• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

can someone please explain to me what is going.

May 31, 2009
22
3
✟22,657.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
I saw this on the news:

Pope Proposes New Financial Order


Pope urges new financial order guided by ethics, dignity, search for common good in encyclical


By NICOLE WINFIELD Associated Press Writer
VATICAN CITY July 7, 2009 (AP)


Pope Benedict XVI called Tuesday for a new world financial order guided by ethics and the search for the common good, denouncing the profit-at-all-cost mentality blamed for bringing about the global financial meltdown.
In the third encyclical of his pontificate, Benedict pressed for reform of the United Nations and international economic and financial institutions to give poorer countries more of a say in international policy.
"There is urgent need (for) a true world political authority" that can manage the global economy, guarantee the environment is protected, ensure world peace and bring about food security for the poor, he wrote.
The document "Charity in Truth," was in the works for two years, and its publication was repeatedly delayed to incorporate the fallout from the crisis. It was released a day before leaders of the Group of Eight industrialized nations meet to coordinate efforts to deal with the global meltdown, signaling a clear Vatican bid to prod leaders for a financially responsible future and what it considers a more socially just society.
"The economy needs ethics in order to function correctly — not any ethics, but an ethics which is people centered," Benedict wrote.
The German-born Benedict, 82, has spoken out frequently about the impact of the crisis on the poor, particularly in Africa, which he visited earlier this year. But the 144-page encyclical, one of the most authoritative documents a pope can issue, marked a new level of church teaching by linking the Vatican's standing social doctrine on caring for the poor with current events.


While acknowledging that the globalized economy has "lifted billions of people out of misery," Benedict accused the unbridled growth of recent years of causing unprecedented problems as well, citing mass migration flows, environmental degradation and a complete loss of trust in the world market.


He urged wealthier countries to increase development aid to poor countries to help eliminate world hunger, saying peace and security depended on it. He specified that aid should go to agricultural development to improve infrastructure, irrigation systems, transport and sharing of agricultural technology.


At the same time, he demanded that industrialized nations reduce their energy consumption, both to better care for the environment and to let the poorer have access to energy resources.


"One of the greatest challenges facing the economy is to achieve the most efficient use — not abuse — of natural resources, based on a realization that the notion of 'efficiency' is not value-free," he wrote.
Benedict said that the drive to outsource work to the cheapest bidder had endangered the rights of workers, and he demanded that workers be allowed to organize in unions to protect their rights and guarantee steady, decent employment.
Benedict called for a whole new financial order — "a profoundly new way of understanding business enterprise" — that respects the dignity of workers and looks out for the common good by prioritizing ethics and social responsibility over dividend returns.


The Rev. Drew Christiansen, editor of the Jesuit monthly America and a leading social ethicist, said he was most intrigued by the pope's call for a new sector of society to work alongside government, market and civil society: for-profit entities that work for the common good, which Christiansen suggested could include "fair trade" product makers and micro-finance institutions.


"I am not sure these enterprises yet constitute a sector of economic life," Christiansen wrote on his blog. "But they are harbingers of a different, conscientious kind of economics that would not repeat the mistakes of the last 30 years."


Kirk Hanson, a business ethics professor at Santa Clara University, said that while the encyclical went into some detail about the rights of workers and the duties of the state in protecting those rights, there was precious little about how an actual CEO leader should go about business.
"It's almost as if the church has so little trust in business leaders that it speaks to the political leaders urging regulation and the consumers urging voting with their buying power," said Hanson, who chaired hearings leading up to a similar U.S. Catholic bishops' statement on capitalism and social justice in the 1980s.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ACougar

rambot

Senior Member
Apr 13, 2006
28,312
15,976
Up your nose....wid a rubbah hose.
✟449,402.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Politics
CA-Greens
I always find it funny when the guy who runs the religion about the guy who literally gave everything he had away does so from a huge mansion.

In reality thought Jesus would probably be considered a communist by today's Republicans.
If there's one thing we can say about Jesus, it's that he clearly wanted us to have control over the money that we earn through our work.

I'm sure there are many conservatives on this site who share that sentiment.
 
Upvote 0

yasic

Part time poster, Full time lurker
Sep 9, 2005
5,273
220
37
✟22,058.00
Faith
Atheist
If there's one thing we can say about Jesus, it's that he clearly wanted us to have control over the money that we earn through our work.

I'm sure there are many conservatives on this site who share that sentiment.

I am sorry but I can't tell if your being sarcastic or not.

If not, could you please provide scripture from what jesus said to back this up?
 
Upvote 0

Billnew

Legend
Apr 23, 2004
21,246
1,234
59
Ohio
Visit site
✟42,863.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
Politics
CA-Conservatives
The pope wants more religious based goverment. I don't think this is socialism.
Spreading the wealth for religious purposes and helping the needy.
Not as the people see fit, but as the religious panel sees fit.
Socialism is close, but not quite what he wants.

We need a healthy capitalism economy. Not the self destructive free for all we have had.
 
Upvote 0