E. J. DIONNE (Brookings Institution): There is
something different here. I think there are three things: one—there is a
radicalism and an urgency to what he is saying and you read the
language of this latest document and in so many places, he talks about a
deified market. He talks about a system which tends to devour
everything which stands in the way of increased profits. He talks about
defenseless beings and so I think we cannot deny that he has given a
higher priority to the church’s social teachings, to our obligations to
the poor, and to criticism of an unjust economy than we have heard in a
long time; not that he is inconsistent with John Paul or Benedict
because they said some tough things about the market as well, but I
think this is so central to who he is.
MICHAEL GERSON: I would say that the heart, that for
all of this discussion, the reason that Francis is powerful and
attractive to so many is because he talks about Jesus and because he
acts like Jesus. And that is the source of power and authority in the
Christian church in all of its expressions. And I would only conclude by
saying that a church that looked like this would transform the entire
world
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Hey, thanks for engaging the conversation!