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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: 87b77c6ad7b4135⋯.jpg (1.42 MB, 4318x2793, 4318:2793, 5c190461ae298b22bd5dbbbd.jpg)

7b5a82  No.753144

POPE: Populism 'Weakening Multilateral System'…

Curiously, nowhere in his 5,600-word speech did the pope mention “subsidiarity,” the central principle of Catholic social thought that protects the freedom of individuals, families, and communities from the interference of state and international bodies.

http://archive.today/2019.01.08-032842/https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/01/07/pope-warns-populism-is-weakening-the-multilateral-system/

The upcoming year will mark the 100th anniversary of the establishment of the League of Nations, the pope said in his annual address, which represented “the beginning of modern multilateral diplomacy, by which states try to remove mutual relations from the logic of oppression that leads to war.” Difficulties with the League of Nations led exactly twenty years after its birth to “a new and more lacerating conflict, which was the Second World War.” “The indispensable premise of the success of multilateral diplomacy is the good will and good faith of the interlocutors, the willingness to a fair and sincere confrontation and the willingness to accept the inevitable compromises that arise from the confrontation between the parties,” he said. “Where even one of these elements fails, the search for unilateral solutions prevails and, ultimately, the overwhelming of the weaker by the stronger,” he said, and unfortunately, “we note that the same attitudes are still undermining the stability of the main international organizations.”

The pope went on to put forward his belief that globalist organizations are key to the maintenance of peace and international stability. I consider it important that “even in the present time the will of a peaceful and constructive confrontation between the States does not fail,” he said, “even though it is evident that relations within the international community, and the multilateral system as a whole, are going through difficult times, with the re-emergence of nationalistic tendencies.” These tendencies “undermine the vocation of international organizations to be a space for dialogue and meeting for all countries,” he said. The rise of populism, the pope suggested, is partly due to the inability of the multilateral system to offer effective solutions to unresolved situations, and in part it “is the result of the evolution of national policies, more and more frequently determined by the search for an immediate and sectarian consensus, rather than by the patient pursuit of the common good.”

The Catholic Church has consistently reaffirmed the vital principle of subsidiarity, which determines that “a community of a higher order should not interfere in the internal life of a community of a lower order, depriving the latter of its functions, but rather should support it in case of need and help to co-ordinate its activity with the activities of the rest of society, always with a view to the common good.” As a result, Catholics believe that international bodies should never be all-encompassing or invasive regarding the internal life of nations but should limited their activity to areas of life that cannot practically and effectively be governed by the nations themselves. The sovereignty of nations should never be compromised by overly aggressive international legal or political structures. Importantly, according to Catholic thought, subsidiarity is a fundamental component of the common good and not a counterbalance to it, and where it is disrespected, the common good suffers. Although subsidiarity is fundamentally a limiting principle on the interference of a society of a higher order in the life of a society of a lower order, it furthers the common good by defending essential freedoms and the autonomy of societies of a lower order, including that of individual nations.

681767  No.753148

Disclaimer: I'm not Catholic. But I have to ask, why does he even involve himself in this godless system?

I understand wanting a sense of international stability - but only under the Church! He seems to think this multilateral model still applies, in a secular sense. But that is the way of Nimrod. Satan tries to mirror the things of God.


d18224  No.753152

Ugh this guy again


d56698  No.753157

>>753148

He's the Pope, a political institution since the days of Constantine. Besides, Papa Franku is a Jesuit. Internationalism is in his blood.


681767  No.753164

>>753157

>He's the Pope, a political institution since the days of Constantine. Besides, Papa Franku is a Jesuit. Internationalism is in his blood.

Except this isn't nearly the same as Constantine (or better yet, his successors). This is Kissenger/CFR era faggotry who considers him irrelevant.

And besides, his office is responsible for destroying any sense of unity under the Church the world had anyhow.


0a0e7a  No.753257

>>753144

>be pope

>see the people revolt over being oppressed and disinherited from their own homelands

>lol populism bad ok?

Playing dumb is getting really old.




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