The key to caring for God's creation isn't more innovative solutions that will emerge from this week's United Nations Ocean Conference, nor is it a new set of targets that could come out of vital UN conferences later this year. Rather, to truly care for our common home, we all need to feel connected to God's creation and each other, speakers from throughout Oceania shared in an unofficial side event to the UN Ocean Conference on Tuesday.
The event, titled 'Oceania Talanoa: Faith, Indigenous, and Nature's Moana Shaping and Safeguarding Innovations of the Sea,' was broadcast live from Lisbon, Portugal, the host city of the conference. The dialogue brought together Catholic leaders and Indigenous Peoples from throughout Oceania to share how they connect with the ocean and God's creation, and how Catholics everywhere can "shake up" the status quo. Read more Watch the video of the side event (1:54:55) 'In the second paragraph of his 2015 encyclical letter, "Laudato Si', on Care for Our Common Home," Pope Francis reflects on the ways in which the human species has mistreated and abused the Earth, which he calls our "Sister, Mother Earth" in the tradition of his namesake St. Francis of Assisi. The pope then states: "We have forgotten that we ourselves are dust of the earth (cf. Gen 2:7); our very bodies are made up of her elements, we breathe her air and we receive life and refreshment from her waters." This single sentence says a lot. It acknowledges what both the second creation narrative in the Book of Genesis and natural sciences affirm about our human bodies being composed of the same material as the Earth, while also noting that we have "forgotten" — or, perhaps better, willfully ignored — our inherent creatureliness over the centuries. As is clear from the rest of the text, Francis believes that a major cause of the environmental crises that the Earth faces today are caused in part by the self-centeredness of the human species. In other words, anthropocentrism is a major problem. Too often, we humans live as if everything is about us and all nonhuman creation is intended for us to do with as we please. Francis is among those religious leaders who have strongly critiqued anthropocentrism, noting that nonhuman creatures are also loved into existence by God and have their own inherent dignity and goodness...' Read the rest of the article here |
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