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Serve, Work and Transform
In this blog, we'll look at how men and women at serving Jesus Christ both at home and abroad. We'll focus on how God is using their work to transform the lives of people all over the world.
Friday, March 27, 2026
WCC news: Ecumenical delegation to visit Cuba as humanitarian crisis deepens
WCC NEWS: International symposium to lay path towards digital justice in times of AI
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EarthBeat Weekly: A Catholic social teaching approach to animal protection
New institute applies Catholic social teaching to animal protectionEarthBeat Weekly March 27, 2026
A statue of St. Francis of Assisi at an animal hospital in Prince Fredrick, Maryland, July 22, 2021. (OSV News/Bob Roller)Kristin Dunn never really considered herself an "animal person." Yes, she loved her dog Pressly, who she considers one of her best friends (along with her husband) and grew up with dogs, but she hadn't given much thought to the plights of other animals when a former colleague approached her in 2014 about a position with an animal protection organization. Ultimately, Dunn, who was working in the nonprofit field, decided to pursue the opportunity. In her first few months, she read as many books and watched as many documentaries as she could find on the issues facing animals. What struck her most was the amount of animal suffering that was preventable, particularly on factory farms. "One of my very first thoughts was that as a Catholic who grew up in a very Catholic home and had a lot of really wonderful Catholic influences in my life, I just felt like every Catholic needs to know what's happening to these animals," she told me in an interview. Over the course of the next decade, that feeling lingered with Dunn, who earlier in March established the St. Francis Institute for Animals. As I reported this week for EarthBeat, the St. Francis Institute has a vision of mobilizing a unique type of animal advocacy informed by Catholic social teaching to address the inhumane ways animals are treated by people in factory farms, laboratories and other settings. To that end, it has compiled a mix of education and action resources for individuals and parishes, including a depository of teachings on animals from popes and theologians, alongside pages on its website devoted to law, wildlife protection, animal sentience and adoption. In addition, it has created a free monthlong reflection guide and is looking to partner with parishes to further raise awareness and help more Catholics demonstrate more compassionate relationships with all of God's creation. "We know that as Catholics, we're called to care for God's creation, and that includes his creatures," Dunn, who lives in Austin, Texas, told me. "Most people are not aware of the extent of preventable animal suffering, and so our goal is to connect church teachings on animals to the realities that animals are facing today, and with that, to empower people to take steps to make a difference." In a statement, noted theologian St. Joseph Sr. Elizabeth Johnson said the St. Francis Institute for Animals "is undertaking the vitally important work of promoting a Catholic approach to animal protection." Added Dunn, "Our main message is really that small actions can make a tremendous difference for animals." Read more: St. Francis Institute for Animals sets out to limit suffering for all God's creatures What else is new on EarthBeat:
![]() by Thomas Reese, Religion News Service The president's energy policy "has left the country unprepared for his war," Thomas Reese writes.
by Justin McLellan The microstate, which the pope will visit March 28, offers a rare example of religion exerting a visible influence in Western civic society today.
by OSV News Chairmen of several U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops committees wrote in a letter to key House lawmakers that they support a bill that would establish an effort to investigate and document the histories and practices of Indian boarding schools, and their long-term effects on Native American peoples.
![]() by Kat Armas Figures like Dolores Huerta, whose tireless work helped build the United Farm Workers, remind us that the movement's victories are shaped by collective stories, just as much by those remembered as by those forgotten.
by Gina Christian, OSV News Catholic dioceses and organizations are canceling events and rethinking initiatives honoring the late civil rights icon César Chávez, following newly reported allegations the activist — who publicly drew on his Catholic faith in his work — sexually abused several women and girls. What's happening in other climate news:
Interior, TotalEnergies strike deal ending US offshore wind projects —Kelsey Tamborrino for E&E News Everglades restoration also helps save the planet from climate change, study finds —Amy Green for Inside Climate News The ferocity of the downpour that brought the latest Hawaii flooding surprised even meteorologists —Audrey Mcavoy and Gene Johnson for the Associated Press Nebraska fires burn grazing lands, threaten plans to grow US cattle herd —Tom Polansek for Reuters Iowa's cancer crisis linked to pesticides, PFAS, fertilizer and radon, report says —Anika Jane Beamer for Inside Climate News E.P.A. chief to headline event by group that says there's no climate crisis —Lisa Friedman for The New York Times Final Beat:
During the brief visit, Leo will meet with Prince Albert II, who as McClellan reports, is viewed as "a fierce advocate of environmental protections on the global stage" with a charity established in his name for environmental causes. That foundation provided funding for the Minderoo-Monaco Commission on Plastics and Human Health, a 2023 landmark report that was the first comprehensive examination of the full-scale health impacts of plastics across their life cycles. The commission was headed by Dr. Philip Landrigan, a leading public health physician who specializes in environmental harms to human health and the director of the Boston College Global Observatory on Planetary Health. Landrigan and Prince Albert had previously partnered on a major study in 2020 on the impact of ocean pollution on human health. That December, Monaco convened an international symposium on the subject of oceans and human health that Boston College co-sponsored. It was through mutual connections with Amherst College — the Massachusetts school and Prince Albert's alma mater — that brought Monaco and Boston College together on the studies of pollution's health harms. During a December 2020 interview, Landrigan recounted to me their first encounter two years earlier: "I told him about our work and as we were having the conversation we jointly came up with the idea of let's do a major study of the impact of ocean pollution on human health … that's what kicked the thing off." As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.
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Truth and Action Roundup 3.20.2026
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