The World Is the Road to God: The Encyclical Laudato Si’ and the “Ecological” Vision of Pope Francis †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- A generically movementist one: Let us think of the global experience of Fridays for Future, which started as a great wave of youth protest (2018), calling on politicians to act and limit carbon dioxide emissions according to signed international agreements, and to stipulate other and more stringent ones. But let us also think about the striking and provocative actions in public spaces developed by organized groups such as Just Stop Oil or Extinction Rebellion. The purpose of all this is to raise public awareness and urge politicians to intervene. While imagining the presence of a strong value base, and even deep spiritual sensitivities, it remains difficult to determine whether there is an equally solid ideological foundation underneath such movements that goes beyond the good intentions of “happy degrowth”, a current of thought advocating for, precisely, a progressive “degrowth” of the economy to avoid catastrophe (Latouche 1989, 2006, 2010).
- The second one, essentially technological-productive in nature, is shared by most Western political institutions, especially supranational ones such as the European Union, and by a significant sector of the global business and financial world. This is so-called “sustainable development”. The ecological turn, without questioning the principles of neoliberal economics in the slightest, is exclusively declined in a technical paradigm shift through the identification and use of new environmentally sustainable means of production and distribution.
- Then there are a number of essentially philosophical–religious positions that see the environmental disaster, first, as one of the signs of the impending and in some cases desirable apocalypse (e.g., in a part of the American-based evangelical movements discussed later in this article). Second, as an opportunity to rethink humanism in a negative sense as a current of thought that, by proclaiming humankind’s dominion over nature, actually created the cultural preconditions for the current ecological catastrophe. The latter should be seen as an opportunity to transcend the human into new forms of post-human or trans-human existence (Adorno 2021) that allow, even through the use of technology no longer based on the mere will to power, a techno-biological transformation of the human being himself and his “lowered” repositioning in nature (Braidotti and Bignall 2018; Grusin 2015; Kohn 2013)2.
2. The Church as an Anti-Economic Institution
The Huguenot or the Puritan (…) He can build his industry far and wide, make all soil the servant of his skilled labor and “inner-worldly asceticism”, and in the end have a comfortable home; all this because he makes himself master of nature and harnesses it to his will. His type of domination remains inaccessible to the Roman Catholic concept of nature. Roman Catholic peoples appear to love the soil, mother earth, in a different way; they all have their own “terrisme” [loyalty to the land]. Nature is for them not the antithesis of art and enterprise, also not of intellect and feeling or heart; human labor and organic development, nature and reason, are one.
power of representation. It represents the civitas humana. It represents in every moment the historical connection to the incarnation and crucifixion of Christ. It represents the Person of Christ Himself: God became human in historical reality. Therein lies its superiority over an age of economic thinking.
3. World Is a Medium
And more:85. God has written a precious book, “whose letters are the multitude of created things present in the universe”. [54] The Canadian bishops rightly pointed out that no creature is excluded from this manifestation of God: “From panoramic vistas to the tiniest living form, nature is a constant source of wonder and awe. It is also a continuing revelation of the divine”. [56] This contemplation of creation allows us to discover in each thing a teaching which God wishes to hand on to us, since “for the believer, to contemplate creation is to hear a message, to listen to a paradoxical and silent voice”. [57] We can say that “alongside revelation properly so-called, contained in sacred Scripture, there is a divine manifestation in the blaze of the sun and the fall of night”. [58] Paying attention to this manifestation, we learn to see ourselves in relation to all other creatures: “I express myself in expressing the world; in my effort to decipher the sacredness of the world, I explore my own”.(Laudato Si’, II, 4)
86. The universe as a whole, in all its manifold relationships, shows forth the inexhaustible riches of God. Saint Thomas Aquinas wisely noted that multiplicity and variety “come from the intention of the first agent” who willed that “what was wanting to one in the representation of the divine goodness might be supplied by another”, [60] inasmuch as God’s goodness “could not be represented fittingly by any one creature”. [61] Hence we need to grasp the variety of things in their multiple relationships.(ibid.)
4. Franciscans and Jesuits
Let them be brave, let them be tender. Don’t forget that Ignatius was a great one for tenderness. He wanted Jesuits brave with tenderness. And he wanted them men of prayer. Courage, tenderness and prayer are enough for a Jesuit.(Pope Francis in conversation with Jesuits in Congo and in South Sudan. “The Church is not a multinational spirituality corporation”—18 Feb. 2023)9.
In a recent speech, Pope Francis very well explained this difficult positioning.
Until a few decades ago
it was easier to distinguish between two rather well-defined realities: a Christian world and a world yet to be evangelized. That situation no longer exists today. People who have not yet received the Gospel message do not live only in non-Western continents; they live everywhere, particularly in vast urban concentrations that call for a specific pastoral outreach. In big cities, we need other “maps”, other paradigms, which can help us reposition our ways of thinking and our attitudes. Brothers and sisters, Christendom no longer exists! Today we are no longer the only ones who create culture, nor are we in the forefront or those most listened to.(Christmas Greetings to the Roman Curia. Address of His Holiness Pope Francis—21 dicembre 2019)10
5. The New Jesuit Model: Against Inequality, Poverty, and Resource Exploitation
93. Whether believers or not, we are agreed today that the earth is essentially a shared inheritance, whose fruits are meant to benefit everyone. For believers, this becomes a question of fidelity to the Creator, since God created the world for everyone. Hence every ecological approach needs to incorporate a social perspective which takes into account the fundamental rights of the poor and the underprivileged. The principle of the subordination of private property to the universal destination of goods, and thus the right of everyone to their use, is a golden rule of social conduct and “the first principle of the whole ethical and social order”. [71] The Christian tradition has never recognized the right to private property as absolute or inviolable and has stressed the social purpose of all forms of private property. Saint John Paul II (…) [73] clearly explained that “the Church does indeed defend the legitimate right to private property, but she also teaches no less clearly that there is always a social mortgage on all private property, in order that goods may serve the general purpose that God gave them”. [74](Laudato Si’, II, 6)
94. The rich and the poor have equal dignity, for “the Lord is the maker of them all” (Prov 22:2). “He himself made both small and great” (Wis 6:7), and “he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good” (Mt 5:45). This has practical consequences, such as those pointed out by the bishops of Paraguay: “Every campesino has a natural right to possess a reasonable allotment of land where he can establish his home, work for subsistence of his family and a secure life. This right must be guaranteed so that its exercise is not illusory but real. That means that apart from the ownership of property, rural people must have access to means of technical education, credit, insurance, and markets”. [77](ibid.)
6. Conclusions
20. In Laudato Si’, I offered a brief resumé of the technocratic paradigm underlying the current process of environmental decay. It is “a certain way of understanding human life and activity [that] has gone awry, to the serious detriment of the world around us”. [13] Deep down, it consists in thinking “as if reality, goodness and truth automatically flow from technological and economic power as such”. [14] As a logical consequence, it then becomes easy “to accept the idea of infinite or unlimited growth, which proves so attractive to economists, financiers and experts in technology”. [15]
21. In recent years, we have been able to confirm this diagnosis, even as we have witnessed a new advance of the above paradigm. Artificial intelligence and the latest technological innovations start with the notion of a human being with no limits, whose abilities and possibilities can be infinitely expanded thanks to technology. In this way, the technocratic paradigm monstrously feeds upon itself.(Laudate Deum, 2)
57. I consider it essential to insist that “to seek only a technical remedy to each environmental problem which comes up is to separate what is in reality interconnected and to mask the true and deepest problems of the global system”. It is true that efforts at adaptation are needed in the face of evils that are irreversible in the short term. Also some interventions and technological advances that make it possible to absorb or capture gas emissions have proved promising. Nonetheless, we risk remaining trapped in the mindset of pasting and papering over cracks, while beneath the surface there is a continuing deterioration to which we continue to contribute. To suppose that all problems in the future will be able to be solved by new technical interventions is a form of homicidal pragmatism, like pushing a snowball down a hill.
58. Once and for all, let us put an end to the irresponsible derision that would present this issue as something purely ecological, “green”, romantic, frequently subject to ridicule by economic interests. Let us finally admit that it is a human and social problem on any number of levels.(Laudate Deum, 5)
43. All this presupposes the development of a new procedure for decision-making and legitimizing those decisions, since the one put in place several decades ago is not sufficient nor does it appear effective. In this framework, there would necessarily be required spaces for conversation, consultation, arbitration, conflict resolution and supervision, and, in the end, a sort of increased “democratization” in the global context, so that the various situations can be expressed and included. It is no longer helpful for us to support institutions in order to preserve the rights of the more powerful without caring for those of all.(Laudate Deum, 3)
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For a discussion of the broad and complex issue of globalization, see (Appadurai 1996; Bauman 1999, 2000; Beck 1997, 2008; Castells 1995, 1997; Van Dijck et al. 2018). |
2 | Consider, for example, the “anti-speciesist” movements (Maurizi 2021). |
3 | For further discussion, see (Pelletier 1992; Morandini 2005; McKim 2019; Malavasi and Giuliodori 2016). |
4 | The Exhortation can be read at https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/apost_exhortations/documents/20231004-laudate-deum.html (accessed on 15 May 2024). |
5 | The encyclical can be read at https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/encyclicals/documents/papa-francesco_20150524_enciclica-laudato-si.html (accessed on 5 May 2024). |
6 | Geography and climate also intervene in such a worldview, both on the symbolic and identity and worldview levels. To see how geography and environment condition the general conception of culture, see the classic text by Lucien Febvre (1922). |
7 | It can be read at https://www.repubblica.it/cultura/2014/05/01/news/i_due_francesco_l_ultima_intervista_di_jacques_le_goff-84949294/ (accessed on 12 May 2024). |
8 | For all this reasoning, see Tarzia (2022, pp. 198–211). |
9 | In La Civiltà Cattolica, 4144 (18 February 2023). The text can be read at https://www.laciviltacattolica.com/pope-francis-in-conversation-with-jesuits-in-congo-and-in-south-sudan// (accessed on 21 May 2024). |
10 | The text can be read at https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2019/december/documents/papa-francesco_20191221_curia-romana.html (accessed on 2 May 2024). |
11 | ibid. |
12 | The debt Pope Francis owes to Liberation Theology is evident, especially to that side represented by Leonardo Boff (1995), which sees environmental care and ecology as impossible activities in a capitalist and competitive system. |
13 | See, for this approach (Giraud and Renouard 2009; Giraud 2014, 2022; Giraud and Petrini 2023). From this very “dialogue”, and thanks to the thrust of Laudato si’, there has been a proliferation of theoretical and field experiences in recent years, starting with the establishment of the team of The Economy of Francesco (EoF) (Rozzoni and Limata 2023) to the operational practices of the “Laudato si’“ communities, and the action of the Frontier Churches. |
14 | For more on the issues related to the relationship between the Catholic Church, Christianity, monotheistic religions, and new and social media, see (Tarzia and Ilardi 2022). |
15 | On the meaning and practices of the synod experience, see (Asti and Cibelli 2020; Salato 2020). |
16 | See the Address of his holiness Pope Francis Opening of the works of the XVI Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops “For a Synodal Church: communion, participation and mission” (4 October 2023). The Address can be read at https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2023/october/documents/20231004-apertura-sinodo.html (accessed on 13 May 2024). |
17 | See again the 21 December 2019 Address at https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2019/december/documents/papa-francesco_20191221_curia-romana.html (accessed on 21 May 2024). |
18 | see note 4 above. |
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Tarzia, F.; Ilardi, E. The World Is the Road to God: The Encyclical Laudato Si’ and the “Ecological” Vision of Pope Francis. Religions 2024, 15, 646. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060646
Tarzia F, Ilardi E. The World Is the Road to God: The Encyclical Laudato Si’ and the “Ecological” Vision of Pope Francis. Religions. 2024; 15(6):646. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060646
Chicago/Turabian StyleTarzia, Fabio, and Emiliano Ilardi. 2024. "The World Is the Road to God: The Encyclical Laudato Si’ and the “Ecological” Vision of Pope Francis" Religions 15, no. 6: 646. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060646
APA StyleTarzia, F., & Ilardi, E. (2024). The World Is the Road to God: The Encyclical Laudato Si’ and the “Ecological” Vision of Pope Francis. Religions, 15(6), 646. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060646