the Christians determined to travel (on
foot) to Rome, to pray at the tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul and to
receive the Pope's blessing, in order to obtain the grace and strength to carry
on. They came in their thousands at Christmas in 1299. Due to their great number
the Pope, having enquired and learned the reason for their coming, full of
admiration for their faith proclaimed a "year of forgiveness of all sins".
A similar year would be held in future, every hundred years. Outstanding names
are recorded among the pilgrims of that first Jubilee: Dante, Cima Bue, Giotto,
Carlo de Valois brother of the King of France, with his wife Catherine. Dante
Alighiere who writes of the event in his "Divine Comedy" in Canto XXXI
of Paradise.
While the Apostolic See was transferred to Avignon in France (1305-1377)
there were many requests for the second Jubilee to be held earlier, in 1350
instead of 1400. Clement VI gave his consent and set a period of fifty years
between jubilees. Besides visiting the Basilicas built over the tombs of Peter
and Paul the pilgrims were also required to visit to Saint John Lateran, the
city's Cathedral, being the first Church of the Bishop of Rome who is the Pope.
Later Pope Urban VI decided to reduce the period to thirty three years in memory
of the earthly life of Jesus. When Pope Urban died, however, the new Pope,
Boniface IX opened the Holy Door on Christmas Eve 1390, but since the numbers of
pilgrims were so great he called a second Holy Year at Christmas 1400.
In 1425, and not in 1433, as it had been formerly set, Pope Martin V
proclaimed the Holy Year 1425 with two novelties: a special commemorative
Jubilee Medal and the opening of a Holy Door in the Cathedral of Saint John in
the Lateran. Nicholas V called the 1450 Holy Year and in 1470 Pope Paul II
issued a Bull to fix the Jubilee for every twenty-five years. The next Holy Year
1475 was proclaimed by Sixtus IV. And for the occasion the Pope wished to adorn
Rome with more works of art: he ordered the building of the Sistine Chapel and
the Ponte Sisto or Sixtus Bridge over the River Tiber (both named after him).
Several renowned artists were working in Rome at that time: Verroccio,
Signiorelli, Ghirlandaio, Botticelli, Perugino, Pinturicchio, Melozzo da Forli.
In 1500 Pope Alexander VI announced that the Doors in the four major
basilicas would be opened contemporaneously, and that he himself would open the
Holy Door of Saint Peter's. The ninth Jubilee was solemnly opened on December
24th 1524 by Pope Clement VII, at a time when there were already symptoms of the
great crises which would soon tear the Church apart, with the Protestant Reform.
The 1550 Jubilee was proclaimed by Paul II, but it was Pope Julius III who
actually opened it. The remarkable afflux of pilgrims caused no few difficulties
in the city and Saint Philip Neri was among those who came to their help with
his Holy Trinity Confraternity. It is recorded that in 1575, in the time of Pope
Gregory XIII, as many as 300,000 people came to Rome from all over Europe. The
next Holy Years were proclaimed by Clement VIII, (1600) Urban VIII (1650),
Clement X (1675).
Innocent X, who opened the Jubilee of the year 1700, is remembered
especially for establishing one of Rome's most renowned charitable institutions,
the Hospice St Michele a Ripa. Gradually other similar institutions were opened
to offer shelter and assistance to pilgrims, as in the year 1725, the Holy Year
called by Benedict XIII. A famous preacher during the Jubilee 1750, proclaimed
by Benedict XIV, was Saint Leonardo da Porto Maurizio, the apostle of the Via
Crucis, who set up 14 stations of the Cross inside the ruins of the Colosseum.
Clement XIV announced the Jubilee of the Year 1775 but he died three months
before Christmas and the Holy Door was opened by the new Pope, Pius VI. The
difficult situation in which the Church found herself during the hegemonic rule
of Napoleon prevented Pius VII from proclaiming the Jubilee of 1800.
More than a half a million pilgrims made the journey to Rome for the Jubilee
of 1825. As St Paul's Basilica was under new construction, having been destroyed
by fire two years earlier, Pope Leo XII substituted the visit to St Paul's
outside the walls with Santa Maria in Trastevere Basilica. Twenty five years
later, the Holy Year could not be held because of the unsettled situation in the
Roman Republic and temporary exile of Pius IX. However, this Pope did proclaim
the Holy Year 1875, although there was no ceremony of the opening of the Door
due to Rome's occupation by the troops of King Vittorio Emmanuele.
It was Pope Leo XIII who called the 22nd Christian Jubilee which opened the
20th century of the Christian era, characterised by six beatifications and two
canonizations, (Saint Jean Baptist de La Salle and Saint Rita da Cascia). In the
Holy Year 1925, Pius XI wished to direct the attention of the faithful to the
prodigious work of the missions. To gain the indulgence, the people were asked
to pray (according to the intention of the Pope) for peace among peoples. In
1950, a few years after World War II, Pius XII called the Holy Year with the
following indications: the sanctification of souls through prayer and penance
and unfailing faith in Christ and the Church; action for peace and protection of
the Holy Places; defence of the Church against constant attacks by her enemies;
prayers for the gift of faith for those in error, and for unbelievers; the
promotion of social justice and assistance of the poor and needy. It was during
this year that the Pope defined the Assumption into Heaven of Mary, the Mother
of Jesus, as a dogma of the Catholic faith. (November 1st, 1950). The last
ordinary Jubilee was called in 1975 by Pope Paul VI with two main themes for
reflection and action: Renewal and Reconciliation.
Apostolic Letter
TERTIO MILLENNIO ADVENIENTE
On November 10th, 1994, Pope John Paul II promulgated an Apostolic Letter,
Tertio Millennio adveniente, addressed to "the Bishops, the clergy
and lay faithful on preparation for the Jubilee of the Year 2000". The
document contains a brief introduction and five chapters. The introduction
presents the main subject of the letter: the Jubilee is a celebration of the
redeeming Incarnation of the Son of God, Jesus Christ.
Chapter I JESUS CHRIST IS THE SAME YESTERDAY AND TODAY, explains the
significance and importance of the birth of Christ. He, the Son of God, became
one of us in order to reveal to us God's plan for the whole of creation, and for
mankind in particular. This is the essential point which makes Christianity
different from other religions: it is God who comes in search of mankind, and
shows the way for us to reach him. The incarnation of Christ is God's coming, to
show us that we have taken the wrong road, the road of evil. "Overcoming
evil: this is the meaning of the Redemption" (TMA 7) Christianity
therefore, is the religion of the Incarnation, of the world's Redemption.
Chapter II, THE JUBILEE OF THE YEAR 2000, explains the origin of a
Holy Year and the deep significance of this next one which will mark the end of
one millennium and the beginning of another. With the Incarnation, God entered
human history, eternity entered time: Christ is the Lord of time. In
Christianity, time has a fundamental importance. Since God has entered our human
time, there arises the duty to sanctify time. Against this background we can
understand the custom of Jubilees which began in Bible times and continues in
the history of the Church. Jesus himself proclaims the year of the Lord's
favour. For the Church the Jubilee is a year of special grace, of remission of
sins and the punishment due to them, a year of reconciliation between disputing
parties. Our own lives are marked with jubilees, anniversaries of birthdays, and
weddings and, for Christians, anniversaries of Baptism, First Communion,
Confirmation, Priestly or Episcopal Ordination. Communities, dioceses and
parishes also celebrate Jubilees for anniversaries of foundation etc. Hence with
regard to its content, this great Jubilee will be, in a sense, like any other.
But at the same time it will be different, greater than any other for Christians
and for all people of goodwill.
Chapter III, PREPARATION FOR THE GREAT JUBILEE, highlights the
various events which can be seen as providential preparation for the Jubilee of
the second Christian millennium. First of all the Second Vatican Council, "an
event, focused on the mystery of Christ and his Church and at the same time open
to the world. This openness was an evangelical response to recent changes in the
world, including the profoundly disturbing experiences of the 20th century, ...
the first and second World Wars ..." experiences which demonstrate the
world's need for purification. The best preparation for the new millennium, the
Pope writes, will be renewed commitment to apply the teachings of Vatican II to
the life of every individual and of the whole Church. Other events seen as
preparation for the Jubilee are the regular series of meetings of the Synod of
Bishops, since Vatican II, synods which can be, universal, continental,
regional, but also national and diocesan and which discuss and address various
questions and matters regarding the life of the Church. The underlying theme of
them all is evangelization, or rather the new evangelization. The ministry of
the Bishop of Rome has special tasks and responsibilities with regard to the
Jubilee of the Year 2000. In a sense all the Popes of this century have prepared
for this Holy Year with numerous documents and messages, concerning social
doctrine, for example the annual Message for Peace first delivered by Pope Paul
VI in 1968. The present Pope, John Paul II, in his first Encyclical, (Redemptor
hominis), spoke explicitly of the Great Jubilee as a time to be lived as a "new
Advent". Papal journeys too, have become an important element in the work
of implementing the Second Vatican Council. In this Letter he expresses the
desire to visit Sarajevo, Lebanon, Jerusalem and the Holy Land, "the places
on the road taken by the People of God of the Old Covenant, starting from the
places associated with Abraham and Moses, through Egypt and Mount Sinai as far
as Damascus, the city which witnessed the conversion of Saint Paul."
The Pope also affirms the important role of local Jubilees, in preparation
for the Great Jubilee, heralded also by the extraordinary 1983 Holy Year of the
Redemption, and the Marian year, 1986/87. "The Marian year was as it were
an anticipation of the Jubilee and contained much of what will find fuller
expression in the Year 2000". Furthermore, the Tertio Millennio
adveniente was written in the Year of the Family, "a celebration
closely connected with the mystery of the incarnation and with the very history
of humanity"
Chapter IV, IMMEDIATE PREPARATION, presents a specific programme of
initiatives for preparation for the Jubilee in three phases: ante-preparatory
(1994-96) in which to revive in the Christian people an awareness of the value
and meaning of the Jubilee of the Year 2000 in human history; the second,
(1997-99) a three year period centred on Christ, the Son of God made Man, and
so, Trinitarian. Reflection will therefore focus in 1997 on Christ; in 1998 on
the Holy Spirit and in 1999 on God the Father, from whom the Lord was sent and
to whom he has returned.
The main points indicated by the Pope for this immediate preparation which
must be, he says, a profound general and individual examination of
conscience, can be presented briefly as follows:
- Recognition of sinfulness: "The Holy Door of the Jubilee of
the Year 2000 should be symbolically wider than those of the previous Jubilees -
the Pope writes - because humanity upon reaching this goal, will leave behind
not just a century but a millennium. It is fitting that the Church should make
this passage with a clear awareness of what has happened to her during the last
ten centuries. She cannot cross the threshold of the new millennium without
encouraging her children to purify themselves, through repentance of past errors
and instances of infidelity, inconsistency and slowness to act";
- Yearning for unity among Christians, a deep desire present
throughout the Letter. The Pope speaks of wounds of division which must be
healed, and calls again for examination of conscience and promotion of fitting
ecumencial initiatives, ecumenical dialogue on all levels, and above all prayer
for unity.
- Promotion of social justice in keeping with the Biblical tradition
of the Jubilee, (universal destination of the produce of the land,
re-establishment of equality among the children of Israel)
- Remembering the martyrs. A Church which forgets the martyrs of
the past or fails to recognise the martyrs of today is not worthy to be the
Church of Christ. Here the Pope says "In our own century the martyrs have
returned" and "as far as possible their witness should not be lost to
the Church." For this purpose he has asked that documentation be gathered
and martyrologies be updated, particularly to foster the recognition of the
heroic virtues of men and women who have lived their Christian vocation in
marriage.
During the three-year period of preparation the Church will give special
attention in 1997 to renewed appreciation of the Bible, of Baptism, of
catechesis "the Apostles' teaching", and a strengthening of faith and
the witness of Christians. In 1998 efforts will be made for a renewed
appreciation of the presence and activity of the Spirit, the principal agent of
the new evangelization, and attention for the signs of hope present in this past
part of the century, in society and in the Church. In the third and final year
of immediate preparation, according to the indications given by Pope John Paul
II, the sense of being on a journey to the Father should encourage everyone to
undertake an authentic journey of conversion, through renewed appreciation and
better celebration of the Sacrament of Penance. Conversion is an indispensable
condition of Christian love. Love which is expressed n the Church's preferential
option for the poor and the outcast. The Jubilee could also be an opportune
moment to reduce, of not cancel the international debt which weighs on many
nations. The eve of the Year 2000 will also be a good time for interreligious
dialogue; a time to hold joint meetings in significant places.
The celebration of the Great Jubilee, which will take place simultaneously
in the Holy Land, in Rome and in all the local Churches throughout the world,
will give glory to the Trinity, God, the Father, the Son and Holy Spirit.
- Chapter V of Tertio Millennio adveniente, "JESUS CHRIST IS
THE SAME ... FOR EVER, speaks of the mission of the Church, called to carry on
the work of Christ. Like the mustard seed in the Gospel, the Church has grown to
become a great tree, able to cover the whole of humanity with her branches. Ever
since the time of the Apostles, the Church's mission has continued without
interruption within the whole human family. With the fall of the great
anti-Christian systems in Europe, first of Nazism and then of Communism, there
is urgent need to bring once more the liberating message of the Gospel to the
men and women of today, and to the young generation in particular.
ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE
Pope John Paul II officially began the preparations for the journey towards
the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 with his Apostolic Letter Tertio
Millennio adveniente, published on November 10th 1994. Five days later he
constituted the Central Committee and its Council of Presidency.
PRESIDENT: Cardinal Roger Etchegaray,
President of the Pontifical Coucil for Justice and Peace
COUNCIL OF PRESIDENCY:
Cardinal Camillo Ruini,
Vicar General of the Diocese of Rome
Cardinal Francis Arinze,
President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue
Cardinal Edward Idris Cassidy,
President of the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Unity among
Christians
Cardinal Virgilio Noe,
Archpriest of St Peter's Basilica
SECRETARY GENERAL
Archbishop Sergio Sebastiani,
Apostolic Nuncio
Since November 1994, various initiatives have been undertaken to lay the
basis for serious preparation for the Jubilee. In February 1995, following the
Holy Father's indications, Cardinal Etchegaray called on all the Presidents of
the different Episcopal Conferences to begin the preparation for the Holy Year
and he suggested the institution of National Jubilee Committees to guide and
co-ordinate similar diocesan committees, and also to work together with the
Central Committee in Rome for capillary sensitisation among Christians.
The Central Committee offices were inaugurated on March 16th 1995. On that
occasion came the official announcement that the Pope had appointed 22 members
of the Central Committee and constituted eight commissions and three committees
within the same Central Committee. Here is the list of the Commissions:
Ecumenism, Interreligious Dialogue, Liturgy, New Martyrs, Theology-History,
Pastoral-Mission, Art-Culture, Social. The committees are the following:
Mass-Media, Rome, Technical. On June 5th 1995, three new memebrs of the Central
Committee were appointed. Furthermore, the appointment of Mgr Kamal Hanna
Bathish, President of the Jerusalem Committee, brought the number of Committees
to four.
On the 15th and 16th of February 1996, there was a meeting in the Vatican
between the 25 members of the Central Committee and more than a hundred
representatives of the Bishops' Conferences throughout the world. Leaders of
other Christian communions also participated. Discussion focused on preparation
for the Jubilee according to the Tertio Millennio adveniente document.
On February 16th the participants were received by Pope John Paul II who
indicated in the teachings of the Second Vatican Council "the fundamental
lesson for the preparation and celebration of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000".
The meeting was also the occasion of the presentation of the first issue of Tertium
Millennium the official bulletin of the Central Committee for the Great
Jubilee.
On June 3rd and 4th, the Central Committee held a plenary meeting in the
Vatican to study opportune initiatives in view of the first year of immediate
preparation for the Jubilee, that is 1997, during which, reflection will focus
on Jesus Christ. The meeting resulted in a draft of a schedule for the Holy
Year, and various proposals: renewed impulse to evangelization; gestures of
solidarity and reconciliation among individuals and peoples; emphasis on the
ecumenical character of the Jubilee; an invitation to followers of
non-Christian religions to participate in the "great birthday celebrations"
for the 2000th anniversary of Christ's birth . During the meeting work-plans for
the 12 sub-organizations were also agreed on. These include: a Christological
volume by the Theological-Historical Commission in five languages; pastoral and
liturgical guide/handbooks; the announcement of the compilation of a Registry of
Martyrs of the 20th century.
The Central Committee was received in audience by the Holy Father on
Tuesday 4th of June.
On November the Cardinal Etchegaray, during a meeting with the journalists,
hold in the pressroom of the Holy See, announced the celebration of the Vespers
in the first Advent's Sunday, together with the solemn opening celebrated by the
Holy Father regarding the preparatory triennium to the Great Jubilee of the Year
2000.
At the same time was presented the guide - handbook of the
Theological-Historical Commission "Christ, Word of the Father".
Another important announce was the choice of the ufficial "Logo"
designed by a girl, student of the School of Arts: "Istituto Poligrafico e
della Zecca di Stato". On December has been ufficially inaugurated the
operative office of the Jubilee whether of the Technical Committee or of the
Mass Media
TERTIUM MILLENNIUM
Bulletin
Tertium Millennium is the official bulletin of the Central Committee
for the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000. There have already been two editions in
1996 and a third will be published before the end of the year. The magazine
serves as a connecting link between the Central Committee and the national
committees set up by the Church in the various countries, a tool for pastoral
workers and a source of information for the media. It offers correct and
comprehensive information on the Jubilee, as regards its true significance, a
commemoration of the birth of Christ.
The trasformation of the issue in a simplier style - from Bulletin into a
magazine - represents the first attempt to put into practice the suggestions
expressed by the Holy Father in his first address to the Central Committee (June
8th 1995). "It is a question of helping the Episcopal Conferences, the
Dioceses and the parishes to come <to a deeper appreciation of the most
significant aspects of the Jubilee celebration> (TMA 31) combining
them with the ordinary commitment to new evangelization, and providing regular
and useful pastoral materials for this purpose. I know that you are planning
appropriate links, making the best possible use of the many modern means of
social communications so that the intense preparatory work may be known and
shared by the entire Christian people in every corner of the earth." And in
this endeavour, precisely with the interventions and teachings of the Holy
Father, in a leading-section "The Word of the Pope", in each edition,
Tertium Millennium offers readers an updated record of the journey
towards the Holy Year of the Year 2000.
The magazine contains all the official acts: it reports the activity of the
central Committee and other special bodies (eight commissions and four
committees), Pastoral Guides for the attention of the local Churches and
pastoral workers, as well as preparations undertaken by national committees in
the different countries throughout the world. Stating clearly the Church's point
of view, it also deals with topical matters, such as ecumenical and
interreligious dialogue; the international debt and consequent shameful
north-south imbalance; the problem of refugees and migrants; the valorisation of
Christianity's artistic and cultural patrimony. The special-issue published in
February 1996 reported on the activity of the Central Committee and the various
other committees and commissions in Rome; the second issue, which came out in
July, gave more space to the work of National Jubilee Committees, it also gave a
brief History of the Holy Year, with illustrations taken from the Vatican
Apostolic Library and a series of articles to mark the tenth anniversary on the
historical meeting of religions for a Day of Prayer for Peace in Assisi in 1986.
Both issues of the Magazine were multimedia, and this will continue to the
Year 2000. Included with first issue readers found a CD ROM comprising the
address given by Pope John Paul II, parts of the Apostolic Letter for the
Jubilee, Tertio Millennio adveniente and a selection of sacred music.
There was also a video produced by the Vatican Television Centre. The CD ROM in
the second issue contained the Tertio Millennio adveniente document in
three languages, an audio-visual version of the History of Holy Year and some
unpublished recordings of some pieces of sacred music. In February Tertium
Millennium was published in Italian and in English, in the July issue, a
French edition was added as well. The next bulletin which will be released at
Christmas, focuses on the opening of the three-year phase of immediate
preparation for the Jubilee. It also presents the "logo" chosen for
the Holy Year 2000. In 1997 Tertium Millennium will be published every
two months.
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