The Earth Charter

Declaration of the Global Super-State

 

 

URGENT MESSAGE FROM POPE JOHN PAUL II:

"Is this not the time for all to work together for a new constitutional organization of the human family, truly capable of ensuring peace and harmony between peoples, as well as their integral development?  But let there be no misunderstanding. This does not mean writing the constitution of a global super-State."

--Message for the World Day of Peace, 2003

 

"Clearly, we are faced with the total denial of Christianity."

--Archbishop Javier Lozano Barragán, 2003

 

by Bill Jacobs, ecologist and director of the Catholic Conservation Center

Aspirants to Global Government

    In 1987, the United Nations World Commission on Environment and Development issued a call for the creation of a charter that would set forth fundamental principles for sustainable development.  An attempt to draft such a charter failed at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit.  Beginning in 1994 and working outside the United Nations, Maurice Strong, billionaire, president of the Earth Council, and former member of the Commission on Global Governance; Mikhail Gorbachev, Marxist, former communist dictator, president of Green Cross International, and advocate of global government; and Steven Rockefeller, multi-millionaire, head of the Earth Charter Commission, USA, and advocate of global government; together carefully crafted a new Earth Charter.  The charter was officially launched in 2000.  According to its founders, the Earth Charter is "a declaration of fundamental principles for building a just, sustainable, and peaceful global society in the 21st century."   The plan is to disseminate the Earth Charter globally in schools and religious communities. 

    Gorbachev and Strong wrote the Charter to rectify what they saw as the excessively "anthropocentric emphasis" of the Declaration on the Environment produced at the 1992 UN conference in Rio.   The founders envision a global super-state to enforce the principles of the Charter.  Charter founders have stated this on numerous occasions.  Gorbachev stated this clearly when he said, "The emerging 'environmentalization' of our civilization and the need for vigorous action in the interest of the entire global community will inevitably have multiple political consequences.  Perhaps the most important of them will be a gradual change in the status of the United Nations.  Inevitably, it must assume some aspects of a world government."7

A Standard for the Church?

  The Earth Charter Commission hopes that the charter will become a common standard “by which the conduct of all individuals, organizations, businesses, governments, and transnational institutions is to be guided and assessed” (Earth Charter Secretariat 2000).  The Roman Catholic Church, as a transnational institution, would be required to be guided by the Earth Charter.  (They did say "all.")  However, the only member of the founding Earth Charter Commission that has identified himself as a Catholic was Leonardo Boff, an ex-priest, Marxist, and leader of the liberation theology movement.  John Paul II has criticized liberation theology and its advocates, accusing them of wrongly supporting violent revolution and Marxist class struggle.  Boff was silenced by the Church in 1985.  He resigned from the priesthood in 1991.  Boff is still a member of the Earth Charter Commission. 

    Pope John Paul II does not endorse the Earth Charter, contrary to what some proponents of the Earth Charter allege.  Instead, the Holy Father has recommended an addition to the United Nations Charter of Human Rights.  According to the Holy Father, "THE RIGHT TO A SAFE ENVIRONMENT is ever more insistently presented today as a right that must be included in an updated Charter of Human Rights."8  In the 2003 Message for the World Day of Peace, the Holy Father warned us about the dangers of the type of global super-state envisioned by charter proponents: "Is this not the time for all to work together for a new constitutional organization of the human family, truly capable of ensuring peace and harmony between peoples, as well as their integral development?  But let there be no misunderstanding.  This does not mean writing the constitution of a global super-State."   Sadly, the Pope's message has been widely misunderstood or ignored, particularly by a number of religious orders and institutions.  In addition, recent allegations of corruption and ineptitude in the United Nations suggest the need for an overhauled U.N. or a new organization of the human family comprised of free, democratic states.

Agenda for Totalitarianism

    Since the collapse of communism, Boff, Gorbachev, and several other leading socialists and Marxists have switched to planetary environmentalism as the means to advance their political agendas.  Unfortunately, if socialists and Marxists ever were to gain global power, it would cost us our religious and political freedom, regardless of whether or not they saved the environment.

    Although carefully hidden from the document itself, the charter is part of a larger agenda to establish a centralized, socialist or Marxist global super-government.  This super-government, which charter founders affectionately refer to as "global governance," would enforce the principles of the charter.  In Steven Rockefeller's own words, "No nation state can exist any longer as a separate island capable of providing in isolation opportunity and security for its people.  Local and global security can only be founded on the principles of global partnership and the sharing of sovereignty, leading to the creation of new systems of global governance."4  At the 1995 State of the World Forum, Maurice Strong said regarding the Earth Charter: "We shouldn't wait until political democracy paves the way. We must act now."5  After the Charter is adopted and implemented - with or without a democratic process - the new "international body" will not "be subservient to the rules of state sovereignty, demands of the free market, or individual rights." 

   
The "New Ten Commandments"?

   Superficially, the charter is a noble concept designed to end social and environmental tensions around the world.  However, a closer look reveals the underlying principles of atheistic and secular humanism, neo-paganism, Marxism, and other beliefs that are in conflict with Christianity.  This new "global ethic" is designed to supplant the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to replace the Ten Commandments, neither of which can protect the Earth's ecosystems according to charter proponents, with a new "Sixteen Principles".  Mr. Gorbachev is quoted as saying, "Do not do unto the environment of others what you do not want done to your own environment...  My hope is that this charter will be a kind of Ten Commandments, a 'Sermon on the Mount', that provides a guide for human behavior toward the environment in the next century.”2   In Maurice Strong's own words, “The real goal of the Earth Charter is that it will in fact become like the Ten Commandments."6  Mr. Gorbachev has declared his creed: "Cosmos is my God; Nature is my God."3  

     In contrast to the Ark of the Covenant that housed the Ten Commandments, the Earth Charter is housed in the "Arc of Hope" (photos above).  The design honors some of the world’s spiritual alternatives to Christianity.  According to the website for the Earth Charter Initiative, the ark's carrying  poles are “fashioned like unicorn horns which, according to legend, render evil ineffective.”  The five painted panels of the Ark are decorated with "indigenous symbolism celebrating Earth and all her living elements." 

Culture of Death vs. Culture of Life

    On the surface, there is much to agree with in the charter, such as concern for the environment and human rights.  However, Roman Catholics should not endorse, nor adopt as their own, the Earth Charter.  Highest among the reasons for this are:

    (1) The Earth Charter ignores the existence of God, our Creator and Redeemer.  Efforts to heal the Earth without God or by human efforts alone are not "sustainable" and will ultimately fall far short.  For believers, all of the true solutions to our global environmental crisis are found in sacred Scripture, living Tradition of the Church, message of Creation, and the voice of conscience enlightened by God’s law authentically interpreted.  The secular humanists, neo-pagans, and Marxists who founded the Earth Charter are only concerned with the message of nature (i.e., matter/energy) and the voice of ego (self) or a conscience that ignores God's law.  Christianity is an obstacle to their success.  Given the serious nature of our social and environmental problems, the need for authentic disciples of Jesus Christ remains as urgent as ever. 

    Ethics without God are dangerous; the warning of Pope Pius XI in 1937 against totalitarianism is fitting today: "Whoever exalts race, or the people, or the State, or a particular form of State, or of the depositories of power, or any other fundamental value of the human community -- however necessary and honorable be their function of worldly things -- whoever raises these notions above their standard value and divinizes them to an idolatrous level, distorts and perverts an order of the world planned and created by God; he is far from the true faith in God and from the concept of life which that faith upholds." 

    (2) The Earth Charter provides no protection for unborn children and their mothers, while offering protection for nearly every other creature on Earth, including endangered species and wild animals.  Apparently for proponents of the charter, the benefits of "sustainable development" and "human rights" for the most powerful among us are far more important than the lives of millions of unborn human babies!  Tragically, some proponents of the charter endorse abortion as a tool of sustainable development, an endorsement carefully cloaked under the banners of "family planning" and "choice."  Yet, in the words of Blessed Mother Theresa of Calcutta, "I have said often, and I am sure of it, that the greatest destroyer of peace in the world today is abortion.  If a mother can kill her own child, what is there to stop you and me from killing each other?"  Never again should any woman be coerced or forced by the demands of an often self-centered and greedy world to kill her own child.  In addition, a number of proponents of the charter endorse euthanasia for those determined not capable of living a "quality" life.

    [SIDEBAR: For those women and men who suffer from the grief of losing an unborn child to abortion, as I do, please visit the website, There is Hope After Abortion For an interesting article about feminism and abortion, "Redefining the F-Word: Feminists for Life and the Origins of the Women’s Movement," click here.  For another interesting article, read the "Three Faces Toward Eve" by Steve Kellmeyer.]

Arrogance, Greed, and Disrespect for Life

    Sacred Scripture and Tradition of the Church specifically address the root causes of social injustice and environmental destruction, especially the sins of arrogance, greed for power and possessions, and lack of respect for life.  The Earth Charter, on the other hand, glorifies human arrogance, greed, and disrespect for life.  These are illustrated by the arrogance of ignoring our Creator and Redeemer, the billions of dollars in wealth accumulated by the charter's founders, and the desire for power by an elite group of men dedicated to a world socialist order and global super-government.  Shamefully, the charter fatally diminishes respect for life by failing to provide protection for unborn children and their mothers.

Secularism vs. Christianity

    Proponents argue that the charter is a secular document, therefore, it should not mention God.  Yet, one has only to look as far as the United States Declaration of Independence for an example of recognizing God in an otherwise secular document: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men [humanity] are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."  The Constitution of the United States refers to these rights as the "blessings of liberty."   Mikhail Gorbachev himself looks to the U.S. Constitution as a model for the Earth Charter, "We can use experience of the founding fathers of the United States' Constitution" (speech at the Rio+5 Forum, March 18, 1997).   However, the founders of the Constitution expressly recognized liberty as a gift from God.  Mikhail Gorbachev and the rest of the charter's founders do not recognize human rights as a gift from God.  Yet, as Thomas Jefferson wisely stated, "Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are ... the gift of God?"1 

    A similar debate has occurred over the Constitution of the European Union.  Pope John Paul II lobbied European leaders for "a clear reference to God and the Christian faith to be formulated in the European constitution."  European Catholic bishops also requested that the European Constitution make reference to God.  The Holy Father said that a reference to God would "help guard the continent against the double risk of ideological secularism, on the one hand, and sectarian integralism on the other."  The Holy Father's  sentiments were backed by the majority of European religious bodies, as well as the secular leadership of the Eastern European nations.

False Ecumenism   

    Proponents of the Earth Charter claim that the charter does not use the words "God" or "Creator" because the charter is "ecumenical," meaning that it speaks to people of all faiths.  However, this is a misuse of the word "ecumenical."  "Ecumenical" typically means "of, relating to, or representing the whole of a body of churches; promoting or tending toward worldwide Christian unity or cooperation" (Merriam-Webster Online).  According to the Church's Decree on Ecumenism, "the term 'ecumenical movement' indicates the initiatives and activities planned and undertaken, according to the various needs of the Church and as opportunities offer, to promote Christian unity.Without any reference to God, the Earth Charter is not ecumenical.  By definition, the Earth Charter is at best "secular," meaning "not overtly or specifically religious," and at worst "atheistic," denying the existence of our Creator entirely. 

 

Proclaim the Gospel to Every Creature

    All the Earth's peoples, nations, and religious groups must work together to heal the Earth.  This includes Catholics working peacefully with atheists, secularists, pantheists, neo-pagans, Gnostics, Marxists, and others.  However, we need not and should not adopt or endorse their beliefs, however noble they may appear to be !  It is important for everyone that we respectfully champion our Roman Catholic beliefs in the global public square and to make certain that God is not forgotten.   Pope Paul VI wisely stated, "All believers of whatever religion always hear His revealing voice in the discourse of creatures.  When God is forgotten, however, the creature itself grows unintelligible." 

  

 

Catholic Social Teaching is Infinitely Superior to the Earth Charter

    Catholicism has a highly developed system of modern social teaching that we should respectfully proclaim to the whole world.  The Church's social teaching is infinitely more loving, just, sustainable, peaceful, authentic, rich, wise, deep, holy, whole, life-affirming, and GREEN than the Earth Charter!   Let us not accept anything less!  A great place to begin is with Pope John XXIII's prophetic teaching: Pacem in Terris.

    The Roman Catholic faith is grounded in objective truths, in inalienable rights granted by our Creator, in God's book of nature, and in His Word revealed in Scripture and Tradition, in marked contrast to a Godless morality grounded in the subjective whims of a self-appointed global governance and its disordered vision of "sustainable development" through abortion.  The world urgently needs our example and leadership to begin the process of conserving, developing, and restoring Creation, a process that will be completed by God - the Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier of all Creation - in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

The Cornwall Declaration on Environmental Stewardship is vastly superior to the Earth Charter.  Click here for more information.

 

"In a world where the shadows of poverty, injustice, and secularism are cast over every continent,

the need for authentic disciples of Jesus Christ remains as urgent as ever."

Pope John Paul II , March 23, 2004

 

    "It is on faith in God, preserved pure and stainless, that man's morality is based.  All efforts to remove from under morality and the moral order the granite foundation of faith and to substitute for it the shifting sands of human regulations, sooner or later lead these individuals or societies to moral degradation."

Pope Pius XI

 

"Indeed, the world is full of false prophets, declaring, "Follow my 'new story' and we will save the Earth," or "Follow my 'new spirituality' and we will save the Earth," or "Follow my new 'charter' and we will save the Earth."  Thankfully, most Christians know better.  The one most essential solution to the environmental crisis is offered by the Blessed Trinity: the Redemption of humankind, which extends in a mysterious way to all of Creation.  We find the solutions to the environmental crisis in sacred Scripture, the living Tradition of the Church, the message of Creation, and the voice of conscience enlightened by God's law authentically interpreted.  Accept no substitutes."

Bill Jacobs, Catholic Conservation Center

 

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Noted Catholic Theorist Voices Concerns about the "Earth Charter"

    VATICAN, Nov. 29, 2000 (CWNews.com) -- Msgr. Michel Schooyans, a noted Belgian political theorist, has expressed serious misgivings about the process of “globalization” as it is seen by the United Nations leadership.

    Msgr. Schooyans, a member of the Pontifical Academy for Social Sciences and consultant to the Pontifical Council for the Family, offered his thoughts to a Vatican conference on globalization and the family.  He suggested that in the eyes of UN officials, globalization means “a concentration of power that has the odor of totalitarianism.”

    The UN, the Belgian professor observed, “thinks that the world in its entirety has more value than the person.”  He added that according to this view — which he said is heavily influenced by New Age thinking — Christian humanism “has to be abandoned and rejected, in order to exalt a neo-pagan cult of Mother Earth.”

    Msgr. Schooyans, who teaches at the Catholic University of Louvain, said that the “Earth Charter” currently being prepared by UN officials offers clear evidence to support his charges.  In that document, he reported, the human race is depicted as “a part of a vast universe in the process of evolution,” and which is marked today by “an unprecedented growth in population that overtaxes economic and social systems.”  The underlying philosophy of the Charter, he said, sees all religions — but particularly the Catholic faith — as obstacles to progress.

    The UN, Msgr. Schooyans concluded, is now aiming to create a new world order over which a “supergovernment” would preside. “The Church will have no choice but to fight against such a form of globalization,” Msgr. Schooyans remarked.  This powerful new government would suppress intermediate structures, and seek “more and more centralized control of information, knowledge, technology, human life, health, commerce, politics, and law.”   

Defending Humankind and Nature
by Michel Schooyans

 


 

    As can be seen from many recent documents from UN agencies like UNFPA, there is a trend for the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights to be supplanted by documents such as the Earth Charter.  Man is considered to be the result of the evolution of matter, and he must agree to submit himself to the Great Whole.  This, we are told, is the price to pay for "sustainable development".  This view of Mother Earth denies man the central place in the world that was assigned to him in the 1948 Declaration.  We must return to this anthropocentrism and this universalism, which was inspired by the Roman, Jewish, and Christian traditions and was brilliantly reaffirmed by the Renaissance, if we wish to save and protect human capital. The quintessential value is man and not the environment.  Without men properly prepared to become responsible managers of Nature, Nature itself cannot but deteriorate and man cannot but vanish.  This view of man and his relationship with nature necessitates a fully humanistic conception of development.  This conception prompts us to revisit current educational, health, and food policies.  It also prompts us to reconsider policies relating to women and families.

   

    Speaking about the Earth Charter and related globalism, Msgr. Michel Schooyans said, "In order to consolidate this holistic vision of globalism, certain obstacles have to be smoothed out and instruments put to work.  Religions in general, and in the first place the Catholic religion, figure among the obstacles that have to be neutralized."

--Msgr. Michel Schooyans, Professor Emeritus at the University of Louvain, is a Member of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences and Advisor to the Pontifical Council for the Family.  Defending Man and the Family in UNCHS -The United Nations Centre for Human Settlements-, June 2001, Vol. 7, n2

 

   Speaking about the nation state and efforts to destroy it, Msgr. Schooyans said, "Without doubt, insofar as [nation states] exist and accomplish their role well, particular nations protect their citizens; they bring about respect for human rights, and use appropriate means towards this end. Presently, in the milieus of the UN, the destruction of nations appears as an objective to be sought if one wishes definitively to smother the anthropocentric conception of man's rights. By doing away with the intermediate body called the national state, one puts an end to subsidiarity, since a centralized world state will have been put in place. The way will be open, then, for the arrival of the globalizing technocrats and other aspirants to world governance."

--LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE, Belgium, SEPT. 8, 2001 (Zenit.org).- The United Nations is embracing a type of globalization that would radically redefine rights and the power of nations. Here, ZENIT offers an adapted excerpt from an essay by Michel Schooyans, professor emeritus at Louvain University, on the problems of globalization.

 

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Read "Earth Charter Woos Catholics with New Age Spirituality" by Mary Jo Anderson

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Catholics Are Being Misled

    In January 2003, Joe Holland, Professor of Philosophy & Religion at Saint Thomas University of Miami, Florida, USA issued a statement that is being widely distributed by proponents of the Earth Charter.  This statement is being used by charter supporters to lead Catholics and others to believe that the Earth Charter is endorsed by Pope John Paul II and that it does not support abortion.  However, the Earth Charter is NOT endorsed by the Church.  The charter does NOT provide protection for unborn children, thereby permitting the killing of millions of innocent lives.

    Holland's statement includes a quote, taken out of context, from Archbishop Leonardo Sandri, Sostituto, Secretariat of State, Vatican City State, to Mikhail Gorbachev, one of the crafters of the Earth Charter.  The quote is being used to imply an endorsement of the Holy Father for the Earth Charter.  However, this statement is NOT an endorsement of the charter!  Instead, it is a statement addressed to Monsignor Angelo Comatri, Pontifical Delegate, requesting that the Monsignor welcome Gorbachev to Italy and encourage Gorbachev's efforts as a statesman to "bring forth greater respect for the planet’s resources."  The Holy Father has often encouraged the efforts of those outside the Church to bring forth improved environmental stewardship.  Yet this does not mean that the Church endorses the religions or beliefs of those outside the Church, such as the beliefs of secular humanism, neo-paganism, and Marxism that underlie the Earth Charter.

    Since 2001, representatives from three Pontifical Councils have warned against the endorsement of such a new global ethic (see below).  In 2003, the Holy Father himself warned against "writing the constitution of a global super-State. Of course, proponents of the charter don't distribute these quotes!   

    Addressing abortion, Holland provides the following official statement from the Earth Charter International Secretariat, issued in June 2002:  "The Earth Charter takes no position for or against abortion."  Unfortunately for Holland and other proponents of the charter, this statement only serves to reinforce charges of the intentional denial of protection for millions of unborn children.  This is a position that pro-abortionists like to refer to as "pro-choice."  Again, the decision to exclude unborn children from the charter is neither "just", "sustainable", nor "peaceful".  And it is in direct conflict with the Catholic Church. 

    According to the Church, respect for life and for the dignity of the human person extends also to the rest of Creation.  Tragically, the culture of death promoted by the Earth Charter and those who continue to allow abortion also extends to the rest of Creation.  Blessed Mother Theresa of Calcutta wisely asked, "If a mother can kill her own child, then what is left of the West to be destroyed?"

 -Commentary by Bill Jacobs

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Pope Pius XI:

A New Morality Without a Basis on Christian Faith Can't Succeed

(Excerpts)

    "It is on faith in God, preserved pure and stainless, that man's morality is based.  All efforts to remove from under morality and the moral order the granite foundation of faith and to substitute for it the shifting sands of human regulations, sooner or later lead these individuals or societies to moral degradation.  The fool who has said in his heart 'there is no God' goes straight to moral corruption (Psalms xiii. 1), and the number of these fools who today are out to sever morality from religion, is legion.  They either do not see or refuse to see that the banishment of confessional Christianity, i.e., the clear and precise notion of Christianity, from teaching and education, from the organization of social and political life, spells spiritual spoliation and degradation.  No coercive power of the State, no purely human ideal, however noble and lofty it be, will ever be able to make shift of the supreme and decisive impulses generated by faith in God and Christ.  If the man, who is called to the hard sacrifice of his own ego to the common good, loses the support of the eternal and the divine, that comforting and consoling faith in a God who rewards all good and punishes all evil, then the result of the majority will be, not the acceptance, but the refusal of their duty." (804)

    "Whoever exalts race, or the people, or the State, or a particular form of State, or of the depositories of power, or any other fundamental value of the human community---however necessary and honorable be their function of worldly things---whoever raises these notions above their standard value and divinizes them to an idolatrous level, distorts and perverts an order of the world planned and created by God; he is far from the true faith in God and from the concept of life which that faith upholds."

    "No coercive power of the State, no purely human ideal, however noble and lofty it may be, will ever be able to make shift of the supreme and decisive impulses generated by faith in God and Christ."

    "Should any man dare, in sacrilegious disregard of the essential differences between God and His creature, between the God-man and the children of man, to place a mortal, were he the greatest of all times, by the side of, or over, or against Christ, he would deserve to be called the prophet of nothingness, to whom the terrifying words of Scripture would be applicable: “He that dwelleth in heaven shall laugh at them” (Psalms 2.3).

--Pope Pius XI, Mit Brennender Sorge, 1937 encyclical against Nazism.

    The Communism of today, more emphatically than similar movements in the past, conceals in itself a false messianic idea.  A pseudo-ideal of justice, of equality and fraternity in labor impregnates all its doctrine and activity with a deceptive mysticism, which communicates a zealous and contagious enthusiasm to the multitudes entrapped by delusive promises." 

Divini Redemptoris

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Two Pontifical Councils Warn Against the New Global Ethic

(Excerpts)

    What has been successful is the generalization of ecology as a fascination with nature and resacralisation of the earth, Mother Earth or Gaia, with the missionary zeal characteristic of Green politics.  The Earth's executive agent is the human race as a whole, and the harmony and understanding required for responsible governance is increasingly understood to be a global government, with a global ethical framework.  The warmth of Mother Earth, whose divinity pervades the whole of creation, is held to bridge the gap between creation and the transcendent Father-God of Judaism and Christianity, and removes the prospect of being judged by such a Being.

    In such a vision of a closed universe that contains “God” and other spiritual beings along with ourselves, we recognize here an implicit pantheism.  This is a fundamental point which pervades all New Age thought and practice, and conditions in advance any otherwise positive assessment where we might be in favor of one or another aspect of its spirituality.  As Christians, we believe on the contrary that “man is essentially a creature and remains so for all eternity, so that an absorption of the human I in the divine I will never be possible”....

    New Age has a marked preference for Eastern or pre-Christian religions, which are reckoned to be uncontaminated by Judaeo-Christian distortions.  Hence great respect is given to ancient agricultural rites and to fertility cults. “Gaia”, Mother Earth, is offered as an alternative to God the Father, whose image is seen to be linked to a patriarchal conception of male domination of women.  There is talk of God, but it is not a personal God; the God of which New Age speaks is neither personal nor transcendent.  Nor is it the Creator and sustainer of the universe, but an “impersonal energy” immanent in the world, with which it forms a “cosmic unity”: “All is one”.  This unity is monistic, pantheistic or, more precisely, panentheistic....  [Webmaster's note:  There's nothing at all "new" about these errors or heresies, hence the New Age movement contains little, if anything, that is really new.]

    Christian groups which promote care for the earth as God's creation also need to be given due recognition.  The question of respect for creation is one which could also be approached creatively in Catholic schools.  A great deal of what is proposed by the more radical elements of the ecological movement is difficult to reconcile with Catholic faith.  Care for the environment in general terms is a timely sign of a fresh concern for what God has given us, perhaps a necessary mark of Christian stewardship of creation, but “deep ecology” is often based on pantheistic and occasionally gnostic principles.

PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR CULTURE
PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE

Read the entire Church statement about the "New Age" on the Vatican website:

JESUS CHRIST
THE BEARER OF THE WATER OF LIFE
:

A Christian reflection
on the “New Age”

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VATICAN NEWSPAPER WARNS AGAINST "GLOBAL ETHIC"

    VATICAN, February 12, 2003 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Archbishop Javier Lozano Barragán, president of the Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers, surprised those who doubt that the Maurice Strong led movement for a new "global ethic" presented a threat to Christianity.  [Maurice Strong is a founder and leader of the Earth Charter movement.]  In an article published yesterday in the Vatican's L'Osservatore Romano, the Archbishop warned that the aim of the program was to supplant Christian values with a "global ethic."

    The "New Paradigm" as it is called in the article is an eco-religion which holds "sustainable development" as the highest good.  The Archbishop warns that the New Paradigm manifests itself "as a new spirituality that supplants all religions, because the latter have been unable to preserve the ecosystem."  In a word, this is "a new secular religion, a religion without God, or if you prefer, a new God that is the earth itself with the name GAIA," he said.

    The influence of the New Paradigm is already felt in the field of bioethics which uses warped interpretations of ethical stands which result in justifying research which offends human dignity such as embryonic stem cell research.

    "The different religions existing in the world have been unable to generate this global ethic; therefore, they must be replaced by a new spirituality, which has as its end global well-being, within sustainable development," explained Archbishop Barragán.

(c) Copyright: LifeSite Daily News is a production of Interim Publishing.

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"Global Ethic" Aiming to Supplant Christian Ethic, Warns Official

    VATICAN CITY, FEB. 11, 2003 (Zenit.org) - A Vatican official warns of a plan to supplant Christian values with a "universal ethic" in the new context of globalization.  Archbishop Javier Lozano Barragán, president of the Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers, analyzed and criticized the fundamental characteristics of the "New Paradigm" in an article in the Jan. 11 Italian edition of L'Osservatore Romano.

    The article mentioned some of the most important topics of the World Day of the Sick (www.worlddayofthesick.org), held in Washington, D.C., today. Archbishop Lozano presided over the U.S. event in his capacity as special papal envoy.

Ideology

    According to the archbishop, this "New Paradigm" is influenced by the following ideological currents:

-- Eclecticism, which "accepts any affirmation on conduct regardless of its system, context and judgment";

-- Historicism, which holds that "truth changes according to its adaptation to a specific period of history."

-- Scientific spirit, which says "the only acceptable truth is the one which can be experienced scientifically";

-- Pragmatism: "the sole criterion of ethical decisions is their usefulness";

-- Nihilism: "gives up the capacity to arrive at objective truths."

Characteristics

    Archbishop Lozano Barragán described the features of the New Paradigm as follows:

-- "The objective of the new global ethic is global well-being within sustainable development."

-- "This global well-being constitutes the end called 'quality of life,'" which means "the individual's perception of his position in life, in the context of culture and of the system of values in which he finds himself."

-- Quality of life covers six areas: "physical health, psychological health, level of dependence, social relations, milieu (economy, freedom, security, information, participation, environment, traffic, climate, transportation ...), spirituality (religion, personal beliefs)."

-- "What is basic is individual self-determination. Social obligations are disregarded."

Regarding religion and spirituality, the archbishop spelled out these points in the New Paradigm:

-- "The different religions existing in the world have been unable to generate this global ethic; therefore, they must be replaced by a new spirituality, which has as its end global well-being, within sustainable development."

-- "Nature, the earth, called 'GAIA,' is divine and inviolable. The human being is only one more element of it, who can only be understood in harmony with the earth."

-- "This new ethic is based on five pillars: human rights and responsibility, democracy and elements of civil society, protection of minorities, commitment to the peaceful solution of conflicts and honest negotiations, intergenerational equity."

-- "There are four problems that must be solved: the first affects the man-nature balance; the second the meaning of happiness, of life, and of plentitude; the third examines relations between the individual and the community; and the fourth looks to a balance between equity and freedom."

Bioethics

    According to Archbishop Lozano Barragán, this theory imposes three principles on bioethics:

-- The principle of autonomy: "an action is good if it respects the freedom of the moral agent and of others."

-- The principle of beneficence: "good must always be done and evil avoided."

-- The principle of justice: "give each one his due."

    These three principles end up submerged in relativism as, for example, according to the principle of autonomy "those who are not free are not considered for this moral action, for example, the handicapped, children, fetuses, embryos," the archbishop explained.

    The principle of beneficence says that good must be done, but it does not explain what is the good for others. If one does not know what good is, good cannot be done consistently. And the same happens with justice, he added.

New Paradigm vs. Christianity

    Archbishop Lozano Barragán explained that some of the values presented by the New Paradigm can be shared: concern for the environment, human rights, respect for minorities, democracy, social justice, health and education for all.

    However, the New Paradigm manifests itself "as a new spirituality that supplants all religions, because the latter have been unable to preserve the ecosystem." In a word, this is "a new secular religion, a religion without God, or if you prefer, a new God that is the earth itself with the name GAIA," he said.

    "The series of values that sustain the New Paradigm are values subordinated to this divinity that becomes the supreme ecological value, which they call sustainable development. The highest ethical end, within this sustainable development, is well-being," he wrote.

    "Clearly, we are faced with the total denial of Christianity and the fundamental fact of Christianity, the Incarnation of the Word, the redeeming death of Christ and his glorious resurrection. If this historical fact is accepted, the assumption of the New Paradigm fails completely," the archbishop warned.

    "This does not mean that the genuine values proclaimed by the New Paradigm also fail, values that are not foreign to Christian thought, but find their raison d'être in the latter," he added.

    The president of the Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers said that the New Paradigm runs into its greatest problem "when it perceives that everything must be based on consensus, a consensus that does not stem from objective truths, but from subjective opinions."

    "An authentic universal ethic, which really hopes to be global, must be an ethic founded on the objectivity of man himself ... whose end is God himself and, in the final instance, the historical fact of the Incarnation of God," the archbishop concluded.

© Innovative Media, Inc.

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Pope John Paul II, The Gospel of Life

(Excerpt)

    "The Pharaoh of old, haunted by the presence and increase of the children of Israel, submitted them to every kind of oppression and ordered that every male child born of the Hebrew women was to be killed (cf. Ex. 1:7-22).  Today not a few of the powerful of the earth act in the same way.  They too are haunted by the current demographic growth, and fear that the most prolific and poorest peoples represent a threat for the well-being and peace of their own countries.  Consequently, rather than wishing to face and solve these serious problems with respect for the dignity of individuals and families and for every person's inviolable right to life, they prefer to promote and impose by whatever means a massive program of birth control.  Even the economic help which they would be ready to give is unjustly made conditional on the acceptance of an anti-birth policy." (821)

    Editor's note: The "inviolable right to life" has been purposefully omitted from the Earth Charter in order to advance the Godless religion of "sustainable development."  If killing millions of children advances "sustainable development," then who among us will be next?

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We Should Return to Pope John XXIII's prophetic teaching: Pacem in Terris

    "At the beginning of a new year in our human history, this is the hope that rises spontaneously from the depths of my heart: that in the spirit of every individual there may be a renewed dedication to the noble mission which Pacem in Terris proposed forty years ago to all men and women of good will....  The fortieth anniversary of Pacem in Terris is an apt occasion to return to Pope John XXIII's prophetic teaching....  I accompany this hope with a prayer to Almighty God, the source of all our good. May he who calls us from oppression and conflict to freedom and cooperation for the good of all help people everywhere to build a world of peace ever more solidly established on the four pillars indicated by Blessed Pope John XXIII in his historic Encyclical: truth, justice, love, freedom....  The fortieth anniversary of Pacem in Terris is an apt occasion to return to Pope John XXIII's prophetic teaching."

--Pope John Paul II, From the Vatican, 8 December 2002

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"You cannot imagine how great is people's foolishness.  They have no sense or discernment, having lost it by hoping in themselves and putting their trust in their own knowledge." 

-St. Catherine of Siena

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LINKS

The Earth Charter - Agenda for Totalitarianism

By Lee Penn

Global Eco-Logic

By Thomas Sieger Derr

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Click here to see what abortion looks like. 

Main Menu    Introduction   Peace with God and all Creation    Ecological Conversion    Declaration on Environment    Hebrew Scripture    Christian Scripture    Catechism    Pope John Paul II    Bishops    Saints    Lay/Religious    St. Francis    Kateri Tekakwitha    St. Thérèse    Population    Creation Theology    Get Involved   Prayers    Revolution of Mary    Resources    Links    About Us    Cornwall Declaration    Guest Book

1(Notes on the State of Virginia (1782), Bergh 2:227.

2 Mikhail Gorbachev, The Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1997

3 Mikhail Gorbachev, on the PBS Charlie Rose Show, Oct. 23, 1996

4 Ecology, Religion, and Global Governance. Steven C. Rockefeller. Prepared for A Symposium on Religion and World Order, Sponsored by Global Education Associates, Maryknoll Center for Mission Research and Study, and Fordham University Institute on Religion and Culture. May 3-7, 1997.

5Anita Coolidge, "Ecology: The ultimate democracy - A report from the State of the World Forum," San Diego Earth Times, November 1995, Internet document, http://www.sdearthtimes.com/et1195/et1195s3.html, p. 3

6Interview: Maurice Strong on a "People's Earth Charter." Transcript of interview conducted March 5, 1998.  The Earth Council.

7Green Cross International, "The Founding Speech of Green Cross, by President Mikhail Gorbachev," Kyoto, Japan, April 20, 1993, Internet document, http://www4.gve.ch/gci/GreenCrossFamily/gorby/FoundingspeechGorbi.html, p. 7

 

8PEACE WITH GOD THE CREATOR, PEACE WITH ALL OF CREATION. Message of His Holiness Pope John Paul II for the celebration of the WORLD DAY OF PEACE, January 1, 1990.


Some other quotes taken from the Earth Charter website, http://www.earthcharter.org

 

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