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EJC Voices

Sacred Activists Hope Films Will Prompt Action

March 15, 2013 By chris

By Marty Minchin, South Charlotte news. A group of Sacred Activists in Charlotte are hoping a new film series will spark some righteous indignation. “Speaking Truth to Power: The Justice […]

Sacred Activists Hope Films Will Prompt Action

March 15, 2013 by chris

By Marty Minchin, South Charlotte news.

A group of Sacred Activists in Charlotte are hoping a new film series will spark some righteous indignation.

“Speaking Truth to Power: The Justice Series” begins March 23 at Unity of Charlotte. The first movie is “What a Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire,” a 2007 documentary about a middle-class man dealing with issues such as climate change and mass extinction.

A discussion will follow each movie, which the Sacred Activists hope will be only the beginning.

“I hope it will motivate people to action and realize we can do a lot of things to make this world a better place,” said the Rev. Nancy Ennis, minister of Unity of Charlotte and a member of Sacred Activists.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

NC Congregations Speaking Out on Climate Change

February 4, 2013 By chris

Public News Service

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Congregations in places of worship across North Carolina soon will hear a message about climate change. On Feb. 8-10, at least 36 places of worship in the state will participate in the fifth annual Preach-In on Global Warming, organized by the organization North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light. www.preachin.org lists some of them.

NC Congregations Speaking Out on Climate Change

February 4, 2013

Public News Service

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Congregations in places of worship across North Carolina soon will hear a message about climate change. On Feb. 8-10, at least 36 places of worship in the state will participate in the fifth annual Preach-In on Global Warming, organized by the organization North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light.
www.preachin.org lists some of them.

Religious leaders, including the Rev. Craig Schaub of the United Church of Christ, Winston-Salem, will explain to their congregants why protecting the environment is a moral issue.

“Everything we can do to build a movement to stop what has been happening in terms of climate change, that’s a prophetic call to all of us who are people of faith,” Schaub said.

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Filed Under: In the News

The Christian Response to Global Warming

January 18, 2013 By chris

Coastal Review Online, Annita Best

Christians, says Penny Hooper, often don’t put their beliefs to work protecting God’s creation. They just need to know how, she says. Interfaith Power & Light, Hooper hopes, is one way. This national coalition that describes itself as “a religious response to global warming” and believes that Christians and environmentalists aren’t necessarily very different and that they can work together to solve the greatest environmental threat.

The Christian Response to Global Warming

January 18, 2013

Coastal Review Online, Annita Best

Christians, says Penny Hooper, often don’t put their beliefs to work protecting God’s creation.  They just need to know how, she says.

Interfaith Power & Light, Hooper hopes, is one way.

This national coalition that describes itself as “a religious response to global warming” and believes that Christians and environmentalists aren’t necessarily very different and that they can work together to solve the greatest environmental threat.

Interfaith Power & Light believes that the Christian response to global warming is good stewardship – in this case, promoting energy conservation, energy efficiency, and renewable energy.

“This organization works from our moral commitment to Creation Care and specifically for advocacy and education about climate change within faith-based communities,” said Hooper, Carteret County resident. “Alternative energy gives the churches more money to use in other ways.”

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Filed Under: In the News

Christianity and the Environment: NC Churches Take Action

November 1, 2012 By chris

Authentic Progress (NC Sustainability Center) by Sami Grover

"The Lord God took the man and put him in the garden to till it and keep it." Genesis 2:15 Stewardship of the Earth – or creation care – is at the heart of the Bible’s Creation Story. Allison Reeves Jolley is Volunteer and Outreach Coordinator at North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light (NCIPL), an organization that brings believers of all faiths and denominations together to address the causes and consequences of global climate change.

Christianity and the Environment: NC Churches Take Action

November 1, 2012

Authentic Progress (NC Sustainability Center) by Sami Grover

“The Lord God took the man and put him in the garden to till it and keep it.”
Genesis 2:15

Stewardship of the Earth – or creation care – is at the heart of the Bible’s Creation Story.

Allison Reeves Jolley is Volunteer and Outreach Coordinator at North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light (NCIPL), an organization that brings believers of all faiths and denominations together to address the causes and consequences of global climate change. She argues that the prominent placement of environmental concepts at the beginning of the Bible is indicative of their importance to the Christian faith:

“It’s right there at the beginning of the Bible. It’s the earliest and clearest call for Christians to care for the environment. Eco-theologians, such as Dr. Norman Wirzba, often make the connection that this point in scripture is perhaps the clearest instance where God tells humans that our role is to protect the garden of God’s creation. In context, that implies that our polluting of the garden’s atmosphere is in exact opposition to what God calls us to do.”

This is a view echoed by Daniel J. Stulac, a Doctoral student a Duke Divinity School, whose studies look at the Hebrew Bible through the lens of agrarianism. Dominion over the Earth, he argues, is a concept that has been misinterpreted to justify exploitation and depletion of resources. Stulac, who previously managed the organic farm at Dartmouth College, and spent two years in Rwanda with his wife building an agricultural college for subsistence farmers, argues that the concept of earth stewardship is peppered throughout the Old Testament:

“Time and again the Bible looks at ethical principles through the notion of human beings as producers and consumers of food. As Dr Ellen Davis, author of Scripture, Culture and Agriculture: An Agrarian Reading of the Bible, has shown, the story of Exodus 16 – where the Isralites leave Egypt and escape slavery – is really about the notion of a wilderness economy. The Isralites develop morally and ethically in the wilderness. Food is a revelation from God, and you can’t behave ethically while taking more than your fair share.”

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Filed Under: In the News

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