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Pope Francis Prophetically Calls Us to Engage the World, Says Our Sunday Visitor

Contact: Christine Valentine-Owsik, 
215-230-8095, cowsik@osv.com

HUNTINGTON, Ind., June 18, 2015 /Christian Newswire/ -- In an editorial on Pope Francis' new encyclical, "Laudato Si' ("Praise Be to You"): On Care for Our Common Home," just released today, Our Sunday Visitor examines how Pope Francis, in quintessential fashion, uses a global perspective to challenge all people of the world to environmental and social responsibility. A key to best understanding the encyclical, the Editorial Board writes, is to resist the temptation to either dismiss or exploit it to serve one's own agenda.

    The OSV editorial:

    Care for our home
    By OSV Editorial Board

    After what seems like months of speculation, Pope Francis' long-anticipated encyclical on human ecology was released June 18 — and it does not disappoint. Divided into six chapters, "Laudato Si' ("Praise Be to You"): On Care for Our Common Home," is a rich exploration of the interconnectedness that exists among God, humanity and creation, and it details all the blessings and challenges brought on by such intimate relationships. For Pope Francis, penning the encyclical was "both joyful and troubling." It was also intensely personal, resulting in a direct plea from the Holy Father to all people for conversion of heart and for action.

    "I urgently appeal, then, for a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet," Pope Francis writes. "We need a conversation which includes everyone, since the environmental challenge we are undergoing, and its human roots, concern and affect us all."

    A much more comprehensive summary of the remarkable document can be found elsewhere in OSV Newsweekly, but here we share a few initial thoughts.

    First, as one of the seven tenets of Catholic social teaching, the importance of caring for creation is hardly groundbreaking in terms of Church doctrine. Francis liberally quotes St. John XXIII, St. John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI. He also relies on the insights of St. Francis of Assisi, St. Benedict, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, St. John of the Cross and even Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew. What Francis does do that is unique, however, is delve into the complexity and interconnectedness of what he calls an "integral ecology" in a way that is meant to spur the reader to thoughtful reflection and personal action. While such connections bring to mind the doctrine of the mystical Body of Christ and John the Evangelist's imagery of the "vine and the branches," Pope Francis takes them a step further, directly linking human, economic, political, technological and spiritual activity to environmental and social responsibility.

    It's a lesson critical to all of us and to our future. As the Holy Father highlights, the great temptation of the world today is to remain isolated from one another, whether it be from the unborn child in the womb or from the suffering of third-world migrants.

    In many ways, Laudato Si' is quintessential Francis, bringing a global perspective to an issue on which many Catholics, particularly those in the West, tend to look through a more narrowed lens. As such, elements of the encyclical are guaranteed to be challenging regardless of who is reading. The encyclical no doubt will be shrugged off by some for being idealistic, inconsequential or focused on the wrong priorities. But Pope Francis is prophetically calling on us to engage the world and understand our God-given bond with our fellow men and women and all creation. Just as the Apostle Paul challenged the early Church to travel to the corners of the world, so Francis is asking us to think beyond our own immediate wants and needs, our own comforts and self-interest to the needs of others. That's the beauty of Laudato Si': Pope Francis, in countering our self-centeredness and individualism, is calling us to a better version of ourselves — and to holiness.

    For both conservatives and liberals, there will be a temptation to either dismiss or exploit the encyclical to serve one's own agenda. We strongly caution against this and instead encourage Catholics and Catholic parishes to both reflect on it and pray over it. In this way, we do justice to what will surely become one of the Church's great social texts.

In this encyclical, Pope Francis follows and expands on Catholic teaching on mankind's responsibility to care for God's creation, and to protect and care for the most vulnerable. This letter builds on the teachings of previous popes, including Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI and Pope St. John Paul II.

Our Sunday Visitor will publish the encyclical, and the book will include discussion questions for individual or group study ($12.95, available July 18, accepting preorders now at www.osv.com, as well as through Amazon and Barnes & Noble). A pamphlet, outlining the encyclical's main points will also be available July 1 (package of 50, $15.95 – preorders available).

For an interview with someone from the OSV Editorial Board, please contact Christine V. Owsik, 215-230-8095 or cowsik@osv.com.

ABOUT OUR SUNDAY VISITOR
The world's largest English-language Catholic publisher, Our Sunday Visitor serves millions of Catholics globally through its publishing, offertory, and communication services. Established in 1912, Our Sunday Visitor publishes a wide range of books including Bibles, biographies of the saints, books by Pope Francis, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, children's books, devotionals, bible studies, inspirational works, and curriculum. Our Sunday Visitor is a not-for-profit organization, returning a portion of net earnings back to the Catholic community through the Our Sunday Visitor Institute. For more information, visit
www.osv.com.