World needs politicians who uphold Catholic social teaching, pope says August 28, 2023By Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service Filed Under: Feature, News, Vatican, World News VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis prayed that God would raise up a new generation of “well-educated and faithful Catholics leaders committed to promoting the church’s social and ethical teachings” through public service, especially in politics. Such leaders, he told members of the International Catholic Legislators Network, can contribute to building God’s kingdom by placing human life and dignity at the center of their concern and ensuring care for the environment and the world’s poorest people. The pope met at the Vatican Aug. 26 with the legislators who were holding their annual meeting in Frascati, south of Rome, and focusing on what they see as “dehumanizing trends” in politics, economics and technology. A key feature of the trends, which have a “negative impact upon both human and natural ecology alike,” the pope said, is a “subtle seduction of the human spirit, lulling people — and especially the young — into misusing their freedom.” “We see this when men and women are encouraged to exercise control over, instead of responsible custodianship of material or economic ‘objects,’ the natural resources of our common home or even one another,” the pope said. Seeing everything and even other people as an object to be used for one’s personal benefit, he said, “ultimately impacts most negatively on the poorest and most vulnerable in society.” Even the connections people find on social media can be dehumanizing, he said, when they are used to spread “fake news” or to promote hatred and division. “This misuse of virtual encounter can only be overcome by the culture of authentic encounter, which involves a radical call to respect and to listen to one another, including those with whom we may strongly disagree,” Pope Francis told the legislators. On the other hand, he said, international networks like the Catholic legislators’ group can show a better way not only by connecting people, but also by uniting them in a common project. Such a network mirrors the church itself, he said, because it is a community “called to live in both communion and mission.” “Those ‘centripetal’ and ‘centrifugal’ forces of the Christian life, sustained by the power of the Holy Spirit, inwardly bind people together in fraternal unity and direct them outward on the shared mission of joyfully proclaiming the Gospel,” Pope Francis told the group. Read More Vatican News Vatican aid a sign of Pope Leo’s closeness to suffering Ukrainians, papal almoner says Pope expected to visit Australia for 2028 International Eucharistic Congress, bishop says Security strains, political tensions cloud potential papal visit to Cameroon Archbishop Fulton Sheen’s beatification moves ahead after 6-year pause Vatican confirms pope will not visit U.S. in 2026 Sister Thea Bowman’s sainthood moving forward to Vatican review Copyright © 2023 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Print