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Fernando

Donna Berenguera in tears was kissing her 16 year old moaning son with a body covered with cruel sores causing him unrelieved torture at the door of death with  Archbishop Rodrigo Jimenez de Rada  i n armor   near by in a chapel.  Berenguera:  Our Lady of Ona, I beg you Holy Mary for the life of my son. Berenguera then is quiet with her hands folded in prayer and her head on her hands and then she looks at her son smiling. The sores are gone and she weeps for joy seeing Fernando sitting up cured and she makes the sign of the cross and says: Thank you, Mother and Queen of Heaven, I can see his soul is changed for I see his eyes now shine with a deep light that is proof that you have accepted him as your son. Fernando smiling says to his mother: Thank you mother, Holy Mary has cured me because you consecrated me to her and  to her Son, the King of Kings. Fernando relies:   I will build in my land a very great church and will call it Holy Mary...
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Michael Novak and Paul Adams: Social Justice Is Not What You Think It Is (2015) Novak and Adams aim to reclaim the term "social justice" from its modern association with progressive state-run programs and redefine it according to its roots in Catholic social teaching (CST). Amazon.com Amazon.com +1 Social Justice as Virtue: The authors argue that social justice is not a state of affairs or a legislative policy, but a personal virtue—a habit of acting justly with others. The "Social" Element: They define the "social" aspect as the skill and habit of forming associations (community-building) to pursue the common good, acting in the "vast space" between the individual and the state. Alternative to State Power: The book challenges the view that social justice requires government action, instead presenting it as a way to nurture personal responsibility and local community action, thereby countering the growth of an unchecked state. Theological Roots: They trace the concept back to Pope Pius XI, who introduced it as a virtue in the 1931 encyclical Quadragesimo Anno, meant to address the needs of an industrial world. Critique of Misuse: Novak argues that the term is often used vaguely as an ideological weapon to brand opponents as immoral, reducing complex social issues to partisan, state-centered solutions. Amazon.com Amazon.com +4

Based on the sources provided, here is an overview of the arguments made by Michael Novak and Paul Adams in  Social Justice Is Not What You Think It Is  and the perspectives discussed by Matthew Shadle regarding  Centesimus Annus . Michael Novak and Paul Adams:  Social Justice Is Not What You Think It Is  (2015)   Novak and Adams aim to reclaim the term "social justice" from its modern association with progressive state-run programs and redefine it according to its roots in Catholic social teaching (CST).   Amazon.com  +1 Social Justice as Virtue:  The authors argue that social justice is not a state of affairs or a legislative policy, but a  personal virtue —a habit of acting justly with others. The "Social" Element:  They define the "social" aspect as the skill and habit of forming associations (community-building) to pursue the common good, acting in the "vast space" between the individual and the state. Alternative to State Powe...

Catholic Social Thought and Work Justice Theological Studies Journal https://theologicalstudies.net › uploads › 2022/11 PDF by CF Hinze · 2016 · Cited by 10 — Matthew Shadle discusses Catholic neoconservative, radical, and reformist views in. “Twenty Years of Interpreting Centesimus annus on Economy,” ...Read more 18 pages

Catholic Social Thought and Work Justice Theological Studies Journal https://theologicalstudies.net  › uploads › 2022/11 PDF by CF Hinze  ·  2016  ·  Cited by 10 —  Matthew Shadle discusses Catholic neoconservative ,  radical , and  reformist views  in. “ Twenty Years of Interpreting Centesimus annus on Economy ,” ... Read more 18 pages

Christianity & Subjective Human Rights - Villey vs M: Maritain, the Catholic philosopher, who was involved in the writing of the United Nations’ Declaration, believed that a doctrine of individual rights is implicit in the Christian emphasis on the dignity of human personality. In contrast, another French scholar, Michel Villey, who studied the origins of “rights talk” in the late medieval period, held that while rights theories are derived from Christian morality, they are an aberration, a kind of deformed variety of Christian thought.

https://www.touchstonemag.com/archives/article.php?id=11-06-031-f&readcode=&readtherest=true#therest Christianity & Subjective Human Rights On the Fiftieth Anniversary of the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) by  Peter Toon Far too many people around the world are treated inhumanely and even barbarously. In such contexts the message of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, issued fifty years ago by the newly formed United Nations, that “all human beings are born free, and equal in dignity and rights” needs to be heard again so that basic human rights—such as full recognition as a person before the law to equality before the law and equal protection of the law—are not only fought for but also implemented. In contrast, a “human rights industry” has developed in North America on the basis of the post-1960s American judicial rights revolution, and the Universal Declaration is now interpreted as if it were a global Bill of Rights, a list of es...