Showing posts with label Pope 2013 Jorge Bergoglio Francis first Jesuit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pope 2013 Jorge Bergoglio Francis first Jesuit. Show all posts

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Pope rails against 'dictatorship of the economy'




Rome: Pope Francis has attacked the ''dictatorship'' of the global financial system and warned that the ''cult of money'' is making life a misery for millions.
He said free market capitalism had created a ''tyranny'' and that people were being judged purely by their ability to consume goods.
Money should be made to ''serve'' people, not to ''rule'' them, he said on Thursday, calling for a more ethical banking system and curbs on financial speculation. Countries should impose more control over their economies and not allow ''absolute autonomy'', in order to provide ''for the common good''.


Pope Francis holds a dove
Gift of flight: Pope Francis frees a dove at the Vatican. Photo: Reuters

The gap between rich and poor was growing and the ''joy of life'' was diminishing in many developed countries, the Pope said. ''While the income of a minority is increasing exponentially, that of the majority is crumbling,'' said the pontiff who, as archbishop of Buenos Aires, visited slums, opted to lived in a modest flat rather than an opulent church residence and went to work by bus. In poorer countries, people's lives were becoming ''undignified'' and marked by violence and desperation, he said.

....

The Pope, who was elected two months ago, made the remarks in his first substantial speech on finance and the economy, during an address to foreign ambassadors in the Vatican. It underlined his reputation for showing deep concern for the plight of the poor and vulnerable.
''The worship of the golden calf of old has found a new and heartless image in the cult of money and the dictatorship of an economy which is faceless and lacking any truly human goal,'' he told the ambassadors.
As the Catholic leader in Argentina, he often spoke out about the plight of the poor during the country's economic crisis. Unchecked capitalism had created ''a new, invisible, and at times virtual, tyranny'', he said.
''The Pope loves everyone, rich and poor alike, but the Pope has the duty, in Christ's name, to remind the rich to help the poor, to respect them, to promote them,'' he said.
Pope Francis will make the first foreign trip of his papacy to Brazil in July. He will visit a Rio de Janeiro slum, meet young prison inmates and attend World Youth Day, a week-long event expected to attract more than 2 million people.


Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/world/pope-blames-tyranny-of-capitalism-for-making-people-miserable-20130517-2jru9.html#ixzz2Tms9WZsi

Friday, March 15, 2013

Pope Francis: 'If we are not praying to the Lord, we are praying to the devil'.



Pope Francis – the real deal – has Audience

Today I took in the Audience Pope Francis held for the College of Cardinals in the Sala Clementina. It was entirely charming.
20130315-114600.jpgThere was a little scare, however. After the first greeting by the Dean of the College, Card Sodano, the Pope rose to go down to him and he almost fell on the stair. I noticed that in during the Mass yesterday he also had a little help going down the step from his chair.
He again came in only the white cassock… I hope he will bend to decorum over time… and gave a talk that was partly prepared and partly extemporaneous. He departed frequently from his text to add observations.
20130315-114629.jpgWe need a transcript yet, but watch for his wonderful digression about how most of the men there (himself included) are now old. Old age, he said, is the place of wisdom, it is like a good wine that has to be shared with young people.
He spoke about the need not to be pessimistic. Give no place, he said, to pessimism, which the devil offers us every day. Yesterday he spoke about the devil, saying that if we are not praying to the Lord, we are praying to the devil. He clearly believes in the spiritual warfare going on around us.
20130315-114647.jpgHe smiled, he quoted from a German poet, he smiled, he extemporized, he smiled, he spoke warmly of the humble example of Benedict XVI, he smiled. He brought forth a strong memory of John Paul I.
As we move out of the first hours of this pontificate and into days and then weeks, we will see him more clearly as he is. He exudes warmth.
Finally, here is a view I think we will see a lot of.
20130315-114703.jpg
I suspect we will see this Pope visibly in prayer. Perhaps it will be more of a praying pontificate than a teaching pontificate. But Francis was able to quote a German poet when departing from his text.

....