John Kerry on the Pope
So many are looking here and there for the 'Man of Sin' and he is sitting right in plain site. All the blue prints are laid out step by step.
He will use the 'Common Good' for all, in caring for our common earth through Climate Change. It's a form of Gaia, goddess worship, along with Mary 'Queen of Heaven' worship. Pope Francis has said, “The promotion of the common good is a duty of justice that falls on each citizen." It's all coming together daily.
Here are a few excerpts taken from the Vatican News site of John Kerry's interview, I'll leave the link to the article in the comments.
"Special Presidential Envoy John Kerry made a special visit to the Vatican on Saturday and met in private audience with Pope Francis. He is currently in Europe visiting Rome, London, and Berlin, to meet with European government officials and business leaders on to strengthen cooperation on dealing with climate change. The 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change will meet later this year.
After his audience with the Pope and Vatican officials, Mr. Kerry sat down with Vatican News' Christopher Wells for this interview."
"You’re on a very important mission here to Europe to speak with world leaders and especially European leaders about the climate crisis. Why is it important for you to include a visit with the Pope on this journey to Europe?"
"Well, the pope is one of the great voices of reason and compelling moral authority on the subject of the climate crisis. He's been ahead of the curve. He's been a leader."
"His encyclical Laudato si’ is really a very, very powerful document, eloquent and morally very persuasive." (It's ALL about the Laudato Si)
"And I think, I think his Holiness speaks with a moral authority that is quite separate. It's unique and we need all the power we can bring to the table."
"And, in fact, on that note, Pope Francis has also spoken about the importance about getting everybody to the table and to dialogue in order to reach a consensus, especially with regards to concrete actions to move forward."
"The Holy Father is one of, if not the, one of the most powerful voices on the planet and he's been extraordinary in the eloquence of his call on people to do to step up and be reasonable and to live out our responsibility as human beings in caring for God's creation. And we all have to be stewards of that creation, that's his message. But because he is above politics and outside of the hurly-burly of day-to-day, national conflict, etc. I think he can sort of shake people a little bit and bring them to the table with a better sense of our common obligation."
"So, I think that the world has a special respect for Pope Francis and there is no question that he has already been a significant leader in this endeavor. And we look to him for further guidance and help in getting this job done."
"Big, powerful nations, like the United States, have had the ability over years to be emitting and growing, but now we're at a day of reckoning with respect to what are the consequences of the way we've been growing. And I think that the Holy Father speaks with special authority to our sense of obligation to each other, and the ways in which we need to all step up now together, given the divisions of the world and some of the polarization and the ideology and conflict. That voice is more important than ever."
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