Pope Francis calls for Catholics to ‘pray for the cry of the Earth,’ says it ‘has a fever’
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Pope Francis calls for Catholics to ‘pray for the cry of the Earth,’ says it ‘has a fever’
‘We pray that each of us will listen with the heart to the cry of the Earth,’ Pope Francis said in a new video, claiming that ‘if we took the planet’s temperature, it will us that the Earth has a fever. And it is sick, just like anyone who’s sick.’

[Image: pope-video.jpg]

Pope Francis calls for ecological concern in his Pope Video.
YouTube screenshot

Aug 30, 2024
VATICAN CITY (LifeSiteNews) — This September, Pope Francis has urged members of the Catholic Church to “pray for the cry of the Earth” and “the victims of environmental disasters and the climate crisis.”

“We pray that each of us will listen with the heart to the cry of the Earth and the victims of environmental disasters and the climate crisis, committing ourselves personally to guarding the world we inhabit,” the Pope’s prayer intention for September begins.

Each month a prayer intention and accompanying video is posted by the Pope Video network, in which Pope Francis issues a specific prayer intention for the coming weeks.

To coincide with the month-long period designated as the “Season of Creation,” which runs from September 1 through October 4, Francis’ September intention focusses on ecological issues.

Entitled “for the cry of the earth,” the papal message remarks that “if we took the planet’s temperature, it will tell us that the Earth has a fever. And it is sick, just like anyone who’s sick.”

“But are we listening to this pain? Do we hear the pain of the millions of victims of environmental catastrophes?” it adds.

However, numerous scientific experts, such as Nobel Prize winner Dr. John Clauser of the CO2 Coalition, have refuted mainstream alarmist climate claims, such as those promoted by Pope Francis, and denied that there is a “climate crisis.”

READ: Nobel Prize winner denounces alarmist climate predictions: ‘I don’t believe there is a climate crisis’

Continuing, Francis urged that people “commit ourselves to the fight against poverty and the protection of nature, changing our personal and community habits.”

In press release details accompanying the Pope’s video, the World Economic Forum’s climate statistics were cited to highlight Francis’ ecological message.

Echoing Francis’ message was Cardinal Michael Czerny SJ, prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, which was established by the pope in January 2017. “Creation is groaning,” said Czerny.

He linked the Pope’s call for ecological attention to personal freedom, stating that it is “only by liberating the Earth from the condition of slavery to which we have subjected it can we liberate ourselves as well, anticipating the joy of our salvation in Christ.”

Francis has made the topic of “climate change” a central one in the 11 years of his pontificate. He has also often invoked the term “ecological debt,” taking aim at wealthy or Western nations for allegedly disproportionately impacting “climate change.”

Supporting his regular statements on the topic are his two lengthy texts. The first was Laudato Si’ issued in 2015, which gave rise to the Laudato Si’ Movement – a group aiming to “turn Pope Francis’ encyclical letter Laudato Si’ into action for climate and ecological justice,” as the mass divestment from “fossil fuels” is inspired by the Pontiff’s environmental writings.

The second papal text was Laudate Deum in 2023, in which Francis issued stark calls for “obligatory” measures across the globe to address the issue of “climate change.”

The Pope has also made numerous calls to action for global leaders to implement the pro-abortion Paris Climate Agreement, citing the “negative effects of climate change” and an “ecological debt” which required “climate finance, decarbonization in the economic system and in people’s lives.”

In a CBS TV interview earlier this year, Francis went so far as to state that the world was at a “a point of no return.”

“Global warming is a serious problem. Climate change at this moment is a road to death. A road to death, eh,” he said.

However, the Pope has previously been corrected by scientists who attest that he “is getting terrible advice from some exalted churchmen who are seriously deficient in scientific knowledge.” While echoing Francis’ concerns that nature should not be treated with wanton disregard, independent climate researchers Tomas Sheahen and Hal Doiron warned that the Vatican was weighing into a debate on which it did not have the necessary expertise.

“The correct answer is clearly not a settled science on which Pope Francis can confidently rely for the definition of when CO2 emissions become a sin,” Doiron told LifeSiteNews in 2016.

After many years of climate alarmism rhetoric from the Pontiff, in 2022 the Vatican officially joined the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the pro-abortion Paris Climate Agreement.
"So let us be confident, let us not be unprepared, let us not be outflanked, let us be wise, vigilant, fighting against those who are trying to tear the faith out of our souls and morality out of our hearts, so that we may remain Catholics, remain united to the Blessed Virgin Mary, remain united to the Roman Catholic Church, remain faithful children of the Church."- Abp. Lefebvre
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