by Rev. Jed Koball
by Rev. Jed Koball
by Rick Randolph, MD
This September, my wife and I attended the 2023 Presbyterians for
Earth Care (PEC) biennial conference at the PC(USA) Conference Center in
Massenetta Springs, VA. This was a wonderful event featuring inspired preaching
from the Rev. Dr. Diane Givens Moffett, enlightening teaching from Rev. Dr.
Patricia Tull, the Rhodes Professor Emerita of Old Testament at Louisville
Presbyterian Theological Seminary, and an enlightening offering of classes.
Everyone was collegial and the setting in Massenetta Springs enhanced our sense
of reverence.
This conference was an ambitious undertaking by PEC. It was held
in a hybrid in-person/online format with presentations originating from several
different sites. It spanned five days and had 28 presentations. These
presentations included advocacy opportunities, learning more about the effects
of climate change, the Inflation Reduction Act, personal financial choices,
congregational funding, and personal wellness.
We heard about the Doctrine of Discovery, environmental
communications, home energy conservation, and how to become an Earth Care
Congregation. In order to have so many offerings, several were presented
simultaneously, presenting us with the challenge of choosing only one course at
a time!
Thankfully, all the breakouts, the plenary presentations by Rev
Dr. Diane Givens Moffett and Rev Dr. Patricia Tull, and the times of worship
were recorded and all are on the PEC website.
Visit and see the full breadth of the areas presented.
As with most conferences, the ability to visit with the other
participants who were attending in person ended up being one of the most
enduring fruits of the conference. Thanks must be given for the incredible hard
work of the organizing committee. My wife Jo was part of that group and didn’t have the
opportunity to enjoy the conference as much as the rest of the 237 attendees. I
can only express my profound appreciation for the results of their labors. PEC
puts on a conference every two years. Plan now to attend. You will not be
disappointed.
Richard
Randolph, MD, recently retired as the Senior Chief Medical
Officer of Heart to Heart International, based in Lenexa, KS, having had
responsibility for the development of medical, disaster, and public health
programs in the developing world and the US. He and his wife Jo have worked
actively with PEC for many years and belong to Grace Covenant Presbyterian
Church in Overland Park, Kansas.
by Nancy Corson Carter
One of the great gifts of PEC’s
conference for me was the discovery of Octavia E. Butler’s novel, The Parable of the Sower.
I learned of it through Dr. Faith Harris’s
presentation, “A Womanist and Interfaith Response to Climate Change:
Reimagining Our Collective Futures.”
Dr. Harris quoted Katie Geneva Cannon to introduce herself: “My
assignment as a womanist liberation ethicist is to debunk, unmask, and
disentangle the historically conditioned value judgements and power relations
that undergird the particularities of race, sex, class, and oppression.” (She
defines “womanist” as a liberation theology restoring dignity and
hope to women of color without being adversarial.)
In asking “What should people of faith and good conscience do?” Dr.
Harris argued that our faith tradition can change the narrative: “We can make the moral
argument to invest in people, in Earth.” So it seemed natural, now that I have
read The Parable, that she would celebrate this book.
Written in 1993 by a gifted prize-winning writer who’d grown up poor,
fighting the notion that “black women don’t
write,” the story begins in 2024. This dystopian work of science fiction
presents a world in chaos that we can recognize as already becoming true—it is
both prescient and prophetic.
The young woman protagonist, Lauren (the sower in hopes of
seeding good soil), is thrown into a deeply disturbing journey by violence. I
found that the nightmarish world she traverses (ostensibly the Pacific coast in
the future) is not unlike the DariƩn Gap, the dangerous link between Colombia
and Panama being risked now by hundreds of thousands of migrants set on finding
a better life in the North. Yet Earthseed: The Books of the Living threads
through the book in brief poetic-journal form at the beginning of each chapter
as her testimonial that there is a God who is our partner in this Earth through
change, “forever uniting, growing, dissolving.” She believes that
this God leads us, if we persist, toward loving, Earth-honoring community. The
book’s
final words quote the parable of the sower from Luke 8: 5-8 in the King James
Version of the Bible.
A main theme Dr. Harris
argued is that, “Our challenge is to interrupt the fossil fuel death
spiral” and to face our problem of a “theo-ethical premise” that individuals can own land and
push others out (stealing, killing, or enslaving them as in the Doctrine of
Discovery). She urged that the moral remedy is to bring God back to Earth: “God
is not outside us but within us and all Earth,” and our hope is to
create community wherever we are. She celebrates Parable of the Sower as
a work that gives her hope because “we are going to have to figure this out, to do it
together.” That we will do this is my hope as well.
Nancy Corson Carter, professor emerita of humanities at Eckerd College, has published two
poetry books, Dragon Poems and The Sourdough Dream Kit, and three poetry chapbooks.
Some of her poems, drawings, and photos appear in her nonfiction book, Martha,
Mary, and Jesus: Weaving Action and Contemplation in Daily Life and in her
memoir, The Never-Quite-Ending War: a WWII GI Daughter's Stories.
by Nancy Corson Carter
Retired oceanographer Dr. C. Mark Eakin has spent over 30 years
with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. His presentation, “Climate
and Oceans,” reminded me of the powerful film he helped create as its Chief
Science Advisor. The Sundance and Emmy
award-winning 2017 movie Chasing
Coral documents one of the first repeated coral
bleachings that occurred between June 2014 to May 2017. During that time,
nearly all world coral bleached, sometimes for two years running, as the Earth’s oceanic waters
have continued to warm beyond safe levels for the coral. An area near Guam was
hit excessively. Now, almost every year brings bleaching events.
When corals are stressed by changes in conditions such as
temperature, light, or nutrients, they expel the symbiotic algae living in
their tissues, causing them to turn completely white. Corals can survive a
bleaching event, but they are under more stress and are subject to mortality.
Chasing Coral helped alert the world to what is only a
10-year-old field of study, one which is racing against time to rescue a
beautiful and once abundant source of life. Nearly a billion people rely on
coral reefs directly and indirectly. Thanks to its availability on Netflix and
YouTube, Chasing Coral is available to more people and encourages action
in caring for the oceans and advocating for their protection.
The corals depend upon a symbiotic relationship with algae, which
exudes nutrients for the coral and protects them. Those who study the coral
have been shocked to find that in places like the Great Barrier Reef and
especially in the tropical waters around Florida, 60% of the coral are in
jeopardy.
The situation has become critical and scientists are conducting
research in coral nurseries to keep them alive and find strains that can
survive warming water. One of the corals wiped out in the wild now only survives
in a nursery. But we must do more to reduce CO2 now to save one of the ocean’s
most valuable resources.
There is some good news on the climate change front. France has
officially pledged to shut down all coal-fired power plants in three years.
California will put five million electric cars on the road by 2030. Individuals
can help reduce dependency on fossil fuels by changing lifestyles, for example,
by using mass transit and electric cars, and by supporting electric work
vehicles like pickups, buses, and delivery trucks.
Reducing local stressors also helps. 50-85% of the coral loss in
Kiribati in 2016 is now bouncing back; after a ban on most fishing. Shade helps
and anything that cools the water—even ships spraying salt water up to make
clouds.
Dr. Eakin’s
report emphasized a great need to provide mental health support for
scientist-researchers who must observe, year after year, the death of once
healthy and utterly magical coral reef ecosystems.
In 1994, I went on an eco-tour of the Brazilian flooded forests
of the Amazon, sponsored by the PC(USA) and led by Rev. Bill Somplatsky-Jarman.
Our preparation packets included a stunning essay,“The Ecology of Grief,”
by Phyllis Windle.
Windle explores, with a wonderful cast of scientists and
especially ecologists, “the benefits of grieving well,” of avoiding the
temptation to turn and walk away when what we love is threatened. In the final
words of her essay, she writes, “We shall need passion, commitment, creativity, energy,
and concentration. We shall have none of these if we fail to grieve (alone and
with each other) for the magnificent trees, the lovely animals, and the
beautiful places that we are losing.“
As Dr. Eakin and others like Dr. Faith Harris in our empowering
2023 Earth Care Conference remind us, “Our hope is to create community together wherever we
are.”
Nancy Corson Carter, professor emerita of humanities at Eckerd College, has published two
poetry books, Dragon Poems and The Sourdough Dream Kit, and three poetry chapbooks.
Some of her poems, drawings, and photos appear in her nonfiction book, Martha,
Mary, and Jesus: Weaving Action and Contemplation in Daily Life and in her
memoir, The Never-Quite-Ending War: a WWII GI Daughter's Stories.
by Eric Diekhans
It seems like everything about America is big, whether it’s our
landscapes, our superhero movies, our McMansions, or our SUVs. But that
abundance results in a disproportionate impact on global warming. Each year,
Americans are responsible for 19 tons of CO2 emissions per capita, as compared
to seven tons for Europe, two tons for South Asia, and one ton for Sub-Saharan
Africa.
Fifteen percent of those emissions comes from food and food
waste. It’s not the largest source of our carbon footprint but it still has a
substantial impact on climate change. Making different choices about food can
make a real difference in avoiding the worst impacts of global warming.
As a member of Montclair Presbyterian Church (MPC) in Oakland,
CA, Suzanne Jones helps lead the Earth Care Committee’s Climate and Food Team and
recently co-authored MPC’s new cookbook, Climate Friendly Cooking—105 Recipes to
Help Save the Planet. During her presentation
at PEC’s conference, Suzanne admitted that changing our diets isn’t easy. Food
has important connections to our emotions, our habits, and our identities.
Think of Thai beef noodles, British steak and kidney pudding, or Cuban boliche.
“It can be difficult and even painful to change such deeply held
practices,” said Suzanne, but we can harmonize our food-related needs with
leaving behind a livable planet and still be healthy and well-fed.”
Suzanne said that “the dominant factor that determines our
dietary greenhouse gas emissions is what we choose to eat for protein.”
Thirty-one percent of agricultural emissions comes from livestock
and fisheries. Most adults need 50-175 grams of protein per day. Eating 100
grams of beef protein emits 49.89 kg of carbon. Getting the same amount from
nuts emits about half that amount.
But you don’t have to completely give up meat to make a positive
environmental impact. Ruminants do the most damage to our environment. These
are animals like cattle, bison, and sheep that chew the cud regurgitated from
their second stomach, or rumen.
This causes them to exhale methane, which is 80 times stronger than CO2 as a
greenhouse gas. Ruminant waste also emits CH4 and nitrous oxide n20, which are
300 times more potent as greenhouse gases than CO2.
“Cutting out just red meat and dairy products results in
emissions comparable to pescatarians (who eat fish but not meat) and
lacto-ovo-vegetarians (who eat plants, eggs, and dairy products),” says
Suzanne.
If you don’t want to become a full-time vegetarian or
pescatarian, Suzanne suggests saving beef for special occasions like Christmas
dinner, and getting most of your protein from pork, chicken, and plants.
Fish is also another good source of protein, but choosing the
right seafood is complicated. Wild-caught fish tend to be better for the
environment than farm-raised, though new methods of raising fish on land are
changing that calculation. Plus, ocean ecosystems are very stressed due to
overfishing, pollution, and acidification from CO2 emissions.
Crab, lobster, and some oysters and prawns are very high in CO2
emissions because boats must go out and check traps often.
You can learn about the best options for choosing seafood using
the Seafood Carbon
Emissions Tool.
Buying local has become a popular way to minimize agriculture’s
harm. But Suzanne says that, while it may have other benefits, buying locally
sourced food has little impact on emissions because transportation only
accounts for 6% of agricultural CO2. But it’s still important to be aware of
how our food is transported. Ships are much more fuel-efficient than trucking.
California beef has only 1% lower emissions than beef exported from Australia.
On the other hand, air shipping perishable foods like out-of-season berries is
terrible for the environment.
Food waste also contributes to global warming because food grown
but thrown away offers no benefits. In the United States, we waste 40% of the
food we use, and 30% of food is wasted worldwide.
“What could be more unChristian?” Suzanne asks.
She suggests that we be careful not to overbuy. We can also bring
our own containers to take home restaurant leftovers, buy ugly produce that
might otherwise be thrown away, and donate our extra food if possible. You can
even search the web for companies that will deliver ugly but tasty produce to
you, or consider signing up for a CSA farm share.
Following all of the advice in this article will make a positive
impact on your personal carbon footprint but Suzanne reminds us that to save
our planet, we must also take action to support and change institutions that
have an even larger impact on carbon emissions. That means supporting
democratic institutions and voting rights so we have the power to make our
voices heard. Those voices must demand that governments enact swift and bold
policies to phase out fossil fuels and other sources of greenhouse gas emissions.
Eric Diekhans is a published author, Executive
Director of the Greater Chicago Broadcast Ministries, and a member of Lake View
Presbyterian Church in Chicago. You can learn more about him on his website.