Understanding Laudato Si EP 03: "What is Happening to our Common Home?"

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ส.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 15

  • @TheChizuyo
    @TheChizuyo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you, Father. Very helpful.

  • @zaidavillareal2827
    @zaidavillareal2827 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you Fr. for sharing your wisdom and expertise in proclaiming the good news of Laudato Si on how to care for our common home-Mother Earth.

  • @mollylimfmm6341
    @mollylimfmm6341 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You have made it very clear for me, Fr Horan. Thank you. May many of our brothers and sisters come to benefit from your sharing like i have so that we can appreciate Laudato Si and take concrete urgent action as revealed and well articulated in the encyclical.

  • @user-pb9jh3jk8s
    @user-pb9jh3jk8s 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you! very very amaziong!

  • @shaijasnd8497
    @shaijasnd8497 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It is well prepared presentation and it very inspirational and invites the viewers to really to get in touch with the creator God ,being as a caring , loving and ever present God. Thank you Fr. DanHoran

  • @charlieneumanofs918
    @charlieneumanofs918 7 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank You Fr Horan for explicating the Pope Francis message in simple terms. Looking forward to seeing you in Milwaukee, WI in October, 2017 Peace Charlie R. Neuman OFS

  • @paulwhearty4535
    @paulwhearty4535 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm watching the series for the second time. I've started it and watched as far as Episode 06 before going back again. I am blown away by it. There is so much that I get from each episode and in watching them I get more the second time around. I love the 'I Thirst' of Jesus on the Cross. It is something I've never considered! That question: What does it mean to say that the Body of Christ thirsts today? Thank you for not only ensuring that I'm enjoying going back over Laudato Si' but also for causing me to question much of what I think I know!

  • @simka321
    @simka321 8 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Dear Fr. Horan,
    This is a wonderful series of talks. You are doing a great job explicating the Holy Father's message and I'm very appreciative.
    I am not Roman Catholic, but Greek Orthodox. I have been so deeply convicted and moved by both Patriarch Bartholomew's preaching of environmental harm as sin, as well as by the thorough and intense message of "Laudato Si" that I'm willing to everything in my power to attending to the current environmental crisis.
    In that regard, I'd like to ask your advice. What do you think about the practicality and/or possibility of starting a Catholic college in California's Sierra foothills (where I live), dedicated to the study of the theory and practice of alternative, green and sustainable science and technology?
    This would be a Catholic based post-secondary institute, which would be open to any student, Catholic or not, interested in pursuing an undergraduate degree in sustainable development, permaculture and/or environmental sciences and technologies; its mission statement would be dedicated to furthering the vision of "Laudato Si" in the spirit of the social justice and love for creation expressed by St. Francis of Assisi and St. Katharine Drexel, who, as you know, was an educator and benefactor to the First Nations of this land.
    If the Church is really serious about taking Pope Francis' encyclical seriously, founding an institution that would be focused on the very issues that the Holy Father addresses in "Laudato Si," delivered by means of the best kind of Catholic educational methods available, would be a great place to demonstrate our commitment to cherishing our Sister and Mother, the Earth.
    Please let me know what you think about this idea, and whether you have any advice about how something like this can get started.
    In Christ,
    Seraphim Winslow

  • @charliebrown100000
    @charliebrown100000 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Both And

  • @denimcowboy501
    @denimcowboy501 8 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I would like know two things: 1) How does industrialization continue while preserving the environment. (I mean how is this answered in Ladauto Si? 2) Why is the focus on the west and rich countries of the west when China and orient are the greatest polluters on the planet? We need a middle ground here. Industry is needed to make things. At the same time we need to replace and preserve what we have in nature. Environmental Science calls it "sustainability." But the focus on Climate Change as a fact (disputed by some scientists) is questionable. The focus on western countries is unfair when China is the worlds biggest polluter.

    • @denimcowboy501
      @denimcowboy501 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All this sounds good, but people in the world have to make and live. People need things in order to live. Therefore we need industry. Trees will be cut for wood, mines will be dug for coal etc. The reality is that we need these things.

    • @alanblanes2876
      @alanblanes2876 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@denimcowboy501 In the 1980s there was a more serious approach to recycling and in fact getting toward a closed-loop industrial model, where there would be no pollution but effluent captured and broken down into its elemental states. 3M was leading this in a program called 'Pollution Prevention Pays' but over the decades this has been blotted out because we have given in to short term profit maximization. China has some excellent practices that seem to have the best chance of picking up from where 3M left off.

  • @PiusThekemurysjpatna
    @PiusThekemurysjpatna 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It seems to me that you have become a Laudator Si