The Pope's message has found an audience in the climate faithful. Bill McKibben, UN Secretary General António Guterres, and a host of other leaders have endorsed the clear call to action. Francis wrote "the world in which we live is collapsing and may be nearing the breaking point." The solution, he points out, is the "abandonment of fossil fuels." It's also worth noting in this weekend of expanding violence in the Israel, Gaza, and the Middle East that the same leaders — like Guterres and Francis — calling for peace are calling for an unequivocal end to fossil fuels. No war, no warming, indeed.
But the real question is whether leaders like Biden will hear and heed this call to action.
Francis' short letter makes it clear that courage is not saying what should be done, and leaving it to others to do it — like Biden's net zero by 2050 pledges. Nor is it in saying that you cannot do more because there are material constraints — in Biden's case he usually blames the Republican congress, or lawsuits from red state AGs as the reasons why he "must" continue expanding fossil fuel extraction, consumption and export. Courage, according to the head of Biden's faith, is listening to the voice of angry protesters and responding to their call to act more boldly and move more swiftly toward a peaceful, sustainable future.
Sign the petition if you agree: Pope Francis is right. We must stop burning fossil fuels.
Thanks,
Drew and the 198 methods to pray for peace and climate action crew
Header image of Pope Francis by Martin Schulz