Stewards & creatures / ‘Green the Church’ / Pentecostal environmentalism
Stewards & creatures / ‘Green the Church’ / Pentecostal environmentalism
August 16, 2021

Creation care & congregational life

Creation care should be an urgent preaching, teaching and pastoral priority for all of our congregations. 
In this Weekly, we explore how congregations and other faith-based organizations participate in protecting the planet.
We're talking about commitments to environmental justice this week. Welcome to the Weekly! 
On Earth Day, people of faith need to take action on climate change

People of faith must take action on climate change

In our current ecological crisis, we must emphasize humanity’s role as both stewards and creatures in God’s creation, writes a theologian.
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A nonprofit works to 'green' the Black church

Green The Church encourages African American congregations to commit to an environmental theology that promotes sustainable practices and helps build economic and political change.
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Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago raised millions of dollars to build a green roof, pictured here, which is covered in vegetation to absorb rainfall and regulate temperature.

Otis Moss III: Care for the land is intimately tied to Black liberation

An urban megachurch on Chicago’s South Side is a leader in creation care, drawing upon the congregation’s history and addressing its current needs.
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'I'm a Pentecostal environmentalist'

Creation care is an integral aspect of the relationship of the Holy Spirit to the world, says a Pentecostal theologian, pastor and environmentalist.
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From the Alban Library

'Climate Church, Climate World: How People of Faith Must Work for Change'


by Jim Antal


"Climate Church, Climate World" argues that climate change is the greatest moral challenge humanity has ever faced; it multiplies all forms of global social injustice: hunger, refugees, poverty, inequality, deadly viruses, war. Environmental leader Rev. Jim Antal presents a compelling case that it’s time for the church to meet this moral challenge, just as the church addressed previous moral challenges. He calls for the church to embrace a new vocation so that future generations might live in harmony with God’s creation. After describing how we have created the dangers our planet now faces, Antal urges the church to embrace a new vocation, one focused on collective salvation and an expanded understanding of the Golden Rule (Golden Rule 2.0). He suggests ways people of faith can reorient what they prize through new approaches to worship, preaching, witnessing and other spiritual practices that honor creation and cultivate hope.
Learn more and order the book

Before you go...

More than 10 years ago, I observed “Climate Church, Climate World” author Jim Antal lead the Massachusetts Conference of the UCC with a wholehearted commitment to both environmental justice and to church renewal: commitments shared by Green the Church, Dr. Kim, the Rev. Moss, and others featured in this Weekly. Those of us who are worried about the future of congregations can learn something from those who see mission as extending to all of creation. Such commitments might help us keep our challenges in perspective and focus on a God-sized calling.
Blessings to you as you consider how your congregation is participating in and shaped by creation care and environmental justice.
Peace,


Dave Odom

Director, Alban at Duke Divinity

Executive Director, Leadership Education at Duke Divinity 

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