Pope cautions environmental sinners they will answer to God
Encourages aid workers to go to the peripheries.
"The planet has enough food for all, but it seems that there is a lack of willingness to share it with everyone," Francis said at a mass to mark the opening of the general assembly of the Catholic charitable organization Caritas.
"We must do what we can so that everyone has something to eat, but we must also remind the powerful of the earth that God will call them to judgment one day and there it will be revealed if they really tried to provide food for Him in every person and if they did what they could to preserve the environment so that it could produce this food."
The striking comments from the Argentinian pontiff came ahead of the upcoming publication of a papal encyclical on the ethical aspects of environmental issues that is eagerly awaited by campaigners for action to address global warming.
An encyclical is a statement of fundamental principles designed to guide Catholic teaching on a subject. It is issued in the form of a letter from the pope to bishops around the world.
Campaigners on climate change believe that a signal from Francis that the Church considers global warming a grave danger could influence the global discussion on the severity of the problem, what has caused it and what can be done.
The pope is due to address the UN Special Summit on Sustainable Development in September and the international community will seek to agree a universal agreement on climate change at a summit in Paris in December.
Climate change skeptics have warned Francis not to take sides in the debate but all the signs so far are that he sees the problem as man-made and as one that can be alleviated by political action.
Caritas is a confederation of 165 Catholic charity and aid groups operating in 200 countries worldwide.
It holds a general assembly once every four years. This year's meeting, the first under Francis's papacy, runs to Saturday.
Message to aid workers
On Tuesday, Francis told global representatives of Caritas that true service is about welcoming God and others, and called them to continue their mission by going out to the peripheries.
In his homily for the Mass, Francis noted how the source of the organizations' global work “lies in the simple and docile welcome of God and neighbor…. This is the root. If you cut this root, Caritas dies.”
He encouraged them to bring Christ to each person they meet, and cautioned against the temptation to compare the size and reach of their various offices throughout the world.
“The Caritas of each particular church, even the smallest, is the same. There is no big Caritas or small Caritas, all are the same,” he said.
Manila archbishop Luis Antonio Tagle is tipped to take over from Hondurian cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga as the organization's president, the latter cleric having served the maximum two terms.
Source: UCAN
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