Posted on 10/10/2021 6:07:12 PM PDT by marshmallow
Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople and Pope Francis co-launched the new UNESCO Chair on Futures of Education for Sustainability at the Pontifical Lateran University of Rome in a ceremony at the university yesterday.
The Chair is named for both the Pope and the Patriarch, reports greek.vema.com.au.
Responding to current challenges requires a new way of learning and doing that is built on “openness, creativity, wider educational offerings, but also sacrifice, dedication, transparency and honesty in choosing, especially in these difficult times,” the Pope said during the ceremony, reports the National Catholic Reporter.
The attitude that “it’s always been done this way” is “suicide,” the Roman pontiff continued.
The launch of the Pope Francis-Pat. Bartholomew-UNESCO Chair coincided with the launch of a new academic program dedicated to “Care for our common home and safeguarding creation.”
Pat. Bartholomew said the initiatives reflect the collaboration between the two “sister churches” and their commitment to work to protect “God’s wonderful universe.” They also reflect a needed interreligious and interdisciplinary approach to the urgent environmental challenges of today, especially concerning climate change, he added.
Pope Francis also praised Pat. Bartholomew’s decades of ecological work.
(Excerpt) Read more at orthochristian.com ...
Any chance they have anything to say about repentance or salvation? Prayer? No? Just green gunk they have no business talking about cause so it’s so cool to do anything other than your actual job
I’d like to launch a chair of my own their direction.
Maybe a lazy boy recliner.
Pukes.
Sounds a lot like worshipping creation instead of the Creator.
Anaxios to Bart. He’s a scourge on the Faith. Let him be anathema.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.