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A church going ‘green’
Grey water treatment system at Maroubra Junction
In 2007, Maroubra Junction Uniting Church received a Community Water Grant of $33,636 from the federal government. The money was used to install two top of the range grey water treatment systems for Corio House (the church’s student accommodation), and to promote the initiative and water conservation in general to the broader community. READ ON MORE
Climate Change in the Pacific: Voices from Affected Communities
An evening seminar and discussion on Thursday August 7, 6 to 8 pm at Wesley Church, Wesley Mission, 220 Pitt St Sydney 2000. Free admission.
This event will feature experiences and stories of three voices from affected communities. Come along and learn about the issue of climate change, the imperative for action, and what you can do in solidarity with Pacific communities. Click here for more information, or contact Miriam Pepper, mpepper@climateinstitute.org.au, 02 9252 5200
Seminar: Would Jesus Burn Coal? Faith and Climate Change in Newcastle
Around Australia and around the world, communities are coming together to work for a socially and environmentally just future, free from the ravages of climate change. The speakers at this seminar are all Christians who are active on climate change in their faith communities and beyond. Their actions include church-based practical projects, education and awareness raising, lobbying, and direct action. Come along and learn about the issue of climate change, why it is of concern for Christians, and what you can do about it.
Saturday July 12, 1:30 - 3:30 pm.
Hamilton Wesley Uniting Church Senior Citizens Hall
21 William Street, Hamilton, Newcastle
Chair: the Rev. Dr Jonathan Inkpin, General Secretary of the NSW Ecumenical Council
Speakers:
Jonathan Moylan, from the Uniting Church in Australia Tertiary Students Association and Rising Tide Newcastle;
Dr Miriam Pepper, from Project Green Church and the Australian Religious Response to Climate Change;
Anglican speaker to be confirmed.
Supported by:
Project Green Church;
Uniting Church Hunter Presbytery Justice Committee
For more information, contact Miriam Pepper, projectgreenchurch@gmail.com, 0447 730 772. Click here for a flyer.
Please support action on climate change on Sunday July 13
On Sunday July 13, hundreds of people from across the country, including Christians, will take part in Australia's biggest single direct action protest against coal and climate change. For more information, see http://www.climatecamp.org.au/. Please pray for this action in your churches on Sunday July 13, for progress on the prevention of climate change, and for people who are already suffering from climate change such as drought affected communities and our Pacific Island neighbours. Please also consider being a part of this historic movement. The protest begins with a colourful rally and march, and you don't need to be willing to be arrested to come along. There will be a march to Carrington coal terminal where some members of the community will walk onto the coal railway line to stop coal exports in their tracks. The march begins at Islington Park at 10 am. For more information, see http://www.climatecamp.org.au/sunday-july-13th-community-protest-stop-coal-expor
Uniting Earthweb
Uniting Earthweb is a network of Uniting Church people within NSW and the ACT who work for a greater connection between ecology and Christian faith and practice, including through theological study, the arts, worship, and practical projects and campaigns. READ ON Contact Miriam Pepper on m_d_pepper@yahoo.com.au for more information about Uniting Earthweb or a copy of the latest email bulletin.
Church Resources Greening Communities program
Church Resources is a charitable trust that helps non-profit organisations with procurement. Its new program Greening Communities helps places of worship and other non-profit groups to procure environmental product solutions, involving water conservation and reuse, energy from renewable sources, and energy efficiency. Church Resources can help you to access these products in a cost and time effective manner. You can join the Eco Demand register for solar power (photovoltaic panels), solar hot water, water tanks, grey and black water recycling, energy efficient fittings (for example energy saving light bulbs), water efficient fittings, and GreenPower. For more information, click here.
Climate change: faith and action
A report by the Justice and International Mission Unit of the Synod of Victoria and Tasmania. This paper aims to assist Uniting Church members and the general community in understanding the causes and impacts of climate change and what action we can take to try to reduce the potentially harmful effects. READ ON
WA Uniting Church Centre goes green
The Western Australian Synod of the Uniting Church has moved a step closer to its aim of reducing its greenhouse gas emissions, as it begins an energy audit of its administrative hub, the Uniting Church Centre. READ ON
Green church: sustaining creation
Resources from the WA Synod. READ ON
Greening the church email network
Are you interested in “greening” the church? Would you like to share ideas and experiences with like-minded people? Please contact Miriam Pepper by email on m_d_pepper@yahoo.com.au if you would like to join a new email network of Uniting Church people in New South Wales and the ACT who are interested in questions of faith, ecology, and action.
Climate project
Denistone East Uniting Church minister David Reichardt says his experience meeting former US Vice President Al Gore and being personally trained to communicate the complex issues around climate change has provided space to examine the relationship between being evangelical and how that relates to environmentalism. READ ON
Climate change report card online
In the lead-up to the federal election, the Climate Institute has released its final report card comparing the climate change policies of the major parties. READ ON Click here for a downloadable copy of the report card to take to the polling booth on Saturday.
Christian call to action on climate change
On Saturday November 2, Maroubra Junction Uniting Church presented a declaration on climate change to local MP Peter Garrett and local Mayor Bruce Notley-Smith. A copy was also sent to Malcolm Turnbull. “We feel it is a practical way to display to the politicians that as Christians we are called to be stewards of God’s good creation,” said congregation member Geoff Callaghan. READ ON
Faith leaders call for greenhouse pollution targets
Thirteen Australian faith leaders including have called for targets to reduce greenhouse pollution by between 60 and 90 per cent by 2050 and a clean energy target of 25 per cent by 2020. READ ON
Journeying in green discipleship
Project Green Church, Maroubra Junction Uniting Church’s grass roots sustainability project, has come along in leaps and bounds since it started 18 months ago. READ ON
Agriculture for the future: a spiritual perspective
The Rev. Dr Robyn McPhail, President of the International Rural Christian Association, and Karen Pearce f rom the CSIRO were keynote speakers at the Agriculture for the future, spirituality with the land one-day workshop held in Dubbo in September. READ ON to find out some of what they had to say.
Seven steps to sustainability
The religions of Australia have a shared sense of moral purpose on global warming. Follow these seven steps to help turn this shared purpose into action and start leading by example. READ ON
Project Green Church on the the ABC
Maroubra Junction Uniting Church is taking a lead with Project Green Church which aims to reduce the church's environmental impact. READ ON
Climate faith appointment
The Climate Institute has appointed a Faith Project Officer in recognition of the powerful role individuals and organisations of faith play in addressing climate change. READ ON
Campbelltown works on its footprint
In December 2006, the congregation at Campbelltown Uniting Church voted to make 2007 the “Year of Greening”. Campbelltown Uniting Church has five community service programs, including supported accommodation for adults with intellectual disabilities, a medium-long term residential accommodation service for young men aged 14 to 18, and a literacy centre to provide remediation for students with learning difficulties. READ ON
Eco-village for Sydney
Truly ecologically sustainable living is on its way to Sydney. Illabunda Village, set on a two hectare property in Winston Hills, is a new residential housing project which encourages social, environmental and economic sustainability. READ ON
How many light bulbs does it take to change a Christian?
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has endorsed a booklet encouraging Christians to play their part in helping to stop climate change. Aiming to counter the idea that stark warnings on the state of the environment seem too colossal for individuals to make any real difference, the book — called How many Lightbulbs Does it Take to Change a Christian? — argues that Christians not only can have an impact by adapting their lifestyle, but also have a moral duty to do so. READ ON
For the sake of the planet
The National Assembly has approved a proposal to go green. In November 2006 the Assembly Standing Committee adopted the statement, For the sake of the planet: A Uniting Church in Australia Statement on ClimateChange. At its March meeting, the Assembly Standing Committee considered a report detailing how the Assembly could put the principles of that statement into effect in its own life. READ ON
Blaxland goes green
Located in the lower part of the heritage-listed Blue Mountains, Blaxland is surrounded by national parks. It is fitting then Blaxland Uniting Church is getting involved with Project Green Church. READ ON
Climate change appeal
Religious groups including the World Council of Churches and the US National Council of Churches have joined international companies and civic groups in backing a major statement on climate change. The statement, “The Path to Climate Sustainability”, by the Global Roundtable on Climate Change, a coalition of more than 150 groups, called for governments to set “scientifically informed targets” for reducing greenhouse gases and carbon dioxide emissions. It urged “a concerted effort to de-carbonise the global energy system”, including an increase in the of non-fossil fuel energy sources. It also recommended a market price to be placed on carbon emissions in order to award energy efficiency. See www.earthinstitute.columbia.edu/grocc/.
God from the Ground Up!
Sydney North Presbytery’s Earth Ministry is a response to the need felt by many Christians to recognise the riches of God's creation and to address from a Christian perspective the environmental problems of our society.
The Rev. David Reichardt of the Denistone East congregation says the Earth Ministry concept can and should lie at the heart of our life as a church.
“It’s missional. It’s ecumenical. It’s something the whole church needs to be involved in, and it’s something e can do together — proclaim God’s glory in nature and call all people to love and care for God’s creation.” READ ON EARTH MINISTRY
The New South Wales election: vital issues for the electorate
The NSW Ecumenical Council is raising concerns about three vital social issues — including environmental sustainability — in the lead up to the New South Wales election. READ ON
Groundbreaking framework to fight climate change
The World Council of Churches has endorsed a groundbreaking climate change statement, fruit of an unprecedented consensus among high-level representatives of the corporate world as well as civil, religious and educational institutions. READ ON
Greening Bega When Bob Grasby and his wife read about green power in the newsletter that came with their electricity bill, they decided to switch to green power in their home. READ ON
Maroubra Junction gets solar hot water
Next time you’re flying over Maroubra and coming into land at Mascot, you may notice an extra glint of sunshine reflecting back up at you from the rooves of the student accommodation of Maroubra Junction Uniting Church. READ ON
Moderator exhorts congregations go to green
The Moderator of the New South Wales Synod of the Uniting Church, Mr Jim Mein, has written to all congregations in New South Wales and the ACT strongly encouraging them to switch to Green Power. READ ON In October, the 2006 meeting of the New South Wales Synod asked all
congregations, presbyteries and agencies to make one, simple and practical first
step to help stop polluting the air and stop global warming: switch to Green
Power. READ ON
Church's attack on greenhouse gas not just hot air
The Uniting Church is poised to become that nation's first to buy into a carbon credit scheme to compensate for the greenhouse emissions generated by its leaders' air travel. READ ON
Your World, O God, grows warmer – a hymn in response to global warming
The Rev. Peter Holden has written a hymn which can be used as a liturgical resource by congregations to respond to and reflect on the problem of global warming.
The hymn may be freely used in the context of worship provided that acknowledgement is made to the writer.
Click here to download a PDF of the hymn, and here to download a midi file of the tune (8KB).
For more information, contact Peter Holden on holdens@bigpond.net.au.
Green Power congregations
Synod has encouraged all its congregations, presbyteries and agencies to switch to government accredited "Green Power". Synod agreed that, as a church, it had a moral and theological imperative, as stewards of the earth, to be actively concerned with environmental issues. » READ ON
Switching to green power
Is your congregation ready to make the switch to green power? Click here to find out how.
God from the Ground Up!
How Earth Ministry and the Waterlines project is helping share the gospel for the whole earth. » READ ON
Book: Through Ecological Eyes
This volume has a wealth of sermon ideas to connect the images of creation mentioned in the Bible with local worship and action » READ REVIEW
Greening Maroubra
Maroubra Junction Uniting Church is undergoing a green
transformation. "Project Green Church" — a multi-layered
project to make the church more ecologically sustainable
— has been endorsed
by Member for Kingsford Smith and
Shadow Minister for Climate Change, Environment and
Heritage, Peter Garrett. » READ ON
What kind of environmental parents are we?
This is my brief: to spend a month living sustainably and to describe how I go. There are many, many guides and ten-step plans for household sustainably, and I take my cue from these. » READ ON
Movie: An Inconvenient Truth
“Green” and “activist” aren’t the first words usually associated with high-level American politicians. But when Al Gore lost the 2000 election, he shifted gears to see how one can make a difference to the world when you’re not President of the United Sates. » READ REVIEW
Share your story
Is your congregation taking some action to reduce its impact on the environment? We'd love to share your story with the rest of the church. Send some details of what you are doing to emmah@nsw.uca.org.au.
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