Pope Urges Respect for Creation, Not Conflict Over Resources

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Vatican News writes:ย “In his Message for the 10th World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, Pope Leo XIV quotes extensively from Pope Francisโ€™ encyclical Laudato siโ€™, denouncing environmental and social injustice and noting that Godโ€™s creation is not intended to be a battleground for vital resources.”

By Linda Bordoni*

As the Church prepares to mark the Tenth World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation on 1 September 2025, Pope Leo XIVโ€™s message for the occasion urges Christians and all people of goodwill to recognize the urgent need for environmental and social justice in a world increasingly scarred by climate change, conflict, and inequality.

Entitledย Seeds of Peace and Hopeย and released on July 2,ย the Popeโ€™s message resonates with the spirit of the ongoing Jubilee Year, calling the faithful to embrace their role as “pilgrims of hope” and stewards of God’s creation.

Justice in a wounded world

Echoing the prophetic words of Isaiah, Pope Leo invites the global community to envision a transformation of todayโ€™s โ€œarid and parched desertโ€ into โ€œa fruitful field.โ€ This biblical vision, he explains, is not a poetic metaphor but an urgent call to action in the face of alarming ecological and human crises.

Quoting extensively from Pope Francisโ€™ encyclical Laudato si’ in the year of its 10th anniversary, he writes, โ€œInjustice, violations of international law and the rights of peoples, grave inequalities, and the greed that fuels them are spawning deforestation, pollution, and the loss of biodiversity.โ€

Linking environmental destruction to the exploitation of the poor and marginalized, he highlights the disproportionate suffering of indigenous communities and the widening gap between rich and poor as hallmarks of a system that treats nature as a commodity rather than a common home.

Nature as a battleground

He laments the fact that nature itself has become โ€œa bargaining chip,โ€ subjected to policies and practices that prioritize profit over people and the planet. From agricultural lands riddled with landmines to conflicts over water and raw materials, Pope Leo paints a sobering picture of a creation โ€œturned into a battlegroundโ€ for control and domination.

These wounds, he says, are โ€œthe effect of sin,โ€ a betrayal of the biblical command not to dominate creation, but to โ€œtill and keepโ€ it, a call to cultivate and preserve the Earth through a relationship of care and responsibility.

Environmental justice as a moral imperative

The Popeโ€™s message reaffirms the Churchโ€™s commitment to an โ€œintegral ecology,โ€ a concept at the heart of Laudato siโ€™. Environmental justice, the Holy Father affirms, is not an abstract or secondary concern but a โ€œduty born of faith.โ€

โ€œFor believers,โ€ he writes, โ€œthe universe reflects the face of Jesus Christ, in whom all things were created and redeemed.โ€ In this light, caring for the planet becomes not only an ecological necessity but also a profoundly spiritual and moral vocation.

Seeds that bear fruit

Encouraging concrete action, Pope Leo calls for perseverance and love in sowing โ€œseeds of justiceโ€ that will, in time, bear the fruits of peace. He cites the Borgo Laudato Siโ€™ project at Castel Gandolfo as a tangible example of how education and community life rooted in ecological values can shape a just and hopeful future.

โ€œThis may take years,โ€ the Pope acknowledges, โ€œbut years that involve an entire ecosystem made up of continuity, fidelity, cooperation and love.โ€

A blessing for the future

Concluding his message with a prayer for the outpouring of Godโ€™s Spirit, Pope Leo XVI invokes the hope of the risen Christ as the guiding light for a world longing for healing.

โ€œMay [Laudato siโ€™] continue to inspire us,โ€ he writes, โ€œand may integral ecology be increasingly accepted as the right path to follow.โ€

*Pope: Godโ€™s creation is not a battleground for vital resourcesArticle originally published on Vatican News on July 2, 2025