Patriarch Bartholomew's Water Problem

Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew in his statement for the 2015 World Water Day makes a number of assertions that, while inspired by morally good ideals, are morally and practically problematic. Chief among them is his assertion â??that environmental resources are Godâ??s gift to the worldâ? and so â??cannot be either considered or exploited as private property.â? While certainly not absolute, the Orthodox Christian moral tradition doesnâ??t reject the notion of private property. In fact, property is valued â??as a socially recognized form of peopleâ??s relation to the fruits of labour and to natural resources.â? Included here are the â??basic powers of an owner,â? such as â??the right to own and use property, the right to control and collect income, the right to dispose of, lease, modify or liquidate propertyâ? (The Basis of the Social Concept of the Russian Orthodox Church, VII.1).

On a practical level, Bartholomewâ??s concern for â??sustainabilityâ? reflects what George Will calls an idea whose â??premises are more assumed than demonstratedâ? and which â??as a doctrine of total social explanation, transforms all ills and grievances into environmental causes, cloaked in convenient science.â? When embodied in public policy, sustainability empowers â??government planners and rationers to fend off planetary calamity while administering equityâ? allowing them â??to supplant markets in allocating wealth and opportunity.â?

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