Monday, February 9, 2026

Action Alert - No New Nuclear Arms Race

“He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; 

they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks; 

nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
    neither shall they learn war any more.”  Isaiah 1:17 (NRSV)

Today the only remaining nuclear non-proliferation treaty between the United States and Russia expired leaving the world open to a new nuclear arms race. The New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) was ratified by both nations in 2011 and capped the deployed nuclear arsenals of the United States and Russia while encouraging transparency, communication, and accountability between the two nations.  


Last September, Russia offered a year-long informal roll-over on the agreement to give both nations time to hash out a durable replacement to New START. The United States failed to make a formal response. The current Administration’s failure to respond allows the United States and Russia to unabatedly modernize and expand their arsenals, an escalation of nuclear brinksmanship that comes amid the rapid deterioration of trust and transparency in international relations. In response, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ Science and Security Board moved the Doomsday Clock to 85 seconds from midnight, the shortest the Clock has ever been in its history.
 

This failure in international diplomacy is unacceptable. We must call upon our government to pursue an extension to New START at once and to act quickly to begin talks for a renewed agreement. 


For decades, the Presbyterian Church has decried the development, testing, or hoarding of nuclear weapons, holding that any concept of nuclear warfare falls outside the bounds of a faithful conception of just war doctrine. Just war criteria such as “proportionality” or “discrimination” are impossible to satisfy in the use of nuclear weapons; therefore, nuclear arms are a direct violation of the sanctity of human life. 


The PC(USA) has advocated for the complete dismantling and abolition of nuclear weaponry, declaring that “nuclear war is totally unacceptable as a solution to human problems.” (195th General Assembly, 1983). Our faithful commitment to peacemaking compels us to abandon national interest and rather “seek the good of all humanity and not just of ourselves.” (192nd General Assembly, 1980) Repeatedly over the last few decades, the church has reaffirmed that we seek the good of all humanity by pursuing international treaties like New START which limit or dismantle the nuclear arsenals of the US and other major powers.


The world is less safe and less secure without strong international treaties controlling nuclear arms. Likewise it is further from God’s promised Shalom. We call on you to:
 

  • Call for Congress to pass a framework for preventing a new nuclear arms race by passing H.Res. 317 and S.Res. 323Learn more about these bills here.
  • Call for the Administration to both accept the extension of New START and formally commit to the development of a comprehensive treaty to replace it.
     

WCC News: WCC launches “Ten Commandments of Climate-Responsible Banking,” encouraging faith communities to divest from fossil fuels

The World Council of Churches (WCC) has released a new resource, Ten Commandments of Climate-Responsible Banking, calling on individuals, churches, and faith-based organizations to align their financial choices with climate justice and the wellbeing of future generations. 
People of faith joined together in an interfaith invocation before the March to End Fossil Fuel in New York City on September 17, 2023. Photo: Simon Chambers/ACT
05 February 2026

The guide stresses that money entrusted to banks is often invested in industries driving the climate crisis and urges believers to use their economic influence to support a transition away from fossil fuels and toward sustainable alternatives. 

“At the heart of the resource is the conviction that responsible financial decision-making is a powerful tool for protecting life and ensuring intergenerational justice,” says Rev. Dr Kenneth Mtata, WCC programme director for Life, Justice, and Peace. “Continued investment in fossil fuel expansion threatens children and future generations, as fossil fuels account for around 90% of carbon emissions driving the climate emergency.”

Putting together these commandments, added Mtata, will help churches relate to the issues in ways familiar to their religious language.

By encouraging people to examine how their savings, pensions, and insurance funds are invested, the resource frames climate-responsible banking as an ethical and practical way to safeguard creation and human dignity. Linking financial stewardship with moral responsibility, the initiative aims to inspire practical, faith-driven action to protect the planet and ensure a just and sustainable future for generations to come.

The resource sets out ten concrete actions for individuals and communities seeking to reduce their financial contribution to environmental harm. These include researching how much one’s bank invests in fossil fuels and urging financial institutions to end such investments. The guide also recommends spreading awareness, exploring legal avenues to challenge banks that support fossil fuel expansion, and moving money to greener banks or values-based investment funds. 

Additional actions include checking whether pension and insurance providers invest in fossil fuels and shifting to climate-responsible alternatives, steps the WCC describes as among the most impactful personal climate measures.

“It is a moral duty of faith communities to protect God’s creation and act in solidarity with vulnerable populations disproportionately affected by the climate emergency,” says Frederique Seidel, WCC senior programme lead for Children and Climate. “Churches have both spiritual and societal influence, enabling them to advocate for transparency, accountability, and ethical finance while responding to scientific warnings and the appeals of young people for climate solutions.”

Ten Commandments of Climate-Responsible Banking

Learn more about the Churches' Commitments to Children

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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 356 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.

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EarthBeat Weekly: Christian leaders call out Chicago's toxic lead pipe problem

Christian leaders call out Chicago's toxic lead pipe problem

 

EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

February 6, 2026


 

Troy Hernandez, an environmental justice activist, shows a piece of lead pipe obtained from his residence during his home renovation, April 9, 2021, in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood. (AP/Shafkat Anowar)

No state in the country has more lead pipes in service than Illinois. That large presence of toxic infrastructure in the Land of Lincoln recently compelled a coalition of Chicago Christian leaders to call for action to swiftly address this danger to public health. 

Ecumenism Metro Chicago, comprising 14 Christian denominations in the Windy City, called on federal and state lawmakers to "make every effort to replace all the lead water pipes in Illinois as quickly as possible," as I reported today at EarthBeat.

The letter was issued Jan. 24 during an ecumenical prayer service at St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church in Chicago as part of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. The Christian leaders, which includes the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago, also urged the Trump administration to reenter the Paris Agreement on climate change, from which the president has withdrawn the country for a second time.

"In the words of our late Holy Father Francis, we must see that in creation 'Everything is connected' if we are to effectively 'listen both to the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor,' " Auxiliary Bishop Mark Bartosic, citing Pope Francis' 2015 encyclical "Laudato Si', on Care for Our Common Home," said in a statement. "Things go very wrong when we overlook essential points of connection between us."

In Laudato Si', Francis wrote that "access to safe drinkable water is a basic and universal human right, since it is essential to human survival and, as such, is a condition for the exercise of other human rights."

Drinking water is one of the main sources of lead exposure in the U.S. today, with Illinois alone estimated to have more than 1 million lead service lines, the highest in the nation, according to a 2023 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency report.

Lead is a heavy metal and a neurotoxin. There is no safe level of exposure to lead, which when ingested can cause serious damage for people at all ages but especially children, said Dr. Philip Landrigan, director of the Program for Global Public Health and the Common Good at Boston College whose research on lead poisoning in the 1970s helped spur federal bans of lead in paint and gasoline.

"The reason infants in the womb and young children are so vulnerable to lead is that their brains are still developing," Landrigan, a pediatrician and epidemiologist, told me. "Brain development is an extremely delicate, fragile process [that is] easily disrupted."

While the bans of lead-based paint and gasoline have led to a 95% drop in childhood lead poisoning, the metal remains a danger through old housing where lead paint is still present, and through drinking water serviced with lead pipes. In both cases, economically poor families and minority communities in the U.S. are disproportionately at risk.

That scenario is on display in Chicago.

Read more: Chicago Christian leaders urge rapid replacement of state's toxic lead water pipes



What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by Brian Roewe

Some 2,000 members of the Notre Dame community gathered in subfreezing temperatures to celebrate a candlelit Mass at St. Olaf Chapel, a student-constructed fleeting house of worship made from snow, ice and faith.

Read more here »


 

by Anne Chiwala

Catholic sisters in Malawi are working with local communities to spread the Watts of Love project, which distributes solar-charged lamps and trains women and men in basic finance and management skills.

Read more here »


What's happening in other climate news:


Climate change is making the Winter Olympics harder to host —Janice Kai Chen, N. Kirkpatrick and Júlia Ledur for the Washington Post

Fate of Colorado River hangs in balance as political battle brews —Joshua Partlow for the Washington Post

Why companies are phasing out these super-pollutants despite Trump —Nicolás Rivero for the Washington Post

Good news: We saved the bees. Bad news: We saved the wrong ones. —Dana Milbank for the Washington Post

How a cockatiel named Koco inspired a conservation movement —Ruby Mellen for the Washington Post

How bad is your stove for your health? Look it up. —Daniel Wolfe and Frank Hulley-Jones for the Washington Post

Washington Post gutting its climate team —Sammy Roth for Climate Colored Goggles


Final Beat:


The opening ceremonies of the 25th Winter Olympics take place on Friday in Milan amid the majestic Italian Alps. 

As you may guess, there's a climate angle to the winter edition of the world's premier exhibition of athletics excellence.

The article above from the Washington Post provides an interactive look at the future of the Winter Olympics in a warming world. The compelling graphics are based on a 2024 study commissioned by the International Olympic Committee that analyzed 93 global regions on their climate reliability for hosting by 2050 and beyond. 

"If global emissions and Games continue as they are, there will be just 52 locations that remain climate-reliable by the 2050s, and 46 by the 2080s," the Post article reports of the study's conclusions. 

It's easy to see how rising temperatures will have an impact on winter sports. Hotter temperatures mean less precipitation falling as snow. But it's not just the quantity, as Kiley Price reports for Inside Climate News, but the quality of snow that's put in jeopardy — an important element for high-level competition where races are often decided by less than a second.

The same authors of the 2024 study in the past week issued a follow-up report examining ways to make the Winter Olympics more resilient on a warming planet. One key, as both articles highlight, is not so much where to host but when. 

Something to keep in mind as you watch skiers like the incredible Mikaela Shiffrin fly down the Italian mountainsides in the coming weeks.

As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.

 



Brian Roewe
Environment Correspondent
National Catholic Reporter
broewe@ncronline.org

 


 


 
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Truth and Action Roundup 2.5.2026

Action Alert - No New Nuclear Arms Race

“He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples;  they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears...