Matthew Plese #fundie #wingnut #forced-birth fatima.org
In recent decades, concern for the environment has increasingly taken on the character of a moral crusade. “Environmentalism” is often presented not merely as prudent care for nature, but as a quasi-religious ideology with its own dogmas, sins, and rites of atonement. In many of its modern forms, this movement subtly displaces God, elevates creation above man, and reduces human dignity to a liability rather than a gift.
The Catholic Church, however, has always taught a far older, deeper, and more coherent doctrine regarding man’s relationship to the created world. Authentic Catholic stewardship of creation stands in clear contrast to secular environmentalism, precisely because it places God at the center, man in his proper place, and creation in ordered service to both.
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This truth immediately distinguishes Catholic teaching from modern environmental ideologies that treat the earth as a self-sustaining organism, a sacred entity, or an ultimate moral reference point. Such views subtly revive ancient paganism, replacing the Creator with the created.
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Modern environmentalism frequently inverts the moral order. Instead of creation serving man for the glory of God, man is portrayed as a parasite or threat to the planet. Human fertility is treated as a problem, economic development as a crime, and technological progress as inherently suspect.
This inversion leads to grave moral errors. Policies justified “for the planet” increasingly promote contraception, sterilization, abortion, and even euthanasia – evils long condemned by the Church. In such systems, human life becomes expendable in service of an abstract ecological ideal.
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Environmentalism, when severed from God, becomes another modern idol – one that often masks hostility toward man himself. Catholic stewardship, by contrast, restores right order: God as Creator, man as steward, creation as servant to divine glory and human flourishing.