Brian R Corbin's Reflections on Religion and Life

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ENSURE THAT NO ONE WILL EVER BE HUNGRY AGAIN

ENSURE THAT NO ONE WILL EVER BE HUNGRY AGAIN

VATICAN CITY, NOV 22, 2007 (VIS) – At midday today, the Pope received participants in the 34th general conference of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), which has its headquarters in Rome.

In his English-language talk to the delegates, the Pope indicated that “all forms of discrimination, and particularly those that thwart agricultural development, must be rejected since they constitute a violation of the basic right of every person to be ‘free from hunger.’ These convictions are in fact demanded by the very nature of your work on behalf of the common good of humanity.”

Benedict XVI highlighted the paradox of “the relentless spread of poverty in a world that is also experiencing unprecedented prosperity, not only in the economic sphere but also in the rapidly developing fields of science and technology.”

Such obstacles as “armed conflicts, outbreaks of disease, adverse atmospheric and environmental conditions and the massive forced displacement of peoples,” said the Pope, “should serve as a motivation to redouble our efforts to provide each person with his or her daily bread.

“For her part, the Church is convinced that the quest for more effective technical solutions in an ever-changing and expanding world calls for far-sighted programs embodying enduring values grounded in the inalienable dignity and rights of the human person,” he added.

“The united effort of the international community to eliminate malnutrition and promote genuine development necessarily calls for clear structures of management and supervision, and a realistic assessment of the resources needed to address a wide range of different situations. It requires the contribution of every member of society – individuals, volunteer organizations, businesses, and local and national governments – always with due regard for those ethical and moral principles which are the common patrimony of all people and the foundation of all social life.”

Benedict XVI continued his talk by saying that “today more than ever, the human family needs to find the tools and strategies capable of overcoming the conflicts caused by social differences, ethnic rivalries, and the gross disparity in levels of economic development.”

“Religion, as a potent spiritual force for healing the wounds of conflict and division, has its own distinctive contribution to make in this regard, especially through the work of forming minds and hearts in accordance with a vision of the human person.”

“Technical progress, important as it is, is not everything,” the Pope told the FAO delegates. “Progress must be placed within the wider context of the integral good of the human person. It must constantly draw nourishment from the common patrimony of values which can inspire concrete initiatives aimed at a more equitable distribution of spiritual and material goods.”

“This principle,” he explained, “has a special application to the world of agriculture, in which the work of those who are often considered the ‘lowliest’ members of society should be duly acknowledged and esteemed.”

In conclusion the Holy Father recalled how “FAO’s outstanding activity on behalf of development and food security clearly points to the correlation between the spread of poverty and the denial of basic human rights, beginning with the fundamental right to adequate nutrition. Peace, prosperity, and respect for human rights are inseparably linked. The time has come to ensure, for the sake of peace, that no man, woman and child will ever be hungry again!”

AC/HUNGER/FAO VIS 071122 (570)

Filed under: Social Doctrine, Social Justice

Putting Social Doctrine in the Limelight

ZE07112109 – 2007-11-21
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-21072?l=english

Putting Social Doctrine in the Limelight

Justice and Peace Council Consider Key Task

VATICAN CITY, NOV. 21, 2007 (Zenit.org).- The Church’s social doctrine is a treasure that needs to be better known and understood, said the secretary of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.

In his Tuesday report to open the dicastery’s plenary assembly, Monsignor Giampaolo Crepaldi explained that the promotion of Christian social doctrine is one of the group’s key tasks.

“Within this perspective,” explained the secretary of the Pontifical Council, “all the activities have been planned as instruments to give a new momentum to social doctrine, in order to detect ways of relaunching it in the various social, economic and political fields.”

Monsignor Crepaldi considered the reception of the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, presented for the first time publicly in October 2004, and now already officially released in countries all over the world. The compendium continues to be translated into more and more languages, he said.

“We should try to make a provisional review of the reception of the compendium three years since its publication,” affirmed Monsignor Crepaldi. “I dare say, that it has been welcomed with greater enthusiasm outside Europe — in Asia, Africa, Latin America — than on the European continent.”

According to the secretary of the Vatican dicastery, “There is still much to do so the compendium will be used systematically as a point of reference for a social pastoral plan adapted to these times, conforming to the teachings of the Church, and trusting that the light of the Gospel is still the principal motor of human development.”

Among the many places in which the compendium was presented, Monsignor Crepaldi emphasized Russia and Cuba.

“In Russia, in St. Petersburg and Moscow, the presentation of the compendium helped contact with the Orthodox Church,” the monsignor said. “In Cuba, because of the presence of a communist regime in that country, and on account of the vivacity of a Catholic Church very committed on the part of the laity, the presentation of the compendium was a very opportune initiative.”

For Monsignor Crepaldi, the compendium “can do much good because it helps to clarify, helps one understand and dialogue in search of the truth.”

Filed under: Social Doctrine