CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (LifeSiteNews) â Pope Leo XIV celebrated the newly composed âMass for the Care of Creationâ today, marking the first use of the liturgical texts he approved a few weeks ago.
With just a small congregation gathered in the gardens of Castel Gandolfo this morning, Pope Leo offered the votive Mass âfor the care of creation.â
Leo was joined by a similarly small selection of prelates, including Archbishop Vittorio Viola who is secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship â the Vatican office chiefly responsible for the Mass texts.
Also present was Archbishop John Joseph Kennedy, the head of the disciplinary section at the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Announced on June 30, the text of the Mass was unveiled via press conference on July 3. It has been added to the Masses âpro variis necessitatibus vel ad diversa,â or votive Masses, of the Roman Missal.
Approved by Pope Leo on June 8, the text of the Mass is understood to have been in the workings for some time under Pope Francis, and was due to be promulgated to coincide with the ten-year anniversary of Francisâ climate change oriented encyclical, Laudato Siâ.
Citing the encyclical, a decree promulgating the new Mass texts stated that it was âconsidered appropriateâ by the Dicastery for Divine Worship to institute the new Mass formulary since âit is evident that the work of creation is seriously threatened because of the irresponsible use and abuse of the goods God has endowed to our care (cf. Laudato siâ n. 2).â
Presenting the texts last week, Cardinal Michael Czerny â prefect of the Dicastery for the Promotion of Integral Human Development, which has oversight over climate issues â revealed that the new formulary came âin response to requests suggested by Laudato siâ.â He stated that, for âthe past decadesâ the Church has âcontinually affirmed the âmutual responsibility between human beings and natureâ (LS 67),â and asked that the new Mass prayers might âhelp us to learn how to careâ for creation which âis always already present in the Catholic liturgy.â
The texts themselves are less inflammatory than had been expected, especially given the often strident climate-focussed language used under Pope Francis:
The location of todayâs Mass was significant, given that it took place in the papal gardens given over to the âBorgo Laudato Siâ center at Castel Gandolfo, born out of the encyclical and with the aim to promote the textâs ideals.
The garden, said Leo today, âis intended, according to Pope Francisâ intuition, to be âa laboratoryâ in which to live that harmony with creation which is healing and reconciliation for us, developing new and effective ways of caring for the nature entrusted to us. To you, who are committed to this project, I therefore assure you of my prayers and encouragement.â
Delivering a homily â comprised of a prepared text and initial off-the-cuff comments â Leo said that Francisâ writings are still relevant today: âIn a world that is burning, both from global warming and from armed conflicts, which make Pope Francisâ message in his encyclicals Laudato siâ and Fratelli tutti so relevant today.â
âOnly a contemplative gaze can change our relationship with created things and bring us out of the ecological crisis caused by the breakdown of our relationships with God, with our neighbors, and with the earth, as a result of sin,â he added, referencing Laudato Siâ.
Leo also highlighted the need of âconversionâ for those who do not yet prioritize âthe urgency of caring for our common home,â saying:
At the beginning of Mass, we prayed for conversion, our conversion. I would like to add that we must pray for the conversion of many people, inside and outside the Church, who still do not recognize the urgency of caring for our common home.
Many natural disasters that we still see in the world, almost every day in many places, in many countries, are also partly caused by the excesses of human beings, with their lifestyle. Therefore, we must ask ourselves whether or not we ourselves are experiencing that conversion: how much we need it!
The Popeâs comments are notable today for two reasons: firstly, that he decided to give off-the-cuff remarks prior to his prepared homily, which is not yet something he has done, but also because of the severity of language he used to refer to climate change issues, namely âa world that is burning ⌠from global warming.â
In previous climate related messages â such as his message for the upcoming world day of prayer for the care of creation â Leo has struck a different tone to Francis, urging a Catholic style of ordered care for creation while shying away from Francisâ often hyperbolic phraseology regarding alleged climate change.
After many years of climate alarmism rhetoric from the late pontiff, in 2022 the Vatican officially joined the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Paris Climate Agreement. Francis defended the controversial move, saying that âshe [âMother Earthâ] weeps and implores us to put an end to our abuses and to her destruction.â
Such notable continued promotion of the Paris Agreement, which underpins the majority of the current âclimate changeâ agenda, came despite the agreementâs fundamentally pro-abortion principles which connect to the stated U.N. goal of creating a universal ârightâ to abortion in line with Goal No. 5.6 of the organizationâs Sustainable Development Goals.
Leoâs early foray into the topic of climate issues as Pope has so far suggested he will strike a gentler tone, though todayâs Mass presents an alternative reference point for the future.
News Source : https://www.lifesitenews.com/analysis/pope-leo-xiv-warns-world-is-burning-from-global-warming-at-first-care-of-creation-mass/