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Congregations can
take action to become good stewards of God's creation!
Your congregation - both as an institution and in the lives of its members - can become
a good steward of God's creation.
Talking is not enough! Justice demands that we fulfill our stewardship
responsibility by living our institutional lives and our personal lives in
ways that create a sustainable world for the sake of people all over
the world today, for future generations, and for all of God's non-human
creations.
The National Council
of Churches has issued an
Open Letter to Church and Society: God's Earth is Sacred. Please take
time to read this important statement!
Here are some ways we can work for environmental
justice:
 | Energy stewardship is of primary
importance because of the threat of continued global warming as well as
power plant pollution that contributes to asthma, heart disease, and
other illnesses.
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Join New York
Interfaith Power and Light, a newly-formed interfaith
effort working for just and faithful stewardship of God's gift
of energy to create a sustainable world and to prevent further
global warming. |
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Get a low-cost/no-cost energy audit from NYSERDA. |
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Use the 1-2-3
Response to Global Warming Toolkit for Congregations. |
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Take action NOW: Urge your
Representative and Senators to support a just and sustainable
energy policy.
 | Take action on the General Board of
Church and Society's UM
Power website. |
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Know what your denomination says, such as
the United Methodist Church's Energy
Policy Statement in our Social Principles. |
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 | Responsible food choices - second
only to energy in importance!
 | Justice Coffee is a particularly easy, important,
and appropriate way for congregations to make a big difference for
Central American family farms, for our own migratory birds, and
for the earth. |
 | Take action in your own congregation with the Food for Thought
(...and Action!) program |
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 | Stewardship of public and private
lands - especially your own congregation's land.
 | Pesticides - Make your
grounds a chemical-free zone. Protect our children, adults, and
wildlife. |
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 | Lifestyle and responsible consumption
- important spiritually as well. Do we too highly value material
things and consume more than our fair share of the earth's resources? |
 | Other ways to take action |
 | And advocacy to heal and defend God's
creation goes along with all of these. Make sure our public policy
representatives know that we care about good stewardship of God's
creation. |
Just getting started in your own congregation?
The
Ecological Disconnect (or) What Keeps Us From Responding by Karla
Hignite describes the four barriers you may face as you work with your
congregation to become good stewards of God's creation. It also describes what is needed to have a faithful earthkeeping program,
including "...at least one individual who is totally passionate and
who is willing to put in serious time." YOU can be that person!
What's New!
* New information about the impact of
every purchase of 100 pounds of coffee
* Updated Environmental Justice
articles from Connections, and archives for
past years
* The Food for Thought
(...and Action!) Toolkit for Congregations - Dec 2003
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Updated
January 19, 2006
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