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Serve, Work and Transform
In this blog, we'll look at how men and women at serving Jesus Christ both at home and abroad. We'll focus on how God is using their work to transform the lives of people all over the world.
Friday, April 17, 2026
WCC News: WCC renews commitment to peace with justice for people of Sudan
EarthBeat Weekly: Decade-old scars of environmental disaster in Vietnam
Decade-old scars of environmental disaster in VietnamEarthBeat Weekly April 17, 2026
![]() Thi Mai sells fish at a market in Hue, Vietnam, on Apr. 4, 2026. She like other locals believe the chemical alteration of the water after the 2016 Formosa marine disaster has stunted the growth and quality of the catch. (Photo: Reporter in Vietnam) For many fishermen in Vietnam, the memory of April 7, 2016, does not fade with the tides. That day marked the beginning of the Formosa marine disaster — one of the most devastating human-caused environmental catastrophes in Vietnam's history. Ten years later, for the Catholic communities spanning 200 km of coastline, the "common home" described by Pope Francis in Laudato Si' remains a place of profound brokenness. While the government claims the waters have recovered, the families who live by the rhythms of the sea say the environmental penance is far from over. The disaster was precipitated by the Taiwanese-owned Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corporation, which admitted to illegally discharging a cocktail of phenol, cyanide and iron hydroxides into the ocean. The toxins formed dense compounds that settled on the seabed, suffocating the marine ecosystem. Read more: Vietnam's coastal Catholics hold the scars of Formosa disaster 10 years later What else is new on EarthBeat:
![]() by Derrick Silimina In 2022, the Daughters of the Redeemer launched the Community Transformation Programme, which supports five Zambian villages with agricultural mentorship, nutrition programs, and water, sanitation and hygiene activities.
by Gina Christian, OSV News The letter was commended by Cardinal Michael Czerny, prefect of the Vatican's Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, who extended Pope Leo XIV's blessing to the bishops.
![]() by Brian Roewe The pope's repeated calls for a world without nuclear arms challenges the president's accusation that he has been soft on the nuclear issue. What's happening in other climate news:
Iran war's global energy crisis sharpens China's advantage in clean tech —Chan Ho-Him, Aniruddha Ghosal and Anton L. Delgado for the Associated Press Afghanistan's capital is in the grip of a water crisis —Elena Becatoros for the Associated Press Supreme Court hands win to Chevron, Big Oil in environmental damage case —Julian Mark for the Washington Post Big win for mining as Senate votes to remove moratorium on Boundary Waters watershed —Ana Radelat for MinnPost BLM advances contentious South Dakota uranium mine —Hannah Northey for E&E News A Trump 'blockade' is stalling hundreds of wind and solar projects nationwide —Brad Plumer and Rebecca F. Elliott for The New York Times Environmental groups take Trump administration's 'God Squad' to court —Wyatt Myskow for Inside Climate News Final Beat:
Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corporation is one of five subsidiaries of the Taiwan-based Formosa Plastic Group, the corporation behind efforts to build a massive petrochemical facility in southeastern Louisiana, an area often referred to as "Cancer Alley." At the center of the effort to oppose the Formosa Plastics plant is Sharon Lavigne, a Catholic activist who through her grassroots group RISE St. James has rallied community and environmental organizations to prevent another industrial facility from being built in the region already inundated with dangerous levels of pollution. Lavigne's work for environmental justice has been recognized with the 2021 Goldman Environmental Prize and a year later the prestigious Laetare Medal from the University of Notre Dame. Still, the eight-year struggle to block the Formosa plant continues. While a state judge in 2022 vacated air regulation permits for the proposed plant, which she said posed "serious health consequences" for residents, that decision was overturned in 2024. In February, RISE St. James and environmental groups filed a new lawsuit to block the air permits. "Formosa wants the state to keep this project on life support, even though it would double toxic air pollution in an already overburdened parish, and LDEQ keeps extending the permit as if our lives don't count," Lavigne said in a statement. "How many of our neighbors have to die? We're still here, we're still fighting, and St. James Parish is not a sacrifice zone." As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.
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Truth and Action Roundup 4.17.2026
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Thursday, April 16, 2026
SojoMail - The president vs. the pope
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WCC News: WCC renews commitment to peace with justice for people of Sudan
As the devastating war in Sudan enters its fourth year, World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay reflect...
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Genocide, Worker Rights, and White Christian Nationalism NCC Newsletter July 2, 2021 Click here to donate Recent Interview with Jim Winkl...
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View this email in your browser This week: Queering Christianity, an interview with folk singer-songwriter Crys Matthews, and examining our ...
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On the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, churches and communities across the world deepened their calls for...


















