In Paris, Wednesday, Dec 3, 2015—Blog Post 2

Sr. Joan Brown,osf

Executive Director, NMIPL

 

After arriving at Charles de Gaulle Aiport at 9:30 am, Sr. Odile of the Franciscan Missionary of Mary community graciously met me and we went to their convent in Southern Paris and then off to the People’s Climate Conference for the rest of the day.

 

Both the People’s Conference and the official COP are right next to one another in the northern part of Paris. How glorious that there were not lines to maneuver and I soon had my official badge and then off to the People’s Conference for the rest of the day. I will be an official observer the second week of  COP under the Franciscan International badge.

 

Inside the COP various working groups are very busy in order to meet a deadline of submitting their proposals, as requested by Christina Figueroa by Friday. In opening remarks Christina Figuera said that the world is at a turning point and must begin a new path to try to meet the 2 degree limit.

 

Governments need to recognize that national plans submitted by some 183 countries are a beginning place and require accountability being set in place; however, with these plans the calculations ae that there will still be a 2.7-3.5 degree celsius rise which is well above the sought after 2 degree and 1.5 degree that some civil society members would like.

 

She noted that a path must be made to go lower and that strong financial measures and accountability to plans are required. Civil society needs to be aware of the reality and yet continue to work for progress.  Paris is a process and the work of civil society during and after Paris is increasingly important. I believe the role of faith traditions and people of conscience have a particular role to play. So many are suffering and we are called to be the difference in what Pope Francis calls a “World of Indifference.”

 

My day included an interfaith prayer at the end led by women with colleagues from Texas Interfaith Power and Light and others. We were Jewish, Protestant, Catholic and Unitarians. On the way back to my lovely abode with the Missionary sisters of Mary we saw the beautiful lights of the city of Paris and prayed for peace and well-being in this city of Lights.

 

 

 

Sr. Joan Brown,osf

Executive Director, NMIPL

 

After arriving at Charles de Gaulle Aiport at 9:30 am, Sr. Odile of the Franciscan Missionary of Mary community graciously met me and we went to their convent in Southern Paris and then off to the People’s Climate Conference for the rest of the day.

Both the People’s Conference and the official COP are right next to one another in the northern part of Paris. How glorious that there were not lines to maneuver and I soon had my official badge and then off to the People’s Conference for the rest of the day. I will be an official observer the second week of  COP under the Franciscan International badge.

Inside the COP various working groups are very busy in order to meet a deadline of submitting their proposals, as requested by Christina Figueroa by Friday. In opening remarks Christina Figuera said that the world is at a turning point and must begin a new path to try to meet the 2 degree limit.

Governments need to recognize that national plans submitted by some 183 countries are a beginning place and require accountability being set in place; however, with these plans the calculations ae that there will still be a 2.7-3.5 degree celsius rise which is well above the sought after 2 degree and 1.5 degree that some civil society members would like.

She noted that a path must be made to go lower and that strong financial measures and accountability to plans are required. Civil society needs to be aware of the reality and yet continue to work for progress.  Paris is a process and the work of civil society during and after Paris is increasingly important. I believe the role of faith traditions and people of conscience have a particular role to play. So many are suffering and we are called to be the difference in what Pope Francis calls a “World of Indifference.”

My day included an interfaith prayer at the end led by women with colleagues from Texas Interfaith Power and Light and others. We were Jewish, Protestant, Catholic and Unitarians. On the way back to my lovely abode with the Missionary sisters of Mary we saw the beautiful lights of the city of Paris and prayed for peace and well-being in this city of Lights.

 

 

 

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On the Road to Paris

The Road Through Paris: Journey blog 1

December 1, 2015

Joan Brown,osf

 

I am always amazed by the miracle of flight, for birds and for featherless humans, like myself. Without feathers, I am in flight from Albuquerque to Paris for the Conference of Parties, (COP 21) UN Climate meeting.

 

Last night we had a very moving Interfaith prayer beginning with a walk from the federal building to Immaculate Conception Church. Our walk was in solidarity with the millions of climate related refugees and immigrants. Our prayers in the church brought Jewish, Sikh, Muslim, Buddhist, Protestant and Catholic brothers and sisters together in our suffering, hopes and calls to action.  We sang and prayed and danced and lit candles and decided to speak out for the Green Climate Fund and a Renewable Energy Tax Credit for New Mexico by making calls to our political leaders.

 

Yesterday afternoon, a piece in the National Catholic Reporter quoting Pope Francis stated, “Every year, the problems are more grave,” adding that politicians have so far “done little” to address the situation. “We are at the limit,” said Pope Francis. “We are at the limit of a suicide, to say a strong word.” But he added: I have trust; I have trust that thee leaders will do something, because I would say I am sure they have the good will to do it. And I wish that it will be so, and I pray for this.”

 

As I travel to COP21 it is this message of reality illuminated with the light of hope in action. The following prayer, shared at the interfaith Prayer on Monday night by the Buddhist Dharma teacher, Kathryn Turnipseed also travels with me.

 

A Path for Warriors by Margaret Wheatley
We are grateful to discover our right work
and happy to be engaged in it.

We embody values and practices that offer us meaningful
lives now. We let go of needing to impact the future.

We refrain from adding to the aggression,
fear, and confusion of this time.

We welcome every opportunity to practice our skills
of compassion and insight, even very challenging ones.

We resist seeking the illusory comfort of certainty
and stability.

We delight when our work achieves good results
yet let go of needing others to adopt our successes.

We know that all problems have complex causes.
We do not place blame on any one person or cause,
including ourselves and colleagues.

We are vigilant with our relationships, mindful to
counteract the polarizing dynamics of this time.

Our actions embody our confidence that humans can get
through anything as long as we’re together.

We stay present to the world as it is with open minds and hearts,
knowing this cultivates our gentleness, decency, and bravery.

We care for ourselves as tenderly as we care for others,
taking time for rest, reflection and renewal.

We are richly blessed with moments of delight, humor,
grace, and joy. We are grateful for these.

 

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Dance, Pray, Walk Barefoot and Take Legislative Action During Climate Talks in Paris

The faith community and people of conscience in Albuquerque and Santa Fe took a number of actions during the conference on climate in Paris (COP21) on Nov. 30-Dec. 11. An interfaith vigil in Albuquerque brought members of the Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, Sikh and other traditions for a procession and a prayer service in Albuquerque on Nov. 30. The service, which was held at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, was planned to coincide with the departure of Sister Joan Brown and Sister Marlene Perrotte of New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light  to the talks in Paris the next day.  Below are a few snapshots of the service.

Rev. Sylvia Miller-Mutia and her family led liturgical dance

Father Warren Broussard, Sister Joan Brown

Necip Orhan

 

Ruby Kochhar and fellow member of Sikh community

Legislative Advocacy
The local actions in conjunction with COP21 included opportunities for advocacy and an activity on the Plaza in Santa Fe this afternoon (Wednesday, Dec. 2). The legislative advocacy efforts include actions at the federal and state levels. We are asked to urge our members of the New Mexico State House and Senate to pass the Home Renewable Energy Tax Credit and to advocate to Sen. Tom Udall to vote to vote to fund the U.S. contribution to the Green Climate Fund.

Barefoot on the Santa Fe Plaza

Organizers of the “Shoes of Solidarity” event asked people in the Santa Fe area to bring their shoes to the Plaza on Wednesday, Dec. 2, 4:00 to 5:00 p.m.  (or anytime thereafter until Dec. 11) in solidarity with the COP21 summit. “Please place your shoes on the grassy areas only. Take the time to invite your neighbors and friends to join you as a statement that New Mexicans want the climate restored to a safe, stable level, and that you want to see New Mexico leaders mobilize for serious climate action,” said organizers, who created a Facebook event  to publicize the action.

 

 

 

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Planting good seeds in the fertility of the mind: Rise up to the Paris climate pledge

Pomegranate. (Mike Cooke, used under FreeImages.com/license)

Planting good seeds in the fertility of the mind: Rise up to the Paris climate pledge

The pomegranates on our tree cracked open while I was at the World Parliament of Religions in Salt Lake City in mid-October. Green flesh burst forth revealing multitudinous iridescent juicy ruby seeds. When they burst they are not spoiled, but very ready to be eaten and shared.

This pomegranate experience for me has become a heralding of this moment beginning with the amazing Parliament of the World’s Religions experience. “Reclaiming the Heart of Our Humanity” drew some 10,000 people of all religious traditions to chant, sing, pray and most importantly to enflesh religious traditions with action.  For the first time, the parliament pleaded for religious leaders to address climate change, poverty, indigenous rights and equality of women.

Coming on the heels of the Papal Encyclical of Laudato Si’, a Muslim call by global leaders on climate change, strong statements by the Dalai Lama, Evangelical andJewish leaders, it is apparent that the pomegranate has burst open. Jewish tradition teaches that the pomegranate, with its multitudinous seeds, is a symbol of righteousness and represents fruitfulness, knowledge, learning and wisdom. The Hebrew word for “pomegranate” is rimon(רימון), which comes from the same root as the verb “to rise up.”

Now as we approach the U.N. Climate Change meeting in Paris, the Conference of Parties (COP 21), Nov.30-Dec. 11, it is as if the Earth herself is bursting forth with humanity as so many seeds to “rise up” for life. While there are doubts that a strong agreement will take place in Paris and while some powers in the United States poise themselves to be stumbling blocks for the world, just as the pomegranate cannot help bursting forth, so too the moment is ripe to “Reclaim the Heart of Our Humanity.”

The violent events in Paris and Beirut recently make even more evident the call of people of faith to be active witnesses caring for God’s creation and one another. While the general public knows that the reasons thousands of refugees fleeing Syria and even Central America are related to violence and war, most people do not know or have not made the connection to climate change. Years before the current eruptions of violence leading to displacement, unprecedented droughts intensified by a warming planet resulted in food insecurity, hunger, poverty and the inability for people to live normal lives. Social unrest does not take place in a vacuum. As our world experiences the increasing effects of climate change with social destabilization, we will have more refugees and immigrants.

I will be going to Paris on Dec. 1 until Dec. 13 as an NGO delegate with Franciscans International and also working with Interfaith Power and Light. But, I feel like I have been on the road to Paris with so many people in New Mexico and with my Franciscan community for ages. We have been working on reducing carbon emissions, planting solar panels on roofs and good seeds in gardens, shedding light on methane leaks and flaring, testifying at permit hearings around coal-fired power plants and educating and activating the soul within people of faith to “rise up.”

Here in New Mexico we have gathered hundreds of Paris Pledge postcards signed by ordinary people and faith communities committing themselves to reduce their carbon footprint by 50 percent by 2030 and to net zero by 2050. Many women religious communities have signed the Paris Pledge. Interfaith Power and Light will take these pledges of good faith to Paris to say to world leaders that the people are serious about the call to address climate change, because too many brothers and sisters are already suffering and God’s creation is looking like a pile of filth, to paraphrase Pope Francis.

In Scripture, Solomon uses the pomegranate as a holy fruit to speak of the fertility of the mind, where good seed is planted and a harvest is sure. In the New Testament, we might compare it to the fruits of the Holy Spirit.

Let us pray for the bursting open of good fruit and the seeds spilling all over the floors of COP 21.

[Sr. Joan Brown, OSF, is a Franciscan sister from the Franciscan Sisters of Rochester, Minn., and executive director of New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light.]

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US sisters’ ability to connect social, environmental justice offers a path forward

In 1988, not long after Dominican Sr. Patricia Siemen graduated from law school, she worked for a nonprofit that was preparing to build affordable housing for farmworkers in south Florida.

She opened a TEDxJacksonville talk in 2013 with the story of how environmental activists fought the project’s development in defense of the Florida scrub-jay. Siemen’s employer hoped to purchase land that was apparently an occasional habitat of the bird.

“I kept walking that land and saying, ‘Over my dead body is some bird going to stop our building housing for people in need,’ ” Siemen recounts for her TEDxJacksonville audience.

Siemen’s sense of social justice has since expanded. Several years after that project — which did, in the end, build farmworker housing on the desired property — Siemen got into environmental ethics, and in 2006*, she co-founded the Center for Earth Jurisprudence at Barry University School of Law in Orlando, Florida, where she still serves as executive director.

“There has been this oftentimes divide between social and human justice issues and environmental justice, and sometimes a fear that if we’re concerned about environmental justice, we’re not worried about human justice,” Siemen said.

That is a false dichotomy that the environmental movement too often fails to correct, according to Franciscan Sr. Joan Brown,executive director of New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light, an affiliate of the 40-state “religious response to global warming.”

While the Catholic church’s role in caring for the earth has gotten more attention in recent months following the publication of Pope Francis’ encyclical, Laudato Si’, a dedicated group of women religious has occupied a special place in the Earth justice movement for decades, working to bridge these various social justice silos that operate as though progress were a zero-sum game.

Brown thinks this role of connector is one that women religious are perhaps uniquely suited to play. She has dubbed the work “ecology ministry,” with “ecology” referring to the whole life system.

“Whether it’s poverty, human trafficking, immigration — ecology ministry is about the home, and everything is connected,” Brown said. “In the web of life, everything is connected.”

Laudato Si’ has been a source of hope for Brown and many sisters like her. In clear, passionate language aimed at the entire global population, Pope Francis lays out the scope of the problem and the urgent need to address it. The encyclical’s subtitle, “On Care for Our Common Home,” reflects his understanding of the human place within the ecological entirety of this planet, not separate from it.

“I wept when I read it the first time,” Siemen said, “because it’s the first time . . . where for me, the voice of the official church was so on target with, really, the cries of the poor and the cries of the earth.”

Dominican Sr. Pat Siemen. (Provided photo)

Charity Sr. Paula Gonzalez, who has spent all 83 years of her life believing in the sacredness of the natural world, says we are in a critical moment of human history. She expects the inequity of U.S. consumption of natural resources to become politically disastrous from a global perspective, and she sees ecological problems as moral issues that faith communities are perfectly positioned to grapple with.

“Care of the Earth is one of the most important religious activities that we can undertake,” Gonzalez said, “because it is God’s creation that is being mutilated.”

Earth as our common home

Pope Francis’ encyclical has provided a new foundation for conversations about the rights of nature all over the world. The global population, for its part, is at different stages of acceptance.

Some people have grown up with a default understanding of Earth as a “common home.” In Latin America, for example, indigenous groups who never lost their connection to nature lead the work to protect the natural world. Brown’s environmental upbringing in Olpe, Kansas, was a combination of being raised on a farm and growing up as part of a parish that celebrated the seasons, blessed the fields and prayed for rain.

As a young woman preparing for her final vows in the late 1980s, Brown did a 30-day solo camping retreat. Toward the end, as she was standing among the Aspen trees conducting a ritual and a prayer, Brown heard God through the trees. They told her they depend on her to be their voice, and they need her to do the work of caring for creation and the community.

Sarah McFarland Taylor’s 2007 book Green Sisters: A Spiritual Ecology chronicles the work of women religious in North America, like Brown, who have responded to a spiritual calling to heal and restore the planet. In an interview on Harvard Press’ Off the Page, McFarland Taylor said the work of these sisters is the antithesis of what has been cast as “an elitist, tree-hugging environmental movement.”

“These truly are women who have spent decades working with the poor and the destitute,” said McFarland Taylor, an associate professor of religion at Northwestern University. “And these women have now come to see hunger and economic injustice, social injustice, and even war in environmental terms.”

McFarland Taylor first studied Genesis Farm — a pioneering ecological center founded by the Dominican Sisters of Caldwell, New Jersey, in 1980 — as a doctoral student, turning that research into her dissertation. The center brings people together to study the universe story, personal and social change, and sustainable farming, and McFarland Taylor found it to be the “tip of the iceberg” in a growing movement. In the decade leading up to the publication of Green Sisters, McFarland Taylor said the number of ecology learning centers and earth ministries run by sisters grew about fourfold.

In the Harvard Press podcast, she said these sisters practice ecological sustainability “almost as a kind of spiritual discipline,” making no distinction between planting fields organically and praying, for example.

“Planting those seeds is their prayer,” McFarland Taylor said. “Working their fields is this form of spiritual practice.”

Dominican Sr. Miriam Therese MacGillis, director of Genesis Farms, is one of the pioneers of what McFarland Taylor calls the “green sisters movement.” Like many of the sisters involved in ecological activism, MacGillis credits her worldview to the teachings of Passionist Fr. Thomas Berry, who spoke about the “new cosmology.” This concept identifies a common evolutionary origin of all life on Earth.

Faith leaders at a January Public Regulatory Commission hearing in Santa Fe calling for shutting down part of the San Juan coal power plant in the Four Corners region of New Mexico. (Provided photo)

The new cosmology has provided the basis for much soul-searching at Genesis Farm as women religious and other visitors grapple with the implications of the universe story. MacGillis said for so long, people have thought of the hard work of farming as a punishment that Adam and Eve earned for humans by making their first mistake. At Genesis Farm, MacGillis tries to bring back the awe and wonder of connecting with plants and “the whole mystery of life around it.”

“It’s a whole universe, and we haven’t, as a society, been introduced to that as a spiritual mystery,” MacGillis said. “But it is. And it’s profound.”

Pope Francis’ encyclical chronicles the abuses that humans have perpetrated against the environment, making clear the changes that must come to preserve “our common home.” He calls for a new lifestyle that harnesses the purchasing power of consumers to force widespread change among corporations that get rich on consumption. While Laudato Si’ minces no words in pointing to the failings of humans as protectors of the environment, it ends on a hopeful note, with the belief that humans together can make positive change.

All of the women religious engaged in environmental efforts have seen the pope’s words animate Catholics and non-Catholics alike since the encyclical’s release in May. Sisters who pioneered this work and those who have taken up the call are being invited to discuss its significance and the suggested path forward, often with interfaith communities.

Gonzalez says it is finally beginning to click with people that “we are a part of nature, not apart from it.”

“That’s what Pope Francis really speaks to in the encyclical,” Gonzalez said. “We have to change our hearts and minds so we all understand that we are all part of the great union of life.”

Work in progress

On the legal side of things, care of the environment in the United States is couched in a protection of human rights. The right to breathe air free of chemicals. The right to clean drinking water. Siemen points to the Clean Air and Clean Water acts as examples of environmental laws that are distinct from Earth laws. Neither act says nature has a right to be clean for its own benefit.

Other countries have made greater progress. In 2008, Ecuador became the first nation to enshrine the rights of nature in its national constitution. While advocates argue that there has been a lack of enforcement, people at least have the legal standing to protect the rights of nature in court.

Nepal was in the process of revising its own constitution to include this legal standing when a devastating April 2015 earthquake put the project on hold. Bolivia has the Law of Mother Earth, which gives the natural world equal rights as humans and compels Bolivians to protect them. And Europe is home to a campaign to expand the definition of ecocide from a crime of war to a crime at any time.

In the United States, lines about the rights of nature generally are stricken from laws before they are approved — if they’re even written in at all. But Siemen believes the country could be on the verge of a breakthrough. She says people seem to be developing an understanding that nature does not need to be protected for human utility alone.

“I don’t want to take that away,” Siemen said. “But it needs to be expanded. Other species have a right to exist. We need to figure out how to live in balance.”

The opening prayer for the Albuquerque Climate March on Sept. 24, 2014, in front of the Albuquerque cathedral. (Provided photo)

Laudato Si’ gives congregations and community groups a way to engage each other and bring new voices to the conversation about environmental protection. Many are sure it will be taken seriously for years to come as religious and secular communities respond to its call to broaden a movement that has been building for decades, at least.

Siemen says the idea of movement-building is very important. The movement to end slavery or to secure women’s right to vote took many years and a lot of work. For many people today, the concept of nature having inherent rights that must be respected is as absurd as the arguments once were that slaves deserve to be free or women deserve to vote.

But women religious all over the country are in it for the long haul. At Interfaith Power and Light, Brown says she works within a three-pronged strategy: education around climate change, engagement around sustainable living, and advocacy around public policy. She and her team are advocating for new methane rules through the Environmental Protection Agency and a renewable energy tax credit as they urge individuals to sign the Paris Pledge, named for the United Nations’ climate change conference to be held Nov. 30-Dec. 11 in Paris. The pledge is a commitment to cut personal consumption of carbon in half by 2030 and to be completely carbon neutral by 2050.

In some parts of the country, women religious are fighting fracking or the Keystone XL pipeline. Holy Cross Sr. Joan Marie Steadman, executive director of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, said much of the sisters’ work is done on a local level, relating to the unique circumstances of different regions. They are organizing within their own parishes to use less energy, conserve water, grow more food on motherhouse property, restore prairies and wetlands, and protect forests. They are adopting green technology, offsetting their own carbon emissions, and turning to hybrid vehicles.

Genesis Farm is one of the oldest education centers, but many others have joined it since 1980 as women religious open their doors for environmental teaching. Steadman points to demonstration projects across the country, including haybale houses, sustainable gardens, and restoration projects.

And now, unlike in recent years, all of these projects have the pope’s explicit backing as being critical for our common survival.

*An earlier version of this story gave the incorrect founding year.

[Tara García Mathewson is a freelance writer based in Boston.]

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Methane

I was in Washington D.C. last week with a coalition of organizations including NM Interfaith Power & Light, NMCC, and the Sierra Club. We were lobbying our elected officials on the EPA’s proposed limits on methane emissions. About 40 people from across the country flew in to D.C. for two crammed days of education and advocacy. There were four of us from New Mexico, including

Alex Renirie with the Sierra Club in New Mexico, Daniel Tso from the Navajo Nation, and Gloria Lehmer, and activist from Farmington.

You’ve probably seen news about the giant methane cloud over the four corners area. This cloud represents high rates of asthma, increased risk of low birth weight in infants, and increased rates of cardio-vascular disease. Lehmer shared photos of methane flares around Farmington and the dead landscape behind her house, surrounding an old methane vent. While methane occurs naturally, fracturing for natural gas releases huge amounts of methane into the environment. We met a mother and daughter from Wyoming who had to l

eave their family farm after everyone in their family and their new calves became ill. Activists from the MHA Nation in North Dakota talked about the devastation to their ancestral lands and to the health of their people. The rate of methane emissions and the havoc it wreaks was overwhelming.

There are currently no limits on methane emissions in the U.S. As part of President Obama’s Climate Action Plan, the EPA is proposing common sense limits to protect the environment and our communities. So, we fanned out across D.C. to let our legislators know that we support this proposal. The four of us from NM were able to meet with Senators Udall and Heinrich and Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, as well as members of their staffs. We also met with staff from Rep. Ben Ray Lujan’s office. It is encouraging to know that our Congressional Delegation is already on board with the EPA’s proposal, and in fact wrote to the Office of Management and Budget last summer to encourage quick release of the proposal.

We will continue to watch developments over the coming months. The President is including these proposed limits as part of the U.S.’s pledge at the upcoming Climate Change Conference

in Paris next month. We hope that Congress will support and expand these efforts for the sake of our communities and those around the world. If you’d like to know more, please follow the links in blue. You can help by writing to our Congressional delegation and thanking them for their support, and also contacting your state legislators to encourage them to speak out in favor of the EPA’s proposed rule.

 

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Advocating in Washington, D.C.

I was in Washington D.C. last week with a coalition of organizations including NM Interfaith Power & Light, NMCC, and the Sierra Club. We were lobbying our elected officials on the EPA’s proposed limits on methane emissions. About 40 people from across the country flew in to D.C. for two crammed days of education and advocacy. There were four of us from New Mexico, including

Alex Renirie with the Sierra Club in New Mexico, Daniel Tso from the Navajo Nation, and Gloria Lehmer, and activist from Farmington.

You’ve probably seen news about the giant methane cloud over the four corners area. This cloud represents high rates of asthma, increased risk of low birth weight in infants, and increased rates of cardio-vascular disease. Lehmer shared photos of methane flares around Farmington and the dead landscape behind her house, surrounding an old methane vent. While methane occurs naturally, fracturing for natural gas releases huge amounts of methane into the environment. We met a mother and daughter from Wyoming who had to l

eave their family farm after everyone in their family and their new calves became ill. Activists from the MHA Nation in North Dakota talked about the devastation to their ancestral lands and to the health of their people. The rate of methane emissions and the havoc it wreaks was overwhelming.

There are currently no limits on methane emissions in the U.S. As part of President Obama’s Climate Action Plan, the EPA is proposing common sense limits to protect the environment and our communities. So, we fanned out across D.C. to let our legislators know that we support this proposal. The four of us from NM were able to meet with Senators Udall and Heinrich and Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, as well as members of their staffs. We also met with staff from Rep. Ben Ray Lujan’s office. It is encouraging to know that our Congressional Delegation is already on board with the EPA’s proposal, and in fact wrote to the Office of Management and Budget last summer to encourage quick release of the proposal.

We will continue to watch developments over the coming months. The President is including these proposed limits as part of the U.S.’s pledge at the upcoming Climate Change Conference

in Paris next month. We hope that Congress will support and expand these efforts for the sake of our communities and those around the world. If you’d like to know more, please follow the links in blue. You can help by writing to our Congressional delegationand thanking them for their support, and also contacting your state legislators to encourage them to speak out in favor of the EPA’s proposed rule.
Join us for lunch in Laguna
NMCC’s Board of Directors will hold their quarterly meeting on Nov. 18th at the United Presbyterian Church in Laguna. While you probably don’t want to sit through the meeting portion (though they’re open and anyone is welcome) you might want to join us for lunch at 12:00 noon. The congregation will provide the meal and tell us what’s happening in Laguna. You must RSVP by Thurday, Nov. 12th to nmchurches.org

Interfaith Vigil for Climate Change
NM Interfaith Power & Light will be hosting an Interfaith Candlelight Vigil on the eve of the Paris Climate Change Conference. Join us on Monday, Nov. 30th at 5:30 pm for a short walk from the Federal Building Downtown to Immaculate Conception Roman Catholic Church. We will pray for the decision makers and all those traveling to Paris, including Sr. Joan Brown. More information will be available at NM-IPL.org

New Mexico Conference of Churches
1019 2nd St. NW
Albuquerque, NM 87102

(505) 238-5534
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Let Your Little Light Shine

Spare Parts, a band from the First Unitarian Church in Albuquerque, performed several songs at the Fall Gathering of the New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light on Saturday, Nov. 7. (See video of part of the keynote address by Interfaith Power & Light founder Rev. Canon Sally Bingham). Let Your Little Light Shine was one of the songs this wonderful group shared with participants.The song is very appropriate to recognize some of the people and organizations that received the Sprouts and Seeds awards from NMPIL that afternoon.

 Rev.Canon Sally Bingham poses with Sen Mimi StewartSen. Mimi Stewart was recognized for her leadership in promoting an initiative to extend the residential, commercial, and agricultural tax credit for solar installations in New Mexico.”This bill helps more New Mexicans take advantage of a pollution-free energy source that also creates jobs. New Mexico was just ranked in the top ten states for renewable energy job growth by Environmental Entrepreneurs,” said the organization Environment New Mexico. The bipartisan initiative was approved by an overwhelming 37-5 vote in the New Mexico State Senate, but Gov. Susana Martinez, without an explanation, chose to use the pocket veto on the measure.  According to the Taos News, Sen. Stewart is considering bringing back the measure during the upcoming session of the legislature, perhaps trying to add a solar power tax credit to the tax incentive bill.
Fr. Christopher McLaren & Gary Gunthorpe, St. Mark’sOne of our Core Values at St. Mark’s is to be good stewards of the earth’s resources and to move toward a more sustainable future for our congregation, our families and our world. As the people of God in this place we are initiating New Energy @ St. Mark’s Solar Project as one way that we can begin to take practical and visionary steps toward becoming a good steward of God’s creation and an environmentally aware community of faith.  Fr. Christopher McLaren

St. Mark’s on the Mesa Episcopal Church received a special recognition for its Solar Power Project, which aims to meet the energy needs of the house of worship with solar power.  The parishioners are investors in the project through a Limited Liability Corporation (LLC) that the church has set up to finance the project. The anticipated cost of the solar system is approximately $100,000, which  purchase an installed 30 kW photovoltaic system from New Mexico-based company PPC Solar.

Evelyn Sanchez & Kathy Sanchez, TWU

Environmental Justice has been defined by our community as, “Our Commitment to honor and protect the rights of ourselves, our habitat, and the fair treatment of all living things.”

NMIPL honored Tewa Women United for its consistent strong and collective voice creation care and environmental justice through prayer, inspiration, advocacy and witness  rooted within the spiritual ways of native women. TWU is a collective intertribal women’s voice in the Tewa homelands of northern New Mexico.

Through its Environmental Justice Program, TWU aims to engage in local and international dialogue and activism on nuclear non-proliferation, human rights, and the rights of our Mother Earth.  The best way to achieve this aim is to integrate body, mind, and spiritual awareness into environmental justice advocacy, policy change, and community education. Another major goal is to empower Indigenous, women and their families, and people of color’s voices in local, national, and International networks and coalitions in order to build community capacity and leadership development.

Ruth Hoffman

Other individuals, faith communities and organizations honored on Saturday were Immaculate Conception  Catholic Church (Albuquerque), Santa Maria de la Vid Norbertine Community (Albuquerque), Patricia Gallegos of the organization Juntos (Albuquerque), Rev. Nick King (Mennonite Minister in Carlsbad), Ruth Hoffman of the Lutheran Advocacy Ministry (Santa Fe), Robyn Seydel of La Montañita Cooperative (Albuquerque) and Kathy Freeze of Catholic Charities of Central New Mexico (Albuquerque).

 

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Rev. Sally Bingham Relates Her Journey into Faith-Based Environmental Advocacy

Rev. Canon Sally Bingham, an Episcopal priest who founded Interfaith Power & Light, relates the story of how she became involved in the environmental movement and how IPF was founded in San Francisco. There are 40 state organizations that belong to IPL, including New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light. Rev. Bingham spoke at NMIPL’s annual Fall Gathering on Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015 in Albuquerque. This video shows only 10 minutes of her full address. (Watch for a separate post about the fall gathering later this week).

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Prayers for Paris: Interfaith Candle Light Prayer Service

Prayers for Paris, November 30, 2015—By Joan Brown,osf

People of all faith traditions gathered Monday evening November 30 for Prayers for Paris. Beginning at the Federal Building at 6th and Gold a procession, calling to mind plight of the many climate refugees and immigrants, walked to Immaculate Conception Church.

The Interfaith Candle Light Prayer Service joined Catholics, Protestants, Muslims, Sikhs, Jews, Buddhists and others in song, prayers, action and blessings. Sr. Joan Brown,osf, who leaves for the meeting on December 1-December 13 was blest amidst the prayers. The executive director of New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light, Sr. Brown is an official observer inside the COP 21 with Franciscans International and Interfaith Power and Light.

A scroll containing the names of three congregations and more than 250 individuals who signed a Paris Pledge to reduce carbon emissions by 50% by 2030 and to net zero by 2050 were blest on their way to the UN Climate Change meeting in Paris. The commitments including First Unitarian Church and First Congregational Church of Christ in Albuquerque and Church of Antioch in Santa Fe joined over 150 Religious Organizations and some 4,000 individuals have signed the Paris Pledge. It is hoped that the 150 nations represented at CPO21, the 21st “Conference of Parties” will establish internationally agreed upon targets to curb ongoing Climate Change.

The Paris Pledge was developed by Interfaith Power and Light, an organization of 18,000 religious congregations and organizations located in 40 states throughout the US. Through this pledge they intend to lead by example and clearly state that Faith Leaders in the US are committed to reduce, and eventually eliminate, the impact of human activity on Climate Change. The Paris Pledge will be presented in Paris at COP 21 at a State Department event that Sr. Brown and Rev. Sally Bingham, President of Interfaith Power and Light and Susan Stephenson, Executive Director will offer.
In 2015 all of the major religious traditions have published major statements calling the world to act on climate change for climate justice for the common good. Pope Francis’, Laudato Si: On Care of Our Common Home, International Muslim Declaration on Global Climate Change, a statement by the Dalai Lama and the evangelical leaders in the United States are a few of the calls of faith to action.

The event was co-sponsored Catholic Charities; Immaculate Conception Church; Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe; OXFAM; Bread for the World NM, New Mexico Faith Coalition for Immigrant Justice and Center for Action and Contemplation.

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