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For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
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The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? the Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?

File: 35cd45e181f81a6⋯.jpg (38.51 KB, 700x439, 700:439, Pope-large.jpg)

db8846 No.656169

Pope to meet with oil execs to discuss 'climate change'…

Exclusive: Pope convenes Big Oil, investors to talk climate change

http://archive.today/2018.06.02-024619/https://www.axios.com/exclusive-pope-convenes-big-oil-investors-to-talk-climate-change-1527810398-44c1f3bb-37ed-4b98-a0a5-b6b65a3bffea.html

Pope Francis is hosting a gathering next week at the Vatican with executives of major oil producers and investment firms to talk about how the companies can address climate change, according to several people familiar with the event. Why it matters: It’s one of the most significant developments showing how corporations are working with other world leaders on climate change amid President Trump’s whole-scale retreat on the issue. Situational awareness: One year ago today, Trump announced his intention to withdraw America from the Paris climate deal, which now has support from every country except the United States. Three years ago, Pope Francis wrote his encyclical — a papal letter sent to all bishops of the Roman Catholic Church — on the importance of addressing climate change, a first in the church’s history. Here’s a list of some of the participants in the private conference, with more expected:

- Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock, world’s largest asset manager.

- Bob Dudley, CEO of BP.

- Darren Woods, CEO of ExxonMobil.

- Eldar Sætre, CEO of Equinor, oil and energy producer partially owned by the Norwegian government (formerly Statoil).

- Ernest Moniz, former U.S. Energy Secretary under then-President Obama.

- Lord John Browne, former CEO of BP and current executive chairman of L1 Energy, an oil and gas investment firm.

- Ben Van Beurden, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell, was invited but declined because he had an obligation elsewhere, according to an official.

The big picture: The Pope, BlackRock and big oil companies are increasingly focusing on climate change as cleaner sources of energy have become more competitive, the impacts of a warmer world have become more apparent, and public pressure to address the issue mounts. This meeting reflects this convergence. The details: The focus of the gathering is similar to the encyclical (“On Care For Our Common Home”) with an emphasis on the energy transition of a “shared home,” according to people familiar with it. The event is occurring late next week, with two people saying the Pope is likely to talk Saturday. The University of Notre Dame is helping convene it. Leo Burke, director of its business school’s climate investing initiative, declined to comment. “All along the way, we have said that any energy-related meeting involving the Vatican and Notre Dame would be a private dialogue among the attendees,” Burke told me by email. Yes, but: While it’s a significant meeting, it’s still just a meeting. Deep political stalemate persists in the United States on the issue. Tensions are flaring over lawsuits alleging big oil companies are liable for climate change and some environmentalists say the industry’s greener moves aren’t big or fast enough. To what degree the Vatican gathering prompts change and new developments is a big question mark. For the record:

- BP spokesman Geoff Morrell said Dudley is “looking forward to the Vatican dialogue. He believes gatherings of this kind help develop a better understanding of the energy transition and the best ways for corporations, countries and wider society to participate in it.”

- An Exxon spokesman said the company is "hopeful that this kind of dialogue can help develop solutions to the dual challenge of managing the risks of climate change while meeting growing demand for energy, which is critical to alleviating poverty and raising living standards in the developing world."

- A spokesman for Moniz confirmed his attendance.

- A BlackRock spokesperson declined to comment.

- A spokesperson for Equinor said the company looks forward to the "opportunity to discuss how we can address climate change and opportunities in the energy transition."

b37937 No.656170

Is this weird?


edf392 No.656175

>>656170

I expect nothing, but I may be surprised and that's reason enough to do this. I imagine the execs are only meeting to virtue signal and they're hearts are probably hardened to the matter, but if anyone can break them I imagine a Pope can.


8c9deb No.656230

>>656175

I want to believe they will take something from it. But greed is a strong stealer of souls


f92427 No.656234

File: 867e279ee2d5003⋯.png (137.75 KB, 654x447, 218:149, gsx3kci0qi701.png)

>>656169

muh climate change


debcf8 No.656333

>>656170

>>656169

>>656175

This is a complete sham, all those corporations are in bed with a new carbon credit system which would make them even richer than trading crude and will foot the bill to the consumer.

Being brainwashed into thinking that this is for their own benefit, consumers won't even think twice. The Pope is merely there to decorate the altar of Mammon.


868f78 No.656445

File: fa2587da4200b3c⋯.jpg (133.97 KB, 1025x667, 1025:667, c71124e1-40a5-46bc-8e68-ce….jpg)

>>656333

Maybe that's the final effect, but as stewards of Creation, we have a responsibility to minimize the speed of its decay.

I know some protestants actually want to incite Judgement, but every day it doesn't come is another batch of potential souls to save.

The Pope's first encyclical was on the nature of this relationship.

Laudato Si

http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/encyclicals/documents/papa-francesco_20150524_enciclica-laudato-si.html

Besides. The desert was beautiful, but I'm not too eager to see it grow any faster.


bc1bec No.656466

>>656333

This.

>>656445

What you say is true, but I have little patience for defenders of papa Frankie who hide behind the official doctrine of the church in order to excuse his tacit support and enabling of NGO's, Globo-corps, progressive, communist, and homosexual advocacy organizations because of their supposed "virtuous" goals. Their hypothetical aims mean nothing when they are in reality nothing but socially and morally perverted freaks who spread evil and filth across the world, you couldn't find people more in opposition to everything the Church stands for.

You must see that this meeting will do less than nothing to protect the environment, so how can this be acceptable to you? It's purely for the benefit of the attending parties, nothing more.

>>656169

>Big mean Drumph wrecked everything when we were right in the middle of saving the world

The media whore cries out in pain as he shills for international monopolies that are poisoning the world

>>656175

>>656230

Well to the extent that the problem of "Global Warming" is real (whatever that may be, I can't claim to have a strong understanding), you can be sure that corporations/government/the media/high profile clergy

1) Don't care

2) Will not sacrifice anything of their own to improve the situation

3) Will make the situation worse and retard any efforts to find a solution, all for their personal gain

Follow these three rules for any and every problem, and they won't lead you far wrong. Having a first hand experience of God and totally reversing course in life isn't impossible, but you've got a lot better odds on a lottery ticket. Trust not in the better nature of proven cretins, but trust that God shall provide despite them.


3bc469 No.656470

Kinda nice I guess but I think the Pope should be focussing on more pressing matters ANSWER THE DUBIA FRANSICUS




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