Report lends new urgency to religious climate-justice work

A scientific report released this week provides more evidence that human activity is seriously threatening God’s creation, said the United Church of Christ’s national minister for environmental justice.

AGU climate article 7/22/20 screen shotResults of an international climate study issued July 22 show that carbon emissions caused by humans – if continued at their current pace – are likely to cause global warming at the high end of previous estimates. Unless steep emissions cuts are made soon, severe and irreversible damage to Earth is likely, the study said.

The findings appear in an article in “Reviews of Geophysics,” a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

“Whenever a new climate report is released, it is like a report card on how we are doing when it comes to caring for God’s creation,” said the Rev. Brooks Berndt, who leads the UCC’s Environmental Ministries. “For a long time, we have been getting a collective F.”

“The problem is that we can’t simply quit school, because our school is literally on fire, and our only way out is to become A-students on the honor roll. A whole curriculum has been designed to help churches excel as caretakers of Creation.”

Webinar logo for 8/5/20He said churches and members wanting to study and fight climate change have several upcoming and ongoing opportunities. Among them:

Vote Justice logo 2020

Berndt said there are plenty of connections between urgent climate issues and the current twin crises of the COVID-19 pandemic and racism. These are discussed, for example, in a July 20 statement on the U.S. food system from the Food Justice Affinity Group of the UCC Council for Climate Justice.

“The pandemic has starkly exposed the vulnerability and unsustainability of our present-day food system, dependent on industrial-scale agriculture and supply chains that span the entire continent,” the statement says in part. “The pandemic has also exposed the structural inequalities and inherent racism in the food system, including the precariousness of food workers’ livelihoods of low wages and savings, poor housing, and little or no healthcare provisions.”

Cathedral on Fire book promo imageThis “intersectional” approach is important when responding to scientific reports like the one just published, Berndt said. “Sometimes there is a tendency to put different causes and issues in competition with each other,” he said. “I have never found that to be either helpful or an accurate reflection of the crises faced.

“For example, we know that COVID-19 has a devastating impact on people suffering from air pollution. If anything, the pandemic should be generating all the more motivation to attack pollution.

“Likewise, for decades, we have known the centrality of race when it comes to environmental devastation, but that fact has never been fully absorbed and acted upon. The Black Lives Matter Movement has now created the possibility for a far greater level of awareness and action. Standing Rock and the Black Lives Matter Movement are the two best things that have ever happened to the climate movement. To say that the climate movement is suffering because the racial justice movement is getting attention is a nonsensical framework.”

Categories: United Church of Christ News

Related News

Webinar series to explore need for justice leaders within congregations

A Nurture the Soul series featuring the founders of the Justice Leadership program begins on...

Read More

Climate Action Assembly takes deep dive into plastics, electrification, climate hope

The United Church of Christ Council for Climate Justice launched its first in a series of...

Read More

Embodying Women & Gender Justice webinar uplifts need for awareness, advocacy

UCC Women's Week was celebrated with a special Embodying Women and Gender Justice Year Round...

Read More