|
|
Food and Faith Stories
- Farmers' Markets - Rose City Park Presbyterian
Church of Portland, OR hosts the Hollywood
Farmer's Market every
Saturday morning. The market previous operated in the parking
lot of a bank, but when the bank extended operating hours to
include Saturdays this valuable community resource was in need
of a new home. If you have interest in using your church space
for a market, please contact info@nccecojustice.org!
- Farmer’s Markets A new coupon program
called "That's
My Farmer" was started this
year in Benton County, OR. St. Mary Catholic Parish, First Congregational
United Church of Christ, First United Methodist, Monroe United
Methodist and the Corvallis Mennonite Fellowship sell coupons
after services and in church offices which are redeemable at
local farmers’ markets. In their first weekend, the congregations
sold more than $1,500 worth of coupons. Ten percent of all proceeds
are used to provide coupons to low-income families. The program
is based on the desire to raise awareness within faith communities
of the need to support local farmers which is good for the local
economy, and to promote access to fresh, nutritious food for
lower-income folks.
- Community Supported Agriculture - Community
United Church of Christ in Champaign, Illinois bought three shares
from a local Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm and distributes
fresh and local food to local social services organizations every
week. Click here to
read an article about how Community UCC became involved in CSA.
- Community Gardens - Click here to
read an article that originially appeared in Disciples Today
about three different congregations and their approaches to community
gardens.
- Community Gardens Anathoth Community Garden
in Cedar Grove, NC was started in 2005, though the initial “seeds” were
sown in 2003 with a prayer vigil that addressed race relations.
Realizing
that some of the area’s racial tensions stemmed
from economic injustices, Grace Hackney, pastor of Cedar Grove United Methodist
Church initiated some conversations to engage the community around issues
of faith, food, and farming. Out of these discussions grew the idea for an
experimental
community garden on the grounds of Cedar Grove UMC. The criteria for membership
to the garden include an agreement to work for two hours each week and an
annual fee of $5; in return, members receive a share of the weekly harvest.
In addition
to bringing people of different races together for the purpose of producing
and sharing organically grown food, the garden serves as a host site for
teenagers needing to fulfill hours of community service, and has plans to
add a prison
ministry component. Anathoth Community Garden is more that an experiment
in church-supported organic agriculture; it is an invitation to reconciliation.
- Co-ops Whole Farm Cooperative, Inc. of Long
Prairie, MN is an organization owned by family farmers, whose
objective is to sell sustainably
produced foods to its
community members. It was started, in part, out of a desire to create a link
between farmers and customers whereby the community could invest in its own
health and welfare. From its beginning, the group worked with the Catholic
Archdiocese in St. Paul to get area churches involved resulting in a successful
C.S.A. (Congregationally Supported Agriculture) initiative which is based
on the idea that food and spirituality are inextricably linked.
For more information,
check out www.wholefarmcoop.com.
- Fair Trade First United Methodist Church in
Tacoma, WA operates a store called “Ends
of the Earth” which sells only fair trade items. The store, which is
located on the first floor of the church and is sponsored by the church’s
Micah Project, was started in 2005 following a two year commitment by the
church to serve only fair trade coffee and to sell fair trade coffee and
tea to its
members as a fund-raiser. The lay member who had initiated this commitment
and the executive director of the Micah Project opened the store with $1000
in seed money from the denomination’s Pacific Northwest Annual Conference
and $5000 of their own credit. Their motivation stemmed from the desire to
raise awareness about the impact our choices as consumers have on those who
produce the products. Any profits from the store are used to support the
church’s
peace and justice ministries.“
- Maine Council
of Churches launched "Be
a Good Apple!" on Earth Day Sabbath (April 23, 2006) as
a way for Maine congregations and their members to focus on
and increase food security and independence within their local
communities and to help build economically and environmentally
sustainable and just communities as they connect with and support
their neighbor farmers. The project involves individual households
pledging to make $10 weekly purchases of Maine foods.
- Our Father's Garden is
the principal mission of the Church of the Holy Spirit in Baton
Rouge, LA. On 4 acres of land, is the church office,
the Mission and
Ministry Center, and the Garden, where parishioners and local
volunteers raise vegetables, fruit, and fish which are given
to Mother Teresa's Missionary Sisters of Charity in downtown
Baton Rouge to help feed the hungry.
|
|