Card McCarrick: Impact Investing ‘a great new way to
help the poor’
(Vatican Radio) Cardinal
Theodore E. McCarrick, Archbishop Emeritus of Washington, has long been an
advocate for social justice issues, especially on behalf of the poor. So it was
with enthusiasm that he agreed to participate in the Impact Investing Conference 2016, saying impact
investing is 'a great new way to help the poor'.
The three day conference –
hosted by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, in conjunction with Catholic Relief Services – is taking place from 26-28
June, with key business experts and Catholic leaders from around the world
exploring ways to harness the power of impact capital to sustain the Catholic
Church’s social mission.
Impact investing is a form of
investment made into companies or organizations with the goal of providing
social benefit to those in need, whilst providing a financial return to the
investor.
In an interview with Devin
Watkins, Cardinal McCarrick spoke about the delight he experiences in
retirement when new ways are found to help the poor.
Cardinal Theodore McCarrick
retired in 2006 from the helm of the Archdiocese of Washington, but he said
finding new ways to help the poor gives him consolation in retirement.
"Sometimes during
retirement you come into these very interesting moments like this. This whole
idea of finding a new way to help the poor, to find a new way to get all the
interesting insights that we've developed over the years to people who have a
great desire to be what the Lord is asking us to be, and to have the wisdom to
find out about it and do it."
People express God's love
to the poor
The Cardinal said the final
goal of such initiatives is to help the poor experience God's love through the
care of other people.
"This is a new way of
trying to bring into the life of the poor the wonderful things that they need
to survive, to realize God's love, and to realize that, through God's love,
they are loved by a lot of other people."
This is the second installment
of the Vatican Impact Investment Conference and seeks to build on two years of
on-the-ground experience.
"We had a meeting two years ago with some very fine and challenging
talks, and now we've had a chance to think about it and to test some things
out."
'Do more!'
Cardinal McCarrick said Pope
Francis has been a guiding inspiration for finding new ways to reach out to the
poor.
"The idea [for the
conference] sprang up from six or seven different sources, but everyone under
the tutelage of this Holy Father."
"He is the one who keeps
saying, 'Do more! Do more!', and if we say, 'How can I do more?', the Lord puts
these ideas into our heads so we see different ways to do more. And that's a
great blessing."
(Devin Sean Watkins)
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