World Council of Churches
Address
by His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew at the WCC
Town-Hall Discussion on Interfaith Dialogue, Climate Change, and Refugee
Displacement
Address
by His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew at the WCC
Town-Hall Discussion on Interfaith Dialogue, Climate Change, and Refugee
Displacement - at the Religious Leaders Unite for Climate Peace in
Solidarity with Refugees, Ecumenical Center, Geneva, Switzerland 12
December 2023.
Distinguished colleagues and congregants,
Beloved organizers and participants,
Celebrating the 75th anniversary of the United
Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, it is a special privilege
to attend and address this unique assembly of religious leaders, devout
citizens, and people of good will, in our shared concern and prayerful
objective to consider ways of responding to urgent challenges in a world
where uncertainty seems to be the only sure reality faced by so many of
our brothers and sisters across the planet.
Climate change and the refugee crisis are no longer an external
or remote possibility, far removed from our daily attention and
responsibility. They are immediately and profoundly affecting our lives,
our careers, and our lifestyles. We no longer have the false luxury of
ignorance or indifference. We are now either directly contributing to
the problem or else decidedly committed to a solution.
One of the lessons that we learned during the recent
pandemic—albeit in a very painful and certainly involuntary manner—is
that no one is saved alone; no one is saved unless everyone is saved.
The threats that our world is currently facing can only be addressed and
overcome in collaboration. And this is where the dialogue and
partnership of religious communities proves to be essential and vital.
Because whether we are speaking of Covid-19, climate change, or the
refugee predicament, we are certainly dealing with unprecedented
challenges. This is why we even refer to them as crises, which is a
Greek term that signifies a pronouncement of “judgment”—precisely
because we are measured by the way we respond to these circumstances
inasmuch as they are turning points or phenomena that definitively shape
our lives. In fact, while the coronavirus may involve medicine, and
pollution may involve science, and immigration may involve policy, the
way we respond to and choose to resolve these challenges is exactly
where faith and religion should be involved.
As you will be aware, throughout our ministry over the last
decades, we have repeatedly underlined that—as the distinctive and
defining issue of our time—global warming has become the greatest threat
to our planet and its population. The growing but neglected toll from
rising global temperatures will undoubtedly and undeniably eclipse the
current number of deaths from all the infectious diseases combined if
climate change is not constrained. Environmental sustainability will
only be achieved through drastic lifestyle changes that we must make.
That is why we have persistently and consistently underlined that
climate change primarily constitutes a spiritual and ethical issue—not
only a governmental or technological problem, as if it was merely one in
a long list of dilemmas confronting politicians in particular and
people in general.
What religious leaders must always remember and consequently
remind civic leaders is that there is no way of endlessly manipulating
our environment and its resources that comes without cost or
consequence—material and human. We are—as we know very well today, and
as mystics have taught very clearly through the ages—intimately and
inseparably bound up with the history, present, and destiny of our
world.
However, in order to appreciate such a worldview—which is
ultimately a worldview of frugality and simplicity, of gratitude and
generosity—we must acknowledge the world as larger than ourselves and
our interests; in other words, we must adopt a spirit of honesty and
humility. We must be prepared to look at options and solutions that
affect us personally and not just other people. Unfortunately, so often,
we are convinced that solving the ecological crisis is a matter of
acting differently or living more sustainably. But we should never
forget that it is our very options and actions that led us to this mess
in the first place.
Paradoxically, then, the answer may lie not so much in doing something as in doing nothing;
which brings us to the importance of silence and meditation. First, we
must stop what we are doing and reflect. First, we must learn to listen
and understand how we have reached this crisis. First, we must accept
our sinfulness toward the planet and other people so that we can
acknowledge the need for repentance—which involves a literal and radical
change of mind, heart, and behavior. This is the way of the prophets;
this is the way of the mystics; and this is the way of those who realize
that “the earth is the Lord’s and all the fullness thereof” (Psalm
24.1).
And this is why our moment of silence is the most appropriate
action in this chapel today. Let us, therefore, beseech God to be
merciful and compassionate on us and His people, especially those in
need and displaced. Let us imagine a world where peace and justice
prevail, where violence and discrimination are dispelled, where human
rights and human dignity are effectively protected. And let us open our
hearts to solidarity with refugees as well as to respect and protection
of the unique gift of God’s creation that we are called to transmit to
our children.
His All-Holiness
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
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