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Policy

The Hope We Share: A Vision For Copenhagen
A Statement from the Anglican Communion Environmental Network (http://acen NULL.anglicancommunion NULL.org/index NULL.cfm)
October 12, 2009
Download PDF (http://acen NULL.anglicancommunion NULL.org/_userfiles/File/copenhagen_ACEN NULL.pdf)

Resolution B002: Response to Global Warming – 2007
Visit Link (http://gc2006 NULL.org/legislation/view_leg_detail NULL.aspx?id=188&type=ORIGINAL)

Common Declaration of Pope Benedict XVI and The Archbishop of Canterbury His Grace Rowan Williams
November 23, 2006
Visit Link (http://www NULL.vatican NULL.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/speeches/2006/november/documents/hf_ben-xvi_spe_20061123_common-decl_en NULL.html)


Green Links

For your interest visit the following sites, which are related to earth stewardship:

  • Earth Hour 2010 – Earth Hour was conceived by the World Wildlife Fund, and represents the global call to action on climate change. The more people that pledge to turn off their lights for Earth Hour, the more influence we will have. Nearly one billion people around the world turned off their lights for Earth Hour 2009 and we can help make the next one even bigger. Follow this link (https://www NULL.myearthhour NULL.org/home?invite=GMVYdh6kcN) to learn more and sign-up yourself.
  • Green Home Building: http://www.greenhomebuilding.com (http://www NULL.greenhomebuilding NULL.com/)
  • Georgia Interfaith Power & Light: http://www.gipl.org/home.html (http://www NULL.gipl NULL.org/)

Organic Foods and Local Farmers

  • Slow Food Atlanta: slowfoodatlanta.org (http://slowfoodatlanta NULL.org/) – lists fund-raising events and opportunities to go to the farms and pitch in with manual labor. Help out where you can!
  • Love Is Love Farm: loveislovefarm.com (http://www NULL.loveislovefarm NULL.com/) – located in Douglasville, the farm was badly damaged by the recent flooding – go to slowfoodatlanta.org (http://slowfoodatlanta NULL.org/) to find out how you can donate to the Georgia Flooded Farms Relief Fund.  Love is Love Farm has an “Amazing Eggs” subscription program to receive farm-fresh eggs and frequently appear at various farmer’s markets around Atlanta.
  • White Oak Pastures: whiteoakpastures.com (http://whiteoakpastures NULL.com/) – delicious grass-fed beef from a family farm in Bluffton, Georgia. Sold at Whole Foods and Publix – tell the store manager you are buying it and thank them for stocking it.
  • Johnston Family Farm: johnstonfamilyfarm.com (http://johnstonfamilyfarm NULL.com/) – a family dairy farm in Newburn, Georgia that offers the most unbelievably good, non-homogenized milk ever. Bottled on the farm, this is fresh, pure, tasty milk that dairyman Russell Johnston is trying to get into Atlanta Whole Food stores. The Druid Hills store may already be carrying it.
  • Sparksman’s Cream Valley: sparkmanscreamvalley.com (http://sparkmanscreamvalley NULL.com/) – a family dairy farm in Moultrie, Georgia that also offers delicious, hormone free milk fresh from the cow. Currently sold in local Whole Foods stores.
  • Taylorganic Farm: taylorganic.com (http://taylorganic NULL.com/)

Holy Trinity’s Solar Array

Holy Trinity’s solar array on the south roof of Tisdale Hall includes 20 Suniva PV modules generating 4.7 KW of power. The system is connected back to the Georgia Power electrical grid and the power generated will offset a portion of Holy Trinity’s monthly electrical bills. A web-based monitoring system allows parishioners to view power generation data. OneWorld Sustainable was the solar array contractor and Georgia Interfaith Power & Light has been instrumental in helping us put this project together.

Holy Trinity’s solar array was recently featured in an issue of Photon International, the Solar Power Magazine.

solar monitorClick here (http://siteapp NULL.fatspaniel NULL.net/siteapp/simpleView NULL.jsf?&view=PV/standard/Simple&eid=436982&KeepThis=true&TB_iframe=true&height=475&width=840&scrolling=no) to view the monitoring system. Note: the info display may take a moment to load. A modern web browser (Firefox 2 and up, Internet Explorer 7 and up, Macintosh Safari, Google Chrome, Opera 8 and up) required. If nothing appears in your browser, you may need to upgrade to one of these browsers.

Our Green Ministry

The Green Church ministry seeks to carry out the following mission: to the parish and community. Leadership for this ministry is overseen by the Green Team, which meets regularly to set sustainability goals and provide resources.

The green ministry works closely with Georgia Interfaith Power and Light. The work began with an energy audit at Holy Trinity followed by a major reworking of the heating and cooling systems.

Other green projects and ministries of the parish include:

  • Our green web host, which buys three wind power offsets for each “block” of power that it uses;
  • Providing leadership for developing a community garden at Decatur High School;
  • A vegetable garden overseen by the parish preschool;
  • Celebrations of green Eucharists;
  • The removal of Styrofoam products from the church;
  • Changing light bulbs from incandescent to CFLs (compact fluorescent light bulbs);
  • Participation by parishioners in the Georgia Power Power Credit Program (http://www NULL.gipl NULL.org/powercredit NULL.html);
  • Home energy audits performed by your fellow parishioners here at Holy Trinity. Download a home audit checklist, developed by Georgia Interfaith Power and Light.

Holy Trinity has sponsored several green forums, including one that featured Bill McKibben, author of Fight Global Warming Now: The Handbook for Taking Action in Your Community (http://www NULL.amazon NULL.com/gp/product/0805087044?ie=UTF8&tag=holtripar-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0805087044). Ellen Dunham-Jones, author of Retrofitting Suburbia: Urban Design Solutions for Redesigning Suburbs (http://www NULL.amazon NULL.com/gp/product/0470041234?ie=UTF8&tag=holtripar-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0470041234), has also spoken at Holy Trinity.

Holy Trinity wins a GIPPY!

Holy Trinity was honored at the 2009 GIPPY Awards Celebration at The Temple on Peachtree Street last month. The GIPPYs are given annually by Georgia Interfaith Power and Light (GIPL) to honor faith communities that exhibit “exemplary work incorporating creation care into the life of their congregations.” Guests enjoyed dessert and coffee, conversation, and an inspiring program. Holy Trinity won the Power Award, not just for installing our 4.7 KW solar array, but for all of our power-related improvements and Green Team activities.

The program began with great news from GIPL Executive Director Alexis Chase that GIPL will receive $600,000 in grant money to fund their new PowerWise program, which will not only provide energy audits to faith communities all over Georgia, but also provide congregations with ongoing support from a PowerWise team that will help them develop plans for energy efficiency and analyze their energy use over time. Atlanta City Council President Ceasar Mitchell entertained the crowd with stories about growing up in Atlanta, winning a Blinkie Award from the Atlanta Bicycle Coalition, and trying to get a sustainable building ordinance passed by the Atlanta City Council. Keynote speaker Dr. Peggy Barlett, Goodrich C. White Professor of Anthropology and the faculty liaison to the office of Sustainability Initiatives at Emory, shared a glimpse of her early days as pioneer in environmental stewardship and sustainability programs. Her advice for starting and sustaining a Green program: Go where the energy is. Get your group together and go after projects that people in your group are passionate about.

Representatives from the congregations that won last year’s GIPPYs presented the GIPPY awards for this year. The first presenter was Adam Saslow from Temple Sinai, winner of last year’s Power Award. Mr. Saslow is Chair of the Guardians of the Earth, which is Temple Sinai’s Green Team. Mr. Saslow announced that Holy Trinity had won the Power Award and he described the many ways that our parish has demonstrated good earth stewardship, starting with one of the first important contributions from the Green Team – washing mugs to phase out our Styrofoam use. He went on: in only 6 weeks, we raised $22,000 for our solar array, we received a no interest loan from GIPL to cover the balance, we are installing a monitoring system for our solar array that will feature live data readouts on the internet and provide educational opportunities for local schools. Then he looked around the room and said, “There’s more. There’s a lot more.”

Mr. Saslow told the crowd that our Green Team keeps creating opportunities for the parish to be active in creation care, and that in 2007, we were one of the first congregations to get a GIPL energy audit, we changed lighting and repaired leaks as recommended by the audit, replaced a 35-year old boiler and replaced the HVAC controls, aided by a $10,000 GIPL grant. As a result of these changes, we reduced our gas consumption by 25% and our electricity consumption by 10%. He quoted former Senior Warden Bill Clark as saying that the main effect of the audit was to “galvanize the energy of the parish and to get things done.” Our Outreach ministry provided funds for a solar-powered street light that will serve as a beacon for a village in Haiti. Mr. Saslow cited this as an example of 1) Solar technology, 2) Care for creation, and 3) Mission, coming together. He said, “It’s this vision of care for creation being embedded in the work and life of the parish that sets Holy Trinity apart.” And on that note, Fr. Deneke and Bill Clark received the award (a recycled basketball trophy now proudly displayed in the narthex) and Fr. Deneke said how thrilled we are about our new solar array, and he invited everyone to come see it when they’re in Downtown Decatur.

All Saints Episcopal Church won the Light Award for a series of Adult Christian Formation classes on “intentional eating as a spiritual practice that enriches our lives, protects the Earth, fosters community, and puts our faith into action.” The series, called Food for the Soul: The Spirituality and Pleasure of Intentional Eating was about how what we eat affects everything around us. Holy Comforter Episcopal Church won the Trailblazer Award for its Seedtime and Harvest gardening program which employs several parishioners and sponsors plant sales throughout the year. Ebenezer Baptist Church’s Solo Ministry won the Ministry of the Year GIPPY. The Solo Ministry Team organized several Green events – something for everyone in the congregation. GIPL Executive Director Alexis Chase acknowledged that three of the four 2009 GIPPY winners are Episcopal parishes. She said something like, “Sorry, but that’s where the work is being done right now, so all you other denominations – get on it!”

We can thank GIPL and our leaders on the Green Team for this honor, but as Mr. Saslow said that night, the work at Holy Trinity is being done by the clergy and the laity, and that “There are many, many champions – not just one, and at every step along the way, Holy Trinity says Yes.”


An Earth Day Sermon

by Steven Whitney, preached at St.  Stephen’s Episcopal Church, Earth Day Sunday, April 21, 1996. Texts: Genesis 2:15, 9:8-11 and  Job 12:10, 38:1-7

Good morning!  Happy Earth Day!  And thanks be to God for this opportunity to reflect on the goodness of the creation and on our role in its stewardship.

As you may have read in the Messenger, I am a professional environmentalist.  I work to protect, among other things, the forests of this great land which John Muir once described as the finest God ever planted.  My work has enabled me to do many things — I’ve given plenty of speeches — but this is my first sermon.  And, to tell you the truth, its a little scary.  Speaking from the head is easy.  Speaking from the heart is harder to do — at least for me.

So I think I’ll begin with a true story.  Last Tuesday afternoon, I took some time off, and knowing these remarks would require a little thought, I gathered up a Bible and some other materials and walked down the street to our local pub for a cool micro-brew and a sandwich.  Needless to say, the waitress was a little surprised at my choice of reading materials, so I explained what I was doing and then I asked her if she thought it was improper to write a sermon while sitting in a tavern.  She replied by asking where I went to church.  When I said “St.  Stephen’s Episcopal” she chuckled and said “Oh, don’t worry about it, they’ve all been here.”

And she may be right, and that’s OK.  Because, unlike some other religious traditions, those of us in the Anglican tradition openly celebrate God’s creation in all of its manifestations.  The forests that blanket the landscape, the clear water that flows from the mountains, the bald eagles and killer whales, the flowering shrubs that paint our neighborhoods with flashes of pink and yellow, the diversity of human life, and yes, even the hops for my beer last Tuesday afternoon.  For all that we have, and all that we are, we owe thanks to God.

Christians five centuries ago knew this well.  They set aside a few days a year during planting time, Rogation Days, to offer their thanksgivings and to ask for the Lord’s blessing on their fields and crops.  Today’s readings from that Rogation Day tradition are pretty clear about who is the Creator.  Did you hear what God said to Job from the whirlwind?  “Who is this that darkens counsel by words without knowledge?  Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth . . . when the morning stars sang together and all the heavenly beings shouted for joy?” Of course, you and I know the answer, its right there on page one of the bible -­God created heaven and earth and said it was good.  And, although in the Christian tradition the human role in God’s world is unique among the animals, man and woman are not creators, they are merely a part of the Creation — placed in the garden by God.  Job learned that lesson the hard way.

But our Rogation Day readings for today don’t stop with this reaffirmation of God as Creator.  They go on to affirm that God not only created the earth and all that is upon it, but that Creation belongs to God – the land, the water, the animals, the air, the “riches” — all God’s.  This is emphasized by way of the parable from Luke about the rich man who has accumulated so many worldly goods that he must build a bigger barn to contain them all.  God’s response is to call the rich man a fool and declare, “This very night your life is being demanded of you.  And the things you have prepared, whose will they be?” We know the answer to that one too.

So from the readings we know that God is the creator and that creation belongs to God.  But it’s the collect that gives us some insight into the role of humanity in the context of Creation.  It begins by saying to the Lord . your hand is open wide to satisfy the needs of every living creature . . Notice it doesn’t limit the statement to creatures that provide us with food, or those that are commercially valuable.  It is unequivocal.  It says every living creature.

When I first read today’s collect, I was reminded of the story from the Jewish tradition when Noah is loading the Ark with the Camels and water buffalos and the goats, when up the ramp comes a pair of tiny little gnats.  According to the story, Noah turned to God and said , “You want me to save the gnats?  Of what possible value could they be?” And God replied “Yes Noah, save the gnats.  They hold many secrets you may never know.”

In fact, it is the Noah story where the bible is quite clear that God’s covenant was established not just with people, but with all of creation.  God said to Noah and his sons, “I set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and the Earth.” Have you seen the rainbows over Seattle during the past few weeks?  They truly have been amazing.  No one who has seen them can possible doubt God’s resolve to uphold his covenant with the Earth.

But what about us?  I wonder what God thinks of our modern attitudes toward the diversity of life, where value is measured not in terms of the secrets the creatures may hold, but in dollars and cents.  We treat the earth like an ark in reverse.  Rather than march the animals two by two up the ramp of survival, we march them faster and faster down the gang-plank of extinction.  “They are taking our property rights” we say, “just to save the spotted owl or the wild salmon.” But I think we need to start asking ourselves the question, whose property is it, really?  And, on whose authority do we use our private land to the detriment of God’s creation?”

Which brings us back to the collect for today and our request that God “grant that we, remembering the account that we must one day give, may be faithful stewards of your good gifts…” Faithful stewards. . . What does it mean to be a faithful steward of God’s creation?  Good question.  Fortunately the bible provides guidance — the first reference right in Genesis 2 when God placed the human creature in the garden “to till it and keep it.” Clearly this direction from God means we have the authority, if not the responsibility, to till the Earth in order to make its productive powers flourish.  But does this mean we are to till all of it?  I don’t think so, because we also have the obligation to “keep it” which means to sustain it, conserve it, perpetuate it — to “keep” the Earth by protecting its God created life systems and life forms.  And, let’s not forget the rainbow — God’s covenant with creation and with all of the world’s creatures.  “Till it” yes, but know when to stop.

In the modern age, of course, “when to stop” is usually a political call.  And the world of environmental politics can be complicated and frustrating.  In conservation work it is often said that all victories are temporary and all defeats permanent.  And most of the time it’s true.  Yet, despite the frustrations, and the fact that it seems I work twice as hard for half as much money – I wouldn’t give it up for anything.

Years ago I was fond of saying that environmental work is a lot like working for the Church.  Only back then I had no idea how true that statement really was.  You see I didn’t find my way to church until 1986 after my first daughter was born, and long after my career was underway.  At first, I pretty much just went through the motions, until one Sunday something clicked.  I remember the sermon vividly.  It was on the subject of intergenerational responsibility and was illustrated by reference to the environment and our obligation as Christians to care for creation.  That was the first day I remember really hearing a lesson.  It made sense to me.  It was relevant to the world today.  It was important.  And, it came right from the bible.  Since then, I’ve heard a green message almost every Sunday.

I used to defend my decision not to attend church by saying that I always felt more spiritual on a mountaintop than in a building.  But while that was true, it hardly justified living a life without God.  I was missing the point.  The point is, God speaks to me through the mountains — always has.  It just took me awhile to learn how to listen.  For me, and perhaps for you, nature is the ultimate tangible manifestation of God in our midst.  And, I have come to learn that somewhere deep in that knowledge lies the basic motivation for my life’s work.  Like the little gnats in the Noah story, there remain many secrets I may never know — this spiritual journey is still more mystery to me than understanding.  But day by day, one step at a time, with God’s help, the understanding grows.

Let us pray.

Lord, we thank you for this opportunity to reflect on your creation, your covenant with all living things, and our obligation to be good stewards of the gifts you have provided.  Help us to understand that each of us has an important role in Caring for Creation, by the choices we make and by the actions we take.  Give us the wisdom to choose thoughtfully, and to act with care, in accordance with your will, and your love of this good Earth, our island home.

Happy Earth Day — Amen.