
Free. Open to all. Register in advance here

Colette Joyce is the Justice and Peace Co-ordinator for the Diocese of Westminster. From 9-15 August this summer, she joined the YCCN Relay from London to Oxford, walking for Climate Justice as part of a larger pilgrimage from the G7 in Cornwall to COP26 in Glasgow.
‘Come, ye thankful people, come’ – I have always loved a good harvest festival. This time of year always brings back memories from my Essex childhood of ecumenical services in village churches, displays of pumpkins, apples, fruit, vegetables, tins and packets of every kind, and always, in the middle, a wheatsheaf baked out of bread. And afterwards everything was always distributed to those in need – the children’s home, the residential care home, refugee families. Christians in the UK have long celebrated the produce of the earth in autumn and practiced the tradition of sharing it out.
Since 2015 Pope Francis has called Catholics to join other Christians worldwide in widening their gaze still further at this time of year. From 1st September to 4th October we are invited to celebrate the Season of Creation, a time that includes many of the elements familiar to the tradition of harvest festivals but can now be shared universally across all countries and cultures, each with their own unique patterns of fruitfulness. While still giving gratitude for the great bounty of the earth, what we are being called to celebrate now is the very gift of Creation itself, every plant, tree, animal, insect, bird, fish, river, ocean, mountain and plain.
‘The Earth is the Lord’s and everything on it,’ (Ps 24:1) says the Psalmist. Our Scriptures tell us that we are stewards of creation, receiving a gift from the hand of God that we hold only in trust for our time on earth. No matter how much we might want to build bigger barns to store away more and more of this gift for ourselves, we can take nothing with us when we die, but will be judged instead on what we leave for the next generation.
Sadly, our earth is in danger so the Season of Creation calls forth from us a new urgency to understand and cherish the eco-systems of our world, that we might also know how to protect it. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Report on 7th August 2021 stated unequivocally that, “Human-induced climate change is already affecting many weather and climate extremes in every region across the globe,” (A3) and, “Global surface temperature will continue to increase until at least the mid-century under all emissions scenarios considered. Global warming of 1.5°C and 2°C will be exceeded during the 21st century unless deep reductions in CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions occur in the coming decades.” (B1)
However, this is also the year when governments and businesses have the opportunity to unite and address these challenges at the COP26 UN Climate Change meeting in Glasgow, 1st-12th November. The actions of millions of people of faith, whether through advocacy, prayer or personal lifestyle changes, will be instrumental in helping the best collective decisions to be made.
This Season of Creation, let us strive to be part of the solution, not the problem, so that future generations, too, will be able to ‘Raise the song of harvest home.’
LINKS
Young Christian Climate Network – www.yccn.uk/
IPPC Report – www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/downloads/report/IPCC_AR6_WGI_SPM.pdf
Westminster Justice and Peace – https://westminsterjusticeandpeace.org/season-of-creation-1st-september-4th-october/

Lord Deben
The Rt Hon Lord Deben (John Selwyn Gummer), will be speaking on Catholicism, COP 26 and the Climate this Monday, 6 September, at Holy Apostles Parish, Winchester Street, Pimlico, London SW1V 4LY. A former MP, now member of the House of Lords, Lord Deben is Chairman of the UK’s independent Committee on Climate Change.
The talk begins at 7.15pm. Admission Free. All welcome.

Fr Richard Nesbitt, Parish Priest, Our Lady of Fatima, White City. Source: Independent Catholic News
Artist Martin Jarvis has installed his very powerful ‘The Crucified Planet’ artwork onto the large wooden cross outside our parish of Our Lady of Fatima in White City, and also written a wonderful reflection on it which I have put on the front of this weekend’s newsletter. In the photo, Martin is on the right and I am beside him.
Pope Francis invited the Church around the world to celebrate September 1st as a special Care for Creation Day of Prayer. And then to mark the time from this date up until October 4th, the feast day of St Francis of Assisi, as a ‘Season of Creation’ when we reflect on and put into action Pope Francis’ call in his encyclical letter, Laudato Si’ that we “hear and respond to the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor.” The new piece of artwork will help us with this.
Here the artist, Martin Jarvis, explains the ideas behind this powerful image:
“The intention of this installation is to awaken us to the reality of climate change and environmental injustice for which we are responsible both personally and through the systems we use. I see that we humans have become lost and detached from the interconnectedness of everything. We need to understand that Jesus is the Universal Christ who inhabits all of creation, all matter and all space and time. When we realise this, the whole world becomes sacred and we feel the pain of all the terrible things we are doing to our beautiful planet and home and its inhabitants who are our kin (not just the two-legged ones). Like St Francis and Pope Francis we can, and need to, see them as sisters and brothers. We live in the ‘Kin-dom of God.’
As we see Christ in the whole planet we see that we are crucifying Him again by our ignorance and callous disregard for the interconnectedness of all creation. Many, in our western society in particular, have been asleep to the looming climate crisis and because of all the instant gratification and distraction offered by consumerism and the accelerated pace of life, have become lost and detached from the slower rhythms of nature. Therefore, we have been called to wake up, return and reconnect. These are perhaps more accessible words than repentance and healing for those who do not share our faith. My hope is that this is a piece of art which will speak to everyone in the local community.
Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato Si’, in which he addresses all these issues, has been a great inspiration to many people, Catholic and non-Catholic. Many see the mess but don’t know what to do about it. We all must do what we can in our own lives to address this crisis, but many of our problems stem from the destructive systems we humans have come to rely on, and it is those systems that must change if we are to survive. That is largely the responsibility of governments and businesses. We have to challenge them in whatever way we can to do the right thing. We must be prepared for change which will demand sacrifice.
Originally this installation was conceived as a Lenten project in a different parish. The Lord has shown a different time and place for this project and I am glad to be doing this for Fr Richard and the parish of Our Lady of Fatima and its neighbourhood here in White City, especially in this time leading up to the COP 26 UN Climate Change Conference in November in Glasgow. I hope that this powerful image will give you food for thought and prayer as well as challenge you to act and to play your part in caring for our common home, our beautiful planet Earth.”
LINK
Our Lady of Fatima’s, White City – www.ourladyoffatima.org.uk/

Welcome to the Season of Creation!
Amidst all our current difficulties and the challenges that face us at the start of this new academic year, we hope you will be able to take some time to celebrate and enjoy the wonderous gift to us that is God’s creation – our planet, all its treasures, plants, animals, each other and life itself…
This month’s newsletter includes links to resources and events that we hope will be helpful during this Season, as well as the usual Diary Dates for many other justice activities in the coming term.

The trustees of the London Churches Refugee Fund stand in solidarity with the children, women and men of Afghanistan in their deep trouble.
To those who have managed to escape to Britain, far from home, families and lives broken, struggling to survive in an unfamiliar world: we welcome you, praying that you meet with love and compassion from the British people. We pray also for the families and friends left behind, hungry and afraid, and facing a terrifying future and the threat of violent death. Our hearts go out to them.
Now more than ever all refugees need our help, material assistance and prayers. LCRF recognises that all the refugee charities we support in London will have an additional burden to bear as a result of this unfolding human tragedy. They will stand in ever greater need of our twice-yearly grants to help support those destitute asylum seekers who access their services. And we, in our turn, pledge to do all we can to help them.

Source: Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales
The Chair of the Bishops’ Conference Department of International Affairs has urged Catholics to pray for the people of Afghanistan, while pointing to the work of humanitarian organisations, and efforts to welcome refugees, as signs of hope.
Bishop Declan Lang said:
“As Christians, we are called to be people of hope, even when a situation may appear hopeless.
Today our hope can be placed in those who are working tirelessly for dialogue, justice, and peace in their country.
Our hope can be placed in the humanitarian organisations that are continuing to offer their assistance, and the efforts to welcome and protect refugees fleeing their homes.
Above all we place our hope in the Lord Jesus Christ, to whom we pray in the knowledge that he will never abandon the people of Afghanistan.”
After the Angelus on Wednesday Pope Francis called for dialogue in the country:
“I ask all of you to pray with me to the God of peace so that the clamour of weapons might cease and solutions can be found at the table of dialogue. Only thus can the battered population of that country – men, women, elderly and children – return to their own homes, and live in peace and security, in total mutual respect.”

Homily given by Bishop Nicholas Hudson at the Mass to celebrate the 104th birthday of St Oscar Romero in St George’s Cathedral, Southwark, today, Saturday 14 August.
That image we all know so well of St Oscar with blood streaming from his nose and ears is of a man transfigured, transfigured by justice. Of course, he’d seen it coming: “In El Salvador, the sky has turned red,” he had said. “Putting ourselves on the side of the poor is going to mean a lot of bloodshed.” That was on the Feast of the Transfiguration in 1977, some two and a half years before he himself made the supreme sacrifice.
THE SAME ROAD AS RUTILIO
He’d already said to Fr Cesar Jerez, Jesuit Provincial, as they visited Rome together, “When I saw Rutilio dead, I thought, if they killed him for what he was doing, it’s my job to go down that same road.” This testimony of Jerez I find particularly moving, coming as it does just months after Rutilio’s death. “Monsenor, you’ve changed,” Jerez told him as they walked along. “Everything about you has changed. What’s happened?”
The Archbishop halted and was silent: “I ask myself that same question when I’m in prayer,” he said. “It’s just that we all have our roots, you know,’ he went on. “I was born into a poor family, I’ve suffered hunger … When I went to seminary (in Rome) … I started to forget where I came from. I started creating another world … they made me bishop’s Secretary in San Miguel … then they sent me to Santiago de Maria, and I ran into extreme poverty again. Those children were dying just because of the water they were drinking, those campesinos killing themselves in the harvests … And what happened to Fr Grande … You know how much I admired him. When I saw Rutilio dead, I thought, if they killed him for what he was doing, it’s my job to go down the same road … So, yes, I changed. But I also came back home again.”
COMING HOME TO CHRIST
The figure lying dead on the floor of the Hospitalito chapel two years later is indeed the figure of a man who has come home. He’s already being received into the place prepared for him by Christ since before the beginning of time; a man of the poor who allowed himself to be transfigured by the cry of the poorest for justice. It’s surely no coincidence that it was on the Feast of the Transfiguration every year that he made some of his most heartfelt pleas for justice as Archbishop of San Salvador because this is the Feast not only of Christ’s glorification but also the Patronal feast of El Salvador. As death loomed, he was clear that he would be dying not just for the Church but for the nation: “I offer God my blood for the redemption and resurrection of the people of El Salvador … for the liberation of my people,” he said just a few days before he died.
LISTEN TO HIM
The Christ of today’s Gospel reveals to his friends what his – Christ’s – homecoming will be like too; how he too will be totally transfigured, with clothes dazzling white, whiter than any bleacher could make them. While from the cloud a voice is heard; it is the voice of the Father, saying, ‘Listen to him’.
‘Listen to him’: this was a command which St Oscar amplified continually. The last year he would be alive to celebrate the Feast of the Transfiguration, he told the people, “our duty is to listen to him … listen to the voice of the Father.” He developed the point to say, “Every year the divine transfigured One comes to challenge this people with the words, ‘What have you done with my mystery? Am I not bringing about the transfiguration of this nation?'” The Pastoral Letters written for the Feast of the Transfiguration of 1977, ’78 and ’79 contain some of his most powerful appeals for the rulers of the nation to change. That they must allow themselves too to be transfigured by justice was his conviction and deepest yearning.
JUDGMENT, LIGHT, LISTENING, FOLLOWING, GLORY
So central is the Transfiguration story to our faith that it’s found in all three of the Synoptic Gospels. The sum of these accounts amounts to a significant number of elements. These different elements St Oscar uses to explain what is happening to the people: judgment, light, listening, following, clothing, glory.
Yes, judgment, as he explains in the most developed of his four Pastorals, the third Pastoral, for the Feast of the Transfiguration in 1978. There he explains that the words of Jesus, “Don’t tell anyone what you have seen until the Son of Man has risen from the dead”, indeed refer to judgment, to how the humbled shall be glorified and rise with the Son of Man while at the same time all creation witnesses the humiliation experienced by the Servant of Yahweh.
LIGHT
Judgment. And light. I wonder if you’ve ever noticed how often St Oscar speaks of light.
From the Transfiguration specifically he draws the image of the light radiating from Christ needing now to be carried by the Church to shine on the lives of all men and women across the nation. “The Church is a lamp that must shed light; and it must involve itself in concrete realities in order to enlighten those who are pilgrims on this earth,” he writes in 1978. The obligation to shine this light on concrete realities is something he takes to himself as early as November 1977 when he preaches a homily which condemns a new law allowing the detention of suspects for participation in a forbidden activity. He says, “in the light of God’s word, I … have the right and the duty to cast light on this event in our land”.
In another place he suggests that “the illumined face of Christ is like a pilgrim’s compass showing them they are on the right path.” I like the fact that he’s clear the light of Christ is a light needing to shine on Christians of every class and state of life – that no one should consider themselves exempt, in other words, not least the poor. Even the poor must scrutinise their lives in the light of the Gospel. For poverty isn’t just about lacking things, he says; it’s a call to be grateful, grateful for the little you have.
CLOTHED WITH CHRIST
And, of course, for those privileged with riches and status, walking in the light of Christ means sharing and influencing. Listening and then following, in other words. If all the followers of Christ would do this, he is saying, then they would reflect the light of the transfigured one. They would reflect Christ’s glory.
Because they will have put on Christ, as St Paul would put it. St Oscar says as much on the Feast of the Transfiguration in 1978: “Those who will one day be the holy people of the Most High … are a people close to Christ; we could almost say they are Christ’s clothing.”
But how to put on Christ exactly? By “denouncing every lie, every injustice, every sin,” he says. By being “the voice of the voiceless, and defender of the rights of the poor, a promoter of every just aspiration for liberation.” Clothing yourself in justice, in other words, he is saying. And these are words at which our own hearts should thrill as we seek to fathom this mystery for ourselves: that at its heart is a call for us to “(denounce) every lie, every injustice, every sin”; to be “the voice of the voiceless, and defender of the rights of the poor, a promoter of every just aspiration for liberation.”
DUAL PURPOSE
Of course, in showing himself transfigured, Jesus had a dual purpose. He wished to prepare his friends, so as to give them hope when they saw him suffer; he wished too to show how they would also be changed themselves. This dual purpose is confirmed, as we shall hear, by the Preface for the Feast, when it says, “he revealed his glory … (so) that the scandal of the Cross might be removed from the hearts of his disciples and that he might show how in the Body of the whole Church is to be fulfilled what so wonderfully shone forth first in its Head.” But the force of St Oscar’s reflection on Transfiguration is that the process of our own changing needs to begin in the here and now.
We heard St Oscar tell Fr Jerez he knew he had changed. What the Archbishop probably didn’t realise was just how much he’d changed, that he was transfigured already to some degree by justice. Fr Jon Sobrino gives us a touching glimpse of that transformation when he tells us, “in the cathedral (Romero) was transfigured …. By nature he was rather shy. But in the cathedral he was transfigured.”
POSSESSED BY GOD
Many, many years before, St Oscar had written, while writing his dissertation, “In recent days … the Lord has inspired in me a great desire for holiness. I’ve been thinking of how far a soul can ascend if it lets itself be possessed entirely by God.” Well, it was a long road – but one which would allow him to say, as journey’s end was at last coming into view, that martyrdom was a grace which he knew he didn’t merit but that, if God accepted the sacrifice of his life, his prayer would be that his death be offered for the liberation of his people and a testimony of hope in the future. He was saying, in other words, that, in spite of his fear, he accepted. He accepted that to “be possessed entirely by God” meant he too must take the same road now as Rutilio Grande, Alfonso Navarro, Octavio Ortiz, and so many other martyrs, to walk faithfully and humbly and in the footsteps of his Lord and theirs; and allow himself to be fully transfigured by justice. Would that we allowed ourselves to be possessed even a tenth as much!
Watch the Mass here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rznZwyiab8&t=708s
Read more about the Archbishop Romero Trust: www.romerotrust.org.uk/

Ecumenical Climate Prayer Service in the Lady Chapel, Westminster Cathedral, 6th August 2021
Source: Independent Catholic News
Chris Carling gave this reflection during the Young Christian Climate Network relay walkers service in Westminster Cathedral on Friday:
Daniel 3:57-81, 88-89
Song of the Three Young Men in the Furnace
That Canticle from Daniel sums up how God calls us to cooperate with creation to bless the Lord, to give glory and eternal praise to him. This is what God meant when in Genesis he gave dominion over the earth – not that we dominate or destroy the planet but that we care for creation, we till this earth.
However, humanity has sinned, we have turned away from God and we need conversion; ecological conversion. Like our constant spiritual conversion, this is a process not an event, it will last a lifetime. And it is always the work of the Holy Spirit.
In Romans 5:20 we are told ‘where sin increased, grace overflowed all the more’. Right now humanity’s sin against creation and against our creator is indeed increasing. The canticle proclaims ‘Ice and Snow, bless the Lord’ yet we are melting the ice caps and the glaciers retreat. ‘Seas and Rivers, bless the Lord’, yet we fill the waters with plastic. ‘Everything that grows on earth, bless the Lord’ and we cut down the rainforests. Our sin is increasing, but we do not despair because we are Christian and we have hope. We know that grace will overflow.
Grace is indeed already overflowing in this relay and in the YCCN. Young people filled with the Holy Spirit coming together at this ‘decade defining’ moment to share the call to care for creation. Already 300 miles in, they have touched hundreds of communities by their presence, and countless more by their prayer. Grace is overflowing.
That same grace is overflowing in the young Catholics represented here from CAFOD, CARITAS, Jesuit Missions and others. Knowing, like the YCCN, that climate change affects the world’s poorest, they are helping those most affected by the current crisis to take action. CAFOD are doing excellent work lobbying parliament: already 100 MPs have met with Catholic parishes and Christian groups through their ‘parliament in your parish’ initiative. They are also running key petitions to our Prime Minister and Chancellor. Jesuit Missions are taking practical action such as by supporting reforestation efforts by communities in Madagascar. The Holy Spirit is moving in these groups as they respond to the call for ecological conversion.
Our Pope, at 84 may not be young, but he is a wise prophet on this question. This man filled with the Holy Spirit is reaching millions. His encyclical, Laudato Si’ – Praise Be – a letter to the whole world, written six years ago, is becoming ever more relevant by the day. This Diocese of Westminster has heard his call and has just committed to seeking carbon neutrality by 2030. We know the Pope’s voice matters: at COP 21 his words moved nations and were key to the agreement there. We pray, his health permitting, he can come to Glasgow and move nations again.
Because this call to ecological conversion needs to spread. Thinking of our government, it is perhaps easy to despair; new oil fields being considered off the Shetlands, a second private jet for ministers. Yet there is hope, hope in this conference in Glasgow, hope that grace will overflow. Our government, our Prime Minister -married in this very chapel a few months ago- the delegates, we pray they are filled with the Holy Spirit at COP and hear the call to ecological conversion.
Conversion too is a theme on this great Feast of the Transfiguration. I resonate especially with St Peter who, on seeing our Lord transfigured ‘brilliantly white’ before him on the mountain turned to Jesus and said: ‘Rabbi … it is wonderful for us to be here; so let us make three tents, one for you, one for Moses, one for Elijah’. It seems he wanted to stay in the presence of our transfigured Lord.
It too is wonderful for us to see the Lord transfigured on this relay. To see him transfigured in each other, hope transfigured in young Christians responding to the call for ecological conversion. For those lucky enough to have taken this relay into the city or who will take it out again, it is wonderful to see our Lord transfigured in creation. I think of the beauty of Devon and Cornwall and the walkers who will cross the Pennines before eventually reaching the Northumberland Coast. It is indeed wonderful to be here with our transfigured Lord.
However like St Peter, we too must come down from the mountain. He went on to experience his own journey of conversion. Denying our Lord three times during the passion, before experiencing the grace and mercy of the resurrection. He lived his vocation taking the Gospel, the Good news, the message of conversion to the ends of his world, to Antioch and Rome.
As we come away from this relay, how will we respond to the call to spread the message of ecological conversion? How will we cooperate with creation to give glory and eternal praise to God? As humanity’s sin against creation and against our creator increases, how will grace overflow in us?
Chris Carling is a Communications Volunteer with Westminster Justice and Peace Commission. He has recently completed a European Social and Political Studies BA at University College London.
LINKS
Ecumenical Climate Service at Westminster Cathedral welcomes COP26 walkers
Young climate campaigners bring message to London on way to COP26

Source: Ellen Teague, Independent Catholic News
Members of the Young Christian Climate Network (YCCN), on pilgrimage from June’s G7 in Cornwall to November’s COP26 in Glasgow, had a great welcome from churches in and around London while passing through these past few days. Services and meetings at St Paul’s Cathedral – where they were greeted by Anglican Bishop John Sentamu – St John’s Waterloo, Lambeth Palace, Wesley’s Chapel, St Martin in the Fields and St James Piccadilly included a gathering for action, prayer, and reflection in Westminster Cathedral.
As around 100 people gathered in the piazza of Westminster Cathedral on Friday afternoon, waiting to go in, the line ups for photos demonstrated both Catholic and ecumenical support for the pilgrimage. Four Westminster Diocesan priests attended, including the current Chair of Westminster Justice and Peace, Fr Dominic Robinson SJ, and former one, Fr Joe Ryan. Alongside the YCCN banners there was Westminster Justice and Peace, CAFOD, Caritas, Pax Christi, Jesuit Mission, Columban JPIC, and ARocha. “What do we want? Climate justice!” echoed round Victoria.
When we walked down to the Lady Chapel we saw that the YCCN boat had been set up on the altar. The relay is accompanied along the whole route by this boat whose sail bears fabrics from climate threatened places – pointing to the hundreds of millions of people whose lives are threatened by sea level rise, cyclones, and other climate related disasters. It sat well alongside the chapel’s decoration where above the altar is the Tree of Life (the Cross) and from it gushes fountains of living water; its branches produce vines and refuge for birds and other living creatures.
Colette Joyce of Westminster Justice and Peace welcomed the congregation, followed by testimonies from Florence, Sophie and Naomi, three of the walkers. They explained the reasons for the relay. Pilgrims are calling on the government to meet and exceed their own climate finance commitments, reinstate the original aid budget and to cancel the debts of poor countries. The pilgrims also seek to raise awareness of COP26 and urged participants to spread the word “to look out for us and we would like as many people to join us as possible”. They were clapped as they stepped down amidst an animated and joyful spirit in the very chapel where Prime Minister Boris Johnson – the primary target for climate lobbying – was married at the end of May.
After a prayer of thanks, taken from the song of the three young men in the furnace in the Book of Daniel, a reflection on “ecological conversion” was given by Chris Carling, a student and Westminster Justice and Peace volunteer. He felt the ecological conversion called for in Laudati Si’ is a process that lasts a lifetime. Despite such challenges as the melting ice caps and polluting the oceans with plastic, “grace will overflow with YCCN”. Then a reflection from Pope Francis calling on each person to “be a guardian of our common home,” and protect all God’s creation, including other species.
We said together the final prayer from CAFOD:
“Inspire us to care for the environment:
to help rebuild lives and communities;
to share in the griefs and anxieties, joys and hopes of all your people,
so that all your creation may flourish. Amen.
The pilgrimage has been very successful in drawing attention to God’s presence in the world, particularly to people and places which are the first victims of the climate crisis. Anglican ordinand Hannah Malcom based her Saturday morning Radio 4 Thought for the Day reflection on it.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p09fsjx5
The young people have travelled through Truro, Exeter, Bristol, Reading and London, being received enthusiastically and offered hospitality by churches of all denominations, and are now heading north towards Glasgow.
Colette Joyce rounded off the service by telling the pilgrims, “you are doing a tremendous job and we will follow you all the way.” More clapping!

YCCN – www.yccn.uk/