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I'm glad you caught that because as a Catholic this has been a source of tremendous annoyance to me - the pope must be one of the most misquoted people in the modern era. So much so that I routinely just ignore "pope says" type articles.

If course even if he did say that it doesn't touch on morals or dogma so it's just a guy voicing his personal opinion. It would just be weird for him to voice it using his religious platform.

That said it is likely that some group in the Vatican has started a teach kids to code program under their charity wing. As to how effective such programs are - I'm skeptical. There are already lots of great python resources online - is this going to be geared towards Catholic kids and parents to help that niche get interested in code?



> If course even if he did say that it doesn't touch on morals or dogma so it's just a guy voicing his personal opinion. It would just be weird for him to voice it using his religious platform.

I find that hard to accept. He is the Pope. It's like thinking a country's president saying something that isn't directly political is just voicing his opinion as a private citizen.


I doubt a single Australian thought the then Prime Minister Bob Hawke was making a political statement, proposing a new national holiday, or doing anything other than voicing an opinion as a private citizen when he celebrated the Australian win against the USofA in the America's Cup Race.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8mdHO2_Zo8


To be honest, I do think he is on some level speaking for Australians in general. Not formally speaking for the state of course, but the only reason we care about his opinion is that he is a national leader and not a private citizen.


We (Australians) also care about his opinion because he was an avid sportsman and took out a British record for downing a yard glass of beer.

Although I suppose the law degree and Rhodes scholarship add a little weight.

The main point here, though, is we are able to seperate his personal opinions from his role as Prime Minister just as I would hope that many Catholics would be able to seperate the opinions of the Pope on Python (if in fact there were any, given that this entire story seems to lack a direct primary Pontiff quote) from the Pope's official statments re: Catholicism and the wider Christian beliefs.

I suspect however that perhaps devout members of a religious flock that regard a person as a direct agent of God on earth might be less discerning about that person's opinions than the citizens of a democratic country are about the opinions of their temporay prime political representative particulalry as a good number of those citizens might not even support that representative.

TLDR: democratic citizens are likely more critical of their ephemeral leaders than religuos flocks are about their designated "voice of the lord".


Saying the Pope is "the voice of God" is inaccurate. He is an appointed leader who gets the last word on certain issues. There are plenty of Catholics critical of any Pope even with regard to his opinions on Catholic beliefs. Take a look at what rad trad Catholics say about the current Pope, for example.

The extent to which Catholics would give extra weight to the Pope's opinions outside his official role varies wildly. Much the same is true of any leader: e.g. the weight given to the opinions of a president of a democratic country by their supporters and opponents. The last president of the US is a particularly good example of this :)



Not sure whether you are agreeing or disagreeing ex-cathedra is very much in his official role, and applies to a tiny proportion of what Popes say.


I'd argue people who don't accept the authority of the holy see, by definition, aren't Catholic.


Depends. The Church's own doctrines place a lot of emphasis on following your individual conscience for example.

Also, any authority is only valid in an offical role.What we are discussing here is out of scope for that.


Fellow Catholic here, it’s interesting that Jorge Bergolio has chosen to endorse a computer programming language named after a serpent. I hope they won’t be using any Apple products for this project otherwise , truly, the prophetic forerunner of the antichrist and the end times have arrived.

Joke (maybe?).


Never miss an opportunity to be a kill joke!!! Python was named after Monty Python the British comedy group. If you have not watched them, I highly recommend.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_(programming_language)#...


Good joke, definitely.




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