Focolare Movement

Glasgow, SCOTLAND: Great religions safeguarding creation

Dec 22, 2021

Lorna Gold, president of the Laudato Si' Movement, and Martin Palmer, founder and president of Faith Invest explain how the world's great religions can be a driving force in civil society on climate change.

Lorna Gold, president of the Laudato Si’ Movement, and Martin Palmer, founder and president of Faith Invest explain how the world’s great religions can be a driving force in civil society on climate change. During the COP26 conference, the religious leaders present took part in various events, that were opportunities for mutual knowledge and dialogue. These included one event held at the Mosque and one hosted by the Focolare Movement. Martin Palmer (England) has spent his entire working life engaging with major religions around the world on environmental issues. This began in 1986, when Prince Philip (the Duke of Edinburgh), who was international president of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), asked him to bring together representatives of five of the world’s major religions to look at ways in which those faiths understood their place in nature. They set up a comprehensive program on bringing faiths into partnership with major environmental groups, the UN, the World Bank, and other bodies. Lorna Gold is the Vice-Chair of the Global Catholic Climate Movement Board and President of the Laudato Si’ Movement. She coordinates their work on climate action within faith communities and has been leading work to get the Catholic Church in Ireland and globally to disinvest from fossil fuels. In our interviews, we talked about many subjects regarding COP26, the climate crisis and the current situation… Understandably, it was not possible to include everything in the report broadcast during the Link Up. For example, Martin Palmer told us about the particular period we are going through and said: “I think we are on the cusp of a very great change. And the very great change is that instead of waiting for governments to give the lead, it is civil society, it is the young and the old. I’ve been at this work for 40 years. I think it’s the rise of women’s organizations, which were simply not there in 1997. I think of the whole role of indigenous people, I think of the whole role of faith communities, of the NGO world, of the educational world. I see that, now, we’re at that moment where we tip. There are still many people who think that if we protest, we can influence governments… I have to say, I don’t believe that”. “The faiths are getting together with the financial world, with the educational world and saying, how can we create partnerships? Where we have the money, we have the influence. We have the structures. We have the means to make a change…”. And afterwards we had a very interesting exchange with Lorna Gold about what she defined as “climate anxiety”, where she said: “I think it’s something that all of us, to one degree or another, will face because once you accept that there is a climate crisis and that everything isn’t as ‘rosy’ in the future, as maybe we would have wanted, the prospect of a united world is quite distant if climate change can’t be resolved.. “(…) I try to manage that anxiety. One way is through spending time in nature. Nature is a great healer. Being outdoors, meditating in nature, finding God in creation. It makes you realize that nature is quite resilient. We see generation all around us.”. “I truly believe that this moment we’re living through is a crisis, but it can also be a kairos. A kairos, as Pope Francis says, is an opportunity, a moment, an opportune moment to rethink, to convert ourselves, to undergo that deep ecological conversion and to start moving in a different direction.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfX3QEj07Ns&t=133s  

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