Blessed Diego Luis de San Vitores Church at 884 Pale San Vitores Road, Tumon Bay, Guam 96913 US - The Third Millennium
The Third Millennium
Author:
Authored on:
9/29/1999
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“Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today
and forever.” What is Holy Year? In the
Roman Catholic tradition, a Holy Year, or
Jubilee is a great religious event. It is a
year of forgiveness of our 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 when 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 ungathered corn, you will not gather the
untrimmed vine. The Jubilee is to be a holy
thing to you, you will not 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
favor” (Isaiah 61: 1-2). Officials in Rome
have unveiled the logo for the Jubilee year
2000, which proclaims Jesus Christ as the
lord of yesterday, today and forever. The
logo features five doves closely circling
one another so that their wings resemble the
petals of a flower. From the center of the
circle emanates a burst of white to
symbolize salvation. Each dove is a
different color, and a cross in matching
colors forms the backdrop along with a ring
representing the universe.
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