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Keeping the faith(s): May God(s) help us

Religious leaders unite around climate change

Posted by Dan Worth (Guest Contributor) at 10:37 AM on 27 Sep 2006

On Monday, in the wake of remarks that caused anger and intense debate around the world, Pope Benedict XVI told Muslim diplomats that "our future" depends on good relations between followers of the Catholic and Muslim faiths. His Holiness quoted John Paul II calling for "reciprocity in all fields" and urging religious freedom and tolerance.

This past week, I had the incredible honor of presenting on a panel with religious leaders from around the world as part of the Climate Institute's Summit on Climate Destabilization. The panel, chaired by famed Earth Day founder Denis Hayes, featured revolutionary leaders from the Jewish, Presbyterian, Catholic, Christian, Muslim, and Mormon faiths, all united in efforts to urge their religious communities to take action to stop global warming. As each leader spoke, I watched the rest of the panel nodding, taking notes, and cheering each other on.

"Good relations" and "reciprocity in all fields" indeed!

Of particular note was a Presbyterian initiative, spearheaded by Pamela Mcvety, asking the Church's 2.4 million members to "bear witness" to global warming and Go Carbon Neutral in their own lives. This revolutionary commitment made by the national body of what Mrs. Mcvety jokingly called the "frozen chosen" -- a religion in which conservatives outnumber liberals by an estimated 2-1 -- shows the amazing potential of religion to overcome political and cultural differences in the face of a common global threat.

In the session's final presentation, Dr. Khalid Shaukat, Advisor for Scientific Issues for the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), quoted passages from the Qu'uran, stressing the responsibility of all Muslims to protect creation. A response to the Pope's remarks by Dr. Shaukat's group, the Islamic Society of North America, notes:

It is true that some Muslim rulers deviated from Qur'anic principles by using political or military power to oppress other religious communities. However, such actions were exceptional, which is why the oldest and most diverse Christian and Jewish communities were found in Muslim lands up to the modern period.

Before last week, I imagined two of the most influential religions in the world locked in a death spiral over conflicting religious values. But after listening to these forward-looking leaders turn the issue of climate change -- potentially the ultimate divider -- into the ultimate uniter, I have faith.

Their talks highlighted the huge base of common beliefs -- respect for creation, one's neighbors, and future generations -- that great religions and all of humanity share. Each of these visionary leaders has begun the long-term process of changing the behavior of the more than 3 billion people their faiths represent. I am humbled, inspired, and hopeful.

Thank God.

And your post has given me hope.  We need hope.  

Call me skeptical....

given how much destruction religion causes around the world I am dubious of its ability to effectively unite us around environmental issues. But maybe I'm wrong. I doubt it though.

We need to focus on the root causes of problems.
That's so Jason.

But maybe I'm wrong. I doubt it though.

That made me laugh out loud.  FWIW, I agree with you... it's just funny.


"reciprocity"?

It is not altogether clear what John Paul II meant, exactly, by that word.  A Jesuit expert on Islam who teaches in Rome, in a recent interview currently up on Commonweal Magazine's website, correctly pointed out that the desire for reciprocity is not a Christian virtue; total generosity is.  It is true that many Catholics are annoyed that in Saudi Arabia, for example, Christian practice is by the law prohibited from being any more than a catacombish affair.  Still, the Jesuit says, Catholics should not demand the freedom to worship openly in Muslim-majority countries as a condition for beginning dialogue with Muslims.

On Benedict's quote from the Emperor Manuel Palaiologos, and on the falling into Muslim hands of a huge piece of property, from Afghanistan to Morocco, in a matter of decades (I doubt it was accomplished through a brilliant campaign of direct mailing and well-planned TV spots), I most definitely have opinions.  But they are in conflict with the hopeful mood of the conference and of Dan Worth's post, so I shall keep them to myself.  At least the words of the Islamic Society of North America are fair enough: generally, Muslims in control have been tolerant of non-Muslims (which means we must consider exceptional the current state of affairs in Saudi Arabia and Iran, as well as displays of anti-Christian violence in Egypt, Pakistan and Iraq); they have certainly been more tolerant than Christians.

I was unaware that so many Presbyterians identify themselves as conservative.  Perhaps that is a function of membership distribution and regional differences.  Here in the Northeast, they tend to be liberal, I think.  But at my Presbyterian mother-in-law's church in Springfield, MO, one of those places with a claim to being the buckle on the Bible Belt, they fit right in.

It is good to know that the Catholic Bishops have this thing called the Environmental Justice Program.  I have never heard of it, though, which just goes to show it is not really a top-priority item on the Bishops' agenda.

One distracting error that Dan might try to correct next time: the ranking "Presbyterian, Catholic, Christian" is logically incorrect.  "Christian" designates a larger category which includes both "Presbyterian" and "Catholic" as members within that category.  The unqualified adjective "Christian" should not be used to designate Evangelical Protestant Christians.  That has been done in the media, but it is inaccurate, and it is offensive to other Christians who are not Evangelicals.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

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