Pope Francis Providing His Climate Change Expertise Again

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

h/t Breitbart; We have all been very naughty.

MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS
POPE FRANCIS
FOR THE 
WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR THE CARE OF CREATION

1 SEPTEMBER 2019
  
“And God saw that it was good” (Gen 1:25). God’s gaze, at the beginning of the Bible, rests lovingly on his creation. From habitable land to life-giving waters, from fruit-bearing trees to animals that share our common home, everything is dear in the eyes of God, who offers creation to men and women as a precious gift to be preserved.

Tragically, the human response to this gift has been marked by sin, selfishness and a greedy desire to possess and exploit. Egoism and self-interest have turned creation, a place of encounter and sharing, into an arena of competition and conflict. In this way, the environment itself is endangered: something good in God’s eyes has become something to be exploited in human hands. Deterioration has increased in recent decades: constant pollution, the continued use of fossil fuels, intensive agricultural exploitation and deforestation are causing global temperatures to rise above safe levels. The increase in the intensity and frequency of extreme weather phenomena and the desertification of the soil are causing immense hardship for the most vulnerable among us. Melting of glaciers, scarcity of water, neglect of water basins and the considerable presence of plastic and microplastics in the oceans are equally troubling, and testify to the urgent need for interventions that can no longer be postponed. We have caused a climate emergency that gravely threatens nature and life itself, including our own.

In effect, we have forgotten who we are: creatures made in the image of God (cf. Gen 1:27) and called to dwell as brothers and sisters in a common home. We were created not to be tyrants, but to be at the heart of a network of life made up of millions of species lovingly joined together for us by our Creator. Now is the time to rediscover our vocation as children of God, brothers and sisters, and stewards of creation. Now is the time to repent, to be converted and to return to our roots. We are beloved creatures of God, who in his goodness calls us to love life and live it in communion with the rest of creation.

For this reason, I strongly encourage the faithful to pray in these days that, as the result of a timely ecumenical initiative, are being celebrated as a Season of Creation. This season of increased prayer and effort on behalf of our common home begins today, 1 September, the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, and ends on 4 October, the feast of Saint Francis of Assisi. It is an opportunity to draw closer to our brothers and sisters of the various Christian confessions. I think in particular of the Orthodox faithful, who have celebrated this Day for thirty years. In this ecological crisis affecting everyone, we should also feel close to all other men and women of good will, called to promote stewardship of the network of life of which we are part.

This is the season for letting our prayer be inspired anew by closeness to nature, which spontaneously leads us to give thanks to God the Creator. Saint Bonaventure, that eloquent witness to Franciscan wisdom, said that creation is the first “book” that God opens before our eyes, so that, marvelling at its order, its variety and its beauty, we can come to love and praise its Creator (cf. Breviloquium, II, 5, 11). In this book, every creature becomes for us “a word of God” (cf. Commentarius in Librum Ecclesiastes, I, 2). In the silence of prayer, we can hear the symphony of creation calling us to abandon our self-centredness in order to feel embraced by the tender love of the Father and to share with joy the gifts we have received. We can even say that creation, as a network of life, a place of encounter with the Lord and one another, is “God’s own ‘social network’” (Audience for the Guides and Scouts of Europe, 3 August 2019). Nature inspires us to raise a song of cosmic praise to the Creator in the words of Scripture: “Bless the Lord, all things that grow on the earth, sing praise to him and highly exalt him forever” (Dan 3:76 Vg). 

It is also a season to reflect on our lifestyles, and how our daily decisions about food, consumption, transportation, use of water, energy and many other material goods, can often be thoughtless and harmful. Too many of us act like tyrants with regard to creation. Let us make an effort to change and to adopt more simple and respectful lifestyles! Now is the time to abandon our dependence on fossil fuels and move, quickly and decisively, towards forms of clean energy and a sustainable and circular economy. Let us also learn to listen to indigenous peoples, whose age-old wisdom can teach us how to live in a better relationship with the environment.

This too is a season for undertaking prophetic actions. Many young people all over the world are making their voices heard and calling for courageous decisions. They feel let down by too many unfulfilled promises, by commitments made and then ignored for selfish interests or out of expediency. The young remind us that the earth is not a possession to be squandered, but an inheritance to be handed down. They remind us that hope for tomorrow is not a noble sentiment, but a task calling for concrete actions here and now. We owe them real answers, not empty words, actions not illusions.

Our prayers and appeals are directed first at raising the awareness of political and civil leaders. I think in particular of those governments that will meet in coming months to renew commitments decisive for directing the planet towards life, not death. The words that Moses proclaimed to the people as a kind of spiritual testament at the threshold of the Promised Land come to mind: “Therefore choose life, that you and your descendants may live” (Dt 3:19). We can apply those prophetic words to ourselves and to the situation of our earth. Let us choose life! Let us say “no” to consumerist greed and to the illusion of omnipotence, for these are the ways of death. Let us inaugurate farsighted processes involving responsible sacrifices today for the sake of sure prospects for life tomorrow. Let us not give in to the perverse logic of quick profit, but look instead to our common future!

In this regard, the forthcoming United Nations Climate Action Summit is of particular importance. There, governments will have the responsibility of showing the political will to take drastic measures to achieve as quickly as possible zero net greenhouse gas emissions and to limit the average increase in global temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius with respect to pre-industrial levels, in accordance with the Paris Agreement goals. Next month, in October, the Amazon region, whose integrity is gravely threatened, will be the subject of a Special Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. Let us take up these opportunities to respond to the cry of the poor and of our earth!

Each Christian man and woman, every member of the human family, can act as a thin yet unique and indispensable thread in weaving a network of life that embraces everyone. May we feel challenged to assume, with prayer and commitment, our responsibility for the care of creation. May God, “the lover of life” (Wis 11:26), grant us the courage to do good without waiting for someone else to begin, or until it is too late.
From the Vatican, 1 September 2019
FRANCIS

Read more: http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/messages/pont-messages/2019/documents/papa-francesco_20190901_messaggio-giornata-cura-creato.html

His Holiness’ claim that the intensity AND frequency of extreme weather is increasing is evidence of how badly he is being advised, because it is not actually possible for both the intensity and frequency of extreme weather to increase worldwide.

But don’t take my word for it.

Constrained work output of the moist atmospheric heat engine in a warming climate

Incoming and outgoing solar radiation couple with heat exchange at Earth’s surface to drive weather patterns that redistribute heat and moisture around the globe, creating an atmospheric heat engine. Here, we investigate the engine’s work output using thermodynamic diagrams computed from reanalyzed observations and from a climate model simulation with anthropogenic forcing. We show that the work output is always less than that of an equivalent Carnot cycle and that it is constrained by the power necessary to maintain the hydrological cycle. In the climate simulation, the hydrological cycle increases more rapidly than the equivalent Carnot cycle. We conclude that the intensification of the hydrological cycle in warmer climates might limit the heat engine’s ability to generate work.

Read more: http://science.sciencemag.org/content/347/6221/540.full

The power driving the hydrological cycle described in the constrained work output study comes from the sun, it is the rate at which heat passes through the Earth’s climate system. This is NOT a sun controls global warming argument, it is simply an observation that there is a limited rate of energy supply available to power extreme weather, and rate at which the energy is supplied will not increase if the surface of the planet warms.

That thermodynamically limited energy budget can be expended on more extreme storms, or it can be expended on more frequent storms, or storms could be concentrated into a geographical region, but something has to give to balance the books; that energy budget cannot be stretched to cover storms which are both more extreme AND more frequent across the entire world.

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GTB
September 4, 2019 12:53 am

The problem is that Roman Catholicism is not Bible Christianity.

Willem69
September 4, 2019 1:21 am

‘Let us also learn to listen to indigenous peoples, whose age-old wisdom can teach us how to live in a better relationship with the environment.“

That seems to be a bit of a break of tradition for the church.

Ed Zuiderwijk
September 4, 2019 1:24 am

Slowly but steadily the goddess Gaia is replacing the Virgin Mary as focus of veneration. Could it be that even monotheistic religions are doomed to fall back into paganism?

Carl Friis-Hansen
September 4, 2019 2:48 am

From The Remnant Newspaper:
“This pope is much more enigmatic than his predecessor — and that is becoming a problem. Right up to this day, many people have been trying to determine Francis’ true intentions. If you ask cardinals and bishops, or the pope’s advisors and colleagues, or veteran Vatican observers about his possible strategy these days — the Pope’s overarching plan — they seem to agree on one point: The man who sits on the Chair of St. Peter is a notorious troublemaker.”
From the article “The End of the Popularity of Pope Francis?” by Michael J. Matt

Rich Davis
Reply to  Carl Friis-Hansen
September 4, 2019 3:42 am

It seems certain that his election is a fraud. Isn’t it a CNN/NYT-proven fact at this point that the Russians steal elections?

Now I see my error, the Russians only steal elections on behalf of extreme right-wingers like Trump.

They do that to disrupt western society with
‘notorious troublemakers’.

Oh wait…

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Rich Davis
September 4, 2019 4:51 am

“Isn’t it a CNN/NYT-proven fact at this point that the Russians steal elections?”

No, the only thing proven is that the Russians *try* to influence elections. There is no evidence they have actually stolen an election other than possibly in their own country.

The Russians ran a troll farm whose main purpose in the American elections was to cause division among Americans. The Russians should have saved their time and effort because they can count on the Democrats to voluntarily do all that for them at no charge.

Rich Davis
Reply to  Tom Abbott
September 4, 2019 5:13 pm

Tom,
A “CNN/NYT-proven fact” is analogous to a EurekAlert! press release about climate change (pure BS).

Sorry if my untagged sarcasm was too subtle.

September 4, 2019 4:42 am

Tragically, the human catholic church’s response to this gift has been marked by sin, selfishness and a greedy desire to possess and exploit.

There, fixed it for Frankie

George Lawson
September 4, 2019 4:46 am

As God is considered to have created this world and all that happens in it, why does he leave the problems of Global Warming to be sorted out by the Pope? Is it because God does not see that there is any global warming problem in the first place.

ResourceGuy
September 4, 2019 6:18 am

Waving smoke and slinging holy water is not going to fix the Advocacy Climate Crusades.

Stefan Parzer
September 4, 2019 6:50 am

…now I know, where the phrase ‘holy sh..’ comes from…

Holy bible: Genesis 1:29 New International Version (NIV)

1.29 Then God said, “I give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be yours for food

…and the cute little Bambi and his brown eyed mother can be eaten by the Lions. The cute Baby-Seal can be swallowed down by the Polarbears…a.s.o…”

It seems to mee, that God was the first hypocrite on Earth…

Slacko
Reply to  Stefan Parzer
September 5, 2019 11:56 pm

Ah, I see what you done there. You deliberately left out the sin bit didn’t ya?

See, between Gen 1:29 and cute little brown-eyed mother comes Gen 3:15. “I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed.” Then it was thorns and thistles time when they got kicked out of Eden. Lots of stuff got changed when sin came in, so it was after that that Bambi got gobbled up by big bad lions.

The Bible even got all the pronouns orl kerrect, something you never see any more.

Al Miller
September 4, 2019 7:02 am

It’s hilarious that the pope is jumping on the bandwagon- but then a central tenet of the people leading this “charge” is the burning of witches and heretics, so maybe not. He’s just mad he didn’t think of it first, but after all history shows a long history of the Catholic Church burning witches and heretics- interestingly much the same way that totalitarian governments deal with opposing groups.

ResourceGuy
September 4, 2019 10:21 am

It makes a nice cover package and bow in place of talk on corruption, mismanagement, scandals, and damage control.

ResourceGuy
September 4, 2019 10:24 am

When do they start sainthood proceedings for Greta from the evidence of miracle walking on water, causing people to fly, and miracle feeding of the masses with only a few pieces of tofu?

September 4, 2019 10:43 am

There was a photograph of Pope Francis in a WUWT post on Dec 10, 2016. I’m trying not to offend anybody, but that likeness reminded me of Peter Sellers. I can only hope that Mr Sellers would forgive me…..

Sam Capricci
September 4, 2019 10:55 am

Found this on another site and it seems apropos.

“Death to World Imperialism” (1917)
In the second coming of a carbon-neutral world, cited oppressions — with other bourgeois tendencies — will be as kaput as the internal combustion engine. (Not a joke. A Select Committee of the U.K. Parliament proposes to ban all private vehicles by 2050. This past January, Sacramento floated a bill that would ban the sale of internal combustion vehicles throughout the state starting in 2040.) Our synod points back to the future via aboriginal cultures in “multifaceted harmony” with “the life of the universe and of all creation.”
One defense against eco-fundamentalist rhapsodies by a cosmos-hugging Vatican is a ground-level look at the realities of traditional hunter-gatherer life. Start with Nomads of the Long Bow: The Siriono of Eastern Bolivia, a transcription of the field notes of anthropologist Allan R. Holmberg made during his year in the rainforest.

First published in 1950 by the Smithsonian, this slim text records the daily routines of a particular primitive band in the Bolivian Amazon in 1940–41. Written prior to increased acculturation from the 1960s onward, Holmberg’s eyewitness account remains invaluable. His observations go against the grain of current reveries about the paradisal conditions in the pre-contact Americas:
Only one who has traveled in the region can appreciate the myriad forms of insect life that harass the inhabitants. Since a great part of the country is swamp for at least 6 months of the year, mosquitoes of all kinds (and of which the area is never free) can breed unhampered and, as night falls, these insects, together with gnats and moths descend upon one by the thousands. During the day … their place is taken by innumerable varieties of deer flies and stinging wasps. When traveling by water … one is also perennially pestered by tiny flies which settle on the uncovered parts of one’s body by the hundreds and leave minute welts of blood where they sting.

The stamina of early anthropologists and ethnologists puts to shame today’s journalist-activists who romanticize pre-Columbian existence from the stacks of an air-conditioned library. Or on their own laptop, where they can drag-and-drop modernity into the trash:
No less molesting are the ants, most of which are stinging varieties. The traveler in the forest soon learns what kinds to avoid. Especially unpleasant are those which inhabit the tree called palo santo, the sting of a few of which will leave one with a fever, and the tucondera, an ant about an inch in length whose bite causes partial paralysis for an hour or two.

In addition … there are scorpions and spiders whose bites may also cause partial paralysis and for whose presence one must be continually on the lookout; and sweat bees, which drive the perspiring traveler to a fury in trying to escape them. Some mention should also be made of wood ticks, which range in size from a pin point to a fingernail. During the dry season as many as a hundred may drop from a disturbed leaf on to a person as he passes by. One of the most common pastimes of the Indian children, in fact, is picking off wood ticks from returning hunters.

Protruding stomachs were common among Siriono children. Holmberg attributed the distention to hookworm infestation, a familiar complaint in tropical and subtropical nations with poor sanitation. Bare feet provide a point of entry for hookworm larvae that thrive in soil contaminated by feces. (Distention might also have been a symptom of malnutrition, which, like anemia, remains prevalent in the rainforest.)
Eden was unsanitary. Infants were not diapered. There were no latrines:
In the early morning a Siriono hut must be approached with caution so as to avoid innumerable piles of excreta that have been deposited just outside the house during the night. Although adults retire to a respectful distance from the house to defecate during the day … their nightly behavior in this respect is restricted by the intense darkness, the annoyance of insect pests, and the fear of evil spirits, and they seldom go very far from the house. Moreover, the excreta are rarely removed the following day, but are left to gather flies, to dry up, or to be washed away by rain. Thus … the immediate environs of the house become rather unbearable to the unaccustomed.

Our bishops hasten to repeat Francis’s censure of a “culture of waste.” Yet the Siriones, among other aboriginal cultures, traditionally discarded the sick and elderly. Their ancient “worldview and wisdom” recognized the burden placed on group survival by the old and frail. Holmberg wrote:
People who are extremely ill or decrepit and whose period of usefulness is over, are abandoned to die. … The aged and infirm are weeded out shortly after their decrepitude begins to appear. … When a person becomes too ill or infirm to follow the [nomadic] fortunes of the band, he is abandoned to shift for himself.
Ants and vultures do the rest. Synodal enthusiasm for “inter-culturality” is a treacherous thing.

Personally I’m not looking to live like that so I can have a low carbon lifestyle.

S Capricci
Reply to  Sam Capricci
September 4, 2019 11:06 am

Moderator, not familiar enough with html so apparently my attempt made the whole article the link instead of just the link https://onepeterfive.com/amazon-awful/
If you can correct it that would be great.

Sam Capricci
September 4, 2019 11:23 am

Moderator, my inexperience with HTML caused me to create the entire article as a link to the original at this site… https://onepeterfive.com/amazon-awful/
Can you remove that HTML as I now know that just posting the link makes it active.
thank you.

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  Sam Capricci
September 4, 2019 2:14 pm

Quite impressive, though. That’s the longest link I’ve ever seen!

Flight Level
September 4, 2019 1:22 pm

The right moment to ask the Vatican if climate change would increase the risks of angel-strikes as flocks of them scared from an ever warming paradise migrate to hell .

Richard Patton
September 4, 2019 5:33 pm

The Papacy is a political job, not a spiritual. The Pope knows no more science than Bible which isn’t much. He has put out so much that is antithetical to the Bible that it isn’t funny. And now he has to be anti-science too. It’s sad.

Amber
September 5, 2019 10:33 pm

I wonder if the Pope realizes he is encouraging another religion with a false GOD . Money , mass population reduction , and one world government hiding behind an unscientific fraud . The earth has a fever .
How does the Pope feel about China , the biggest polluter on earth working to eradicate freedom of religion and extending their influence to more and more countries .
How would the Pope feel if the communists ruled the world . Then we would find out what real pollution is and
how fast the Catholic religion would be destroyed .
Capitalism is full of flaws , including allowing the global warming scam to take root but with all do respect
supporting it will end badly . Maybe the Pope will listen to scientists that know the truth about climate models and the effect of CO2 rather than rent seeking con artists at his door . Lets pray for that .

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