Posted on 07/19/2017 4:00:54 PM PDT by ebb tide
The head of the Vaticans Pontifical Academy of Sciences has again inferred that denial of the controversial concept of manmade climate change equates to flat earth mentality.
"From the scientific point of view, the sentence that the earth is warmed by human activity is as true as the sentence: The earth is round! said Archbishop Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo.
The archbishop has been a consistent and zealous promoter of manmade climate change as a non-negotiable Church issue, despite the status of care for the environment as a prudential matter.
Climate change ideology continues to be contested as a ploy perpetrated with manipulated data by the left to enact environmental regulations and taxes.
Even so, Archbishop Sorondo dismissed deniers of climate change in a recent Vatican Radio interview as "a small, negligible minority."
The interview conducted in German contained the headline: Vatican: Climate change is a fact, and centered on reception of Pope Francis eco-encyclical Laudato Si two years after its release.
Archbishop Sorondo went on in the interview to say that human-affected climate change was considered science. He added that the pope not only has the right but also the duty to rely on science in addition to doctrine and philosophy in seeking out truth.
If the pope expresses himself on such a subject, then this was not arbitrary, he said, as the popes words are not restricted to the area of "doctrine of faith and morals."
The pope makes use of the truths of science or philosophy to not only explain to man how to get to heaven, said the archbishop, but also what he must do on earth.
All human activities have to do with ethics, the Argentinean archbishop said, so they are already within the jurisdiction of the pope.
Archbishop Sorondo is a close adviser to Pope Francis and the Chancellor of both the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. He has repeatedly welcomed pro-abortion and population control advocates to the Vatican for conferences under the pretext of the climate issue.
Last month, just before President Donald Trump announced the U.S. would pull out of the controversial Paris Climate Agreement, the archbishop likened climate ideology skeptics to flat-earthers as well.
Withdrawal from the Paris accord "would not only be a disaster but completely unscientific," he said.
"Saying that we need to rely on coal and oil is like saying that the earth is not round, Archbishop Sorondo stated. It is an absurdity dictated by the need to make money."
He has also repeatedly made the claim that those who dont subscribe to the manmade climate change theory are in some way subsidized by the oil industry. He did so again in the Vatican Radio interview.
"Of course, some sectors that depend on the oil lobby including some Catholic institutions! do not agree with Laudato Si,' the archbishop stated. And with this they are causing serious damage, because the climate is deteriorating even the opponents of climate change will be among their victims, in the short or long term.
Archbishop Sorondo drew a heated reaction at a December 2015 conference in Rome on Laudato Si by claiming that the popes pronouncements on global warming expressed in his document are magisterial teaching with the same gravity as the Churchs teaching on abortion.
The archbishop had tried to float the idea then as well that climate change, then generally still labeled global warming, was a non-negotiable moral issue.
After asserting in his address that global warming was caused by human activity and twice claiming that Pope Francis teaching on it via Laudato Si was magisterial, other panel presenters at the conference challenged Archbishop Sorondo.
Acton Institute founder and president Father Robert Sirico explained citing the Catechism that the Churchs mission was spiritual and not political, economic or social.
The Church does not claim to speak with the same authority on matters of economics and science as it does when pronouncing on matters of faith and morals, he said.
Later during the question and answer session when asked about the weight of the popes opinions regarding global warming in Laudato Si, Archbishop Sorondo said the judgment must be considered magisterium it is not an opinion.
It is under ordinary magisterium, he said, that abortion is a grievous sin this is ordinary magisterium because there is not the revelation of it. So there is an assumption of moral doctrine, he continued, that even though the majority opinion is contrary, we accept that abortion is a grievous sin is magisterium.
Journalist Riccardo Cascioli objected to the archbishop implying that Catholics must submit to pronouncements on scientific theories versus faith and morals, prompting a stern retort from Sorondo.
When the Pope has assumed this, it is magisterium of the church whether you like it or not, he stated. It is the magisterium of the church just as abortion is a grievous sin equal
it is magisterium of the church ... whether you like it or not.
I see no problem with the Vatican making pronouncements on global warming, which has become an article of religious faith for those on the left. Liberals who never even took a high school physics class and who check their horoscopes daily will denounce PhDs who express doubts about this cult.
Listen to the gay pedophiles, they know what’s best for you and the altar boys too. Remember,they are God’s representatives on earth.
IDIOCY!!!!
His Excellency is a scientific moron.
Sorondo is a foaming-at-the-mouth Marxist loon. A cartoon of the red, red, red Latin American bishop.
As a 74 year old Catholic, I cannot recall a time when so many A**holes were in such high positions in the church. They have their noses stuck in everyone else’s business except their own of being shepherds of the Catholic faithful.
Not only did G-d say in Genesis 8:22 that wed have cold and heat, summer and winter, for as long as the earth endures, but Matthew 24:15-20, particularly verse 20, shows that Jesus told the women to pray that they dont have to flee during the winter in the end times, Revelation 16:21 also mentioning a great hail storm.
The problem with Catholic leaders (imo), as Paul warned about in Ephesians 4:14, is that there would be believers who are not deeply rooted in the faith, and consequently believe everything that they hear.
He would have been lucky to get a D from my high school science teacher too. But that was back in the early ‘70s when science was still more about facts than feelings.
Sorondo actually said it, and yes, it was pretty stunning. Needless to say, the European press is loving it.
Oh...one more thing. Arturo Sosa, head of the Jesuits, turned up sitting cross-legged with his hands up stretched at a Buddhist service the other day.
I honestly think they’ve all gone mad. But one thing is certain, they wouldnt be doing this if they didn’t think their boss approved.
Marxism is really pernicious.
Galileo might disagree with you.
Unam Sanctam
Did you ever hear of Friar Gregor Mendel? Fr Georges Lemaitre? Robert Grosseteste (big bang)? Roger Bacon? Bede of Jarrow who wrote treatises on The Reckoning of Time and The Nature of Things? There are a lot of them. Galileo had some political problems and was reconciled. His theories were not new, even in the Church. His demonstration was new and statements that did not affect the theories themselves got him in trouble.
Chelsea Clinton has a huge database that she can release at any time and this is just MORE Proof!
(Like, is he worth five bucks, or one hundred bucks?)
Now in a few short months, we'll be experiencing global cooling, on my little point on the globe. (And, I'm already dreaming of a White Christmas!)
Carry on, my good man.
Christ know it would be better for the Vatican and all the "soldiers of Christ" that run down the ranks, to stick to preaching the Good News of the Gospel. They have a history of being criminally wrong about science...
Ahhh, just a scant few centuries ago, everyone needed to accept that the Sun revolved about the Earth...
Same guys.
He's right insofar as we are discussing their ethical dimension. But whether or not human activity is warming the earth, and to what extent, is absolutely not an ethical question. It's a purely scientific one, and the church has no business picking sides there.
But, for the archbishop, swimming with the zeitgeist is a lot easier than actually teaching the hard truths of Catholicism, so there is that. /s
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