Earth Matters – March 2025

At last,  the longer days and brighter evenings of March are with us. We can get outside more  and  dust  off  the  cobwebs that  have kept  us  grounded  for  the past  few  months.

There’s  nothing better to  entice  us to enjoy the outdoors more than the welcoming chorus of birdsong from the many varied species visiting our gardens and parks now.  There are blackbirds, thrushes, robins, wrens, great tits, and finches along with the abundance of crows who along with the others are busy building nests for their new families.  This month, especially, it’s good to keep our eyes and ears open and to be alert to the myriads of amazing factors the natural world offers. 

Many trees and shrubs are sprouting buds while various flowers add welcome colour to our gardens.  My tulips and begonias are blooming and my pink camelia already has a profusion of colour in my front garden which always attracts the admiration of passersby. 

Butterflies, moths plus other invertebrates and amphibians are now venturing out of hibernation.  We should keep an eye out for hedgehogs at this time too and provide suitable food plus water (not milk!) for them. 

Our farmers are busy sowing various seeds in the hope of plentiful crops later on.  This reminds me that we should all try, if possible, to grow some of our own food produce.  In this way, instead of always taking away from the earth’s resources by purchasing all our food in stores, etc., we  can  give  back  some  reserves  to  nature.  

I  want  to  raise  awareness  this  month  about  the  interconnectedness of  all life and things on our planet.  Pope Francis states in Laudato Si (83) that ‘All creatures are moving forward with us and through us to a common point of arrival which is God’. 

And again (LS 84) states that ‘Each creature has its own purpose.  The entire material universe speaks of God’s love, his boundless affection for us.  Soil, water, mountains; everything is, as it were, a caress of God’. 

LS (85) the  Canadian  Bishops  rightly  pointed  out  that  ‘no  creature is excluded from the manifestation of God which is the multitude of created things present in the universe’.

The  great  theologian  Teilhard de  Chardin  wrote  extensively about  the  interconnectedness  of  everything  in  the  Universe.

All  life  is  sacred.  It  should  evoke  wonder  and  awe  in  us.  How perfect  is the  rosebud,  the  baby’s toenails, the dog’s sense of direction.  The beat of our hearts in necessary to the continued beat of the universe.  Even the humble crow teaches us a lesson demonstrating a bond with humanity and many species. Tradition tells us they start building their nests on 1st March. From their natural instinct prompting them to build nests, we learn the importance of ritual and routine in our lives too.  It gives a rhythm to our ordinary everyday lives in the midst of an ever-changing world, where we have a need for constancy and sameness.  Once again, mother nature is our instructor and we are reminded that we too are also part and parcel of nature, a fact that we often overlook.  There is a universal rhythm with whose beat ALL of life is in tune.

The  metaphor  for  the  picture  of  The  Great  Chain  of  Being  that the  progress of human understanding over time has arrived at is the Tree of Life.

“Every   creature  has  descended  from  a  common  ancestor,  growing  from  the  acorn  of  its  beginning  into  a  great  oak  of  relationships,  and  we  humans  are  one  small  twig  at  the  end  of  one  branch.” (Messenger, Sacred Heart Publication)

“The  world  is charged  with  the  grandeur  of  god,  and  for  all this,  nature  is  never  spent; there lies the dearest freshness deep down things”.  (Gerard Manley Hopkins)

Happy  Springtime,  Your  Earth  Friend,  Anne