🇻🇦Lo que está ocurriendo con “Magnifica Humanitas” es histórico y muchos todavía no entienden la magnitud.
Estoy leyendo la encíclica llevo varias horas y: Mientras Silicon Valley promete eficiencia, automatización y reemplazo humano, León XIV pone el problema real sobre la mesa: la IA no solo amenaza empleos, amenaza la propia concepción del hombre. Y eso cambia completamente el debate.
La encíclica no es tecnofobia. Es una declaración de guerra moral contra la deshumanización disfrazada de progreso. Por eso incomoda tanto a ciertas élites tecnocráticas que quieren reducir al ser humano a datos, productividad y algoritmos.
“No machine can ever replace” no es una frase poética. Es un límite civilizatorio.
Después de décadas donde muchos pensaban que la Iglesia había llegado tarde al debate tecnológico, el Vaticano acaba de entrar al centro de la guerra espiritual más importante del siglo XXI.
Y lo hizo defendiendo algo que el mundo moderno ya casi olvidó: el alma humana.
No la he terminado me falta mucho, más de 42.000 palabras, les recomiendo encarecidamente que la lean y no se dejen manipular por titulares de pasquines digitales ni de influencers anti-católicos. 👇🏻
✝️ Viva Cristo Rey
In the era of #ArtificialIntelligence, when human dignity is threatened by new forms of dehumanization, ours is the pressing duty to remain profoundly human. We must lovingly safeguard the grandeur of humanity bestowed upon us and revealed in its fullness in Christ, the splendor of which no machine can ever replace. #MagnificaHumanitas
https://t.co/6i9MWs6LJl
🚨 The real masterminds and backstage geniuses behind the rose petals falling from the Pantheon’s oculus on Pentecost Sunday?
The Rome firefighters!
Italy at its finest 🇮🇹🔥
For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him.
— Colossians 1:16
I mentioned that the Holy Spirit influences the selection of Popes, and the Protestants started protesting again.
So some began listing “bad Popes” and asking if the Holy Spirit was involved in choosing them too
Let’s be honest for a second.
Being chosen by God has NEVER guaranteed that a man won’t lose his way.
God chose Saul - he fell.
God chose Solomon - he fell into idolatry.
God chose David - he committed grave sins.
God chose Judas - he betrayed Christ.
So what exactly is your point?
The pattern in Scripture is clear;
God calls, man responds, man can also FAIL.
The Holy Spirit guiding the Church does NOT mean every Pope will be morally perfect.
It means the Church will not be led into doctrinal error.
Even in the Bible, priests and kings held divine offices and still acted corruptly.
So bringing up “bad Popes” doesn’t disprove anything.
It actually CONFIRMS the biblical pattern.
God has always chosen men.
And men have always had the freedom to either stay faithful, or fall.
As Catholics, that’s why we pray for our priests. That’s why we pray for our Pope.
Because being chosen is one thing.
Remaining faithful is another.
I love the ending part of today's Gospel reading:
"But there are also many other things that Jesus did; if every one of them were written down, I suppose that the world itself could not contain the books that would be written."
When I was reading it, what came to my mind was the never-ending question: Where is it in the Bible?
The Bible provides the answer to that question.
The Catholic Church, despite being led by imperfect men, has been right about every theological and social subject for 2,000 years
After a lifetime of trying to keep up with an ever-changing world, I can’t put into words how much better my life has gotten since realizing this fact and fully surrendering to it
Turns out “all those rules” are there for our own benefit
The New Testament didn’t exist during Jesus’ life and ministry
It wasn’t canonized for 350 years
There was no “sola scriptura” in the early Church
Nobody came to church with a Bible tucked under their arm. Most of them couldn’t have read it anyway because of such high illiteracy rates
They did, however, attend Mass and receive the Eucharist and had priests, bishops and deacons
Scripture is a later addition to the faith. It was written by apostles and canonized by the Church long after the Church had already been venerating Mary and asking for the Saints’ intercession
Christ left a Church, not a Bible. The Bible gets its authority from the Church. So if that same Church tells me to pray the rosary, I’m gonna do it
“Vain repetition” is everywhere in modern “worship” songs:
“This is how I fight my battles
This is how I fight my battles
This is how I fight my battles…”
And so on and so on
The songs are fine, but they’re not “worship”
I fight my battles by examining my conscience, regular confession, Mass attendance, Scripture reading and receiving the Eucharist
And by praying the rosary
There is no “vain repetition” in the Catholic Church, as not all repetition is “vain.” Catholicism actually has a plan and design for spiritual battle
It’s the modern Evangelical churches that use “vain repetition” to evoke an ephemeral emotional response
“It may look like I’m surrounded but I’m surrounded by you
It may look like I’m surrounded but I’m surrounded by you
It may look like I’m surrounded but I’m surrounded by you…”
Pretty song. Awfully repetitive
And not worship