Vatican announces Laudato Si’ anniversary year

21 May 2020

By The Record

Colourful wildflowers frame the peak of Byron Glacier near Girwood, Alaska, in this file photo. The Vatican announced on 16 May 2020 that it would commemorate the fifth anniversary of Pope Francis’ encyclical on the environment with a yearlong series of initiatives dedicated to the safeguarding and care for the earth. Photo: Sam Lucero/The Compass.

By Junno Arocho Esteves

The Vatican has last weekend announced that it will commemorate the fifth anniversary of Pope Francis’ encyclical on the environment with a yearlong series of initiatives dedicated to the safeguarding and care for the Earth.

In a statement released by the Vatican press office on 16 May, the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development announced a “Special Laudato Si’ Anniversary Year” from 24 May 2020 to 24 May 2021, which will emphasise “ecological conversion in action”.

As the world continues to deal with the coronavirus pandemic, the dicastery said, the encyclical’s message is “just as prophetic today as it was in 2015”.

“Truly, COVID-19 has made clear how deeply we are all interconnected and interdependent. As we begin to envision a post-COVID world, we need above all an integral approach as everything is closely interrelated and today’s problems call for a vision capable of taking into account every aspect of the global crisis,” the statement added.

This is the prayer card the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development published to mark the fifth anniversary (24 May) of Pope Francis’ encyclical “Laudato Si’ on Care for Our Common Home”. Photo: Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development/CNS.

Among the events set to take place throughout the year are prayer services and webinars dedicated to environmental care, education and the economy.

The dicastery also detailed the rollout of a “seven-year journey toward integral ecology” for families, dioceses, schools, universities, hospitals, businesses, farms and religious orders.

The Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development said that amid the current pandemic, Laudato Si’ can “indeed provide the moral and spiritual compass for the journey to create a more caring, fraternal, peaceful and sustainable world”.

“We have, in fact, a unique opportunity to transform the present groaning and travail into the birth pangs of a new way of living together, bonded together in love, compassion and solidarity and a more harmonious relationship with the natural world, our common home,” the dicastery’s statement said.

“As Pope Francis reminds us,” it continued, “‘all of us can cooperate as instruments of God for the care of creation, each according to his or her own culture, experience, involvements and talents’.”

Recalling the fifth anniversary of his encyclical after reciting the Regina Coeli prayer 17 May, Pope Francis expressed his hope that the message of Laudato Si’ will encourage people to take upon themselves the shared responsibility of caring for the Earth.

“In these times of pandemic, in which we are more aware of the importance of caring for our common home, I hope that all our common reflection and commitment will help to create and strengthen constructive behaviours for the care of creation,” the Vicar of Christ said.