God's Mandate Statement
Let members of Congress know how much we, as people of faith, value
protecting God's creation. Challenges to clean air and water, the
endangered species act, and protecting the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge are forcast for this spring in Congress. In addition, climate
change and energy legislation are likely to appear in the coming
months.
Signing the statement "God's Mandate: Care for Creation"
can help raise the religious voice to our national leaders. The
statement (pasted below and available online at www.nccecojustice.org)
sets forth all the major components of the present situation: our
foundation in biblical scripture; the wide support for environmental
stewardship across the religious community; the breadth of national
consensus and absence of any mandate; the immediate, specific challenges
in policy, and the kinds of responses being planned already. Add
my name!
GOD'S MANDATE: CARE FOR CREATION
Preface and Summary
We are men and women from the pews and pulpits of mainstream America
for whom loving our Creator and thus caring for God’s creation
is at the heart of our religious faith. We come from communities
that hold traditional values of neighborly love and respect for
life. We benefit daily from laws that safeguard habitat and public
health. We are proud of our nation’s long-standing commitment
to conservation. We seek to raise our children in a culture of stewardship
and bequeath them the full blessings of God’s bounty.
From these perspectives, we feel called to express great dismay
and alarm at plans by the Administration and the leadership of the
109th Congress to reverse and obstruct programs that protect God’s
creation in our land and across the planet. There are now specific
proposals before the government that would jeopardize public health,
clean air and water; sustainable sources of energy; safety of natural
habitats; and Earth’s climate, which embraces us all.
These measures would turn back protections in laws passed over
decades with overwhelming public support. Moreover, there was no
mandate, no majority, or no “values” message in this
past election for the President or the Congress to rollback and
oppose programs that care for God’s creation.
In this brief statement, we seek to encourage consideration of
these challenges and the need for faithful, forceful action.
Biblical Mandate, Moral Values, and National Consensus
Our mandate is from biblical scripture. First, we read in Genesis
that God beholds all creation as “very good” (Gen 1:31)
and commands us to “till and tend the garden” (Gen 2:15).
Humankind is called to stewardship of the commons. Second, we read
in Psalms, “The Earth is the Lord’s and the fulness
thereof” (Ps 24:1). The bounty of Creation’s gifts must
serve the common good of all. Third, we have a paramount obligation
to “defend the poor and the orphan; do justice to the afflicted”
(Ps 82:3) and to care first for “the least of these”
(Math 25:35). Care for God’s creation particularly requires
protection of vulnerable life. Finally, we have an obligation, in
prudence and precaution, to sustain the future well-being of all
life on Earth, God’s “covenant which I make between
me and you and every living creature for perpetual generations”
(Gen 9:12).
Regardless of religious affiliation, generations of Americans have
embraced what really are universal moral precepts: the goodness
of all life, stewardship, justice, inter-generational duty, and
the exercise of prudence for the common good. These values have
been embodied in bipartisan policy and law from the establishment
of the Forest Parks Service (1916) through the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act (1948), Clean Air Act (1963); National Environmental
Policy Act (1970), Endangered Species Act (1973), Clean Water Act
(1977), and Superfund law (1980.) Across the nation, moreover, localities
have established laws that protect their environments to assure
the well-being of their citizens.
Finally, the ability of our science to document threats and of
our technology to prevent and remedy them has increased our capacity
and therefore responsibility for stewardship.
As an expression of fundamental human values, then, there is a
religious, moral, scientific, and an historic national consensus
on the abiding priority of environmental stewardship.
Public Policy and Threats to God’s Creation
And yet, on the basis of past policies and recent pledges, it is
clear to us that the administration and leadership of the 109th
Congress are planning to roll back programs that protect God’s
creation in our land and to obstruct international action for the
common good of the entire Earth.
· According to a recent study from the National Academy
of Sciences, the Administration’s Clear Skies initiative will
weaken emissions reduction requirements for power plants and would
increase air pollution and further expose millions of people ---
especially children, the elderly, the poor, and the sick --- to
toxic substances including mercury, rather than simply enforcing
intended Clean Air Act standards.
· The Administration’s Energy policy would establish
increased access to oil as the overriding priority for managing
our common public lands, extending our dangerous reliance on fossil
fuels instead of emphasizing a common ethic of conservation.
· The Superfund toxic waste program that cleans up hazardous
sites in or near low-income or minority families is unjustly being
allowed to collapse because major corporations refuse to pay a small
tax to clean up pollution their industries have largely created.
· Proposed amendments to the Endangered Species Act would
eliminate federal protection for habitats in which God’s creatures
can flourish and would obstruct independent scientific discernment
which makes our faithful stewardship of life possible in the first
place.
· Most crucially, for all God’s creation on our planet,
the Administration continues to question the urgency of climate
change and to refuse mandatory action to protect the entire Earth
from global warming. And the Senate Majority Leader continues to
not even allow discussion of a bipartisan measure to curb greenhouse
gas emissions.
In this effort, finally, the Administration is enlisting our Treasury
by cutting budgets and our Judiciary by appointing judges hostile
to environmental safeguards. It is challenging our very tradition
of open government by providing special treatment for corporate
interests in planning public policy.
Attitudes and Actions of Religious Americans
The values underlying our concerns are shared by more and more
religious Americans whose faith groups have been increasingly active
in programs to care for God’s creation. The Pew Forum on Religion
and Public Life recently reported that, “In contrast to abortion
and other hot-button cultural issues, which divide most religious
groups in the United States, there is fairly strong consensus across
faith traditions on environmental policy…By a two-to-one margin
(55% to 27%) respondents back strong regulations to protect the
environment. Furthermore, the level of support is quite deep.”
[Although we believe that our economy can be strengthened, not weakened
by environmental protection,] “Respondents in this survey
were asked whether they favored stronger environmental regulations
‘even if they cost jobs or result in higher prices.’”
[And, while we honor deep convictions and do not wish to set them
against each other,] as “priorities for religious voters”,
environment (53%) ranks higher than abortion (46%) or gay marriage
(33%).
With such evidence, we feel called to alert our fellow religious
Americans to these alarming challenges. We encourage all to study,
pray, convene, and consider courses of action. While we are grateful
for the engagement of our senior leaders, we are taking initiative
from local communities, encouraged by the power of grassroots citizen
action in last year’s campaign. We plan to participate in
any number of projects, some of which are, for the first time, being
announced here:
· National denominational staff and local clergy and lay
leaders from every region will meet for several days in February
to discuss issues, goals and strategies.
· Educational materials will be prepared for distribution
to congregations including an Earth Day action alert from the National
Council of Churches to over 150,000 churches.
· In response to the administration’s “Clear
Skies” proposal, the multi-state Interfaith Climate and Energy
Campaign will release a study on the dangerous effects of power
plant emissions on children.
· Religious alliances in at least ten states will present
Energy Charters setting forth the moral imperatives for conservation,
alternatives to the Administration’s Energy policy, and proposals
for sustainable policies in their states.
· Evangelical Christian and Jewish groups will establish
a “Noah Alliance” to present theological and ethical
perspectives on biodiversity and to oppose roll back by the Congress
of the Endangered Species Act.
· As a highest priority, faith groups across the entire
spectrum, at the national and local level, are already calling for
debate on the McCain-Lieberman Climate Stewardship Act and will
discuss the urgency of such action with United States Senators.
Diverse Viewpoints and the Religious Mission
We share these perspectives with great respect for colleagues in
faith communities with many theological traditions and cultural
perspectives. There will be no single approach to these challenges.
But religious Americans everywhere increasingly recognize an overarching
obligation for faithfulness in caring for God’s creation.
Moreover, we are discovering that care for God’s creation
renews religious life itself. And so we are all called to consider
an ancient challenge under fresh circumstances across the entire
planet, “I call heaven and earth to witness against you today
that I have set before you life and death, blessing and curses.
Choose life so that you and your descendants may live.” (Deut
30:19)
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