“The ‘World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation’ is not about differing political positions, conflicting scientific theories and opinions or protests and debates,” Bishop O’Connell says in his message. “These realities have their own place in contemporary society and their own audiences who embrace the various issues and strategies they raise and propose.”
Bishop O’Connell later says, “strategies for ‘finding ways to make the earth flourish’ will continue to be discussed and debated in the halls of government, in the research laboratories and lecture halls of science, in the writings and libraries of centers of learning all over the world and rightly so.
“But the care for creation, our common home cannot and should not linger there alone. It must find its way into the concern, consideration, conversation and commitment of all of us who share this common home. And it must be part of our prayer.”
The Bishop cites the Holy Father in reminding us to be “‘protectors’ of creation, protectors of God’s plan inscribed in nature, protectors of one another and of the environment. … To protect Jesus with Mary, to protect the whole of creation, to protect each person, especially the poorest, to protect ourselves. … Let us protect with love all that God has given us!”