http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/world/pope-francis-climate-technology-encyclical/index.html
 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/world/pope-francis-climate-technology-encyclical/index.html>
Video at the top of this link: Climate Change Opinion on Global Warming: 
Public: No 48% / Yes 52%
Climate Scientists: No 3% / Yes 97%
Pope Francis: 'Revolution' needed to combat climate change
By Daniel Burke <http://www.cnn.com/profiles/daniel-burke>, CNN Religion Editor
Updated 4:10 PM ET, Thu June 18, 2015
| Video Source: CNN
(CNN)Pope Francis warned Thursday that modern trends -- from a heedless worship 
of technology to an addiction to fossil fuels and compulsive consumerism -- 
have swept the planet to the verge of a perilous "breaking point." 

"Doomsday predictions," the Pope said in a sharply worded manifesto, "can no 
longer be met with irony or disdain." 

Citing scientific consensus that we are witnessing a "disturbing warming" of 
the Earth, Francis embraced the view that humans are largely to blame for a 
dramatic change in the climate.

Nothing short of a "bold cultural revolution" can halt humanity's spiral into 
self-destruction, the Pope warned. 

"The Earth, our home, is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile 
of filth," Francis said. "In many parts of the planet, the elderly lament that 
once beautiful landscapes are now covered with rubbish."

The popular pontiff castigated big businesses, energy companies, short-sighted 
politicians, scurrilous scientists, laissez faire economists, indifferent 
individuals, callous Christians and myopic media professionals. Scarcely any 
area of society escapes his probing pen. 

Though it ends with a prayer, it is a deeply pessimistic statement, at least in 
parts, particularly from a spiritual leader known for his hopeful messages of 
mercy and openness. People no longer seem to believe that happy days lie ahead, 
the Pope lamented. 

Francis' challenging manifesto came Thursday in the form of an encyclical, a 
letter traditionally addressed from St. Peter's Square to the more than 1 
billion Catholics across the globe. Derived from the Greek word for "circle," 
an encyclical is among the church's most authoritative teaching documents.

But Francis has set his sights far beyond the circle of his church. With an eye 
toward several key climate change summits scheduled for later this year, the 
Pope said his letter is addressed to "every person living on this planet."

"I would like to enter a dialogue with all people about our common home," 
Francis said. 

Critique of modern life
The humble invitation belies the damning analysis of modern life contained in 
the 184-page encyclical, entitled "Laudato Si. 
<http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2015/images/06/18/papa-francesco_20150524_enciclica-laudato-si_en.pdf>"
 The archaic Italian phrase, which means "Praised Be To You," appears in the 
"Canticle of the Sun," a song penned by St. Francis, the patron saint of 
ecology. 

Read the full encyclical (PDF) 
<http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2015/images/06/18/papa-francesco_20150524_enciclica-laudato-si_en.pdf>
Subtitled, "On Care for Our Common Home," the encyclical was published Thursday 
in at least five languages during a news conference at the Vatican. The 
document was more than a year in the making, church officials say, and draws on 
the work of dozens of scientists, theologians, scholars from various fields and 
previous popes. 

"We have a situation here," said Janos Pasztor, the U.N.'s assistant 
secretary-general for climate change, "in which science and religion are 
totally aligned." Pasztor was part of a team that convened with church 
officials at the Vatican this April.


Pope Francis 34 photos
EXPAND GALLERY
The Pope's eagerly awaited encyclical recycles some of the now-familiar themes 
of Francis' papacy: an abiding concern for the poor, a scorching critique of 
the idolatry of money and a facility for using evocative and earthy language to 
describe complex conundrums. 

As the first Pope from the developing world, Francis brings a moral vision 
shaped not in the seminaries of Europe but the slums of Buenos Aires, 
Argentina. 

With language ranging from the majestic (lyrical poetry in praise of nature) to 
the mundane (take the bus!), the Pope put his signature stamp on a 
controversial topic and moral clout on the line. 

"Laudato si" is long on laments and short on specific solutions, though the 
Pope repeatedly urges deep thinking and dialogue to address the complex 
symptoms now plaguing the planet. In broad strokes, Francis calls for a drastic 
change in "lifestyle, production and consumption" from superficial and 
unsustainable habits to more mature means of caring for "our common home."

"What kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us, to children 
who are now growing up?" Francis asks. "The question not only concerns the 
environment in isolation; the issue cannot be approached piecemeal." 

And while the Pope calls for practical steps like recycling and improving 
public transportation, he said structural injustices require more political 
will and sacrifices than most societies seem willing to bear. 

In short, our care for the environment is intimately connected to our care for 
each other, he argues, and we are failing miserably at both. 

"We are not faced with two separate crises, one environmental and the other 
social," Francis writes, "but rather one complex crisis which is both social 
and environmental."

The rich and powerful shut themselves up within self-enclosed enclaves, Francis 
argues, compulsively consuming the latest goods to feed the emptiness within 
their hearts, while ignoring the plight of the poor. 

The Pope's 10 commandments on climate change 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/world/pope-10-commandments-climate-change/index.html>
The poor, meanwhile, find themselves on the run from natural disasters and 
degraded habitats, shunted to the bottom of the world's pile of problems with 
decreasing access to its natural resources. 

Francis saves his most challenging questions for modern consumers, arguing that 
humanity has become enamored of another apple -- and this time no Eve or 
serpent are around to take the fall. The temptation may have shifted from a 
forbidden fruit to cutting edge technology, but the sin remains the same: 
hubris. 

"We are not God," the Pope warns, "The Earth was here before us and has been 
given to us." 

Powerful quotes from the Pope's encyclical 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/world/pope-encyclical-quotes/index.html>

'Bottom of the pile'

Though Popes since Paul VI in 1971 have addressed environmental degradation, 
"Laudato Si" is the first encyclical to focus primarily on creation care, the 
Christian idea that God gave humans the earth to cultivate, not conquer. 

Even months before its publication, the encyclical drew criticism from 
conservatives and climate change skeptics, who urged the Pope not to put his 
moral weight behind the controversial issue of global warming. 

Many Catholics and environmentalists, meanwhile, eagerly awaited the 
encyclical. The Washington-based Catholic Climate Covenant, for example, plans 
to send homily hints to the 17,000 Catholic parishes in the United States for 
priests to use during sermons this summer. The group is also planning media 
events with bishops in Iowa, California, New Mexico and elsewhere. 

In the weeks before the encyclical's release, Protestant pastors and at least 
300 rabbis in the United States also said they were willing and eager to 
embrace Pope's call for environmental justice.

A Brazilian group made even made a tongue-in-cheek trailer 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/15/world/pope-climate-change/> ahead of Francis' 
encyclical, portraying the pontiff of a spiritual superhero gearing for battle 
against the forces of evil -- energy executives. 

In another sign of the anticipation awaiting the encyclical, the news that an 
Italian magazine had published a leaked draft 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/15/europe/pope-climate-change-encyclical/index.html>
 of the document online on Monday made the front pages of several American 
newspapers. 

>From the first days of his papacy, Francis has preached about the importance 
>of the environment, not only as a scientific concern but also a moral one. In 
>his first homily as pontiff, Francis called six times during the short sermon 
>for humans to protect creation.

The encyclical published on Thursday goes well beyond any sermons, delving into 
fields familiar to any Catholic, such as Scripture and theology, but also 
wandering into sociology, politics, urban planning, economics, globalization, 
biology and other areas of scientific research. 


The pope has said he hopes his encyclical on the environment will reach a wide 
audience.
Broken into six chapters, "Laudato Si" begins by cataloguing a host of ills 
wracking the planet: dirty air, polluted water, industrial fumes, toxic waste, 
rising sea levels and extreme weather. 

The problem is "aggravated," the Pope said, "by a model of development based on 
the intensive use of fossil fuels." 

If present trends continue, Francis argued, the changing climate will have 
grave implications for poor communities who lack the resources to adapt or 
protect themselves from natural disasters. 

Many will be forced to leave their homes, while the economically and 
politically powerful "mask" the problems or respond with indifference, the Pope 
said. 

The poor may get a passing mention at global economic conferences, Francis 
says, but their problems seem to be merely added to agendas as an afterthought. 

"Indeed, when all is said and done," the Pope said of the poor, "they 
frequently remain on the bottom of the pile." 

Opinion: Listen to the Pope about climate 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/opinions/cardin-pope-climate-change-message/index.html>

Technology takes over 

Conservatives like Rush Limbaugh called Francis a Marxist 
<http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2013/12/02/rush-limbaugh-vs-the-pope/> after he 
released another statement, called an apostolic exhortation, in 2013. In the 
statement, the Pope called trickle-down economics "crude" and "naive." 

Limbaugh renewed the criticism 
<https://www.facebook.com/RushLimbaugh/posts/1127495920599401> on Wednesday, 
accusing Francis of adopting "communist way of doing things: Controlling 
mankind through ... governments backed by police or military power."

Apparently undeterred, the Pope doubles down on his critique of modern 
capitalism -- especially aspects of the free market -- in "Laudato Si." 

"We need to reject a magical conception of the market, which would suggest that 
the problems can be solved simply by an increase in the profits of companies or 
individuals," he said. 

What's more, the Pope called the idea that the "invisible forces of the market" 
can adequately regulate the economy the "same kind of thinking" that leads to 
the "exploitation of children and abandonment of the elderly who no longer 
serve our interests." 

In one particularly searing section, Francis compared laissez faire economists 
to mobsters, drug lords, illegal organ harvesters and human traffickers. All 
are part of a "throwaway culture," the Pope argues, that treats human beings as 
just another commodity to exploit. 

The Pope's attack on the "myth of progress" is more surprising. But he 
connected his critique to a "worshipping of earthly powers," where humans have 
usurped the role of God, imposing our own laws and interests on reality with 
little thought to the long-term consequences. 

Opinion: Message from Pope: Hey you, stop ignoring climate change 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/opinions/sutter-pope-climate/index.html>
In particular, he argued that our "cult of human power" and blind adoption of 
technology has been a Faustian bargain, offering a wealth of benefits, but at 
the risk of losing our souls.

"Life gradually becomes a surrender to situations conditioned by technology," 
he said, "itself viewed as the principle key to the meaning of existence." 

"It has become countercultural," Francis continued, "to choose a lifestyle 
whose goals are even partly independent of technology." 

The omnipresent digital media feeds our "information overload" and "mental 
pollution," the Pope said. Those, in turn, lead to an excessive 
self-centeredness that tends to "shield us from direct contact with the pain, 
the fears and the joys of others and the complexity of their personal 
experience." 

"Nobody is suggesting a return to the Stone Age," he continued, "but we do need 
to slow down and look at reality in a different way." 

Despite his bleak view of our present situation, the Pope offered glimmers of 
hope near the end of his "joyful and troubling" reflection. 

"Yet all is not lost," Francis said. "Human beings, while capable of the worst, 
are also capable of rising above themselves, choosing again what is good, and 
making a new start, despite their mental and social conditioning." 

Is the Pope right on technology? 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/health/pope-francis-versus-media/index.html>

Getting business 'on board'

Opposition to the Pope's encyclical began several months before it was 
released. 

In April, the Heartland Institute, a conservative group skeptical of climate 
change, mounted a campaign 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/world/pope-francis-climate-technology-encyclical/cnn.it/1BhKVj6>
 to convince Pope Francis that global warming "is not a crisis."

"The Pope is putting his moral authority behind the radical environmental 
agenda of the United Nations -- and he's doing it after being told only part of 
the climate story," Jim Lakely, a Heartland spokesman, said in an email 
interview on Tuesday. 

Lakely said Heartland will contact "hundreds of thousands of Catholics" in the 
United States through mail and email countering the Pope's message and "giving 
them the truth about climate change."

That may be a difficult task. 

More Americans trust Francis almost any other world or U.S. leader as a source 
of information on global warming, according to a survey conducted by Yale 
University and George Mason University. Still, the same poll 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/15/world/pope-climate-change/> showed that less 
than 10% of Americans view climate change as a moral issue. 

5 key questions about the Pope and climate change 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/15/world/pope-climate-change/>
According to a Pew Research Center study released on Tuesday, American 
Catholics are divided along partisan lines over climate change. More than 7 in 
10 believe the planet is getting warmer, and nearly half attribute global 
warming to human causes. A similar number (48%) view it as a very serious 
problem, according to Pew. 


 <> <> <http://www.cnn.com/videos>
Cardinal hits back at Jeb Bush on climate 01:54
PLAY VIDEO
But while more than 80% of Catholic Democrats say there is solid evidence that 
the Earth is warming, just half of Catholic Republicans agree. And less than a 
quarter of Catholic Republicans believe that global warming is a man-made or 
poses a very serious problem.

Christiana Peppard, a professor of ethics at Fordham University, said she is 
not surprised that more Catholics are unconvinced that climate change presents 
a moral imperative. 

"There's an idea that science exists in a realm separate from the way we live 
our lives," said Peppard, author of the book "Just Water: Theology, Ethics, and 
the Global Water Crisis." 

But the Catholic Church has long taught that scientific facts, while reliable, 
don't answer deeper questions about human meaning and morality. "For that, 
ethical reasoning and contemplation are important," Peppard said. 

On the 2016 campaign trail, though, the Pope's eco-encylical seemed to be a 
tough sell. 

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who is Catholic, said the Pope should 
"leave science to the scientists." 

At a town hall in New Hampshire this week, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a 
Catholic convert, said, "I don't get economic policies from my bishops or my 
cardinals or my Pope. I think religion ought to be about making us better as 
people and less about things that end up getting into the political realm."

Pope hands GOP climate change dilemma 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/politics/pope-encyclical-climate-change-catholic-republicans/>
Other Catholics, though, were eagerly awaiting the Pope's encyclical. 

In addition to Cardinal Peter Turkson of Ghana, the Vatican panel presenting 
"Laudato Si" included Metropolitan John of Pergamon, an Eastern Orthodox 
priest; John Schellenuber, founding Director of the Potsdam Institute for 
Climate Impact Research; Carolyn Wo, the Chinese-American director of Catholic 
Relief Services; and Valeria Martano, an Italian historian and member of the 
Rome-based lay Catholic Community of Sant'Egidio. 

Woo said her assignment is to connect the encyclical's concerns to the business 
world.

Over the past 20 years, said Woo, former dean of the University of Notre Dame's 
Mendoza College of Business, some corporations have adopted more ethical 
approaches, and she expects a wave of letters from business leaders this week 
praising the Pope's initiative. 

"The bottom line is that we need business, not just some, but all, to do more," 
Woo said. "They are the ones on the front lines. We need them on board."

The Pope will also need world leaders to buy into his moral message, which will 
be key before a U.N.-sponsored climate summit in December, said Pasztor of the 
U.N. 

At the meeting, nations are expected to submit their plans for reducing 
greenhouse gases, and the Pope will likely repeat the encyclical's entreaties 
when he speaks at the U.N. General Assembly this September.

"Having such an important person as the Pope talking about this issue will 
reach a lot of people," Pazstor said, "and at a crucial time."

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