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Sunday, June 21, 2015

The Pope's Encyclical Laudato Si is a Major Awakening-Bravo, Pope Francis!

The Pope’s Encyclical Laudato Si Is A Major Awakening-Bravo, Pope Francis!
Occupy Democrats's photo.
BRAVO,POPE FRANCIS !
Today is a major turning point. Pope Francis’ encyclical is more than a theological statement, it is a major awakening for the world of the deep moral urgency of the climate crisis. The science is settled, our moral need to act is clear – now let’s come together and build the world we need.
Support the Pope’s call & take action here: http://gofossilfree.org/praisedbe/
My friend and retired Professor George Getzel notes:
You don’t have to be profoundly theist to appreciate this papal encyclical; you only need eyes that see, a mind that thinks and be graced with an empathetic conscience toward human beings and their environment.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/19/world/in-footsteps-of-popes-seeking-worldly-change.html?smid=nytcore-iphone-share&smprod=nytcore-iphone
In the Footsteps of Other Popes, Francis Seeks Worldly Change
Photo
Pope Francis issued a paper on combating climate change. CreditMaurizio Brambatti/European Pressphoto Agency
When an elderly Pope Leo XIII released a document in 1891 on the rights of workers to unionize and of owners to hold private property, European capitalists and socialists alike cried foul. Why should we listen, they fumed, to a pope’s pronouncements on economics and politics?
Now, 124 years later, Pope Francis has set off an uproar over his document on the environment and the threat of climate change, an encyclical released Thursday called “Laudato Si’ ,” or “Praise Be to You: On Care for Our Common Home.”
Once again industrialists, politicians and critics are fuming, contending that the pope should stick to religion and stop meddling in matters in which he has no competence.
“Pope Francis’ message on global warming was a confusing distraction that dilutes his great moral authority and leadership at a time when it is desperately needed to combat real — and present — crises in the Church and in Western culture,” said Richard A. Viguerie, who pioneered the use of direct-mail fund-raising to help build the political and religious right.
But Francis is following in the footsteps of popes and bishops who, for generations, have written documents on pressing social problems by applying religious teaching to events so contemporary that they seem ripped from their eras’ headlines.
Pope Leo’s encyclical “On the Condition of Labor” — or “Rerum Novarum” in Latin — became the seminal document in what is now recognized as modern Catholic social teaching.
Yet there have been many since then. Pope John XXIII warned of nuclear annihilation in “Pacem in Terris,” in 1963. Paul VI challenged wealthy nations to help develop poor nations in “Populorum Progressio,” in 1967. Benedict XVI noted economic inequality from globalization in “Caritas in Veritate,” in 2009.
Still, Francis’ encyclical, contends Austen Ivereigh, a papal biographer in England, “is the most significant Catholic social encyclical since the very first, ‘Rerum Novarum,’ in 1891, and it’s very much within that tradition.”
What distinguishes “Laudato Si’ ” from previous church documents on the environmental crisis, Mr. Ivereigh added, is that it is intended to provoke action — to cause an enormous “conversion” in how humans understand their place and responsibility to a planet that is in peril.
“We all know this is happening; the church has been talking about it for a long time,” Mr. Ivereigh said, paraphrasing Francis on environmental destruction. “Yet we do nothing.”
In “Praise Be to You” Francis puts forward a profoundly theological document, grounded in Catholic teaching, but one in which spiritual and secular matters are knit so closely together that the table of contents promising to segregate them into sections is a bit deceptive.
Throughout the paper, like a recurring chant, Francis intones that everyone and everything is interconnected — to God, to creation, to fellow human beings.
The encyclical repeatedly invokes phrases like “brother sun, sister moon, brother river and mother earth.” Praise for “our Sister, Mother Earth” comes from the Canticle “Laudato Si’ ” by St. Francis of Assisi, for which the encyclical is named.
“As believers, we do not look at the world from without but from within, conscious of the bonds with which the Father has linked us to all beings.”
But just when he begins to sound spiritually cosmic, Francis adds a pinch of science: “A good part of our genetic code is shared by many living beings.”
Francis seems intent on showing that the concern about the environment is not his alone.
For at least three decades, bishops’ conferences and popes have spoken out on environmental problems. Francis’ encyclical is studded with quotations and footnotes from the statements of bishops in countries like Australia, Brazil, Canada, the Dominican Republic, Japan, the Philippines and the United States on the impact of climate change or environmental crises.
For some of Francis’ most contentious arguments — about an economic system that exacerbates inequality and causes environmental degradation — he cites the words of his predecessors, especially St. John Paul II and Benedict XVI.
He attributes the environmental crisis to wealthier, industrialized countries that extract resources to feed an insatiable desire for consumer goods. Christians also, he said, have been seduced by this consumerism, despite the tradition of monasticism and teachings on simplicity by St. Francis and others.
“Christian spirituality proposes an alternative understanding of the quality of life, and encourages a prophetic and contemplative lifestyle, one capable of deep enjoyment free of the obsession with consumption,” Francis writes. “We need to take up an ancient lesson, found in different religious traditions and also in the Bible. It is the conviction that ‘less is more.’ ”
Early in the encyclical, the pope spells out his intent for all humanity to undergo a spiritual transformation: “Our goal is not to amass information or to satisfy curiosity, but rather to become painfully aware, to dare to turn what is happening to the world into our own personal suffering and thus to discover what each of us can do about it.”
He says that the Bible’s reference to human beings having “dominion” over the earth has been misread by some Christians as giving license to humans to plunder its resources without respect for other living organisms.
From Bro. Mickey O’Neill Mcgrath, OSFS, a painting that he worked on yesterday, perfect for today and the release of the Papal encyclical.‪#‎LaudatoSi‬ ‪#‎PopeFrancis‬
Bro. Mickey O'Neill Mcgrath, OSFS's photo.
Francis of Assisi would affirm.
Read Pope Francis’ new encyclical online, in PDF, or in paperback form. Discover the Catholic Church’s teaching on ecology, climate change, and care for creation.
LAUDATOSI.COM|BY WORD ON FIRE
AMEN,AMEN
Love to all of God’s Creations,
Rev. Dr. Judy Lee, RCWP

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