Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Clean Water in Action: Advocacy Through the Permitting Process

by Lisa Brenskelle

Join Alenka Cardenas of Bayou City Waterkeeper for an overview of the Clean Water Act's permitting programs. Alenka will teach attendees how to use a variety of monitoring and reporting tools to identify and correct water permit violations. They will also share best practices for advocating through the permitting process to win stronger permits that can better protect water quality and wetlands. Access to clean water is a human right, and you can make difference with your advocacy! 

Time for Q&A with the speakers will be provided. The session will be recorded and the recording sent to all registrants.For more information, contact Lisa Brenskelle at gcs.lrc@gmail.com. 


The Annual San Antonio Season of Creation Mass

The people of San Antonio celebrated the Season of Creation with its archdiocese annual pilgrimage on September 14, 2025.  It started by a celebration of the Eucharist with Archbishop Gustavo as the presider.  There were more than a hundred of people who walked the El Camino from Mission Espada to Mission San Juan.

As part of the pilgrimage, Archbishop Gustavo asked a volunteer to read the reflection.  There were about several points of reflection. These were about the greenhouse gas emissions, water conservation, plastic pollution, food waste, diminished biodiversity, etc. Saint Anthony Catholic School's Earth Angels graciously picked up trashes along the road and inspired other people to do the same.

The pilgrimage ended with a blessing from Archbishop Gustavo and prayers from the pilgrims.  After the closing prayer, everyone was invited to have tacos, and paletas.





















Saturday, September 13, 2025

Friday, September 12, 2025

Sun Day in San Antonio

 


Season of Creation 2025 Peace with Creation Prayer

PEACE WITH CREATION

Creator of all,
we praise you for the gift of life
and for the faith that unites us in care for our common home.
We confess how estranged we have become—
from one another, from your Creation, and from our truest selves.
We acknowledge that our greed and destructive impulses
have fractured our relationships with you, with others, and with the Earth.
Fertile fields have become barren,
forests lie desolate,
oceans and rivers are polluted.
Thriving communities have become places of suffering,
and the earth cries out.

Beloved Christ,
who spoke “Shalom” to frightened hearts,
stir us to compassionate action.
Inspire us to work for the end of conflict,
and for the full restoration of broken relationships—
with you, with the ecumenical community,
with the human family,
and with all Creation.

Prince of Peace,
through your wounds, teach us to stand in solidarity
with the woundedness of others,
of creation, and of the world.
Through your resurrection,
make us people of hope—
with a vision of swords turned into ploughshares
and tears transformed into joy.
May we come together as one family,
to labor for your peace—
a shalom where all your people
may dwell in safety,
and rest in quiet places.

Amen.

More:

Season of Creation 2025 Celebration Guide

Catholic Climate Covenant Season of Creation Resources 2025

Season of Creation

Laudato Si' Movement Prayer Guide for September 20

Creation Care Mass in Archdiocese of San Antonio on September 14

The Archdiocese of San Antonio will also have its Annual Creation Care Mass and Pilgrimage on September 14 where Archbishop Gustavo-Siller will be celebrating Eucharist in Mission Espada followed by a pilgrimage to Mission San Juan.  There will be various points of reflection on the road to Mission San Juan.  The pilgrimage will conclude with a prayer and food.



Reference:

Creation Care Mass and Procession
Camino San Antonio
Jubilee of Hope from Vatican
Season of Creation
USCCB Creation Care Mass
Holy Mass for the Care for Creation

Laudato Si' Action Platform (LSAP) for Incarnate Word Sisters SA and the Archdiocese of San Antonio

On August 16, 2024, the Congregation of Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word formally made its ritual and commitment to support Laudato Si' given its seven goals for seven years through the Laudato Si' Action Platform (LSAP).  The Congregation is now among the 2,751 registrants in North America. By enrolling in this platform, the congregation committed to layout plans and work towards animating these goals:

1. Addressing the cry of the earth 

The Response to the Cry of the Earth is a call to protect our common home for the wellbeing of all, as we equitably address the climate crisis, biodiversity loss, and ecological sustainability. 

2. Addressing the cry of poor 

The Response to the Cry of the Poor is a call to promote eco-justice, aware that we are called to defend human life from conception to death and all forms of life on Earth. 

3. Adoption of sustainable lifestyles 

The Adoption of Sustainable Lifestyles is grounded in the idea of sufficiency, and promoting sobriety in the use of resources and energy. 

4. Ecological Economics 

Ecological Economics acknowledges that the economy is a sub-system of human society, which itself is embedded within the biosphere–our common home. 

5. Ecological Education 

Ecological Education is about rethinking and redesigning curricular and institutional reform in the spirit of integral ecology in order to foster ecological awareness and transformative action.

6. Ecological Spirituality 

Ecological Spirituality springs from a profound ecological conversion and helps us to “discover God in all things,” both in the beauty of creation and in the sighs of the sick and the groans of the afflicted, aware that the life of the spirit is not dissociated from worldly realities. 

7. Community resilience and empowerment

Community resilience and empowerment envisage a synodal journey of community engagement and participatory action at various levels. 

More information about this public commitment and the Laudato Si' Action Platform Goals can be found in Incarnate Word Sisters SA Laudato Si' Action Platform Public Commitment

Each of the countries' collaborators was given a freedom to choose a goal or goals among the seven and plan towards accomplishment of such.  We have completed our one year out of the seven years  commitment.  On September 19-20, the committee members of Justice, Peace, and Integrity of Creation of the Congregation will gather together to reflect, ponder, and present the ways in which we have participated in accomplishing its goals through our religious congregation of sisters, associates, offices, ministries and networks.

Sr. Marylou as the Collaborator for United States region has engaged with our US Sisters, Associates, Staff and selected ministries through letters, emails, and conversations to reflect on the 2024 goals addressing the Cry of the Earth and the Cry of the Poor and also get their ideas for 2025 goals toward building the sustainable and ecologically economic society.  We are grateful to all who have already sent their feedback. This effort is a continuous work to advocate and animate the goals and the mission of the Incarnate Word through our Congregation in animating our care for our Common Home.  We value and welcome everyone's input, work and contributions.  Sr. Miriam of Mexico and Dony Avalos of Peru are also engaging their networks to act on their respective regional Laudato Si' Action Platform goals.

As what the most recent LSAP 2024 Global report states highlighting the Laudato Si article 14:

"All of us can cooperate as instruments of God for the care of creation, each according to his  or her own culture, experience, involvements and talents"

All of us have our own responsibility in our own communities, organizations, and networks of influence to care for our common home.  With the care that each of us can contribute, we will be able to make a sustainable environment that promotes health and well-being for all in creation.  Without this crucial component of life, the quality of our life will not be viable, considering the dangers and risks that our world are in right now given the growing plastic pollution, quality of air and water scarcity, land and ocean extractivism through oil drilling, fracking, LNG, overfishing, chemically induced products and animals that we surround our lives and society, and other human-made risks and catastrophe such as wars, forced starvation, nuclear, and weapons. 

In the same light, the Archdiocese of San Antonio has been working hard to advocate to all its parishes to enroll in the Laudato Si' Action Platform, having been on enrolled itself for past one year.  With the leadership of Archbishop Gustavo-Siller and supported by its new Director for Social Justice Dr. Virginia Mata, there are about 40 parishes out of about 148 parishes who participated in its recent Laudato Si' Action Platform on-line training.  The archdiocese aimed for all the parishes to enroll in the platform by the end of September 2025.

The latest webinar by Dr. Mata of the Archdiocese of San Antonio can be found here.

Important Dates in the Archdiocese LSAP Archdiocese-wide Goals:

  • October 30: Part II Building Relationship and Teams
  • End January 2026: Complete Parish Assessment and start conducting 1-1s and listening sessions
  • January 29, 2026: Part III Developing Action Platform Goals
  • End of February 2026: Complete Parish Goals
  • End of February 2026: Submit Plans to Archdiocese and to Laudato Si' Action Platform
 
Reference:

Laudato Si' Action Platform Annual Report 2024
Laudato Si' Action Platform
Laudato Si' Animators
Laudato Si'
Season of Creation
Archdiocese of San Antonio Makes a Commitment to Care for Our Common Home

Thursday, September 11, 2025

UIW Brainpower Connection's Artworks 3.0 and Pilgrimage

The Catholic church designated this year as the Jubilee Year of Hope. US Justice, Peace, and Integrity of Creation, University of Incarnate Word (UIW) and UIW Brainpower Connection have joined hands again to create a program for five schools namely Incarnate Word High School, Saint Anthony Catholic High-School, Saint Anthony Catholic School, Saint Mary Magdalene Catholic School and Blessed Sacrament Catholic School.  These schools will have their third year of collaborative work with students reflecting on the Season of Creation through creating artwork about God's wondrous works. The students will use the theme "Peace with Creation" for their artworks.  The deadline for the submission of the artworks to Ms. Karen Gonzalez, the Assistant Administrator to UIW Brainpower Connection has been moved to September 29 to give more time to the students, and teachers.

The artworks of the students will be displayed in Padre Margil Pilgrimage Center which is the center adjacent to Mission Concepcion, a World Heritage Site.  Each of the artworks will be an entry to a raffle that will be held on October 4, 2025.  There will be UIW students from Environmental Science Department courtesy of Dr. John Hooker who will be working together with Sister Martha Ann to create a program and design for the display of artworks for the Pilgrimage Center. We are grateful to Ms. Biniza ZentellaPadre Margil Pilgrimage Center Manager who made it possible to a public exhibit of the children's art work there on October 4, 2025, the Feast of St. Francis of Assisi, patron of creation.  

In line with the Jubilee Pilgrimage of Hope, as well as the 10th Year Anniversary of Laudato Si', the UIW Brainpower Connection, UIW, and JPIC are also hosting a Jubilee Pilgrimage of Hope for Creation. The pilgrimage will be held on October 4, 2025.  The pilgrimage will start at 9:00am in Confluence Park, San Antonio, passing through the side of the river to the park, following the path to Mission Concepcion, and finally ending in the Padre Margil Pilgrimage Center.  Confluence Park and the trail going to the Mission Concepcion give a wonderful opportunities to learn about nature in this area. We will both pray to thank the Creator, and we will learn as we see aspects of creation. A special program  will be held in the pilgrimage center at 10 am and it will include a raffle for those students who  participated in the Season of Creation Artworks 3.0. 

All the students and faculties from the five schools are encouraged to participate in Artworks 3.0 and this pilgrimage. Contact Ms. Karen Gonzalez through kkgonza1@uiwtx.edu and phone (210) 832-5635 for information on submitting artwork.  Questions on the Pilgrimage can be also answered by Sister Martha Ann Kirk kirk@uiwtx.edu.

Please wear comfortable walking shoes and bring water. The walk is only .9 miles, but we will be pausing to reflect on things along the way. Please arrive at Confluence Park, 310 W Mitchell St, San Antonio, TX 78204, at 8:50 am to check in. Those who do not wish to walk can drive to nearby the Padre Margil Pilgrimage Center and Mission Concepcion 807 Mission Rd, San Antonio, TX 78210.

To join the pilgrimage register here: Mission Concepcion Pilgrimage and Artworks 3.0

For UIW students who need service hours, this is an opportunity to volunteer and enjoy serving by putting up the artworks (September 30 - October 3), taking down the artworks (October 7) and assisting with the event:  https://uiw.givepulse.com/event/update/669954 

More information can be found below.  Click the image to enlarge.


The Pilgrimage from Confluence to Mission Conception ending in Padre Margil Pilgrimage Center


Incarnate Word Sisters of San Antonio having the Mission Concepcion as its heritage ministry

Saturday, September 6, 2025

Fracking and Our Future

How much do you know about fracking in TX?  Do you really think you are safe from the effects of fracking just because you think it is not near you?




Monday November 10 at 7:30 p.m. CST/6:30 p.m. MST - Our member, Sr. Elizabeth, will provide a presentation and Q&A on the dangers of fracking based on her travels hosting ordinary citizens, small businesses, scientists, researchers, journalists, public health studies faculty and students, through the Eagle Ford Shale.   

This presentation is for LSM members and diocesan guests only; please email Texas@lsmchapter.org to get the password.


Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Shine a Green Light

To RSVP, click the image below.  To know more about the event, go to http://saccvi.blogspot.com/p/events.html  



 





Monday, September 1, 2025

Stop Starvation: Bang Pots for Peace

We live in the world where violence, war, and forced starvation are tolerated in Gaza.  The starving people especially children, pregnant women, amputees, orphaned children have not moved the hearts of those responsible for Israel-Gaza war.  The artilleries and weapons produced by the powerful countries supporting Israel continue to be an instrument of evil.  People are suffering and dying before our eyes while infrastructure and buildings continue to be pounded by missiles and shelled by tanks.  The truth is posted in popular media, newspaper, and television.  Sometimes, we feel we cannot do anything but we can advocate for the voiceless in Gaza to oppose further shipments of missiles, artilleries and military aid until those in power will be able to work for justice and peace.

The colonialism of the western civilization is rooted in the Doctrine of Discovery.  Starting in 1100s, it was decreed through papal bulls and decrees that later on became the justification for the claims on the lands discovered by the Christian European explorers.  On May 4, 1943, Pope Alexander VI issued a papal bull "Inter Caetera" where any land not inhabited by Christians are available to be discovered in support of spreading the Catholic faith.  On the other hand, the papal bull became an instrument for Christian rulers to exploit this power over the lands.  The later Popes revoked the decrees and was nullified in 1530s.

Over the centuries, what became power to the occupiers is the domination and the belief of possession dehumanizing people living in the area despite the native poeple originally occupying the land or the inhabitants of the land have been living in the "discovered area".  The same concept has been used in United States, believing that it has a control over the land of the indigenous people and thus, the land of the native Americans were taken away.  The same concept lies in enslaved people including properties stolen.  Pope Francis, however, apologized to the Indigenous people.  It is also believed that the doctrine has been rescinded since the 1537.   

What justifies the killing of thousands of people in Gaza?  Though, the situation is complicated with the conflict of Palestinian and Jewish people over the territory as early as 1948, the violence between the two are not justified whether or not the violence started by whatever entities.  The conflict between the two have existed long ago after the World War one.  Therefore, the conflict between the two requires a deep conversation and cultural mindset shift.

The area of Gaza is now in famine and some of the children are considered permanently malnourished with thousands of pregnant and nursing mothers who are also malnourished and starving.  It is believed that 1 out of 3 people has not eaten for days in Gaza.  The violence of Israel against Gaza continues.  It is now 695 days since October 7, 2023 when the most recent war started.  There are now more than 63,000 people who died and more than158,629 people are injured from this conflict.  

Bang pots from your window or balcony to demand an end to starvation in Gaza. Record, share, and let your city’s voice be heard supporting the human rights of vulnerable people especially children in Gaza. Join us on September 19 at 5pm CT.  The zoom link will be posted in Justicia, Paz y Tierra / Justice, Peace and Earth: Events

This year's Season of Creation theme is Peace with Creation.  In line with the situation in Gaza, we mourn for the children who have lost their parent or parents and a lot have been orphaned because of the war.  We mourn with all the people of Gaza who have lost their loved ones.  We grieve for the countless lives hurt and environment destroyed.  We take this moment to feel for those who have nothing to eat for days, and for those mothers and fellow brothers and sisters who will go hungry in order to feed their children and in some cases, their chidlren also had nothing to eat.  We pray for those who have to wait in line for food.  We cry for the pain of those shot and killed for reason of hunger and starvation, longing for something to feed themselves or their families.  We advocate for the life of the people of Gaza and those working in the frontlines and marching for the human rights of Palestinians.  They are not numbers, they are human beings with dignity and where each life lies a unique and irreplaceable value and worth.

Some of the inspiration from the Season of Creation Guide:

• Peace with Creation requires proactive steps. Jesus taught repentance and restorative justice. We must repair broken relationships: between humans and Earth, humans and other creatures, and humans and God.

• “The effect of righteousness will be peace” (v17). While the challenges may seem overwhelming, Christ reminds us, “With God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26). Hope fuels action; through prayer, discernment, and commitment, we can create a foundation for change. 

• God’s peace emerges when we work for justice, solidarity, reconciliation, and harmony with Creation. Transformation takes patience, understanding, and trust.

Let us therefore be a people of hope and action for the people of Gaza and the oppressed.

SEASON OF CREATION 2025 PRAYER PEACE WITH CREATION

Creator of all,
we praise you for the gift of life
and for the faith that unites us in care for our common home.
We confess how estranged we have become—
from one another, from your Creation, and from our truest selves.
We acknowledge that our greed and destructive impulses
have fractured our relationships with you, with others, and with the Earth.
Fertile fields have become barren,
forests lie desolate,
oceans and rivers are polluted.
Thriving communities have become places of suffering,
and the earth cries out.

Beloved Christ,
who spoke “Shalom” to frightened hearts,
stir us to compassionate action.
Inspire us to work for the end of conflict,
and for the full restoration of broken relationships—
with you, with the ecumenical community,
with the human family,
and with all Creation.

Prince of Peace,
through your wounds, teach us to stand in solidarity
with the woundedness of others,
of creation, and of the world.
Through your resurrection,
make us people of hope—
with a vision of swords turned into ploughshares
and tears transformed into joy.
May we come together as one family,
to labor for your peace—
a shalom where all your people
may dwell in safety,
and rest in quiet places.

Amen.

 Take Action to advocate for human rights to live and peace: Stop Aiding Israel