Pope Benedict’s environmentalism concerned with the 'ecology of man,' Vatican observer writes
Rome: December 21, 2009, (PCTV Newsdesk)Pope Benedict XVI’s so-called “green revolution” differs in key ways from parts of the environmentalist movement, Vatican expert Sandro Magister says. While some forms of environmentalism place nature first in relation to mankind, he explains that the Pope has as his priority the “ecology of Man” in relation to God.
Magister, writing at www.Chiesa, commented on Pope Benedict's Dec. 8 message for the World Day of Peace, observed every January 1.
At the center of this message, he says, is the biblical image of the Garden of Eden, “entrusted by God to man and woman for them to protect and cultivate.”
“Nature therefore has no primacy over man, nor is man a tiny part of nature. Nor, in his turn, can man usurp the right to despoil nature instead of taking care of it,” Magister writes.
The Vatican analyst cites as an illustration a masterpiece of Piero della Francesca, which shows a “cultivated, orderly and luminous” background landscape highlighting the same characteristics of the woman in the foreground who is “illuminated” with pearls.
An essential concept of Pope Benedict is that the ecology of nature and the ecology of man share “the same destiny.”
“Care for creation must be one and the same with care for the ‘inviolability of human life in every one of its phases and every one of its conditions,’” Magister adds.
“Wherever hatred and violence break out, nature weeps as well. A devastated landscape and an uninhabitable city are the product of a humanity that has made a desert of its own soul,” his analysis at www.Chiesa concludes.
News source: www.catholicnewsagency.com
Latest news:
-
Father James Shamaun launches his 7th CD in Sharjah
-
St Micheal's celebrates it's 5th Anniversary in Sharjah
-
Golden anniversary of the Pacific Conference of Churches
-
Iraqi seminarians and bishops request prayers from youth in Madrid
-
Pope reflects on Mary's example before heading to WYD
-
World Youth Day exhibition highlights Christian persecution
-
Pope Benedict XVI offers special indulgence to World Youth Day pilgrims
-
WCC representatives at World Youth Day in Madrid
-
Former Primate, Archbishop of New Zealand and Governor General dies
-
Muslims Attack Christian Village in Egypt -- 1 Murdered, Homes Looted and Torched
