Cardinal Parolin delivers Pope Francis’ message to COP28 (AFP or licensors)
By Linda Bordoni
Dec 4 2023
Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin delivers Pope Francis’ speech to delegates at the UN Climate Change Summit, urging world leaders not to postpone action any longer but to craft concrete and cohesive responses for the well-being of our common home and future generations.
Expressing regret for his impossibility to be present in Dubai for the 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference, Pope Francis reiterated his belief that “the future of us all depends on the present that we now choose.”
This year’s UN Summit comes in the wake of a year of record heat and drought and features a contentious set of issues for countries working to find common ground in tackling climate change.
In a hard-hitting message, delivered on his behalf by Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin, the Pope told the COP assembly that his presence serves to remind them that “the destruction of the environment is an offence against God, a sin that is not only personal but also structural, one that greatly endangers all human beings, especially the most vulnerable in our midst and threatens to unleash a conflict between generations.”
Appeal to choose life
Climate change, the Pope continued, is “a global social issue and one intimately related to the dignity of human life”.
It raises an urgent question; he said, “Are we working for a culture of life or a culture of death?”
“To all of you,” he added, “I make this heartfelt appeal: Let us choose life! Let us choose the future! May we be attentive to the cry of the earth, may we hear the plea of the poor, may we be sensitive to the hopes of the young and the dreams of children! We have a grave responsibility: to ensure that they not be denied their future.”
Reiterating his urgent call to address the climate crisis, Pope Francis attributed its root cause to the excessive heating of the planet, driven mainly by escalating levels of greenhouse gases that, he said, result from unsustainable human activities.
“The drive to produce and possess has become an obsession, resulting in an inordinate greed that has made the environment the object of unbridled exploitation. The climate, run amok, is crying out to us to halt this illusion of omnipotence,” he stated.
The Pope called on mankind to recognize its limits “with humility and courage” as the sole step towards authentic fulfilment.
He pointed to the divisions that exist among us as the main obstacle to this crucial shift, and said “a world completely connected, like ours today, should not be unconnected by those who govern it, with international negotiations that ‘cannot make significant progress due to positions taken by countries which place their national interests above the global common good’.”
Emphasizing the need to overcome inflexible positions, he urged a focus on collective responsibility for the future: “The task to which we are called today is not about yesterday but about tomorrow: a tomorrow that, whether we like it or not, will belong to everyone or else to no one.”
Pope Francis then rejected attempts to shift the blame on the poor and high birth rates.
“It is not the fault of the poor, since the almost half of our world that is more needy is responsible for scarcely 10% of toxic emissions, while the gap between the opulent few and the masses of the poor has never been so abysmal,” he said.