Episcopalians near Idaho fires taking precautions
Mary Frances Schjonberg in Episcopal News Service:
Mary Frances Schjonberg in Episcopal News Service:
Marilyn Sewell, a Unitarian minister, is troubled that churches have not taken up arms in the battle against climate change. Writing at Huffington Post, she
At issue is end time believers’ perceived lack of investment in the earth’s future. That is, if they believe Jesus is coming back, do they have any incentive to preserve and protect the environment for future generations?
The Rev. Dr. Jeff Golliher, offers a way to engage with local stakeholders about hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” through respectful dialogue. He brings a Christian faith-based perspective to a technical and scientific conversation.
The Episcopal Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the Church of Sweden (Lutheran) committed to “leading a conversion of epic scale, a metanoia, or communal spiritual movement away from sin and despair toward the renewal and healing of all creation.”
Climate Revival 2013, organized by New England Regional Environmental Ministries on Saturday featured a sermon by Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori and became a Twitter
That’s the kind of shepherding we’re in for – recognizing the preciousness of the whole flock of creation. Not just the human ones, or the mammals, or the local pasture, but the vast web of interconnected matter we call creation.
The Rev. Sally Bingham of Interfaith Power and Light is among those quoted in the Salt Lake City Tribune’s story about viewing climate change as
Rolling Stone highlights the Rev. Sally Bingham as a “New Green Hero” and part of what they area calling “The Fossil Fuel Resistance.”
You may want to be remembered after you die but