[Grem] *****SPAM(7.1)***** Burke bíb. szerint az 'ökológiai megtérés" fogalma szabadkőműves eredetű, "ökológiai bűn" pedig nem létezik, mert a bűn továbbra is a 10 parancsolat viszonylatában értelmezhető
Emoke Greschik
greschem at gmail.com
2020. Jan. 6., H, 19:22:48 CET
Cardinal Burke warns faithful about calls for ‘ecological conversion’
'What I see behind this is a push for worship of ‘Mother Earth',' says the
cardinal.
https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/cardinal-burke-warns-faithful-about-calls-for-ecological-conversion
[image: Featured Image] Cardinal Raymond Burke
LA CROSSE, Wisconsin, January 3, 2020 (LifeSiteNews
<http://lifesitenews.com/>) – *Cardinal Raymond Burke, known for his
outspoken faithfulness to perennial Catholic teaching, is warning **Catholics
**about* *recent calls from the Vatican and top Church leaders for
“ecological conversion.” ** Behind this concept, he said, lurks an
“insidious” agenda of idolatry and one-world government.*
“With regard to ‘ecological conversion,’ what I see behind this is *a push
for worship of ‘Mother Earth,’” *said Cardinal Raymond Burke in a wide-ranging
interview
<https://thewandererpress.com/catholic/news/frontpage/interview-with-cardinal-burke-he-is-with-us-trusting-in-the-lord-in-turbulent-times/>
with The Wanderer published Dec. 26.
The cardinal, who is the patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
and Prefect Emeritus of the Vatican's highest court (known as the Apostolic
Signatura), said that *Catholics honor the Virgin Mary as mother.*
*“In truth, our mother is not the earth *— *our mother is the Blessed
Virgin Mary in the sense that she gave birth to our Savior. We do not have
another mother, certainly not a pagan idol like the Pachamama, which is
very revelatory of what is behind this whole business,*” *he said.*
*The cardinal’s mention of “Pachamama*” *refers to the October 2019 Amazon
Synod in Rome, where a statue of a naked pregnant woman was set up for
veneration in the Vatican gardens during a tree planting ceremony which
Pope Francis attended. The statue was later brought into St. Peter’s
Basilica with pomp and ceremony, and was again venerated.*
*Burke said that **“ecological conversion*” *is also being used as “an
argument for a one-world government.”*
“*This is a masonic idea, an idea of completely secularized people who no
longer recognize that the governance of the world is in the hands of God,
Who entrusts it to individual governments, nations, and groupings of people
according to nature itself*,” he said.
“The idea of a one-world government is fundamentally the same phenomenon
that was displayed by the builders of the Tower of Babel who presumed to
exercise the power of God on earth to unite heaven with earth, which is
simply incorrect,” he continued.
*“What we truly need is a religious conversion, in other words, a strong
teaching and practice of faith in God and obedience to the order with which
He has created us,” he added.*
Burke called “ecological conversion” a “very insidious” phrase that is
being used to “promote a certain agenda which has nothing to do with our
Catholic faith.”
“As far as the environment and ‘ecological conversion’ goes,* the Church
has always taught respect for nature.* This is why it is taught that* man
is the steward of God’s creation and that he will have to render an account
of the creation for which he has been entrusted.* *God created man in His
own image and likeness*,* that is with intelligence and free will,
precisely for the mission of stewardship of the earth.* This is what should
be taught to people, not a so-called ‘ecological conversion.’”
Pope Francis brought the term “ecological conversion” into vogue in his
2015 encyclical letter on the environment *Laudato Si’
<http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/encyclicals/documents/papa-francesco_20150524_enciclica-laudato-si.html#_ftn5>*,
in which he made use of the phrase five times. He said that people who
“choose not to change their habits” with regard to the “ecological crisis”
are in need of an “’ecological conversion’, whereby the effects of their
encounter with Jesus Christ become evident in their relationship with the
world around them.” The phrase was first used by Pope John Paul II
during a General
Audience in January, 2001
<http://w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/audiences/2001/documents/hf_jp-ii_aud_20010117.html>.
The late pope said that he must “encourage and support the ‘ecological
conversion’ which in recent decades has made humanity more sensitive to the
catastrophe to which it has been heading.”
In his 2016 message for the celebration of World Day of Prayer for the Care
of Creation
<https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/pope-francis-go-to-confession-for-not-recycling-repent-of-excess-plastic-an>,
Pope Francis called on Catholics to have an “ecological conversion” and go
to confession for sins of not being respectful of creation, giving examples
of examination of conscience such as “avoiding the use of plastic and
paper,” “separating refuse,” and “turning off unnecessary lights.”
*The concept of “ecological sin” was formally introduced to the Church at
the October, 2019 Pan-Amazonian Synod.*
“We propose to define ecological sin as an action or omission against God,
against others, the community and the environment. It is a sin against
future generations and manifests itself in acts and habits of pollution and
destruction of the harmony of the environment, transgressions against the
principles of interdependence and the breaking of solidarity networks among
creatures (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 340-344) and against the
virtue of justice,” stated
<https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/exclusive-lifesitenews-translates-final-document-of-the-synod-on-the-amazon-into-english>
the synod’s final document.
*In November, the Pope said he was thinking about adding
<https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/pope-francis-proposes-adding-ecological-sin-against-common-home-to-catechism>
“‘ecological sin’ against our common home” to the Catechism of the Catholic
Church.*
"We have to introduce―we are thinking about it―to the Catechism of the
Catholic Church the sin against ecology, the 'ecological sin' against our
common home, because a duty is at stake," he said in a speech given at the
20th World Congress of the International Association of Penal Law in Rome.
Later in the interview with The Wanderer, *Cardinal Burke criticized the
notion of “ecological sins.”*
“*In the same way, there are no new ‘ecological sins.’** The same Ten
Commandments that the Lord God gave us on Mount Sinai are in force today. **We
have to respect nature as well as our own human nature. So, I do not know
what this can mean,” he said.*
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