eco justice

Eco-Act 21:10: relationships never end

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It’s hard to believe but I (Adrienne) am writing this blog from sunny (but not as hot) San Diego! As many of you know, I have moved down here to start a graduate school program in Climate Science & Policy at Scripps Institute of Oceanography in July.

My journey of vocational discernment has been greatly shaped by my time with you all at Union/415. While I was with you, I was able to discern in community a call to ordained ministry (still in the works but maybe later), social work / thriving communities, environmental action, food justice, and local business that’s for the neighborhood. Though I’ll be focusing on the climate action piece this next year, I am very excited to see how all of my Union/415 experiences and interests will overlap my studies and overall vocation.

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Staying Connected

reflecting on the past & looking toward the future

As we look backward and ahead regarding our Eco-Faith initiative and Union’s next iteration as we get back in person, I want to frame these wonderings within the (indigenous) idea that relationships never end. How might we live as People of the Way if relationships never end? How might we commit to acting for the care of all of Creation if we took seriously the earth’s ongoing relationship with us and all our ancestors, past and future? I can’t help but wonder about the timing and care of this message as I’ve heard it twice (maybe 3 times?) during my first week in San Diego.

The first time was from a Japanese American Episcopal priest serving in Okinawa. Nestled in our Zoom boxes, she described how beautiful it has been to get to know the community and indigenous Okinawan culture while walking with her parish through the uncertainties of a still very real COVID pandemic. She detailed how important relationships are to people there (especially the older folks most impacted by the virus) and shared there is no word in Okinawan for goodbye because culturally, relationships never end.

A day or two later, I was reading about the 751 more unmarked graves found at a former residential school in Saskatchewan, Canada. As I mourned these children and the history of genocide that the Church and State perpetuate all over the world, a package arrived. In it was a thank you present from Union: a wool blanket designed by Snoqualmie Tribal Members McKenna Sweet Dorman and Jaime Martin. The timely gift was different shades of brown (so earthy!) and “incorporates designs found on traditional basket weavings from the Puget Sound region” (see above link for more). The last note said:

These blankets were designed with wrapping, gifting, and honoring in mind. The meeting of the design from each side to the other will speak to the continuous quality of time and intergenerational connection through time. The intentional colors of the blanket reflect the use of natural plants, dyes, and materials used by traditional artists. This design speaks to Snoqualmie Tribe's collective past, present and future.

After learning in Kitchen Table Conversations of Native histories and re-imagined futures for Coastal Salish peoples and other Native folks on Turtle Island, this gift thoughtfully wrapped and held me — a tangible reminder of the histories, communities, and relations that have shaped my work at Union, alongside my hopes for deepened Union relationships with local tribes. The blanket’s Native context and Union’s gift remind me, though not quite in the same language: relationships never end…we are all part of Creation…we will always be connected.

This view of time and of relationship encompasses our sense of self in relation to the community, how we treat one another, and the ways we act for the earth. Though I am stepping away, I wonder who might step in and alongside my frank and action-oriented Eco-Faith counterpart: Gary Cooke. I believe that the momentum we’ve all created together is meaningful and one way Union can continue to show God’s deep love for all of Creation.

If you are interested in becoming more involved with Eco-Faith, please email Gary. For the rest of the summer, we will be collecting produce on Thursdays before noon at the McCollough’s in N. Seattle, 415, and the Downey’s in W. Seattle. The beautiful produce from our dispersed community gardens gets distributed to neighbors at Compass House Dexter.

As I hold on to the significance of relationships never ending, I will always think fondly of my Union community! But to be sure, I think I had more profound exhortations and reflections of gratitude for Union in my Sunday Zoom goodbye (Gary’s prayer that sent me on my way had us all crying!). What I do recall from that message is: Union is doing the Kin-dom work in so many areas; keep showing up tangibly!

I will leave the Eco-Faith blog world (for now) with some exhortations from Jesus…a 1st century indigenous Palestinian Jew and Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer of the cosmos (and all our relations):

“Believe me: I am in my Father and my Father is in me. If you can’t believe that, believe what you see—these works. The person who trusts me will not only do what I’m doing but even greater things, because I, on my way to the Father, am giving you the same work to do that I’ve been doing. You can count on it. From now on, whatever you request along the lines of who I am and what I am doing, I’ll do it. That’s how the Father will be seen for who he is in the Son. I mean it. Whatever you request in this way, I’ll do.”

- John 14:11-14, MSG

Eco-act 034: taking a Sabbath

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What a year this has been kicking off our new Eco-faith ministry of acts of purpose and hope for climate healing. We have really enjoyed diving into these topics and the interrelated ways they intersect with our call to care for all of God’s Creation.

After many weeks of contributing to the Eco-faith blog, we’re taking a little time off to rest, regroup, and plan our next series! Though we will be pretty quiet on the blog for the next few weeks, we encourage you to reflect and re-member this last year. What have you learned? Have you integrated care for Creation into your faith praxis and discipleship?

While we are away, we welcome any feedback, questions, and topics that you want us to cover next. And finally, we offer this excerpt from Wendell Berry’s writing, "Sabbath as the Path to Creatureliness” for further Sabbath reflections.

Eco-act 033: love for God, creation, and one another

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What has this Advent felt like to you? We hope you have been able to practice stopping, taking a deep breath, being attentive to the present moment, collecting your bearings, and living in gratitude for all of the gifts of this life — even just for a moment. As we finish out this 4th week of Advent in the midst of a very long year, we are dwelling on and in God’s great love — for all of Creation (including us!).

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waiting + love

for climate healing

We believe love is an action, not just an intention or warm and fuzzy feeling. It is embodied by seeing, listening, and knowing, by sharing in belonging and mutual care. God’s love radically embodied and made known by Jesus actively demonstrates and models for us what are the possibilities of love and that this abundant, overflowing love is for all of Creation — human and non-human. It is a Cosmic love that does not shy away from the hard yet truthful realities around the injustices of oppression, greed, and death that pervade the earth but rather, because of love, works tirelessly and creatively toward furthering life. In our time, Jesus’ love calls us to recognize, pray for, and act on much of the climate chaos we find ourselves in, as directly related to capitalism, consumerism, environmental racism (in the extraction of natural resources and BIPOC labor, ideas, lives), and in our accounting of Christianity’s entanglement in all of this. And yet, we can look to Jesus, the Word, who sustains and furthers all of the Cosmos as our hope and continued reason to act (Hebrews 1:1-2:8).

So. What might waiting on, looking for, and acting in God’s great love look like for us in this somewhat dismal state of our climate crisis? For one, it might look like joining in with what the Spirit is doing to bring wholeness, healing, abundance, vibrance, creativity, truth, interdependency, and ultimately more life. We would point to the other blog posts we’ve done on Eco-faith because acting for climate healing is a lot of things…but really does come from God’s invitation to participate in love-in-action.

For some ideas to further your reflection on God’s love and climate healing, we encourage you to check out these organizations, resources, and practices:

  • For the Love (Canada): this interfaith organization in Canada that “invites Canadian faith communities and faith-based organizations to come together under a unified banner to mobilize education, reflection, action and advocacy for climate” (homepage).

  • Interfaith Power & Light: this group is similar to the organization above, but located in the United States. It builds movements amongst faith communities, especially in the policy realms.

  • Earth Ministry: on a very local Seattle level, this group helps churches green their congregations, partners with IP&L above, and provides resources for advocacy in the ways of sustainable futures.

  • Read this reflection about Wendell Berry’s view of love, health, and wholeness.

  • Show your love for the earth and our communities by going on a nature gratitude walk, tending to your plot of earth, or supporting local food growers.

“I take literally the statement in the Gospel of John that God loves the world,” he writes. “I believe that the world was created and approved by love, that it subsists, coheres, and endures by love, and that, insofar as it is redeemable, it can be redeemed only by love. I believe that divine love, incarnate and indwelling in the world, summons the world always toward wholeness, which ultimately is reconciliation and atonement with God.”

—Wendell Berry, “The Body and the Earth”

Eco-act 032: finding Advent joy in today’s physical world

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We mark this coming Sunday, the third in Advent, with the lighting of the Joy candle. But when we think honestly about the current state and trajectory of our physical world, can we be entirely joyful? How do we hold both the reality of climate change and Advent joy?

A starting point might be to reflect for a moment on the notion of joy voiced by Henri Nouwen:

“Joy is not the same as happiness. We can be unhappy about many things, but joy can still be there because it comes from the knowledge of God’s love for us….”

Father Richard Rohr makes a similar point:

“… spiritual joy is something we participate in; it comes from elsewhere and flows through us. It has little or nothing to do with things going well in our own life….”

To these big ideas, we add two smaller thoughts of our own.

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waiting + joy

for climate healing

First, we lament, we worry, not so much that climate change is happening at all—climate change has always happened—but that it is happening disproportionately, and in ways, in places, and at a pace fueled in part by human self-centeredness, indifference, denial and finally resignation. But because these are human behaviors, change is possible.

Secondly, to some extent anyway, creation is adaptable, resilient. Birds actually sing louder or softer depending on ambient noise levels. Ancient grains and biodiversity may help feed the world, should climate change threaten today’s mainstay food crop yields. And animals and crop-specific planting regions can migrate for viability; for example, some warm-weather wine grapes can now be grown farther north than in the past. Despite tidbits of good news like these, however, the bottom line remains the same: such adaptations cannot make climate change acceptable, or even bearable. They simply suggest that creation itself can act to “buy humans some time” to become better stewards. And anyway, all of this feels more like relief than joy…. How do we get to joy?

Maybe the answer rests in knowing that we have the chance to participate in environmental renewal; we get to be in solidarity with our natural world. Listen to Hildegard of Bingen: “Humankind, full of all creative possibilities, is God’s work. Humankind alone is called to assist God … to co-create. With nature’s help, humankind can set into creation all that is necessary and life-sustaining.” Now that is a big, joyous idea!

As we reflect on how to hold both joy and our concern for the environment in this season of waiting and preparing, here are a few final thoughts to consider: first, if you can, enjoy a good walk in nature, in your neighborhood or elsewhere (somewhere safe for you and others). Look and listen closely. Take a breath and take it all in. And as you walk …

  • Commit to continue—or begin—your own pro-environment campaign in 2021 (your first New Year’s resolution!). While our individual efforts won’t save the environment, our absence from the battle will only make matters worse and set a bad example for others. And collectively, we can make significant contributions.

  • Take a moment to start planning next year’s garden. Visualize the perfection of those flowers, tomatoes, lettuces … imagine the aroma of the basil and rosemary….

  • Reflect on the conclusion of the above observation from Henri Nouwen: “Joy does not simply happen to us. We have to choose joy and keep choosing it every day. It is a choice based on the knowledge that we belong to God and have found in God our refuge and our safety and that nothing, not even death, can take God away from us.”

May you find joy in Advent, and Merry Christmas!

Eco-act 031: Peace and climate health

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As we look ahead to the second week of Advent through the lens of eco-faith, we are struck by how important this second candle, Peace (or Prophecy in some traditions), is for the work of Creation Care. This Sunday’s Old Testament reading is Isaiah 11:1-10:

1 A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse,
    and a branch shall grow out of his roots.
The spirit of the Lord shall rest on him,
    the spirit of wisdom and understanding,
    the spirit of counsel and might,
    the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord.
His delight shall be in the fear of the Lord.

He shall not judge by what his eyes see,
    or decide by what his ears hear;
but with righteousness he shall judge the poor,
    and decide with equity for the meek of the earth;
he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth,
    and with the breath of his lips he shall kill the wicked.
Righteousness shall be the belt around his waist,
    and faithfulness the belt around his loins.

The wolf shall live with the lamb,
    the leopard shall lie down with the kid,
the calf and the lion and the fatling together,
    and a little child shall lead them.
The cow and the bear shall graze,
    their young shall lie down together;
    and the lion shall eat straw like the ox.
The nursing child shall play over the hole of the asp,
    and the weaned child shall put its hand on the adder’s den.
9 They will not hurt or destroy
    on all my holy mountain;
for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord
    as the waters cover the sea.

Aside from the lush pastoral language, how do these verses land for you, especially verses 6-10 regarding this other-worldly, seemingly impossible peace among all of Creation? Where do you find such bold visions of peace in absolute contrast to what’s happening in our world today? Who are our prophets of today regarding the state of our earth and really, the state of us?

While it is hard enough to believe that peace can come for the above-mentioned relations, it seems daring to hope or hold our breath for peace to reign in our present societies. How do we wait with Advent hope for the powerful to relinquish their influence peacefully (and we’re not just talking about the Presidential transition)? For all of the industrial complexes (agriculture, pharmaceutical, prison, military, and even non-profit) to take account of their systemic harm and oppression and dismantle themselves for healthier communities? Can we realistically expect peace, and how do we act for it?

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waiting + peace

for climate healing

To start, we can be inspired by the work of organizations doing this work at a global, national, and interpersonal level. The Institute for Climate and Peace is a great place to get your feet wet in the world of peace and climate mutuality. We highly recommend you look at their write-ups on Future Coastlines, Just Migration, Women & Gender Inclusion, and Positive Peacebuilding. All of these areas and more overlap and work together to produce healthier social and ecological fabrics for generative communities. Read the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals to learn about the 17 targets that include both peace and various climate-related actions. And we can’t talk about peace and climate without highlighting the harm done to BIPOC communities who are usually first and most impacted by climate change...and the ways these communities have been innovating to support their survival and thriving. We’ve shared some BIPOC farmers and other community members making moves of wholeness and peace for themselves and their communities — please share any more folks you know of in the comments!

Moving to a very local and personal level, what might cultivating peace amidst a year of upheaval look like for you this Advent season? We invite you to find practices that move you forward in your peacemaking…internally, interpersonally, and at a community level. We all have to be aligned, rested, hydrated, and showing up as our full selves to face the challenges before us: both big and small. Take care and be gentle with yourself and those around you. Here are a few invitations:

  • Get your hands in the dirt: work on that winter garden and prep your soil for spring planting! Your body might find peace when you are more connected to the earth.

  • Read: We recommend My Grandmother’s Hands for learning about the somatic impacts of white supremacy and how to heal our bodies. Though not explicitly about peace or eco-care, these all overlap and we think you will find meaningful connections along the way! Or, read Wendell Berry’s “The Peace of Wild Things

  • Listen to music: Especially this year, Beautiful Chorus’ Hymns of Spirit album has been joyful, grounding, and calming for our bodies and spirits. And their newer released singles encourage us to Rise Up and act.

  • Walk a labyrinth: Seattle has many labyrinths that may be used for full-body worship and walking prayer. Here is a list that details all the labyrinths in the Seattle area. Here’s one for Bainbridge Island. Find one nearby, or take a family field trip/pilgrimage and contemplate peace and prophecy.

Do you have any other reflections or practices of peace, prophetic wisdom, or climate care this Advent season? Remember, Sabbath rest is most definitely part of this equation; cultivating and caring for your mental and spiritual health is resistance!

Eco-act 030: Advent hope for climate change

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Advent begins this coming Sunday, and we mark the day by lighting the Hope candle. But perhaps we also ask ourselves, what does hope look like in the context of climate change? Is there still time, or any reason, to hope? Experts tell us that it’s not a matter of if or even when: climate change is happening now. Those with eyes to see know this, even though others still refuse to acknowledge reality. So how do we find a way to hope for the care and healing of our physical world? Here are three thoughts for consideration.

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waiting + hope

for climate healing

At the macro level, a broad range of factors offer hope, including:

  • Transition to new national leadership that acknowledges climate change and includes people committed to addressing it—not just the President-elect, but John Kerry and others (with organizations like the Sunset Movement holding the gov’t accountable).

  • The imminent return of our nation to the Paris Climate Accord.

  • The announcement this week that General Motors will withdraw from the Trump administration’s lawsuit seeking to stop California from setting its own (aggressive) clean-air standards.

  • The UN climate chief's comments about major industrial nations’ renewed commitments to curb pollution.

  • A USA Today article from earlier this year noting five reasons for hope: (1) global economic growth is outpacing emissions growth, meaning that a healthy economy AND a healthier environment can coexist; (2) energy-efficient solutions like LED lights have reached a tipping point and are becoming commonplace; (3) wind and solar energy prices are dropping, making them smart choices; (4) clean energy availability is growing too, even as prices decline; and (5) state/local governments control zoning, land-use, building and energy use regulations, and are often more agile than the federal government in taking climate-friendly steps.

  • The World Wildlife Fund notes that when the US withdrew from the Paris Accord, literally thousands of leaders representing corporations, universities, states, counties, cities, tribes, faith communities, and others joined the We Are Still In movement. Concern for our environment is indeed broad-based.

  • WWF also notes that “More than 3.3 million Americans are employed in the clean energy economy. There are more American jobs in renewable energy than in traditional fossil fuels.” When environmental concerns and economic interests coincide, there is reason for hope.

At the individual level, we can find hope in the knowledge that we have agency to ACT. Perhaps our private actions feel small, even futile, in the face of the environmental challenges confronting us. But collectively, our actions have the potential to deliver a mighty contribution. Throughout our Eco-Faith posts, we’ve identified intentional steps each of us can take to make a difference—reducing food waste and e-waste, properly recycling, mindfully disposing of things we no longer need, thoughtfully shopping, growing a garden, planting trees, and so on. Writer Christiana Figueres, referenced in The Hill, adds three more “tangible things we can do in 2020 and before we hit 2030: find out what our carbon footprint is using one of many online calculators, determine what are the low hanging fruit and commit to reducing our personal carbon footprint by 50 percent by 2030.” Here’s a link to a calculator provided by the EPA.

At a deeper level, we might also find hope by pausing, taking a deep breath, and then reflecting on our roles in the climate change battle. We’re not asked to win it by ourselves. We’re asked to support and collaborate with each other … to do what we can, consistently and faithfully … and then to wait, in the space and time between what’s now broken and the better environmental future we long for. We don’t know the outcome—but we know Who does, so we can wait in hope. And hope does not disappoint.

Eco-act 029: support local

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This week, we’ve been reading this excerpt of Wendell Berry’s article “The Idea of a Local Economy” — and we highly encourage you to read it. Berry articulates so well how and why local economies matter in the big and small scheme of things. We invite you to consider a few quotes, as big corporations and multinational companies continue shaping our world (inequitably for the poor and people of color…and inevitably for all of us who share the land and its resources):

One begins to ask, What is here, what is in me, that can lead to something better?

…So far as I can see, the idea of a local economy rests upon only two principles: neighborhood and subsistence. In a viable neighborhood, neighbors ask themselves what they can do or provide for one another, and they find answers that they and their place can afford. This, and nothing else, is the practice of neighborhood. This practice must be, in part, charitable, but it must also be economic, and the economic part must be equitable; there is a significant charity in just prices.

…The “free trade” which from the standpoint of the corporate economy brings “unprecedented economic growth,” from the standpoint of the land and its local populations, and ultimately from the standpoint of the cities, is destruction and slavery. Without prosperous local economies, the people have no power and the land no voice.

This example of the practice of neighborhood has us wondering in what ways are we operating out of equitable subsistence…out of providing for and receiving from our community (burritos - food security and care, our garden box - hands in the dirt and free food, tutoring - education and connection). The ending of this excerpt highlights the colonial economy that we all find ourselves in, which is poignant (especially as we try to decolonize our lives…see our recent post on accounting truthfully for Thanksgiving). How does this show up in your life and other spheres? What hits you from this article? Let us know in the comments.

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shop local

keeping here vibrant✨

So, here’s where our holiday series gets practical. What better way to stand up to climate change than by supporting the hardworking businesses and people in our community?! Reduce shipping and transportation emissions and pick up your items in person (maybe even walk or bike there?). As Black Friday approaches next week, we encourage you to opt-out of the fanatical deals/consumerism that really only benefits “big box” corporations — many of whom have gotten a whole lot richer in this pandemic. And for you online shoppers, we were displeased to find out that many online shopping returns do not in fact get restocked…they often end up in the landfill in the tune of 5 billion pounds!

Anyway, as we head back into greater covid restrictions, our small businesses need our help (and if the federal gov’t won’t help…we will show up for our beloved small biz community!). So, we invite you to shop small and shop local on #SmallBusinessSaturday, 11/28 instead of Black Friday, and in addition to REI’s call to #optoutside (which by the way, they have great ideas about safe outdoor activities to get you reconnected with Creation!).

We especially recommend the Seattle-based company, Intentionalist, whose search tool you can use to find BIPOC-owned, veteran-owned, LGBTQ+-owned, disability-owned, family-owned, and women-owned businesses. You can sign up for some of their games and play bingo by frequenting certain stores — they even have a curated gift list to help your impact go further this holiday season. In the ways of food, may we suggest supporting Seattle Restaurant Week (errr, month), happening until 11/21. Finally, here’s an updated list with covid-updated eateries. You can also refer to previous Eco-faith posts for more local farmers, book stores, etc!

So. Vote with your wallet by re-circulating your money in your local economies and let us know how you are practicing neighborhood in the comments below!