S
sprout
Guest
The Church HAS ADDRESSED each and every one of these issues. They’re in the links I gave earlier on Papal Statements* if you would take the time to read them*.Again, I agree with you.
What the Bishops, and Vatican officials for that much, should be doing is first of all an ***in-depth study ***of the specific problem going on in Mexico, the U.S. and the southern border. Instead of giving platitudes that are designed to sound like the Beattitudes.
We have serious illegal drug smuggling, human trafficing, child pornography, Islamic-terrorist threats going on near our southern border – not just poor families seeking relief.
In fact, at the USCCB website there is an entire page called Vatican Statements On Human Trafficking: usccb.org/mrs/vaticanTIP.shtml complete with links to the actual documents. Here, I’ll list them for you:
Vatican Statements Regarding Trafficking in Persons
First International Meeting for the Pastoral Care of Street Children (PDF)
Final Report from the meeting in Rome, Oct. 24-25, 2004
Pontifical Council of Migrants and Itinerant People
From the Vatican, 4 December 2004
Letter Of John Paul II To Archbishop Jean-Louis Tauran
On The Occasion Of The International Conference
“Twenty-First Century Slavery -The Human Rights Dimension To Trafficking In Human Beings”
From the Vatican, 15 May 2002
Intervention By The Delegation Of The Holy See At The 11th Economic Forum On “Trafficking In Human Beings, Drugs, Small Arms And Light Weapons”
Prague, 20 May 2003
Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People
People on the Move - N° 93, December 2003
Work among Trafficked Women in Thailand
Sr. M. Supaporn CHOTIPHOL, R.G.S.
Fountain of Life Centre
Pattaya City (Thailand)
THESE REFERENCE TRAFFICKING
Message Of His Holiness John Paul II For Lent 2004
“…a word must be said about the selfishness of those who do not “receive” children. There are young people who have been profoundly hurt by the violence of adults: sexual abuse, forced prostitution, involvement in the sale and use of drugs; children forced to work or enlisted for combat; young children scarred forever by the breakup of the family; little ones caught up in the obscene trafficking of organs and persons.”
In the document Strangers No Longer that I quoted earlier and gave a link to, and that you later quoted it begins by saying:Message Of His Holiness Benedict XVI For The 92nd World Day Of Migrants And Refugees (2006)
“Migrations: a sign of the times”
…
“In this context it is necessary to mention trafficking in human beings - especially women - which flourishes where opportunities to improve their standard of living or even to survive are limited. It becomes easy for the trafficker to offer his own “services” to the victims, who often do not even vaguely suspect what awaits them. In some cases there are women and girls who are destined to be exploited almost like slaves in their work, and not infrequently in the sex industry, too.”
Clearly the Church and her Bishops have given this issue much, much, more thought than either you or I or even our politicians have given.
- In preparing this statement we have spoken with migrants, public officials, enforcement officers, social justice activists, pastors, parishioners, and community leaders in both the United States and Mexico as part of a process that lasted two years. Our dialogue has revealed a common desire for a more orderly system that accommodates the reality of migration and promotes just application of civil law. We seek to measure the interests of all parties in the migration phenomenon against the guidelines of Catholic social teaching and to offer a moral framework for embracing, not rejecting, the reality of migration between our two nations. We invite Catholics and persons of good will in both nations to exercise their faith and to use their resources and gifts to truly welcome the stranger among us (cf. Mt 25:35).
I think the problem, judging by the comments on this topic, is not that the Church doesn’t know what she’s taking about, rather it’s that many Catholics are unfamiliar with what the Church has been saying on these issues for decades.
I can’t do your reading for you. I can’t post entire articles on this forum and even if I could I don’t have all day to go to each and every article and cut & paste them. DUDE! I’m not your secretary!
What I can do is to direct you to where you can go to get the information. As they say, “you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make 'em drink”