56°F
weather icon Clear

Nuns protest pipeline through cornfield on religious grounds

PHILADELPHIA — An order of nuns brought their fight to stop a natural gas pipeline project on their rural Pennsylvania property to a federal appeals court Friday.

The Adorers of the Blood of Christ argue that construction of a pipeline through their cornfield in Lancaster County represents a violation of their religious freedom and duty to preserve the earth.

A lower court dismissed the nuns’ lawsuit last year, and the pipeline company already has been given permission use the land to build the Atlantic Sunrise project, which is more than 20 percent finished.

But the sisters, backed by a courtroom full of supporters in Philadelphia, said they’re undeterred.

“If there’s anybody who thinks sisters live quiet, uneventful lives, they have not met the Adorers of the Blood of Christ,” Sister Janet McCann said after the hearing. “And they have not heard about our resistance to the forced placement of a 42-inch high-pressure fracked gas pipeline our farmland in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.”

Lawyers for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Company said the order doesn’t have grounds to object because it never brought its religious freedom argument to the federal agency.

“They had the opportunity to present a defense, and they chose not to,” company lawyer Elizabeth U. Witmer told the panel of appeals judges. “They have simply waived all of their rights.”

The company reiterated the basis of the lower court’s decision to toss the case because of insufficient evidence that the pipeline will infringe on nuns’ religious beliefs. It said the pipeline will be a good source of inexpensive natural gas.

The Adorers of the Blood of Christ’s legal claim draws, in part, on Pope Francis’ 2015 encyclical letter, Laudato Si, which they said provides theological basis that members of the Roman Catholic Church and others must protect the earth as god’s creation. A copy of Francis’ letter was attached to one of the nuns’ legal filings.

The nuns also allowed an outside group to build a makeshift chapel on the land.

J. Dwight Yoder, the order’s lawyer, framed the case in religious terms when talking with reporters.

“It’s David versus Goliath,” he said after the hearing. “And we have to believe that there is a way to get this done.”

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Judges order Trump administration to use contingency funds for SNAP payments

Two federal judges ruled on Friday that the Trump administration must continue to pay for SNAP, the nation’s biggest food aid program, using emergency reserve funds during the government shutdown.

Is Dictionary.com’s word of the year even a word?

Teachers have banned it. Influencers and child psychologists have tried to make sense of it. Dictionary.com’s word of the year isn’t even really a word.

How Americans feel about changing the clocks, according to new poll

Yes, you’ll get a shot at an extra hour’s sleep. But even with that, it might be one of the most dreaded weekends on the American calendar: the end of daylight saving time.

Haiti, Jamaica and Cuba pick up the pieces after Melissa’s destruction

Emergency relief flights began landing at Jamaica’s main international airport, which reopened late Wednesday, as crews distributed water, food and other basic supplies.

Trump says US will resume testing nuclear weapons for first time in 30 years

“Because of other countries testing programs, I have instructed the Department of War to start testing our Nuclear Weapons on an equal basis,” he said in a post on Truth Social. “That process will begin immediately.”

MORE STORIES