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Energy Resources for Your Congregation
Michigan IPL is here to inspire and equip your congregation to use energy more wisely. Energy extraction, transportation, and waste have negative consequences for our health and the stability of life on Earth. Together we can make positive change to improve our communities, and create better opportunities for faith, creation and environmental justice!
You can begin here by learning more about:
- IRA (Inflation Reduction Act)
- Solar
- Utility Provider options
- Carbon Fund mini grants
At Michigan IPL, we believe that our best hope for a livable future and a stable climate is to ensure that the benefits of clean, efficient energy are shared by ALL. That means our collective charge is to channel resources to those communities with the greatest need and with the fewest resources.
Since congregations are on the frontlines of meeting the spiritual and material needs of their communities, we know that shoring up their financial and environmental sustainability will have payoffs far beyond the walls of each individual congregation. Congregations participating in Sacred Spaces are implementing $100K each in energy efficiency upgrades. Hear from them how they are putting faith into practical action:
First Presbyterian Church of Saline's Solar Tour
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)
A provision in new legislation, referred to as the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) allows nonprofits, places of worship, and other tax-exempt organizations to receive a 30% tax credit as a direct payment to help cover costs of certain renewable energy and energy efficiency related upgrades.
Included in the IRA, are clean energy tax credits for:
- Solar projects
- Back up battery storage
- Electric Vehicle charging stations
- Geothermal Heat Pumps
- Weatherization such as insulation
2021 Renewable Role Model Winner – Student-led solar at Gesu Catholic Church and School, Detroit
Photo courtesy of Gesu Catholic ChurchSolar Faithful
With the help of Solar Faithful, your congregation can join the growing number of Michigan congregations who are going solar. Learn about Solar Faithful.
Free energy efficiency upgrades and rebates from Consumers Energy helped Pastor Melene Wilsey of New Heart Mission, Saginaw, put more $$ into serving her community
Save Energy & Money
Don't wait for grants that may or may not be available to make building upgrades that will benefit your congregation and the environment immediately. With these easy steps, your congregation can save energy, save money, and protect the Earth. Learn more about resources for implementing energy efficiency and renewable energy projects.
Pilgrim Baptist Church, Detroit, installed two solar-powered LED exterior lights to illuminate the food pantry entrance, thanks to a grant from the Carbon Fund
Carbon Fund Mini Grants
Providing mini-grants of 1-3K to economically disadvantaged communities to implement climate pollution-reducing projects. Learn about Carbon Fund Mini Grants.
FAQ's
1. How can my congregation access grant funds to finance my project?
For most congregations, grants can be difficult and time consuming to apply for, requiring a lot of skill, ability and time. It is our recommendation that congregations do not wait for a grant opportunity to pursue energy efficiency upgrades at your place of worship. If your faith community does have an interest in exploring that grants, you can find information on grants HERE
2. My congregation would like to implement an energy efficiency project. How do I begin?
Check with your local utility provider to explore options for discounts and rebates on applicable efficiency projects. Identify at 2-3 contractors to supply you with a quote. If you are completing your project with volunteers, purchase your materials from suppliers who are able to get you discounted products through your local utility. You can access more information on our Save Energy page!
3. What are the benefits of membership with Michigan IPL?
If your congregation would like to address the climate crisis, partner with us! Becoming a member by signing our covenant connects your congregation with hundreds of others across the state and is a symbol of your commitment to Earth stewardship and climate action. Sign the Covenant!
4. What types of projects have been done by other Michigan congregations?
Across all faiths and covering every imaginable project, we have been assisting faith communities in Michigan for years. Learn more about the various ways that Michigan faith communities are exercising care for Creation on our blog. Read more on our Blog!
5. How can I be informed about new opportunities for me and for my congregation?
There are many ways to stay in touch and learn more about efficiency and opportunities for your house of worship. One way is to join our email list! Stay in Touch!
You can inspire your congregation to take steps toward efficiency!
Check out our Blog and learn how other faith communities here in Michigan have stepped into energy efficiency with great results!
Has your faith community successfully implemented an energy efficiency project? Help us inspire and equip other faith communities by telling us about how your congregation is putting faith into action!
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Group Facilitation
IPLs in Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Iowa and beyond have been engaging thousands of people in Climate Conversations. This approach was developed based on the work of the Yale project on Climate Change Communication whose study, The Francis Effect, found that Pope Francis' 2015 encyclical Laudato Si' both increased the engagement of people of faith with the issue of climate destabilization and grew their understanding of climate as moral and spiritual matter.Building on these insights, we see Climate Conversations as a great opportunity to build the engagement of people of faith in the climate movement and to equip them to act for climate justice. In this 1.5-hour session we will:
- begin by sharing stories of connection and aliveness
- articulate together the realities of our destabilized climate and its disproportionate impacts on the poor, people of color, and the developing world
- provide a framework for planning faithful, transformative action for climate justice
The goals of the conversation are to help your community:
- strengthen relationships and collective commitment to climate action, rooted in the theology of your tradition
- recognize and collectively process some of the emotional barriers to climate action
- set the stage for taking faithful, collective action for climate justice at the intersection of your community's strengths, passions, and needs
Want us to facilitate a Climate Conversation in your community?
In 2024, we will be facilitating Climate Conversations with congregations in Detroit and Ann Arbor, coaching each congregation to develop a project, and providing them with $1,000 to carry it out! To learn more:What is an Eco Chaplain?
In short, we understand Eco Chaplaincy as: the work of providing emotional and spiritual support to communities trying to figure out how to live in a world ravaged by environmental devastation and climate disruption.
Drawing from the work of Sarah Vekasi and others (scroll down for suggested readings), we define Eco Chaplains as people who:
- Engage ecological devastation as a spiritual crisis and opportunity.
- Bear witness, provide empathy, and help people honor their pain for the world.
- Help communities develop resilience by connecting them with the ecological wisdom of their own spiritual traditions and cultivating deeper allyship with other communities and all of Creation.
- Provide structure/ritual for communities to explore their unique abilities to respond to environmental degradation (locally, systemically, and relationally), grounded in the creative potential and power of God/Spirit/Life.
Fill out the form below to get a copy of the Eco Chaplain Directory, including contact information for individuals, emailed to you.
For details about fees, services, and availability, please reach out directly to the Eco Chaplain/s you're interested in working with.
Rev. Dr. Ventra Asana
Detroit, MI
Group conversation facilitation
Video calls
Religious/spiritual background: Christian
Services offered:
- Group facilitation of mindfulness practices
- Ritual creation/facilitation
- Eco-Bible/Eco-spirituality classes
Experience:
"As ecominister I created and directed many programs, including St. Timothy UMC (Detroit) '2nd Thursdays: Ecology Talks' at Metropolitan UMC (Detroit)..."
For complete listing and contact information, fill out the form below.
Baba Oluwo Ifabayowa
Adesanya AwoyadeDetroit, MI
Group conversation facilitation
Video calls
Religious/spiritual background: Isese'lagba (Yoruba Traditional Religion)
Services offered:
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Ancestral reverence practice / ancestral repair work
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Spiritual readings/cleansings
- Traditional medicines
Experience:
"I've been initiated into this spiritual/ancestral cultural tradition for six years and have assisted hundreds of people with spiritual grounding..."
For complete listing and contact information, fill out the form below.
Dr. James Perkinson
Detroit, MI
Group conversation facilitation
Video calls
Workshops
Religious/spiritual background: "Christian (seeking to embrace challenges from indigenous and folk cultures)"
Services offered:
- Collective grief and resilience group facilitation
- Anti-racism group work
- Bible studies
Experience:
"I have lived for 35 years as a settler on Three Fires land in inner city Detroit, currently teaching as Professor of Social Ethics at the Ecumenical Theological Seminary..."
For complete listing and contact information, fill out the form below.
Baba Owólabi Aboyade
Detroit, MI
Group conversation facilitation
Video calls
Workshops
Religious/spiritual background: New Afrikan Spiritual Mindset (Yoruba Traditional Religion)
Services offered:
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Ancestral reverence practice / ancestral repair work
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Spiritual readings/cleansings
- Collective grief and resilience group facilitation
Experience:
"I am a long term community organizer with experience helping people connect holistic change-making to the healing of body-mind-emotions-soul-ancestry so that our destiny (Ori) is fulfilled..."
For complete listing and contact information, fill out the form below.
Rabbi Moshe Givental
West Bloomfield, MI
Group conversation facilitation
Video calls
Religious/spiritual background: Jewish
Services offered:
- Collective grief and resilience group facilitation
- Ritual creation/facilitation
Experience:
"I am a former psychotherapist (MA in Clinical Psychology) and an ordained Rabbi. I am a trained facilitator of a process called Work That Reconnects..."
For complete listing and contact information, fill out the form below.
Rachel Koeson
Grand Rapids, MI
Group conversation facilitation
Video calls
Workshops
Religious/spiritual background: "I was raised Christian but no longer identify as a Christian. There are many parts of Buddhism I appreciate and study but I do not practice any one specific religion."
Services offered:
- Group facilitation of mindfulness practices
- Collective grief and resilience group facilitation
- Somatic/embodied self-compassion practices
Experience:
"My primary training and certification is in the Hakomi Method. I have facilitated groups on grief, mindful anger..."
For complete listing and contact information, fill out the form below.
Rev. Ruth Moerdyk
Kalamazoo, MI
Group conversation facilitation
Video calls
Religious/spiritual background: "Ordained in the United Church of Christ, pastor in the Church of the Brethren (which comes from a pacifist, simple living tradition)."
Services offered:
- Group facilitation of mindfulness practices
- Collective grief and resilience group facilitation
Experience:
"Training in spiritual direction and pastoral care, some familiarity with The Work That Reconnects..."
For complete listing and contact information, fill out the form below.
If you would like to be considered for inclusion in the directory, fill out our Eco Chaplain Directory Application.Suggested reading
- A Rabbi's Reflection on Being an Eco-Chaplain, by Rabbi Moshe Givental (Michigan IPL Board member)
- A Call for a New Kind of Chaplain, by Rabbi Katy Allen
- Eco-Chaplaincy: Creating and Tending our NEW story, by Rev. Lauren Van Ham
- Sustainable activism: managing hope and despair in social movements, by Paul Hoggett and Rosemary Randall
- Apocalypse Fatigue, Selective Inattention, and Fatalism: The Psychology of Climate Change, by Damaris Zehner
- Rebecca Solnit on Hope in Dark Times, Resisting the Defeatism of Easy Despair, and What Victory Really Means for Movements of Social Change, by Maria Popova
- Transforming Despair: An Interview with Joanna Macy, by Mary NurrieStearns
- Beyond Hope, by Derrick Jensen
Legal disclaimer
This directory is meant to be a public resource. The individuals listed are not Michigan IPL employees and Michigan IPL cannot be held legally liable for their work.
Fill out the form below to receive the Eco Chaplain Directory by email.
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Faith Statements
Baptist (American)
Global warming affects hunger, access to clean water, environmental stewardship, health and peace. Addressing global warming will make it more possible for all to live the life of possibility that God intends. Therefore, based on our faith in the Creator God who makes us a part of a unified creation, the General Board of the American Baptist Churches USA, calls on national boards, regions, American Baptist institutions, congregations and individuals to:
- Join in ways to build a culture that can live in harmony with God’s creation
- Join in global, local and personal efforts to safeguard the world’s atmospheric integrity and quality
- Address the causes and reverse the consequences of global warming
The study of ecology has become a religious, social and political concern because every area of life is affected by careless use of our environment. The creation is in crisis. We believe that ecology and justice, stewardship of creation and redemption are interdependent. Our task is to proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ until the coming of the Kingdom on Earth. All God’s people must be guided by the balance of reverence, the acknowledgement of our interdependence, the integrity of divine wholeness and the need for empowerment by the Holy Spirit to image God by our dominion over creation (Mark 10:43-45). If we image God we will reflect in our dominion the love and the care that God has for the whole creation, “for God so loved the world…” (John 3:16, Romans 8:21-22, Matthew 5:43-48). Jesus told us to let your light so shine that others may see the good things you do and praise God (Matthew 5:16). …
The Creator-Redeemer seeks the renewal of the creation and calls the people of God to participate in saving acts of renewal. We are called to cooperate with God in the transformation of a fallen world that has not fulfilled its divinely given potential for beauty, peace, health, harmony, justice and joy (Isa. 11:6-9, Micah 4:3-4, Eph. 2:10, Rev. 21:1-5). Our task is nothing less than to join God in preserving, renewing and fulfilling the creation. It is to relate to nature in ways that sustain life on the planet, provide for the essential material and physical needs of all humankind, and increase justice and well-being for all life in a peaceful world.
- American Baptist Resolution on Global Warming, 2007 (PDF)
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American Baptist Statement on Ecology, 2007 (PDF)
Buddhism
“When we respect the environment, then nature will be good to us. When our hearts are good, then the sky will be good to us. The trees are like our mother and father, they feed us, nourish us, and provide us with everything; the fruit, leaves, the branches, the trunk. They give us food and satisfy many of our needs. So we spread the Dharma (truth) of protecting ourselves and protecting our environment, which is the Dharma of the Buddha. When we accept that we are part of a great human family—that every being has the nature of Buddha—then we will sit, talk, make peace. I pray that this realization will spread throughout our troubled world and bring humankind and the earth to its fullest flowering. I pray that all of us will realize peace in this lifetime and save all beings from suffering.” -Maha Ghosananda
Catholicism
At its core, global climate change is not about economic theory or political platforms, nor about partisan advantage or interest group pressures. It is about the future of God’s creation and the one human family. It is about protecting both “the human environment” and the natural environment. It is about our human stewardship of God’s creation and our responsibility to those who come after us…
(From Global Climate Change: A Plea for Dialogue, Prudence, and the Common Good, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2001)“At a time of world food shortage, of financial turmoil, of old and new forms of poverty, of disturbing climate change, of violence and deprivation which force many to leave their homelands in search of a less precarious form of existence, of the ever-present threat of terrorism, of growing fears over the future, it is urgent to rediscover grounds for hope. Let no one draw back from this peaceful battle that has been launched by Christ’s Resurrection. For as I said earlier, Christ is looking for men and women who will help him to affirm his victory using his own weapons: the weapons of justice and truth, mercy, forgiveness and love.” -Pope Benedict XVI, Urbi et Orbi, Easter 2009
- Pope Francis issued an encyclical on the environment and earth care in June 2015. Read it here.
- Check out the discussion guide produced by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops here.
- And check out this readers guide published by the National Catholic Reporter here.
Hinduism
Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita says: “I pervade the Universe. All objects in the Universe rest on me as pearls on the thread of a garland.”
The Upanishads narrate that after creating the Universe, the Creator entered into each and every object to help them maintain their interrelationship. Therefore to contribute toward the maintenance of this interrelationship becomes worship of God. Hindus believe that there is soul in all plants and animals. One has to do penance even for killing plants and animals for food. This daily penance is called visva deva. Visva deva is nothing but an offering of prepared food to the Creator, asking His pardon.
When humanity develops consciousness of the presence of God and His continuous showering of blessings on the universe, it develops deep love for Him. To enjoy this nectar of love, God created people. Only people have a time-space conception. Therefore, only humanity can see God, pervading time-space, conserving the ecological balance which is the greatest boon bestowed on the universe by God. Though humans cannot contribute toward the conservation in the same way as other animals do, they can help all lives and other objects in the universe to play their roles effectively by persuading God through prayers of love to grant them the required energy and directions. Yavat bhumandalam datte samrigavana karnanam, tavat tisthati medhinyam santatih putra pautriki: “so long as the Earth preserves her forests and wildlife, man’s progeny will continue to exist.” This is the Hindu approach toward the conservation of ecology. -Swami Vibudhesha Teertha
Islam
For the Muslim, mankind’s role on earth is that of a Khalifah – vicegerent or trustee of Allah. We are Allah’s stewards and agents on Earth. We are not masters of this Earth; it does not belong to us to do what we wish. It belongs to Allah and He has entrusted us with its safekeeping. Our function as vicegerents, Khalifahs of Allah, is only to oversee the trust. The khalifah is answerable for his/her actions, for the way in which he/she uses or abuses the trust of Allah.
The central concept of Islam is Tawhid – the Unity of Allah. Allah is Unity and His Unity is also reflected in the unity of mankind, and the unity of man and nature. His trustees are responsible for maintaining the unity of His creation, the integrity of the Earth, its flora and fauna, its wildlife and natural environment. Unity cannot be had by discord, by setting one need against another; it is maintained by balance and harmony. - Dr. Abdullah Omar Naseef, secretary general of the Muslim World League.
Further Information can be found here, and the Islamic Declaration on Global Climate Change can be found here.
Judaism
For Jews, the environmental crisis is a religious challenge. As heirs to a tradition of stewardship that goes back to Genesis and that teaches us to be partners in the ongoing work of Creation, we cannot accept the escalating destruction of our environment and its effect on human health and livelihood. Where we are despoiling our air, land, and water, it is our sacred duty as Jews to acknowledge our God-given responsibility and take action to alleviate environmental degradation and the pain and suffering that it causes. We must reaffirm and bequeath the tradition we have inherited which calls upon us to safeguard humanity’s home.
Our agenda is already overflowing. Israel’s safety, the resettlement of Soviet Jewry, anti-Semitism, the welfare of our people in many nations, the continuing problems of poverty, unemployment, hunger, health care and education, as well as assimilation and intermarriage — all these and more have engaged us and must engage us still.
But the ecological crisis hovers over all Jewish concerns, for the threat is global, advancing, and ultimately jeopardizes ecological balance and the quality of life. It is imperative, then, that environmental issues also become an immediate, ongoing and pressing concern for our community.
Energy Conservation is an Ancient Commandment, by Rabbi Fred Scherlinder Dobb, Coalition on Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL)
Rav Zutra, in the Talmud (Shabbat 67b), mandates fuel efficiency, saying that those who burn more fuel than necessary violate the law of not wasting (bal tashchit). And a 13th century German pietistic text, Sefer HaChinuch (529), suggests that: “Tzadikim (righteous) people of good deeds…do not waste in this world even a mustard seed. They become sorrowful with every wasteful and destructive act that they see, and if they can they use all their strength to save everything possible from destruction. But the rasha’im (wicked) are not thus; they are like demons. They rejoice in the destruction of the world, just as they destroy themselves.”
Further Information can be found here.
Lutheran (ELCA)
Humans, in service to God, have special roles on behalf of the whole of creation. Made in the image of God, we are called to care for the earth as God cares for the earth. God’s command to have dominion and subdue the earth is not a license to dominate and exploit. Human dominion (Gen 1:28; Ps 8), a special responsibility, should reflect God’s way of ruling as a shepherd king who takes the form of a servant (Phil 2:7), wearing a crown of thorns.
We are called to live according to God’s wisdom in creation (Prov 8), which brings together God’s truth and goodness. Wisdom, God’s way of governing creation, is discerned in every culture and era in various ways. In our time, science and technology can help us to discover how to live according to God’s creative wisdom.
Sin and captivity, manifest in threats to the environment, are not the last word. God addresses our predicament with gifts of “forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation” (Luther, Small Catechism). By the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ, God frees us from our sin and captivity, and empowers us to be loving servants to creation.
Presbyterian (USA)
The church has powerful reason for engagement in restoring God’s creation:
- God’s work in creation is too wonderful, too ancient, too beautiful, too good to be desecrated.
- Restoring creation is God’s own work in our time, in which God comes both to judge and to restore.
- The Creator-Redeemer calls faithful people to become engaged with God in keeping and healing the creation, human and non-human.
- Human life and well-being depend upon the flourishing of other life and the integrity of the life-supporting processes that God has ordained.
- The love of neighbor, particularly “the least” of Christ’s brothers and sisters, requires action to stop the poisoning, the erosion, the wastefulness that are causing suffering and death.
- The future of our children and their children and all who come after is at stake.
- In this critical time of transition to a new era, God’s new doing may be discerned as a call to earth-keeping, to justice and to community.
Quaker
Integrity, as a synonym for truthfulness, wholeness, and single-handed pursuit of the Good, therefore provides a comprehensive understanding of how Friends traditionally have engaged the secular powers that alienate and destroy rather than unify and heal. In this approach, our commitments to peace, equality, justice, and Earthcare are understood as different facets of the same spiritual concern.
Some examples of the integration of Friends’ testimonies include:
Peace Work and Earthcare
- The manufacture, testing, and use of weapons is destructive to ecosystems and depletes nonrenewable resources. War disrupts communities, which are typically most knowledgeable about local environments and best equipped to practice stewardship.
Equality and Earthcare
- Inequality, (racial, gender, ethnic, sexual orientation) deprives people of basic needs as well as rights, which makes it difficult for them to be mindful of the needs and rights of other species and future generations. Competition for scarce, nonrenewable resources is exacerbated by overconsumption.
Justice and Earthcare
- Ecosystems can be healthy only when society is just and healthy. Ways can and must be found to provide for both the needs of people and protection of Earth’s precious resources, for the benefit of all. Focus turns to the common interests of resource users, environmentalists, and endangered species.
“Ecological Integrity and Light Within” (webpage)
United Church of Christ
God’s Gift and Call To Us
As people of faith, we look to the scriptures for guidance for the choices we make in our lives. Genesis 1 says that when God created the heavens and the earth, God saw that everything was “very good.” We learn in Genesis 2 that as humankind has the freedom to make moral choices, and that each of us lives with the responsibility for our personal actions or inactions. With the freedom of God’s gift, the prophet Micah guides us towards moral and responsible lifestyle choices: we are to do justice, love kindness and mercy, and walk humbly with our God [Mic.6:6-8].
Our Response To God
We understand scriptures compel us to act on our faith grounded in wonder, reverence, love, and respect for all of God’s creation. But clearly, God’s creation is groaning under the burden of injustice, greed, and arrogance. Our choices have resulted in vanishing and degraded farmland, air unfit to breathe and water unfit to drink, unsustainable energy processes and consumption, and the perilous immediate and long-term worldwide consequences of global warming and climate change. Poor communities and communities of color will disproportionately suffer the unjust consequences of our choices. And now, we realize more every day that our choices threaten the voiceless natural systems that sustain all of life itself.
Our Choices Now
When confronted with environmental responsibility, people of faith now face an additional choice: to live in despair or to live with hope. We in the United Church of Christ are called to live with hope. We are called to go beyond lifestyle adjustment. We are called to spiritual and lifestyle transformation based on justice and reverence for all of God’s creatures and creation. We are called by Jesus to love God and love our neighbor as ourselves. With God’s grace, we invite individuals to transform their lives and their communities to become hopeful, restorative, and just.
We invite you to tell others of your concern and to work in your congregation for environmental justice. We invite you to sign up to attend a workshop or retreat that will expand your awareness and deepen your faith.
United Methodist (US)
God’s creation is in crisis. We, the Bishops of The United Methodist Church, cannot remain silent while God’s people and God’s planet suffer. This beautiful natural world is a loving gift from God, the Creator of all things seen and unseen. God has entrusted its care to all of us, but we have turned our backs on God and on our responsibilities. Our neglect, selfishness, and pride have fostered:
- pandemic poverty and disease
- environmental degradation
- the proliferation of weapons and violence
Despite these interconnected threats to life and hope, God’s creative work continues. Despite the ways we all contribute to these problems, God still invites each one of us to participate in the work of renewal. We must begin the work of renewing creation by being renewed in our own hearts and minds. We cannot help the world until we change our way of being in it.
[L]et us practice social and environmental holiness. We believe personal holiness and social holiness must never be separated. John Wesley preached: “The gospel of Christ knows of no religion, but social. No holiness but social holiness.” Through social holiness we make ourselves channels of God’s blessing in the world. Because God’s blessing, care, and promise of renewal extend to all of creation, we can speak today of “environmental holiness” as well. We practice social and environmental holiness by caring for God’s people and God’s planet and by challenging those whose policies and practices neglect the poor, exploit the weak, hasten global warming, and produce more weapons.
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Spiritual Resources
Hope for Creation SWMI's Stewardship of Creation Webinar Series
Part I: Why Start a Green Team
Part II: How to Start a Green Team
Part III: Ideas for Green Team Action
Statements about Earth care from diverse faith traditions
Faith Community Guides and Programs:
International Environment Forum: Scientific and Spiritual Dimensions of Climate Change course
This 9-session course is designed to help participants gain a deeper understanding of climate change, to explore ethical questions connected to climate change, and to learn how to address these issues in the context of the spiritual teachings from the world’s religions. Bahá'í-inspired and designed to be used by any faith group.Awakening to God’s Call to Earthkeeping
A four-session small group study curriculum designed to encourage, empower, and equip members of faith communities in their calling to care for creation. Prepared by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life's Resources for Congregations
COEJL has a wealth of resources for congregations, ranging from environmental issues (rainforests, oceans) to many Jewish holidays to sermons.Green Sanctuary
Green Sanctuary is a program of the Unitarian Universalist Association. It provides structure, leadership, and support for the UU faith community to engage in an ambitious Environmental Justice and Climate Justice movement. The program is meant to help congregations deepen their reverence, gratitude, and care for the living Earth and it suggests specific activities that congregations of all denominations can do to further these goals.United Church of Christ's Resources for Individuals and Congregations
The United Church of Christ has an environmental justice section of its website with a variety of helpful resources.