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Let’s Make Peace with Creation

Let’s Make Peace with Creation.

On October 4, the Church celebrates the feast of St. Francis of Assisi. He prayed: “Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.” Today, this prayer also calls us to make peace with creation.

In today’s fast-paced world, the broken relationship between people and nature is plain to see. Deforestation, pollution, and climate change show the wounds. Reconciling with nature is both an ecological need and a spiritual call. Healing the earth also brings healing to ourselves.

For centuries, people lived close to nature. They learned from its rhythms and drew food, shelter, and wisdom from it. But consumerism and exploitation have weakened this bond. The earth now groans, asking us to return with gratitude, humility, and hope.

Listening to Nature’s Wisdom

Reconciliation goes deeper than activism. It asks us to see our true place in creation. We are not masters. We are fellow creatures with the duty of stewardship.

Pope Francis reminds us in Laudato Si’: “The misuse of creation begins when we no longer recognize any higher instance than ourselves, when we see nothing else but ourselves.” Humility is the first step. Forests, rivers, mountains, and skies hold silent wisdom. When we treat nature as a companion, not a commodity, we begin to heal both the earth and our souls.

From Exploitation to Stewardship

The Bible says God placed humanity “in the garden to till it and keep it” (Gen. 2:15). This is a call to care, not to exploit.

We live this call through daily choices. We can reduce waste, conserve resources, protect biodiversity, and support fair policies. Each action, big or small, helps restore the bond with creation. Pope Francis says this is a cultural, spiritual, and educational challenge. It is a path of renewal.

Gratitude Changes the Heart

Gratitude is the seed of reconciliation. When we see the earth as a gift, we move from ownership to reverence. Forests, rivers, and animals are not things to use. They are companions in life.

“The entire material universe speaks of God’s love,” says Pope Francis. Each sunrise, each bird, and each tree is an invitation to wonder. Gratitude restores our spirits and brings us closer to God.

Let’s Make Peace with Creation

Conversion and Action

Healing our bond with creation needs both personal change and community effort. Gratitude and humility should shape our choices.

Simple steps matter: reducing plastic, conserving water, planting trees, and choosing simplicity in what we buy. Bigger steps are needed, too, policies that protect people and the planet. Each act is a gesture of reconciliation. Each step turns indifference into care.

Hope for Renewal

Despite the damage, nature shows resilience. Forests can grow again. Rivers can be cleaned. Species can return if given space. This mirrors our faith: new life can rise from brokenness.

“Hope would have us recognize that there is always a way out,” writes Pope Francis in Laudato Si’. Hope commits us to act, to repair, and to build a future where the earth can thrive.

Living in Harmony

To make peace with creation is to make peace with God and with one another. The journey calls for humility, gratitude, and hope. Each small act becomes a seed of harmony.

We rediscover the joy of belonging to creation. We remember our duty to care for our common home.

Here are a few steps we can take:

  • Be grateful for nature’s daily gifts.

  • Live simply, buy only what is needed.

  • Reduce plastic, recycle, and compost.

  • Plant trees or care for native plants.

  • Respect wildlife and keep natural places clean.

  • Support sustainable practices in schools, parishes, and communities.

  • Include prayers for creation in worship.

A Prayer for the Earth

Lord, You created the earth in beauty and placed it in our care. Yet we have damaged forests, rivers, and air. Forgive us for forgetting we are part of creation, not above it. Teach us gratitude for every gift. Give us humility to tread lightly. Give us the courage to repair what we have harmed. Renew our hope that healing is still possible. May reconciliation with nature heal both the earth and our hearts. Amen.

(Fr. Ashok Sandil, an Indian Jesuit from Ranchi Province in Jharkhand, holds a doctorate in Computer Science. He writes on a wide range of topics, including computer science, spirituality, leadership, ecology, and more.)

Let us know how you feel!

73 reactions

Comments

Sr. Kavita Lopes, Oct 04 2025 - 10:41am
Congratulations for great awareness of ecological justice that bring peace between us and natural world. Reconciling with creation is indeed a spiritual journey as well as a moral one. Thanks Fr. Ashok for urging us to live with gratitude, humility and hope. So that healing the earth we also heal our own heart.
God bless you.
Sr. Mariana Tete , Oct 04 2025 - 11:10am
He is a person always think a new. Deep rooted in prayer, love for nature and poor people.
As I have read his books many times, I find that full of love of God and to his creation.
Sr. Ajita SCJM, Oct 04 2025 - 11:49am
Wonderful imagination is put out.
Excellent writings and advance thoughtful. Great 👍
Anonymous, Oct 04 2025 - 1:08pm
Good article, very fitting for today's feast and also an inspiring message for saving our planet from human greed.
Ruphina Toppo, Oct 05 2025 - 12:45am
This article by Fr. Ashok Sandil SJ offers an inspiring reminder that making peace with creation is both a spiritual calling and a practical necessity. By linking St. Francis of Assisi’s prayer for peace to caring for the earth, it encourages gratitude, humility, and hope in our daily stewardship of nature. The call to treat the earth with reverence—and see nature as a companion, not a commodity—shifts our outlook from exploitation to healing. Rooted in faith and practical steps, this message urges everyone to nurture the world with small acts, fostering harmony, and renewing hope for a thriving future. I am edified by the article.
rajni, Oct 06 2025 - 8:32pm
This is a very thoughtful and well-structured article, both spiritually and practically. It draws inspiration from the feast of St. Francis of Assisi and beautifully connects his prayer for peace with the modern ecological crisis. A few strengths worth highlighting:
• Spiritual depth with practical grounding: The article doesn’t stop at theology; it moves into real, actionable steps—personal, community, and policy-level—which makes it both inspiring and concrete.
• Balance of realism and hope: While it acknowledges the wounds of creation—deforestation, pollution, climate change—it also holds up nature’s resilience and the Christian virtue of hope, preventing the message from sounding too heavy.
• Integration of Scripture and Laudato Si’: Quoting Genesis and Pope Francis situates the reflection firmly within the Catholic faith while addressing global ecological concerns.
• Tone of humility and gratitude: The emphasis on gratitude, humility, and stewardship is pastoral, not accusatory. This makes it inviting for readers rather than alienating.
• Structure and flow: Moving from “Listening to Nature’s Wisdom” → “From Exploitation to Stewardship” → “Gratitude” → “Conversion & Action” → “Hope” creates a natural journey for the reader.
Overall, it is a moving reflection that unites spirituality, ecology, and practical action—very much in the spirit of St. Francis.
Sister Nelsa AC, Oct 10 2025 - 12:47am
Congratulations to Fr. Ashok Sandil SJ, for his insightful article ‘ Let’s Make Peace with Creation’. It is an invitation to revisit the mandate that God gave to humankind when He created the universe - “ Till it and care for it”. Fr. Sandil draws our attention to our true place in creation. Indeed, the reflection in this article leaves us with food for thought: do we really understand the duty of our stewardship?