(1) Soil desertification. For wheat and grapes to grow, they need fertile soil. Desertification is a process that robs land of its ability to sustain traditional crops. One might view desertification as a threat to the celebration of Mass in areas hard-hit by desertification, either directly (e.g., being unable to cultivate crops) or indirectly (e.g., by increasing the price of bread and wine through scarcity.
That’s the fault of the land,not of the Eucharist.
How can something be “the land’s” fault? Soil arability is a function of its ability to maintain sufficient nutritional content to support life. Human activities can cause soil degradation. The balance of productive to degraded soil has been shifting toward degradation in recent years.
Here’s the US Geological Survey’s
page on it.
Nothing is “the Eucharist’s fault,” but if humans raise the crops needed to produce bread and wine in a manner that harms the soil’s long-term viability, it’s Catholics that are the ones that can change it!
(2) Pesticides. Bread and wine are produced from two plants that have undergone large-scale conversion to the use of pesticides. The bread and wine have been converted into using drugs? Well,as long as they revert to Catholicism and are cleansed of their impurities,it’s alright.
Grapes and wheat are produced in many areas using artificial pesticides. And whether they’re really “cleansed of impurities” is a good question. I know of
one 2003 study that found that children who consumed organic diets had significantly lower levels of pesticides in their urine. From the abstract:*
“The dose estimates suggest that consumption of organic fruits, vegetables, and juice can reduce children’s exposure levels from above to below the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s current guidelines, thereby shifting exposures from a range of uncertain risk to a range of negligible risk.”*
I’d think that ensuring that the “accidents” of bread and wine are free from impurities would be a way of showing our respect.
As part of our celebration, shouldn’t we think more about the means by which the bread and wine are produced?
No,let’s leave that to the producers.
That only takes place in communist economies. In market economies, consumers can demand that the goods the purchase meet their criteria.
(3) Others, including air pollution from long-range transport.
Think of it as holy smoke.
Sadly, an asthmatic friend of mine has asthma attacks when the closest thing we have to “holy smoke” (incense) is used during Mass!
I hate to be a complete downer, but air pollution kills people, produces breathing problems, accelerates athersclerosis, and is just generally bad for you.