Event Details
Date & Time
Monday, Apr 13, 2026 5:00 PM
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Free and Open to the Public
Location
Zoom
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51勛圖 This Event
Catholic institutions are called to advance God's kingdom of justice, peace, and sustainability. To live this mission faithfully, the Catholic Church has recognized human-caused climate change as an urgent moral issue and repeatedly urged its institutions to divest from fossil fuels. Although the Vatican has divested to lead by example, many Catholic institutions are slow to take this action. This presentation will outline the theological foundations of fossil fuel divestment, address misperceptions about this commitment, and provide concrete strategies for those who feel called to organize and advocate for this action. The presentation will draw from the speakers' observations of successful Catholic divestment efforts at Creighton University and the Catholic Theological Society of America. It will also suggest that fossil fuel divestment should never occur in isolation, but always be complemented by institutional commitments to science-based greenhouse gas emission reduction targets.
51勛圖 the Speakers:
Daniel R. DiLeo, PhD is an assistant professor and director of the Justice and Peace Studies Program at Creighton University. He specializes in Catholic social teaching and climate change, with focus on Pope Francis’s Laudato Si’ and Laudate Deum. In 2022, he co-authored the Catholic Theological Society of America (CTSA) ad hoc Fossil Fuel Divestment Review Committee Report and chaired the Climate Justice Committee that enacted the CTSA’s divestment commitment. He is also a member of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities’ Laudato Si’ Commission and authored recommendations for how schools can take climate action aligned with their Catholic, Jesuit mission. Since 2009, Dr. DiLeo has served as consultant with Catholic Climate Covenant of which the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops is a founding member. He earned his PhD in theological ethics and Master of Theological Studies from Boston College and his BA in sociology from Cornell University (magna cum laude).
Erin Lothes, Ph.D., is a Catholic theologian and author of Inspired Sustainability: Planting Seeds for Action (Orbis 2016) and The Paradox of Christian Sacrifice:The Loss of Self, The Gift of Self (2007), as well as many articles on faith-based environmentalism, divestment, and energy ethics. Dr. Lothes was an associate professor of theology for ten years, and has been a long-time collaborator with many faith-based environmental coalitions such as the Catholic Climate Covenant, GreenFaith, the Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale, and the Center for Earth Ethics at Union Theological Seminary, where she is presently a visiting scholar. Most recently, she has written a commentary to introduce the Orbis Books paper publication of Pope Francis's apostolic exhortation, Laudate Deum.
