Necessary, indeed, when understood correctly. Not like a sort of dogmatic and institutional compromise based on the lower common denominator, as promoted by theological liberalism.
Public Orthodoxy
by Massimo Faggioli
Photo: L’Osservatore Romano
Pope Francis’ trip to Egypt (April 28-29, 2017) has been one of the most important and difficult for this pontificate, given the international political situation and the plight of Coptic Christians in Egypt and of all Christians between Africa and the Middle East. It is not easy to look at this trip through one single interpretive lens, and therefore it requires the attempt to read it in the context of the pontificate.
A first level was the trip of Francis as expression of the modern magisterium of the pope of the Catholic Church on the relationship between religion as defensor of human rights and political rights in an age of evident crisis of faith not only in God, but also in our fellow human beings – the crisis of democracy. Interestingly, in his speech to the strongman of Egypt, general Al Sisi, and to…
View original post 1,082 more words
Filed under: Varia