Sunday, 14 February 2016

I write as a "believer in God" but it does not matter (Marco Emanuele)

Francis, through its "radical simplicity", speaks to all people around the world. It's for this reason that, in my previous post, I pointed out the problem of a politics that, to find its essence, must return to the worlds-of-life. Francis is an example of how politics should be, at the same time, able to understand, to mediate and to decide.

As well as the Gospel is, at the same time, a book to "adore" and a book to "live", the unity of "believers in God" (not easy to reach) may be condition for the unity of humanity (just as difficult as the first); of course, our "thought" must be reconsidered deeply and radically, overcoming our desire for separation and domination and finding our talent for integration.

I write as a "believer in God" but it does not matter; our problem of "human persons", beyond our cultural beliefs (and, in them, the religious ones), is to find new principles of unity, of sharing, of responsibility.

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