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Dirty bread and kickback god

Pope Francis must have been the most radical and outspoken Vicar of Christ in the last 100 years.  He has been, as one international journalist put it, messing up the protocols of the church and rarely hesitated to speak his mind on important social issues of the day. His sweeping and controversial statements on various issues like the state of the church, the nature of God, homosexuality, proselytism, sexual abuse, freedom of religion and spirituality could reinvent or redefine Catholicism and the Catholic faith as we know it.
 
But if I would choose one lesson from the learnings that I got from his sermons and the Papal visit, it would be his constant determined effort to root out corruption and cronyism in the minds of man, the Catholic Church and governments.  The pontiff might have been briefed of the extent of corruption in the Philippines that he would challenge our top political officials to discard thievery at all levels of society.  In Pope Francis words “I hope that this prophetic summons will challenge everyone…to reject every form of corruption which diverts resources from the poor.”  The statement resonated with many. A netizen would tweet “It’s quite embarrassing that the Pope has to highlight corruption in his speech. But yes, we needed that.”

Last year, in Vatican, Francis delivered quite a fiery discourse on corruption, the corrupt and citing Jesus words from the Bible. Quoting from the Gospel of St. Luke in the New Testament, the bishop of Rome said ““Jesus says: It would be better for him [Francis referring to the corrupt, corruption as his context] if a millstone were put around his neck and he be thrown into the sea.”

Pope Francis described the burglars, thieves, bandits and crooks in government as:

“Christians living a double life” [giving money to the Church while stealing resources from and for the poor]

“Whitewash tombs” [they appear stunning from the outside but ugly and nasty inside; that a life based on corruption was varnished putrefaction]

And:

“Those who take kickbacks have lost their dignity and give their children dirty bread”.

His words were strong against hypocrites “who used tainted money to shower their children with gifts and send them to expensive schools.” The Pope considers corruption as a “worse evil than sin” and compared it to bad breath as “someone who has it hardly ever realizes it, other people notice have to tell him.”  Corruption for Francis requires “more than forgiveness, this evil needs to be cured” as “it is an evil greater than sin.”

He however believes that the corrupt could still change if they accept and live the teachings of the merciful and compassionate Christ.  The Pope prayed and I wish “that the Lord may change the hearts of those who worship the kickback god.”


engagedforesight.com 

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