{"id":16649,"date":"2016-10-27T09:31:00","date_gmt":"2016-10-27T09:31:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/news\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do-52061\/"},"modified":"2017-07-17T10:31:00","modified_gmt":"2017-07-17T10:31:00","slug":"kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/","title":{"rendered":"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what&#8217;s a Catholic to do?"},"content":{"rendered":"<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<html><head><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><\/head><body><p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/images\/Child_Credit_Unsplash_CNA.jpg\"><\/p>\n<p>Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (<a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">CNA<\/a>).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child.<\/p>\n<p>She wanted a big family, but he\u2019s a philosopher who studies climate change with the <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.bioethicsinstitute.org\/\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Berman Institute of Bioethics<\/a><\/strong> at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided.<\/p>\n<p>In his college classes, Rieder <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.npr.org\/2016\/08\/18\/479349760\/should-we-be-having-kids-in-the-age-of-climate-change?utm_source=facebook.com&amp;utm_medium=social&amp;utm_campaign=npr&amp;utm_term=nprnews&amp;utm_content=20160818\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">asks his students<\/a><\/strong> to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis?<\/p>\n<p>Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase \u2013 and that if the earth\u2019s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous.<\/p>\n<p>The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality.<\/p>\n<p>But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Penalizing parents<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p>In his book \u201cToward a Small Family Ethic,\u201d Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe.<\/p>\n<p>They suggest a \u201ccarrots for the poor, sticks for the rich\u201d population control policy, which they insist is not like China\u2019s harsh one-child policy.<\/p>\n<p>For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of \u201cchild tax,\u201d which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,\u201d Rieder told NPR. \u201cWe as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new.<\/p>\n<p>Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons \u2013 overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa \u2013 and now, global warming and climate change.<\/p>\n<p>And while the idea isn\u2019t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Should Catholics limit their family size?<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p>Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe proposals (on limited family size)\u2026need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,\u201d Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA.<\/p>\n<p>Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/news\/who-you-gonna-call-on-murky-moral-issues-catholic-bioethicists-64732\/\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">answer the moral bioethical dilemmas<\/a><\/strong> that Catholics face in the modern world.<\/p>\n<p>What\u2019s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,\u201d she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, \u201cit frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.\u201d \u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice \u201cunlimited procreation.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe Catholic Church has never held \u2013 and has many times denied \u2013 that responsible parenthood means \u2018unlimited procreation\u2019 or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said.<\/p>\n<p>But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cCatholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,\u201d he said. \u00a0<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhy? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.\u201d \u00a0<\/p>\n<p>\u201c(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time\u2026But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems.<\/p>\n<p>Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a \u201cchild tax\u201d might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy.<\/p>\n<p>Hilliard agreed.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,\u201d Hilliard said.<\/p>\n<p>Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted.<\/p>\n<p>\u201c(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,\u201d Brugger said.<\/p>\n<p>All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. \u00a0<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>It\u2019s not people, it\u2019s your lifestyle<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p>William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island's Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/catholicecology.net\/\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">catholicecology.net<\/a><\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p>The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a \u201cfalse choice.\u201d The problem isn\u2019t numbers of people \u2013 it\u2019s the amount each person is consuming.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe <strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.epa.gov\/smm\/advancing-sustainable-materials-management-facts-and-figures\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">US Environmental Protection Agency reports<\/a><\/strong> that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons\u2014and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,\u201d he wrote in a blog post about the topic.<\/p>\n<p>There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,\u201d Patenaude told CNA.<\/p>\n<p>Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis\u2019 pontificate. While <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/news\/the-green-pope-isnt-who-you-think-it-is-30552\/\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">not the first Pope<\/a><\/strong> to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders.<\/p>\n<p>In May 2015, Pope Francis published \u201cLaudato Si,\u201d the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation.<\/p>\n<p>In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth \u201cnow cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for \u201cour common home\u201d and to work toward a better human ecology. \u00a0<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIt seems that voices that urge fewer children aren\u2019t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are \u2013 or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,\u201d Patenaude said.<\/p>\n<p>Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don\u2019t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cOn the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life \u2013 collectively and individually \u2013 is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change.<\/p>\n<p>Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is \u201cimperative\u201d to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAs for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,\u201d he told CNA.<\/p>\n<p>What is needed is a true \u201cecological conversion,\u201d like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. \u00a0<\/p>\n<p>\u201c(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><em>This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div class=\"feedflare\">\n<a href=\"http:\/\/feeds.feedburner.com\/~ff\/catholicnewsagency\/dailynews?a=nQgD-Vinwk8:QYa9snTZqQs:yIl2AUoC8zA\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/feeds.feedburner.com\/~ff\/catholicnewsagency\/dailynews?d=yIl2AUoC8zA\" border=\"0\"><\/a>\n<\/div>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/feeds.feedburner.com\/~r\/catholicnewsagency\/dailynews\/~4\/nQgD-Vinwk8\" height=\"1\" width=\"1\" alt=\"\"><\/p>\n<\/body><\/html>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/images\/Child_Credit_Unsplash_CNA.jpg\"><\/p>\n<p>Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (<a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/\" target=\"_self\">CNA<\/a>).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child.<\/p>\n<p>She wanted a big family, but he&rsquo;s a philosopher who studies climate change with the <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.bioethicsinstitute.org\/\">Berman Institute of Bioethics<\/a><\/strong> at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided.<\/p>\n<p>In his college classes, Rieder <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.npr.org\/2016\/08\/18\/479349760\/should-we-be-having-kids-in-the-age-of-climate-change?utm_source=facebook.com&amp;utm_medium=social&amp;utm_campaign=npr&amp;utm_term=nprnews&amp;utm_content=20160818\">asks his students<\/a><\/strong> to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis?<\/p>\n<p>Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase &#8211; and that if the earth&rsquo;s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous.<\/p>\n<p>The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality.<\/p>\n<p>But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Penalizing parents<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p>In his book &ldquo;Toward a Small Family Ethic,&rdquo; Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe.<\/p>\n<p>They suggest a &ldquo;carrots for the poor, sticks for the rich&rdquo; population control policy, which they insist is not like China&rsquo;s harsh one-child policy.<\/p>\n<p>For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of &ldquo;child tax,&rdquo; which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,&rdquo; Rieder told NPR. &ldquo;We as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new.<\/p>\n<p>Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons &ndash; overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa &ndash; and now, global warming and climate change.<\/p>\n<p>And while the idea isn&rsquo;t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>Should Catholics limit their family size?<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p>Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;The proposals (on limited family size)&#8230;need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,&rdquo; Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA.<\/p>\n<p>Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/news\/who-you-gonna-call-on-murky-moral-issues-catholic-bioethicists-64732\/\">answer the moral bioethical dilemmas<\/a><\/strong> that Catholics face in the modern world.<\/p>\n<p>What&rsquo;s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,&rdquo; she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, &ldquo;it frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.&rdquo; &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice &ldquo;unlimited procreation.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;The Catholic Church has never held &ndash; and has many times denied &ndash; that responsible parenthood means &lsquo;unlimited procreation&rsquo; or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,&rdquo; he said.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;It does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said.<\/p>\n<p>But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;Catholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,&rdquo; he said. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;Why? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.&rdquo; &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time&#8230;But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,&rdquo; he said.<\/p>\n<p>And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems.<\/p>\n<p>Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a &ldquo;child tax&rdquo; might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy.<\/p>\n<p>Hilliard agreed.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,&rdquo; Hilliard said.<\/p>\n<p>Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,&rdquo; Brugger said.<\/p>\n<p>All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em><strong>It&rsquo;s not people, it&rsquo;s your lifestyle<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p>William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island&#8217;s Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/catholicecology.net\/\">catholicecology.net<\/a><\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p>The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a &ldquo;false choice.&rdquo; The problem isn&rsquo;t numbers of people &ndash; it&rsquo;s the amount each person is consuming.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;The <strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.epa.gov\/smm\/advancing-sustainable-materials-management-facts-and-figures\">US Environmental Protection Agency reports<\/a><\/strong> that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons&mdash;and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,&rdquo; he wrote in a blog post about the topic.<\/p>\n<p>There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;We can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,&rdquo; Patenaude told CNA.<\/p>\n<p>Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis&rsquo; pontificate. While <strong><a href=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/news\/the-green-pope-isnt-who-you-think-it-is-30552\/\">not the first Pope<\/a><\/strong> to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders.<\/p>\n<p>In May 2015, Pope Francis published &ldquo;Laudato Si,&rdquo; the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation.<\/p>\n<p>In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth &ldquo;now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for &ldquo;our common home&rdquo; and to work toward a better human ecology. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;It seems that voices that urge fewer children aren&rsquo;t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are &ndash; or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,&rdquo; Patenaude said.<\/p>\n<p>Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;The good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don&rsquo;t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,&rdquo; he said.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;On the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life &ndash; collectively and individually &ndash; is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change.<\/p>\n<p>Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is &ldquo;imperative&rdquo; to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families.<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;As for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,&rdquo; he told CNA.<\/p>\n<p>What is needed is a true &ldquo;ecological conversion,&rdquo; like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. &nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&ldquo;(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<div>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/feeds.feedburner.com\/~ff\/catholicnewsagency\/dailynews?a=nQgD-Vinwk8:QYa9snTZqQs:yIl2AUoC8zA\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/feeds.feedburner.com\/~ff\/catholicnewsagency\/dailynews?d=yIl2AUoC8zA\" border=\"0\"><\/a>\n<\/div>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/feeds.feedburner.com\/~r\/catholicnewsagency\/dailynews\/~4\/nQgD-Vinwk8\" height=\"1\" width=\"1\" alt=\"\"><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1031,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-16649","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-us"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what&#039;s a Catholic to do?<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (CNA).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child. She wanted a big family, but he&rsquo;s a philosopher who studies climate change with the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided. In his college classes, Rieder asks his students to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis? Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase - and that if the earth&rsquo;s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous. The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality. But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.Penalizing parents In his book &ldquo;Toward a Small Family Ethic,&rdquo; Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe. They suggest a &ldquo;carrots for the poor, sticks for the rich&rdquo; population control policy, which they insist is not like China&rsquo;s harsh one-child policy. For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of &ldquo;child tax,&rdquo; which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child. &ldquo;(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,&rdquo; Rieder told NPR. &ldquo;We as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.&rdquo; While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new. Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons &ndash; overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa &ndash; and now, global warming and climate change. And while the idea isn&rsquo;t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.Should Catholics limit their family size? Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person. &ldquo;The proposals (on limited family size)...need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,&rdquo; Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA. Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to answer the moral bioethical dilemmas that Catholics face in the modern world. What&rsquo;s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said. &ldquo;(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,&rdquo; she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, &ldquo;it frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.&rdquo; &nbsp; Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice &ldquo;unlimited procreation.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Catholic Church has never held &ndash; and has many times denied &ndash; that responsible parenthood means &lsquo;unlimited procreation&rsquo; or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.&rdquo; Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said. But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching. &ldquo;Catholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,&rdquo; he said. &nbsp; &ldquo;Why? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.&rdquo; &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time...But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,&rdquo; he said. And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems. Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a &ldquo;child tax&rdquo; might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy. Hilliard agreed. &ldquo;(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,&rdquo; Hilliard said. Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted. &ldquo;(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,&rdquo; Brugger said. All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s not people, it&rsquo;s your lifestyle William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island&#039;s Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at catholicecology.net. The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a &ldquo;false choice.&rdquo; The problem isn&rsquo;t numbers of people &ndash; it&rsquo;s the amount each person is consuming. &ldquo;The US Environmental Protection Agency reports that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons&mdash;and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,&rdquo; he wrote in a blog post about the topic. There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population. &ldquo;We can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,&rdquo; Patenaude told CNA. Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis&rsquo; pontificate. While not the first Pope to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders. In May 2015, Pope Francis published &ldquo;Laudato Si,&rdquo; the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation. In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth &ldquo;now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.&rdquo; But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for &ldquo;our common home&rdquo; and to work toward a better human ecology. &nbsp; &ldquo;It seems that voices that urge fewer children aren&rsquo;t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are &ndash; or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,&rdquo; Patenaude said. Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said. &ldquo;The good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don&rsquo;t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life &ndash; collectively and individually &ndash; is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.&rdquo; Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change. Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is &ldquo;imperative&rdquo; to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families. &ldquo;As for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,&rdquo; he told CNA. What is needed is a true &ldquo;ecological conversion,&rdquo; like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.&rdquo; &nbsp;This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016. &nbsp;\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what&#039;s a Catholic to do?\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (CNA).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child. She wanted a big family, but he&rsquo;s a philosopher who studies climate change with the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided. In his college classes, Rieder asks his students to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis? Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase - and that if the earth&rsquo;s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous. The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality. But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.Penalizing parents In his book &ldquo;Toward a Small Family Ethic,&rdquo; Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe. They suggest a &ldquo;carrots for the poor, sticks for the rich&rdquo; population control policy, which they insist is not like China&rsquo;s harsh one-child policy. For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of &ldquo;child tax,&rdquo; which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child. &ldquo;(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,&rdquo; Rieder told NPR. &ldquo;We as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.&rdquo; While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new. Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons &ndash; overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa &ndash; and now, global warming and climate change. And while the idea isn&rsquo;t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.Should Catholics limit their family size? Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person. &ldquo;The proposals (on limited family size)...need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,&rdquo; Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA. Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to answer the moral bioethical dilemmas that Catholics face in the modern world. What&rsquo;s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said. &ldquo;(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,&rdquo; she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, &ldquo;it frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.&rdquo; &nbsp; Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice &ldquo;unlimited procreation.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Catholic Church has never held &ndash; and has many times denied &ndash; that responsible parenthood means &lsquo;unlimited procreation&rsquo; or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.&rdquo; Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said. But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching. &ldquo;Catholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,&rdquo; he said. &nbsp; &ldquo;Why? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.&rdquo; &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time...But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,&rdquo; he said. And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems. Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a &ldquo;child tax&rdquo; might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy. Hilliard agreed. &ldquo;(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,&rdquo; Hilliard said. Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted. &ldquo;(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,&rdquo; Brugger said. All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s not people, it&rsquo;s your lifestyle William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island&#039;s Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at catholicecology.net. The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a &ldquo;false choice.&rdquo; The problem isn&rsquo;t numbers of people &ndash; it&rsquo;s the amount each person is consuming. &ldquo;The US Environmental Protection Agency reports that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons&mdash;and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,&rdquo; he wrote in a blog post about the topic. There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population. &ldquo;We can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,&rdquo; Patenaude told CNA. Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis&rsquo; pontificate. While not the first Pope to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders. In May 2015, Pope Francis published &ldquo;Laudato Si,&rdquo; the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation. In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth &ldquo;now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.&rdquo; But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for &ldquo;our common home&rdquo; and to work toward a better human ecology. &nbsp; &ldquo;It seems that voices that urge fewer children aren&rsquo;t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are &ndash; or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,&rdquo; Patenaude said. Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said. &ldquo;The good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don&rsquo;t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life &ndash; collectively and individually &ndash; is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.&rdquo; Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change. Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is &ldquo;imperative&rdquo; to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families. &ldquo;As for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,&rdquo; he told CNA. What is needed is a true &ldquo;ecological conversion,&rdquo; like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.&rdquo; &nbsp;This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016. &nbsp;\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Catholic News\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2016-10-27T09:31:00+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2017-07-17T10:31:00+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/images\/Child_Credit_Unsplash_CNA.jpg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"CNA Daily News\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Written by\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"CNA Daily News\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"10 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/\",\"name\":\"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what's a Catholic to do?\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#website\"},\"datePublished\":\"2016-10-27T09:31:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2017-07-17T10:31:00+00:00\",\"author\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#\/schema\/person\/35d4bd7addc580050842c844a11575f1\"},\"description\":\"Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (CNA).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child. She wanted a big family, but he&rsquo;s a philosopher who studies climate change with the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided. In his college classes, Rieder asks his students to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis? Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase - and that if the earth&rsquo;s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous. The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality. But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.Penalizing parents In his book &ldquo;Toward a Small Family Ethic,&rdquo; Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe. They suggest a &ldquo;carrots for the poor, sticks for the rich&rdquo; population control policy, which they insist is not like China&rsquo;s harsh one-child policy. For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of &ldquo;child tax,&rdquo; which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child. &ldquo;(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,&rdquo; Rieder told NPR. &ldquo;We as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.&rdquo; While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new. Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons &ndash; overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa &ndash; and now, global warming and climate change. And while the idea isn&rsquo;t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.Should Catholics limit their family size? Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person. &ldquo;The proposals (on limited family size)...need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,&rdquo; Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA. Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to answer the moral bioethical dilemmas that Catholics face in the modern world. What&rsquo;s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said. &ldquo;(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,&rdquo; she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, &ldquo;it frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.&rdquo; &nbsp; Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice &ldquo;unlimited procreation.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Catholic Church has never held &ndash; and has many times denied &ndash; that responsible parenthood means &lsquo;unlimited procreation&rsquo; or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.&rdquo; Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said. But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching. &ldquo;Catholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,&rdquo; he said. &nbsp; &ldquo;Why? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.&rdquo; &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time...But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,&rdquo; he said. And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems. Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a &ldquo;child tax&rdquo; might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy. Hilliard agreed. &ldquo;(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,&rdquo; Hilliard said. Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted. &ldquo;(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,&rdquo; Brugger said. All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s not people, it&rsquo;s your lifestyle William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island's Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at catholicecology.net. The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a &ldquo;false choice.&rdquo; The problem isn&rsquo;t numbers of people &ndash; it&rsquo;s the amount each person is consuming. &ldquo;The US Environmental Protection Agency reports that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons&mdash;and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,&rdquo; he wrote in a blog post about the topic. There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population. &ldquo;We can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,&rdquo; Patenaude told CNA. Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis&rsquo; pontificate. While not the first Pope to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders. In May 2015, Pope Francis published &ldquo;Laudato Si,&rdquo; the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation. In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth &ldquo;now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.&rdquo; But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for &ldquo;our common home&rdquo; and to work toward a better human ecology. &nbsp; &ldquo;It seems that voices that urge fewer children aren&rsquo;t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are &ndash; or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,&rdquo; Patenaude said. Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said. &ldquo;The good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don&rsquo;t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life &ndash; collectively and individually &ndash; is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.&rdquo; Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change. Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is &ldquo;imperative&rdquo; to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families. &ldquo;As for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,&rdquo; he told CNA. What is needed is a true &ldquo;ecological conversion,&rdquo; like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.&rdquo; &nbsp;This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016. &nbsp;\",\"breadcrumb\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/#breadcrumb\"},\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"ReadAction\",\"target\":[\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"BreadcrumbList\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/#breadcrumb\",\"itemListElement\":[{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":1,\"name\":\"Home\",\"item\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/\"},{\"@type\":\"ListItem\",\"position\":2,\"name\":\"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what&#8217;s a Catholic to do?\"}]},{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/\",\"name\":\"Catholic News\",\"description\":\"\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":\"required name=search_term_string\"}],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\"},{\"@type\":\"Person\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#\/schema\/person\/35d4bd7addc580050842c844a11575f1\",\"name\":\"CNA Daily News\",\"image\":{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#\/schema\/person\/image\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/8f1180c7dca7995d4a997aac72a3a88a?s=96&d=mm&r=g\",\"contentUrl\":\"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/8f1180c7dca7995d4a997aac72a3a88a?s=96&d=mm&r=g\",\"caption\":\"CNA Daily News\"},\"sameAs\":[\"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/\"],\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/author\/cna-daily-news\/\"}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what's a Catholic to do?","description":"Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (CNA).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child. She wanted a big family, but he&rsquo;s a philosopher who studies climate change with the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided. In his college classes, Rieder asks his students to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis? Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase - and that if the earth&rsquo;s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous. The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality. But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.Penalizing parents In his book &ldquo;Toward a Small Family Ethic,&rdquo; Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe. They suggest a &ldquo;carrots for the poor, sticks for the rich&rdquo; population control policy, which they insist is not like China&rsquo;s harsh one-child policy. For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of &ldquo;child tax,&rdquo; which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child. &ldquo;(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,&rdquo; Rieder told NPR. &ldquo;We as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.&rdquo; While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new. Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons &ndash; overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa &ndash; and now, global warming and climate change. And while the idea isn&rsquo;t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.Should Catholics limit their family size? Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person. &ldquo;The proposals (on limited family size)...need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,&rdquo; Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA. Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to answer the moral bioethical dilemmas that Catholics face in the modern world. What&rsquo;s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said. &ldquo;(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,&rdquo; she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, &ldquo;it frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.&rdquo; &nbsp; Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice &ldquo;unlimited procreation.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Catholic Church has never held &ndash; and has many times denied &ndash; that responsible parenthood means &lsquo;unlimited procreation&rsquo; or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.&rdquo; Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said. But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching. &ldquo;Catholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,&rdquo; he said. &nbsp; &ldquo;Why? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.&rdquo; &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time...But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,&rdquo; he said. And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems. Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a &ldquo;child tax&rdquo; might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy. Hilliard agreed. &ldquo;(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,&rdquo; Hilliard said. Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted. &ldquo;(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,&rdquo; Brugger said. All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s not people, it&rsquo;s your lifestyle William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island's Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at catholicecology.net. The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a &ldquo;false choice.&rdquo; The problem isn&rsquo;t numbers of people &ndash; it&rsquo;s the amount each person is consuming. &ldquo;The US Environmental Protection Agency reports that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons&mdash;and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,&rdquo; he wrote in a blog post about the topic. There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population. &ldquo;We can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,&rdquo; Patenaude told CNA. Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis&rsquo; pontificate. While not the first Pope to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders. In May 2015, Pope Francis published &ldquo;Laudato Si,&rdquo; the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation. In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth &ldquo;now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.&rdquo; But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for &ldquo;our common home&rdquo; and to work toward a better human ecology. &nbsp; &ldquo;It seems that voices that urge fewer children aren&rsquo;t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are &ndash; or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,&rdquo; Patenaude said. Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said. &ldquo;The good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don&rsquo;t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life &ndash; collectively and individually &ndash; is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.&rdquo; Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change. Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is &ldquo;imperative&rdquo; to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families. &ldquo;As for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,&rdquo; he told CNA. What is needed is a true &ldquo;ecological conversion,&rdquo; like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.&rdquo; &nbsp;This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016. &nbsp;","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what's a Catholic to do?","og_description":"Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (CNA).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child. She wanted a big family, but he&rsquo;s a philosopher who studies climate change with the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided. In his college classes, Rieder asks his students to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis? Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase - and that if the earth&rsquo;s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous. The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality. But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.Penalizing parents In his book &ldquo;Toward a Small Family Ethic,&rdquo; Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe. They suggest a &ldquo;carrots for the poor, sticks for the rich&rdquo; population control policy, which they insist is not like China&rsquo;s harsh one-child policy. For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of &ldquo;child tax,&rdquo; which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child. &ldquo;(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,&rdquo; Rieder told NPR. &ldquo;We as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.&rdquo; While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new. Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons &ndash; overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa &ndash; and now, global warming and climate change. And while the idea isn&rsquo;t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.Should Catholics limit their family size? Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person. &ldquo;The proposals (on limited family size)...need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,&rdquo; Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA. Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to answer the moral bioethical dilemmas that Catholics face in the modern world. What&rsquo;s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said. &ldquo;(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,&rdquo; she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, &ldquo;it frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.&rdquo; &nbsp; Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice &ldquo;unlimited procreation.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Catholic Church has never held &ndash; and has many times denied &ndash; that responsible parenthood means &lsquo;unlimited procreation&rsquo; or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.&rdquo; Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said. But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching. &ldquo;Catholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,&rdquo; he said. &nbsp; &ldquo;Why? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.&rdquo; &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time...But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,&rdquo; he said. And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems. Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a &ldquo;child tax&rdquo; might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy. Hilliard agreed. &ldquo;(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,&rdquo; Hilliard said. Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted. &ldquo;(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,&rdquo; Brugger said. All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s not people, it&rsquo;s your lifestyle William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island's Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at catholicecology.net. The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a &ldquo;false choice.&rdquo; The problem isn&rsquo;t numbers of people &ndash; it&rsquo;s the amount each person is consuming. &ldquo;The US Environmental Protection Agency reports that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons&mdash;and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,&rdquo; he wrote in a blog post about the topic. There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population. &ldquo;We can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,&rdquo; Patenaude told CNA. Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis&rsquo; pontificate. While not the first Pope to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders. In May 2015, Pope Francis published &ldquo;Laudato Si,&rdquo; the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation. In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth &ldquo;now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.&rdquo; But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for &ldquo;our common home&rdquo; and to work toward a better human ecology. &nbsp; &ldquo;It seems that voices that urge fewer children aren&rsquo;t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are &ndash; or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,&rdquo; Patenaude said. Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said. &ldquo;The good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don&rsquo;t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life &ndash; collectively and individually &ndash; is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.&rdquo; Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change. Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is &ldquo;imperative&rdquo; to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families. &ldquo;As for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,&rdquo; he told CNA. What is needed is a true &ldquo;ecological conversion,&rdquo; like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.&rdquo; &nbsp;This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016. &nbsp;","og_url":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/","og_site_name":"Catholic News","article_published_time":"2016-10-27T09:31:00+00:00","article_modified_time":"2017-07-17T10:31:00+00:00","og_image":[{"url":"http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/images\/Child_Credit_Unsplash_CNA.jpg"}],"author":"CNA Daily News","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_misc":{"Written by":"CNA Daily News","Est. reading time":"10 minutes"},"schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/","url":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/","name":"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what's a Catholic to do?","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#website"},"datePublished":"2016-10-27T09:31:00+00:00","dateModified":"2017-07-17T10:31:00+00:00","author":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#\/schema\/person\/35d4bd7addc580050842c844a11575f1"},"description":"Washington D.C., Jul 17, 2017 \/ 04:31 am (CNA).- Travis Rieder and his wife Sadiye have one child. She wanted a big family, but he&rsquo;s a philosopher who studies climate change with the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. One child of their own was all the world could environmentally afford, they decided. In his college classes, Rieder asks his students to consider how old their children will be by 2036, when he expects dangerous climate change to be a reality. Do they want to raise a family in the midst of that crisis? Many scientists concur that the earth is currently in a warming phase - and that if the earth&rsquo;s average temperatures rise by more than 2 degrees Celsius, the effects would be disastrous. The 2015 Paris Agreement, signed by nearly 200 countries within the United Nations, aims to address just that. Signatory countries agreed to work to keep the global temperature from increasing by two degrees through lowering their greenhouse gas emissions, and to work together on adapting to the effects of climate change that are already a reality. But reproductive solutions, such as the ones proposed by Rieder, are wildly controversial for the ethical and moral questions they raise.Penalizing parents In his book &ldquo;Toward a Small Family Ethic,&rdquo; Rieder and two of his peers advocate for limited family size because of what they believe is an impending climate change catastrophe. They suggest a &ldquo;carrots for the poor, sticks for the rich&rdquo; population control policy, which they insist is not like China&rsquo;s harsh one-child policy. For poor developing nations, they suggest paying women to fill their birth control and widespread media campaigns about smaller families and family planning. For wealthier nations, they suggest a type of &ldquo;child tax,&rdquo; which would penalize new parents with a progressive tax based on income that would increase with each new child. &ldquo;(C)hildren, in a kind of cold way of looking at it, are an externality,&rdquo; Rieder told NPR. &ldquo;We as parents, we as family members, we get the good. And the world, the community, pays the cost.&rdquo; While it might sound strange, the idea that climate change and overpopulation morally necessitate couples to limit their family size (or to have no children at all) is not new. Since the 1960s, some scientists have been advocating for smaller families for various reasons &ndash; overpopulation, climate cooling, the development of Africa &ndash; and now, global warming and climate change. And while the idea isn&rsquo;t new, neither are the moral and ethical concerns associated with asking parents to limit their family size for the sake of the planet.Should Catholics limit their family size? Ultimately, Catholics ethicists said, while environmental concerns can certainly factor into lifestyle choices, those who would ask people to completely forego children simply due to their carbon footprint are approaching the topic from the wrong perspective, not realizing the immeasurable worth and dignity of every human person. &ldquo;The proposals (on limited family size)...need to be assessed with a perspective as to the very nature of the human person, marital relationships, and society,&rdquo; Dr. Marie T. Hilliard told CNA. Hilliard serves as the director of bioethics and public policy at The National Catholic Bioethics Center (NCBC), a center designed specifically to answer the moral bioethical dilemmas that Catholics face in the modern world. What&rsquo;s problematic about the policies proposed by Rieder and other scientists is that they ask married couples to frustrate one of the purposes of their sexuality, Hilliard said. &ldquo;(T)he procreative end of marriage must be respective. Couples cannot enter into a valid marriage with the intent of frustrating that critical end, and one of the purposes of marriage,&rdquo; she said. If couples are not open to the possibility of a child, &ldquo;it frustrates at least one of the two critical ends of marriage: procreation and the wellbeing of the spouses.&rdquo; &nbsp; Dr. Christian Brugger is a Catholic moral theologian and professor with St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. He clarified that while the Church asks couples to be open to life, it does not ask that they practice &ldquo;unlimited procreation.&rdquo; &ldquo;The Catholic Church has never held &ndash; and has many times denied &ndash; that responsible parenthood means &lsquo;unlimited procreation&rsquo; or the encouragement of blind leaps into the grave responsibilities of child raising,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It does mean respecting marriage, respecting the moral principles in the transmission of human life, respecting developing human life from conception to natural death, and promoting and defending a social order manifestly dedicated to the common good.&rdquo; Considering the common good can include considering the environment, as well as a host of other factors that pertain to the flourishing of the human person, when couples are considering parenting another child, Brugger said. But he cautioned Catholics against the moral conclusions of scientists whose views on life and human sexuality differ greatly from Church teaching. &ldquo;Catholics should not make decisions about family size based upon the urgings of these activists,&rdquo; he said. &nbsp; &ldquo;Why? Because they hold radically different values about human life, marriage, sex, procreation, and family, and therefore their moral conclusions about the transmission of human life are untrustworthy.&rdquo; &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)opulation scare-mongering has been going on in a globally organized fashion for 70 years. The issues that population activists use to promote their anti-natalist agendas change over time...But the urgent conclusion is always the same: the world needs less people; couples should stop having children,&rdquo; he said. And many worry that legislated policies encouraging and rewarding smaller families could open up a host of ethical and moral problems. Rebecca Kukla of Georgetown University told NPR that she worries about the stigma such policies would unleash on larger families. She also worried that while a &ldquo;child tax&rdquo; might not be high enough to be considered coercive, it would be unfair, and would favor the wealthy. Hilliard agreed. &ldquo;(A) carte blanche imperative to limit family size can lead us to the dangers the (NPR article) cites, as discrimination and bias and government mandates can, and have, ensued,&rdquo; Hilliard said. Women in particular would bear the brunt of the resulting stigmas of such policies, Brugger noted. &ldquo;(W)omen will and already do suffer the greatest burden from this type of social coercion. Women have always been the guardians of the transmission of human life. They share both the godlike privilege of bearing life within them and the most weighty burdens of that privilege. Anti-natalist demagoguery is always anti-woman, always,&rdquo; Brugger said. All things considered, the Catholic Church would never take away the right and responsibility of parents to determine their family size by supporting a policy that would ask families to limit their size because of climate change, he said. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s not people, it&rsquo;s your lifestyle William Patenaude is a Catholic ecologist, engineer and longtime employee with Rhode Island's Department of Environmental Management. He frequently blogs about ecology from a Catholic perspective at catholicecology.net. The idea that we must choose between the planet or people, he told CNA, is a &ldquo;false choice.&rdquo; The problem isn&rsquo;t numbers of people &ndash; it&rsquo;s the amount each person is consuming. &ldquo;The US Environmental Protection Agency reports that in 1960 the United States produced some 88 million tons of municipal waste. In 2010 that number climbed to just under 250 million tons&mdash;and it may have been higher had a recession not slowed consumption. This jump reflects an almost 184 percent increase in what Americans throw out even though our population increased by only 60 percent,&rdquo; he wrote in a blog post about the topic. There is a similar trend in carbon emissions, which increase at a faster rate than the population. &ldquo;We can infer from this that individuals (especially in places like the USA) are consuming and wasting more today than we ever have, which gets to what Pope Francis has been telling us about lifestyles, which is consistent with his predecessors,&rdquo; Patenaude told CNA. Climate change has been one of the primary concerns of Pope Francis&rsquo; pontificate. While not the first Pope to address such issues, his persistence in addressing the environment has brought a new awareness of the urgency of the issue to other Church leaders. In May 2015, Pope Francis published &ldquo;Laudato Si,&rdquo; the first encyclical devoted primarily to care for creation. In it, the Holy Father wrote that the earth &ldquo;now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will.&rdquo; But never does the Pope ask families to have fewer children. Instead, he urges Catholics to address pollution and climate change, to make simple lifestyle changes that better care for &ldquo;our common home&rdquo; and to work toward a better human ecology. &nbsp; &ldquo;It seems that voices that urge fewer children aren&rsquo;t interested in new and temperate lifestyles. In fact, they are implicitly demanding that modern consumption levels be allowed to stay as they are &ndash; or even to rise. This seems selfish and gluttonous, and not at all grounded in a concern for life, nature, or the common good,&rdquo; Patenaude said. Furthermore, the good of any individual person outweighs the damage of their potential carbon footprint, he said. &ldquo;The good and dignity and worth of every human person is superseded by nothing else on this planet. If we don&rsquo;t affirm that first, we can never hope to be good stewards of creation, because we will never really be able to appreciate all life,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;On the other hand, one way to affirm the dignity of human life &ndash; collectively and individually &ndash; is to care for creation. Because as I noted earlier, creation is our physical life-support system, and so to authentically care for it is to care for human life.&rdquo; Dan Misleh is the executive director of Catholic Climate Covenant, which was formed in 2006 by the United States Catholic Bishops in order to help implement Church social teaching regarding climate change. Misleh agreed that while reducing the consumption of fossil fuels is &ldquo;imperative&rdquo; to reducing negative effects of climate change like droughts and rising sea levels, that does not mean mandated population engineering and smaller families. &ldquo;As for population, places like the U.S., Japan and many European countries have both high carbon emissions and relatively low population growth and birth rates. So there is not a direct correlation between low-birth rates and fewer emissions. In fact, the opposite often seems to be true: countries with the highest birthrates are often the poorest countries with very low per-capita emissions,&rdquo; he told CNA. What is needed is a true &ldquo;ecological conversion,&rdquo; like Pope Francis called for in Laudato Si, Misleh said. &nbsp; &ldquo;(P)erhaps we Catholics need to view a commitment to a simple lifestyle not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to live more in keeping with the biblical mandate to both care for and cultivate the earth, to spend more time on relationships than accumulating things, and to step back to appreciate the good things we have rather than all the things we desire.&rdquo; &nbsp;This article was originally published on CNA Oct. 27, 2016. &nbsp;","breadcrumb":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/#breadcrumb"},"inLanguage":"en-US","potentialAction":[{"@type":"ReadAction","target":["https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/"]}]},{"@type":"BreadcrumbList","@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/2016\/10\/kids-in-a-time-of-climate-change-whats-a-catholic-to-do\/#breadcrumb","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"Home","item":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"name":"Kids in a time of climate change &ndash; what&#8217;s a Catholic to do?"}]},{"@type":"WebSite","@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#website","url":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/","name":"Catholic News","description":"","potentialAction":[{"@type":"SearchAction","target":{"@type":"EntryPoint","urlTemplate":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/?s={search_term_string}"},"query-input":"required name=search_term_string"}],"inLanguage":"en-US"},{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#\/schema\/person\/35d4bd7addc580050842c844a11575f1","name":"CNA Daily News","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","inLanguage":"en-US","@id":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/#\/schema\/person\/image\/","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/8f1180c7dca7995d4a997aac72a3a88a?s=96&d=mm&r=g","contentUrl":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/8f1180c7dca7995d4a997aac72a3a88a?s=96&d=mm&r=g","caption":"CNA Daily News"},"sameAs":["http:\/\/www.catholicnewsagency.com\/"],"url":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/author\/cna-daily-news\/"}]}},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16649","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1031"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=16649"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16649\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=16649"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=16649"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/catholicnews\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=16649"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}