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In times that feel apocalyptic, where do we place our hope? It's an
apocalyptic moment. The grim effects of climate change have left
many people in despair. Young people often cite climate fears as a
reason they are not having children. Then there's the threat of
nuclear war, again in the cards, which could make climate worries a
moot point. The paradoxical answer ancient Judaism gave to such
despair was a promise: the promise of doomsday, the "Day of the
Lord" when God will visit his people and establish lasting justice
and peace. Judgment, according to the Hebrew prophets, will be
followed by renewal - for the faithful, and perhaps even for the
entire cosmos. Over the centuries since, this hopeful vision of
apocalypse has carried many others through moments of crisis and
catastrophe. Might it do the same for us? On this theme: creation
is transformed and made new. That's what the "end of the age" meant
to Jesus and his early - Peter J. Leithart says when old worlds
die, we need something sturdier than the myth of progress. -
Brandon McGinley says you can't protect your kids from tragedy. -
Cardinal Peter Turkson points to the spiritual roots of the climate
crisis. - David Bentley Hart says disruption, not dogma, is
Christianity's grounds for hope. - Hanna-Barbara Gerl-Falkovitz
reminds us that the Book of Revelation ends well. - Lyman Stone
argues that those who claim that having children threatens the
environment are wrong. - Eleanor Parker recounts how, amid Viking
terror, one Anglo-Saxon bishop held a kingdom together. - Shira
Telushkin describes how artist Wassily Kandinsky forged a path from
the material to the spiritual. - Anika T. Prather learned to let
her children grieve during the pandemic. Also in the issue: -
Ukrainian pastor Ivan Rusyn describes ministering in wartime Bucha
and Kyiv. - Mindy Belz reports on farmers who held out in Syria
despite ISIS. - New poems by winners of the 2022 Rhina Espaillat
Poetry Award - A profile of newly sainted Charles de Foucauld -
Reviews of Elena Ferrante's In the Margins, Abigail Favale's The
Genesis of Gender, and Emily St. John Mandel's Sea of Tranquility -
Readers' forum, comics, and more Plough Quarterly features stories,
ideas, and culture for people eager to apply their faith to the
challenges we face. Each issue includes in-depth articles,
interviews, poetry, book reviews, and art.
Living out the social message of the Catholic Christian faith is
not only an academic question. But if someone asked you for one
book that clearly elucidated that message, what could you give
them? Just as the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1992) has
become a standard reference for informed Catholics about the
Church's general doctrine, popes since John Paul II have expressed
a desire for a "social Catechism" that succinctly presents the
implications of the faith for social and political life and its
connection to the new evangelization. This work aims to fill that
void. Handbook of Catholic Social Teaching employs a question and
answer format, to better accentuate the response of the Church's
message to the questions Catholics have about their social role and
what the Church intends to teach about it. It is the first short
book on Catholic Social Teaching to ground itself thoroughly in the
longer and authoritative Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the
Church (2004), following the compendium's structure but rendering
its key points more succinctly and accessibly. It also brings in
more recent papal encyclicals like Caritas in Veritate and Laudato
Si and new special topics (such as gender ideology). Written in
consultation with the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, and
already a best-seller in Italy, the Handbook should take its place
alongside the Catechism on the shelf of informed Catholics as works
that can inform what we believe and do in the public sphere.
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