Rome & the World: Italys elections and the Church Etienne Gilson 40 years after his death – Aleteia

Posted: September 29, 2022 at 12:55 am

Monday 26 September 2022~1. Will Italys elections hurt Pope Francis?2. Thomism versus rationalism: 44 years after his death, tienne Gilsons ideas remain important3 . The canton of Lucerne does not want to finance the new Swiss Guards barracks4. Torpedoing the presidential election leads to the collapse of the Republic, worries Patriarch Rai5. German bishops meet amid crisis~

Yesterday, Sunday 25 September, Italians went to the polls to vote for a new parliament, which will lead to a new prime minister. The party that received the most votes is the right-wing Fratelli dItalia, which combines disaffection from Republican institutions with a nostalgia for the fascism of Benito Mussolini, comments Massimo Faggioli, Italian religion historian, in the liberal magazine, Commonweal. The partys victory means that its leader, Giorgia Meloni, will be Italys first woman and first hard-right-wing prime minister. Faggiolis opinion article, however, centers on the Vatican and the Churchs unusually cautious reaction to these elections and how a right-wing victory could affect Pope Francis position in the country. The Italian historian underlines, for example, how the Jesuit magazine close to the Vatican, Civilt Cattolica, has published nothing about whats at stake in these elections, which it usually has during other elections. The Italian bishops did publish a statement encouraging citizens to vote and reminding them to remember the most marginalized, but Faggioli analyzes that the Catholic leadership is overwhelmed by the gap between the seriousness of the situation and the forces at their disposal, underscoring the growing political irrelevance of the Catholic Church in Italy. Faggioli also emphasizes a difficulty of communication between Francis and the Italian bishops. The new president of the bishops conference, Bologna Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, is part of the Community of SantEgidio, which has seen some of its members running for parliament on a slate connected to the center-left Democratic Party, whose positions do not always coincide with the Church. On the other hand, Zuppi knows that some clerics and Catholics would welcome a right-wing government that, although anti-immigration, could also oppose recognizing LGBT rights or relaxing abortion laws. The Italian historian assesses that the influence of Catholicism politically in Italy is far weaker than in the past and also wonders whether Italian bishops and the Vatican are underestimating the repercussions of these elections on the Church. With a hard-right government in Italy, Francis would be forced to find a way to live with political leaders who have a very different worldview and even a different language than he has. A new government in Italy could very easily strengthen opposition to Francis and severely limit the social and political reception of his pontificates core message, concludes Faggioli.

Commonweal, English

On the occasion of the 44th anniversary of the death of the French historian of philosophy tienne Gilson (1884-1978), Quebec Catholic magazine Le Verbe published a long article on the life of this intellectual, who is often misunderstood but who played an essential role in the rediscovery of the Christian philosophical heritage. Alex La Salle, the author of the article, underlines how useful Gilsons thought is for understanding why Christianity cannot be associated with irrationality. The French historian, at a time when rationalism had become the dominant thought, was the first to demonstrate that the roots of modern rationality were to be found in the Thomistic scholasticism of the Middle Ages, at the time considered by the Hegelian philosopher Victor Cousin as the night of thought. The Middle Ages conquered the rights of reason for modern thought, estimated Gilson, who had a lot of difficulty finding his place in a French university where atheism, under the guise of secularism, often forbade interest in Christian thinkers. Initially hostile to scholasticism himself, he changed his point of view when he discovered that the figurehead of modern rationalism, Ren Descartes, had himself been strongly inspired by medieval thought. Gilson went on to become one of the greatest specialists in Christian thought, and in particular in Saint Thomas Aquinas.

Le Verbe, French

3 . The canton of Lucerne does not want to finance the Swiss Guards new barracks

In Switzerland, the people of Lucerne have rejected with 71.48% of the votes the possibility to contribute up to 400,000 francs to the reconstruction of the Swiss Guards barracks in Rome.

Cath.ch, French

4. Torpedoing the presidential election leads to the collapse of the Republic, worries Patriarch Rai

Any attempt to torpedo the presidential deadline aims to cause the fall of the Republic, on the one hand, and to marginalize the Christian role, especially Maronite, at the level of power, on the other hand, while we are the fathers of this Republic and the standard bearers of the national partnership, lamented Cardinal Bechara Boutros Pierre Ra, in his homily on Sunday. In Lebanon, presidential elections are expected to take place in the fall.

IciBeyrouth, French

5. German bishops meet amid crisis

The autumn plenary assembly of the German Bishops Conference begins a few weeks after the fourth synodal assembly, which revealed tensions within the episcopate concerning a possible reformulation of sexual morality.

Katholisch.de, German

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Rome & the World: Italys elections and the Church Etienne Gilson 40 years after his death - Aleteia

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