Bill McKibben: It’s Time for Interfaith Moral Action on Climate Change.
By Bill McKibben | Sourced from
Interfaith
Action on Climate Change
There are lots of types of people who have
been taking action on climate change over the last several years:
environmentalists (of course), students and young people, community-based
groups, labor activists, indigenous peoples, Appalachian and Gulf Coast
residents, ranchers and more. Also, importantly, have been people from the many
different denominations that make up the broad religious community in the United
States.
It was personally inspiring to me when several dozen people of faith
took action last August, getting arrested at the White House protesting the
Keystone XL pipeline. And it is inspiring that some of those people, as well as
many more, have joined together to organize five days of faith-based activities
calling for action on climate change in Washington, D.C. April 22-26. The
Interfaith Moral Action on Climate (http://www.interfaithactiononclimatechange.org) is playing a
key role in organizing and connecting these activities.
It’s very important that an interfaith voice— Christian, Jewish,
Muslim, Buddhist, Baha’I, Hindu, and Native American—is taking action in this
way. A spiritual voice is urgently needed to underline the fact that global
warming is already causing human anguish and mortality in our nation and abroad,
and much more will occur in the future without rapid action. There is an urgent
need to stop subsidizing the fossil fuel industry, dramatically reduce wasted
energy and significantly shift our power supplies from oil, coal and natural gas
to wind, solar, geothermal and other renewable energy sources.
As stated in IMAC’s Call to Action, “Virtually all the world’s
religious and spiritual traditions proclaim that we have a moral obligation to
be good stewards of the Earth and all of its creatures and processes. To disrupt
the climate that is the cornerstone of all life and to squander the
extraordinary abundance of life, diversity, and beauty of the planet is a moral
failure of the first order.”
What better time to bring this voice forward in unified action than
during the week that includes Earth Day? I will be there on Tuesday, April 24th,
for a day of activities that begins with an early morning vigil at the Martin
Luther King, Jr. Memorial by the Potomac River. At 10:30 am there will be a
multi-faith service at N.Y. Avenue Presbyterian Church, followed by a religious
procession down Pennsylvania Avenue to Capitol Hill. There a large report card
for Congress with an “F” for failure will be presented, underling Congress’
collective failure to serve and protect the American people, all peoples, and
Mother Earth from the dangers of climate change, and educational visits with key
Congressional members will take place.
I hope others will visit www.interfaithactiononclimatechange.org and make plans to be
part of this important, new, collaborative faith initiative.
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