EPISCOPAL BISHOPS IN
NEW ENGLAND ISSUE FIRST PASTORAL LETTER ON THE ENVIRONMENT,
2003
Press
Conference of February 27,
at 2 PM, 138 Tremont Street, by the Diocese of Massachusetts
and three local leaders in environmental affairs: Dr. Kevin
Knobloch of the Union of Concerned Scientists; Stephen MacAusland
of the Episcopal Ecological Network and Massachusetts Interfaith
Power and Light; The Rev. Margaret Bullitt-Jonas, author and
environmental activist from All Saints Church Brookline.
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the pastoral letter (MS Word).•
“The religious community needs to speak
out on the environmental crisis,” say the Episcopal bishops
of New England, and to underscore their concern they have issued
a pastoral letter, the first of its kind. The letter, “To Serve
Christ in All Creation,” is being mailed to all of the Episcopalians
in Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire,
and Maine.
“This
letter comes at an important, even pivotal, time in our nation
and region,” said The Rt. Rev. Bud Cederholm, Bishop Suffragan
of Massachusetts. “Our national leadership, as we write in this
letter, ‘is failing to acknowledge the urgency of the planetary
crisis in which we now find ourselves.’ Our letter calls for
us to repent of our greed and waste and commit ourselves to
energy conservation and the use of clean, renewable sources
of energy. All around the country we are seeing religious leaders
beginning to talk about our environment—for example, the National
Religious Partnership for the Environment and one of
the results is that we are putting more pressure on our governmental
leaders to meet their commitments to us and to the future.”
This unprecedented pastoral letter comes
as a strong scientific consensus has emerged that global climate
change is underway and threatens to dramatically alter, for
the worse, the world we leave our children if we do nothing
to curb greenhouse gas emissions. Present national leadership,
however, is waging an unprecedented assault on the environment
and environmental protections and laws. At the same time, there
is important environmental leadership from Governor Mitt Romney
and other New England governors.
Accompanied by a list of resources, suggested
practical actions, and a proposed curriculum for churches to
use in raising congregational awareness of environmental issues,
the letter is designed to educate Episcopalians to be proactive
stewards of creation.
On behalf of the Episcopal Bishops of
New England, Bishop Cederholm has scheduled a press conference
for February 27, beginning at 2 PM, at the Episcopal Diocese
of Massachusetts, 138 Tremont Street, Boston.
Joining Bishop Cederholm to comment on
the importance of this pastoral letter in terms of national
and regional environmental policy will be Kevin Knobloch, Executive
Director of the Union of Concerned Scientists, Stephen MacAusland
New England representative of the Episcopal Ecological Network
and founder of Massachusetts Interfaith Power and Light, and
The Rev. Margaret Bullitt-Jonas, an author and environmental
activist from All Saints Church in Brookline.
Copies
will be made available to the press on request and at the press
conference itself.
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Download
MS Word version of Episcopal Bishops
in New England Issue First Pastoral Letter on the Environment
Go
toTo Serve Christ in All Creation – A Pastoral Letter
from the Episcopal Bishops of New England
Download
MS Word version of To Serve Christ in All Creation – A
Pastoral Letter from the Episcopal Bishops of New England
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