Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
FaithShort Take
Peter Knox
The choice by Pope Francis to release “Laudate Deum” eight years after the publication of “Laudato Si’” is an unusual one, signaling an imminent climate crisis.
Pope Francis joins others in holding a banner during an audience at the Vatican June 5, 2023, with the organizers of the Green & Blue Festival. The banner calls for financing a "loss and damage" fund that was agreed upon at the COP27 U.N. climate conference in 2022. The fund would seek to provide financial assistance to nations most vulnerable and impacted by the effects of climate change. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
Politics & SocietyDispatches
David Stewart
With COP28 in the United Arab Emirates imminent, opinion in the developed world on climate change has become deeply polarized. Perhaps exhausted by the digital news cycle, many people have developed compassion fatigue.
FaithFeatures
Colleen Jurkiewicz
The C.E.C. demonstrates a profound, organic Catholicism that places people within "the wholeness of creation" and asks them "to look and feel and touch and know it."
Politics & SocietyShort Take
Charles C. Camosy
In his new document, 'Laudate Deum,' Pope Francis gives us more hope about humanity’s right relationship with other animals, even if it lacks specifics.
FaithFaith in Focus
Jaime L. Waters
Pope Francis draws inspiration, especially from psalms and legal texts, to remind humans of our shared status with creation.
FaithNews Analysis
Ricardo da Silva, S.J.
In 'Laudate Deum,' Pope Francis takes direct aim at the failure of human action on climate change on the global level.