Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
July 2006
To continue to walk the current path of ecological destruction is not only folly; it is sin. As voiced by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, who has taken the lead among senior religious leaders in his concern for creation: "to commit a crime against the natural world is a sin. For humans to cause species to become extinct and to destroy the biological diversity of God's creation...for humans to degrade the integrity of Earth by causing changes in its climate, by stripping the Earth of its natural forest, or destroying its wetlands...for humans to injure other humans with disease...for humans to contaminate the Earth's waters, its land, its air, and its life, with poisonous substances...these are sins." We have become un-Creators. Earth is in jeopardy at our hands.
SCOBA, 8 East 79th Street, New York, NY 10021
7/8/2005
SCOBA Hierarchs Endorse
Statement on the Environment
A group of Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant theologians, convened in
Washington, DC by the National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA,
released a letter recently calling all Christians to reject teachings that
suggest humans are "called" to exploit the Earth without care for how our
behaviour impacts the rest of God's creation.
This letter, reprinted below, was endorsed by the hierarchs of the Standing
Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas (SCOBA) at their
meeting in New York City, on June 21, 2005, following its approval by the
SCOBA Social and Moral Issues Commission, and recommendation by the SCOBA
Study and Planning Commission.
God's Earth is Sacred:
An Open Letter to Christians in the United States
God's creation delivers unsettling news. Earth's climate is warming to
dangerous levels; 90 percent of the world's fisheries have been depleted;
coastal development and pollution are causing a sharp decline in ocean
health; shrinking habitat threatens to extinguish thousands of species; over
95 percent of the contiguous United States forests have been lost; and
almost half of the population in the United States lives in areas that do
not meet national air quality standards. In recent years, the profound
danger has grown, requiring us as theologians, pastors, and religious
leaders to speak out and act with new urgency.
We are obliged to relate to Earth as God's creation "in ways that sustain
life on the planet, provide for the [basic] needs of all humankind, and
increase justice." Over the past several decades, slowly but faithfully, the
religious community in the United States has attempted to address issues of
ecology and justice. Our faith groups have offered rich theological
perspectives, considered moral issues through the lens of long-standing
social teaching, and passed numerous policies within our own church bodies.
While we honor the efforts in our churches, we have clearly failed to
communicate the full measure and magnitude of Earth's environmental crisis -
religiously, morally, or politically. It is painfully clear from the
verifiable testimony of the world's scientists that our response has been
inadequate to the scale and pace of Earth's degradation.
To continue to walk the current path of ecological destruction is not only
folly; it is sin. As voiced by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, who has
taken the lead among senior religious leaders in his concern for creation:
"to commit a crime against the natural world is a sin. For humans to cause
species to become extinct and to destroy the biological diversity of God's
creation...for humans to degrade the integrity of Earth by causing changes
in its climate, by stripping the Earth of its natural forest, or destroying
its wetlands...for humans to injure other humans with disease...for humans
to contaminate the Earth's waters, its land, its air, and its life, with
poisonous substances...these are sins." We have become un-Creators. Earth is
in jeopardy at our hands.
This means that ours is a theological crisis as well. We have listened to a
false gospel that we continue to live out in our daily habits - a gospel
that proclaims that God cares for the salvation of humans only and that our
human calling is to exploit Earth for our own ends alone. This false gospel
still finds its proud preachers and continues to capture its adherents among
emboldened political leaders and policy makers.
The secular counterpart of this gospel rests in the conviction that humans
can master the Earth. Our modern way of life assumes this mastery. However,
the sobering truth is that we hardly have knowledge of, much less control
over, the deep and long-term consequences of our human impacts upon the
Earth. We have already sown the seeds for many of those consequences. The
fruit of those seeds will be reaped by future generations of human beings,
together with others in the community of life.
The imperative first step is to repent of our sins, in the presence of God
and one another. This repentance of our social and ecological sins will
acknowledge the special responsibility that falls to those of us who are
citizens of the United States. Though only five percent of the planet's
human population, we produce one-quarter of the world's carbon emissions,
consume a quarter of its natural riches, and perpetuate scandalous
inequities at home and abroad. We are a precious part of Earth's web of
life, but we do not own the planet and we cannot transcend its requirements
for regeneration on its own terms. We have not listened well to the Maker of
Heaven and Earth.
The second step is to pursue a new journey together, with courage and joy.
By God's grace, all things are made new. We can share in that renewal by
clinging to God's trustworthy promise to restore and fulfill all that God
creates and by walking, with God's help, a path different from our present
course. To that end, we affirm our faith, propose a set of guiding norms,
and call on our churches to rededicate themselves to this mission. We firmly
believe that addressing the degradation of God's sacred Earth is the moral
assignment of our time comparable to the Civil Rights struggles of the
1960s, the worldwide movement to achieve equality for women, or ongoing
efforts to control weapons of mass destruction in a post-Hiroshima world.
Ecological Affirmations of Faith
We stand with awe and gratitude as members of God's bountiful and good
creation. We rejoice in the splendor and mystery of countless species, our
common creaturehood, and the interdependence of all that God makes. We
believe that the Earth is home for all and that it has been created
intrinsically good (Genesis1).
We lament that the human species is shattering the splendid gifts of this
web of life, ignoring our responsibility for the well being of all life,
while destroying species and their habitats at a rate never before known in
human history.
We believe that the Holy Spirit, who animates all of creation, breathes in
us and can empower us to participate in working toward the flourishing of
Earth's community of life. We believe that the people of God are called to
forge ways of being human that enable socially just and ecologically
sustainable communities to flourish for generations to come. And we believe
in God's promise to fulfill all of creation, anticipating the reconciliation
of all (Colossians 1:15), in accordance with God's promise (II Peter 3:13).
We lament that we have rejected this vocation, and have distorted our
God-given abilities and knowledge in order to ransack and often destroy
ecosystems and human communities rather that to protect, strengthen, and
nourish them.
We believe that, in boundless love that hungers for justice, God in Jesus
Christ acts to restore and redeem all creation (including human beings). God
incarnate affirms all creation (John 1:14), which becomes a sacred window to
eternity. In the cross and resurrection we know that God is drawn into
life's most brutal and broken places and there brings forth healing and
liberating power. That saving action restores right relationships among
members of "the whole creation" (Mark 16:15).
We confess that instead of living and proclaiming this salvation through our
very lives and worship, we have abused and exploited the Earth and people on
the margins of power and privilege, altering climates, extinguishing
species, and jeopardizing Earth's capacity to sustain life as we know and
love it.
We believe that the created world is sacred - a revelation of God's power
and gracious presence filling all things. This sacred quality of creation
demands moderation and sharing, urgent antidotes for our excess in
consumption and waste, reminding us that economic justice is an essential
condition of ecological integrity. We cling to God's trustworthy promise to
restore, renew, and fulfill all that God creates. We long for and work
toward the day when churches, as embodiments of Christ on Earth, will
respond to the "groaning of creation" (Romans 8:22) and to God's passionate
desire to "renew the face of the Earth" (Psalm 104.30). We look forward to
the day when the lamentations and groans of creation will be over, justice
with peace will reign, humankind will nurture not betray the Earth, and all
of creation will sing for joy.
Guiding Norms for Church and Society
These affirmations imply a challenge that is also a calling: to fulfill our
vocation as moral images of God, reflections of divine love and justice
charged to "serve and preserve the Garden (Genesis 2:15). Given this charge
and the urgent problems of our age-from species extinctions and mass poverty
to climate change and health-crippling pollution -how shall we respond? What
shall we be and do? What are the standards and practices of moral excellence
that we ought to cultivate in our personal lives, our communities of faith,
our social organizations, our businesses, and our political institutions? We
affirm the following norms of social and environmental responsibility:
Justice-creating right relationships, both social and ecological, to ensure
for all members of the Earth community the conditions required for their
flourishing. Among human members, justice demands meeting the essential
material needs and conditions for human dignity and social participation. In
our global context, economic deprivation and ecological degradation are
linked in a vicious cycle. We are compelled, therefore, to seek eco-justice,
the integration of social justice and ecological integrity. The guest for
eco-justice also implies the development of a set of human environmental
rights, since one of the essential conditions of human well-being is
ecological integrity. These moral entitlements include protection of soils,
air, and water from diverse pollutants; the preservation of biodiversity;
and governmental actions ensuring the fair and frugal use of creation's
riches.
Sustainability - living within the bounds of planetary capacities
indefinitely, in fairness to both present and future generations of life.
God's covenant is with humanity and all other living creatures "for all
future generations" (Genesis 9:8-17). The concern for sustainability forces
us to be responsible for the truly long-term impacts of our lifestyles and
policies.
Bioresponsibility - extending the covenant of justice to include all other
life forms as beloved creatures of God and as expressions of God's presence,
wisdom, power, and glory. We do not determine nor declare creation's value,
and other creatures should not be treated merely as instruments for our
needs and wants. Other species have their own integrity. They deserve a
"fair share" of Earth's bounty - a share that allows a biodiversity of life
to thrive along with human communities.
Humility - recognizing, as an antidote to arrogance, the limits of human
knowledge, technological ingenuity, and moral character. We are not the
masters of creation. Knowing human capacities for error and evil, humility
keeps our own species in check for the good of the whole of Earth as God's
creation.
Generosity - sharing Earth's riches to promote and defend the common good in
recognition of God's purposes for the whole creation and Christ's gift of
abundant life. Humans are not collections of isolated individuals, but
rather communities of socially and ecologically interdependent beings. A
measure of a good society is not whether it privileges those who already
have much, but rather whether it privileges the most vulnerable members of
creation. Essentially, these tasks require good government at all levels,
from local to regional to national to international.
Frugality - restraining economic production and consumption for the sake of
eco-justice. Living lives filled with God's Spirit liberates us from the
illusion of finding wholeness in the accumulation of material things and
brings us to the reality of God's just purpose. Frugality connotes
moderation, sufficiency, and temperance. Many call it simplicity. It demands
the careful conservation of Earth's riches, comprehensive recycling, minimal
harm to other species, material efficiency and the elimination of waste, and
product durability. Frugality is the corrective to a cardinal vice of the
age: prodigality - excessively taking from and wasting God's creation. On a
finite planet, frugality is an expression of love and an instrument for
justice and sustainability: it enables all life to thrive together by
sparing and sharing global goods.
Solidarity- acknowledging that we are increasingly bound together as a
global community in which we bear responsibility for one another's well
being. The social and environmental problems of the age must be addressed
with cooperative action at all levels - local, regional, national and
international. Solidarity is a commitment to the global common good through
international cooperation.
Compassion - sharing the joys and sufferings of all Earth's members and
making them our own. Members of the body of Christ see the face of Christ in
the vulnerable and excluded. From compassion flows inclusive caring and
careful services to meet the needs of others.
A Call to Action: Healing the Earth and Providing a Just and Sustainable
Society
For too long, we, our Christian brothers and sisters, and many people of
good will have relegated care and justice for the Earth to the periphery of
our concerns. This is not a competing "program alternative," one "issue"
among many. In this most critical moment in Earth's history, we are
convinced that the central moral imperative of our time is the care for
Earth as God's creation.
Churches, as communities of God's people in the world, are called to exist
as representatives of the loving Creator, Sustainer, and Restorer of all
creation. We are called to worship God with all our being and actions, and
to treat creation as sacred. We must engage our political leaders in
supporting the very future of this planet. We are called to cling to the
true Gospel - for "God so loved the cosmos" (John 3:16) - rejecting the
false gospels of our day.
We believe that caring for creation must undergird, and be entwined with,
all other dimensions of our churches' ministries. We are convinced that it
is no longer acceptable to claim to be "church" while continuing to
perpetuate, or even permit, the abuse of Earth as God's creation. Nor is it
acceptable for our corporate and political leaders to engage in "business as
usual" as if the very future of life-support systems were not at stake.
Therefore, we urgently call on our brothers and sisters in Christ, and all
people of good will, to join us in:
Understanding our responsibilities as those who live within the United
States of America - the part of the human family that represents five
percent of the world population and consumes 25 percent of Earth's riches.
We believe that one of the surest ways to gain this understanding is by
listening intently to the most vulnerable: those who most immediately suffer
the consequences of our overconsumption, toxication, and hubris. The whole
earth is groaning, crying out for healing - let us awaken the "ears of our
souls" to hear it, before it's too late.
Integrating this understanding into our core beliefs and practices
surrounding what it means to be "church," to be "human," to be "children of
God." Such integration will be readily apparent in: congregational mission
statements, lay and ordained ministries, the preaching of the Word, our
hymns of praise, the confession of our sins, our financial stewardship and
offerings to God, theological education, our evangelism, our daily work,
sanctuary use, and compassionate service to all communities of life. With
this integrated witness we look forward to a revitalization of our human
vocation and our churches' lives that parallels the revitalization of God's
thriving Earth.
Advocating boldly with all our leaders on behalf of creation's most
vulnerable members (including human members). We must shed our complacency,
denial, and fears and speak God's truth to power, on behalf of all who have
been denied dignity and for the sake of all voiceless members of the
community of life.
In Christ's name and for Christ's glory, we call out with broken yet hopeful
hearts: Join us in restoring God's Earth - the greatest healing work and
moral assignment of our time.
Contact: SCOBA Office
8 East 79th Street
New York, NY 10021
Phone: 212-570-3593
Fax: 212-774-0202
Email: [email protected]
Even within a wonderfully encouraging letter like this one, we see distinct
signs of political pressure that have been brought upon the writers of this
document as they dance around the issue of the tremendous pollution and
environmental damage caused by animal agriculture and in particular, factory
farming. Until we fully recognize the animals, by name, and "shed our
complacency, denial, and fears and speak God's truth to power, on behalf of
all who have been denied dignity and for the sake of all voiceless members
of the community of life," which includes the animals, we will never achieve
the goals this document calls us to fulfill.
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