Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Sisters’ ExxonMobil Resolution More Gaia Than Catholic
Sisters’ ExxonMobil Resolution More Gaia Than Catholic
Jul 11, 2025 11:29 PM

Divination, bearing false witness and pantheism are three no-no’s of Christianity. You could look it up. I know from personal experience that many of my fellow pewsitters in the Catholic tradition fail in their attempts to obey the strictures of the faith by seeking out tarot cards, Ouija boards, horoscopes and the like. Many of us are guilty also of spreading deceit, bald-faced lies or even plete and unsettled facts as ontological truths. This has been a problem for some time with Christians and you could look that up too.

What’s more, while we’re obligated to act as environmental stewards, we’re also called to worship God before we bow down to nature. We acknowledge the need to better ourselves by avoiding fortune telling, lying and Gaia-worship among other sins proscribed by Church doctrine.

That said, it’s distressing to witness members of Catholic religious orders engage openly in manners all of us are instructed to shun. My distress was caused by an essay penned by Tri-State Coalition for Responsible Investment Executive Director Sister Patricia Daly over at . Trust me, it’s a doozy.

It seems the Sisters of St. Dominic of Caldwell, N.J., of which Sr. Daly is a member, are active participants in the progressive environmentalism advocated by shareholder activists the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. Sr. Daly pledged her fealty to ICCR’s mission by reads in part: encouraging readers to support a proxy resolution directed at ExxonMobil Corporation, which states:

Resolved: Shareholders request that the Board of Directors adopt a policy acknowledging the imperative to limit global average temperature increases to 2°C above pre-industrial levels, which mitting the Company to support the goal of limiting warming to less than 2°C.

Supporting Statement

We believe that ExxonMobil should assert moral leadership with respect to climate change. This policy would supplement ExxonMobil’s existing positions on climate policy.

Here’s Sr. Daly from her R-I essay linked above:

Amid this new moment, with Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato Si’ presenting a framework for our coexistence with the planet, stating that “the climate is mon good, belonging to all and meant for all,” and the Paris Agreement providing a goal of limiting warming to 2°C or less for the munity to work toward, ExxonMobil investors put the question before pany – must you acknowledge the moral imperative to limit warming to 2°C? Must you recognize this global goal to protect our planet and the people living on it? On May 25th, shareholders of ExxonMobil will have the opportunity to call on pany to join the rest of the world in acknowledging the imperative to keep warming to safe levels by supporting Item 11 on the proxy.

All of this predicated on Sr. Daly’s Cassandra-like divination of a world inexorably destined to havoc wrought by human-caused climate change unless human activity stalls or reverses it. Your writer will leave it to readers to unpack themselves all the scientifically unsubstantiated assertions put forth by Sr. Daly.

But, in Sr. Daly’s view, should ExxonMobil pass the resolution, pany will receive absolution from what she perceives are the sins of its past:

This resolution has striking applicability to ExxonMobil. This is even more appropriate this year amid questions of Exxon’s liability, or at least poor integrity, related to its knowledge about the climate impacts of its core business practices. ExxonMobil is the subject of investigations from multiple state Attorneys General for poor disclosure to investors and the public on what it knew about climate change, and is facing intense public scrutiny for its role in interfering with climate action.

“What it knew?” News flash for you, Sister: Nobody knew then and nobody knows with absolute certainty today other than climate-change zealots that 1) catastrophic climate-change is imminent; 2) climate change is manmade; 3) humans can stall or reverse it by reducing its carbon dioxide and greenhouse gas emissions. As for the allegations in the rest of the paragraph, they remain exactly that – alleged. To conclude much less report actual wrongdoing mitted by pany and its staff before the Attorneys General wrap-up what has been characterized elsewhere as McCarthyism, witch hunts and equal to the Soviet show trials of the 1930s is to bear false witness. But Sr. Daly continues:

This is not only historic action: even in 2015, ExxonMobil spent $27 million on munications, lobbying, and trade associations to undermine policy action on climate change. This strategy has succeeded in keeping the policy agenda on climate change stalled for decades.

Oh my! How dare ExxonMobil defend itself and its shareholders against inconclusive science?

All this before Sr. Daly flies off to Gaia-land:

My Congregation, the Sisters of St. Dominic of Caldwell, NJ and 34 co-filers representing a cross-section of faith-based investors, health systems, socially responsible asset management firms and indigenous munity groups, with over half of a million ExxonMobil shares, filed this resolution urging ExxonMobil to acknowledge the untold suffering that climate change will cause and take steps to work towards solutions. After surviving a vigorous challenge at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), this unique resolution presents a moral challenge that is hardly a high bar given the stakes: simply join in agreement with the primary goal of the Paris Agreement.

ExxonMobil positions itself as fulfilling a moral imperative to deliver energy to the world’s population as a way to lift people out of poverty. Proponents contend that the moral imperative to limit warming to 2°C is a parallel, and equally important, goal that ExxonMobil must acknowledge. It is time we put an end to the concept that there are no alternatives to fossil fuels capable of lifting people out of poverty or providing energy. Alternative energy sources like solar and wind are already providing light and power to those that coal and gas have been unable to help, without contributing to extreme weather, drought, rising sea levels, crop failure, and accelerated species loss. If ExxonMobil is serious about addressing energy poverty, it also needs to consider the impacts of these climate events on the world’s most vulnerable.

So, the empirical facts that inexpensive and plentiful fossil fuels have lifted billions out of abject poverty are outweighed by the presumption that solar and wind energy can realistically replace them immediately without tragic disruptions? Is that a moral choice she really wants to force on pany in which she and her fellow nuns invest?

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Will socialism or corruption sink Europe’s most Catholic state?
The island nation of Malta has long enjoyed a reputation as perhaps the most Catholic nation in the world. However, some analysts believe socialism is gaining adherents, with Labour Party member George Vella about to e president this Friday – and its popularity is due in large part to widespread corruption. Mark R. Royce examines both issues in a new essay for Religion & Liberty Transatlantic. He begins by defining the term socialism, a helpful definition that notes the faith-based...
Kevin D. Williamson responds to ‘Ben Shapiro and the alt-right smear’
In my Friday post titled, “Ben Shapiro and the alt-right smear” I wrote: Thus, National Review – once a bulwark of American conservatism – advocates that gay marriage is a family value – according to Jonah Goldberg – and that statues of former Confederate leadership must be torn down by patriotism – according to Kevin Williamson. Williamson objected, saying this is what he actually wrote in his August 2017 piece “Let It Be” in National Review: The current attack on...
Study finds crony capitalists believe markets in America are already too free
Do business leaders embrace cronyism because they receive favoritism from the government or do those who seek favoritism from the government do so because they’ve already embraced cronyism? Whether it’s a matter of causation or correlation, there is definitely a connection, as a new study from the Mercatus Center at George Mason University finds. The new working paper discusses a national survey of business leaders that sought to determine how government favoritism toward particular firms (i.e., cronyism) correlates with attitudes...
The U.S. money supplies
Note: This is post #117 in a weekly video series on basic economics. What exactly is money? That may seem like a really simple question, but it’s actually kind plicated, notes economist Alex Tabarrok. We often think of money as currency (i.e., paper bills and coins), but “money” is anything that is a widely accepted means of payment. Given that there’s no set definition for what makes modity money, there are a few measurements for the U.S. money supplies. In...
All homeschoolers may have to register with the government
The Department of Education has proposed new guidelines that all homeschool parents must register with the government. Officials say the registry, es as a booming number ofchildren are being educated at home,would be used for government officials to check upon students and assure the pupils are receivingthe government’s definition of aquality education. The UK government unveiled the proposal as another controversial policy percolated through the British school system: pulsory classes about homosexual, bisexual, and transgender relationships beginning in primary school.That...
AOC and the New Eugenics
Here is a piece I wrote for the Stream on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and ments on climate change and whether “it is still ok to have children.” When an American politician asks if it is still okay to have children, this is something to notice. Are you familiar with the progressive movement and their attraction to eugenics? Then you know the score. It’s a short step from “wondering” if it’s okay for people to have children to making laws that forbid...
President Trump visits Grand Rapids, promises to turn it into Detroit
Last Thursday, at a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, MI (home, inter alia, to the Acton Institute), President Trump promised the crowd, “By the way, we’re bringing a lot of those panies back. Remember I told you. ing back. They’re pouring back in.” Now, it is important to put this in context. Trump had just praised Michigan workers — and no doubt people likely came from all over Michigan, even out of state, to hear the president speak. That said,...
Grace in our life together: Community beyond markets, states, and ‘social capital’
When discussing the role of economics in our life and world I am always careful to make a distinction: life is economic but economics is not all of life.I’ve suggested this broader understanding of personal and social interests has mon among major free-market theorists since Adam Smith. Economics itself is the product of the sustained reflection of Christians on nature, the scriptures, and their own experience in crafting the institutions, ethics, and law which birthed the tradition of ordered liberty....
The biggest beneficiaries of the success sequence
Good choices benefit everyone but, as in all of life, not all groups gain equally. The success sequence is no different. The sequence says that the vast majority of people can avoid living in poverty if they make a few deliberate life choices: finish high school, work full time, wait until age 21 to get married, and do not have children outside wedlock. Religion can provide unparalleled motivation for at least two of these goals.A new study has found that99.1...
How the minimum wage affected workers during (and after) the Great Recession
The law of demand is one of the most fundamental concepts of economics. This law states that, if all other factors remain equal, the higher the price of a good, the less people will demand that good. Most of the time this is too obvious to mention. Yet people seem to think we can suspend the law of demand when es to wages. They seem to believe, for example, that increasing the price of labor for low-skilled workers will have...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved