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United Dioceses of Dublin & Glendalough

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29.08.2025

Peace with Creation – European Church Leaders Promote Season of Creation

September 1 – October 4
Peace with Creation – European Church Leaders Promote Season of Creation -  September 1 – October 4
St Andrew’s Parish Church, Co. Monaghan, in Clogher Diocese which has been hosting a Sunflower Meadow Festival in August. The sunflowers are growing in the rectory field. Photo credit: Brian Donaldson.

We live in a beautiful natural world.  As part of the plans to mark the 2025 Season of Creation, and inviting prayer and action for our common home, the Church of Ireland’s Commission on Christian Unity and Dialogue has commended a joint statement from the Conference of European Churches (CEC) and the Council of Catholic European Bishops’ Conferences (CCEE).

Sun breaks through clouds among the Italian Alps.  Photo credit: Jonathan Hull.
Sun breaks through clouds among the Italian Alps. Photo credit: Jonathan Hull.

What is it?

The Season of Creation, or Creationtide, has its origins in the Greek Orthodox Church. Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios I proclaimed 1st September as a day of prayer for creation in 1989. The celebration has been extended to cover a full month with support from other Churches, and concludes on the Feast of St Francis of Assisi, patron saint of the environment, on 4th October.

How can I take part?

For clergy and lay readers, An Order of Service for Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer for use on Sundays on the theme of Creation has been prepared by the Liturgical Advisory Committee and is available at the following link: www.churchofireland.org/prayer-worship/book-of-common-prayer/creationtide-resources

A guide to celebrating this annual occasion is also provided at www.seasonofcreation.org

Eco–Congregation Ireland shares a range of inspiring and practical ideas to care for creation on its website: www.ecocongregationireland.com

Harvest in Wicklow. Photo credit: Lynn Glanville.
Harvest in Wicklow. Photo credit: Lynn Glanville.

The full statement reads as follows:

Since the beginning of his mission, the prophet Isaiah became aware of God’s desire fora messenger to be sent to His people. Despite his sense of inadequacy, he committed himself to give human voice to God’s design. Preaching to a people living in a disastrous and crumbling situation, he experienced bitter resistance and opposition; nevertheless, this experience brought him to a firm and lifelong resolve: he was aware of a frenzied need to call his people back from the brink of peril and decline.

Hen Mountain in the Mournes, Co. Down.  Photo credit: Jonathan Hull.
Hen Mountain in the Mournes, Co. Down. Photo credit: Jonathan Hull.

In his prophecies, Isaiah compared God to a careful and diligent farmer, who, sometimes angry at the wild fruits of injustice and violence that were produced, threatened to take away his care and protection. But strengthened by his encounter with God’s holiness, Isaiah also offered an alternative to catastrophe: survival depended on returning to a way of life that reflected trust and devotion toward God. This is a daily commitment that requires a sober life and respect for everything offered as a gift of creation, without any form of unfair exploitation of people or natural resources. This is for Isaiah the only way to live in peace and to prosper, and this is what we call “peace with creation”.

In this revealing spiritual experience, we have found the inspiration for the oecumenical celebration of this year’s Season of Creation, around the theme of “Peace with creation”, with the symbol “Garden of Peace”, inspired by Isaiah 32:14–18.

Forested grounds in the Convent of the Missionary Sisters of St Columban, Magheramore, Co. Wicklow. Photo credit: Lynn Glanville.
Forested grounds in the Convent of the Missionary Sisters of St Columban, Magheramore, Co. Wicklow. Photo credit: Lynn Glanville.

As Christian Churches, this is for us a time of prayer and sincere conversion, that gives voice to our profession of faith to the God that “created heaven and earth”, as every Christian community has been proclaiming for centuries in the words formulated by the Council of Nicaea, of which we celebrate this year the 1,700th anniversary. While proclaiming our faith in God the creator we also pray for our brothers and sisters that are victims of different forms of environmental and human injustice.

Our world can hardly be seen as a garden of peace nowadays. To the contrary, the human destruction and death brought by wars and social unrest in several countries and peoples inform our daily experiences. However, like the prophet Isaiah, we strongly believe we are called to seek peace with creation and that each of us is called to honouring the hallmarks of the “giver of life”.

We have also moulded this spiritual commitment in every page of the revised Charta Oecumenica, that will be signed before the end of this year. For more than twenty years this joint agreement between Christian Churches in Europe has inspired our theological reflections and pastoral work. We hope that the revised version will keep shaping our listening of Christ’s prayer, that we “all may be one” (John 17:21).

View of the Rocky Mountains, Colorado.  Photo credit: Brian Donaldson.
View of the Rocky Mountains, Colorado. Photo credit: Brian Donaldson.

As they work to care for our climate, we will pray for all leaders and participants of the 30th Climate Change Conference of Partners (COP30), organised by the United Nations in Belém (Brazil), from 10th to 21st November. We believe that the current climate crisis is an opportunity to reconfigure international relations toward the common good and to create a more fair and sustainable way of living for the whole of humanity. We also hope that the impact of climate change policies on the poor and vulnerable will remain well placed in the minds and hearts of the leaders and experts gathering at the conference, considering the interrelated social and environmental challenges of our time.

The Season of Creation calls us to be faithful stewards of what God has created and entrusted to us, in our daily choices and public policies, so that our prayer and our way of living may echo what we believe and confess: “The heavens declare the glory of God; the firmament proclaims the works of his hands” (Psalm 19:2).

+ Nikitas Archbishop of Thyatira and Great Britain CEC President

+ Gintaras Grušas Archbishop of Vilnius CCEE President

 

Garden scene in Co. Wicklow. Photo credit: Lynn Glanville.
Garden scene in Co. Wicklow. Photo credit: Lynn Glanville.

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