The paper explores Process theology in dialogue with theologies of liberation and the experience of labourers as necessary theological frameworks to construct labour justice and solidarity as divinely ordained. In addition to womanist and liberationist theologies, the paper relies upon personal and anecdotal evidence of labour organizers and labourers. The paper begins by deconstructing the Capitalocene through Process and Liberationist hermeneutics as a social contract based upon a co-created web of exploitative labour relations. Recognizing the co-creation of the Capitalocene, the paper explores Monica Coleman's Womanist Process Theology in dialogue with labourers as a possible reconstruction of a theological framing of labour justice that centers the experiences of labourers as foundational for the emergence of liberative possibilities. Furthermore, the paper argues Process theology offers an inherent interreligious theological argument needed for building global solidarity. In the final part of the paper, the developed process theological framework is examined through international religious advocacy. By grounding the proposed theological framework within a case study, the paper seeks to further prove Process theology as a necessary theological foundation for liberation within the Capitalocene.