Pope: Sustainable development
rooted in ethical values
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| Pope Francis addresses paticipants of an international conference entitled,"Religious and the Sustainable Development Goals (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis on Friday meets with participants in an
international conference entitled, “Religions and the Sustainable Development
Goals
By Lydia O'Kane
In 2015 Pope Francis addressed the UN General Assembly in
New York shortly before member states unanimously adopted Agenda 2030
and the Sustainable Development Goals.
Fast forward to 2019 and the Pope was in the Vatican on
Friday where he greeted participants taking part in a two day international conference
entitled, “Religions and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): Listening to
the cry of the earth and of the poor”.
Listening to all voices
Pope Francis got straight to the point by telling those
gathered that, “when we speak of sustainability, we cannot overlook how
important it is to include and to listen to all voices, especially those
usually excluded from this type of discussion, such as the voices of the poor,
migrants, indigenous people and the young.”
The 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals, the
Pope said, “were a great step forward for global dialogue, marking a vitally
“new and universal solidarity”. But he noted, “for too long, the conventional
idea of development has been almost entirely limited to economic growth.”
The Pontiff emphasized that, “this has led the modern
economic system down a dangerous path where progress is assessed only in terms
of material growth, on account of which we are almost obliged to irrationally
exploit the environment and our fellow human beings.”
Economic and political objectives, Pope Francis stressed,
“must be sustained by ethical objectives, which presuppose a change of
attitude: what the Bible would call a change of heart. Already Saint John Paul
II spoke about the need to “encourage and support an ‘ecological conversion’”,
he said.
The Pope underlined that what was needed was a commitment to
“promoting and implementing the development goals that are supported by
our deepest religious and ethical values.” He also expressed the hope
that concrete solutions and responses would emerge from the conference.
Religious Dimension
Noting the importance of the religious dimension to this
gathering, Pope Francis said that “those of us who are religious need to open
up the treasures of our best traditions in order to engage in a true and
respectful dialogue on how to build the future of our planet.”
The Pontiff also underlined, that “if we want to provide a
solid foundation for the work of the 2030 Agenda, “we must reject the
temptation to look for a merely technocratic response to the challenges, and be
prepared to address the root causes and the long-term consequences.”
Indigenous Peoples
During his address, the Pope made particular mention of
Indigenous Peoples saying that, “in a strongly secularized world, such peoples
remind us all of the sacredness of our earth. Their voice and their concerns,
he added, should be at the centre of the implementation of the 2030 Agenda and
at the heart of the search for new paths for a sustainable future. I will also be
discussing this with my brother bishops at the Synod for the Pan-Amazon Region,
at the end of October this year.”
Injustice that brings tears to our world is not invincible
Concluding his address and quoting his encyclical Laudato
Si, he told those present that, “three and a half years since the adoption of
the sustainable development goals, we must be even more acutely aware of the
importance of accelerating and adapting our actions in responding adequately to
both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor.”
He added, “the challenges are complex and have multiple
causes; the response, therefore, must necessarily be complex and
well-structured, respectful of the diverse cultural riches of peoples.”
Expressing his understanding for the task that can at times
seem all too difficult, the Pope offered words of encouragement. “Human beings,
while capable of the worst, are also capable of rising above themselves,
choosing again what is good, and making a new start”.
“I encourage you to continue the fight for that change which
present circumstances demand, because the injustice that brings tears to our
world and to its poor is not invincible.”
The Conference is being jointly organized by the Vatican
Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development and the Pontifical Council
for Interreligious Dialogue and runs until March 9th.

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