Dental Care
This part II should include Exegesis about the Economic Justice.
The world is wrestling today -- as it always was, but perhaps it is more noticeable today -- between extremes of progress and stultification, between extremes of poverty and wealth, and between extremes of greed and lassitude. People, on the one hand, are grasping for more, and then you have, on the other hand, people who have the wealth of half the world and keep in their small nook. It is not only countries that are suffering but individuals, too. And the Church, committed to spreading the Word of God and, consequently, committed to world progress, resolves, as is mentioned in the Vatican Pastoral Constitution, to intervene:
In the economic and social realms, too, the dignity and complete vocation of the human person and the welfare of society as a whole are to be respected and promoted. For man are the source, the center, and the purpose of all economic and social life. (Chap. 3; 63).
The Church, throughout the ages, has set down certain guidelines to try to reduce the gap between wretchedness and extravagance and to try to nurture and relieve the load of the suffering individual on both a micro and macro scales. The Vatican resolved to augment these steps with others in accordance with contemporary circumstances. They came up with four resolutions:
1. Technical progress and innovation should be pursued but the ends should be, nor for material acquisition, but for the growth and development of humanity -- seeing its needs in a positive way and towards fulfillment of a God-filled world. Economy should be pursued in accordance with the guidelines of God (Section 1; 64).
2. All nations and groups should have a share in determining economic development and the progress of their country; it should not be left under the direction of a few individuals or mighty corporations or governments (Section 1; 65).
3. The skills of all classes of people should be used in augmenting the county's economic situation. Immigrants and their families should be treated kindly, and workers, as a whole, should be dignified not as tools of production but as people in their own right. (Section 1; 66).
4. Society should help all individuals find work and remuneration should be in accord with helping man achieve his labor and live his life. Workers should be compensated with above-menial wages so that they can also devote time to enjoying their family and to resting. (Section 2; 67).
5. Workers can form unions. All should be regulated in a peaceful way. Affairs of operation and administration should be worked out between employer and employee (Section 2; 68).
6. Man should see himself as part of a wider world. All that he earns, also belongs to, and should, benefit others. His actions have repercussions. His work should benefit the world as a whole. In his work, therefore, she should take heed of the results of his actions on others. Family and social services should be promoted and his Investments should be dedicated towards progressive purposes. (Section 2; 68)
7. Goods can be deprivatized only within the proper authority and with adequate compensation. (Section 2; 69). (Pastoral constitution on the church in the modern world" Gaudium Et Spes and teaching from USCCB ( U.S. conference of catholic bishops)
Chrisitant who follow these precepts, assures the Vatican, are constructing a truer more harmonious world that is in sync with God's regulations.
The Bible was always concerned with economics seeing economies as its rite of progress. Philosophers such as Charles Beard and William Appleman stated that history could be understood through economics. Actually, economics is also a hermeneutics that can be used in Biblical interpretation.
Right off from the very start, the Garden of Eden was a milieu that worked on the principles of economics. The citizens were supposed to till the garden; in return, they would benefit. The manna in the desert was the first glimmerings of socialism; all received an equal 'slice'. The manna, too, came with lessons against hoarding. The Jubilee laws, with land reverting in the 5 oth year to the original owner, was a strategy that prevented the few accumulating great mass of possession and power; it also kept the poor from being exploited. There were countless laws like this, including the regulation of paying wages on time and returning the poor man his garb that was his loan at night.
So many individuals equate capitalism with greed and, thenceforth, to evil. The popular saying goes that...
Dental Amalgam: The Risks and Alternatives Some of the most common dental restorative materials currently in use are dental amalgams, but these compounds contain approximately 50% mercury making their use controversial, particularly with young children who may be harmed by long-term exposure. Although there are some viable composite resin alternatives available, dental amalgams with mercury remain the treatment of choice for many practitioners. To determine the current risks and potential alternatives
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