Bishops Statement On Climate Change
Bishops Statement On Climate Change
Bishops Statement On Climate Change
• Last month, the United Nations sounded the alarm about food supplies. World
food security is increasingly at risk due to 'unprecedented' climate change impact.
Today 500 million people live in areas that experience desertification. People
living in already degraded or desertified areas are increasingly negatively affected
by climate change.7
With this immense threat, we may feel inclined to despair, but we are people of faith.
Catholic social teaching is built on the principle of subsidiarity, “which grants freedom to
develop the capabilities present at every level of society, while also demanding a greater
sense of responsibility for the common good from those who wield greater power”.8 We
are called to act with hope and to respond to this challenge with urgency in all facets of
our life: as individuals making an ecological conversion in our personal lives; as
members of our parishes, schools and businesses striving for structural changes that
reduce environmental impact; and as citizens participating in political discussions and
fulfilling our civic responsibilities. We are asking everyone to examine their personal
vocations and opportunities to take action to take better care of our common home.
Change is hard and at the outset can seem intimidating. Every person’s actions will
depend on their life circumstance and their commitment to protect our natural resources.
We must each find tangible and substantive actions that are within our grasp. Families
should discuss their concerns about the environment and how their lifestyle and
consumption is contributing to the climate changes and other environmental degradation.
Parishes should integrate Catholic social teaching on the environment in their liturgy and
in their religious education program. Action is needed at all levels of government to
encourage replacement of fossil fuels with renewable sources of energy while ensuring
that the most vulnerable in society are protected from harm during this transition.
We also wish to echo the view of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops who
adopted an explicit priority to teach and advocate about integral ecology, emphasizing
environmental degradation and its impact on the lives of the most vulnerable.
As a Catholic community we must commit to this effort while Christians around the
world celebrate the Season of Creation (September 1st- October 4th). We, the Catholic
Bishops of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, pledge our support to addressing this
global crisis.
“Start by doing what's necessary; then do what's possible; and
suddenly you are doing the impossible.”
Saint Francis of Assisi
+His Eminence Seán P. Cardinal O’Malley, OFM, Cap. + Most Reverend Robert J. McManus
Archbishop of Boston Bishop of Worcester
1 Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’- on Care for our Common Home- May 24, 2015, paragraph 12
2 Statement from Most Rev. Robert J. McManus, Bishop of Worcester, June 18, 2015
3 Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’- on Care for our Common Home- May 24, 2015, paragraph 23
4 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, October 8, 2018
5 Washington Post, Brady Dennis and Chris Mooney, November 23, 2018
6 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, August 15, 2019
7 UN News, August 8, 2019
8 Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’- on Care for our Common Home- May 24, 2015, paragraph 196
September, 2019