In a Letter to the Editor of the Albuquerque Journal (Saturday, February 18), Shana Edberg of Baltimore Maryland, joins faith leaders in New Mexico and elsewhere urging the Environmental Protection Agency to reduce methane emissions.
IN RESPONSE to “EPA should ensure methane protections,” (Journal Jan. 29) it was an inspiration to read a faith leader’s perspective on limiting methane pollution.
Hispanic Access Foundation’s Por La Creación Faith-Based Alliance is a group of Latino faith leaders in New Mexico and across the country with the mission of protecting God’s creation — our lands, air, water, wildlife and a healthy environment for all.
We believe that God gave us the Earth to act as stewards.
Reducing the contamination our communities and environment face from oil and gas operations is one aspect of stewarding God’s creation. All families deserve to breathe clean air, but that is not currently the case, especially in our Latino communities. For example, as a result of living in more polluted neighborhoods, Latino children are twice as likely to be hospitalized and twice as likely to die of asthma as White children; 1.6 million Latinos live within a half mile of an oil well.
It is up to us as faith leaders and leaders of our communities to ensure we are creating a healthy environment for our families and our planet to thrive. For that reason, Por La Creación is joining the call for the Environmental Protection Agency to limit methane pollution. It is our obligation as stewards of creation to voice the needs of our communities, and we hope you will as well.
SHANNA EDBERG Baltimore, Maryland
Webinar Video: Daily Ecology in a World Where Everything Is Connected
/in Earth & Faith, Featured Articles, NEWS, Reflections, Resources /by adminThe February Journeying With the Laudato Si’ Action Platform webinar is about “Daily Ecology in a World Where Everything Is Connected”, related to the Laudato Si’ Goal of “Adoption of Sustainable Lifestyles”. In his encyclical letter Laudato Si’, Pope Francis invites us to an interior change of heart that can overcome our fragmented way of seeing, experiencing, and interacting with the world around us. He reminds us that we are deeply linked to nature and to one another. How do we rediscover that connectedness, and how might that impact our everyday life? Representatives of the Families and Individuals sector will speak about the social dimension of ecology, and how they discover the many ways Gospel love leads them to answer the needs of those around them and the suffering planet.
Semana de Acción Religiosa por el Clima (Faith Climate Action Week)
/in Earth & Faith, Featured Articles, NEWS /by adminThe Spanish language free download of the Faith Climate Action Week kit is now available!
Spanish-speaking communities are especially concerned about climate change according to a study by Yale Climate Communications, and are more willing to engage in climate activism than their white counterparts because of their greater exposure and vulnerability to extreme weather events due to climate change.
Please help build the movement of people of faith acting on climate by sharing the Spanish Faith Climate Action Week materials (forward this email with a Spanish message at the end) with your Spanish-speaking colleagues and friends who might use it in their Spanish-speaking congregations or organizations.
The 2023 featured film series, Current Revolution, will have Spanish subtitles, and the free screening kit will also be available in Spanish. You can access information about the film and the Faith Climate Action Week organizer’s kit in Spanish on the Faith Climate Action Week website.
Spanish materials here.
Letter to the Editor: Faith leaders join methane fight
/in Earth & Faith, Featured Articles, NEWS /by adminIn a Letter to the Editor of the Albuquerque Journal (Saturday, February 18), Shana Edberg of Baltimore Maryland, joins faith leaders in New Mexico and elsewhere urging the Environmental Protection Agency to reduce methane emissions.
IN RESPONSE to “EPA should ensure methane protections,” (Journal Jan. 29) it was an inspiration to read a faith leader’s perspective on limiting methane pollution.
Hispanic Access Foundation’s Por La Creación Faith-Based Alliance is a group of Latino faith leaders in New Mexico and across the country with the mission of protecting God’s creation — our lands, air, water, wildlife and a healthy environment for all.
We believe that God gave us the Earth to act as stewards.
Reducing the contamination our communities and environment face from oil and gas operations is one aspect of stewarding God’s creation. All families deserve to breathe clean air, but that is not currently the case, especially in our Latino communities. For example, as a result of living in more polluted neighborhoods, Latino children are twice as likely to be hospitalized and twice as likely to die of asthma as White children; 1.6 million Latinos live within a half mile of an oil well.
It is up to us as faith leaders and leaders of our communities to ensure we are creating a healthy environment for our families and our planet to thrive. For that reason, Por La Creación is joining the call for the Environmental Protection Agency to limit methane pollution. It is our obligation as stewards of creation to voice the needs of our communities, and we hope you will as well.
SHANNA EDBERG Baltimore, Maryland