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Catholic News 2

Mal 3:19-20a; II Thes 3:7-12; Lk 21: 5-19The Danish philosopher, Søren Kierkegaard, tells the parable of a theater where a variety show is proceeding. Each act is more fantastic than the last, and each is applauded by the audience. Suddenly the manager appears on the stage, apologizing for the interruption.  He announces at the top of his voice that the theater is on fire, and begs his patrons to leave the theatre immediately, without causing a commotion. The spectators think that it is the most amusing turn of the evening, and cheer thunderously. The manager again feverishly implores them to leave the burning building, and he is again applauded vigorously. At last he can do no more. The fire races through the whole building engulfing the fun-loving audience with it. "And so," concludes Kierkegaard, "will our age, I sometimes think, go down in fiery destruction to the applause of a crowded house of cheering spectators". Today’s readings warn u...

Mal 3:19-20a; II Thes 3:7-12; Lk 21: 5-19

The Danish philosopher, Søren Kierkegaard, tells the parable of a theater where a variety show is proceeding. Each act is more fantastic than the last, and each is applauded by the audience. Suddenly the manager appears on the stage, apologizing for the interruption.  He announces at the top of his voice that the theater is on fire, and begs his patrons to leave the theatre immediately, without causing a commotion. The spectators think that it is the most amusing turn of the evening, and cheer thunderously. The manager again feverishly implores them to leave the burning building, and he is again applauded vigorously. At last he can do no more. The fire races through the whole building engulfing the fun-loving audience with it. "And so," concludes Kierkegaard, "will our age, I sometimes think, go down in fiery destruction to the applause of a crowded house of cheering spectators". Today’s readings warn us about a similar fate if we are not well prepared when the “Day of the Lord” dawns quite unexpectedly, marking the end of the world.

Introduction: As the Church year comes to an end, the Sunday readings reflect on the final days of the world, our own death and the Final Judgment.  Today's theme is “The Day of the Lord” or the “Second Coming” of Jesus in glory as Judge at the end of the world. Malachi, in the first reading, foretells this Day, giving the warning that the future, known to God alone, will bring healing and reward for the just who forearm themselves with words and works (peace, justice, mercy and truth), and retribution for the “proud and all evildoers.” Today’s Responsorial Psalm (Ps 98) refers to Jesus in his Second Coming: “The Lord...comes to rule the earth; He will rule the world with Justice and the peoples with equity”(Ps 98:9).  Although Paul expected to be alive at the return of Jesus, he cautioned the Thessalonians, in today’s second reading, against the idleness with which some of them were anticipating the end, and encouraged them not to be weary of doing good. He suggested that their best preparation for the future was to devote their attention to present duties, to maintain a holy and wholesome balance between prayer and service, work and play, and to develop enduring family ties and values.  Today’s Gospel passage warns that the date of the end of the world is uncertain.  Signs and portents will precede the end, and the faithful will be called upon to testify before kings and governors.  The Good News, however, is that those who persevere in faithfulness to the Lord will save their souls and enter God's eternal kingdom. Christ’s Second Coming is something to celebrate, because he is going to present all creation to his Heavenly Father. That is why we proclaim His Second Coming at Mass: "We proclaim Your death, O Lord, and profess Your Resurrection, until You come again." For Luke's community which had experienced much persecution,  Jesus' words about people being "handed over by parents, brothers, relations and friends," were beginning to come true. They would have found, as did Jesus original disciples, that Jesus' promise of the protective power of a providing God through all of this served them as a real encouragement to persevere in Faith and its practice: “By your perseverance you will secure your lives." Jesus also prophesied the signs of the destruction of Jerusalem and the end of the world in order to prepare His original disciples for this more immediate coming disaster and to remind them to rely upon Him for Salvation, not their own power.

First reading: Malachi 3: 19-20: When Judah returned from exile in Babylon, the people and their leaders showed a tendency, which they had absorbed from their long contact with the pagans, to lead loose moral lives.  The priests were irresponsible, ignorant and indulgent leaders, failing to correct abuses (Collegeville Bible Commentary).  Hence, in today’s first reading, the prophet Malachi, in the mid-fifth century (515-458) BC, chided them for their religious impiety, dishonesty and marriages with pagans, for which they hoped, foolishly, to avoid punishment.  The Lord God, through His faithful prophet, Malachi warned Israel that the day of the Lord was coming shortly, and that He had taken note of the goodness of those who feared Him and would have compassion on them in the Day of His coming. But He would punish the wicked and the proud on the “Day of the Lord by setting them on fire, leaving them neither root nor branch.”  The image here is that of a blazing oven. For the sinful, the Day will be a day of fiery purification; for the righteous, it will be the Day of healing. Malachi is the very last book of the Old Testament in many non-Catholic Bibles. The Lord God's final word, that He will send Elijah the prophet to them to give them one last chance at conversion  before  the Day of the Lord brings Final Judgment, is first fulfilled in John the Baptist, the precursor of Jesus, the Messiah, bringing Salvation to the world.

Second reading: II Thes 3:7-12: The earliest Christians expected Jesus to come again in His Glory (Parousia), soon, bringing history to its climax in God's Final Judgment of the living and the dead. Some among the Thessalonians responded to this prospect by abandoning their customary work and leading lives of idleness. They asked themselves, "Why should we spend the small amount of time before the Parousia in hard labor?"  Some of them were more interested in minding other people's business.  Hence, St. Paul corrects them by asking them to imitate his own example of manual work (as a tent-maker or leather-worker of some sort), and preaching, warning them, “If anyone is unwilling to work, neither should that one eat.” By his manual labor Paul supported his ministry, preaching his beliefs in word and deed to his fellow workers. We, too, must keep ourselves busy by faithfully discharging our duties and actively bearing witness to Christ through our lives, as we wait in Hope for the second coming of Jesus. 

Exegesis: The apocalyptic discourse. Luke 21:5-36 is Luke's version of what is frequently called "the apocalyptic discourse."   The early Christian apocalyptic writing was symbolic in nature, giving more an interpretation of future events than an actual prediction. The purpose of apocalyptic literature is to encourage dispirited people by proclaiming that God is in control of history and that punishment of the wicked will come about by God’s doing. It is also intended to encourage believers to remain faithful through the coming ordeals. Further, these works are meant to inspire believers to derive all the spiritual good God offers them through life’s inevitable suffering.  So the apocalyptic writers encouraged their readers to interpret their sufferings as a sharing in the birth pangs of the “end.” The believers were assured that if they remained constant in Faith, they could welcome the end of all things and the beginning of eternity with confidence and joy rather than with fear and dread. Jesus addressed His words to His disciples and followers gathered in the Temple for the Passover feast.  Jesus demands of His hearers tenacity of Faith and Hope in spite of their sufferings.  In the liturgical context, the Church aptly places the first part (ending with verse 19), of Luke's account of Jesus’ endtime predictions at the end of the Church year.  [The rest of Luke's account (vv 20-36), as we have it, includes Jesus' prophecy of the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 with His predictions of the end of the world.]

Fulfilment of Jesus’ prediction: To the proud people of Jerusalem, Jesus’ prediction of the destruction of the Temple was a great shock, almost blasphemy in fact, because those words sounded like massive distrust of God and an insult to God.  Yahweh would not allow it!  It is not surprising that these words of Jesus were used against him at his trial before the High Priest.  Yet within forty years, the prediction of Jesus was largely fulfilled.  The Temple, originally built by Solomon (960 BC), demolished by the Babylonians (586 BC), rebuilt by Zerubbabel and the returning exiles (536-516 BC), and enlarged and rebuilt by Herod the Great (20 BC-- AD 64), was destroyed in AD 70 by the Romans.  At the siege of Jerusalem by the Roman army, 1.1 million people perished, 97,000 were carried away into captivity, the Temple was demolished by fire, and the priests were murdered.

Call for evangelization by heroic witnessing: The real question of the believers at the end of the first century was: "Now that many of these things have happened, and we are being persecuted, what should we do?"  Luke reminds them of Jesus’ assurance that they were to trust His words against their persecutors.  They were to make use of this opportunity to bear witness to Jesus.  This test of Faith was also an opportunity for them to bear witness to Him before the court officials and the public at large.   Thus, the persecution would become a massive evangelization campaign [21:12-13].  Jesus cautions them against despair in the face of wide-ranging opposition and persecution.  Arrests would be followed by trial and condemnation in religious (Jewish) and civil (Gentile) courts.  Their Faith would serve as a clear witness on the Day of Judgment.  Not only would the individual martyrs see the Lord in Heaven, but the Church would flourish in persecution [21:18-19].

Doomsday prophets miss the message: Jesus refused to predict details or provide clues for the time of the coming calamity. “War, earthquake, pestilence and famine" were traditionally personified as the “Four Apocalyptic Horsemen” who would come to announce the endtime judgment.  The late Raymond Brown, a renowned Scripture scholar, suggests that end-of-the-world people perform a valuable service for us. They keep the Second Coming before our eyes.  Prophets of doom in every century point to historical calamities (wars and revolts) and cosmic disasters (great earthquakes, famines, pestilence), and "signs in heaven" (like solar eclipses and comets), as signs of the end.  This is a direct contradiction of what Jesus said.  He told us not to try to predict the end, but to live loyally and lovingly in situations which, in many cases, would be hostile to the Gospel. Instead of destroying us, persecution and martyrdom will gain us eternal life.  At the end of the discourse, Jesus gave the assurance, “Not a hair from your head will perish" (21:18).  God's saving purpose will certainly triumph, because, contrary to appearances, He remains firmly in control.  Finally, the way to glory is traveled more often through day-by-day endurance, rather than through isolated acts of heroic virtue. Here is a practical spirituality each of us can live, whatever our current situation may be.   

Life messages: 1) We need to be prepared daily for death and judgment. The ideal way to accept Jesus’ apocalyptic message is always to be ready to face our death.   We must live holy lives of selfless love, mercy, compassion and unconditional forgiveness, remembering the demands of justice in our day-to-day lives. We must also take time to rest and to pray in order to keep our hearts alive to God’s presence with us and within us. Daily examination of our conscience at bedtime, asking God’s pardon and forgiveness, also prepares us to face God at any time to give an account of our lives.

2) We need to attain permanence in a passing world by leading exemplary lives. Our homes, our Churches and even our own lives are temporary. All our structures are provisional. Our influence has no more claims to permanence than our buildings. Hence, our task is not to build monuments of any kind, but to be faithful to Christ.  How our faithfulness is expressed each day is the most important thing.  We are to persevere in our Faith, despite worldly temptations, attacks on religion and moral values by the atheistic or agnostic media, threats of social isolation, and direct or indirect persecution because of our religious beliefs. Let us conclude this Church year by praying for the grace to endure patiently any trials that are essential to our affirmation of Jesus our Savior. 

The 2000-member church was filled to overflowing capacity one Sunday morning. The preacher was ready to start the sermon when two men, dressed in long black coats and black hats, entered via the rear of the Church. One of the two men walked to the middle of the Church while the other stayed at the back of the church. They both then reached under their coats and withdrew automatic weapons. The one in the middle announced, "Everyone willing to take a bullet for Jesus stay in your seat!" Naturally, the pews emptied, followed by the choir loft. The deacons ran out of the door too. After a few moments, there were about 20 people left sitting in the Church. The preacher was holding steady in the pulpit. The men put their weapons away and said, gently to the preacher, "All right, pastor, the hypocrites are gone now. You may begin the service." -We should not be so anxious about when the world will end but rather should concern ourselves with the preparation needed for the end of our own individual life. Can we be faithful no matter what?? (Tomi Thomas in Spice Up Your Homilies; quoted by Fr. Botelho).

(Source: Fr. Anthony Kadavil)

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Donald Trump has been elected the 45th President of the United States. Trump easily reached the 270 electoral college vote threshold, taking many of the key battleground states. Before his supporters in New York President elect Trump promised to unify the nation after a rancorous campaign.Listen:  Hilary Clinton called her Republican rival to concede but did not plan to speak publicly until Wednesday morning. Trump won in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, states that hadn't voted for a GOP presidential candidate since the 1980s. He also won in Florida, Ohio, North Carolina and others.Global stock markets and U.S. stock futures plunged, reflecting investor concern over what a Trump presidency might mean for the U.S. and world economies and trade.Among those sending their congratulations to the president elect was Russian President Putin and the President of the European Council Donald Tusk. 

Donald Trump has been elected the 45th President of the United States. Trump easily reached the 270 electoral college vote threshold, taking many of the key battleground states. Before his supporters in New York President elect Trump promised to unify the nation after a rancorous campaign.

Listen: 

Hilary Clinton called her Republican rival to concede but did not plan to speak publicly until Wednesday morning. 

Trump won in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, states that hadn't voted for a GOP presidential candidate since the 1980s. He also won in Florida, Ohio, North Carolina and others.

Global stock markets and U.S. stock futures plunged, reflecting investor concern over what a Trump presidency might mean for the U.S. and world economies and trade.

Among those sending their congratulations to the president elect was Russian President Putin and the President of the European Council Donald Tusk.

 

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(Vatican Radio) The world has been reacting to the election of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States. Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin said,  "we wish the new president well, that he may have a truly fruitful government.”German Chancellor Angela Merkel offered the President-elect ``close cooperation'', while UK Prime Minister Theresa May said she was looking forward to work with Mr Trump.Donald Trump gave, what was viewed as, a conciliatory victory speech in which he praised Clinton and urged Americans to ``come together as one united people'' after a deeply divisive campaign.But what are the challenges he faces? Lydia O’Kane spoke to Mattia Diletti, a lecturer in Political Science at Rome’s La Sapienza University.Listen:  Mr Diletti says that one of the main challenges for Donald Trump is to “keep his promises” to the American people. He also says that his focus could very well on be ...

(Vatican Radio) The world has been reacting to the election of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States. Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin said,  "we wish the new president well, that he may have a truly fruitful government.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel offered the President-elect ``close cooperation'', while UK Prime Minister Theresa May said she was looking forward to work with Mr Trump.

Donald Trump gave, what was viewed as, a conciliatory victory speech in which he praised Clinton and urged Americans to ``come together as one united people'' after a deeply divisive campaign.

But what are the challenges he faces? Lydia O’Kane spoke to Mattia Diletti, a lecturer in Political Science at Rome’s La Sapienza University.

Listen: 

Mr Diletti says that one of the main challenges for Donald Trump is to “keep his promises” to the American people. He also says that his focus could very well on be on his own country rather than on foreign policy, but, he notes, it’s difficult to foresee at this time what will happen.

Asked why he thought more Americans voted for Trump rather than Hillary Clinton the political expert says that, “Clinton was not appealing (to voters); in three or four key states she lost the election…” He adds, that Americans voted for change and they voted against the past and they voted against their economic situation.

Under the U.S. constitution, Donald Trump doesn't formally take the reins of power until January but he will likely begin the transition to his presidency almost immediately. 

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(Vatican Radio) The Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, on Wednesday said he hoped the newly elected American president, Donald Trump, would be guided by God to serve his country but also to promote peace and wellbeing in the world.Talking to journalists on the sidelines of a conference at Rome’s Lateran University, the cardinal said he respected the will of the American people as expressed in this exercise of democracy. “We send our congratulations to the new president”, he continued, in the hope that “his government may bear real fruit”.Cardinal Parolin said it would be premature to comment on specific issues such as immigration, noting that the views of presidential candidates often differ from their policies once they become president and adding that Trump had already spoken “in leadership style”.He said Trump can be “assured of our prayers that the Lord may enlighten and support him” in the service of his ...

(Vatican Radio) The Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, on Wednesday said he hoped the newly elected American president, Donald Trump, would be guided by God to serve his country but also to promote peace and wellbeing in the world.

Talking to journalists on the sidelines of a conference at Rome’s Lateran University, the cardinal said he respected the will of the American people as expressed in this exercise of democracy. “We send our congratulations to the new president”, he continued, in the hope that “his government may bear real fruit”.

Cardinal Parolin said it would be premature to comment on specific issues such as immigration, noting that the views of presidential candidates often differ from their policies once they become president and adding that Trump had already spoken “in leadership style”.

He said Trump can be “assured of our prayers that the Lord may enlighten and support him” in the service of his country, but also in the service of peace and wellbeing in the world. Cardinal Parolin concluded by saying he believes there is a need for everyone to work to change the situation in the world today, which is one of “grave wounds, of serious conflicts”.

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(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis on Wednesday urged the faithful not to fall into indifference but to become active instruments of mercy.Addressing the crowd gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the weekly General Audience at a time in which the Holy Year of Mercy is coming to an end, he reflected on the corporal work of mercy that calls us to visit the sick and the imprisoned.Recalling the many readings from the Scriptures that tell of how, during his life, Jesus incessantly reached out to the other, Pope Francis said: He is our model as we consider the corporal works of mercy that call on us to visit the sick and the imprisoned.With these works of mercy, he said, the Lord invites us to perform gestures of great humanity.Sick persons, he said, often feel very alone, and something as simple as a smile, the warm touch of a hand and a little company can prove to be excellent medicine.Praising those who visit the sick in hospitals, the Pope said their contribution is of inestim...

(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis on Wednesday urged the faithful not to fall into indifference but to become active instruments of mercy.

Addressing the crowd gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the weekly General Audience at a time in which the Holy Year of Mercy is coming to an end, he reflected on the corporal work of mercy that calls us to visit the sick and the imprisoned.

Recalling the many readings from the Scriptures that tell of how, during his life, Jesus incessantly reached out to the other, Pope Francis said: He is our model as we consider the corporal works of mercy that call on us to visit the sick and the imprisoned.

With these works of mercy, he said, the Lord invites us to perform gestures of great humanity.

Sick persons, he said, often feel very alone, and something as simple as a smile, the warm touch of a hand and a little company can prove to be excellent medicine.

Praising those who visit the sick in hospitals, the Pope said their contribution is of inestimable value.

When this kind of work is carried out in the name of the Lord, he explained, it also becomes an eloquent and effective expression of mercy: “Let us not deprive sick persons from obtaining comfort, or ourselves from being enriched by closeness to he who suffers”.    

Likewise, the Pope continued, visiting the imprisoned is a fruitful way of bringing the Lord’s healing presence to those who are paying for their mistakes.  Deprived of their freedom, they especially need to hear the message of God’s merciful love and forgiveness, and in this way to recognize their worth and dignity.

“Whatever act a prison inmate may have committed, he remains beloved by God” he said.

“Who can penetrate the intimacy of his conscience and understand what he is feeling? Who can understand his pain and remorse? It is too easy to wash one’s hands of the issue saying ‘he made a mistake’” he said.

As Christians, the Pope said, we are called upon to bring God’s mercy and its redemptive power to our brothers and sisters in need.

Pope Francis also spoke of how he has a special place in his heart for prisoners and recalled that Jesus himself, though innocent, suffered in prison for our sake.

He also mentioned the apostles, Peter and Paul, who used the time of their imprisonment to pray and proclaim the Gospel.

Finally, thinking back to last Sunday’s Jubilee of Prisoners and to his meeting with a group of inmates who told him they wanted to go on to share Saint Paul’s experience with other prisoners, the Pope pointed out that we can all be instruments of God’s mercy with a gesture, a word or a simple visit which, he said, have the power to give back joy and dignity to he or she whose joy and dignity have been taken away.


   

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(Vatican Radio) Cardinal Peter Turkson, the President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, on Wednesday addressed the UNESCO, the United Nation’s cultural office, in Paris.They were holding an event to discuss Pope Francis’ ecological encyclical Laudato si’. The full text of the intervention is below Colloquium: “LAUDATO SI’, THE CARE FOR OUR COMMON HOME” The Earth, our Common Home: Challenges and Hope! “The Key Concept of Integral Ecology and its Evolution in the Church’s Social Teaching” Cardinal Peter K.A. Turkson     PresidentUNESCO – Paris, 9 November 2016 Introduction: It is truly a pleasure and a privilege to be at UNESCO’s headquarters to reflect on the Encyclical, Laudato sì, the care for our common home. At your invitation this afternoon, I wish to present the theme of integral ecology, so central to the encyclical, and its evolution in t...

(Vatican Radio) Cardinal Peter Turkson, the President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, on Wednesday addressed the UNESCO, the United Nation’s cultural office, in Paris.

They were holding an event to discuss Pope Francis’ ecological encyclical Laudato si’.

 

The full text of the intervention is below

 

Colloquium: “LAUDATO SI’, THE CARE FOR OUR COMMON HOME”

 

The Earth, our Common Home: Challenges and Hope! 

The Key Concept of Integral Ecology and

its Evolution in the Church’s Social Teaching”

Cardinal Peter K.A. Turkson

     President

UNESCO – Paris, 9 November 2016

 

Introduction:

 

It is truly a pleasure and a privilege to be at UNESCO’s headquarters to reflect on the Encyclical, Laudato sì, the care for our common home. At your invitation this afternoon, I wish to present the theme of integral ecology, so central to the encyclical, and its evolution in the social teaching of the Church, as a concept which helps us appreciate how the encyclical treats the challenges and hope facing the earth, our common home.

Pope Francis’s Encyclical letter “Laudato si:’ on Care for Our Common Home” was released in June 2015 and no longer requires an introduction or comprehensive presentation. It has been received and analysed in many sectors and disciplines: academia, international organizations[1] and NGOs, scientific and popular organizations, religious institutions of different faiths, media and think tanks, Governments and parliaments, and the business sector at the national and multinational levels.

One leitmotif of the Encyclical is that “everything is interconnected”[2]. This point has made a strong impression on all who read the full document. More than one year after its publication, after the first wave of enthusiasm and analysis, it is very meaningful and important to reflect on this interconnectedness here at UNESCO’s headquarters! The structure of UNESCO, its diverse branches and programs and the variety of its activities clearly reflect this interconnectedness – maybe more than any other single international organization. UNESCO also provides an appropriate base for reflections about technology and our relationships with others and with nature – these concerns are expressed in Chapter 3; and about two of the three pillars – namely culture and education – deemed necessary in Chapter 6 in order to sustain “the long path of renewal”[3] sketched for us by the Holy Father.

Indeed, as Madame Bokova explained in an inspiring article on Laudato si’, “L’UNESCO fut créée (…) dans l’idée que la paix ne peut être durable qu’à la condition de s’ancrer dans l’esprit des hommes et des femmes, par l’éducation, les sciences et la culture. Mais pas n’importe quelle éducation, et pas n’importe quelle culture – car celles-ci, pour inspirer la paix, doivent s’appuyer à leur tour sur la promotion de l’éthique, du respect et de la tolérance, en vue de construire la solidarité intellectuelle et morale des peuples[4].

We need not take time here to repeat the alarming situation of our common home: “the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor” (§49), the dominance of misleading paradigms (cf. §53, 106-109, 203), such as the globalization of a technocratic paradigm, and the effects of a misguided anthropocentrism (cf. §115-123). These elements are what make Pope Francis’ see an urgent challenge to protect our common home (§13).They should be taken as givens, they should already be clear in our minds.

Instead, let us look together at the evolution of the one concept that is most characteristic of this encyclical, and which helps us appreciate the challenges and hopes Laudato si’ addresses.

I shall offer my remarks in three parts:

  1. Looking back, I would like briefly to review Catholic social teaching and how it addresses the environment in its fullest sense. For as we know, authentic teaching has a very long pedigree. I shall draw this material from the pontificates of Pope Leo XIII, Blessed Paul VI, St. John Paul II and Pope emeritus Benedict XVI. All of these Popes have contributed significantly to a deepened understanding of the human person in his/her world: the relationship between natural and human ecology.
  2. Secondly, I shall introduce some of the contributions that Pope Francis has made to the legacy of the Church's teaching on natural and human ecology.
  3. Then, turning to Laudato si’, we can appreciate his teachings on integral ecology with all their contemporary relevance, urgency and signs of hope.

Ecology in the Social Teaching of the Church

Our account of Catholic social teaching begins with the encyclical Rerum novarum of Pope Leo XIII, issued in 1891. While that Encyclical focussed on the conditions and rights of workers, it also contained some seeds of current ideas about our natural environment and the attendant challenges. For example, it stated that those who receive God’s bounty in the form of natural resources or property should exercise their responsibility “as the steward of God’s providence, for the benefit of others”.[5]

Blessed Paul VI

A milestone was the Encyclical Populorum progressio of Pope Paul VI. Issued in 1967, it treated many facets of the development of peoples. Two of its key ideas are that development is the new name for peace, and that we need some effective world authority to cope with the scale of challenge in the environmental and financial realms.[6] And it includes this very positive remark: “By dint of intelligent thought and hard work, man gradually uncovers the hidden laws of nature and learns to make better use of natural resources. As he takes control over his way of life, he is stimulated to undertake new investigations and fresh discoveries, to take prudent risks and launch new ventures, to act responsibly and give of himself unselfishly.”[7]

In his Apostolic Letter Octogesima adveniens (May 1971), Pope Paul VI further addressed the inseparable relationship and interdependence between human life and the natural environment, saying: "Man is suddenly becoming aware that by an ill-considered exploitation of nature he risks destroying it and becoming in his turn the victim of this degradation. Not only is the material environment becoming a permanent menace—pollution and refuse, new illness and absolute destructive capacity—but the human framework is no longer under man's control, thus creating an environment for tomorrow which may well be intolerable" (§21). Paul VI also expressed worries about how the concern to control nature through science could put the human dimension under a parallel, but inappropriate control (§38); about the “new positivism” of “universalized technology” (§29); and about notions of “progress” (§41) that embrace rampant industrialization that could turn persons into “slave(s) of the objects” that they make (§9). The combination of themes in this Apostolic Letter makes it a true precursor of the focus on integral thinking of his successors.

In November of the same year and just before the Stockholm Conference (1972) launched the UN Program on the Environment (UNEP), Paul VI convoked a Synod on Justice in the World, which first gave prominence to the link between justice and ecology. Its line of thought suggested a close link between concern for the poor and a concern for the earth, essentially the cry of the poor and the cry of the earth, and adverted to the culture of waste of the rich.[8]

Saint John Paul II

In his first encyclical, Redemptor hominis, on the human person, John Paul II warned about the threat of pollution to nature.[9] Later, in his social encyclical Sollicitudo rei socialis (1987), on the 20th anniversary of Populorum progressio, he focussed on the nature of authentic human development and its moral character. In this regard, he centred on the need for individuals and communities to have full respect for the nature of the human person, whose origin and goal are found in God. He called attention to the need to respect the constituents of the natural world, which the ancient Greeks referred to as the “cosmos” (an ordered system with beauty).

The first consideration is about connectedness. “One cannot use with impunity the different categories of beings, whether living or inanimate – animals, plants, the natural elements – simply as one wishes, according to one’s own economic needs. On the contrary, one must take into account the nature of each being and of its mutual connection in an ordered system, which is precisely the cosmos.”[10]

The second consideration is that natural resources are limited, and not all are renewable. If we treat them as inexhaustible and use them with absolute dominion, then we seriously endanger their availability in our own time and, above all, for future generations.

Thirdly, certain models of development in industrialized areas cause pollution of the environment, with serious consequences for people’s health.[11]

These considerations form a clear moral message: the demands of morality with respect to nature are a sine qua non for the wellbeing of humanity. According to John Paul II, our fundamental conception and application of morality extends to natural ecology—the use of the elements of nature, the renewability of resources, and the consequences of haphazard industrialization.

In 1991, on the hundredth anniversary of Rerum novarum, John Paul II promulgated his social encyclical Centesimus annus. With regard to the nature of private property and the universal destination of material goods, he drew attention to what he termed the ecological question and its connection with the problem of consumerism. Here he referred to a widespread anthropocentric error: this being our failure to recognize that our capacity to transform, and in a certain sense re-create, the world through human work is always based on God’s prior and original gift of all that exists. Man might imagine that he can make arbitrary use of the earth and subject it without restraint to his will. Rather than carry out his role as a co-operator with God in the work of creation, man sets himself up in place of God. The final outcome is a rebellion on the part of nature which is more tyrannized than properly governed by humans.[12]

To correct these faulty ideas, John Paul II pointed out that all of us human beings, as individuals and in our community, must respect the created world and be conscious of our duties and obligations toward future generations. Certainly, the things that God has created are for our use; however, they must be used in a responsible way, for man is not the master but the steward of creation.

Going beyond the natural environment, the Holy Father also drew attention to the destruction of the human environment. Here he introduced the concept of human ecology. Yes, damage to the natural environment is serious, but destruction of the human environment is more serious. The important “Green” movement is rightly concerned for the balance of nature and worried about the natural habitats of various animal species threatened with extinction. But meanwhile, too little effort is made to safeguard the moral conditions for an authentic human ecology. Not only has God given the earth to humanity, who must use it with respect for the original good purpose for which it was given, but the human being (life) too is God's gift to us—indeed, it is the greatest gift. For this reason we must respect the natural and moral structure with which we have been endowed. The encyclical applies this thought to the serious problems of modern urbanization; it calls for proper urban planning which is concerned with how people are to live, and for attention to a social ecology of work.[13]

Based on this expanded social thought on the ecological question, the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church states that "the relationship of man with the world is a constitutive part of his human identity",[14] and that the cry of the earth and that of the poor are related.[15] In his World Day of Peace Message (1990), John Paul II wrote: "The proper ecological balance will not be found without directly addressing the structural forms of poverty that exist throughout the world." [16] This message inspired the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops to declare that "ecological harmony cannot exist in a world of unjust social structures; nor can the extreme social inequalities of our current world order result in ecological sustainability."[17]

To sum up the contribution of John Paul II on our topic of (environmental) ecology: In Catholic social teaching, respect for the natural environment and the human environment are inseparably and closely linked. On the one hand, man must respect the natural environment by not abusing it. On the other hand, the human environment receives the even greater respect it deserves when we respect the natural and moral structure with which we have been endowed. The more we respect our natural and moral structure, the more we respect others and also the created world. The natural environment and the human environment have a close relationship, and for the natural environment to be respected demands that the human environment be respected above all.

Pope Benedict XVI

In the new millennium, Pope Benedict XVI, in his Message for the World Day of Peace (2007), described four variants of ecology: the ecology of nature, and alongside it, a human ecology which, in turn, demands a social ecology, and, finally, the ecology of peace. For peace to be effected in the world, we must be conscious of the relationship between natural ecology and human ecology. The ecology of peace is comprised of peace with creation and peace among men, which presupposes peace with God.[18]

The example of energy supplies illustrates the close connection between natural ecology and the human ecology and the consequences for peace. Increased industrial production in recent years has led to increased energy needs. The subsequent unprecedented race for available resources has caused, on an overall basis, a rise in energy prices. Benedict XVI expressed serious concern for those affected, namely, for those suffering in the less developed countries who were excluded, as well as the injustices and conflicts that may be provoked by the race for energy resources. He affirmed the urgent need in international relations for a commitment to human ecology that can favour the growth of an ecology of peace; and this, he said, can occur only when the human family is guided by a correct understanding of the human person, that is, an understanding that is not prejudiced by ideology or apathy. [19]

The following year, during his Apostolic Visit to Australia, Benedict XVI drew attention to the beauty of the natural environment created by God. But this natural environment, he went on to observe, now bears scars as well, including erosion, deforestation and the effects of devastating drought. At the same time, the world’s mineral and ocean resources are being squandered and water levels are rising.[20] He also drew attention to the human environment, the highpoint of God’s creation, and the genius of human achievement such as advances in medical sciences, the wise application of technology, and creativity reflected in the arts. But the human or social environment also has its scars, such as alcohol and drug abuse, the exaltation of violence, sexual degradation and depravity, and the false notion that there are no absolute truths to guide our lives. He affirmed the true nature of human life that entails a search for the truth, the good and the beautiful. To this end, according to Benedict XVI, we make our choices and exercise our freedom, knowing that there we find happiness and joy.[21]

In his landmark social encyclical, Caritas in veritate, Benedict XVI dedicates the entire fourth chapter to the issue of the environment and human existence: “The Development of Peoples, Rights and Duties, The Environment.” Fundamentally, “the way humanity treats the environment influences the way it treats itself, and vice versa.”[22] The relationship between human life, and the natural environment which supports it, is inseparable. It is "that covenant between human beings and the environment, which should mirror the creative love of God, from whom we come and towards whom we are journeying".[23] Furthermore, the Book of Nature is one and indivisible, and it includes not only the environment but also individuals, the familiy and social ethics. Accordingly, our duties towards the environment flow from our duties towards the person.[24] But the "decisive issue", in the relationship between man and his world, in natural and human ecology, "is the moral tenor of society".[25]

What Pope Benedict affirmed here is a mutual relationship between natural ecology and human ecology: that we must respect the created world and that we must respect the way in which the human person has been created, for only in this way will we be able to fulfil our freedom. Such an affirmation, moreover, is not a religious claim but the statement of a natural fact.[26]

So the Holy Father called for an integral understanding of the world and the human person: one that respects both the created world and the highpoint of creation that is the human person.

Pope Francis on Integral Ecology

Elected three years ago, Pope Francis has rooted his own teaching deeply in the teachings of his predecessors on the relationship between natural and human ecology. He has promoted care for creation, integral human development, and concern for the poor and the aged in his homilies,[27] addresses and messages[28] at various audiences and events, and in his Evangelii Gaudium.[29] All this culminated in Laudato si’ released in mid-June 2015. The second half of 2015 was decisive for our topic: in July, the Third International Conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa; in September, the U.N. General Assembly on the Sustainable Development Goals running until 2030; and in December, the COP21, the Climate Change Conference in Paris.

Pope Francis himself offers us the core message of Laudato si’ in a short video. Let us watch it now.[30]

The key take-aways from the Laudato si’ video are clear:

  • Our nature is created by God and surrounded by the gifts of creation.
  • Our failures are that we over-consume and that we do not share the gifts of creation. We have tilled too much and kept too little – with dire consequences for the poor and the planet.
  • And so it is urgent that we change our sense of progress, our management of the economy, and our style of life. This coherent and sustainable approach to life is what we call integral ecology.

The foundations of Laudato si’ are found in the biblical narrative. Genesis teaches us that “human life is grounded in three fundamental and closely intertwined relationships: with God, with our neighbour and with the earth itself” (§66). Regarding the relationship with the earth, Pope Francis turns to His Eminence Bartholomew I for his prophetic teaching: “For human beings … to destroy the biological diversity … by causing changes in its climate,” by contaminating “the earth’s waters, its land, its air, and its life – these are sins” (§8), as are ruptures in our relationship with God and with our neighbour. And when one of these relationships is broken, the others are broken too, and our insertion in the universe is no longer integral—it is fractured, fragmented and partial.

On this biblical basis, the path of Laudato si’ unfolds in great and inter-related detail. The following six points help to convey its essential message:

  • All human beings are affected, and everything in nature too, by the crises of climate change, misuse of natural resources, waste and pollution, and attendant poverty and dislocation.
  • Everything is interconnected; we cannot understand the social or natural world or any parts of them in isolation.
  • Everyone must act responsibly to save our world—from individuals who recycle and use energy sparingly, to enterprises reducing their ecological footprints, to world leaders setting ambitious targets to reduce the use of carbon (as they did at COP21 in Paris), and then effectively implementing and enforcing these deep reforms.
  • We must be truthful; let no one hide or distort facts in order to gain selfish advantage.
  • We must engage in constructive dialogue; genuine, trusting and trustworthy engagement of all parties is required to succeed where all is at risk.
  • We must transcend ourselves in prayer, simplicity and solidarity.

By bringing these perspectives together with their impact on concrete human experience, Laudato si’ wishes to persuade the world that the moral dimension must be omnipresent. As all the Popes since Paul VI have insisted in various ways, there are no morally neutral decisions about the economy, production, commerce and trade. Such decisions affect both the natural world which is our common home, and all of us inhabitants of that common home.

In Laudato si’, Pope Francis lays out five aspects of the great effort needed in order to reduce our footprint and reverse the deterioration of the natural and social environment, and so to reshape and assure the future of our planet:

  1. to identify the industrial age’s short-sighted confidence in technology and finance. This technocratic paradigm is the conviction that all reality – including human life – consists of objects which people can endlessly manipulate for the sake of profit and without the slightest ethical consideration. This alliance between technology used as a means of power, and an economy obsessed with the short-term maximization of profits, is spread everywhere by globalization and tends to prevail over the political dimension.
  2. to propose a social teaching of the Church that creates awareness about the immensity and urgency of the challenge of the present situation of the world and its poor: the two fragilities which lie at the heart of Pope Francis’ integral ecology.
  3. to stimulate major shifts in our thinking and commitments—indeed, a self-transformation or conversion of every individual and of groups and institutions at every level, from local communities to global humanity.
  4. to make an urgent appeal for ecological conversion, for an education in ecological citizenship and for ethical and spiritual development. And
  5. with his profound faith and trust in humanity’s ability to work together to build a common home, to encourage humanity to respond to the urgent appeal of Laudato si’.

Thus, the Encyclical proposes “an approach to ecology which respects our unique place as human beings in this world and our relationship to our surroundings” (§15). The paradigm of integral ecology is an inclusive, dynamic proposal which articulates the fundamental relationships of each person with God, with other human beings, and with creation:

When we speak of the “environment”, what we really mean is a relationship existing between nature and the society which lives in it. Nature cannot be regarded as something separate from ourselves or as a mere setting in which we live. We are part of nature, included in it and thus in constant interaction with it... It is essential to seek comprehensive solutions that consider the interactions within natural systems themselves and with social systems (§139).

Integration is the opposite of fragmentation and isolation: “nature cannot be regarded as something separate from ourselves or as a mere setting in which we live” (§139). Rather than think of our relationship with the natural environment as separate from other spheres of human interest and activity, let us see nature as an integral part of a greater whole which includes the social, political and spiritual, material goods, the economic sphere and so on.

In this Pope Francis resonates loudly the sentiments of his namesake, St. Francis of Assisi, "who shows just how inseparable is the bond between concern for nature, justice for the poor, commitment to society, and interior peace”. He is “the example par excellence of care for the vulnerable and of an integral ecology lived out joyfully and authentically” (§10). Then recalling Francis of Assisi' view about the kinship of the human family with nature, Pope Francis asserts that our integration with the universe is inbuilt: “We ourselves are dust of the earth (cf. Gen 2:7); our very bodies are made up of her elements, we breathe her air and we re­ceive life and refreshment from her waters…We are part of nature, included in it and thus in constant interaction with it” (§2, 139). From conception to the moment of death, the life of every person is integrated with and sustained by the awesome panoply of natural processes. Humanity must reciprocate – we must nourish and sustain the earth that nourishes and sustains us.

Francis of Assisi points to the integration of the human and the natural, and so does the word care in the encyclical’s title. The terminology of stewardship appears only twice, but care comes up dozens of times. This bespeaks an intimate relationship that goes beyond jobs and accountability. Stewards can work within the boundaries of their responsibilities, and not deal with what falls outside those boundaries. This is to operate within a silo. But if I care, I look to the objects of my care – my children, my community, my world – and I see no absolute boundaries to my engagement. I might even die for them!

“Everything is closely interrelated,” says Pope Francis, “and today’s problems call for a vision capable of taking into account every aspect of the global crisis” (§137). Therefore, "we urgently need a humanism capable of bringing together the different fields of knowledge, including economics" and science (climate science etc.) "in the service of a more integral and integrating vision." (§141)[31] When we embrace integral ecology, we avoid silo thinking in favour of interconnection and holism. Only interconnection will let us “find adequate ways of solving the more complex problems of today’s world, particularly those regarding the environment and the poor; these problems cannot be dealt with from a single perspective or from a single set of interests” (§110). No branch of science, no form of wisdom -- including culture, religion and spirituality -- should be neglected (cf §63). “Today, the analysis of environmental problems cannot be separated from the analysis of human, family, work-related and urban contexts, and of how individuals relate to themselves.” (§141).

Building on this core idea, Pope Francis explores integral ecology in several areas of application. It comprehends “our unique place as human beings in this world and our relationship to our surroundings”, in the varied aspects of our life, in economy and politics, in various cultures, in particular those which are most threatened, and in every moment of our daily lives.

In the contemporary world, where “injustices abound and growing numbers of people are deprived of basic human rights and considered expendable”, working for the common good means to make choices in solidarity based on “a preferential option for the poorest” (§158).

The common good also regards future generations: “we can no longer speak of sustainable development apart from intergenerational solidarity” (§159). Here, in the context of integral ecology, Pope Francis invokes care for our children to formulate his pivotal question about the environment: “What kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us, to children who are now growing up?”(§160).

Conclusions

In conclusion, let me observe: As we confront the threat of an environmental catastrophe on a global scale, I am confident that a shaft of light has already begun to break through the many heavy clouds about ecology, and to bring us what Pope Francis describes as the warmth of hope! Most importantly,

  • as we gathered in Addis Ababa to consider how together we can pool resources to promote sustainable development,
  • as we gathered in New York, at the Plenary Assembly of the UN, to adopt a global agenda (SDG's), centred on people and on the planet,[32]
  • as we gathered in Paris (July 2015) at a conference to awaken "consciences for climate", and went on to agree (in an accord) at the COP21 (December 2015) to contain temperature rise within 1.5° to 2°, and then went on to show our commitment, appending our signatures at the UN early this year,
  • as we gather again in Marrakesh (November 7-18) for the implementation of COP21,

we become together revolutionaries of tenderness and sympathy, overcoming the world’s pervasive indifference and inequities with care for the earth, our common home, and its poor. Thus, if hope generates energy which stimulates the intellect and gives the will all its dynamism,[33] then the Encyclical Letter: Laudato sì, on the care for our common home is itself the hope that initiates a millennium of respect for life, of our care for God’s creation, of our care for the poor in solidarity and justice, and, particularly, of peace.

We received the earth as a garden from the hands of the Creator, let us not pass it on to those who come after us as wilderness, a desert!

Thank you all for your kind attention!

 

[1] Last year, I presented Laudato si’ in New York in the ECOSOC chamber and at UNICEF, in Paris at OECD, in Rome at FAO. Last December during the UN climate conference COP21, several Ministers quoted the Encyclical. In September 2016, a Seminar on Laudato si’ organized in the Vatican was attended by the heads of IPCC and CBD.

[2] Cf. Laudato si’, §70, 120, 138, 240.

[3] Laudato si’, §202.

[4]L'encyclique Laudato si’ sur le rôle de l'UNESCO sur les questions environnementales, article of Irina Bokova published in Culture e Fede, December 2015.

[5] Encyclical Rerum novarum, Leo III (15 May 1891), §22.

[6] Encyclical Populorum progressio, Paul VI (26 March 1967), §76-78.

[7] Populorum progressio, §25.

[8] Justice in the World, §70 (http://www.shc.edu/theolibrary/resources/synodjw.htm)

[9] Redemptor hominis, §11.

[10] Sollicitudo rei socialis, §34.

[11] Sollicitudo rei socialis, §34.

[12] Encyclical Centesimus annus, John Paul II (1 May 1991), §37.

[13] Centesimus annus, §38.

[14] Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, Vatican Press, 2005 (reprint 2010), #452

[15] Idem, cf. #481-484.

[16] John Paul II, "Peace with God the Creator, Peace with all of Creation", World Day of Peace Message, 1990, 11.

[17] Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops: "You love all that exists…. all things are Yours, God lover of life", 17. Cf. too, Marjorie Keenan, RSHM: From Stockholm to Johannesburg: An Historical Overview of the Concern of the holy See for the Environment 1972.2002, Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Vatican City 2002. United States Conference of Catholic Bishops: And God saw that it was good: Catholic Theology and the Environment, 1996 (with pastoral letters of US Bishops and other Conferences); John McCarthy SJ., "Catholic Social Teaching and Ecology, Fact Sheet" on: http://www.ecojesuit.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/CST_ENG.pdf. Note the list of studies and pronouncements of other Bishops' Conferences and local Churches.

[18] Benedict XVI Message for the celebration of the World Day of Peace (1 January 2007), 8.

[19] Message (1 January 2007), 9-11.

[20] For example, strip mining, which reduces agricultural lands or forests to hillocks of rock-waste and gaping craters, contaminates rivers and springs with mercury, zinc and cyanide.

[21] Benedict XVI Address, Barangaroo, Sydney Harbour (17 July 2008).

[22] Caritas in veritate, (2009) §51.

[23] Caritas in veritate, §50; cf. Message, World Day of Peace 2008, §7.

[24] Caritas in veritate, §51. Cf. too, World Day of Peace Message (2010).

[25] Idem.

[26] Cf. Francis George O.M.I., "Legislation creating 'same-sex' marriage: What's at stake?" Chicago: Catholic New World, 6-19 January 2013.

[27] The homily of the inaugural mass of his Petrine Ministry, Piazza San Pietro, 19 March, 2013; . Saint Peter's Square
XXVIII World Youth Day: Palm Sunday, 24 March 2013, §2; "Evangelium vitae" Day, 16 June, 2013 etc.

[28] Eg. UN World Environment Day, 5 June, 2013; Pope Francis' meeting with indigenous people during visit to Brazil: http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2013/07/27/in_brazil_pope_francis_speaks_out_on_the_amazon_environment_and_indigenous_people.htm

[29] Evangelii gaudium, §56, 215-216

[30] “Pope Francis Asks Us to Pray for Creation on September 1sthttps://youtu.be/19v0A19DDXs « Le Pape François nous demande de prier pour la Création en date du 1er Septembre » https://youtu.be/BOruDA2xqqA

[31] Cf. How Pope Benedict XVI encourages dialogue between faith and reason. The anniversary of the Assisi Day of Prayer in 2013 was celebrated as a pilgrimage: "Faith and reason in pilgrimage for truth".

  1. It was about protecting the human rights of people and the ecosystem of the planet. The SDGs were presented as "the road to dignity" by the UN Secretary General. As he said: "[We] have an historic opportunity and duty to act, boldly, vigorously and expeditiously, to turn reality into a life of dignity for all, leaving no one behind. The SDGs are a reaffirmation of the UN's faith in the dignity and worth of the human person, and taking the world forward to a sustainable future. It is, then, about making a life of dignity a reality for all: a compelling and a principled narrative, based on human rights and dignity. (Cf. Ban Ki-Moon, Synthesis Report, The Road to Dignity by 2030: Ending Poverty, Transforming all Lives and Protecting the Planet, UN general Assembly, New York, 4 December 2014).

[33] Pope Benedict XVI, Address, Presidential Palace, Cotonou 19/11/2011 (Meeting with Government Members, Representatives of State Institutions, Diplomatic Corps and Major Religions).

 

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Vatican City, Nov 9, 2016 / 04:45 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After Donald Trump pulled off what was for many a surprising victory in the United States election, Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin offered his prayers that the new president-elect would promote peace in a world torn by conflict.“First of all, we take note with respect the will of the American people in this exercise of democracy which they tell me was characterized by a large turnout. Then we congratulate the new president, so that his government can be truly fruitful,” Cardinal Parolin told Vatican Radio Nov. 19.He also assured of his prayers, “so that the Lord illuminate him and sustain him in the service of his homeland, naturally, but also of the peace and wellbeing of the world.”“I believe that today it is needed for everyone to work to change the global situation, which is a situation of serious laceration and grave conflict.”Cardinal Parolin spoke at the inauguration...

Vatican City, Nov 9, 2016 / 04:45 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After Donald Trump pulled off what was for many a surprising victory in the United States election, Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin offered his prayers that the new president-elect would promote peace in a world torn by conflict.

“First of all, we take note with respect the will of the American people in this exercise of democracy which they tell me was characterized by a large turnout. Then we congratulate the new president, so that his government can be truly fruitful,” Cardinal Parolin told Vatican Radio Nov. 19.

He also assured of his prayers, “so that the Lord illuminate him and sustain him in the service of his homeland, naturally, but also of the peace and wellbeing of the world.”

“I believe that today it is needed for everyone to work to change the global situation, which is a situation of serious laceration and grave conflict.”

Cardinal Parolin spoke at the inauguration of academic year of the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome.

His comments came in wake of the election of Republican Donald Trump as the next president of the United States of America, concluding what has been seen as a particularly grueling election cycle.

To the shock and surprise of many, Trump, who walked into Election Day as the perceived underdog, came out on top with 289 electoral votes, well over the required 270 needed to win, while Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton lagged behind with just 218 electoral votes, according to CNN.

Although the Catholic vote was in large part divided due to prolife and immigration issues, one of the key topics that likely loomed large in the minds of Catholics as Trump’s victory was announced was his promise to build a wall between the U.S. and Mexico, and as well as Pope Francis’ response.

During his Feb. 19 inflight news conference en route from Juarez to Rome, Pope Francis responded to criticism of Trump, who had called the Pope “political” and threatened to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border.

“A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian. This is not in the Gospel,” the Pope said.

In a Feb. 19 statement the following day, the former Vatican spokesman, Fr. Federico Lombardi SJ, said assured that Francis’ comment “was never intended to be, in any way, a personal attack or an indication of how to vote.”

The Pope has repeatedly talked about the need to build bridges rather than walls throughout his pontificate, and his remarks should be understood in this sense, he said at the time.

“It is not a specific issue, limited to this case. It is his general attitude, very consistent with a courageous following of the Gospel's teachings of welcoming and solidarity.”

When asked what the Vatican’s response to this situation was in light of Trump’s election, Cardinal Parolin said we must wait to “see how the president moves.”

“Normally they say: it’s one thing to be a candidate, it’s another thing to be president, to have a responsibility,” he said, explaining that for him, “even from what I've heard, although I have not looked into it much, the future president has already expressed himself as a leader.”

However, when it comes to specific issues and how Trump will act on them, “we will see what choices he makes and according to that you can also make a judgment,” he said, adding that “it seems premature to make judgments.”

After the final election results came in and Trump had officially received a call from Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton conceding defeat, he gave a 17 minute speech in which he thanked Clinton for “a very hard fought campaign,” and offered thanks to those who supported him along the way.

He said the time has come for America “to bind the wounds of division, we have to get together...I say it is time for us to come together as one united people.”

Trump pledged that he would be a president “for all Americans,” and that by working together, “we will begin the urgent task of rebuilding our country and renewing the American dream.”

Having spent his entire life in business and looking at the “untapped potential in projects and people” throughout the world, the president-elect said he wants every single American to have “the possibility to realize his or her fullest potential,” adding that the forgotten will be “forgotten no longer.”

Speaking of a stronger economy and better highways, infrastructure and care of veterans, Trump also offered a word on foreign policy, stating that “we will get along with all other nations willing to get along with us.”

“I want to tell the world community that while we will always put America’s interests first, we will deal fairly with everyone: all people and all other nations. We will seek common ground, not hostility, partnership, not conflict,” he said.

Although the election cycle “was tough,” Trump promised his best, adding “I look forward very much to being your president...I can only say that while the campaign is over, our work on this movement is really just beginning.”

However, with many Catholics perplexed and unsure as to what a Trump presidency will hold, some Catholic leaders have already spoken out on the need to remain unified and steadfast in maintaining and promoting Catholic values.

In a speech at the Catholic Distance University Founder’s Award Dinner, where he was the recipient of the Founder’s Award, Supreme Knight of Columbus said Nov. 5 that said that no matter the election result, Catholics must be a sign of unity, rather than division.

“The question we should ask ourselves is in what way Catholics in America can be a future source of unity and reconciliation or whether we will be a cause of further division and hostility,” he said, noting that the answer to the question “will depend in large measure upon what it means today to be a Catholic in America.

“In other words, what is fundamental to our identity as Catholics?”

In a series of tweets before the final election results came in, Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles offered his own insight as to what the answer of that question is, and where Catholics should be keeping their focus as things move forward.

“We are not Republicans or Democrats or liberals or conservatives. Before everything else, we are followers of Christ,” he said in a Nov. 8 tweet, adding in a second that “we are children of God, made in his image, called to be saints & to work for his Kingdom, which is the family of God on earth.”

In his comments at the Founder’s Award Dinner, Anderson stressed that no matter what the outcome of the election was, division would still run deep in the U.S., including within the Catholic community.

The solution to this, he said, will require “faithful Catholics to fully exercise their responsibilities as citizens” at a time when many are disheartened and frustrated.

“Now is the time for more – not less – Catholic values in our electoral process. Now is the time for more – not less – Catholic values in our nation.”

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Filling a void created by congressional inaction, voters in a scattering of states tightened gun control laws and approved increases in the minimum wage. The campaign to legalize marijuana achieved a major breakthrough, with victories in at least six states....

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Donald Trump awakened a movement of angry working-class voters fed up with political insiders and desperate for change. On Tuesday, that movement propelled him to the White House....

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LONDON (AP) -- Conciliatory comments from U.S. President-elect Donald Trump in the aftermath of his stunning victory over Hillary Clinton helped global stock markets erase a large chunk of their earlier losses Wednesday....

LONDON (AP) -- Conciliatory comments from U.S. President-elect Donald Trump in the aftermath of his stunning victory over Hillary Clinton helped global stock markets erase a large chunk of their earlier losses Wednesday....

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