 Climate change is a spiritually and morally urgent matter to us because the power to change comes from spiritual sources. We learned this in dialogue with the people's indigenous peoples in the north. All the land, all the cosmos is sacred, a sacrament infused with meaning. Each being has a purpose. This is the soul and spirit of the land and all life. On this Easter and Earth Day 2019, we grieve the greed, self-centeredness, short-sightedness, and human pride that goes with wasteful and thoughtless consumption of energy resources that are not renewable. Those who suffer the effects of our failure to change are those who consume the least, who are coming as future generations and the non-human communities that may or may not be able to adapt. On this Easter and Earth Day 2019, we hope for spiritual transformation, a humility that comes with awareness that all the land, all the cosmos is sacred, a sacrament infused with meaning. Each of us have a purpose. We are all called to a priestly vocation to be a responsible caretaker. On this Easter and Earth Day 2019, we commit as faith leaders to play our part to honestly and directly name our crisis, to raise awareness of its emergency, and to encourage transformative actions that change our consumption-based economy to one grown into a stewardship economy of care. For the love of all creation.