Love Christ means getting your hands around the entire planet

Loving Christ means getting your hands around the entire planet?

In a few words The Tenth Crusade sums up FrancisChurch at the moment of the Global Warming Encyclical.

Pope Francis blasted Catholics labeling his rhetoric about money ‘communism’. They are only showing concern for the poor – that’s all. It’s unfair to say people who care about the poor are communists.

I guess it’s never occurred to him that people calling what he’s doing communism actually care about and for the poor too–some of them even poor themselves.

Sometimes I get the feeling he thinks before he showed up, nobody cared for the poor.

He must know it isn’t advocacy for the poor that convicts him of socialism, its the specific strategies he suggests. It was his constant shilling for the virtues of dysfunction that leaves one penniless and his incitement of contempt for people who study in school and go to work. The class warfare. His going gaga for Cuban communist dictators and tyrants did not help his reputation. It is his abandonment of moral theology and the distribution of Sanctifying Grace – turning the church into a social service agency.

Christ blasted Judas when he tried to turn our mission into the proprietorship of the poor and warned him that first and foremost is the mission of salvation which we have all yet to see in this papacy.

Just as Pope Francis has contempt for a holy and ancient Mass, Judas hated the way Magdalene poured priceless perfume on Jesus feet.  But she was devoted.  She worshiped Him.  She gave Him what meant the most to Him as God.  She loved Him for who He is.  Can’t these things be good in and of themselves?

Consumed by money, power and jealousy, truly Judas was a ‘social justice’ Catholic.

 

Sweeping Condemnation of Industrial Society

Sweeping Condemnation of Industrial Society

You know something’s not right when the AP calls a papal encyclical a ‘sweeping environmental manifesto!’  Isn’t that code for maniacal rant?

In a sweeping environmental manifesto aimed at spurring action, Pope Francis called Thursday for a bold cultural revolution to correct what he said was a “structurally perverse” economic system in which the rich exploited the poor, turning Earth into an “immense pile of filth.”

Is Pope Francis a refined, knowledgeable or spiritual man?  He only strikes me as clever, brutal, and determined.  Do you get the impression that his first version said something like, “a huge pile of s***?”  I’ve read that the pope can be quite vulgar in a closed door meeting.  I don’t know.  I know he didn’t produce this 200-page pile on his own, but I doubt that particular line was anyone else’s.  Either way I resent this characterization of the Earth, and I think you should too.

Where exactly does Pope Francis want the culture to go?  A free market has no structure, only protections for life and property.  To make a new structure or model is really just central planning; adding some new regulations and requirements.  That kind of thing almost never helps.

Francis framed climate change as an urgent moral crisis to address in his eagerly anticipated encyclical, blaming global warming on an unfair, fossil fuel-based industrial model that harms the poor the most.

So the model warms the globe because it’s unfair and it has fossil fuels?  Fossil fuels are just dead.  You can’t really make fuel from things that are alive.  The more dead things are, the more fossil-like.  Even a tree has to grow in some dirt.  You use dead fuel for living things, since they take precedence.

Oil burns cleaner than coal.  Coal burns cleaner than wood.  In Ireland they burn the peat.  Somewhere they cook lizards over dung fires, but something is going to have to burn if you don’t want poverty and starvation.  The world is built for this.  It can support prosperity as well as poverty.

The document released Thursday was a stinging indictment of big business and climate doubters, and aimed to inspire courageous decisions at U.N. climate negotiations this year as well as in domestic politics and everyday life. Citing Scripture and his predecessors, the pope urged people of every faith and even no faith to undergo an awakening to save God’s creation.

Liberals are always courageous.  The more destructive and evil they are the more courageous they feel.  Even Al Gore, Raul Castro, and Elton John are getting heroically Catholic.

“It is not enough to balance, in the medium term, the protection of nature with financial gain, or the preservation of the environment with progress,” the pope wrote. “Halfway measures simply delay the inevitable disaster. Put simply, it is a matter of redefining our notion of progress.”

No more balance!  No more financial gain!  No more progress!  Redefine all your notions!

The world has gone mad, the Church has slipped into the catacombs, and what of Peter?

 

The new beautiful FrancisLand where everything is equal

The new beautiful FrancisLand where everything is equal

At FirstThings R.R. Reno has an unexpected twist on the Pope’s new Global Warming encyclical, ‘Laudato Sii.’  It’s the most anti-modernist papal letter since Piux IX!

Commentators are sure to make the false claim that Pope Francis has aligned the Church with modern science. They’ll say this because he endorses climate change. But that’s a superficial reading of Laudato Si. In this encyclical, Francis expresses strikingly anti-scientific, anti-technological, and anti-progressive sentiments. In fact, this is perhaps the most anti-modern encyclical since the Syllabus of Errors, Pius IX’s haughty 1864 dismissal of the conceits of the modern era.

Haughty?

Francis describes the root of our problem as a failure to affirm God as Creator. Because we do not orient our freedom toward acknowledging God, the Father, we’re drawn into the technological project. We seek to subdue and master the world so that it can serve our needs and desires, thus treating “other living beings as mere objects subjected to arbitrary human domination.” By contrast, if we acknowledge God as Creator, we can receive creation as a gift and see that “the ultimate purpose of other creatures is not found in us.”

In short, without a theocentric orientation, we adopt the anthropocentric presumption that we are at the center of reality. This tempts us to treat nature—and other human beings—as raw material to do with as we wish. For Francis, “a spirituality which forgets God as all-powerful and Creator is not acceptable.”

Of course, God is exactly what modernity has forgotten, which means that it too is “not acceptable”—exactly Pius IX’s conclusion. The Syllabus of Errors is exquisitely succinct. Laudato Si is verbose. But in a roundabout way Francis makes his own case against the modern world.

One of the signal achievements of modernity has been the development of a scientific culture. It is now global in scope. In all likelihood it will serve as the unifying worldview that will undergird any future global consensus. At one point Francis calls for “one plan for the whole world.” If this comes to pass, the scientists and technocrats will formulate and administer it. The authoritarian consensus about global warming that actively suppressed dissent, as Climategate revealed, is a case in point.

Although he endorses the consensus view about global warming, in what may be an internal contradiction Francis describes “the scientific and experimental method” itself as part of the problem. It “is already a technique of possession, mastery, and transformation.” There’s not the slightest suggestion in Laudato Si that the modern scientist contemplates or savors the truths of nature. Science disenchants, measures, dissects, and otherwise prepares the world for us to dominate and control.

Technology is even worse. For nearly two hundred years, “progress” in the West has largely mean ever-expanding technological achievement from steam ships to trains to cars to the jet airplane. This has a creation-denying, God-denying logic. Technology seeks “a lordship over all.”

Francis allows that science and technology can lead to useful innovations, crucial medicines, and a kind of beauty in airplanes and skyscrapers. One assumes he endorses the use of technology to meet the challenges of global climate change, uses that will amount to an unprecedented attempt to manage and manipulate the earth’s ecosystem. But it remains dark and destructive. “Technology tends to absorb everything into its ironclad logic.”

So runaway Godless science has been destructive.  Without God’s guidance it’s become a monster.

Another feature of modernity and its faith in progress has been a political commitment to liberty, equality, and fraternity. To be modern is to believe that, for all our flaws, Western societies are more democratic, more egalitarian, and more inclusive than any in history. This is not the Pope’s view. The West is rapacious. He quotes one source approvingly: “Twenty per cent of the world’s population consumes resources at a rate that robs the poor nations and future generations of what they need to survive.”

In effect, the present world system created by European and North American modernity—the world made possible by Newton, Locke, Rousseau, Ricardo, Kant, Pasteur, Einstein, Keynes, and countless other architects of modern science, economics, and political culture—is an abomination. Francis never quite says that. But this strong judgment is implied in his many fierce denunciations of the current global order. It destroys the environment, oppresses the multitudes, and makes us blind to the beauty of creation.

So in addition to deadly science and technology, freedom has run amok and created a monstrous oligarchy of businessmen who enslave and deprive.  They must be reined-in.

I must report an odd, disoriented feeling when I finished reading Laudato Si. Since Vatican II, the Catholic Church has adopted a largely affirming attitude toward Western modernity. John Paul II denounced the culture of death and Benedict XVI spoke of the dictatorship of relativism. But in their teaching it was clear that they intended these as necessary criticisms to restore the religious and moral basis for modernity’s positive achievements.

Pope Francis seems to be changing course. Laudato Si does not explain how modern science can recover a sense of humility and wonder, nor does it lay down a natural-law framework for the proper development of technology. There’s no application of Catholic social doctrine to help us think in a disciplined way about how to respond to environmental threats, or how to reform global capitalism. That would have reflected the Gaudium et Spes agenda as carried forward by the last two popes.

Instead, Francis has penned a cri de coeur, a dark reflection on the systemic evils of modernity. Like the prophet Ezekiel, Pope Francis sees perversion and decadence in a global system dominated by those who consume and destroy. The only answer is repentance, “deep change,” and a “bold cultural revolution.”

‘Revolution’ is key to understanding Pope Francis.

If Francis continues in this trajectory, Catholicism will circle back to its older, more adversarial relationship with modernity. In the nineteenth century, the Church regarded modernity’s failure to acknowledge God as damning. It led to usurpations of authority, disrespect for hierarchy, and other signs of anthropocentric self-regard. Francis’s concerns are different. He’s worried about the poor, environmental disasters, and the complacent rich indifferent to both. But his analysis is the same, and he shares a similar dire, global view of modernity as the epitome of godless sin.

Yet modernity has changed, which is why so few readers of Laudato Si will think of Pius IX when they read Francis. Today’s progressives are often critical of the West, and in that sense critical of “progress.” Europeans can be hysterical about genetically modified food. They have renounced nuclear energy, the only feasible large-scale alternative to a hydrocarbon-based energy system. Democracy was the signal political aspiration of modernity, but the EU is a post-national political project, a technocratic, post-democratic project. Here in the United States, many are now educated to believe that the history of the West is one long story of oppression and injustice. Optimism has waned, which means that the pope’s pessimism may be received warmly.

Perhaps, therefore, the most accurate thing to say is that Francis offers a postmodern reading of Gaudium et Spes and Vatican II’s desire to be open to the modern world. He seems to propose to link the Catholic Church with a pessimistic post-humanist Western sentiment rather than the older, confident humanism.

The writer of this piece conflates modernity with modernism.  Modernity simply means now.  Modernism, as explained by Pope Pius X, places individual experience and sentiment over doctrine.  The Church has never had an adversarial relationship with the present, but in his new encyclical, Pope Francis seems to.  He wants to erase the foundations of modern life in the hopes that he’ll bring a more just result.  But there is no justice in Communism, only thuggish thievery and lies.

Such is the pretense of post-modern and socialist philosophy which dominates our universities and the UN.  The pope shares this and believes that the Church can be conformed to assist and supplement the same revolutionary goals.  He doesn’t see that Communism and oligarchic ‘capitalism’ are two sides of the same modern coin. Neither resemble the free happy life of Christendom before the Enlightenment, but Communism is clearly worse, though somewhat more ‘equitable,’ if you share that infamous priority.

It’s correct to say that Pope Francis dislikes modernity, because he is a radical.  He is keen to tear down the existing social order but, since he has contempt for the natural laws and rights, for freedom and property, he proposes no realistic structure to take it’s place.  He is the ‘ideologue’ which he constantly rails against.  He is bent only on destruction, in the name of mankind and God of course.

As far as the sentimental Modernist corruption of the Faith which Pope’s Pius IX and X decried, Pope Francis clearly embraces it.  In his constant pleas for closeness, tenderness and mercy, his demagoguery about the poor and suffering, and his embrace of all religions and philosophies on behalf of his ’cause;’ he is exactly what we’ve been warned about.