Bishop_Nulty_Kandle

Ireland: Homily of Bishop Denis Nulty for Launch of Season of Creation 2019

‘The Season of Creation is a very timely reminder that the clock is ticking’

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share this Entry

Bishop Denis Nulty of Kildare and Leighlin in Ireland preached the homily below on Sunday, September 1, 2019, at the Church of the Most Holy Rosary, Tullow, in the Diocese of Kildare and Leighlin at a Mass to mark the launch of the Season of Creation 2019. After the Mass Bishop Nulty planted a mountain ash tree in the grounds of the Cairdeas Centre near the church.

Creation Time or the Season of Creation is marked from September 1 to October 4 each year throughout the Christian world. It celebrates the joy of creation as well as encouraging awareness-raising initiatives to protect the natural environment. The Season of Creation has a special significance for the Catholic Church, particularly since Pope Francis established September 1 as an annual World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation.

“The Season of Creation is a very timely reminder that the clock is ticking,” Bishop Nulty said. “Recycling is no longer an optional habit; it is the very basic and nothing more. Illegal dumping needs to be exposed and uncovered. Incorrect recycling needs to be corrected, what goes where and into which bin. If we are consuming too much; we are also wasting too much.”

********

Introduction
We gather in Tullow this Sunday morning, conscious that this is a time of new beginnings for many. In recent days little ones began school for the first time. Many more return or have already returned to schools and colleges, an end to the Summer season and of course the beginning hopefully of a fine spell of weather!

Speaking of weather today is also an important day in the Church calendar as we begin the Season of Creation (from 1 September until the Feast of St. Francis of Assisi on 4 October). Pope Francis asks all of us to embrace this season in prayer, in living more sustainably and in raising our voices in the public sphere. We are invited to think more deeply about what is happening at present to the Earth, the environmental destruction which now threatens our world, our common home.

Returning to the new beginnings this September month and this Season of Creation offers, I think of the late John O’Donoghue’s poem: ‘For a New Beginning’:

“awaken your spirit to adventure

hold nothing back, learn to find ease in risk

soon you will be home in a new rhythm

for your soul senses the world that awaits you”

We celebrate this awaiting world, this world of new beginnings aware of the God who accompanies all of us at all stages and in all seasons.

Homily
In today’s Gospel, marking the beginning of this Season of Creation, Jesus uses the image of a Great Banquet to explain God’s vision for our world. It is a world where entitlements and privileges are reversed, where those who consider themselves entitled to the highest seats at the table take the lowest seats. It’s an upheaval of traditional social etiquette norms.

The poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind[1] are those who suffer most because we fill our seas with plastic; because we pollute our air with toxins; because we eradicate indigenous populations in the name of so-called progress and development. The theme for this year’s Season of Creation is “The Web of Life”. The most vulnerable among us suffer most deeply as the web of life begins to unravel.

Mention in the Hebrews reading to “a blazing fire or a gloom turning to total darkness[2]brought me to the Rain Forest Fires in the Amazon, where one-fifth of the planet’s oxygen is produced; that accounts for every fifth breath we take. Once again we won’t immediately choke in the western world or the developed world, but the poor, the crippled, the lame will. Our faith calls us to respond to this crisis with urgency. Let us hear the Gospel message today where we are called to consider those on the margins, this includes those most at risk from climate breakdown, and let us commit to working towards a world where all are equally seated and valued at the one banquet table.

I think when someone as eminent as David Attenborough starts to warn that the collapse of our civilizations and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon, it’s long after time for us to sit up and listen. Pope Francis speaks about an “ecological conversion[3]or we face the fact that much of the earth will be uninhabitable for humans in 100 years’ time. I read recently if every family in the world consumed the same as the average Irish family consumes today, we would need 3.3 planets to supply our needs. This is simply unsustainable. The idea of infinite or unlimited growth while attractive perhaps to economists and financiers is based on the premise that there is an infinite supply of the earth’s goods and as Pope Francis said: “This leads to the planet being squeezed dry beyond every limit[4].

A year ago a UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said we had twelve years to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius or we are in serious trouble. Remember the snow we had Easter last year? And in 2016 when floodwater embankments on the River Shannon at Athlone and on the River Lee in Cork were breached? 1.5 degrees may seem pretty insignificant around Ardattin, Grange or Tullow, but the effect on the glaciers in the North Pole is already profound. Where will the waters flow when those glaciers thaw? Around the world, it is always the poorest who are contributing the least to global warming but who are suffering the most.

The Season of Creation is a very timely reminder that the clock is ticking. Recycling is no longer an optional habit; it is the very basic and nothing more. Illegal dumping needs to be exposed and uncovered. Incorrect recycling needs to be corrected, what goes where and into which bin. If we are consuming too much; we are also wasting too much. Luke’s gospel speaks of “a wedding feast[5], too many plates return to hotel kitchens uneaten or at best half-eaten: “I’m too full”, “I’ve lost my appetite”, “I’m not hungry” – well there is someone not far from that banquet room would relish that dinner, that meal.

We will at the end of Mass plant a Mountain Ash to represent the commencement of this great season. I will be assisted by Eileen, Jim & Joe from Cairdeas; Tim from the Parish Pastoral Council and Ben one of your JPII award candidates, who traveled recently with us to Lourdes. I also warmly welcome Jane Mellet representing Trócaire who keep climate change issues at the core of their development outreach and of course our own Julie Kavanagh from Faith Development Services in the diocese. The Mountain Ash, also known as the Rowan Tree is a native tree to this region. It is distinct for its red berries that come in the autumn. I pray this tree and its berries will be a constant reminder to all of us in these parts to do our bit to care together for our common home.

I conclude with one of the many newly composed ‘Prayers for the Environment’, posted to me in recent weeks for entry into our Kildare & Leighlin Ploughing Championships competition where the winning prayers will be announced during the course of those three days in Fenagh. This one written by Tom O’Hara from County Sligo is simply entitled: ‘Dear God” …

“Dear God

To the melting ice cap

Make us pay heed,

And to the great polar bear

Who is in dire need,

Make us study our actions

And what wrath they may bring,

As we begin our deliberations

With the onset of spring.

Make us look to the sky

Over-burdened with cloud,

And listen to the clamor

Growing ever so loud.

And take note of the flooding

That knocks people about,

While other folks sadly

Are dying of drought.

And for all the distractions

Which are causing dismay,

Make us ever-more conscious

With each passing day.

Amen”.

[1] Lk. 14:13

[2] Heb. 12:18

[3] Laudato Si, §5, 2015

[4] ibid, §106

[5] Lk. 14:8

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share this Entry

ZENIT Staff

Support ZENIT

If you liked this article, support ZENIT now with a donation