Series: Our Urban Mission

WM Special

Mission And The City

The world economy, driven as it is by neo-liberal economists and politicians, excludes 80% of the world’s population from gainful and humanly meaningful employment. Only 20% of workers in the world take pride in and meaningfully gain from their work. As an agent of mission, the Church needs to address the issues of globalization and its effects on human beings, especially in the cities.

WM Special

The Democratic Scenario

In 2015, Metro Manila will have 15 million people and much more problems. One way to solve them is to have governments listen to the voice of the lower-income groups and allow them to participate in important decision-making processes. The Church also has an important role: it can intercede on behalf of the poor and help them form their organizations.

WM Special

Proclaiming Liberation

Nairobi has a population of 4 million inhabitants, 2.5 million of whom live in over 200 slums – covering less than 5% of the whole urban area. Indeed, the towns of the world need to hear the liberating Good News of Jesus Christ, as well as see a committed Christian community taking charge of social change, such as in this city.

In Focus

The Call To Change The World

Jesus called people to personal and community change, but He also called us to change the world. He was not only concerned with individual salvation, but He wanted a change of structures that impoverish, enslave and punish the poor.

In Focus

Labor Solidarity At A Global Level

In recent years changes have been brought about in the fields of economy, technology and communications that have transformed the face of work and the conditions of the labor market, at times in dramatic ways. One emerging tendency appears to favor more individualistic relations between enterprise and employees. The latter would protect their own rights on the bases of their skills and entrepreneurial ability. These developments may be calling on us to rethink current forms of solidarity. Although workers may no longer find themselves in physical proximity with each other, solidarity remains crucial and indispensable if founded on our common humanity that links all types of work.

African Insight

Flowers’ Bad Scent

Mostly in the hands of foreign companies, the flower farms in Kenya represent millions of euros in terms of exports. But the booming blooming industry has heavy costs to the workers.

Missionary Vocation

The Bells Of Nagasaki

He was himself a victim of the atomic bomb and became its mystic. This is the heart-rending story of Dr. Paul Takashi Nagai, who gave his life to the mission of making Christian sense of one of the greatest war tragedies of modern history.

Frontiers

A Different Law For The Poor

If ever there is any single piece of evidence that illustrates the gross inequality in the Philippines, it is the treatment of those innocent children accused of crimes and rich politician behind bars. It is a rare once-in-a-life-time event when a rich politician is convicted and jailed for child sex abuse or any other serious crime. Thousands of innocent young people have been arrested, jailed and left to languish in prisons and police station jails with adult criminals and pedophiles in filthy conditions. So just to get one powerful Philippine politician behind bars to serve his sentence gives hope to victims.

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