Catholics and Buddhists should work together for the
environment
(Vatican Radio) The Pontifical
Council for Interreligious Dialogue has sent a message to the Buddhists of the
world to mark the Feast of Vesakh, which commemorates the his birth,
enlightenment and death of Gautama Buddha.
This year’s Message was
inspired by Pope
Francis’ Encyclical Laudato si’.
“As the crisis of climate
change is contributed to by human activity, we, Christians and Buddhists, must
work together to confront it with an ecological spirituality,” writes
Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, the President of the Pontifical Council. “The
acceleration of global environmental problems has added to the urgency of
interreligious cooperation.”
Cardinal Tauran concludes by
calling on Catholics and Buddhists to “cooperate together in liberating
humanity from the suffering brought about by climate change, and contribute to
the care of our common home.”
The full text of the
Message is below
PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR
INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE
Buddhists and Christians:
Together to Foster
Ecological Education
MESSAGE FOR THE FEAST OF
VESAKH
2016
Vatican City
Dear Buddhist Friends,
1.
In the name of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, we are
pleased to extend once again our best wishes on the occasion Vesakh, as you
commemorate three significant events in the life of Gautama Buddha – his birth,
enlightenment and death. We wish you peace, tranquillity and joy in your
hearts, within your families and in your country.
2.
This year we write to you inspired by His Holiness Pope Francis’s Encyclical
Letter, Laudato Sì, On the Care for Our Common Home. His Holiness notes that
“the external deserts in the world are growing, because the internal deserts
have become so vast. For this reason, the ecological crisis is also a summons
to profound interior conversion” (n. 217). Moreover, he states that “our efforts
at education will be inadequate and ineffectual unless we strive to promote a
new way of thinking about human beings, life, society and our relationship with
nature” (n. 215). “Only by cultivating sound virtues will people be able to
make a selfless ecological commitment” (n. 211). In response, Pope Francis
proposes that “ecological education can take place in a variety of settings: at
school, in families, in the media, in catechesis and elsewhere” (n. 213).
3.
Dear Buddhist friends, you have also expressed concern about the degradation of
the environment, which is attested to by the documents The Time to Act is Now:
A Buddhist Declaration on Climate Change and Buddhist Climate Change Statement
to World Leaders. These evidence a shared understanding that at the centre of
the eco-crisis is, in fact, an ego-crisis, expressed by human greed, anxiety,
arrogance and ignorance. Our lifestyles and expectations, therefore, must
change in order overcome the deterioration of our surroundings. “Cultivating
the insight of inter-being and compassion, we will be able to act out of love,
not fear, to protect our planet” (Buddhist Climate Change Statement to World
Leaders). Otherwise, “When the Earth becomes sick, we become sick, because we
are part of her” (The Time to Act is Now).
4.
As the crisis of climate change is contributed to by human activity, we,
Christians and Buddhists, must work together to confront it with an ecological
spirituality. The acceleration of global environmental problems has added to
the urgency of interreligious cooperation. Education in environmental
responsibility and the creation of an “ecological citizenship” require
virtue-oriented ecological ethics such as respect and care for nature. There is
a pressing need for the followers of all religions to transcend their
boundaries and join together in building an ecologically responsible social
order based on shared values. In countries where Buddhists and Christians live
and work side by side, we can support the health and sustainability of the
planet through joint educational programmes aimed at raising ecological
awareness and promoting joint initiatives.
5.
Dear Buddhist friends, may we cooperate together in liberating humanity from
the suffering brought about by climate change, and contribute to the care of
our common home. In this spirit, we wish you once again a peaceful and joyful
feast of Vesakh.
Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran
President
Bishop Miguel Ángel Ayuso
Guixot, MCCJ
Secretary
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