Symposium Focuses on Christian View of Ecology, Warns That Biodiversity
Is Being Annihilated
BUENOS
AIRES, Argentina, Sept. 03, 2010, 12:00 Hrs (Zenit.org):
A symposium
on the "Christian Spirituality of Ecology" raised
a warning that biodiversity is being irreversibly annihilated.
Participants
from 16 countries gathered for the Aug. 21-24 symposium in Buenos
Aires. The event was convoked by the Justice and Solidarity
Department of the Latin American Episcopal Conference (CELAM).
In a concluding
statement, the symposium participants expressed concern over
"the growing process of concentration of the ownership
of land in a few hands, threatening peoples' territories."
Part of
this threat, they added, is due to the fact that "an economic
logic prevails of mere self-interest or profit, in deterioration
of the good living of peoples."
In this
sense, the participants expressed concern over "the frequent
occurrence of corrupt acts in the process of concession of territories
without due consultation of the peoples who inhabit them."
The statement
noted that "the enormous biodiversity of Latin America
and the Caribbean offers environmental services for the whole
planet, a fact that transcends the present mercantile significance
and offers true benefits."
It added,
"This biodiversity is being irreversibly annihilated: In
Amazonia alone just over 17% of the jungle has disappeared and
the rate of extinction of species is 1,000 times higher than
the historical."
The participants
warned: "We are witnessing a growing environmental destruction
through deforestation, contamination due to industrial and urban
residues, opencast mining, extensive mono-cultivation, the growth
of desertification, extraction of hydrocarbons, among other
things, which also affect vital resources such as fresh water
and natural provision of foods for peoples, especially among
the poorest."
Unbridled consumption
They pointed out that "the prevailing lifestyles of unbridled
consumption in a portion of humanity entails a lack of balance
between the growing demand for natural resources -- renewable
and non-renewable -- and the availability of land -- together
with the risk of the annihilation of biodiversity -- as well
as the exhaustion of low-cost energies that threaten the development
of societies in the mid-term."
The statement affirmed that "different environmental catastrophes
on the planet, both natural as well as manmade, in the last
decades prove this" and "cause numerous displaced
peoples and environmental refugees, which generates even more
poverty."
Added to
this is "the prevailing economic activity in technologically
developed cultures, under the logic of efficiency, maximization
of earnings in a few hands and socialization of losses, characterized
by the neglect of the sacred and spiritual dimension of nature
-- as part of the loving creation of God, source of life --
and of the gratuitousness of the goods and services offered
by it," it added (Cf. "Caritas in Veritate" 37).
The statement
highlighted "the lack of responsibility in the management
of the sources of energy and natural resources that are being
exhausted under processes of unsustainable production and consumption,
which do not assume the environmental costs present and end
up being paid by the poor, endangering the survival of present
and future generations."
Faced to
this reality, the participants reaffirmed their faith "in
a loving God, Creator of all that exists, who is the only Lord
of the earth."
They continued:
"He has entrusted this creation to human beings, faces
of the qualities of their Creator, for its protection and cultivation.
Sustained on this is the principle of the universal destiny
of goods.
"From
it is derived the logic of the gift and gratuitousness that
must govern human relations and activities, among them, the
economic, under the form of responsible use of the environment
in order to promote and guarantee the common good for all human
beings, as well as beauty, goodness and truth present everywhere
in the gift of creation (Caritas in Veritate 50, 51)."
The participants
underlined the need to preserve "the qualities that guarantee
the vital prolongation and richness of biodiversity on earth."
To do this,
they stated, ecclesial tasks, catecheses, preaching, celebrations
and other pastoral, technical, academic and professional activities
"must be oriented to fostering ecological conversion as
an integral dimension of the faith."
St.
Francis of Assisi
Likewise,
they added, "experiences of cosmic fraternity must be fostered
in contact with God the Creator, in the dynamic that inspired
St. Francis of Assisi, patron of ecology."
The statement
affirmed, "Popular spirituality, personal and community
prayer, inculturated liturgical celebrations and the profound
living of the sacraments in an ecological key, are privileged
places to experience the action of God's Spirit and the free
initiative of his love."
In this
sense, it underlined "the need to know better and to accept
the age-old wisdom of the indigenous peoples of our continent;
above all of their experience of faith that enables us to learn
their relationship of harmony and communion with God, human
beings, nature and the other beings of creation."
"This
implies cultivating a contemplative attitude vis-a-vis the goods
of creation as gifts of God," the statement added.
As prophetic
Church, the participants affirmed, "it is urgent to prioritize
an economy of human needs that is just, has solidarity, and
is reciprocal, and of policies of integral human development
that respect the right of peoples and preserve the vital qualities
of the natural environment."
To do so,
they explained, "it is necessary to denounce the negative
impact of mega economic projects and infrastructure, as well
as to promote and demand the monitoring of business, state and
civil projects, shedding light on illegal and immoral situations."
They urged,
"We must find mechanisms of influence on national and international
powers in defense of human rights."
The statement
concluded that in local communities, in the framework of the
continental mission of the Church in Latin America and the Caribbean,
and especially in the family, the domestic Church, there must
be a "task to promote a culture of austerity/sobriety,
simplicity and joy as healthy and ecological alternative, both
individual as well as collective, through organic, eco-friendly
production, and responsible consumption, recycling, the adequate
use of goods and education in respect for nature that makes
possible present conditions of social justice and the life of
future generations."