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.
Saturday, December 30, 2023
Today in the Mission Yearbook - A PC(USA) podcast culminates with the Matthew 25 vision as a whole
Friday, December 29, 2023
Today in the Mission Yearbook - The director of the PC(USA)’s Center for the Repair of Historic Harms makes a pitch to attend the Matthew 25 Summit
Presbyterians for Earth Care - Thank You for Prayers & Support AND Link to Inspiring Webinar
Dear Friend of Presbyterians for Earth Care, In 2023, Presbyterians for Earth Care (PEC) offered 11 monthly webinars and 33 conference offerings (worship, Bible studies and workshops) with live opportunities for learning led by outstanding leaders that inspired action in a variety of ways to care for God’s creation and counter the climate crisis. These talks are all posted on YouTube for individual, church and community use for free (see “events” section of PEC webpage). Please donate here today so we can finish 2023 strong and do more in 2024. Thank you! | |||||||||||||||||
WEBINAR RECORDING AVAILABLE Making a Home in the Darkness, Waiting for the Light A Winter Solstice Service The recording of our December 21, 2023 webinar led by The Rev. Dr. Susan Gilbert Zencka, with music by Danny Mitchell, is now available on the PEC YouTube channel. Click the button below to access the link through our website. | |||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||
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! “No duty is more urgent than that of returning thanks.” - St. Ambrose | |||||||||||||||||
|
WCC news: WCC calls for upholding the rights of Armenian community in Jerusalem
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
GreenFaith 2023 Highlights: France & Germany
I hope you’ve been enjoying our GreenFaith 2023 Highlights series this week. Today, we’ll be covering France and Germany. Read on!
On Thursday, May 25 in Paris, a day before the annual shareholder’s meeting of the French multinational TotalEnergies, the sun was shining on the Mirabeau footbridge, which crosses the Seine. Immortalized by French poet Guillaume Apollinaire's famous line, “Sous le pont Mirabeau coule la Seine” ("Under the Mirabeau Bridge flows the Seine"), the bridge occupies a familiar place in France’s cultural memory.
Suddenly, two rabbis, a Buddhist master, a Catholic bishop, and other religious figures lined up across the bridge, blocking the famous crossing. They unfurled a banner with a play on the words of the famous poem, “Dans les tuyaux de Total, coule la mort” ("In Total's pipes, death flows"), in reference to the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline, a TotalEnergies mega-project. For 1443 seconds, the religious figures blocked the bridge, marking the 1443 kilometers that the pipeline would slice through Uganda and Tanzania, carrying oil that would quintuple these two countries’ carbon footprints. The demonstrators attracted international attention. “EACOP will displace more than 100,000 people,” the demonstrators explained. “Total is repressing local opposition and insufficiently compensating impacted local communities. This is wrong.”
Six months later, GreenFaith France and GreenFaith Africa together released As If Nothing Is Sacred, a report showcasing Total’s mistreatment of thousands of local grave sites along EACOP’s proposed route. The report attracted international media attention, again demonstrating a formidable multi-religious opposition to the project.
“Croyantes, corps et âme contre EACOP” ("Believers, body and soul against EACOP"), read one of the banners on the morning of May 25. The peaceful physical and spiritual opposition to the fossil fuel industry represents the highest calling of faith communities in the face of the climate emergency.
Germany
Since the mid-1100’s, the small town of Lützerath, Germany had been home to farmers, small shopkeepers, and several churches. In the 2010’s, the German government gave permission to RWE, Germany’s largest coal company, to destroy the town in order to expand the largest coal mine in Europe. In 2022, RWE advanced its plans. Coal mining at Lützerath would almost certainly push the country past its pledged emissions limits, demolishing Germany’s ability to meet the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C goal.
In early 2023, resistance to mining grew. Peaceful protestors gathered on the property of the one remaining farmer who had refused to sell his land; people of faith were actively engaged. GreenFaith Deutschland became involved, amplifying the voices of faith-based protestors and the makeshift chapel they had erected at the site. RWE and the German police intensified their pressure, with the police violently disrupting peaceful, lawful demonstrations. The protests grew and attracted global media attention.
Later in the year, our German team organized a public action in opposition to the construction of a liquified natural gas plant off Germany’s northern coast. In 2024, our team will continue to raise awareness about the climate crisis and organize opposition to new fossil fuel development among diverse the country’s faith communities.
You can contribute to our 2024 work for climate justice worldwide by donating here.
Thanks,
Grateful for you,
Rose and the GreenFaith Digital Team
Thursday, December 28, 2023
GreenFaith 2023 highlights: USA & Brazil
This past September, UN Secretary General Antonio Guteres challenged world leaders to bring transformative climate change commitments to a summit in New York City. But what attracted media coverage around the globe was the March to End Fossil Fuels, a 75,000-person mobilization that attracted global media coverage.
GreenFaith was one of the march’s leading organizers. We mobilized thousands of people of faith and hundreds of religious organizations to march for climate justice together. [Watch the video] and hosted a multi-faith prayer service before the march with Indigenous, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu, Christian, and Unitarian speakers.
Together, we marched, sang, chanted, and prayed for an end to fossil fuels with a beautiful, vibrant faith contingent. I was there that day, and I will never forget our joy, love, and collective strength and hope. Your support made this possible. Thank you.
90 minutes from Rio de Janeiro is Magé, a city with characteristic Brazilian socio-cultural diversity, located between spectacular mountains and the famous Guanabara Bay. But Magé’s local fisherfolk have suffered from toxic contamination of the nearby river and bay from a nearby oil refinery, and deadly landslides due to drenching, climate-exacerbated rains. These conditions threaten the community’s existence and have overwhelmed Magé’s sanitation systems and infrastructure.
In 2023, we worked with the grassroots from Magé’s Climate Forum and local Catholic, Evangelical, Buddhist, Umbanda, and Candomblé religious leaders there. Watch this video to learn more.
Our goal in 2024, we will organize people of diverse faiths in Magé and organize our first public action to confront climate injustice.
Please support our work as generously as you can.
In faith and solidarity,
Rose and the GreenFaith Digital Team
SojoMail - Sojo’s top films and TV shows of 2023
|
Christmas Joy Offering Impact: Isabella’s Story
Your gifts to the Christmas Joy Offering make a huge difference in the lives of our leaders — past, present and future. This is Isabella Pér...
-
Capital punishment has been a widely debated topic in the United States for many years. In 1972, following the Furman v. Georgia Supreme Co...
-
Genocide, Worker Rights, and White Christian Nationalism NCC Newsletter July 2, 2021 Click here to donate Recent Interview with Jim Winkl...
-
An extension of the ceasefire between the Colombian government and the FARC-EP was announced on 15 October, a milestone occurring one year s...