What you can do!

March 05, 2009

Green My Hood

Does caring for the environment always come at the expense of jobs? Is creation care something that must be traded off against people care? I'm reading a great book right now that addresses just that issue. I'm reading it with my pastor, Leroy Barber, because we care about the beautiful but broken South Atlanta neighborhood our church calls home. Leroy is president of Mission Year and is a speaker at this year's Flourish Conference for church leaders on creation care.

The book is Van Jones' The Green Collar Economy. Van Jones is the founder and president of Green For All, and his work is significant for Christians who want to do community development in environmentally-friendly ways and for those who want to find ways out of the "environment vs. jobs" debate. Jones points out the many ways in which solving environmental problems can be done with justice. His position is that as long as we're going to all the trouble to create a clean energy economy, we might as well make a renewed effort to tackle discrimination and inequality, too.

He addresses the involvement of faith communities directly and challenges the "so-called progressives [who] snarl the word 'Christian' as if it were an insult or the name of a disease." He presses activists to become problem-solvers, to become more about "proposition" than "opposition." In a short list of principles for a new movement, Jones advocates fewer "issues," more solutions; fewer "demands," more goals; fewer "targets," more partners; and less "accusation," more confession.

Leroy's recent post on Sojourners blog captures how he thinks about environmental issues:

Is it possible to create a new economy in the hood that would create jobs, lower energy costs, reduce the carbon footprint of an urban neighborhood, and allow neighbors to get to know one another at the same time? I think there just might be a way to make this a reality. I would like to green my hood.

The problem in urban neighborhoods is that they are some of the most dangerous places, environmentally speaking. Trash dumps, tow lots, expressways, and chemical plants create places that are quite unsafe. Our neighborhoods can begin to help themselves and lower some of the risk by starting their own green projects. We could hire and train people to do home audits for seniors and families in homes that are full of lead paint, leaky windows, clogged gutters, and uninsulated water heaters. This training would give jobs to people and lower energy bills for residents, as well as reduce the carbon footprint of the neighborhood.

We can grow neighborhood gardens and farmers’ markets, which would offer places for neighbors to have better access to nutritious food and vegetables that are otherwise very costly. When we make neighborhoods walkable and livable, neighbors can get around without driving, and that means less asthma-causing air pollution, fewer emergency room visits, and fewer sleepless nights for worried parents. Caring for the environment has hit the hood and is now a major urban issue, and people of faith have opportunity to offer good news in a new way. This is no longer just an issue of global warming and saving rain forests — it is about protecting some of our most vulnerable citizens.

Clothing the naked, visiting the prisoner, and feeding the hungry now needs to include providing clean air, safe streets, and healthy neighborhoods for our poor urban neighbors. I am committed to greening my hood for a number of reasons. If you want to learn more about it, you should check out The Green Collar Economy, by Van Jones. This is his idea, and I have become a fan.

Leroy and I are searching for other Christians who have read The Green Collar Economy—or the related work by Thomas Friedman, called Hot, Flat and Crowded (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008)—and who have ideas and stories to tell about environmental actions that create rather than threaten jobs, especially in this economy. Please write me if we can feature your work or the work of others you know.

To meet Leroy Barber and other Christian leaders who are looking at environmental issues in a new way, check out the Flourish Conference, May 13-15, 2009 in Atlanta.

August 27, 2007

Let's Tend the Garden, 2007, Boise, Idaho

If you’re a pastor, Christian leader, or layperson who wants to learn more about environmental stewardship, and if you aren’t sure where to turn for trustworthy information, this is the conference for you! If you’re already convinced that God wants the church to be the model for care of Creation, and you want practical information about how to incorporate Creation care into your ministry, this is also the conference for you!

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July 30, 2007

Greening Christian camps

Christian camps are green almost by definition--but they struggle with being good stewards of their facilities just like churches and business do. Here are some resources that might help out.

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July 23, 2007

Faith and the Federal Farm Bill

There may not  be any other piece of federal legislation which touches so many lives and so much land as does the federal Farm Bill. Up for renewal and revision about every six years, this omnibus bill affects crop subsidies, food and nutrition for the poor, food and nutrition for everyone else, energy, conservation, and the ability of farmers in the developing world to make a living.

Much of America's poor diet, poor land use, water pollution, industrialization and concentration of agriculture in the hands of fewer and fewer "agribusinesses" is a result of the distortions and wealth transfers effected by the Farm Bill. The damage is not limited to the U.S.--farmers around the world whose hopes for the future are pinned to producing crops for export are hurt when American agricultural goods are priced lower than their cost of production. Food aid to the developing world is partly first-world generosity and partly an elaborate dumping scheme to rid the global North of agricultural overproduction induced by market-distorting subsidies.

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July 16, 2007

Gardening with American Beauties

Gardening is about trial and error. For many years most of my trials ended in errors. I planted good plants in bad places, or bad plants in good places, or did everything wrong at once. Lately, we've had much more success, and we've been using fewer chemicals, fertilizers, and much, much less water, by using native plants. And we've found some great resources for getting the right plants in the right place...

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