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4elise
Guest
Dear Dante,Kimmie, Ender, and Jason:
Perhaps I’m stepping into the crossfire – or perhaps I’m just playing the obligatory “can’t we all just get along” patsy in every internet argument – but it seems to me that two things are at play here:
I, personally, must defer to people who are much smarter than I when it comes to the science. I am, thus, somewhat on the fence on the issue – though leaning away from the anthropogenic hypothesis. The important thing is, though, that a Catholic ought to make his/her choice in good faith based on his/her best understanding.
- Very smart and very well-meaning people on both sides of the debate continue to disagree. In fact, Jason and Ender continually had me waffling on what I thought as I read their (somewhat challenging) posts.
- This thread was supposed to be a discussion of what a Catholic’s obligations are with regard to AGW, not a debate about the validity of that theory.
In either case, we are all called to be good financial stewards, good earthly stewards, and good citizens. That said, from a moral standpoint, whether AGW is correct is irrelevant, because we should take common-sense steps to preserve our planet and to care for the poor anyway. These steps should be a reasonable combination of governmental programs, corporate enterprises, and individual acts of charity – because there is no reasonable way for any of these avenues to be the only effectual one.
Peace,
Dante
Like you I have been very impressed by the exchanges on this thread between Ender and Jason SB - and the obvious amount of experience that is brought to the table - I think Jason has responded to all of the well reasoned points that Ender has made and he has also remained very patient with our young friend Kimmie.
As you say - the original thread was regarding the ‘Catholic’ response - something Ender and I have had many exchanges on over the past year.
I stipulate to his frequent observation that the Pope has not said “it is a sin not to believe in AGW” -however the Church leadership has spoken (including the Holy Father) on this topic and the urgent need to act - so I for one am very grateful for the Church weighing in on this: usccbpublishing.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=312
The Catholic Coalition on Climate Change: catholicsandclimatechange.org/
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“The protection of the environment, and the safeguarding of resources **and of the climate, **oblige all leaders to act jointly, respecting the law and promoting solidarity with the weakest regions of the world.” -
As a world leader the Holy Father speaks to other world leaders to act on the issue of climate keeping the poor at the heart of the discussion - yes Ender - he does not support a specific action - but repeatedly says it is an urgent issue -
So - yes the Church is responding - some think the Church has no place in this discussion, and I think it is quite the contrary - we should be the LEADERS - because how this impacts people, and particularly the poor around the world.
I know even those who are the staunchest deniers of AGW care about creation and want to act in such a way as to care for creation - and I would never imply otherwise - however recognizing that man’s actions are impacting this means we have to make different decisions as individuals and with policy -
I think there is a risk in just saying - people of good will may disagree, so we should all just do what we think is right - when the OVERWHELMING science points to the anthropogenic impact - we need to mitigate that impact and quickly because we are people of faith - because we care about our brothers and sisters around the world.
Blessings