A Faith Response To Climate Change
By: Anne Rinaudo
Faith communities in Australia and around the world are not waiting for reluctant politicians to take decisive action on climate change. They are committing to walking more gently on the earth as part of a global multi-faith campaign called “Living the Change: faithful choices for flourishing world”.
Dire warnings
The latest IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C shows the world is headed for even more dangerous levels of climate disruption. The price is being paid now by vulnerable communities facing super-storms, droughts, disruption of weather patterns and sea level rise.
It is an issue Open House discussed with ANU researcher, Professor Will Steffen who warns that hothouse climate change will make parts of the earth uninhabitable.
Walking more gently on the earth
However the future of all humanity is at risk long-term. Great progress has been made in the development of low-carbon technologies, but there has been a reluctance to rely on lifestyle change as part of the solution.
Recently, Australian faith communities attempted to begin changing this. Around 300 people attended Living the Change events around the country, committing to new decisions to walk more gently on the Earth. They challenge everyone to join them.
Worldwide movement
People from diverse religious traditions came together across Australia and seventy other locations around the globe as part of a campaign called “Living the Change: faithful choices for a flourishing world”.
Commitments from many faiths
The campaign challenges believers in various spiritual traditions to make concrete commitments to living more simply, in line with their deeply held beliefs and values. Anglicans, Buddhists, Catholics, Jewish, Uniting Church, Hindu, Muslim and other people of faith publicly pledged ambitious low-carbon lifestyle changes.
Watch: Different faith groups commit to a lifestyle change at an Interfaith Conference.
Celebrating a simpler life
The events acknowledged the personal sacrifices needed for these pledges but had a celebratory tone, with musical performances, food, workshops and film viewings. The event in Adelaide included performances by Aboriginal dance mob, Dusty Feet. There are indeed sacrifices, but there are many co-benefits that come with simpler lifestyles. Moving towards plant-based diets, walking and cycling bring health benefits; using public transport and reducing air travel slows down the frenetic pace of life; more energy efficiency and renewable energy means less pollution; congruence with personal values enhances self-worth.
Harming the most vulnerable
Rev Dr Peter Catt, Anglican Dean of Brisbane said, “Care for creation in all its forms is a moral action, a moral imperative. As our world changes, the most vulnerable among us are bearing the greatest cost of the impacts of climate change. We can choose to live differently and that’s the path we are choosing.”
What would Jesus do?
Rev John Buchanan, Minister for North Sydney’s Presbyterian parish, said, “The IPCC Report tells us that technological advances and shifting economic levers are not making all the difference that is needed. Perhaps it’s time to promote lifestyle change as another valid option, and the basic principles are already embedded in the world’s religions. As a Christian, I want to follow Jesus’ teachings more fully and, in doing so, I will also be living more sustainably on this finite planet.”
The Buddhist tradition
Ordained Buddhist at the Sydney Buddhist Centre, Aryadharma, said, “The Buddhist tradition teaches the transformative power of turning toward difficulties, even a difficulty as immense as global climate change. When we look closely, we see that climate change is born of thinking ourselves separate from the web of life. We all have the power to remedy this confusion and make significant sustainable choices in our own daily lives. In ways impossible to recognise, every action matters.”
Walk the talk
Rabbi Jonathan Keren-Black, Board member of the Jewish Ecological Coalition, said, “Jewish people around the world are concerned about the future of the planet. They see the urgent need to care for the environment as a moral and spiritual obligation. We have to ‘walk the talk’ by living the change we want to see in the world.”
Moral and ethical issue
Dr Rateb Jneid, President of Australian Federation of Islamic Councils/Muslims Australia, said, “God has made the earth green and beautiful. And there is no greater threat to our ‘green and beautiful’ earth than the more frequent and intense droughts, floods, storms and wildfires brought by climate change. The prospect of these becoming ever more frequent and powerful means that saving the environment is the same as saving future generations. In reality, climate change represents one of the great moral and ethical issues of our time.”
Make your own commitment
Living the Change in Australia is supported by the Australian Religious Response to Climate Change, Religions for Peace, the Multi-Faith Association of South Australia, Anglican Eco-Care Commission, United Religions Initiative and local faith-based communities.
To publicly witness to the values being championed, you are invited to make a commitment to living the change.
Download A Climate Action Kit
ARRCC’s Climate Change Action Kits are up-to-date, comprehensive resources with creative ideas to empower people from different faiths to assist their communities to respond to climate change and care for the earth.
The kits have religious teachings from various faith traditions and resources to easy-to-understand science and improving energy efficiency. There are ideas for nurturing a sense of connection with the earth to ideas and for advocacy actions.
Listen: Rev Dr Peter Catt in conversation with Stephen O’Doherty.
Article supplied with thanks to Open House.
About the Author: Anne is the producer of Open House – a weekly three-hour live talkback radio show exploring life, faith and hope from a Christian perspective.