Dead fish float on the Confuso River in Villa Hayes, Paraguay, in this 2017 file photo. Pope Francis announced in 2019 that the Catechism of the Catholic Church would be updated to include a definition of "ecological sin." (CNS photo/Jorge Adorno, Reuters)

Ecological sin: Idea of updating catechism sparks debate

878 0

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis’ announcement that the Catechism of the Catholic Church would be updated to include a definition of “ecological sin” sent Catholic Twitter into a frenzy.

Reactions ranged from praise for how seriously the church was taking the obligation to care for creation to cynicism or even outrage over the church’s involvement in what many considered to be a highly politicized issue.

“This ‘create a sin’ is absurd,” one person tweeted.

Another Tweet argued that “harming people is a sin but not ‘harming the common home’ as if the environment were a being.”

If the wording of the catechism change “is vague or broad,” the tweet continued, it will do nothing “except foster politicized interpretations.”

Ecological sin was discussed at length during Synod of Bishops for the Amazon in October, and several members of the synod called on the church to deepen its theology in a way that would help people recognize such sins.

In their final document, synod members proposed that the church define ecological sin as “an act of commission or omission against God, against one’s neighbor, the community and the environment.”

Nearly three weeks after the synod, Pope Francis told members of the International Association of Penal Law that there were plans to include a definition of ecological sin in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

The “Twitterverse” often reacts to news with sarcasm, and the mention of “ecological sin” was no exception. One tweeter surmised that a change in the catechism would mean considering “how many extra squares of toilet paper a Catholic can use before it becomes a sin.”

“Bless me, Father, for I have sinned. It has been two weeks since my last confession. I turned on the AC four nights, I used 9 pieces of single-use plastics, I forgot to compost, I gunned the engine twice, I ate imported fruit and neglected to recycle aluminum cans 6 times,” another Twitter user tweeted.

Theologian Celia Deane-Drummond, director of the U.K.-based Laudato Si’ Research Institute, told Catholic News Service in late November that ecological sins “are in one sense simple to understand, but in another sense complex, since they are in between the category of natural evil and moral evil.”

“Those natural disasters that happen, for example, with greater frequency due to climate change, can, at least in part, be attributed to human activity,” Deane-Drummond said.

While some argue that sins against creation in general cannot be equated with sins against other human beings, Deane-Drummond said ecological sins “join together human suffering and those of other creatures,” based theologically “on a doctrine of creation.”

“The story of Genesis portrays the fall of humanity as a breakdown of relationships between God, each other and the natural world. Everything, as Pope Francis says dozens of times, is interconnected,” she told Catholic News Service.

“It is therefore not surprising and completely in keeping with many centuries of Christian thought for ecological sins to be part and parcel of what it means to sin,” she added. “That is, both direct and indirect harms to other creatures and other people that are related to our human activities.”

Talking about “ecological sin” is not unprecedented, Deane-Drummond said, pointing to the Common Declaration on Environmental Ethics, a joint statement signed in 2002 by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople and St. John Paul II.

The degradation of the environment and its natural resources, the statement said, is not an issue that is “simply economic and technological; it is moral and spiritual.”

“A solution at the economic and technological level can be found only if we undergo, in the most radical way, an inner change of heart, which can lead to a change in lifestyle and of unsustainable patterns of consumption and production. A genuine conversion in Christ will enable us to change the way we think and act,” the document stated.

“This idea has been around for some time,” Deane-Drummond told CNS. “What Pope Francis has done is to find a way to embed it more firmly in the church.”

Deane-Drummond told CNS that, in a practical sense, providing a definition in the catechism will help Catholics be more aware of detrimental practices such as overconsuming resources, lifestyles that promote a culture of waste, indifference to the suffering of people impacted by climate change and actions that lead to the extinction of species.

“By naming this as ecological sin, it makes our actions more visible,” she said. “The problem with the challenge we face is that such changes are both cumulative but also often invisible — it is hard to take moral responsibility for them as we don’t visibly ‘see’ what is happening.”

Related Post

Pope Francis delivers the homily as he celebrates Mass Sept. 4 in the chapel of his residence, the Domus Sanctae Marthae. In his homily, the pope described the Christian life as a battle between "the spirit of God that leads us to do good deeds, to charity, to brotherhood, to adore God, to know Jesus, to do many works of charity, to pray" and "the spirit of the world that leads us to vanity, pride, arrogance, gossip." (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Worldly mentality leads to pride, gossip, pope says at morning Mass

Posted by - September 8, 2018 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Christians must engage in spiritual combat every day against a worldly spirit that leads down a…
Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of Manila, Philippines, shown during a 2014 Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, said evangelization can happen even in shopping centers. The cardinal celebrated Mass in a shopping mall in Manila on Dec. 17 with hundreds of people in attendance. (CNS photo/Tyler Orsburn)

Evangelization happens in Philippine shopping malls, Cardinal Tagle says

Posted by - December 20, 2019 0
MANILA, Philippines (CNS) — It might be “unbelievable” to people in other countries, but a Catholic chapel inside a shopping…
Pilgrims climb to touch the Black Nazarene during a Jan. 9 procession in Manila, Philippines. The wooden statue, carved in Mexico and brought to the Philippine capital in the early 17th century, is cherished by Catholics, who believe that touching it can lead to a miracle. (CNS photo/Soe Zeya Tun, Reuters)

Be a devotee of Black Nazarene, not a fanatic, says Cardinal Tagle

Posted by - January 20, 2019 0
MANILA, Philippines (CNS) — Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of Manila warned against fanaticism in his homily during a Mass to…
This year is leap year and so February 2020 has 29 days. The extra day we get approximately once every four years is a way to adapt the calendar year to the astronomical year. The present system of calculating the leap years was designed around fixing the date of Easter. (CNS photo/Rosanna Aguilera, San Angelo Standard-Times via Reuters)

Leap year’s extra day has a Catholic origin

Posted by - March 1, 2020 0
BOSTON (CNS) — The extra day we get approximately once every four years is a way to adapt the calendar…