Friday, May 15, 2026

WCC news: From Sámi theology to Hinduism, WCC webinar will highlight calls for biodiversity justice

Up to one million plant and animal species are on course for extinction, most of it caused by human activity. On 22 May, the World Council of Churches (WCC) is bringing together online voices from five of the world’s major faith traditions to ask a question that is becoming harder to avoid: can Orthodox, Sámi, Buddhist, Islamic, and Hindu conviction become a living force for biodiversity justice? The occasion is the International Day for Biological Diversity.
Speakers for the WCC webinar From Faith to Action: Interreligious Call for Biodiversity Justice (22 May 2026). Top row, left to right: Dr Lovisa Mienna Sjöberg, VID Specialized University; Mr Kevin Maina, Church of Kenya; Dr Alexandra Masako Goossens-Ishii, Soka Gakkai International; Prof. Dr Mathew Koshy Punnackadu, WCC commissioner for Climate Justice and Sustainable Development. Bottom row, left to right: Dr Seyed Masoud Noori, Imam Mahdi Association of Marjaeya; Rev. Dr Jessica Hetherington, United Church of Canada; Dr Gopal Patel, FutureFaith.
13 May 2026

The webinar – “From Faith to Action: Interreligious Call for Biodiversity Justice” – will run from 15:00 to 16:00 CEST. Dr Louk Andrianos, WCC consultant for Care for Creation, Sustainability, and Climate Justice, will coordinate the session.

"Biodiversity loss is a justice crisis. The communities least responsible for the destruction of ecosystems are almost always the first to bear its consequences,” highlights Athena Peralta, director, WCC Commission on Climate Justice and Sustainable Development. “What faith traditions bring to this moment is a moral vocabulary that science alone cannot provide: the call to ecological conversion, to genuine reconciliation with the living world, and to the kind of transformation in our lifestyles and economic systems that creation justice demands, for this generation and every generation to come."

Each of the five speakers arrives from a different tradition with a different set of questions. Dr Christina Nellist is one of the most prominent Eastern Orthodox voices on creation care, working at the intersection of theology and animal suffering. Lovisa Mienna Sjöberg is an associate professor at VID Specialized University whose research on Sámi theology approaches green colonialism and extractivism from within Arctic Indigenous experience. They are joined by representatives from Soka Gakkai International (Buddhism), the Imam Mahdi Association of Marjaeya (Islam), and the FutureFaith initiative (Hinduism). Dr Mathew Koshy Punnackadu, WCC commissioner for Climate Justice and Sustainable Development, will offer a closing spiritual message and prayer.

This year’s International Day for Biological Diversity theme – “Acting locally for global impact” – anchors the session’s logic: that what faith communities do in their own contexts is not separate from the global effort to halt biodiversity collapse. The webinar forms part of the WCC’s Ecumenical Decade of Climate Justice Action and brings together partners including the Faiths for Biodiversity coalition, Season of Creation, ACT Alliance, Laudato Si Movement, Lutheran World Federation, World Communion of Reformed Churches, and European Christian Environmental Network, among others. 

Register for the webinar here

More information about the event here

Ecumenical Decade of Climate Justice Action 

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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EarthBeat Weekly: Trump's border wall threatens mountain on Catholic land

Trump border wall threatens mountain that sits on New Mexico diocese's land

 

EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

May 15, 2026


 

Workers have cut a gash, right, through the southern slope of Mount Cristo Rey, which straddles the border between Sunland Park, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, to build a new section of border wall, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (RNS/Corrie Boudreaux)

During the first Trump administration, persistent attempts to build a wall at the U.S.-Mexico border was a constant focus of media coverage and national attention. 

But during President Donald Trump's second term, the wall largely has fallen out of the spotlight, amid a maelstrom of major news around government slashes, immigration crackdowns, war, rising prices and controversies surrounding Jeffrey Epstein.

This week, though, the wall was back in the headlines and with a Catholic (and environmental) angle.

On Monday, Aleja Hertzler-McCain reported for Religion News Service that the Catholic Diocese of Las Cruces, New Mexico, said it intends to fight the Trump administration's fast-moving attempts to seize its land through eminent domain to extend the southern border wall.

The land in question is at the base of Mount Cristo Rey, a mountain and pilgrimage site topped by a 29-foot-tall limestone statue of Jesus Christ that dates back to 1940. The diocese said the border wall would obstruct pilgrimage routes.

"The erection of a border wall through or along this holy site could irreparably damage its religious and cultural sanctity, obstruct pilgrimage routes, and transfer sacred space into a symbol of division," the Diocese of Las Cruces said in a legal filing May 8. 

The diocese has accused any seizure of the land or construction on it as "a significant infringement on religious freedom and the rights of worship" and a violation of the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

Read more: Catholic diocese fights Trump administration plan to seize pilgrimage site for border wall

While the government's attempts to seize land owned by the Las Cruces Diocese garnered national attention this week — covered by The New York Times, USA Today, Newsweek, Axios, Bloomberg, among other news outlets — the story dates back further. 

In June 2025, the Department of Homeland Security waived environmental and historical preservation laws that cleared the way for a border wall on Mount Cristo Rey, as Inside Climate News reported at the time.

EarthBeat republished on Thursday a story by Inside Climate News that looks deeper at the history of Mount Cristo Rey, viewed by local Catholics as a sacred site "where faith transcends borders," as Martha Pskowski reports.

Mount Cristo Rey sits where the land border between the U.S. and Mexico ends and the Rio Grande becomes the dividing line. For centuries called Paso del Norte — the northern pass — this point has been a crossroads for Indigenous peoples, Spanish colonizers and later settlers traveling west on the early transcontinental railroads. 

A priest at the Catholic Church in nearby Smeltertown first proposed building a statue on the mountaintop in the 1930s. The mountain, previously known as Cerro de los Muleros, or Mule Driver's Mountain, was later renamed Mount Cristo Rey. 

Today, it remains a pilgrimage site for thousands of people, who climb its slope each Good Friday as well as around the Feast of Christ the King ("Cristo Rey"). 

The mountain is also teeming with fossils, geological formations and wildlife, including serving as a crossing point for the Mexican gray wolf between the two countries. 

"There is no accountability," Robert Ardovino, a local business owner, told Pskowski. "And the damage will be irreparable."

Read more: Mount Cristo Rey, in path of Trump's border wall, sits on land of New Mexico diocese



What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by Kate Scanlon, OSV News

As the U.S. Senate prepares to consider a farm bill recently approved by the U.S. House, Catholic organizations together with the U.S. bishops sought to stress to lawmakers the importance of efforts to combat hunger, such as robust support for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, a major part of the nation's social safety net.

Read more here »


 

by Shmuly Yanklowitz

So often, when we in the U.S. debate a war, we omit much of the globe from the conversation: We do not talk about (or to) rice farmers in Asia or soda vendors in Kenya when discussing the cost of a war in the Middle East.

Read more here »


What's happening in other climate news:


The U.S. is forfeiting the clean-energy race to China —By David Uberti, Ed Ballard and Brian Spegele for the Wall Street Journal

Trump administration aims to roll back limits on toxic wastewater from coal-fired power plants —Marc Levy for the Associated Press

Watchdog groups urge Senate to investigate Samuel Alito over oil stock conflicts —Dharna Noor for the Guardian

New York plastics law advances amid debate over 'chemical recycling' —Lauren Dalban for Inside Climate News

Why this tribe is buying up hundreds of acres of farmland — and flooding it —John Ryan for National Public Radio

Trump administration cancels rule that made conservation a use of public lands —Matthew Brown for the Associated Press

Trump's gas tax holiday pitch faces early Capitol Hill headwinds —Pavan Acharya, Amelia Davidson and Meredith Lee Hill for Politico

They've got a plan to combat global warming (and also Russian tanks) —Avril Silva for The New York Times


Final Beat:


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As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.


 


Brian Roewe
Environment Correspondent
National Catholic Reporter
broewe@ncronline.org


 


 


 
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WCC news: From Sámi theology to Hinduism, WCC webinar will highlight calls for biodiversity justice

Up to one million plant and animal species are on course for extinction, most of it caused by human activity. On 22 May, the World Council o...