![]() Religious Campaign for Forest Conservation Catholic-Jewish
Liaison Committee Develops Statement
“Care
for the Environment: A Religious Act”
At
an initial 1994 meeting in Jerusalem the International Catholic- Jewish Liaison
Committee proposed that Catholics and Jews work together on issues of the
environment. On the premise that we “all must learn to live in a way
which respects the integrity of the delicate balance that exists among the
earth’s ecosystems,” a special committee was established to develop
common principles and points of agreement.
At
a March 23-26, 1998 meeting in the Vatican, leaders from the Roman Catholic
Church and Judaism finalized a statement which emphasizes that “respect
for God’s creation, of which we are part, must become a way of
life.”
The
religious leaders went on to state that there is a “need to act together
whenever feasible to assure that sound practices, guaranteed by law, are
established in our countries and local communities for the future preservation
of the environment.”
Excerpts
from the text of the statement approved by both the Roman Catholic Church and
Judaism follows:
Across
the world people are becoming increasingly aware that certain forms of human
activity are leading to environmental damage and seriously limiting the
possibility of a sustainable development for all. Climate change, air and water
pollution, desertification, resource depletion and loss of biodiversity are
among the consequences. While many have contributed to this damage, all must
learn to live in a way which respects the integrity of the delicate balance
that exists among the earth’s ecosystems. Nor can we ignore the relation
between the effect on the environment of population increase in certain areas
and of heightened economic expectation among peoples.
Governments,
commerce, industry and agriculture must collaborate if individuals and
communities are to be able to exercise their right to live in a sound and
healthy environment.
Concern
for the environment has led both Catholics and Jews to reflect on the concrete
implications of their belief in God, Creator of all things. In turning to their
sacred Scriptures, both have found the religious and moral foundations for
their obligation to care for the environment. While they may differ in
interpretations of some of the texts or in their methodological approaches,
Jews and Catholics have found such broad agreement on certain fundamental
values that they are able to affirm them together.
1.
All
creation is good and forms a harmonious whole, rich in its diversity of life
(Genesis 1-2)
Everything
is to be treated with reverence as part of a whole willed by God to be in
harmony. ...
2.
The
human person -- male and female -- is part of creation and yet distinguished
from it, being made in the image and likeness of God (Genesis 1:26).
The
respect due to each person, endowed with a God-given dignity, allows for no
exceptions and excludes no one. Life is precious.... When harm is done to the
environment, the lives of both individuals and communities are profoundly
affected. Any social, economic or political activity that directly or
indirectly destroys life or diminishes the possibility for people to live in
dignity is counter to God’s will.
3.
The
human person, alone of all creation, has been entrusted with the care of
creation (Genesis 1:26-30; 2:15-20).
The
human person has an immense responsibility, that of caring for all of creation.
No person or group can use the resources of this earth as proprietor, but only
as God’s steward who destined these goods for all. Assuring that
individuals and communities have access to what is necessary to sustain life in
dignity is an expression of this stewardship, as is a reverent and moderate use
of created goods.
4. Land
and the people depend on each other (Lev. 25, Ex. 23).
We
all depend on the land, source of our sustenance. While human activity renders
the land productive, it can also exhaust it, leaving only desolation.... A
recognition of the mutual dependence between the land and the human person
calls us today to have a caring, even loving, attitude toward the land and to
regulate its use with justice, the root of peace.
5. Both
Jews and Catholics look to the future, a time of fulfillment.
Our
responsibility for all that dwells in the earth and for the earth itself
extends into the future. The earth is not ours to destroy (cf. Deut. 20:19) but
to hand on in trust to future generations. We cannot therefore recklessly
consume its resources to satisfy needs that are artificially created and
sustained by a society that tends to live only for the present. We also need to
act, together whenever feasible, to assure that sound practices, guaranteed by
law, are established in our countries and local communities for the future
preservation of the environment.
Care
for the creation is also a religious act.... Respect for God’s creation,
of which we are part, must become a way of life. We therefore call upon our
respective religious communities and families to educate children, both by
teaching and example, to fulfill the trust that God has confided to us.
The
earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof, the world and those who
dwell therein
(Psalm
24:1).
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