
LAUDATO SI’: ON THE CARE OF OUR COMMON HOME
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis’ first
encyclical is focused on the idea of ‘integral ecology’, connecting
care of the natural world with justice for the poorest and most vulnerable people.
Only by radically reshaping our relationships with God, with our neighbours
and with the natural world, he says, can we hope to tackle the threats facing
our planet today. Science, he insists, is the best tool by which
we can listen to the cry of the earth, while dialogue and education are
the two keys that can “help us to escape the spiral of self-destruction which currently
engulfs us”.
At the heart of the Pope’s reflections is the question: “What kind of world do
we want to leave to those who come after us, to children who are now growing up?”.
The answers he suggests call for profound changes to political, economic, cultural
and social systems, as well as to our individual lifestyles.
Chapter 1 sets out six of the most serious challenges facing “our
common home”
- Pollution, waste and our throwaway mentality:
“the earth, our home, is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile of filth”
- Climate change: “one of the principle challenges facing humanity in our day”
but “many of those who possess more resources and economic or political power seem
mostly to be concerned with masking the problems or concealing their symptoms”
- Water: “access to safe drinkable water is a basic and universal human right”
yet entire populations, and especially children get sick and die because of contaminated
water
- Biodiversity: “Each year sees the disappearance of thousands of plant and animal
species” and the consequences cannot be predicted as “all of us, as living creatures,
are dependent on one another”. Often transnational economic interests obstruct this
protection
- Breakdown of society: Current models of development adversely affect the quality
of life of most of humanity and “many cities are huge, inefficient structures, excessively
wasteful of energy and water
- Global inequality: Environmental problems affect the most vulnerable people,
the greater part of the world’s population and the solution is not reducing the birth
rate but counteracting “an extreme and selective consumerism”
And Chapter 3 explores six of the deep root causes of these growing crises
- Technology: While it can bring progress towards
sustainable development, without “a sound ethics”, it gives “those with the knowledge,
and especially the economic resources… an impressive dominance over the whole of humanity”
- The technocratic mentality: “the economy accepts every advance in technology
with a view to profit……yet by itself the market cannot guarantee integral human development
and social inclusion”
- Anthropocentrism: we fail to understand our place in the world and our relationship
with nature. Interpersonal relations and protection of human life must be set above
technical reasoning so environmental concern “is also incompatible with the justification
of abortion”
- Practical relativism: environmental degradation and social decay is the result
of seeing “everything as irrelevant unless it serves one’s own immediate interests”
- Employment: Integral ecology needs to take account of the value of labour so
everyone must be able to have work and it’s “bad business for society” to stop investing
in people to achieve short-term financial gains
- Biological technologies: GMOs are a “complex environmental issue” which have
helped to resolve problems but bring difficulties such as concentrating land “in the
hands of a few owners”, threatening small producers, biodiversity and ecosystems
So where do the solutions lie? Here are six of
the best
- In “The Gospel of Creation”: Chapter 2 examines the Old and New Testaments to
show how human life is grounded in our relationships with God, with our neighbours
and with the created world. We must acknowledge our sins when we break these relationships
and realize our “tremendous responsibility” towards all of God’s creation
- In Integral Ecology: Chapter 4 explores this new paradigm of justice which means
“the analysis of environmental problems cannot be separated from the analysis of human,
family, work-related and urban contexts”, while solutions must be based on “a preferential
option for the poorest of our brothers and sisters”
- In Dialogue: Chapter 5, entitled ‘Lines of Approach and Action’ stresses the
need for “honest and open debate, so that particular interests or ideologies will
not prejudice the common good”. The Church does not presume to settle scientific questions
or to replace politics, but it can promote dialogue on global and local governance,
transparent decision-making, sustainable use of natural resources, as well as engaging
in respectful dialogue with other people of faith and with the scientific world
- In Education: Chapter 6 urges schools, families, the media and the churches to
help reshape habits and behavior. Overcoming individualism, while changing our lifestyles
and consumer choices, can bring much “pressure to bear on those who wield political,
economic and social power” causing significant changes in society.
- In Ecological Conversion: Chapter 6 also highlights St Francis of Assisi as the
model of “a more passionate concern for the protection of our world”, characterized
by gratitude and generosity, creativity and enthusiasm
- In Spirituality: Finally Chapter 6 and the two concluding prayers show how faith
in God can shape and inspire our care for the environment. The Sacraments, the Trinity,
the model of the Holy Family and our hope for eternal life can teach, motivate and
strengthen us to protect the natural world that God has given us.