- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
Pope Francis prays for an end to the violence in the Holy Land, especially in Gaza where a humanitarian catastrophe has unfolded, as well as for the …
And I call on the Pope to release internal Vatican documentation and hoarded gold/loot Catholic extremists / fascists stole during WW2. The leader of which was hidden by the Church in the Vatican after the war
We can both make ineffective pleas. At least mine isn’t hypocritical.
Oh, well it will be all right then, if he’s praying for it! /s
Not sure what else you want a religious organization to do, carpet bomb the place?
I suppose he could call for another crusade or maybe dispatch the Swiss Guard to the region. /S
Somewhat more seriously, though not something I’m actually suggesting or would necessarily want to see, he is a head of state and a prominent public figure, it wouldn’t be out of the question for him to play a role in some sort of negotiations as an intermediary or something.
He also has the ears of potentially every Catholic in the world, as well as non-catholics who may want to hear his perspective, and while I’d personally very much rather the church mind their own business and not get involved, he could potentially give guidance to them about how they should feel about the situation, what they can/should or should not do to help, what they should be asking of their governments, etc.
Again, I personally would rather the church keep out of it, but those are some options available should people feel that the Pope should involve himself.
He can’t do any of those things because when they inevitably fail he loses any remaining power people still thought the pope has. If he can’t even succeed as a figurehead, what good is the position in the first place?
They could liquidate their mountain of gold they’ve been hoarding and use it towards humanitarian efforts.
But they won’t do that because that would require the Catholic church to actually help people.
Your religion is the problem, Mr. Pope
A problem certainly, but I’m not sure how Catholicism features in this particular conflict