Ecology

Earth Day: Rooted in Relationship: Forests, Faith, and Care for the Land

GUEST BLOG

At Ignatius Jesuit Centre, care for the land is not separate from spiritual life. It is part of it.

Set on over 600 acres in Guelph, Ontario, the land at IJC holds forests, fields, wetlands, and trails that are actively cared for through conservation, farming, and community engagement. For us, ecological stewardship is not only about protecting natural spaces, but about restoring right relationship — with the land, with one another, and with God’s creation as a whole.

As we mark Earth Day, we are reminded that forests are more than landscapes to be preserved. They are living communities. They hold memory, shelter biodiversity, regulate climate, and offer spaces for reflection and renewal. They also require ongoing care.

At IJC, this care takes many forms. Through our conservation work, we are restoring native habitats, managing invasive species, and working to establish long-term protections for the land. Our Old Growth Forest Project, in particular, is a commitment to thinking beyond our own lifetimes; to steward a forest that future generations may inherit, even if we will never see it fully mature.

This long view is deeply connected to our spiritual practice. In a culture that often prioritizes immediacy and extraction, both faith and ecology invite us into something slower and more attentive. Forests teach patience. They remind us that growth happens over decades, that resilience is built through interconnected systems, and that care is often quiet and unseen.

Alongside conservation, Ignatius Farm continues to be a place where people learn through direct relationship with the land — growing food, tending soil, and participating in ecological cycles. Increasingly, this work is being integrated with opportunities for reflection, retreat, and education through our emerging Centre for Integral Ecology. The Centre is being developed as a place of formation, where people can engage the ecological and spiritual dimensions of life together through hands-on learning, shared reflection, and dialogue. In this way, we are responding, in a practical and grounded way, to Laudato Si’’s call to care for our common home — bringing faith, ecological understanding, and lived practice into closer relationship.

This invitation is already being lived out through the participation of volunteers and community members. On any given week, people gather to remove invasive species, helping native plants and trees to regenerate. Others join in planting trees, tending the community orchard, or supporting restoration projects across the property. On the farm, volunteers seed, harvest, and care for the soil, learning directly from the rhythms and limits of the land. These are not abstract acts of care, but physical, relational ones — ways of coming back into contact with the living systems that sustain us.

At its core, this work is an invitation. Not only to protect the natural world, but to reconsider how we live within it.

Prayer Intentions

We invite you to join us in holding these intentions in prayer:

  • For the healing and restoration of forests and ecosystems under pressure around the world

  • For the plants, animals, birds, and unseen life that share this Earth with us, in gratitude for their presence and with hope for their healing where they have been harmed

  • For the patience and long-term vision needed to care for the land across generations

  • For all who work in conservation, farming, and ecological education, that they may be sustained in their efforts

  • For deeper awareness of our interconnectedness with all of creation, and the courage to live differently in response

Courtesy of the Ignatius Jesuit Centre

The Green Mission: Cultivating Sustainability and Community

The Green Team at our Sisters of St. Joseph Residence in London was formed several years ago with the aim “to educate, empower and promote environmentally sustainable practices within the community and at home”. Composed of three sisters and several staff members, the initiative focuses on the education of integral ecology.  The hope is to have everyone involved and participating within and beyond our residence.

Along with many initiatives, the Green Team sends educational items to the staff newsletter and in poster form throughout our home as well. At Sisters’ house meetings there is information given re: ongoing ecological initiatives.

Our staff communication APP also carries eco information in the form of short educational videos etc. This is also communicated by closed circuit tv.   From time-to-time, in the staff room, incentive posters remind us, “Earth needs all of us”.

Special April Earth Day activities get people up and doing. Armed with compostable yard bags, compostable garbage bags, gloves and long trash pickers to pick up the refuse, off we go to collect garbage from the grounds and our section of Windermere Road, here in London, Ontario.  Every year, the debris lessens.  (In fact, I’ve almost given up my beer-can collecting business). Usually, a few drivers honk to encourage us in our green efforts. Indoors, coffee and Timbits are enjoyed while staff are invited to watch special Earth Day presentations and celebrate our various initiatives.

Sisters in Peterborough making “milk bag mats” to send overseas.

Another successful initiative with which many are familiar is collecting specific types of plastic bags which volunteers transform into durable mats for people in other countries.

Integral ecology involves composting which we see in action in our dining room and kitchen.  Following meals, food scraps are put in specific compost containers.  To ensure that every item gets to its proper place, a framed notice announces, “Compost is hungry for Kleenex and napkins too”.  Posted on the wall nearby are colorful educational compost posters: “Things that CAN be Composted” and “Things that CAN be Recycled”.

At the service entrance in the garbage room stand huge blue, green and black containers for specific kinds of waste waiting to be picked up by Waste Connections of Canada.  The oil products in the black container will be turned into biofuel and the contents of the other compost bins will be processed to nurture soil in fields, gardens etc.

On a creative note, what is prettier than hand-picked wildflowers arranged attractively, in front of our chapel altar?  Incidentally another way to replace costly store-bought bouquets. This too, is integral ecology!

-Sister Jean Moylan, CSJ

Header image: Jan Kopřiva/Unsplash

My Trees

Image: Unsplash/Erwan Hesry

NATIONAL LOVE A TREE DAY is MAY 16th

I never had a favorite tree.  However, I have tried to grow trees from seed.  My first attempt was at growing an orange tree from one of the seeds in the orange I was eating.  Remember when there used to be seeds in oranges?  I think it’s ironic the way we want to control everything having to do with reproduction.  Seeds in oranges are definitely an inconvenience.  But I digress.  My orange tree actually grew quite tall (about 10 cm) and then I moved and gave it up to the elements.

My second attempt at growing a tree was to take a maple seed key from Southwestern Ontario to Edmonton, Alberta to see if I could grow a tall tree there.  Unfortunately, when I put the tiny 4 cm high seedling out in the yard to get more sun, I watch a bird sit on the side of the pot and pull out the plant by the roots.

I have to laugh at myself for thinking that I am the one growing trees when really I only planted seeds and kept them moist.  It really is God who gives the increase.  It’s all part of the plan in which we can actively participate.  

-Sister Elaine Cole, CSJ

Header image: Unsplash/Simon Wilkes

A Treasured Letter: Earth Day 2023

Image: Unsplash/@rinckad

Do you,  like myself, have a letter among your keepsakes that you fondly treasure and pull out to reread? Its words touching your heart and inspiring a commitment to live life more fully.

On April 22nd, Earth Day provides us with an excellent, appropriate opportunity to reread a published papal letter.

Read the letter here, or at least a summary of it signed  with deep caring, only as “Francis”.  This letter, called “Laudato Si’ ”, was  officially published on June 18, 2015, and marks its eighth anniversary this June. Its global release was highly anticipated and was accompanied by a news conference which caught the attention of the world.

In the past, papal letters were written primarily as internal documents containing the present pope's views on church teachings and doctrine and were addressed to Catholic clergy and the laity.  Surprisingly, or perhaps not so remarkably,  Pope Francis addressed his wise, timely and respected words in Laudato Si’ to “the citizens of the world”.

Image: Unsplash/Noah Buscher

Pope Francis, relying on thousands of years of Catholic teaching and scientific knowledge calls on all of us to live our life and our faith by caring for our common home. He draws our attention to the deep connection between the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor. He weaves together the truths of science and spirituality throughout his public letter calling upon all humanity to heed creation and the Creator’s call.

The website, Space offers these realistic and encouraging words for us to take to heart. “When we hear terms like "code red for humanity" and "climate change", it can feel difficult to focus on the small actions individuals and communities can take to address the climate crisis. But Earth Day strives to highlight how everyone can be part of the change. “

Let us ask ourselves this Earth Day,

Image:Unsplash/Greg Rakozy

“What one thing can I change to contribute to the healing of the earth?”

Francis’ encyclical, “Laudato Si’” is indeed a letter to treasure.

 -Sister Nancy Wales, CSJ

Header Image: Unsplash/Andreas Gücklhorn

The Mother Tree

The Great Bear Rain Forest in British Columbia, although about one-tenth in size, is comparable to the Amazon rain forest, as one of the greatest contributors to the health of our planet.  This forest preserves the biodiversity of our animals and plants, stores carbon, is a source of medicine, and counteracts pollution.  Yet, in this forest, the lack of appropriate management and building of dams has resulted in increased pollution, floods, fires, and loss of habitat for animals.  Only three percent of this old-growth forest has never been harvested.  

Suzanne Simard was born in 1960, a member of a logging family.  As a child, she witnessed her grandfather, father, and uncles down trees with hand-held saws, and use horses to drag logs to rivers where men would walk on the floating logs to push them down river and break up log jams with dynamite. Amputated fingers were a common hazard.  In addition, building roads through the forest, using modern equipment, erecting dams, and clear-cutting large sections of the forest have caused much harm. The legacy of frequent forest fires, floods, loss of animal habitat, loss of biodiversity, and reduced carbon storage.   

In her 2021 book, Finding The Mother Tree, Simard describes her long journey to become a forest researcher, overcome resistance to letting go of harmful convictions and practices, and introduce new forest management practices.  Simard’s story is an amazing account of a woman who persisted in following her vision with great courage in the face of much opposition, family responsibilities, and a major health issue.  She leaves a legacy of trained researchers and a revolution in forest management. I highly recommend reading her inspirational book, Finding The Mother Tree. 

Below is a fascinating video Mother Trees and the Social Forest, in which the author describes her work and the application of research findings that provide hope for the restoration of our forests.  

-Sister Pat McKeon, CSJ