SUMMARY:
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The Foundation Centesimus Annus – Pro Pontifice presents the
winners of the “Economy and Society” award
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The
Foundation Centesimus Annus – Pro Pontifice presents the winners of
the “Economy and Society” award
Vatican
City, 26 February 2015 (VIS) – This morning in the Holy See Press
Office the Foundation Centesimus Annus presented its activity during
the past two years, its programmes and the names of the winners of
the second edition of its the biennial international award, “Economy
and Society”. The speakers in the conference were Domingo Sugranyes
Bickel, president of the Foundation, Michael Konrad, secretary of the
jury, Msgr. Giuseppe Antonio Scotti, a jury member and Alberto
Quadrio Curzio, president of the scientific committee of the
foundation and deputy president of the Italian Lincean Academy.
The
Foundation Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice, the president explained,
was created by St. John Paul II in 1993, is managed by a council made
up of nine laypeople and reports to the president of the APSA
(Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See), currently
Cardinal Domenico Calcagno, under the supervision of the Secretariat
of State. Its main objective is to promote the Social Doctrine of the
Church and it therefore invites the participation of businesspeople
and professionals who acknowledge the principles of this Doctrine and
of the papal Magisterium, and who wish to contribute to the creation
of a new economic and social culture. Sugranyes Bickel emphasised
that in these last two years the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice has
worked in line with the themes of Pope Francis' 2013 address, in
which he remarked that it was essential to “restore to this word
'solidarity', viewed askance by the world of economics – as if it
were a bad word – the social dignity that it deserves”.
Msgr.
Scotti reiterated the importance of following Pope Francis' example
in challenging the “deviant culture” that has reached the point
of discarding people. “There are many who believe that the economy
should assume the role of absolute producer of the aims and values to
which every single aspect of the human dimension should be subject,
justifying this with the fact that we live in a post-ideological,
post-political age. Certainly, this would be an interesting aspect to
analyse. … However, contemporary culture can also be analysed from
the perspective of the Word of God. Considering that this award is
assigned to authors who seek to contribute, through their studies,
reflections and publications to learning anew how to take a scholarly
view of the present and on the use of money, it seems appropriate to
me to recall the words of the Qoheleth: 'Whoever loves money never
has money enough; whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with his
income. This too is meaningless'”.
The
names of the recipients of the second edition of the award were then
announced: Pierre de Lauzun, for his work “Finance: un regard
chrétien. De la banque mediéval a la mondialisation financière”,
a profound reflection on the morality that motivates financial
markets, viewed in the light of the social doctrine of the Church,
inviting consideration of an order other than that purely linked to
profit, and emphasising that there is no form of financial operation
that may be separated from social realities and moral needs.
In
the special section dedicated to young researchers of the social
doctrine of the Church, the winner was Alexander Stummvoll, born in
1983, for his thesis “A Living Tradition. The Holy See, Catholic
Social Doctrine and Global Politics 1965-2000”, presented in 2012
at the European University Institute, Florence, Italy. The study
examines the Social Doctrine of the Church in international
relations, referring to four major international issues that take a
concrete event as a starting point. With reference to the war in
Vietnam, he analyses the Holy See's commitment to peace; taking as a
point of reference the Polish crisis before 1989 he studies the
politics of the Holy See in relation to communism; from the
conferences in Cairo and Beijing in 1994 and 1995 he examines the
position of the Holy See regarding bioethical questions, and finally
in relation to the campaign against Third World debt on the occasion
of the 2000 Jubilee, he studies the Holy See's criticism of
unfettered capitalism.
The
awards will be presented by Cardinal Reinhard Marx, archbishop of
Munich und Freising and president of the Jury, during the next
International Congress of the Foundation, scheduled to take place
from 25 to 27 May in the Vatican's New Synod Hall and in the Palazzo
della Cancelleria in Rome, on the theme “Rethinking Key Features of
Economic and Social Life”.
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can find more information at: www.visnews.org
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news items contained in the Vatican Information Service may be used,
in part or in their entirety, by quoting the source:
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