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The Grand Master, His Eminence John Cardinal Foley is in charge of
the Order. His coadjutors are the Governor General and the Grand
Magisterium. The latter consists of 18 Confreres chosen among
members of various countries.
The Order is made up of 48 Representative Bodies called Lieutenancies
of Magistral Delegations which are generally divided into Sections.
Twenty-three such Bodies operate in Europe, 15 in North and Central
America, 5 in South America and 5 in the Far East. There are
about 18,000 Knights and Ladies all over the world.
The fundamental purpose of the Order is the preservation of the faith
in the Holy Land. To this end it must provide spiritual, moral
and material support to the Christians who still live there.
It contributes substantially to the maintenance of 44 parish schools
of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which are attended by 15,000
children, both Christians (Latin, Catholics of Oriental Rite,
Orthodox, Protestants) and Muslim. It also contributes to the
maintenance of the Patriarchal Seminary (80 students) and the Diocesan
clergy. It looks after dozens of dispensaries in the Holy Land
and underpins relief and welfare institutions.
In addition to these ongoing commitments, the Lieutenancies undertake
specific action agreed with the Grand Magisterium on the
recommendation of the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem.
As to give a concrete example, we remember that from 1971 through
1990, thanks to the Order's support, new Churches and Chapels rose at:
Zabadeh, Bir Zeit, Safout, Jaffa-Nazareth, Jenin, Burqin, Gaza,
Tilaa-el-Ali, Marj-el-Hamam, Ermemine, Fouhais-Centre, Main Rabba and
Gifnah. New residences for the Rosary Sisters were built up at:
Jaffa-Nazareth, Rafidia, Ajloun, Rameh, Jenin, Gifnah, Taybeh, Gaza,
Ermemine, Salt, Fouhais-Centre, Naour, Madaba, Khirbeh; and new
presbyteries at: Rameh, Zabedeh, Nablus, Gifnah, Sweifieh,
Rousaifa, Ermemine, Fouhais-Alali; the home for retired Priests in
Betania and the Home for aged people at Nablus.
The approach to the task has been concisely expressed by an
authoritative source: "A Knight who is not prepared to make a
meaningful sacrifice and devote unremitting effort is unworthy of his
mission and breaks his promise. Admission is a personal act of
missionary apostolate. No one is forced to join, but once the
decision has been taken, inactivity and sluggishness would be disloyal
and a breach of Christian honor".
So long as its members are willing to bear witness on those terms,
come what may, the Order will not be found wanting. And the
standard will be handed on from one generation to the next.
His Holiness John Paul II, recently addressing the Representatives of
the Knights and Dames of the Order, said: "I am delighted to
meet with you, Knights and Ladies of the Equestrian Order of the Holy
Sepulchre. While enjoying the extraordinary grace of the Jubilee
Year, you have not wished to return home without a word from the Pope
and his Blessing.
I thank you for this gesture. From the words of your
Lieutenants I note the awareness with which you wish to respond to
your specific vocation. Your mission is an important one.
Although it has such ancient origins yet it preserves all its
importance today and providential function in our society, which is so
advanced, yet so poor and threatened.
Within your families, at work, everywhere, the Lord calls you to
be, in your own characteristic way, witnesses to Christ in the
encourageous daily practice of the Christian life, in fidelity to the
Pope and to the teachings of the Church. Your representative was
wise to recall the words of Paul to Timothy exhorting him to be a good
soldier of Christ and to take upon himself his share in Christ's
sufferings. This is an exhortation which becomes a specific commitment
at your Investiture. But it must be translated into concrete
work in the defense and propagation of the Faith.
Among these works priority is given to assistance to the Catholic
Church in the Holy Land. One thinks with emotion of that land
where Christ was born and died. It is a land which, as Paul VI
said, "has become the spiritual patrimony of all Christians". It
is a land in which the Christian community lives and works under very
difficult human, moral and spiritual conditions. Your specific
mission is to help that land, making an effective contribution to the
survival and growth of the cultural, charitable and social works and
institutions of the Catholic Church in the Holy Land.
In this regard, I wish to mention your noteworthy initiative in
sending to our brothers there much audiovisual material for teaching
Catechism. You have also sent them an extraordinary donation for
the printing of catechetical texts in Arabic.
You have my encouragement as you continue such needed and
providential aid. With St. Paul I say, "Do not grow tired of
doing good". I depend much on your presence, on your generous
and disinterested dedication to this noble cause, on your enthusiasm
in the service of the Church, as your provide for the most urgent
needs of a chosen section of her children. I want to continue to
distinguish yourselves in this Christian witness and in this valuable
charitable work. I pray that the Lord will sustain you and His
Spirit enlighten you in the choices of each day.
I wish you constancy and success in your apostolic work, and I
impart my heartfelt apostolic blessing"..
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