A Itália está prestes a aprovar o casamento gay, o que dirá e recomendará o Papa Francisco? A expectativa é que ele repita o que fez na Argentina, quando mandou que os católicos que planejavam fazer uma vigília de oração contra o casamento gay fossem para casa. Assim diz o jornalista Sandro Magister.
A desculpa é que o Papa não que ser político.
Uau, vejam a foto acima. Ela revela um momento em que o Papa pediu para que o carro que vinha parasse, perto de fotógrafos, para rezar em Belém em um muro que diz "liberdade para palestinos". Pode uma Papa agir de forma mais política do que essa?
Magister não lembra desse fato, mas ele lembra outros, como quando o Papa pede insistentemente que os países forneçam casa, terra e trabalho para todos. Ou quando sugere que a culpa do terrorismo islâmico é da pobreza propagada pelo Ocidente.
O silêncio do Papa é seletivo e quando ele se entrega a fazer política tem agido de forma confusa, em geral em defesa de valores caros ao esquerdismo global.
Eu detesto o silêncio da Igreja, quando ela deve ser a luz. Cristo disse para a Igreja ser a luz do mundo. E São Paulo ressaltou que os cristãos devem pregar Cristo em tempos oportunos e também em tempos inoportunos.
Vejam texto de Sandro Magister.
When It Comes To Gay Unions, Bergoglio Doesn’t Say No
by Sandro Magister
ROME, January 15, 2016 – Jorge Mario Bergoglio likes his crowds festive and prayerful, never politically aggressive.
In Buenos Aires, in 2010, he sent back home the Catholics who had gathered in front of parliament for a prayer vigil against the imminent approval of homosexual marriage. He persuaded them to “avoid the impasse.”
Of course, in that law Bergoglio saw in action nothing less than “the father of lies who has the presumption to confound and deceive the children of God,” but in public he did not say a word. He only released a letter that he had written to cloistered Carmelite nuns, in which he blamed the devil and asked for prayers.
Today as well, now that a law on homosexual unions is on the way in Italy, Pope Francis is not swerving from this stance.
He has thundered against “the new ideological colonialisms that seek to destroy the family” and against “that error of the human mind which is gender theory.” But he did so while he was on his way to Manila and to Naples, both times out of context, never in the heat of political combat.
Last June, at the announcement of a “Family Day” in Rome against the legalization of homosexual unions, secretary of the Italian episcopal conference Nunzio Galantino, the pope’s go-between with the bishops, did everything he could to make it a stillbirth. And when the demonstration went ahead anyway and saw massive public attendance, Pope Francis was careful not to give it his public blessing.
The faithful may indeed act in the field of politics, the pope said the following November to a gathering of Italian Church leaders in Florence, but they can forget about having "bishop-pilots.”
The “Family Day” of 2007, the one that stopped the approval of de facto unions, was in effect organized by the CEI. But even among those who participated in it there are some who take Bergoglio’s new stance, and no longer refer to it as a success but as a “failure” not to be repeated: the words of Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti and of the new president of the Catholic Family Forum, Gianluigi De Palo.
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Easygoing and viewed favorably by secular opinion when it comes to the new laws on homosexual unions, Pope Francis instead takes a more dissonant stance on other crucial geopolitical questions: from immigration to poverty to Islamic radicalism.
On immigration flows, for the pope it all boils down to a single word: “acceptance,” and to the consequent disapproval of all those who do not conform to it.
Francis carefully avoids calling the reproved by name, including states and public institutions. In Lampedusa, on the small island where he made his first journey as pope, he raised a vague cry: “Shame!” But if one looks at what the rulers are saying and doing in Europe and in the world, the distance between them and the pope appears to be measureless.
“Acceptance is needed, but rigor is also needed,” said Italian president Sergio Mattarella, a Catholic and a leftist, in his year-end message to the nation. “Common rules are needed to distinguish those fleeing from wars or persecutions, who therefore have a right to asylum, and other migrants who must instead be repatriated.” They are words that Francis would not endorse.
As for poverty, the solution that the pope systematically invokes is that of giving land, homes, jobs to all men. But the political scientist Angelo Panebianco is right when he objects that “there is in Francis the idea that all the resources are already available and that their scarcity, rather than an objective barrier, is instead the effect of a conspiracy of the dominant classes at the expense of the planet’s poor.”
Last July 12, questioned point-blank by a German journalist on the flight back from Paraguay, Francis admitted the “mistake” of overlooking the middle class in his analyses, but he added that this “is becoming smaller and smaller,” crushed as it is by the increase in inequality between rich and poor. Evidently it escaped the pope that the numbers say the opposite, starting with the giants India and China.
And as for radical Islamism, it is astonishing that Francis should say this is the offspring of Western aggression and poverty, “structural” in the Marxist sense, instead of that of a native religious choice, of an interpretation of the Quran firmly rooted in it. Here as well the pope’s political narrative appears detached from reality. And as a result ineffective.
Nossos pecados devem ser bem escarlates, pois o nosso castigo é muito grande: o Papa Francisco.
ResponderExcluirO Papa Francisco, muitas vezes, se "esquece" que é católico (ao menos é como eu vejo as coisas).
Cumprimentos, caro Pedro. E ótimo começo de semana para você. :)
Amém, ótima semana para vc também, grande Ricardo.
ExcluirAbraço,
Pedro
Só de rezar num lugar com uma propaganda partidaria dessa não deixaria de ser um ato político, logo beneficiando os filhotes de Alá, a deusa da lua.
ResponderExcluirA Secretaria de Estado do Vaticano deveria sair da moite e se revelar de que lado está, embora mantendo em suspense, gerando dúvidas, apesar de que dessa forma assim renderia mais dividendos, penso.
Boa noite, pessoal, boa noite Pedro!
ResponderExcluirVou me manter na seguinte máxima: o Papa precisa de muitas e muitas orações; mas um santo em nossos tempos, seria de altíssima importância, especialmente para ter uma boa conversa com o papa. "Ó Maria, concebida sem pecado, rogai por nós que recorremos a Vós!"
Amém,caro Adilson.
ExcluirO problema é aquilo que Cristo falou: "quem tem ouvidos ouça".
Para se ouvir santo é preciso saber identificar santos. O Papa infelizmente tem dado ouvidos a pessoas e mídias não tão santas.
Rezemos muito por ele.
Abraço,
Pedro