
Guest essay by Eric Worrall
h/t Breitbart; Let them eat Cake? Pope Francis has in my opinion demonstrated a total lack of sympathy and understanding for people whose circumstances might drive them to defy or protest against Covid-19 lockdowns.
… Your Holiness, more than thirty years have passed since the fall of the Berlin Wall, but it seems that we have not learned much from history. The walls continue to rise, and material and spiritual divisions strengthen. There is an impression that the old conflict between the blocs is reappearing, and at the same time new centers of power are emerging. The Catholic Church, especially during the work of your predecessor John Paul II, played a notable role in dismantling the two blocs, which had an ideological matrix. Today, however, economic interests are at the forefront. A materialistic culture is propagated that is focused only on personal well-being, and to the detriment of the community and the poor, who are becoming increasingly poor. In this new local and world situation, what contribution can the Church make to the overall well-being of individuals and peoples?
In your question, I heard the music of the Second Vatican Council, which undoubtedly marked the actions of my predecessors and which gives guidelines for our actions today: “The joys and hopes, sorrows and anxieties of our people, especially the poor and all those who suffer the joys and hopes, the sorrows and anguish of Christ’s disciples. There is nothing truly human that does not resonate in their hearts ”( Gaudium et Spes, 1). We Christians cannot turn our heads the other way and pretend not to notice what is happening around us; moreover, we are called to approach everyone and in all situations, in the name of solidarity born of the mercy of the Lord. He was the first to move towards us and became our brother and he did not run away from any situation. We want to follow him, to be his disciples.
I like to think that a Christian is a realistic person, very realistic, with the realism of the Gospel. Therefore, each generation should take over and appropriates achievements, but also the limitations and defects of each epoch, in order to recognize the fundamental contribution that has been invited to that . Undoubtedly, times are changing, but the mission continues to call us to witness to our hope.
In our pandemic context, we are tempted to think of “normality” as a return to the past; we want to “fix the house” again based on what we have already experienced. It is a temptation to “mourn the black onion from Egypt”, to regret what has happened, which prevents us from seeing one of the basic characteristics of the situation we are going through: we do not come out of the crisis the same; we can get better or worse, but never the same. Crises have the ability to exacerbate existing injustices to which we were accustomed and which we could unconsciously justify; but they can highlight best practices and reactions among us. During this period, we noticed two attitudes. On the one hand, we have authentic “urban heroes” armed with solidarity and quiet, concrete and everyday commitment, the one who takes responsibility towards his neighbor and seeks concrete solutions so that no one would be neglected. On the other hand, we have an increase in the number of those who have relentlessly profited from someone else’s misfortune or those who have thought only of themselves, who have protested or complained about certain restrictive measures, unable to accept that not everyone has the same opportunities and resources to face a pandemic.
I believe that the role of the Church is inscribed precisely at this crossroads. Now is the right time to create and launch long-term processes. Over the decades, the words “crisis” and “change” have become commonplace (social, economic, educational, environmental crisis, etc.). Much has been said and written about the “change of era” and the need and importance of seizing the opportunity. Today, it is no longer a common place in the speeches of the establishment, but it is becoming a reality that we all share. We need change. The pandemic has brought our organizational and development models into crisis; it has exposed many injustices, painful silences and social and health failures, subjecting a large number of our brothers to processes of social exclusion and degradation. In many cases, too, there is a lack of personal and shared “antibodies” that would help us cope with the crisis; and that is the fruit of all efforts to discredit and forget what fed the souls of our peoples, in the name, at first sight, of saving routines, which, in the end, deprive us of the necessary immunity. We have reduced development to simple economic growth, forgetting that authentic development must promote all people and the whole man (c.Populorum progressio , 14). The progress of all people and for all people. We cannot lose sight of the fact that change always has a price and we must ask ourselves who pays for it. We are not alone in this and, therefore, we do not have to answer these questions alone.
As Churches, it is our duty to invite other actors and encourage processes that will help us release the trapped view of the world that is organized around power, wealth, and greed. To call to create a (new) normality. I prefer to think of normality as a mission to be fulfilled, rather than as factual data or factual and unquestionable reality. Normally, it is not the past, but what we long for for our children and grandchildren: the future, which needs to be built, where social stratification and exclusion are not the dominant pattern. The normalcy experienced as a mission will depend on the way we jointly respond to the fragility of our peoples. If we learn to accept and open ourselves to the pain and vulnerability of our neighbors, we will humanize our communities and gain a (new) normality in which human dignity is not a declaration of principles, but a belief that translates into a very concrete practice and lifestyle. In this way, normalcy will not be a mere continuation of the past, nor the abolition of this difficult moment, but the mobilization of all our resources and creativity to transform the present into a link that connects us with a new chance: that things can change. The Church should play an important role here, calling and acting so that the normalcy that is being created could resemble the protocol according to which we will one day be judged (cf.Mt. , 25). If we are able to put the fragile and the small in the center, we will see that the multiplication of the loaves is not a beautiful utopia, but a reality.
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Read more (Serbian): http://www.politika.rs/sr/clanak/465768/Sukobi-se-ne-resavaju-zaboravom-vec-dijalogom
Regardless of whether you agree with Covid-19 lockdowns, it is an incontrovertible fact that the lockdowns have caused tremendous hardship.
There are legitimate reasons for questioning whether lockdowns are the best response.
In many cases governments utterly failed to provide for people whose livelihoods they snatched when they drove people from the streets.
In other cases some governments, even governments in the USA, Britain and Australia, turned lockdowns into a vicious tool of political repression, shattering social trust by treating their own supporters differently to supporters of their political opponents.
Some lockdowns were so badly implemented they likely actually helped spread the disease.
Even in prosperous Australia people went hungry during the early stages of the Melbourne lockdown, thanks to the incompetence of the Victorian Government.
Not every lockdown was as comfortable as the well fed lockdown residents of the Vatican enjoyed.
The various factions of the christian church have been telling people how to live their lives for 2,000 years, often in great detail. So why would it surprise anyone that the Pope tells people to obey lockdown orders? At least he didn’t tie wearing a mask to getting a seat in heaven.
The marxist poop practicing social distancing October 2020
Why would anyone care what a pedo-coddling commie says?
As Argentina really implodes this time maybe there will be some lessons learned in the populist/socialist big tent of backward thinking with very real outcomes.
Can people do a recall election on the Pope?
Asking for a friend.
we have an increase in the number of those who have relentlessly profited from someone else’s misfortune or those who have thought only of themselves …
Indeed. But those are not the protesters.
Makes me glad I am a Polytheist.
The Pope is a Lefty and just about all Lefties are delusional. I think that is a requirement for being a Leftie.
It’s all about the imaginary friends.
Economic growth is the key to all progress.
Having better food, housing, health care, and everything else depends on a sound economy. The more wealth a society generates, the more it has for expensive medicine, better transportation, better food, better insurance, better everything.
The pope and every Progressive I have ever heard of are blighted ignorant fools for thinking money doesn’t buy happiness. Happiness itself is not something that can be bought and sold, but everything which makes life better and creates happy people takes resources, and that is what money represents — access to resources.
The bear is the one wearing the funny hat – while THIS Pope does all the sh1tt1ng in the woods…
Isn’t the Vatican historically in the miracles, wonders and universal holy crowdfunded corporate business ?
Talk the talk, walk the walk, time to deliver guys, you’ve got yourselves a schoolbook case of what miracles and a few wonders can solve.
So get at it, enough “Honest Joe, preowned cars” arguments already.
Just focusing on the protesters, a bunch of nutters who deny that there’s a virus in the first place, say it’s no worse than a cold, it’s an evil plan to have everybody injected with a microchip, having to wear a mask infringes their democratic rights or any other stupid idea that they’ve been told by a friend, seen some nutcase online claim or a Facebook meme.
In whom had they Faith to put on their masks? Whom will they believe to take off their masks?
The conspiracy of ignorance masquerades as common sense.
I asked a neighbor and he responded, “When I am comfortable.”. I asked when did he become un-comfortable and he responded, “When I almost died.”. I left my idiot neighbor to his misery virtue signaling.
I recently learned of –
Sedevacantism is the position held by some people who identify as Catholic that the present occupier of the Holy See is not truly the pope due to the mainstream church’s espousal of what they see as the heresy of modernism and that, for lack of a valid pope, the See has been vacant since the death of Pope Pius XII in 1958 or the death of Pope John XXIII in 1963.
Very satisfying to me a conservative Confessing Lutheran. After 500 years, time for another Reformation.
The positions held by the Society of PPX and others are erroneous in that they would mean that Jesus was lying in Matthew 16:18. If the church collapses, or becomes invalid in some way, then the gates of hell have prevailed, however, Jesus promised they wouldn’t. This is encouraging to me as a Catholic in the sense that I believe the doctrine, but recognize that the Church, beginning with Judas, is led by flawed human beings. That does not shake my faith. Pope Francis, in his entire Pontificate, has not spoken Ex Cathedra (infallibly) on any subject, including this one, which means his opinions are his own and, frankly, I disagree with him.
Guess the Mods considered my comment too truthful to allow.
Perhaps this will help with the understanding of why lock downs only work in the very short term and fail long term:
If the government locked down auto traffic for everyone except emergency workers, the number of auto accidents would go down drastically. But when the lock down is eased and more traffic goes back on the roads, accidents will increase. When you open up the roads to full time traffic again, the number of accidents will go back to what was normal prior to the lock down.
This virus is not going away just because people are not out and about. It is not a passing event that you can hide from and wait for it to dissipate. It will be always be there. so we need to cope with it just as we do with traffic accidents.
‘In other cases some governments, even governments in the USA, Britain and Australia, turned lockdowns into a vicious tool of political repression, shattering social trust by treating their own supporters differently to supporters of their political opponents.’
No they didn’t! Hyperbolic nonsense!
Welcome to the party griff.
What country do you live in? Obviously, not the USA. The federal government didn’t screw the pooch, but many Democratic state Governors have. In the US the state government has policy control over this kind of issue(not National security. A bad example is Pennsyklvania, and New York, and New Jersey, and California.
They all implemented stringent lockdowns. Didn’t work very well in PA because it is majority conservative, albeit pretty evenly distributed outside the major cities. The lockdown orders did greatly affect the big cities because the city government enforced the rules. A lot of other places didn’t really enforce the rules. Virtually nobody was arrested or chastised for not wearing a mask on a hike or a run in a park.
Sad to say the PA governor tried to be a half-pint dictator. He did succeed is wasting money and words with little effect. The guy is strictly a tin-pot dictator. He’s the kind who moved his multi-million dollar company out of PA to avoid taxes BEFORE he ran for governor. He followed CDC guidelines as best he could and threw record numbers of people out of work and closed many companies through the economic stalemate.
The quote you have is right on the money at least in PA, USA. Proud Democratic dogbone.
You beat me to it Griff. I can talk about Australia and Worrel’s comment is ignorant, idealogical driven delusion. Victoria, the only part of Australia that endured a couple of months of serious, extended locking down, has had zero cases, let me repeat that ZERO CASES the last 5 days and as a result and can look forward to getting back to some kind of normality. Compare that to Missouri (about the same population), yesterday’s new infections 3,300 and set to explode. Trying to impress the choir here by calling what has happend in Victoria “political repression” is about the most ridiculous thing I’ve read since the pandemic started.
The places whose leaders were driven by Worrels brand of ignorant, idealogical delusion and have ignored the advice of their epidemiologists are plunging back into an even deeper wave of uncontrollable infection and it’s going to get a lot worse before it gets better. Its the innocent medical staff risking their lives who I feel the most sorry for.
Doom, gloom, fear and trembling, agony, despair, malevolence, plotting and hatred.
Does even Hell have the fury of a progressive governing on earth?
I’m unsure who is being quoted in the massive block quote attributed to “–Read more (Serbian).” Eric Worrall? Breitbart? it’s obviously not a native English speaker.
Um … where are his exact words? I’m not hearing this commentary from EWTN and their host of on-air priests and other on-air individuals …
The marxists have done a gradual but excellent job of dismantling the Catholic religion.
Warren G. Harding must be turning on his grave. The return to normalcy hijacked by Biden, and now the Pope wants to play God and create a new fake green one.
He witnessed first hand, Communism in Argentina. Many died, esp priests. Now he wants the whole world to go down this road of despair! He’s a decent guy, that has gone astray – power corrupts absolutely, and he’s lost his way! Thousand’s of priests in the Church have also gone astray over the years, sexually abusing 10’s of thousand’s young boys and even girls, even killing some of them, but ruining their lives and leading them away from God. Whosoever leads even one of my little children away from God, it would be better to tie a millstone around his neck and throw them to the very bottom of the sea! (paraphrasing). Why haven’t all the Pope’s had all priest who sexually abused kids, tried, convicted, and sent to prison for live, but even better, put to death? Instead…they just moved them around the globe. Most were sent back to the Vatican. A few have been convicted recently by authorities. This Pope did little to actually help these abused children. Instead…they just pay them money from their Vatican Bank that’s supported heavily by the Mafia who own’s them in Italy! The only person(s) who can forgive sin is either Jesus or God…without exception! Asking forgiveness to a priest is like the tinkling of brass, falling away to the ground. The leaders of The Church are no different than the Sanhedrin, who were responsible for killing Christ, torturing Him and hanging Him on the cross! Mixing politics with religion is not what Jesus taught – “Give to Ceasar, the things that are Caesar’s, and to God, the things that are God’s!” Of course, you should keep politics and religion separate, but you can’t take religion out of politicians. It only makes for a more forgiving, merciful, and loving leader. Leaders who care for and serve for the benefit of all human kind!
Surely they must have, in his belief, free will and will be judged by God when they die, right?