September 26, 2016
JUNNO AROCHO ESTEVES
CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE

VATICAN CITY - Religions can play an important role in protecting the environment and defending human rights in their countries, their communities and their schools, Pope Francis said.

"I believe we are still at a nursery-school level in this. That is, in incorporating responsibility not only as a subject, but as (a matter of) conscience as part of holistic education," the pope said Sept. 8.

Pope Francis make his remarks during a Sept. 7-8 audience with participants of a Latin American conference on the care of creation.

In his address, the pope thanked the participants for taking on the challenges set forth in his encyclical, Laudato Si'.

"We cannot help but admire the beauty and harmony that exists in all of creation; that is the gift that God gives us so that we may find him and contemplate him through his work," he said.

Interreligious dialogue and cooperation, he said, are crucial in promoting a "culture of encounter" and must be done with mutual respect.

"I remember in my city, when I was a boy, a priest would ask us to burn down the tents of the evangelicals. Thank God we have overcome this," the pope said.

"If mutual respect does not exist, interreligious dialogue does not exist. It is the foundation in order to walk together and face challenges."

The world, he continued, is looking at religious believers to see their reaction to protecting the environment and human rights.

Members of different religious communities must work alongside non-believers so " we may give effective responses to the many plagues in our world."

Religious communities also must stand together in condemning acts of violence and terrorism in the name of God. These actions, he said, have caused "religions to be pointed to as the ones responsible for the evil that surrounds us."

"We need to show the positive values inherent in our religious traditions to achieve a solid contribution of hope."