Addressing participants in the international Symposium "Man-Woman: Image of God.” Pope Francis describes so-called gender ideology as the "ugliest danger" of our time, because it cancels out all differences that make humanity.

Pope Francis on Friday again spoke out against gender theory describing it as an “ugly ideology of our time”, because it erases all distinctions between men and women. To ceancel this difference “is to erase humanity. Man and woman, instead, exist in a fruitful ‘tension’”, he said.

The Symposium

The remarks came as he opened his address to participants in the international Symposium "Man-Woman: Image of God. Towards an Anthropology of Vocations" held in the Vatican on March 1-2.

The Congress is organized by Cardinal Marc Ouellet, Prefect Emeritus of the Dicastery for Bishops, together with the Centre for Research and Anthropology of Vocations (CRAV) and is a follow-up to the previous 2022 Symposium dedicated to the theology of the priesthood.

Introducing his address the Pope said he still has a cold and asked his assistant Monsignor Filippo Ciampanelli to read it out for him, "so I don't get so fatigued.”

In the prepared text the Pope reflected on the theme of the Congress which is aimed first of all at highlighting the anthropological dimension of every vocation.

The human person is a vocation

Indeed, he remarked, “the life of the human being is a vocation” which has a relational character: “I exist and live in relation to who generated me, to the reality that transcends me, to others and to the world around me, in which I am called to embrace a specific and personal mission with joy and responsibility.”

“Each one of us discovers and expresses oneself as called, as a person who realizes oneself in listening and response, sharing our being and gifts with others for the common good.”

This fundamental anthropological truth is sometimes overlooked in today's cultural context, where human beings tend to be reduced to their mere material and primary needs. Yet, Pope Francis said , they are more than this: created by God in His own image, man and woman “carry within themselves a desire for eternity and happiness that God himself has planted in their hearts and that they are called to fulfil through a specific vocation.”

“Our being in the world is not a mere fruit of chance, but we are part of a design of love and are invited to go out of ourselves and realize it, for ourselves and for others,” the Pope said.

“We are called to happiness, to the fullness of life, to something great to which God has destined us.”

We all have a mission in Church and society

Recalling Cardinal Saint John Henry Newman’s “Meditations and Prayers” Pope Francis further remarked that not only we have all been entrusted with a mission, but ”each and every one of us is a mission.”

The Pope therefore welcomed the symposium and the studies conducted on this topic because, he said, “they spread awareness of the vocation to which every human being is called by God”, and are also useful to reflect on today’s challenges, on the ongoing anthropological crisis, and on the need to promote human and Christian vocations.

Promoting a more effective "circularity" of vocations

He also emphasized the importance of promoting “a more effective circularity” of the different types of vocations in the Church, including lay vocations, ordained ministry and consecrated life, so they “can contribute to generating hope in a world overwhelmed by death.”

“Generating this hope, placing oneself at the service of the Kingdom of God to build an open and fraternal world is a mission entrusted to every woman and man of our time,” he said.

The courage to seek God’s will

Closing his address, Pope Francis encouraged the participants in the Symposium not to shy away from risks in seeking God’s will in their work, reminding them a living faith is not an artifact in a museum:”The Holy Spirit asks us fidelity, but fidelity moves, and often leads us to take risks”, he said.

“Move forward with the courage to discern and risk seeking God's will.”
  • Monk3brain3 [any, he/him]
    ·
    6 months ago

    Wasn't this piece of shit the supposed woke pope.

    Religion is fundamentally incompatible with a rational view of the world and rational approaches to topics like gender and sexuality.

    • huf [he/him]
      ·
      6 months ago

      not woke. he was elected to be the PR pope and he's doing a fairly good job of it, rehabilitating the image of the oldest existing sex pest cult in the eyes of inattentive libs everywhere.

      • Adkml [he/him]
        ·
        6 months ago

        Yea he's not actually progressive he just knows enough to read the room and not bring up how they still oppose birdoctoring but support child rape as a church doctorine.

        • Egon
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          edit-2
          25 days ago

          deleted by creator

          • Adkml [he/him]
            ·
            6 months ago

            That started out as birth control I'm not sure how autocorrect got there lol.

            These birds are perfectly safe they just let me operate on them because of the implications.

            • Egon
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              edit-2
              25 days ago

              deleted by creator

    • 7bicycles [he/him]
      ·
      6 months ago

      Every pope starting with like Paul 2 has been the most woke pope ever that will finally, after thousands of years of being straight up garbage on all accounts, reform the catholic church into a force for good, and every future pope will also do that

      • ElChapoDeChapo [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        6 months ago

        I agree with the overall sentiment but this is demonstrably not true, the last pope was literally the nazi pope who was in the Hitler youth

        Not defending the current grand pedo but the last guy was objectively not even pretending to be more progressive than his predecessor

        • 7bicycles [he/him]
          ·
          6 months ago

          I distinctly remember press coverage about how Ratzinger is making the catholic church good now but admittedly that might have to do with him and me both being german

      • space_comrade [he/him]
        ·
        6 months ago

        "I won't call for genocide of trans people, I'll just call them disgusting and ugly"

        Truly the winds of change are blowing.