Faith Formation: Laudato Si

Laudato Si: On Care of Our Common Home

Laudato Si is Pope Francis' encyclical on the care of our common home. It treats the crisis facing our common home that results from excessive individualism, rampant consumerism, environmental degradation, and oppression of the poor. Pope Francis also calls us to action to recognize the dignity inherent in God's creation and to save our common home. This blog, inspired by the Holy Father's encyclical, offers reflections designed to change our way of thinking about God's creation and practical actions that we can take to save our common home.

Laudato Si Resources

  • Creation Care Network, which aims to provide inspiration, education, and advocacy for Pope Francis’ call to heed the “cry of Earth and cry of the poor.”
  • Laudato Si Action Platform, a collaborative effort of the Vatican, Catholic organizations, and all people of goodwill to act to save our common home.
  • Laudato Si Movement, which aims to mobilize the Catholic community the Catholic community to care for our common home and achieve climate and ecological justice.
  • Laudato Si, the Vatican's official Laudato Si-related website devoted to publicizing Laudato Si and emphasizing actions taken to preserve our common home and promote the wellbeing of the poor.
  • Catholic Climate Covenant, an organization formed in 2006 devoted to the twin tasks of preserving our common home and caring for the world's poor.
  • Seattle University Center for Environmental Justice and Sustainability, which includes a wealth of information on practical action that we can take to save our common home.
  • Laudato Si class at St. John Vianney on YouTube. The class that inspired our Laudato Si blog.
  • Catholics Called to Care for Our Common Home, an event held at St. John Vianney on March 1, 2023. It consists of a reflection on the meaning of dominion in the first creation story in the book of Genesis and a pesentation on climate change by Jeff Renner, retired Chief Meteorologist at King Television in Seattle.

 

Practical Actions

What Is the Cost of the Meat We Eat?

By Laudato Si | August 21, 2023 | Comments Off on What Is the Cost of the Meat We Eat?

If you’ve ever driven through parts of the San Juaquin Valley in Central California, you’ve probably noticed the stench and, quite possibly, had difficulty breathing. The stench and foul air come from factory farms whose animal waste is emitted as ammonia from lagoons and combines with other molecules in the air to become ammonia nitrate.…

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Bees (and Other Pollinators) and Pesticides Don’t Mix

By Laudato Si | August 2, 2023 | Comments Off on Bees (and Other Pollinators) and Pesticides Don’t Mix

America’s bees are dying at an alarming rate. Some of us may see that as a good thing; the fewer bees (and wasps, and other stinging insects), the fewer stings. But bees are pollinators of about 70 to 100 major crops, ranging from apples and blueberries to watermelon and zucchini. There’s a simple equation: the…

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Drink Wine with Natural Cork Stoppers!

By Laudato Si | May 18, 2023 | Comments Off on Drink Wine with Natural Cork Stoppers!

When we open a wine bottle with a natural cork, we often don’t appreciate that the cork was once a living thing, harvested from the cork oak tree, a species of evergreen oak tree found primarily in southern Portugal, southern Spain, and in northwest Africa. The trees themselves play an important role in western Mediterranean…

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Recycling Styrofoam at SJV

By Laudato Si | September 20, 2022 | Comments Off on Recycling Styrofoam at SJV

On the surface, styrofoam appears to be completely innocuous. It is durable, which makes it invaluable for packaging fragile items. It retains heat well without becoming excessively hot, making it perfect as containers for hot beverages such as coffee and tea, as well as for take-out foods. Despite its durability and strength, it is also…

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Shampoo and Environmental Responsibility

By Laudato Si | February 15, 2022 | Comments Off on Shampoo and Environmental Responsibility

We all intuitively believe, as John Wesley expressed it in a sermon, that “cleanliness is indeed next to godliness.” And so often unthinkingly and with the best of intentions, we wash our dishes, do our laundry, and shower, and shampoo our hair. Most commonly, we focus on the short-term result for ourselves and are unaware…

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Wolves and Viable Ecosystems

By Laudato Si | January 18, 2022 | Comments Off on Wolves and Viable Ecosystems

In 2020, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed the grey wolf from the Endangered Species List. The self-accolades accompanying the delisting noted that the recovery of grey wolf populations in the continental United States was a remarkable achievement that spanned half a century. Confined to northern Minnesota and nearby Isle Royale, Michigan, in the…

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Alternatives to Chemical Pesticides

By Laudato Si | December 21, 2021 | Comments Off on Alternatives to Chemical Pesticides

Often, when we see a pest, such as an unwanted species of wildlife, an insect, a slug or a snail, we feel no qualms about eliminating it, typically by using a chemical pesticide or poison. This is an anthropocentric approach; it reflects our assumption that God has made us lords of his creation to do…

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What We’re Doing Differently

By Laudato Si | December 7, 2021 | Comments Off on What We’re Doing Differently

Our weekly blog posts aim at providing practical steps that we each can take to defend our common home, as well as discuss ways in which we can change our way of thinking about science, about our relationship to the world around us, and about our understanding of our faith. Our hope is that, through…

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Organic Herbicides as Alternatives to Chemical Herbicides

By Laudato Si | November 16, 2021 | Comments Off on Organic Herbicides as Alternatives to Chemical Herbicides

In Are We the Pests We’re Getting Rid of?, we discussed the damage that pesticides do to the environment and to human health. Rather than using chemical pesticides, a wide range of safe organic alternatives are available, many of them with specific targets. In this post, we’ve listed some common alternatives to herbicides – that…

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Are We the Pests We’re Getting Rid of?

By Laudato Si | November 9, 2021 | Comments Off on Are We the Pests We’re Getting Rid of?

A common view of pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides is that, after we apply them, they’re effective for a certain length of time, sooner or later lose their effectiveness, and then somehow magically disappear without a trace. Although it is true that the effective shelf-life of these products is limited, their magical disappearance is not. Instead,…

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Reflections

The Spirituality of Plastic

By Laudato Si | October 5, 2021 | Comments Off on The Spirituality of Plastic

In 1 Corinthians 13:1-13, St. Paul tells us that love is the greatest gift of all, an abiding gift. But what is love? Love is a recognition of the intrinsic dignity and value of another, a desire to sacrifice oneself for the wellbeing of another, a subordination of one’s own self-interest to the interest of…

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What If Climate Change Is a Hoax?

By Laudato Si | September 20, 2021 | Comments Off on What If Climate Change Is a Hoax?

We’ve all heard that climate change is a hoax. Or that the science is too new. Or that there is no scientific consensus about climate change. Or that while climate change is real, it is part of a natural pattern that is not caused by human activity. Or that the weather in a particular place…

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Can We Really Be Thankful to God When We Waste Food?

By Laudato Si | September 6, 2021 | Comments Off on Can We Really Be Thankful to God When We Waste Food?

As Food, Garbage, and the Environment notes, about 103 million tons of food, or 40% of all food produced, was wasted in America. This level of waste reflects modern American culture. Our approach to the things around us is purely transactional: If we like them and see value in them, we retain them; if we…

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What’s So Spiritual about Doing the Laundry?

By Laudato Si | August 16, 2021 | Comments Off on What’s So Spiritual about Doing the Laundry?

Many of our articles have focused on seemingly non-religious and non-spiritual activities, such as doing the laundry, washing dishes, and reducing water usage. Are these really religious or spiritual topics? Just how do these mundane activities relate to our faith? In his meeting with the clergy of Bolzano-Bressanone in Northern Italy, Pope Emeritus Benedict addressed…

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Are We Connected Only to Ourselves?

By Laudato Si | August 2, 2021 | Comments Off on Are We Connected Only to Ourselves?

In his encyclical Laudato Si, Pope Francis identifies a set of personality traits that have contributed to the crisis facing our common home and that prevent meaningful action in responding to it. These include a fanatical anthropocentrism, which views humankind as the “owner” of God’s creation to do with as we see fit; a focus…

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What’s So Bad About Idolatry?

By Laudato Si | July 19, 2021 | Comments Off on What’s So Bad About Idolatry?

Typically, we view the condemnation of idolatry simply as a rule mandated by the first commandment (in Exodus 20:3-6 and Deuteronomy 5:7-10). We may even go beyond the first commandment as a rule to understand that God rejects idolatry because He is a jealous god (Exodus 34:14), though what this means can be problematic given our tendency, noted by…

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The Science of Science Denial

By Laudato Si | July 5, 2021 | Comments Off on The Science of Science Denial

We often encounter the argument that there is no consensus among scientists that climate change is occurring, much less that it is caused by human activity. We even sometimes encounter the argument that global warming is a hoax. This line of attack follows a familiar pattern that emerged in response to the polio vaccine in…

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Catholicism and Science

By Laudato Si | June 21, 2021 |

Perhaps more than at any other time in American history, science and scientific knowledge are under attack, with much of the opposition to science coming from Christians. Typically, this hostility to science stems from its rejection of supposed Biblical truths (e.g., evolution versus creationism) or because it supposedly promotes politically motivated hoaxes (e.g., climate change). …

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What is the meaning of dominion?

By Laudato Si | June 7, 2021 | Comments Off on What is the meaning of dominion?

In the first of the two creation stories in Genesis (Genesis 1:1-2:3), God gives man dominion over his creation (Genesis 1:26,28). For many people of faith, these verses have justified a mastery-over-nature orientation: dominion is seen as the right to dominate and to possess absolute control over the entire earth. We get an inkling that…

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The Power of Saying Grace Before Meals

By Laudato Si | May 24, 2021 | Comments Off on The Power of Saying Grace Before Meals

We live in a culture in which human relationships are breaking down and selfishness has become a virtue. As one of the actions that helps us change the way that we relate to the world around us, Pope Francis urges us to say grace before meals. Saying grace can help us to reorient our thinking…

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