Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Notes from: Climate Church, Climate World

Book written by Rev. Dr. Jim Antal - United Church of Christ Leader
Notes from Mike Ignatowski

“…it falls upon our generation to embrace the imperatives set forth in this resolution – imperatives that constitute a new moral era. We view the current climate crisis as an opportunity for which the church was born.”

Now is the time for clergy to speak from their pulpits about the moral obligation of our generation to protect God’s creation.

Now is the time for congregations and for every person of faith to set a moral example through our own words and actions

Let us proclaim truth in the public square – whether in the streets, at the State House, in the halls of power, with our phones, emails, technology and social media by committing our time, financial resources and prayers

Climate Church, Climate World argues that climate change is the greatest moral challenge humanity has ever faced. Hunger, refugees, poverty, inequality, deadly viruses, war--climate change multiplies all forms of global social injustice.

Environmental leader Reverend Jim Antal presents a compelling case that it's time for the church to meet this moral challenge, just as the church addressed previous moral challenges.

It’s not just about me: from personal communal salvation.

[He] urges the church to embrace a new vocation, one focused on collective salvation and an expanded understanding of the Golden Rule (Golden Rule 2.0). He suggests ways people of faith can reorient what they prize through new approaches to worship, preaching, witnessing and other spiritual practices that honor creation and cultivate hope.

"Only a repurposed church (and synagogue, mosque and temple) will be able to inspire the fundamental changes humanity must embrace if we are to restore the continuity of God's great gift of creation," he says

Repurposing the church

Change from focusing on individual salvation towards focusing on community salvation. This was written from a Christian perspective, but even much of the UU focus is on the individual. For example, we regularly teach a course on “Building your own theology”. Question: If Wildflower did this type of repurposing, what would look different from what we’re doing now?

He proposed the Golden Rule 2.0: we must recognize that future generations are no less our neighbors than those who live next door today. Make no mistake – this represents a revolution in human values…. For thousands of years we lived by the golden rule. But the development of nuclear weapons served notice that humanity needed a new moral standard. Suddenly humanity had the capacity to significantly alter – or even to end – life as we knew it.

Just as we had to make the difficult transition from a slave-based economy because of its moral implications, we will also need to transition from a fossil fuel-based economy because of its moral implications to our future fellow humans.

So, we are in the midst of a moral, spiritual, economic, and cultural challenge as daunting as the challenge posed by slavery. I believe that the scale of the material and spiritual transformation required of us today is at least as great as what was required for the United States to move beyond a slave economy.

We need to make civil disobedience a normative expression of discipleship. He pointed out that Peter and Paul spent more time in jail than as free men in the period after Jesus’ death.

Some basic ideas:

· Resilience in place of growth
· Collaboration in place of consumption
· Wisdom in place of material progress
· Balance in place of addiction
· Moderation in place of excess
· Vision in place of convenience
· Accountability in place of disregard
· Self-giving love in place of self-centered fear

What if the first announcement at every church service went something like this:
As we do every Sunday, I’d like to ask those who contacted their member of congress or the white house this past week to advocate for new laws that will make our Earth sustainable to please ire as you are able and receive our applause…. Thank you, and I hope to see still more of you rise next week.
Note: every Sunday might be too much for us to do this, bot perhaps consider once a month asking people who did this or were involved in other social action activities to stand and be recognized?

Organize an interfaith climate revival.

Testimonies from someone who is pregnant about what it means to them to have hope for their child’s future.

If all we do is to continue to behave as we have been… life as humans have always known it on this planet will come to an end.

We are the first generation to foresee, and the final generation with an opportunity to forestall, the most devastating effects of climate change…. Join the UCC in declaring that a new moral era has begun, and that our generation has a moral obligation to protect [the environment for future generations]

The 5 stages of grief: too many of us are stuck in the first stage – denial

Other ideas to focus on:
· Be driven by love and gratitude, with fear as a catalyst.
· A global commons – end the ownership of nature
· Building the kingdom of god: society based on “the common good”
· Living hope-filled lives in a climate crisis world (not optimism, but hope)

When Gandhi envisioned an India free of British rule, he didn’t weigh the chances of success. He didn’t have a plan. He relied on his convictions and his hope that it would eventually happen. Hope stops you from feeling powerless.

Hope is connecting with a new story that has not yet been made clear.

When we die and meet St. Peter at Heaven’s gate, he will invite us to pull out both our checkbook and our appointment book, and then will ask us only one question: can you find in these two records enough evidence to convict you as a Christian?

Thursday, December 13, 2018

Friday, December 14, 2018: Social Dinner and Book Discussion

This Friday  at 6:30 pm we'll gather to enjoy supper together at Panera Bread and discuss Climate Church, Climate World: How People of Faith Must Work for Change, by Jim Antal, a United Church of Christ Minister and passionate climate activist. Bill McKibben, who wrote the foreword, has said of the climate change issue that compared to all other institutions, the Church was made for this.   
       It will not be necessary to read the book, and further discussions will probably follow. For a huge sampling of the book's contents, check out this link on Amazon, and click on “Look Inside.”
       
Panera Bread location:  4625 W. William Cannon, near Brush Country Road.  (map)

For a briefer look at the scope of the book, here is a blurb, and an article about the book from United Church of Christ's website.

Here is a blurb from the cover of Climate Church, Climate World:

"Jim Antal's passion for eco-justice and his bold faith adhere in his emerging theological claim that faith communities have a new vocation: care for the Earth.  This book breaks new ground in claiming that a faith not fully committed to the preservation of the planet loses its raison d'etre."
--The Rev. Dr. John C. Dorhauer, general minister and president,
                        United Church of Christ

Antal's book garnering attention outside church circles

climate-church.jpgMassachusetts Conference Minister and President Jim Antal's new book, 'Climate Church, Climate World' is garnering attention outside of traditional church settings, most recently in an article in the Chicago Tribune.
"Do you believe in God? Then you have a moral duty to fight climate change, writes Jim Antal" is the headline on the Chicago Tribune article, which outlines Antal's argument that Americans are failing to address climate change because it is such a long-term problem.
Antal's book not only explores the details of the current climate crisis and our lack of response, it is also a clarion call on people of faith to be the solution.
"Only a repurposed church (and synagogue, mosque and temple) will be able to inspire the fundamental changes humanity must embrace if we are to restore the continuity of God's great gift of creation," he says.
In the book, subtitled "How People of Faith Must Work for Change," Antal writes: "“Here in America, if Christianity continues to emphasize personal salvation while ignoring collective salvation, if we continue to reduce the Creator to an anthropocentric projection who privileges and protects humanity, however alienated we may be from God’s created order, then the practice of religion will continue to diminish and it will add little to the redemption of creation."
Antal, the national spokesman for climate change for the United Church of Christ, is a political activist on the issue, and has spoken at gatherings of both religious leaders and scientists on the topic. He has recently spoken about the book at a number of churches in the area, as well as the BU School of Theology, Yale Divinity School and the Rhode Island Interfaith Power and Light annual meeting.
Even before his book was published earlier this spring, it gained the attention of notable activists from outside of the church.
ClimateMarchJA.jpg"Jim Antal is among the most knowledgeable and passionate advocates of Creation Care, and he captures the complete story in Climate Church, Climate World," wrote Dr. James Hansen, director of the Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program for the Columbia University Earth Institute.
And Michael Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club, writes: "Even more than an environmental problem, climate change is humanity's greatest collective moral crisis, and no one understands that better than Reverend Jim Antal ... To people of faith - lay or clergy - who are seeking ways to engage on this great global challenge: Here is your guide."
Following each chapter of the book there are discussion questions aimed at prompting readers to engage in their communities through everything from Bible study to civil disobedience. There are also more than 50 sermon suggestions.
The book, of course, has also garnered praise from a number of religious leaders, including John Dorhauer, Brian McLaren, Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, and Sharon Watkins.
"This is the book for which we have been waiting concerning the climate crisis!" writes Walter Brueggemann of the Columbia Theological Seminary. "It is clear… It is bold… It is institutionally realistic: this is no generic moral appeal, but a bid to the church to take up its primal mission… a welcome must read."
"Recorded in the gospel of John is a prayer for disciples in which Jesus gives as a purpose of discipleship: '...so that the world may know.' Rev. Jim Antal embodies this mission through his consistent and impassioned plea to honor God's creation. His new book, 'Climate Church, Climate World' challenges any theologically based notions of discipleship that exclude conscientious care of all of God’s world. And his witness is consistent," said the Rev. Traci Blackmon, executive minister of UCC Justice and Local Church Ministries. "It has strengthened my witness and challenged my personal and denominational commitment to environment and creation '....so that the world may know.'"
Find out more at www.climatechurch.org.
Tiffany Vail is the Associate Conference Minister for Communications for the Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island Conferences United Church of Christ.

Saturday, May 19, 2018

Two Things on Sunday, May 20

We have TWO things happening at Wildflower Church on Sunday May 20th:

SUNDAY, May 20, 9:30-10:45 amClimate Education Class: “Deep Past and Extreme Futures.”  Inspired by readings from The Ends of The World , Peter Brannon, this class will place our present climate situation in perspective to our planet’s five mass extinctions, and examine the significance of these times in relation to the deep past and the deep future. There will be time for discussion, and a followup at Starbucks if we wish. Class is in the Faith Parlor, across from the sanctuary (look for signs). 

ALSO SUNDAY,  7:00 PM—Inspiring the Great Transition Tour, a presentation by Sailesh Rao, Ph.D.
Dr. Rao is the founder and CEO of Climate Healers and is an inspirational speaker on climate change and sustainability. After hearing An Inconvenient Truth, he has worked with other researchers to find solutions to global warming. He has spoken about climate solutions to the European Union Parliament and at the 2015 and 2016 Climate Change Conferences and has worked with interfaith leaders on climate justice from around the world. He has received many prestigious engineering awards, is an author of Carbon Dharma and Carbon Yoga, and is the Executive co-producer of the following documentaries: The Human Experiment, Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret and What the Health!  
LOCATION: Wildflower Church 1314 E Oltorf St, Austin, TX 78704
PARKING MAP link: https://wildflowerchurch.org/visit

FACEBOOK EVENT LINK: Inspiring The Great Transition Tour

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

A few upcoming events

The Climate Team's next regular meeting will be on the second Thursday of April (4/12), at a member's home in South Austin near Westgate blvd. Please call 5128100236 for directions. Meanwhile, here are a couple of events that are coming up sooner than that:
 Thursday March 29, 7:30 - 8:30 pm –“We Are All Connected: Families, Forests, Resources.” Presentation and discussion hosted by Population Connection Activists Charla and Byron. RSVP to Heaven Edwards, heaven@popconnect.org, 202-974-7726. (Some of you may remember that we hosted a forum for the President of Population Connection at Wildflower a while back.)   Free. Twin Oaks Library, 1800 S. 5th St. 

 Saturday, April 14 at 1 PM - 4 PM – Community screening of SEED, The Untold Story, followed by outdoor, educational seed-focused activities in the Festival Beach Food Forest and Community Garden. At the RBJ Center , 21 Waller Street.

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Thurs. March 1st - OBJECT to massive offshore drilling


To respond to plans to dramatically increase leases for offshore drilling of oil and gas, we will gather, with pens or laptops,  as the People’s Ocean + Energy Management (POEM) Assembly to send official comments to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM).  Well-informed members will be present with ideas, literature, BOEM handouts, encouragement, and a good dose of outrage.

Thursday, March 1st, 7-9 pm, Wildflower Church Community Room. Bring your laptop!
Or go to this article from the Austin Sierran to read all about it, and send your comment(s) via the article's link.  The COMMENT PERIOD for this phase ends on MARCH 9.
Trump Abandons Ocean Drilling Protection

Thursday, February 15, 2018

SUNDAY, 2/18, 9:30-10:45 am: CLIMATE CHANGE EDUCATION: Carbon Capture Through Crops, Soil and Grass.


LOCATION: Faith Parlor--across from the Sanctuary at Wildflower Church, 1314 E. Oltorf.
      We will look at alternatives to high-tech carbon capture. This could also be called, "How to Have Your Cow and Your Planet Too" (and incidentally wipe out world hunger). The "dirty secret" of global climate targets is that the scenarios presume that an enormous quantity of carbon dioxide can be captured and safely sequestered, but the means of doing so at scale is unproven. Meanwhile, a new breed of "carbon farmers" is trying to get attention on the promisingly large amount of carbon that photosynthesis can capture in regeneratively managed soils, crops, and grasslands.
      We hope to be able to include guest presenters. Discussion time follows, and may continue afterward at Starbucks.
     Wildflower Church shares its campus with Faith Presbyterian Church.
     For more details, contact Susan Lippman at 512-810-0236

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Join us for a special talk, “THE STATE OF THE CLIMATE” by Derrick Crowe



THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8
 6:30 –Doors open, 7:00- 8:30 – Program, Wildflower Community Room, Wildflower UU Church, 1314 E. Oltorf
      Austinite Derrick Crowe will present The State of The Climate, a scientifically grounded yet clear and engaging presentation describing the climate change challenge and the way forward. Areas covered will include understanding climate change, rebuttal of climate-denier arguments, global climate justice, and what response is required by Earth’s life-support systems.  The birth of Derrick’s son Henry three years ago, coinciding with each of those years breaking all previous global temperature records, led Derrick to prioritize fighting climate change and communicating about it.
      Derrick Crowe has worked as a senior staffer on Capitol Hill on agriculture and rural issues, strategic communications policy, and counter-terrorism. Concern about the latter led him to leave Washington and eventually lead the Rethink Afghanistan project at Brave New Foundation. Since arriving in Austin, he has co-founded a small business and  has done much work in non-profit sector in Austin, including working for SAFE to provide justice to survivors of sexual assault, and a
t the Center for Public Policy Priorities, advocating for low- and moderate-income Texans.  WCAT team members know Derrick for his work with 350.org, a local and national organization dedicated to preventing dangerous or catastrophic climate change, and for his presentation during Climate Justice Week last spring in the lead-up to the People’s Climate March.
      Contact:  The WildEarth Climate Action Team, Susan Lippman 512 810 0236

A note for WildEarth Climate Action Team members: We'll hold our monthly meeting right after Derrick's presentation. We'll decide by consensus whether to stay in the Community Room or adjourn to Opal Divine's Grill across the street to the North of us.