Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Presbyterians for Earth Care - Letter to our Earth Caring Friends đź’š and Upcoming Events

“I am the Vine and you are the branches.”

                                                  --John 15:5


Dear Friend of Presbyterians for Earth Care,


Gabriella Parulli is a remarkable young woman in Albuquerque, NM, and one of the branches that Jesus talks about in John 15:5. As a high school junior, Gabriella opened a “refillery” out of an Airstream trailer. A refillery is a store that sells cleaning and personal products in bulk, where customers bring their own containers making her business plastic and waste-free. Now, she operates a brick-and-mortar refillery called Fillin’ Funky. Gabriella received PEC’s Emerging Earth Care Leader award in 2024.

You, too, can extend God’s love for all creation by partnering with Presbyterians for Earth Care in 2025. Renew your membership and make a difference as you connect and collaborate with national and regional advocates for eco-justice. Presbyterians for Earth Care provides you with resources and models for ministry, including a biennial conference, quarterly issues of EARTH, (a newsletter focused on earth, action, reflection, theology, and hope), timely monthly webinars, and email updates. Your membership in Presbyterians for Earth Care will connect you with individuals engaged in the vital work of climate justice, provide creation care resources for you, your congregation, and your community, and offer spiritual sustenance during this challenging time.


Renew your membership by Earth Day, April 22, 2025, to be part of the Earth Care Movement and a branch of Jesus’ vine. On the back are an earth care quote and a benediction that you and your congregation can share with the larger community, reminding you of the ways God is calling you to care for creation.


Partner with Presbyterians for Earth Care in 2025! The urgency is clear—global temperatures have already exceeded 1.5oC, the threshold set by the Paris Agreement above pre-industrial levels. In 2024, Americans faced the impacts of climate crises across the country, and we continue to witness climate-driven catastrophes in 2025. Now is the time to take action.


Partner in our Eco-Justice Network with a PEC Annual Membership (suggested contribution):

Family: $50   Congregation/Organization: $75   Partner: $100

You can view these and other options for donating online through our website: CLICK HERE   If you prefer to send a check, please mail to: PEC Treasurer, P.O. Box 8041, ,Prairie Village, KS, 66208.


Also, mark your calendars for our 2025 Earth Care Conference at Ferncliff Conference Center in Little Rock, AR, October 8-11, 2025. The theme, Justice Flows Down Like Water, provides opportunities to see the importance of water from many different perspectives. We hope to see you there.


Thank you for considering extending the branches of the Earth Care Movement!


Sincerely,

Courtenay Willcox (Moderator), on behalf of the PEC Steering Committee: Eileen Best, Matthew Davis, Mark Eakin, Sam Hamilton-Poore, Mindy Hidenfelter (Coordinator), Jane Laping, Sarah Mayer, Consuelo Ochoa de Walker, Matthias Peterson-Brandt, Jo Randolph, and Derrick Weston

SPRING WEBINAR


The Book of Revelation:

All Creation’s Hallelujah


Webinar Date: Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Time: 7:30 pm EDT (6:30 CDT, 5:30 MDT, 4:30 PDT)

Presenter: Robert A. Bryant, Ph.D., Kristen Herrington Professor of Bible, Department of Religion and Philosophy, Presbyterian College


The Revelation to John--the last book of the Bible, and sometimes the first book to capture eyes and ears of people and cultures across time. This study enables groups to learn together about messages to first century (CE) churches and how these speak to churches today. Explore visions conveyed in apocalyptic style that provoke faithful wonder and how symbols and metaphors illustrate God’s character and purpose as well as the consequences of evil. Study the ways in which prophecy conveys what matters to God and what Christians need to do to remain faithful to the teachings of Jesus, the Messiah and Savior of the world, and to respect God’s loving care for all creation.



Online Bible Study


What strikes you about having Scriptures that were written by people who were not omniscient, whose knowledge was limited to their own place in history? How do youth climate protests call people of all ages to action?  How do civil suits by young activists draw attention to the need for action? How can retired people become engaged in climate action?


We will explore these questions and more in our upcoming study of a lesson on Intergenerational Justice.


You are invited to join Presbyterians for Earth Care on Sunday, April 27th for an online study of:


Let Justice Roll Down: God’s Call to Care for Neighbors and All Creation

by Patricia K. Tull
Suggestions for Leaders by Rebecca Barnes


Please join PEC for this unique monthly opportunity for community and meaningful study.

 

Time: 7:00 pm Eastern/ 6:00 pm Central/ 5:00 pm Mountain/ 4:00 pm Pacific. The study will run for 75 minutes.


Study Leaders: Rev. M. Courtenay Willcox and Rev. Lucy Youngblood


The study guide is helpful, but not necessary to participate. Each lesson is stand alone - join us online for any or all of our study sessions! We hope to see you there!


Registration opens in May


Presbyterians for Earth Care

Biennial Earth Care Conference

“Sacred Creation: Justice Flows Down Like Water”

October 8-11, 2025

Ferncliff Camp & Conference Center in Little Rock, AR


KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Rev. Andrew Black,

Founder of Earth Keepers

(Read Rev. Black’s Bio HERE)



The Environmental Crisis As A Spiritual and Theological Crisis—Moving From the Apocalyptic To Hope


In a series of keynote addresses, Presbyterian Minister Reverend Andrew Black of EarthKeepers 360 helps us prophetically address important questions facing our church and world?: 1) How do we faithfully interpret and address difficult Biblical texts regarding the environment?; 2) What role must the church and faith leaders play in addressing environmental problems and reimagining the role of responsible stewardship of creation?; 3) What is happening with regards to America’s land, water and wildlife and what are we seeing in terms of U.S. policy impacts in these areas?; 4) What role must churches play in shaping and challenging policy and why? 5) What can local congregations do right now to make a difference?; and 6) Why must congregations and faith leaders be at the forefront of bridging environmentalism and social justice and how do we stand with Tribal and frontline communities?   

How can we help you care for God’s creation?  Drop us an email and let us know at presbyearthcare@gmail.com


Help us grow! Please let us know if there is anyone we should add to our list!  Just reply to this email.  Thank you!

Please help us to continue to assist individuals and churches in creation care work by donating to PEC through our website by CLICKING HERE.  Thank you!

Facebook icon
Instagram icon
Twitter icon

This Thursday Webinar on Gun Violence

This Thursday, April 10, 2025 at 4:00 pm ET, you are invited to join the Office of Public Witness for our first webinar in a series featuring leading Christian ethicists from around the country who are doing important work on some aspect of gun violence. The webinar will offer a rare chance for people of faith to hear from experts on gun violence who approach their work with the big questions of our faith: What does our faith call us to do about gun violence? How can the resources of our faith be a blessing in communities that suffer most from gun violence? In times of intense political polarization, how can people of faith promote community safety so that all can experience God’s peace and flourishing? 

Registration is required. Click the link to sign up to receive the webinar’s Zoom invitation or visit https://zoom.us/meeting/register/v2SFC_5IRimrDAWT1Rxi8w#/registration.

WCC NEWS: On World Health Day, prayers lift up “Healthy Beginnings, Hopeful Futures”

The World Council of Churches (WCC) morning prayer focused on World Health Day, observed on 7 April under the theme “Healthy Beginnings, Hopeful Futures.”
Morning prayer at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on the World Health Day, 7 April 2025. Morning prayer at the Ecumenical Centre in Geneva on the World Health Day, 7 April 2025. Dr Birgitta Rubenson offered a reflection. Photo: Ivars Kupcis/WCC
07 April 2025

World Health Day 2025 is emphasizing that the health of mothers and babies is the foundation of healthy families and communities, helping ensure hopeful futures for us all.

Dr Birgitta Rubenson, a pioneer of WCC's work on Health and Healing, especially concerning the work on HIV from the very onset of the pandemic in the 1980s, offered a reflection.

Rubenson authored the first-ever WCC publication on AIDS: â€śWhat is AIDS: A Manual for Health Workers” (1987). 

She offered a history of the WCC’s work on HIV and AIDS. 

“For WCC and the member churches there were several difficult issues to tackle: the lack of knowledge about the disease and its spread, especially in Africa, the prejudices about the disease and it’s spreading in gay and drug abusing circles in USA and Europe,” she said. â€śAnd everywhere there was the immediate need for care of the sick and dying, as there was no cure.”

At that time, research had discovered the virus causing the disease and that it was spread with body fluids, such as blood, saliva, and breast milk. 

“We had to give as correct information as we could about the spread and care,” said Rubenson. â€śAs so often the focus for many was sidetracked into what was easier to talk about and find ways around like the minimal risk of spread through saliva on the chalice at Eucharist.”

The real lifestyle risks related to sexuality were more difficult to talk about as they were the basis for so much prejudice and fear, said Rubenson. "I wrote two very basic manuals on HIV and AIDS, one for health workers and one for pastors,” she said. â€śThe disease is still deadly but can be kept under control by medication.”

She noted that AIDS forced the churches to reflect on their ecclesiology, their role as churches, tradition or context, reality or ideology, inclusion or exclusion. â€śThese issues are continuously relevant, and possibly even more important today than ever,” she concluded.  

Director of the WCC Commission of the Churches on Health and Healing Dr Manoj Kurian noted that, even in this age of advanced science and technology, 300,000 women lose their lives due to pregnancy or childbirth each year, and over 2 million babies die in their first month of life. 

“Half of the world's population lacks access to essential health services,” he said. â€śAt the same time, we are witnessing a troubling decline in international cooperation with reductions in health, development aid, and humanitarian support.”

He pointed out that, during these critical times, we are called to prayerfully mobilise the contribution of the church to build healing communities, starting with our personal lives, our families, and our congregation. â€śWe also have to engage in direct advocacy—to meet with government representatives to call for increased funding and action on health, climate, and social justice issues,” said Kurian.

With the Ecumenical Prayer Cycle, the WCC is also praying with and for the people and churches of the Balkans - Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia and Slovenia.

See more
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
The World Council of Churches on Twitter
The World Council of Churches on Instagram
The World Council of Churches on YouTube
World Council of Churches on SoundCloud
The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 352 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

Monday, April 7, 2025

Seven Weeks for Water 2025, week 6: Water in the Cosmic Dance!

The sixth reflection of the Seven Weeks for Water 2025 series of the WCC Ecumenical Water Network is written by Prof. Mathew Koshy of Church of South India.  In this reflection, inspired by the Psalm104, he argues that the life giving resource, the water of life, plays a vital role in the “divine choreography” with other elements in God’s creation to sustain life. He then invites us to renew our participation in the “cosmic dance of life”—where water flows freely, justly, and joyfully.  Furthermore, he illustrates the Church of South India’s good practices in this endeavour.
07 April 2025

* By Prof. Mathew Koshy Punnackadu

Text: Psalm 104:10–13, 24–25

“You make springs gush forth in the valleys;
they flow between the hills,
giving drink to every wild animal;
the wild asses quench their thirst.
By the streams the birds of the air have their habitation;
they sing among the branches.
From your lofty abode you water the mountains;
the earth is satisfied with the fruit of your work…
O Lord, how manifold are your works!
In wisdom you have made them all;
the earth is full of your creatures.”
—Psalm 104:10–13, 24–25

Reflection 

Psalm 104 offers one of the most vibrant and poetic portrayals of God's relationship with creation. It invites us into a sacred vision where nature is not merely a backdrop to human life, but an intricate web of divine wisdom, life, and sustenance. The Psalmist sees God as the great choreographer of creation’s rhythm—the One who waters the mountains quenches the thirst of wild animals and fills the earth with abundance. This is not random or mechanical; it is intentional, beautiful, and harmonious.

Water, in this sacred text, is not just a natural element—it is a divine gift. It flows in tune with the cosmic rhythm of God. From the mysterious depths of the sea to the heights of the mountain springs, water follows a graceful path that sustains all life. When the sun lifts water from the oceans into the sky, clouds form and ride the winds. These clouds meet the tree-clad mountains and shower rain upon them. The roots of the trees capture and store this precious gift, slowly releasing it into streams that dance down into the valleys.

This year, we reflect on glacier preservation, a pressing sign of our changing climate and a call to stand with all creation in the struggle for life.

Glaciers are known as the water towers of the world. Their slow melting sustains rivers, nourishes farmlands, and quenches the thirst of millions. Yet, today, these glaciers are vanishing at an alarming rate due to rising global temperatures. The glaciers' tears mirror the Earth's lament, melting under greed, negligence, and injustice.

As the streams join and grow into rivers, they carry life to every corner—nourishing soil, sustaining wildlife, and quenching the thirst of all creatures. Where the rivers widen and slow, wetlands emerge in the plains—nature’s reservoirs. These low-lying regions absorb rain and gradually release water during drier periods, ensuring continuity in the water cycle. Every drop participates in this divine choreography, a cosmic dance that reflects God’s wisdom and generosity.

But when humans disrupt this sacred rhythm—through deforestation, pollution, over-extraction, and climate change—we violate the integrity of God’s creation. The consequences are visible and painful. Where there once was abundance, there is no scarcity. Where streams once sang, rivers now run dry. Without water, there is no life—and the harmony of the cosmos is broken.

Take, for instance, Cherrapunji, once famed as the wettest place on Earth. Despite its heavy rainfall, it now suffers from water scarcity. This paradox stems from poor water management, where rainwater quickly runs off steep slopes without being harvested. Deforestation has stripped the soil of its water-holding capacity, and the rains come in a brief, intense season, leaving months of dryness. Cherrapunji reminds us that even nature's blessings can be lost when we fail to live harmoniously with the Earth.

Natural resources are seen as commodities in today’s capitalistic and globalised world, where everything is reduced to profit margins. Mountains are mined, forests are cleared, rivers are dammed, and wetlands are reclaimed—all in the name of development. The rhythm of water is violently interrupted for short-term gain. Resort mafias encroach into forests, disrupting wildlife habitats, and low-lying wetlands are filled for urban expansion, ignoring their crucial role in groundwater recharge and flood control.

In this context, the church has a prophetic role. The church must be a moral compass, reminding humanity that water is not for sale—it is a sacred right of all creation. The Church of South India has demonstrated this conviction by supporting the Gadgil Commission, which recommended the protection of 1,600 km of the Western Ghats, a vital ecological region known as India’s water tower. Despite opposition from vested interests, the church stood with environmental groups, affirming that the Earth belongs to God, and its gifts must be preserved for future generations. 

The church must educate and mobilise communities to harvest rainwater, protect forests, preserve wetlands, and resist unsustainable urbanisation. Forests are the rightful homes of wild animals; plains are meant for humans and their livestock; wetlands are the abodes of aquatic life. This order, this rhythm, is not arbitrary—it is divine. Perhaps that is why God placed wild and even dangerous animals in forests—to teach humanity boundaries and to remind us that not every place is ours to conquer.

To protect water is to protect life itself. It is to enter into the rhythm of the Creator and join the cosmic dance. Proclaim water sacred, protect sources, promote climate justice, practice eco-lifestyles, and partner with communities to heal God's creation and ensure water justice.

In Psalm 104, we see God as the great Water-Giver, nourishing the land, satisfying every living creature, and delighting in creation. Lent calls us to return to this vision, to repent from our ecological sins, to reimagine our development, and to renew our participation in the cosmic dance of life—where water flows freely, justly, and joyfully.

Let us weep with the melting glaciers, pray beside the drying wells, and act with courage, hope, and unity.

This Lent, let our cry rise with the rivers:
“Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.” (Amos 5:24)

Questions for Discussion

  1. In your local context, where have you witnessed the disruption of water's sacred rhythm—such as drying wells, polluted rivers, or vanishing wetlands—and how has this affected the community and the local ecosystem?
  2. How does your community treat water as a sacred gift or a mere commodity? 
  3. What cultural, spiritual, or faith-based practices could help shift this mindset?

Ideas for Action

  1. Start a church-led rainwater harvesting or wetland restoration project:
    Encourage congregations or local communities to build rainwater harvesting systems or adopt nearby wetlands, reviving them through clean-up drives and community stewardship.
  2. Organize a Water Justice Sunday during Lent:
    Dedicate one Sunday to water justice—include themed prayers, testimonies, and a local river/well walk. Invite environmental activists and scientists to speak, and raise funds or awareness for protecting a nearby water source or glacier-affected community.

Resources 

https://csimkdecological.org/csi-church-formally-endorses-gadgil-report/

https://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Kochi/csi-bishop-seeks-protection-of-ghats/article5360377.ece

https://drmathewkoshy.com/water-is-the-right-of-all-living-being/

https://csimkdecological.org/resources/

* Prof. Dr Mathew Koshy Punnackadu is an environmentalist, writer, and activist who has pioneered the Green Church Movement in India since 1992. He served as the honorary director of the Department of Ecological Concerns of the CSI Synod for ten years, spearheading transformative environmental initiatives across the Church of South India. Currently, he serves as the Environmental Advisor to the CSI Synod. He serves on the World Council of Churches Climate Justice and Sustainable Development Commission. For more, visit: www.drmathewkoshy.com
See more
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
The World Council of Churches on Twitter
The World Council of Churches on Instagram
The World Council of Churches on YouTube
World Council of Churches on SoundCloud
The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 352 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 550 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay, from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

Presbyterians for Earth Care - Letter to our Earth Caring Friends đź’š and Upcoming Events

“I am the Vine and you are the branches.”                                                   --John 15:5 Dear Friend of Presbyterians for Ear...