What Must We Do?
The Church Speaks on Climate Change
Reconnect/Restoration with the Cosmos: A cosmic, not anthropological view of creation.
Within the movement of nature, tranquil and silent but rich in life, there continues to palpitate the original delight of the Creator.
The right to private property does not do away with the original gift of the Earth to the whole of humankind.
The natural world has value in itself
Areligious respect for the integrity of creation
See care for our planet Earth as a 'vocation'.
A Personal Response
We must examine our lives and acknowledge the ways in which we have harmed God’s creation through our actions and our failure to act. We need to experience a conversion, or change of heart.
Ecological education
Restraint, penance and self-imposed limitations
Co-operate in facing global warming as one of the major issues of our time and take roles of responsibility
Respond with sound judgments and resolute action to the reality of climate change.
Detailed and resolute responses need to be both swift and radical.
Consumers send powerful signals to the market by their greenhouse-friendly choice of goods and services.
Profit is secondary to ecologically sustainable living.
Responding to this issue will have to be a central dimension of the life of faith.
Solidarity involves personal and political commitment to the two strategies of mitigation and adaptation.
We commit to an ecological lifestyle, politics and praxis as people of hope and commitment.
Help our nation by developing an ecological ethic
Solidarity with like minds
Justice for the poor/disadvantaged in terms of global change
Sufficiency in my lifestyle
Sustainability in my practices
Prudence in my choices and my understanding of the issue
A Communal Response
Dismantle structural forms of global poverty
Administering prudently a nation’s environmental resources
Future generations should not be robbed
Each sector of the community- has a role in imagining and building a future Australia with radically reduced greenhouse gas emissions.
Detailed and resolute responses need to be both swift and radical.
Short and long term ecologically sustainable options, and unsustainable dead ends, need to be identified and appropriate laws framed.
Australia must continue to support structures that help reduce global warming.
Australians have a particular duty to recognise the fact that they are directly implicated in the causes of atmospheric pollution
For the sake of future generations, we need to
- lower population,
- alter consumption levels and
- promote more resource-efficient technologies.
Take decisive action to stave off the extinction of species which could sterilize the planet.