Cornwall Declaration
The past millennium brought unprecedented improvements in human health, nutrition,
and life expectancy, especially among those most blessed by political and economic
liberty and advances in science and technology. At the dawn of a new millennium,
the opportunity exists to build on these advances and to extend them to more
of the earth's people.
At the same time, many are concerned that liberty, science, and technology
are more a threat to the environment than a blessing to humanity and nature.
Out of shared reverence for God and His creation and love for our neighbors,
we Jews, Catholics, and Protestants, speaking for ourselves and not officially
on behalf of our respective communities, joined by others of good will, and
committed to justice and compassion, unite in this declaration of our common
concerns, beliefs, and aspirations.
Our Concerns
Human understanding and control of natural processes empower people not only
to improve the human condition but also to do great harm to each other, to the
earth, and to other creatures. As concerns about the environment have grown
in recent decades, the moral necessity of ecological stewardship has become
increasingly clear. At the same time, however, certain misconceptions about
nature and science, coupled with erroneous theological and anthropological positions,
impede the advancement of a sound environmental ethic. In the midst of controversy
over such matters, it is critically important to remember that while passion
may energize environmental activism, it is reason - including sound theology
and sound science-that must guide the decision-making process. We identify three
areas of common misunderstanding:
- Many people mistakenly view humans as principally consumers and polluters
rather than producers and stewards. Consequently, they ignore our potential,
as bearers of God's image, to add to the earth's abundance. The increasing
realization of this potential has enabled people in societies blessed with
an advanced economy not only to reduce pollution, while producing more of
the goods and services responsible for the great improvements in the human
condition, but also to alleviate the negative effects of much past pollution.
A clean environment is a costly good; consequently, growing affluence, technological
innovation, and the application of human and material capital are integral
to environmental improvement. The tendency among some to oppose economic progress
in the name of environmental stewardship is often sadly self-defeating.
- Many people believe that "nature knows best," or that the earth-untouched
by human hands-is the ideal. Such romanticism leads some to deify nature or
oppose human dominion over creation. Our position, informed by revelation
and confirmed by reason and experience, views human stewardship that unlocks
the potential in creation for all the earth's inhabitants as good. Humanity
alone of all the created order is capable of developing other resources and
can thus enrich creation, so it can properly be said that the human person
is the most valuable resource on earth. Human life, therefore, must be cherished
and allowed to flourish. The alternative-denying the possibility of beneficial
human management of the earth-removes all rationale for environmental stewardship.
- While some environmental concerns are well founded and serious, others
are without foundation or greatly exaggerated. Some well-founded concerns
focus on human health problems in the developing world arising from inadequate
sanitation, widespread use of primitive biomass fuels like wood and dung,
and primitive agricultural, industrial, and commercial practices; distorted
resource consumption patterns driven by perverse economic incentives; and
improper disposal of nuclear and other hazardous wastes in nations lacking
adequate regulatory and legal safeguards. Some unfounded or undue concerns
include fears of destructive manmade global warming, overpopulation, and rampant
species loss. The real and merely alledged problems differ in the following
ways:
- The former are proven and well understood, while the latter tend to be
speculative.
- The former are often localized, while the latter are said to be global
and cataclysmic in scope.
- The former are of concern to people in developing nations especially, while
the latter are of concern mainly to environmentalists in wealthy nations.
- The former are of high and firmly established risk to human life and health,
while the latter are of very low and largely hypothetical risk.
- Solutions proposed to the former are cost effective and maintain proven
benefit, while solutions to the latter are unjustifiably costly and of dubious
benefit.
Public policies to combat exaggerated risks can dangerously delay or reverse
the economic development necessary to improve not only human life but also human
stewardship of the environment. The poor, who are most often citizens of developing
nations, are often forced to suffer longer in poverty with its attendant high
rates of malnutrition, disease, and mortality; as a consequence, they are often
the most injured by such misguided, though well-intended, policies.
Our Beliefs
Our common Judeo-Christian heritage teaches that the following theological
and anthropological principles are the foundation of environmental stewardship:
- God, the Creator of all things, rules over all and deserves our worship
and adoration.
- The earth, and with it all the cosmos, reveals its Creator's wisdom and
is sustained and governed by His power and lovingkindness.
- Men and women were created in the image of God, given a privileged place
among creatures, and commanded to exercise stewardship over the earth. Human
persons are moral agents for whom freedom is an essential condition of responsible
action. Sound environmental stewardship must attend both to the demands of
human well being and to a divine call for human beings to exercise caring
dominion over the earth. It affirms that human well being and the integrity
of creation are not only compatible but also dynamically interdependent realities.
- God's Law-summarized in the Decalogue and the two Great Commandments (to
love God and neighbor), which are written on the human heart, thus revealing
His own righteous character to the human person-represents God's design for
shalom, or peace, and is the supreme rule of all conduct, for which personal
or social prejudices must not be substituted.
- By disobeying God's Law, humankind brought on itself moral and physical
corruption as well as divine condemnation in the form of a curse on the earth.
Since the fall into sin people have often ignored their Creator, harmed their
neighbors, and defiled the good creation.
- God in His mercy has not abandoned sinful people or the created order but
has acted throughout history to restore men and women to fellowship with Him
and through their stewardship to enhance the beauty and fertility of the earth.
- Human beings are called to be fruitful, to bring forth good things from
the earth, to join with God in making provision for our temporal well being,
and to enhance the beauty and fruitfulness of the rest of the earth. Our call
to fruitfulness, therefore, is not contrary to but mutually complementary
with our call to steward God's gifts. This call implies a serious commitment
to fostering the intellectual, moral, and religious habits and practices needed
for free economies and genuine care for the environment.
Our Aspirations
In light of these beliefs and concerns, we declare the following principled
aspirations:
- We aspire to a world in which human beings care wisely and humbly for all
creatures, first and foremost for their fellow human beings, recognizing their
proper place in the created order.
- We aspire to a world in which objective moral principles-not personal prejudices-guide
moral action.
- We aspire to a world in which right reason (including sound theology and
the careful use of scientific methods) guides the stewardship of human and
ecological relationships.
- We aspire to a world in which liberty as a condition of moral action is
preferred over government-initiated management of the environment as a means
to common goals.
- We aspire to a world in which the relationships between stewardship and
private property are fully appreciated, allowing people's natural incentive
to care for their own property to reduce the need for collective ownership
and control of resources and enterprises, and in which collective action,
when deemed necessary, takes place at the most local level possible.
- We aspire to a world in which widespread economic freedom-which is integral
to private, market economies-makes sound ecological stewardship available
to ever greater numbers.
- We aspire to a world in which advancements in agriculture, industry, and
commerce not only minimize pollution and transform most waste products into
efficiently used resources but also improve the material conditions of life
for people everywhere.
If you would like to add your endorsement to the Cornwall Declaration, please
contact info@acton.org or by phone at (616)
454-3080.
 
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