Ecofriendly Catholics

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I saw a thread about this already and I’m curious about something. I believe it is right to help the enviroment and be green whenever possible, but a concern then pops up. Being ecofriendly has to do with population control in one aspect. How can Catholics combine this with their faith when the Church is against immoral things like contraception, abortion and euthansia?
Any thoughts…:confused:
 
I don’t think being ecofriendly has to do with population control. It’s just that some people in the world use up too many resources, and others don’t have access to basic resources like water.
I think the focus should be on taking care of God’s creation and being stewards… not population control. I care a lot about the environment and I don’t think overpopulation is the problem,
 
I am a very eco-friendly Catholic! I love God’s beautiful planet. I think that population is not so much a problem as poor Stewardship, like the above poster stated. We can all do our small part, such as recycling, lowering consumption (in all arenas of life), cloth diapering, cutting down on road trips, etc… you don’t have to do all of these things in concert, but all efforts are meaningful.

I think that we, as a society, need to rethink ourselves and what is important in life. Having the biggest house, flashiest car, or the ‘most toys’, is so deeply ingrained that most of us don’t even realize these subconscious desires. Even if we don’t think we strive for these things, we might do it in small ways… the better job, not so that we can better care for our family, but so that we can ‘upgrade’ the TV… less hours at home, not to spend more time with the kids, but to get the next model car up.

I am not saying that ‘everyone’ fits the example from above, but I believe that in some small way we have all been ‘sold’ on the bigger, supposedly better lifestyle.

sigh. It’s an ideology problem, not a population control problem.
 
I am a very eco-friendly Catholic! I love God’s beautiful planet. I think that population is not so much a problem as poor Stewardship, like the above poster stated. We can all do our small part, such as recycling, lowering consumption (in all arenas of life), cloth diapering, cutting down on road trips, etc… you don’t have to do all of these things in concert, but all efforts are meaningful.

I think that we, as a society, need to rethink ourselves and what is important in life. Having the biggest house, flashiest car, or the ‘most toys’, is so deeply ingrained that most of us don’t even realize these subconscious desires. Even if we don’t think we strive for these things, we might do it in small ways… the better job, not so that we can better care for our family, but so that we can ‘upgrade’ the TV… less hours at home, not to spend more time with the kids, but to get the next model car up.

I am not saying that ‘everyone’ fits the example from above, but I believe that in some small way we have all been ‘sold’ on the bigger, supposedly better lifestyle.

sigh. It’s an ideology problem, not a population control problem.
Please watch this video. Everyone needs a dose of real reality:

numbersusa.com/content/resources/video/educational/immigration-world-poverty-and-gumballs-updated-2010.html?jid=716659&lid=9&rid=7407&tid=233801

God bless,
jd
 
I wasn’t speaking about immigration… while his example made a lot of sense, and I somewhat agree, I don’t think this is very relevant to what the OP was asking about.

And maybe I took this the wrong way, but are you implying that my reality and thoughts are not ‘real’ reality?

sorry… hope I didn’t step on any toes :-/
 
I have to say, I like Roy Beck’s perspectives and the fact that he stresses the devastating impacts of hostile attitudes towards immigrants. Policy does need to be changed, I agree, but being xenophobic and cruel is not the answer.
 
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