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KEN CHITWOOD

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“The person who knows only one religion, knows none”
— Max Müller

Image via Interfaith America/Getty.

Lessons Learned Reporting on Religion and Climate Change

April 25, 2023

“The road,” wrote Spanish poet Antonio Machado, “is made by walking.”    

Often adopted as a metaphor for pilgrimage, Sarah Moring, a climate activist living in Manchester, England, said she walked with this quote every day as she joined the Young Christian Climate Network (YCCN) — an advocacy community of young Christians in the U.K. — on its relay before the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26), in September 2021.  

Stretching over 750 miles and cutting through Cardiff, London, and Oxford, YCCN participants joined a “crusade for climate justice” by walking the route between the end of the G7 meeting in Cornwall on June 13 and COP26’s opening ceremony on October 31 that year.  

When I covered the pilgrimage for Christianity Today, I had not done much reporting on people like Moring. But over the last two years, I have reported from India and Israel, Lisbon, and London, where people of faith are coming together to respond to climate change and demand action based on their religious beliefs.  

It was with a desire to see more widespread coverage of faith actors advocating for environmental justice that I teamed up with abby mohaupt to write a “Reporting Guide on Religion and Climate Change” for ReligionLink, a nonpartisan, monthly newsletter with source guides and story ideas for journalists reporting on religion.  

Developing the guide, I learned how diverse faith groups view climate change and are coming together to address it.  

Read more at Interfaith America Magazine
In Religion, Religion and Culture, Religion News, ReligionLink Tags Interfaith, Interfaith America, Interfaith America Magazine, Religion and climate change, Environmental justice
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Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash.

Creation care jobs signal possible climate shift for churches in the UK

September 22, 2022

If you were out there looking for a job this summer, you may have come across an eye-catching position at one of London’s largest churches.

Holy Trinity Brompton, or HTB, posted an ad for an “Environmental Project Manager,” to help “oversee the strategy, planning and execution of HTB’s approach to Creation Care.” The individual will work closely with other lead team members to put an “environmental response at the heart of church life,” according to the ad.

HTB, an Anglican church spread across six sites in London with around 3,500-4,500 worshipping every Sunday, is perhaps best known for being the place where the world-famous Alpha evangelistic course originated in the 1970s and 80s.

Jobs like this, at places like HTB, are notable, said Jo Chamberlain, National Environment Policy Officer for the Church of England. Such roles, she said, signal a wider sea change among evangelical churches in the UK — and perhaps elsewhere — realizing the critical importance of creation care and environmental stewardship at the congregational level.

“People are recognizing that we have to get our house in order,” said Chamberlain, “we can’t just talk about taking care of creation without doing the work and changing the way we do things.

Read more at Christianity Today
In Church Ministry, Religion and Culture, Religion News, Religion Tags Creation care, Climate change, Christians and climate change, Evangelicals, Evangelical environmentalism, Holy Trinity Brompton, Tearfund, Jo Chamberlain, Environmental justice, Religion and the environment, Alpha
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Photo courtesy USGS.

Photo courtesy USGS.

"There's no issue more important": Chief Rabbi Rosen on Climate Change and Environmental Justice

April 6, 2021

When it comes to the twin issues of climate change and environmental justice, Chief Rabbi David Rosen is uncompromising.

“There’s no issue more important,” he said in a recent interview with KAICIID. “Of all the very significant things that need to be done in our world, what is their value if we are going to destroy it all? Our responsibility is a critical imperative for the survival of life on earth itself.”

A former Chief Rabbi of Ireland and senior rabbi of the largest Orthodox Jewish congregation in South Africa, Rosen is a prominent interreligious leader. As such, he is the American Jewish Committee’s International Director of Interreligious Affairs and a member of the KAICIID Board of Directors.

Chief Rabbi David Rosen speaking at the Religions for Peace 10th World Assembly in Lindau, Germany (PHOTO: Courtesy RfP)

Chief Rabbi David Rosen speaking at the Religions for Peace 10th World Assembly in Lindau, Germany (PHOTO: Courtesy RfP)

Of all aspects of his work in interreligious dialogue and education, his greatest passion remains the care of the environment and the need to reform our lifestyles accordingly.

“As a religious practitioner, I believe that there is no issue today that is as compelling or imperative for religious people to be engaged with,” he said.

In addition to his work with KAICIID, Rosen has worked with Religions for Peace (RfP) and the Parliament of the World Religions on a variety of interreligious efforts aimed at combatting the calamitous effects of climate change. He frequently writes, speaks, and is actively engaged with multiple initiatives addressing the challenges posed by climate change.

Two of those initiatives are the Jerusalem-based Interfaith Centre for Sustainable Development (ICSD) and the Interfaith Rainforest Initiative — an international, multi-faith alliance that “works to bring moral urgency and faith-based leadership to global efforts to end tropical deforestation.”

Rosen's convictions arise out of a deep personal appreciation of the environment as a gift from God.

learn more here
In Religion and Culture, Religion News, Religious Literacy Tags David Rosen, KAICIID, Religions for Peace, Climate Change, Interfaith Rainforest Initiative, Environmental justice, Religion and environment
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