The Ecological Commandment

dc.contributor.authorKowalczyk, Mirosław
dc.date.accessioned2024-10-07T06:29:52Z
dc.date.available2024-10-07T06:29:52Z
dc.date.issued2016
dc.descriptionArtykuł w języku angielskim.
dc.description.abstractIn May 2015 Pope Francis published the encyclical entitled Laudato Si’ about the proper understanding of the issue of ecology. The subject is understood by the Holy Father as one that is most natural, usual and simple, but at the same time obliging everybody, rousing and engaging both in the worldly, popular and everyday sense and in the essentially religious one, which means spiritually and morally absorbing. From the whole of Pope Francis's argument presented in the encyclical it undoubtedly follows that care of the world, also the temporal one, that is ecological life and work, is both a natural and at the same time God's commandment for man, and this means: for each man, both for a believer in God as the Creator of the world, and for a non-believer, but one who is sensible at the basic level of natural law. The Pope suggests adding the theological understanding of ecology to the common one. As a result in Pope Francis's encyclical Laudato Si’ we have received a realistic, but at the same time mystic, evangelical approach to ecology, one in the light of Christ, with the simplicity of the truth, of love of life, also of the worldly life, and with the light of beauty – the beauty of God, man, the earth and the universe. Hence, integral ecology is – according to Pope Francis – a commandment given by God to believers and to non-believers, both to the impersonal world, and to the human, personal one. True ecology stems from the reality of creation, from the love of God and man, from man’s participation in the work of creation, and finally from the sense of self-preservation of the human being.
dc.identifier.citationRoczniki Teologiczne, 2016, T. 63, nr 2, s. 179-190.
dc.identifier.issn2543-5973
dc.identifier.issn2353-7272
dc.identifier.urihttps://theo-logos.pl/handle/123456789/21200
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherWydawnictwo Towarzystwa Naukowego Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego
dc.rightsCC-BY-NC-ND - Uznanie autorstwa - Użycie niekomercyjne - Bez utworów zależnych
dc.subjectochrona stworzenia
dc.subjectencyklika
dc.subjectLaudato si’
dc.subjectekologia integralna
dc.subjectstworzenie z miłości Boga
dc.subjectzmysł samozachowawczy ludzkiej istoty
dc.subjectekologia duchowa
dc.subjectmoralność ekologiczna
dc.subjectekologia
dc.subjectkatolicka nauka społeczna
dc.subjectstworzenie
dc.subjectmiłość
dc.subjectBóg
dc.subjectmoralność
dc.subjectnauczanie społeczne Kościoła
dc.subjectdokumenty Kościoła
dc.subjectprotection of the creation
dc.subjectencyclic
dc.subjectintegral ecology
dc.subjectcreation from the love of God
dc.subjectsense of self-preservation of the human being
dc.subjectspiritual ecology
dc.subjectecological morality
dc.subjectecology
dc.subjectCatholic social teaching
dc.subjectcreation
dc.subjectlove
dc.subjectGod
dc.subjectmorality
dc.subjectsocial teaching of the Church
dc.subjectChurch documents
dc.titleThe Ecological Commandment
dc.typeArticle

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