Friday, May 8, 2026

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship - Webinar: Environmental Destruction and the War on Gaza

Webinar: Environmental Destruction and Genocide in Gaza

Monday, May 11

7:30 pm - 8:30 pm EDT

 

Join us for this collaboration between the newly formed Creation Action Network of Presbyterian Young Adults (CANOPY) and the Presbyterian Peace Fellowship. Emma Marshall will host the webinar. She is a candidate for ordination in National Capital Presbytery and the young adult organizer for Presbyterians for Earth Care. The speaker, Ben Daniel, is a Presbyterian minister, peace activist, and award-winning author living in Oakland, California. His book, Grace Over GunsPursuing Peace in a Militarized World (due out in June), talks honestly about the reality of war, including war’s impact on the environment.


RSVP to the Meeting

Get Involved: PPF Working Groups

Our working groups meet regularly and welcome new participants. If you’re interested in getting involved, we invite you to join a meeting.


Current working groups include:


  • Gun Violence Prevention Working Group
  • Peace Church Working Group
  • Presbyterians for Abolition
  • Palestine Solidarity Working Group


📅 Visit our calendar for meeting dates and registration details

General Assembly 227 — Upcoming PPF Events


Peace Gathering


Join us during the General Assembly for fellowship, food, and inspiration for the work ahead. We’ll honor Presbyterian Peaceseekers, discuss key issues before the Assembly, and connect with others committed to nonviolence.


Keynote Speaker: Dr. Osamah Khalil

Professor of History at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.


📅 Friday, June 26, 2026

🕕 6:30–8:30 PM

📍 Immanuel Presbyterian Church

1100 N. Astor St., Milwaukee, WI

Register Here

Community Day of Action


As part of the Presbyterian Decade to End Gun Violence, Presbyterians will gather for a day of action focused on gun violence prevention.


Activities may include:

  • Guns to Gardens demonstrations
  • Public art using dismantled gun parts
  • Resources and organizing tools for congregations


📅 Saturday, June 27, 2026

Planning Our GA Witness


Will you be attending General Assembly as a commissioner, delegate, corresponding member, or overture advocate?


We would love your help with:


  • volunteering during GA
  • supporting pre-GA advocacy outreach


📧 Contact: info@presbypeacefellowship.org



Commissioners’ Resolutions due: June 22


Concerned About Gun Violence?


Join individuals, congregation leaders, and clergy from across the country at the James Atwood Institute for Congregational Courage.


Participants will engage in workshops, training, and community-building to help congregations take meaningful action to prevent gun violence.


Learn more or register

Call for Photos


We are looking for photos to use in Atwood publicity.


If you have photos of:

  • faith leaders leading vigils or rallies
  • gun violence prevention events
  • congregations gathering for justice

please consider sharing them with us.




If submitting, include:

• where the photo was taken

• what was happening

• why people were gathered


We will credit photographers when images are used.


You can send them to info@presbyterianpeacefellowship.org

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship | 17 Cricketown Road | Stony Point, NY 10980 US

WCC news: Land rights and mining: WCC, CWM demand reform in Africa

The World Council of Churches (WCC) and the Council for World Mission (CWM), through a joint communiqué, demanded fundamental reform of how extractive industries operate across Africa, following a five-day consultation in Gaborone, Botswana. Church leaders, theologians, Indigenous leaders, and community representatives gathered from 21-25 April for the Africa Consultation on Mining, Land, and Justice.
Photo: Sean Hawkey/Life on Earth Pictures
07 May 2026

“Where mining scars the land, dries the water, and displaces the people, the churches must speak for justice, stewardship, and the healing of creation,” said Dinesh Suna, WCC programme executive for Land, Water, and Food.

The communiqué opens with Psalm 24:1 – “the earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it” – to frame land, water, and ecosystems as sacred trusts, not economic inputs. Development decisions, it insists, must begin with the dignity of those who live on the land, not the value of what lies beneath it.

The consultation’s keynote was delivered by Rev. Dr Rupert Hambira, member of the WCC central committee, who called on participants to move the church from prophetic statement to prophetic action. Prof. Pedro Arrojo-Agudo, UN special rapporteur on the human rights to safe drinking water and sanitation, argued that mining’s damage to water systems demands equitable governance and international accountability.

“Аfrican landscapes and ecosystems often function primarily as sites of resource extraction, while local communities bear the social and ecological costs of development. . . . Therefore, faith communities, especially churches across Africa, carry both a historical responsibility and a prophetic calling to confront systems that perpetuate ecological destruction and social injustice,” said Rev. Daimon Mkandawire, CWM mission secretary for ecology and economy, and Africa region.

The communiqué calls on governments to ground agrarian reform in redistribution, recognition, restitution, and regulation. Mining companies face calls for binding environmental standards and genuine post-closure rehabilitation. Both organisations will carry this work forward within the WCC Ecumenical Decade of Climate Justice Action.

A Communiqué on the Africa Consultation on Mining, Land and Justice - Gaborone, Botswana | 21–25 April 2026

WCC Ecumenical Decade of Climate Justice Action – the framework within which this consultation sits through its programme on Land, Water and Food advocacy.

Council for World Mission – co-issuing organisation of the communiqué

UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights to safe drinking water and sanitation – mandate of Mr Pedro Arrojo-Agudo, cited in the piece

See more
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
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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 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.

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

EarthBeat Weekly: One year ago, the world met Pope Leo. What he's said and done on ecology

One year ago, the world met Pope Leo. What he's said and done on ecology

 

EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

May 8, 2026


 

Pope Leo XIV feeds fish at a pond in the Pontifical Gardens of Castel Gandolfo, Italy, Sept. 5, 2025. (CNS/Lola Gomez)

Friday marks one year to the day since Pope Leo XIV first appeared to the world upon the balcony overlooking St. Peter's Square.

Over the past two weeks, National Catholic Reporter has published numerous articles and commentaries examining all aspects of the first year of the first U.S.-born pope. Stories have looked at his Chicago roots, his Augustinian influences and what it even means to have a pope from the United States. 

Today, Vatican correspondent Justin McLellan reports on how peace has become a central priority of Leo's early papacy. And on Thursday, a team of reporters from Global Sisters Report looked at how he has sought to advance justice

A day earlier, contributor Chelsa Jordan King reflected on another area Leo has emphasized over the past 365 days: ecology

King wrote that one of the closely watched questions with Leo was how he might follow Pope Francis' legacy on addressing the socio-environmental issues, such as climate change, impacting all parts of our world today. 

Indeed, moments after Pope Leo emerged from the conclave inside the Sistine Chapel, I began researching and digging into what, if anything, Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost might have said on the environment. 

As it turns out, he had said quite a bit. At a 2024 Vatican conference, Prevost observed the time had come to move "from words to action" on climate change. His time as bishop of Chiclayo, Peru, put him upfront with the impacts of climate change on rural, Indigenous and impoverished communities, at one point leading him to don rubber boots to survey storm damage in floodwaters. A review of his now-deleted X social media account revealed numerous tweets advocating for climate action, including for the U.S. not to abandon the Paris Agreement (it has done so twice now). 

Those early clues have shown how Prevost as pope would engage environmental matters. As King writes, Leo has not retreated from the powerful positions and teachings on creation that Francis imprinted on the church. Rather, he is propelling it forward. 

"Over the past year, he has insisted there is 'no room for indifference or resignation' in responding to the climate crisis. Like Francis, Leo has maintained that care for the earth cannot be separated from care for the poor, and has demonstrated a willingness to confront the structural drivers of environmental harm, criticizing economic systems that prioritize extraction and profit over human dignity and ecological health."

As he hinted at the 2024 Vatican conference, Leo has placed an emphasis on action, King notes, pressing both policymakers and everyday Catholics to put Francis' words in his encyclical "Laudato Si', on Care for Our Common Home" into tangible, impactful measures. 

Leo has done so by example in completing or continuing numerous initiatives begun by Francis and undertaking others of his own. 

He added a Mass for the care of creation to the Roman Missal. He is overseeing plans to build a vast solar farm outside Rome to turn Vatican City into the world's first carbon-neutral state. He inaugurated the Borgo Laudato Si', an integral ecology education and training center in Castel Gandolfo, where Leo spends a day each week in the stillness of its vibrant gardens. He oversaw the Vatican submitting a new emissions reduction target under the Paris Agreement.

Like Francis, Leo has delivered forceful messages of his own on the environment, including at a conference marking the 10-year anniversary of Laudato Si', in multiple messages to world leaders at the COP30 United Nations climate summit in Brazil, and as part of numerous other speeches.

"If Francis helped the church name the urgency of the ecological crisis," King writes, "Leo appears focused on deepening the response by embedding it more fully in the spiritual, educational and institutional life of the faithful."

Read more: One year in, Pope Leo forges ahead with Francis' ecological legacy

Additional reading: 

Aug. 16, 2025: In his 100 days as pope, Leo links climate, environment to broader global issues

Oct. 1, 2025: Pope Leo calls for 'true ecological conversion' from words to action on environment



What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by Brian Roewe

After conversations among nearly 60 nations on ways to wean the world from fossil fuels, Catholics who attended the first-of-its-kind summit in Colombia left encouraged by the promise the conversations represented.

Read more here »


 

by Sarah Raza, Associated Press

Read more here »


 

by Doreen Ajiambo

One year after the pope's election, religious sisters across Africa say his early visit affirmed the continent's place in the church and now challenges communities to turn his message of peace into lasting action.

Read more here »


 

by Elizabeth Hamilton

In the upcoming PBS documentary, "Mary Oliver: Saved by the Beauty of the World," director Sasha Waters pays homage to one of America's most beloved modern poets.

Read more here »


What's happening in other climate news:


'A huge setback': New EPA directive could weaken hundreds of chemical regulations —Sharon Lerner for ProPublica

AI boom sparks rare warning of 'significant risks' to grid —Christa Marshall for E&E News

More than 150 wind projects stall as Pentagon delays reviews —Brad Plumer for The New York Times

Georgia officials knew chemicals from carpet mills were polluting local water. The people did not —Jason Dearen for the Associated Press, Dylan Jackson and Justin Price for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution

This herbicide is so toxic it's been banned in over 70 countries. But plants in the South are releasing it into the air. —Delaney Nolan for The Lens

Soil at D.C. golf course where East Wing debris was dumped contains toxic metals —Maxine Joselow for The New York Times

Ted Turner, a media mogul who tried to repair the land —Rhett Ayers Butler for Mongabay

From neat lawns to wild havens: how No Mow May is transforming England's gardens —Isaaq Tompkins for the Guardian

The Earth is full of marvels that inspire care for creation —Olivia Bardo for U.S. Catholic


Final Beat:


Readers of EarthBeat and NCR over the years are no doubt familiar with the Catholic Climate Covenant. Based in Washington D.C., it works with 20 national Catholic partners to raise awareness and mobilize action around the church's teachings on creation and the environment. 

The Covenant has taken a leading role in animating many corners of the U.S. church in initiatives ranging from prayer services, creation care teams, educational resources, solar installations and political advocacy.

Last week, the nonprofit organization — originally formed as the Catholic Coalition on Climate Change — celebrated its 20th anniversary. 

"You can't talk about Catholic social teaching without talking about care for creation now. It's just a given, and that was not the case 20 years ago," John Carr, a longtime official with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said at an April 30 event marking the anniversary.

video of the full event is available on the Catholic Climate Covenant YouTube page. 

As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.





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


 


 


 
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Presbyterian Peace Fellowship - Webinar: Environmental Destruction and the War on Gaza

    Webinar: Environmental Destruction and Genocide in Gaza Monday, May 11 7:30 pm - 8:30 pm EDT   Join us for this collaboration between th...