Reason For Delaying Pope Francis' Environmental Encyclical: Mercy Missionaries To Hear Your Environmental Sins Or Face Excommunication!

Confess Your Environmental Sins To Missionary Monkeys Of Mercy
Or Face Excommunication! 
“Evil books will be abundant on earth and the spirits of darkness will spread everywhere a universal slackening of all that concerns the service of God. They will have great power over Nature: there will be churches built to serve these spirits. People will be transported from one place to another by these evil spirits, even priests, for they will not have been guided by the good spirit of the Gospel which is a spirit of humility, charity and zeal for the glory of God. Our Lady of La Salette 19 Sept. 1846 (Published by Mélanie 1879)  
Sins Of Our Time ~ Pope Francis

According to Sandro Magister - Pope Francis has decided to delay the publication of his encyclical on the environment because the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith would not approve the contents.

What exactly is in the encyclical that would not pass the CDF?

Wicked Vatican insiders have leak information on what was in the upcoming environmental encyclical that raised eye brows:

The purpose of sending Mercy Missionaries all over the Globe was to hear specific sins relating to the Environment.

Since most Roman Catholics do not confess such sins out of ignorance many poor souls remain in a state of mortal sin for leaving out these sins against the environment.

Here let some environmentalists explain it to you:

Pope Francis has said “Questo è il peccato nostro: di sfruttare la terra e non lasciare che lei ci dia quello che ha dentro, con il nostro aiuto della coltivazione.”

TRANSLATION: This is our sin: exploiting the land and not allowing it to give us what it has within it, with our help through cultivation.

CURWOOD: Why now? Why is Pope Francis saying that he's going to issue an encyclical about the environment?

PEPPARD: Well, one of the things that we’ve really seen with this papacy is that Francis is trying as hard as he can under the circumstances of his elevated post to remain pretty close to the ground. So he was known back when he was in Argentina for spending a pretty good amount of time in various impoverished communities. He’s known now for, you know, driving a relatively humble Pope-mobile and not wearing fancy Prada shoes, and living in not too fancy quarters in the Vatican. I think that his experience in South America, seeing the ways in which extractive industries and environmental degradation often have negative impacts for people living in situations of poverty, has informed a lot of his comments on the economy and on ecology more broadly. But I also think he understands his role as a kind of moral compass. There has not yet been an encyclical explicitly about the environment. There have been encyclicals that deal with the environment, sort of at this nexus of social justice, environmental degradation and economic development. And environmental degradation really is one of the signs of the times that no moral leader, or in this case theological faith leader, can afford to ignore.

CURWOOD: The sin of our time sounds like a pretty strong statement. What do you think Pope Francis means by that?

PEPPARD: It is a really strong statement. I mean for a Pope to say that deforestation and ecological destruction are the sins of our times is really throwing down a gauntlet. It prompts Christians, especially in the U.S., to think about how we understand sin and how we understand responsibility. So much of Western moral tradition, whether theological or philosophical, has really been based upon a very individualistic paradigm wherein I commit some kind of action, usually intentionally, and it's seen as wrong or sinful. In some sense we can ascribe a clear cause, a clear effect—there’s someone who can repent for it, someone who is affected; there might be some mode of remediation. What's really interesting about applying the language of sin to environmental destruction is that there is not necessarily one person who is the sole cause of things. Causality is much more complex. It has to do with patterns of global economy, of governance, of incentive, of poverty, of the need for arable land and subsistence. And how we think about sin and in that context is complicated, and I appreciate that he's trying to complicate the picture. The Pope and the Sin of Environmental Degradation LOE Read More>>>>

So yes dear faithful you must now not only confess your sins against God, Self and Neighbor you must confess your sins against the Environment!

Failure to do so - will make one excommunicated from the Body of Christ according to the new Evangelization of Pope Francis.

You murdered the environment you must now confess it to the Missionaries of Mercy or face spiritual death yourself.

Will this nonsense of confessing environmental sins be taken out of the pending encyclical? We will find out soon enough...in the meantime stop sinning against the environment...




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