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Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future by Pope Francis
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“For me it's clear: we must redesign the economy so that it can offer every person access to a dignified existence while protecting and regenerating the natural world.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Now, more than ever, what is revealed is the fallacy of making individualism the organizing principle of society. What will be our new principle?
We need a movement of people who know we need each other, who have a sense of responsibility to others and to the world. We need to proclaim that being kind, having faith, and working for the common good are great life goals that need courage and vigor; while glib superficiality and the mockery of ethics have done us no good. The modern era, which has developed equality and liberty with such determination, now needs to focus on fraternity with the same drive and tenacity to confront the challenges ahead. Fraternity will enable freedom and equality to take its rightful place in the symphony.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“A sober, humble lifestyle dedicated to service is worth far more than thousands of followers on social networks.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Sin is a rejection of the limits that love requires.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Migration is not a threat to Christianity except in the minds of those who benefit from claiming it is. To promote the Gospel and not welcome the strangers in need, nor affirm their humanity as children of God, is to seek to encourage a culture that is Christian in name only, emptied of all that makes it distinctive.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Human life is never a burden. It demands we make space for it, not cast it off. Of course the arrival of a new human life in need—whether the unborn child in the womb or the migrant at our border—challenges and changes our priorities. With abortion and closed borders we refuse that readjustment of our priorities, sacrificing human life to defend our economic security or to assuage our fear that parenthood will upend our lives. Abortion is a grave injustice. It can never be a legitimate expression of autonomy and power. If our autonomy demands the death of another, it is none other than an iron cage. I often ask myself these two questions: Is it right to eliminate a human life to resolve a problem? Is it right to hire an assassin to resolve a problem?”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“The health of a society can be judged by its periphery. A periphery that is abandoned, sidelined, despised, and neglected shows an unstable, unhealthy society that cannot long survive without major reforms.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“It was precisely here that the Church was born, in the margins of the Cross where so many of the crucified are found….This is why they followed Jesus. He gave them dignity….To do this Jesus had to reject the mindset of the religious elites of his day, who had taken ownership of law and tradition. Possession of the goods of religion became a means of putting themselves above others, others not like them, whom they inspected and judged. By mixing with tax collectors and ‘women of ill repute,’ Jesus wrested religion from its imprisonment in the confines of the elites, of specialized knowledge and privileged families, in order to make every person and situation capable of God. By walking with the poor, the outcasts, and the marginalized. He smashed the wall that prevented the Lord from coming close to His people, among His flock.

In showing God’s closeness to the poor and sinners, Jesus indicted the mindset that trusts in self-justification, ignoring what happens around them.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“To recover the dignity of the people we need to go to the margins of our societies to meet all those who live there. Hidden there are ways of looking at the world that can give us all a fresh start. We cannot dream of the future while continuing to ignore the lives of practically a third of the world’s population rather than seeing them as a resource.

I mean those who lack regular work living on the margins of the market economy….Yet if we manage to come close and put aside our stereo-types we discover that many of them are far from being merely passive victims. Organized in a global archipelago of associations and movements, they represent the hope of solidarity in an age of exclusion and indifference. On the margins I have discovered so many social movements with roots in parishes or schools that bring people together to make them protagonists of their own histories, to set in motion dynamics that smacked of dignity. Taking life as it comes, they do not sit around resigned or complaining but come together to convert injustice into new possibilities. I call them ‘social poets.’ In mobilizing for change, in their search for dignity, I see a source of moral energy, a reserve of civic passion, capable of revitalizing our democracy and reorienting the economy.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Today, listening to some of the populist leaders we now have, I am reminded of the 1930’s, when some democracies collapsed into dictatorships seemingly overnight. By turning the people into a category of exclusion-threatened on all sides by enemies, internal and external-the term was emptied of meaning. We see it happening again now in rallies where populist leaders excite and harangue crowds, channeling their resentments and hatreds against imagined enemies to distract from real problems.

In the name of the people, populism denies the proper participation of those who belong to the people, allowing a particular group to appoint itself the true interpreter of popular feeling. A people ceases to be a people and becomes an inert mass manipulated by a party or demagogue. Dictatorships almost always begin this way: sowing fear in the hearts of the people, then offering to defend them from the object of their fear in exchange for denying them the power to determine their own future.

For example, a fantasy of national-populism in countries with Christian majorities is its defense of ‘Christian civilizations’ from perceived enemies, whether Islam, Jews, the European Union, or the United Nations. The defense appeals to those who are often no longer religious but who regard their nation’s inheritance as a kind of identity. Their fears and loss of identity have increased at the same time as attendance at churches has declined.

The loss of relationship with God and a loss of a sense of universal fraternity have contributed to this sense of isolation and fear of the future. Thus irreligious or superficially religious people vote for populists to protect their religious identity, unconcerned that fear and hatred of the other cannot be reconciled with the Gospel.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Too often we have thought of society as a subset of the economy and democracy as a function of the market.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Once we were not a people; but now we are God's people.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“The danger of becoming trapped in conflict is that we lose perspective.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“We are born, beloved creatures of our Creator, God of love, into a world that has lived long before us.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“They are the saints next door, who have awoken something important in our hearts...”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“You have to go to the edges of existence if you want to see the world as it is.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“there are bonds of trust: communion and fraternity and physical presence.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“History is what was, not what we want it to have been, and when we try to throw an ideological blanket over it, we make it so much harder to see what in our present needs to change in order to move to a better future.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“is the sin of failing to respect the value of a person.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“The most corrupt media are those that pander to their readers and viewers, twisting the facts to suit their prejudices and fears.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“In moments of crisis you get both good and bad: people reveal themselves as they are.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“not right to judge the past with the lens of today.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“Migration is not a threat to Christianity except in the minds of those who benefit from claiming it is.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“We learn that in our restlessness and frustration, in our fascination with new things, in craving recognition in manic busyness, we had failed to pay attention to the suffering all around us.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“A crisis is almost always the result of a self-forgetting, and the way forward comes through recalling our roots.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“There is a great danger in remembering the guilt of others in order to proclaim my own innocence.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“If we are to come out of this crisis less selfish than we went in, we have to let ourselves be touched by others’ pain.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“No es justo juzgar el pasado con la hermenéutica de hoy.”
Papa Francisco, Soñemos juntos: El camino a un futuro mejor
“Behind the rise of populist politics in recent years is a genuine anguish: many feel thrust aside by the ruthless juggernaut of globalized technocracy. Populisms are often described as a protest against globalization, although they are more properly a protest against the globalization of indifference. At bottom reflect the pain at the loss of roots and community, and a generalized feeling of anguish. Yet, in generating fear and sowing panic, populisms are the exploitation of that popular anguish, not its remedy. The often cruel rhetoric of populist leaders denigrating the ‘other’ in order to defend a national or group identity reveals its spirit. It is a means by which ambitious politicians attain power.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future
“When the accumulation of wealth becomes our chief goal, whether as individuals or as an economy, we practice a form of idolatry that puts us in chains. It is inconceivable that so many women and children are being exploited for power, pleasure, or profit. Our brothers and sisters are being enslaved in clandestine warehouses, exploited as undocumented migrants and in prostitution rings, and the situation is even worse when it is children subject to such injustices, all for profit and the greed of a few.

Human trafficking is often tied to other global plagues-trafficking in arms and drugs, the trade in wildlife and organs-which degrade our world. These vast networks generating hundreds of billions of dollars cannot survive without the complicity of powerful people. States would seem powerless to act. Only a new kind of politics, which partners state resources with organizations and institutions rooted in civil society close to the problem, can rise to these challenges.”
Pope Francis, Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future

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