To Serve Christ in All Creation
A Pastoral Letter from the Episcopal Bishops of New
England
In thanksgiving for the gift of God's creation and with an
urgent concern for the health and stewardship of the world, we your
bishops issue this Pastoral Letter on the Environment. We know that the
environmental crisis is a matter of great concern to many Episcopalians
and we know that many of you have acted more fully and more faithfully
than we ourselves have. We confess our past complacency, ignorance and
neglect. We regret Christian teachings that claim or imply that human
beings have divine sanction to destroy God's creation. We pledge our
prayers, our time, our leadership and our energies to the work that
needs to be done. We encourage all members of the Episcopal Church in
New England to see in the promises of the Baptismal Covenant the call
to serve Christ in all creation.
Scripture and tradition remind us that the whole earth is
filled with the glory of God. Here in our beloved New England we
perceive that glory in wild forests and open fields, in clear lakes and
rocky seashores, in mountains, dunes, and rolling hills. With Martin
Luther, we know that "God writes the Gospel, not in the Bible alone,
but also on trees, and the flowers and the clouds and stars." With
Thomas Aquinas, we affirm that "Revelation comes in two volumes - the
Bible and nature." The world is God's creation, and God delights in it
("God saw everything that [God] had made, and indeed, it was very
good," Genesis 1:31; "The heavens declare the glory of God, and the
firmament shows [God's] handiwork," Psalm 19:1). The land and the
rivers, the air and the sea belong to God, not to human beings ("The
earth is the Lord's and all that is in it," Psalm 24:1). We are part of
the created order, not separate from it, and our first calling by God
is to be the caretakers of creation (Genesis 2:4b-8, 15). Reckless
destruction of nature is a sign of estrangement from God. ("There is .
. . no knowledge of God in the land . . . Therefore the land mourns,
and all who live in it languish; together with the wild animals and the
birds of the air, even the fish of the sea are perishing," Hosea 4:1b,
3; "Hurt not the earth, neither the sea nor the trees," Revelation 7:3).
God's earth and all God's creatures now face perilous and
potentially cataclysmic changes as a direct result of human activities.
New Englanders are acutely aware of the environmental challenges we
face in our own small corner of the world, from the collapse of
fisheries to the loss of farmlands and wetlands, from smog to acid
rain. Airborne mercury poisoning, suburban sprawl, the loss of
wilderness, overuse of pesticides and other toxins, extinction of
species - these are just a few of the environmental hazards with which
we must contend.
One of the most daunting challenges we face is global climate
change. Many scientists agree that if we burn fossil fuels at expected
rates, global warming caused by human activities could raise worldwide
average temperatures between 3 and 11 degrees Fahrenheit in this
century. In New England, climate change may cause flooding in coastal
areas, reduce the quality of our region's fresh water, imperil
agriculture, and increase the outbreaks of infectious disease. Within
this century, New England may lose its maple, birch, and beech trees.
We face the loss of our spectacular fall colors and the end of
fall-foliage tourism, as well as the destruction of our region's maple
sugar industry. (1)
Global warming is but one stark example of the troubled
relationship between humanity and the natural world. Environmental
issues are not just scientific, political, or economic issues, but ones
that are profoundly moral and spiritual, as well. As Christians we
cannot remain silent. Christianity offers an imperiled world the
conviction that God's creation is good, and that God in Christ has
redeemed not only the individual human soul, but also the whole of
creation. In Christ, "all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and
through him God was pleased to reconcile to himself all things, whether
on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross"
(Colossians 1:19-20). Creation is thus made new (Revelation 21:5).
Just as God's salvation encompasses all creation, so too does
Jesus call us to love our neighbors as ourselves. Who is our neighbor?
When Jesus was asked that question, he responded with the story of the
Good Samaritan (Luke 10:29-37). Today, the natural world is under
assault, forests are being stripped and oceans plundered, natural
resources are being exhausted and entire species killed. Today, the
world is being stripped, beaten, and left half dead. Is it not possible
to recognize all creation as our "neighbor"?
The poor, the marginalized, and the least powerful of our
human neighbors are those who suffer most from illness and pollution
caused by environmental degradation. Generators, incinerators, and
waste disposal facilities are concentrated in impoverished
neighborhoods; children in our inner cities suffer alarming rates of
asthma; overemphasis on the use of private vehicles deprives the poor
of transportation. Exploitation of the poor is closely linked to
exploitation of the earth, and our quest for social justice and
economic sustainability must rest on a foundation of ecological
stability. As baptized Christians, we are clearly called to care for
creation, loving our neighbors as ourselves. Through prayer and action
to protect the earth, we acknowledge the ongoing redemption of all
creation in Christ (2 Corinthians 5:19a), and we minister to Christ
himself, who particularly identifies with the outcast and suffering
(Matthew 25:35-36).
Lest we experience despair, lest we feel the hopeless
conviction that it is too late to change anything, too late to turn
this around, we must root ourselves in the deepest convictions of our
faith. We put our trust in a God who loves every inch of creation and
whose covenant with Creation can never be broken ("I will . . .
remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature
of all flesh that is on the earth," Genesis 9:16). We share in Christ's
crucifixion, letting ourselves feel and mourn the wounds of Creation.
We share in Christ's resurrection, bearing witness to the Christ who
bursts out of the tomb, who proclaims that life, not death, has the
last word, and who gives us power to roll away the stone. We receive
the Holy Spirit, source of all truth, who sends forth faithful stewards
of God's creation. We nourish ourselves at the Eucharistic table, where
Christ gives himself to us in the natural elements of bread and wine,
and restores our connections not only with God and one another, but
also with the whole web of creation.
As brothers and sisters in Christ, we commit ourselves and we
urge every Episcopalian in every parish and diocese throughout the
Province of New England:
- To act
together to honor the goodness and sacredness of God's creation;
- To
acknowledge the urgency of the planetary crisis in which we now find
ourselves;
- To pray
and take action to restore a right relationship between humankind and
creation;
- To lift
up prayers in personal and public worship for environmental justice,
human rights, and sustainable development;
- To
repent of greed and waste, and to seek simplicity of life;
- To
commit ourselves to energy conservation and the use of clean, renewable
sources of energy;
- To
reduce, reuse, and recycle, and as far as possible to buy products from
recycled materials;
- To
realize that, through participation in community, public policy, and
business decision-making, we have corporate as well as individual
opportunities to practice environmental stewardship and justice;
- To seek
to understand and uproot the political, social, and economic causes of
environmental abuse.
In order to support these commitments, we call for a
Provincial Convocation on the Environment in 2003.
Who will believe the church's declaration that "God so loved
the world" (John 3:16) if we ourselves do not? By committing ourselves
to join with others in protecting the integrity of God's creation, we
are living out the promises of our baptism and participating in God's
mission to restore all people and all creation to unity with God and
each other in Christ.
Faithfully in the name of Christ and all creation,
The Episcopal Bishops of New England:
The Right Reverend Andrew D. Smith, Bishop of Connecticut
The Right Reverend James E. Curry, Bishop Suffragan of Connecticut
The Right Reverend Wilfrido Ramos-Orench, Bishop Suffragan of
Connecticut
The Right Reverend Chilton R. Knudsen, Bishop of Maine
The Right Reverend M. Thomas Shaw, III, SSJE, Bishop of Massachusetts
The Right Reverend Roy F. Cederholm, Jr., Bishop Suffragan of
Massachusetts
The Right Reverend Gayle E. Harris, Bishop Suffragan of Massachusetts
The Right Reverend Douglas E. Theuner, Bishop of New Hampshire
The Right Reverend Geralyn Wolf, Bishop of Rhode Island
The Right Reverend Thomas C. Ely, Bishop of Vermont
The Right Reverend Gordon P. Scruton, Bishop of Western Massachusetts
Sent to the Episcopal Churches of Province One on the Feast
of the Presentation of Christ, 2003
(1) For an examination of the effects of global warming in New
England, see New England Regional Assessment Group. 2001. Preparing for
Climate Change: The Potential Consequences of Climate Variability and
Change. New England Regional Overview, U.S. Global Change Research
Program, 96 pp., University of New Hampshire (http://www.necci.sr.unh.edu/2001-NERA-report.html)
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