Sunday, June 21, 2015

A Take on the Pope’s Perspective on the Climate and Beyond

The Pope appears to be a one world government advocate and anti-capitalist and his views may sneak into Ctholic teachings.

The Council on Foreign Relations interviewed Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim, co-directors, The Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale University, on the Pope's Laudato Si.

From the interview:
In this encyclical, Pope Francis gives expression...[that] A new global solidarity is a key value to direct our search for the common good.---

I see a fundamental resistance in Pope Francis's thinking to unbridled market capitalism that reduces everything to a commodity that is traded for profit.
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While discussions about social justice have been robust in Catholic and Christian contexts, this encyclical marks the first time social and environmental concerns are brought together. This perspective of eco-justice has traction with other Christian communities as well as non-Christian religions.
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[I]n Catholic seminaries will the curriculum for the training of priests actually be affected?  Will Catholic priests learn how to think theologically about integral ecology and Catholic doctrines?
   -RW

3 comments:

  1. I know a fine seminarian and I gave him the The Christian Response to Poverty by James Sadowsky, S.J. (and friend of Murray Rothbard and David Gordon). I hope that will counteract bad influences he'll be exposed to.

    Google

    anthony flood sadowsky

    and you'll find Fr. Sadowsky's essays.

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  2. The only thing the pope is concerned with is his own power and the power of the papacy.

    Nothing more.

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  3. Interesting that Pope Francis has views more biblically in line with what one would expect from the Antichrist.

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