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"The Environment and Poverty: Legal Dimensions and Moral Responsibility" by the
V. Rev. Archimandrite Panteleimon P. Lampadarios
Patriarchal Vicar of Alexandria |
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Your
Eminence, Beloved
brothers and sisters in Christ,
It
is an honour to address all the honourable members of the Seminar Halki
98 and to present you the sacred blessings and paternal greetings
of His Beatitude Petros VII, Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria and All
Africa. God, who is all good, wished to give existence
to non-beings, in accordance with the prototype existing in Him, in order
that He might constitute other entities capable of sharing His goodness.
The actualisation and realisation of this plan whether it is regarded
as existing eternally or only before time in His
mind, was effected by the Creation of heaven and earth and all they contain.
His All-mightiness in conjunction with His Love and His Divine Will brought
into existence the world. Therefore the reason and the cause of the existence
of the world lies in God Himself. The Creation of the world was a work of great
wisdom and might and proceeded forth from the hands of the All-Wise and
Almighty God. Since the world is Gods work, each of the Persons
in the Godhead had His own share in it: God the Father is the Primary
Cause, God the Son, the Effective Cause, and God the Holy Ghost, the Perfecting
Cause. Creation, according to Orthodox teaching, was the result of Gods
free act of love, and that He created it from nothing. God who freely created the world had an object
or aim in view. This end which God had in view (the causa finalis)
constitutes at the same time the efficient cause (causa impulsiva)
of Creation. The content of this aim and purpose of Gods Creation
is the happiness of all rational creatures, and the final end, the glory
of God. The heavens declare the glory of God (Psalm 19,1). Since the world is the result of Gods
overflowing goodness and bounty, it is impossible that He should have
abandoned it after having brought it into being. Gods Providence
(?nuiiea) is shown in two ways: in His oversight and preservation
of His Creation (ooio?ncoeo), and in His governance and guidance
of it (eoaYnicoeo). Both lead to the highest end which is mans
salvation and the glory of God. Man, being created in the (Gen. 1:26) of
God is called to imitate God in the preservation of his own world, his
own environment. Man was created with all the physical and spiritual endowments
necessary for the fulfilment of Gods Plan. Mans acts are not
pre-determined by God. Moral evil in mans will,
is an inherent possibility due to the freedom of mans will, and
physical evil is a consequence of it. The original state of man was in perfect
harmony within a threefold relationship with himself, with nature
and with God. Unfortunately, because of sin, man did not remain in this
state of original righteousness, but desisted from it, and with him fell
the whole human race and his whole environment around him. Thus man became
poor, not only within himself, since he deprived himself of Gods
Divine Grace, but also amongst his own environment, his own world, which
suffers with him till today. For we know that the whole creation
groans and travails in pain together until now (Rom. 8:22). The
estrangement from God so darkened mans understanding as to entail
a loss of wisdom and knowledge. As a result man was unable to discern
and practise what is good, well pleasing, and perfect before God. Transgression
of the Divine Law and Will involved some consequences, which may be regarded
as natural and positive. The former includes the inevitable consequence
in the natural order; the latter belongs to the ethical and moral. Man, as the king of all creation, should
find ways, based on moral laws, to protect his environment. This constitutes
the appointed method and means of exploiting nature, which secures an
acceptable relation between man with his own environment. For several
reasons mans true environment must be protected by the laws made
by man, because in such a way it will enable him to attain the genuine
and conscious personal communion with nature, created by God, so that
man can live in a surrounding of beauty and goodness. The environment,
in its pure form, brings the infinite man into a liberal relationship
with nature, his fellow man and finally with God, the Creator. The whole man, his mental and physical abilities,
have preordained purposes. Man learns to know about his environment, progressively,
and should be taught to respect, govern and protect it. Man becomes the
determinative centre of his own environment, his world, because he constitutes
the appointed connecting link between the visible and invisible world.
Furthermore, man is the corner-stone between himself and his Creator,
which is the means by which human life is ordered in relation to human
destiny. Human environment, therefore, affords the standpoint and interpretative
principles by which our ideal of life should be developed, and furnishes
both the sanction and the determinative particulars of human obligations. The protection of the earths environment
can never be an exclusively individual affair, but must be considered
by all mankind, so that it can fulfil its function in a global manner.
The progress of man towards his appointed destiny; that is, towards his
full enjoyment of the communion with God, for which he is made, has been
disturbed by the changes of his natural and spiritual environment conditions,
or the crises in the historical development surrounding him. Nature is a gift from God to man, and the
validity of moral judgement concerning the protection of human environment
ultimately depends upon the divine source of the moral sense. Unfortunately,
this sense, like other human faculties, has been abused by man himself
with the result, that nature is constantly suffering the consequences
of this misuse. Man, who is gifted with rational freedom,
is responsible for his actions. On the other hand, the purpose for which
God has made us determines mans chief end. Its fulfilment constitutes
the directive principle of human righteousness. Our righteousness is therefore
determined in quality by the righteousness of God and, in a controlling
purpose, by the goal which God wills us to attain. When man separates his legal responsibilities
from morality, then he brings a misinterpretation of his valid obligations.
These obligations, have on the one hand exclusively earthly reference
and on the other hand reference to mans future and divine destiny.
When man does not respect his own environment, then he converts life into
a half-played drama, the plot of which is arrested before it is fully
developed. The outcome changes of the ideal of human character into an
unfinished portrait. Moral responsibilities towards nature must be viewed
in their ultimate meaning and purpose, as well as in their value and practical
result. Each Government in every country around the
world, as representatives, must determine in its own legal constitutions
the ways and means by which the protection of its own environment and
natural sources can be secured. No Government has any right to permit
the destruction of nature purely for material wealth and greed. The creation
of nuclear weapons and the experimentation of nuclear power, for example
is, in reality, the peak of mans desire for infinite power. Many environmental organisations have complained
and bravely fought against such act of unrighteousness towards nature.
Many governments still, willingly and blindly prefer to disregard the
consequences of their actions against the global environment. They remain
in the darkness of their personal greed and ignore the fact that they
live under the shadow of death. It is not yet too late to redress the wrongs
caused by man s actions against nature. Mankind has seen, during
this century, the catastrophic results caused by the destruction of nature.
Mankind can become rich again only if he respects his environment. We hear the childrens voices; we see
the tears in their eyes; let us not remain only in the presentation of
good speeches and the projection of well prepared documentaries. Mankind
can avoid natural poverty and restore the richness of his environment.
This the essential moral responsibility which should reign in mans
heart, for God has placed man on earth to have dominion over
the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the air, and over the cattle,
and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon
the earth (Gen. 1:26). The acknowledgement that the Will of God determines the legal dimensions and the moral responsibilities of man towards his environment, and that the practice of such responsibilities are involved in fulfilling Gods Divine Will, should lead to the general and world recognition of such responsibility by all mankind. |
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