St. Bernard of Clairvaux, pray for us!!
St. Bernard of Clairvaux | Saint of the Day | AmericanCatholic.org
America's Shop of Horrors: Manufacturing Babies Only to Destroy Them - U.s. - Catholic Online
Caritas in Veritate - Pope Benedict XVI
69. The challenge of development today is closely linked to technological  progress, with its astounding applications in the field of biology.  Technology — it is worth emphasizing — is a profoundly human reality, linked to  the autonomy and freedom of man. In technology we express and confirm the  hegemony of the spirit over matter. “The human spirit, ‘increasingly free of its  bondage to creatures, can be more easily drawn to the worship and contemplation  of the Creator'”[150]. Technology enables us to exercise dominion over  matter, to reduce risks, to save labour, to improve our conditions of life. It  touches the heart of the vocation of human labour: in technology, seen as the  product of his genius, man recognizes himself and forges his own humanity.  Technology is the objective side of human action[151] whose origin and  raison d'etre is found in the subjective element: the worker himself. For  this reason, technology is never merely technology. It reveals man and his  aspirations towards development, it expresses the inner tension that impels him  gradually to overcome material limitations. Technology, in this sense, is a  response to God's command to till and to keep the land (cf. Gen 2:15)  that he has entrusted to humanity, and it must serve to reinforce the covenant  between human beings and the environment, a covenant that should mirror God's  creative love.
 
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