Celebrate the Season of Creation

The Season of Creation, which runs from Sept. 1 to October 4, is a time to renew our relationship with our Creator and all creation through celebration, conversion, and commitment together. This monthlong prayerful observance calls 2.2 billion Christians, along with other people of faith and conscience, to pray and care for God’s creation. During the Season of Creation, we join our sisters and brothers in the ecumenical family in prayer and action for our common home.  Here is a “Celebration Guide”

Rosh Hashanah (Sept 22-24)

Rabbi Prof. David Golinkin explores the environmental underpinnings in Rosh Hashanah prayers that lead us to recognize our stewardship and role in protecting the world in which we live! Environmental Underpinnings in Rosh Hashanah Liturgy: We are Stewards of Our World

 

Here is a running calendar (which we will update)

  • September 1: Opening prayer service led by the Season of Creation Ecumenical Steering Committee. Watch the live event here.   Creation Day Read more (Laudato Si Movement)
  • September 1: Restoration, Renewal, Regeneration and…. Justice?? (Lutherans Restoring Creation-Gulf Coast)
  •  September 4, September 11, September 18, September 25: 6:00 PM -And God Saw that It Was Good  Register Here for each of the four sessions  (Christ the King ELCA/Lutherans Restoring Creation Gulf Coast)
  • September 5:  Steps to Act with Creation:  A reflective webinar , focusing on our relationship with the natural world and our role as stewards of God’s creation.  Register Here  (Laudato Si Action)
  • September 10: Webinar about the Fossil Fuels Non-Proliferation Treaty with high-level speakers from religious and political spheres. Find more details on how to join the event here.  (Laudato Si Movement)
  • September 21: Fossil Fuels Day of Action. Find more information here.  (Laudato Si Movement)
  • September 22-24: Rabbi Prof. David Golinkin explores the environmental underpinnings in Rosh Hashanah prayers that lead us to recognize our stewardship and role in protecting the world in which we live! Environmental Underpinnings in Rosh Hashanah Liturgy: We are Stewards of Our World… (The Schecther Institutes, Inc.)  Rosh Hashanah is actually October 3-4 (starting after sunset on Oct 2).
  • September 24: One Home One Future: Celebrating One Year of Hope in Action.  Events All Day culminating in a Special Celebration at 5:00 PM MT Check out all 10 sessions, music, speakers, and more! Register Here
  • September 25 Earth Spirit Sharing / Fall Equinox   Led by Lisa Leahigh, a Buddhist practitioner who is in a chaplaincy program through Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe,  Register Here (IPL New Mexico & El Paso)
  • October 4: Closing prayer service for the Feast of St. Francis led by the Ecumenical Youth Committee. Find more details on how to join the event here.  (Laudato Si Movement)

 

Apache Stronghold Visits First Congregational Church (Albuquerque)

By John Maddaus

Our church, in cooperation with Albuquerque Mennonite Church, Monte Vista Christian Church, and Interfaith Power and Light of New Mexico and El Paso, hosted Apache Stronghold on their prayer journey to Washington, DC, from Sunday evening, August 18 to Wednesday morning, August 21. Apache Stronghold, in turn, blessed us with their presence, prayers, ceremony, and message.

Dr. Wendsler Nosie Sr.

On Tuesday evening, August 20, we joined in a prayer gathering ceremony in our sanctuary. Members of Apache Stronghold processed into the sanctuary singing. After prayers for the success of their journey and their appeal of their case to the U.S. Supreme Court, and a land acknowledgement, Sr. Joan Brown of Interfaith Power and Light of New Mexico and El Paso led a water ceremony, assisted by Rev. Clara Sims and Rev. Ryan Tate. A water ceremony consists of the mingling of waters from different parts of the country with prayers for healing (see photo). Apache Stronghold will carry this water with them to Washington, DC. We sang “May the Circle Be Re-woven”, containing lyrics written for Apache Stronghold. The song expresses hope for “right relations with all creation” and an appeal to “stand up for the earth today.” Rev. Ryan presented Apache Stronghold a gift of a mojo bag, which he had made and prayed over for success at the Supreme Court. Members of Albuquerque Mennonite Church presented a gift of a quilt, which was wrapped around the shoulders of the 3-year-old granddaughter of Apache Stronghold founder and leader Dr. Wendsler Nosie Sr.

Dr. Nosie  thanked us for fulfilling the dreams of his late mother, who experienced the imprisonment of her Apache people on what became the San Carlos Apache Reservation. As late as 1974, Apache people could not leave the reservation without checking in with a white case worker. The U.S. Army persecuted male Apache religious leaders, but Apache religion was preserved by the women, including his mother.

Water ceremony

Referring to the water ceremony, Dr. Nosie described his experience of visiting the base of the Hoover Dam across the Colorado River, and hearing the sound of water passing through the turbines. When he described this sound to his mother, she cried, and explained to him that the sounds he heard were of the water crying. In Apache belief, everything created by God is a living being that can experience emotions, including pain when being harmed. The proposed copper mine at Oak Flat would destroy billions of gallons of water in the aquifer.

Dr. Nosie explained that when he talks with other Indigenous people, they often express anger at the harms perpetrated by Europeans and their descendants. He replies that Europeans are indigenous people too, but that the evils that they first experienced in Europe were brought with them to North America. European descendants also have experienced harm from the colonial capitalist system, and we all need to be in the struggle together to heal ourselves and Mother Earth.

The U.S. government, consistent with the 1872 Mining Act, wants to exempt Resolution Copper from all laws that would protect the sacred land of Oak Flat, and the water and the air. If the water we need for life were given first priority, everything else would also be protected.

As Apache Stronghold processed out of our sanctuary, drumming, singing, and dancing, they carried our prayers that the Supreme Court justices will open their hearts and minds to their case to protect Oak Flat and Mother Earth, and defend Indigenous religious freedom.

A Prayer/Blessing for Apache Stronghold at First Congregational UCC

Albuquerque was one of the stops for Apache Stronghold on its journey to the Supreme Court in Washington to stop the shattering of human existence and to protect Mother Earth. The prayer journey began in the Lummi Nation, north of Seattle, in July, and it will conclude on September 11, 2024 when the Apache Stronghold files their appeal at the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC, with stops along the way visiting tribes and supporters for prayer and ceremony.

Sister Joan Brown, Rev. Ryan Tate

The local event, held on Monday, Aug. 20, at First Congregational UCC, featured prayers and blessings from three IPL New Mexico-El Paso leaders: executive director Joan Brown osf, board member Rev. Ryan Tate and assistant executive director Clara Sims.

The Apache Stronghold delegation then traveled to  Pueblo, Co.