environment:
As we come again to the changing of the Church year, we reflect once more on
the state of God's creation. We think about the past and repent for all that
we have done or failed to do for the earth's care; we look to the future and
pray for wisdom to guide us in all that we think or do.
These last twelve months have been a time of great uncertainty for the whole
world. The financial systems that so many people trusted to bring them the
good things of life, have brought instead fear, uncertainty and poverty. Our
globalised economy has meant that everyone - even the poorest who are far
removed from the dealings of big business - has been affected.
The present crisis offers an opportunity for us to deal with the problems in
a different way, because the methods that created these problems cannot
provide their best solution. We need to bring love into all our dealings,
the love that inspires courage and compassion. Human progress is not just
the accumulation of wealth and the thoughtless consumption of the earth's
resources. The way that the present crisis has been dealt with has revealed
the values of the few who are shaping the destiny of our society; of those
who can find vast sums of money to support the financial system that has
betrayed them, but are not willing to allot even the least portion of that
money to remedy the piteous state the creation has been reduced to because
of these very values, or for feeding the hungry of the world, or for
securing safe drinking water for the thirsty, who are also victims of those
values. On the face of every hungry child is written a question for us, and
we
must not turn away to avoid the answer. Why has this happened? Is it a
problem of human inability or of human will?
We have rendered the Market the centre of our interest, our activities and,
finally, of our life, forgetting that this choice of ours will affect the
lives of future generations, limiting the number of their choices that would
probably be more oriented towards the well-being of man as well as the
creation. Our human economy, which has made us consumers, is failing. The
divine economy, which has made us in the image of the loving Creator, calls
us to love and care for all creation. The image we have of ourselves is
reflected in the way we treat the creation. If we believe that we are no
more than consumers, then we shall seek fulfilment in consuming the whole
earth; but if we believe we are made in the image of God, we shall act with
care and compassion, striving to become what we are created to be.
Let us pray for God's blessing on the United Nations Climate Change
Conference in Copenhagen in December, so that the industrially developed
countries may co-operate with developing countries in reducing harmful
polluting emissions, that there may exist the will to raise and manage
wisely the funds required for the necessary measures, and that all may work
together to ensure that our children enjoy the goods of the earth that we
leave behind for them. There must be justice and love in all aspects of
economic activity; profit; and especially short-term profit; cannot and
should not be the sole motive of our actions.
Let us all renew our commitment to work together and bring about the changes
we pray for, to reject everything that is harming the creation, to alter the
way we think and thus drastically to alter the way we live.
September 1st, 2009 A.D.
Your beloved brother in Christ and
fervent supplicant before God,
+ BARTHOLOMEW of Constantinople
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