Dr. Massimo Faggioli

Today’s episode is the keynote lecture Massimo gave on May 4, 2023 at the Pope Francis and the Future of the Church: Prospects and Challenges for Renewal conference held at St. Mark’s College on  May 4-6, 2023. His lecture was titled, “Laudato Si’ in a Time of Global Disruption: Francis and Politics,” the inaugural Annual Laudato Si’ Lecture. You can also find the video for this lecture on our You Tube channel.

Laudato Si’ is the document of Pope Francis that has captured more attention from non-Catholics and young people, and, at the same time, has inspired opposition and dismissal. Dr. Faggioli’s lecture addressed Pope Francis’s interpretation of the situation of global disruption during his magisterium. A special focus of the lecture was Laudato Si’s focus on the relationship between the Church and politics in the context of the rapidly changing patterns of influence on both the Church and politics of the sciences, economics and information systems. Massimo remarks in his comments at the end of the lecture on the strange situation of the Church today being the defender of democracy.

The Annual Laudato Si’ Endowment Lecture was established by local donors to plant seeds and raise awareness to encourage change in the way we consider and treat the environment. Laudato Si’ calls upon all the people of the world to take seriously the needs of the environment and climate change, including economic and political systems and the needs of our poorest citizens. Laudato Si’ calls us to learn what we can all do locally and globally for the environment.

Massimo is one of the most prominent Catholic theologians working today in North America and Europe.  Massimo is a friend and was a colleague of mine at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota between 2009 to 2016, where we both worked together in the Department of Theology. He studied in Ferrara, Bologna, Tübingen, and Turin, where he got his PhD in 2002. He taught at the University of Bologna, at the Free University of Bolzano and at the University of Modena-Reggio Emilia. He worked at the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna between 1996 and 2008 under the mentorship of the founder of the Bologna School Giuseppe Alberigo.

He was the founding co-chair of the study-group “Vatican II Studies” for the American Academy of Religion between 2012 and 2017. He has a column in La Croix International and is a contributing writer for Commonweal magazine and the Italian magazine Il Regno. He is co-editor with Bryan Froehle of the new series “Studies in Global Catholicism” for Brill Publishers (first volume scheduled 2023). His books and articles have been published in more than ten languages. His latest books are Catholicism and Citizenship: Political Cultures of the Church in the Twenty-First Century (Liturgical Press 2017), and The Liminal Papacy of Pope Francis. Moving Toward Global Catholicity (Orbis Books, 2020), and Joe Biden and Catholicism in the United States (Bayard 2021).  He is the co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Vatican II (Oxford University Press, 2023) with Catherine Clifford, who has also been a guest on this podcast.  He is under contract with Oxford University Press for a book on the history of the Roman Curia. He lives in the Philadelphia area with his wife and their two children.

 

What Matters Most is produced by the Centre for Christian Engagement at St Mark’s College, the Catholic college at UBC. The CCE is a centre at St. Mark’s College that explores the Christian and Catholic intellectual tradition and seek to learn from others, other Christians, members of other religious traditions, and from those who do not claim any particular or formal religious affiliation.

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John W. Martens