("Rwanda Today: The International Criminal Tribunal and the Prospects for Peace and Reconciliation; Interview with Helen Cobban," 2004 at (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/ghosts/today/)
The works that foster such shows of faith must continue and accelerate to meet the needs of the wandering souls who still carry the burden as ghosts of the Rwandan spirit. The Catholic church is also noted by Cobban as a very active member in this process and this is reflected in the words of Pope John Paul II in his Dives in misericordia, where he intones that the faithful take an anthropocentric view upon the state of humanity and step away from worldly designations of chauvinism of race, gender, and creed as a delimiting designation allowing humanity to shirk acknowledgement of its connectedness as one.
The more the Church's mission is centered upon man -- the more it is, so to speak, anthropocentric -- the more it must be confirmed and actualized theocentrically, that is to say, be directed in Jesus Christ to the Father. While the various currents of human thought both in the past and at the present have tended and still tend to separate theocentrism and anthropocentrism, and even to set them in opposition to each other, the Church, following Christ, seeks to link them up in human history, in a deep and organic way. (2)
Religion as it is today must reconcile through the acknowledgement of one humanity a marriage between theocentrism and anthropocentrism as the world today requires that there is concordance between faith and humanity, to guide modern concerns and needs in uncertain times.
According to St. Augustine, as he speaks on the Grace of Christ "...it is thus that God teaches those who have been called according to His purpose, giving them simultaneously...
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