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Hope and Trepidation.

3/28/2016

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United Methodist Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org and catalyst for the fossil fuel divestment movement, reflects on the meaning of the upcoming fossil fuel screening votes in The United Methodist and Presbyterian USA churches.

I was baptized in the Presbyterian Church on the West Coast; having ended up in the mountains of the northeast, I’ve spent my adult life as a Methodist. And so it is with hope and trepidation that I watch as the denominations that mean so much to me consider divestment.

    Hope because I know how many good people have worked so hard to push this to the front of the church agendas. Hope because I know how important it’s been to watch others divest: when the Episcopalians and the UCC and the Unitarians joined in, it was a real blow to the brand reputation of the big fossil fuel companies. Hope because I know that young people in particular have been the motive force of this global effort, and so it will make the church that much more relevant to people still seeking meaning in their lives. Hope because it links the current climate fight to the last huge divestment movement, that which helped upend South African apartheid. As Desmond Tutu said when he helped launch this divestment campaign, this is the great human rights crisis of our time.

    Trepidation because I know how easy it is for institutions to take the easy way—to issue proclamations of good intent but then let the ‘cooler heads’ of the status quo prevail when it comes to real action. This choice is a particularly easy one because fossil fuel investments have done so badly—even so, it’s easier for finance committees and pension trustees to just keep doing what they’ve always done. But if they do—well, my real trepidation is about how fast the climate is changing. Month after month we crush all the old records for global temperature. The world God left us to take care of, the one that God pronounced “good,” is disappearing with lightning speed. That means it’s time to break with the easy choices and make the hard ones—as people of faith have so often been called on to do through history.

Now is our chance.


This article is co-posted at Fossil Free UMC.
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telling the stories of caring for creation

3/28/2016

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In this Easter Season, we're excited to launch our new blog as we prepare for the 222nd General Assembly in Portland.

As of today we have 25 presbyteries concurring with the Overture to Divest from Fossil Fuels, which means we have so many stories from so many people to share about why we care for creation and why we must do everything we can to care for creation. We believe that divestment from fossil fuels needs to be part of our denomination's care for creation.

Each week between now and General Assembly, we'll share a story of someone who's put their heart, spirit, and mind into the work of divestment from fossil fuels or a story from someone who is directly feeling the effects of climate change.

May we be challenged. And may we remember that the God who makes the resurrection of Jesus Christ possible calls us to work for all creation.
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