Monday, June 27, 2011

Living Earth June 2011 Reflection






From the ELCA e-Advocacy Network's June issue of the Living Earth e-newsletter

"Fracking" Poses Challenges for Communities and our Energy Future
By Mary Minette
ELCA Director for Environmental Education and Advocacy




Due to concerns about air pollution and climate change, many view natural gas as a much cleaner source of electricity than dirtier fossil fuels like coal and oil. Some coal-fired power plants are already switching over to natural gas, and this trend is expected to continue. However, easily available sources of natural gas are dwindling, and many of the largest remaining untapped natural gas reserves are in hard-to-reach underground shale formations. A technique called hydraulic fracturing injects water mixed with sand and chemical fluids into wells drilled deep in the shale in order to force natural gas from the rock.

If you live in states like Pennsylvania, Wyoming and Texas, you've probably already heard of hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking" as it's often called. Each of those states sits on top of shale formations that contain significant reserves of natural gas. Drilling and fracking are happening at an accelerated rate as demand for natural gas continues to grow.

But in many communities with shale formations that show potential to produce natural gas, some are questioning the spread of fracking. They claim the demand for cleaner natural gas is making their communities dirty.

And they may be right: a recent study linked inadequate safety measures in the drilling process to groundwater pollution from methane. In addition, the fracking process uses large amounts of water (between one and nine million gallons per well) and the storage, disposal and recycling of the waste water, which can contain hazardous chemicals, may also threaten surface water supplies. Some states, including Texas, Wyoming and Arkansas, are now requiring that companies disclose the chemicals they are injecting into fracked wells. Other states, including Pennsylvania, do not have disclosure requirements, posing a risk to those who live nearby and to those who respond to emergencies when wells explode or accidental releases occur.

So what's the solution?

Our country needs energy. Natural gas is far cleaner than coal or oil, and shale formations potentially contain a substantial supply of gas that could give us the time we need to develop new, cleaner sources of energy such as wind and solar. Drilling and fracking are bringing revenue to rural landowners and jobs to struggling rural communities.

But the natural gas boom also comes with risks. In addition to the potential to pollute ground and surface water supplies, communities dealing with fracking see other risks and problems. They worry about the impact the "boom and bust" of drilling a non-renewable resource will have on the long-term health of their local economy. They see neighbors in conflict over fracking contracts and who got a better deal, or over whether to allow fracking in the first place. They are concerned about the strain that gas development and population growth is putting on community resources such as schools and social services and roads. And they worry about what comes next after the drilling is done, the wells are played out, the jobs and the money are gone and their communities are left to clean up their land and water.

Some questions to ponder
If we follow the advice of Paul in his letter to the Philippians and consider the interests of others before we consider our own, how do we answer the questions raised by fracking?

Does clean air outweigh clean water?

Are the energy needs of our country more important than the long-term health of rural communities in another state such as Pennsylvania?

Do we really have to choose between these things or can we find a way to make fracking safer for our communities and for the environment?

A prayer for the journey
Loving and compassionate Creator, you sent us your only Son to teach us to love our neighbors and to consider their needs. Help us to find our way through complexity to care for our neighbors and our world. Amen.

Join the ECLA e-Advocacy Networks mailing list by clicking here and selecting to subscribe to the Evnvironmetal Reflections: Living Earth: A Reflection Series on Our Relationship With God's Creation at the bottom of the page.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Garbage vs. Compost

Who says composting doesn't make a difference? If you were able to join us for our Earth Sunday picnic, you may have noticed that the all the plates and cups we used were 100% compostable! That's right - compostable. The plates are 100% biodegradable sugarcane and the cups are 100% biodegradable corn plastic and they can both be stuck in your backyard composter or sent to a commercial compost facility.


Just take a look at how much waste Our Savior's avoided by composting for this meal! And in case you're not sure, the compost is in the BIGGER bag :)






Compostable dishware was donated for our event by Carrie Brusven, your Local Green Irene Eco Consultant

Earth Sunday was a Success!


Thank you, thank you, thank you to everyone who helped make Earth Sunday a fantastic success!


Our guest speaker, Cheryl Biller from Presbyterians for Earth Care, gave us a wonderful message which helped make our worship services very special and the creation care-centered liturgy from the National Council of Churches for Eco-Justice were a great touch!


If you missed our services on Sunday, click here to check out the Earth Sunday video, created by Scott Brusven. The video features several members and friends from Our Savior's faith community, as well as a few folks from the wider Fargo-Moorhead Community, who tell us a little about what they do in their homes and in their lives to be more green and why it's important to them, especially as Christians. It really helps to underscore our Earth Week theme: Eco-Justice as Community. All the little things we do individually work together to make a big difference. We are one body of Christ and when all the parts of the body work together to take care of the more vulnerable parts - amazing things can (and do!) happen.

It was great to see everyone in church on Sunday - enjoying the bit God's creation we brought to the front of the sanctuary, being inspired and challenged by our speaker, learning about eco-justice during our education hour and having fun at the picnic lunch. Lust like the issue of eco-justice itself - it was the participation and enthusiasm of the faith community that made this event a success!
































Thursday, May 5, 2011

Cleanup Week?

This week is "Cleanup Week" in Fargo - Moorhead. As you drive the streets of the two cities this week you might start to feel like to took a wrong turn and ended up in the city landfill itself. WDAY reported earlier this week that this year's "cleanup" is taking in approximately 40% more garbage than any other year. 40%!

Next week, Our Savior's faith community will experience a week that starkly contrasts the week the Fargo-Moorhead community is experiencing today. Next week is our Earth Week. Next week, Our Savior's faith community celebrates the planet, the resources given to us gifts, the responsibility we all have of "tending the garden" and the amazing Creator who put it all in place.


We hope Earth Week will leave you feeling encouraged and re-energized in your efforts to be stewards of creation and that you experience the many workshops, study groups, worship services and celebrations with joy!

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Earth Week Video

This year's Earth Week theme is "Eco Justice as Community." To help illustrate how all the individual actions work together to make a big difference, we're making an Earth Week video and we want to hear from you! Let us know if you would be willing to participate in a very short video interview to say what you do in your home to help care for God's creation!

Spring 2011 Email List Challenge

Help us bolster our email list and save some natural and financial resources at the same time!

Sign up to receive church mailings via email and your name will be entered into a drawing. The winner will be annoucned on Rally Sunday! So far, we have 110 people already saving the church money and the earth's natural resources by subscribing to our email list. Help us reach our membership goal of 200 subscribers by September 1, 2011. 200 emailed monthly newsletters alone saves 16,000 pieces of paper and over $400 in printing and postage costs per year!

Click here to email the church office and add your email to our list now, or sign up in the Welcome Center. When we all work together - we make a big difference!

Earth Week Celebration at Our Savior's Lutheran Church

Eco Justice as Community

Our Savior's is celebrating Earth Week May 9-15 and our theme this year is "Eco Justice as Community."

Community has always been central to God's mission. In the midst of a culture focused on individualism, as "...Christians [we] are called to reach beyond ourselves, to embrace all God's children and affirm our interconnectedness and interdependence. While technology has enabled sprawling virtual communities and facilitated connections that span the globe, nowhere is the call and opportunity for discipleship and transformation greater than in our local community."

Our Savior's invites you to "...reflect on the goodness of God's creation through the lens of your local community. Can the food we eat strengthen our bonds with one another? How do our choices affect our brothers and sisters who live on the economic or social margins of our communities? How might we, as people of faith, celebrate the abundance God has given us an take action to ensure all God's children share in it?" (National Council of Churches for Eco Justice, Where Two or More are Gathered: Community as Eco Justice, pg. 1).

Below is our fantastic line-up of Earth Week activities - we hope you find something that sparks your interest! Please join us - Earth Week is all about you and the community you are a part of!

Plastic Bottle Drive - Now through Sunday, May 15
Bring in as many plastic bottles as you can between now and the 15th and dump them in our giant recycling dumpster. Write your phone number in marker on every bottle you bring. At the Earth Sunday Picnic on May 15, watch as our "Eco Man" dives for the winning bottle! The winner will be announced at the picnic and will receive our Grand Prize with items from local businesses all over Fargo - Moorhead including Eco Chic, Norwex, Love in the Oven Bakery and more!

Movie Night - Monday, May 9, 6:30 p.m. in the West Narthex
Showing: The Inconvenient Truth
Short conversation time after the film
Snacks and beverages provided

Build Your Own Rain Barrel Workshop - Thursday, May 12, 6:00 p.m., River Keepers Living Lab, Fargo
Rain barrels are great tools for conserving water and money during the hot summer months when lawn care and garden watering are at their peak. Register by emailing the church office (oslc@oursaviorsmoorhead.org), call to sign up (233-2412) or stop by the Welcome Center and add your name to the list! This is a great family project!

Art Contest - Paint our Rain Barrel
Our Savior's made a rain barrel in the rain barrel workshop last fall and before we install in on the church grounds it needs to be painted! But why not do something fun and creative? This is where YOU come in! Artists young and old are encouraged to participate in this contest. Submit your design to the church office, in any format your like, by Friday, May 13, and the winning design will be announced at the Earth Sunday picnic on Sunday, May 15.

Adult Education Series: Hope for Creation - Wednesdays at 7:30 in Larsen Lounge, beginning May 11
In Hope for Creation, Dr. Matthew Sleeth explores his personal salvation experience and desire to follow Jesus in the context of the love story God tells in Genesis 1. In these six sessions, Dr. Sleeth guides us through each of the created elements - light, water, soil, heavens, animals, and man - and reminds us of our God-given commission to "tend and protect the planet." Dr. Sleeth is the founder of the Blessed Earth organization - learn more about Blessed Earth at http://www.blessedearth.org/.

Earth Sunday Worship Services - May 15, 8:30 and 10:30 a.m.
Worship on this special Earth Sunday will worship the Creator and celebrate his amazing creation. Special guest speaker, Cheryl Biller of Presbyterians for Earth Care, will deliver the message that day.

Education Hour Projects and Learning Opportunities for All Ages - May 15, 9:30-10:20 a.m.
Parents are encouraged to attend the Sunday School education hour with their kids for a fantastic hour of celebrating and learning about God's creation.

Earth Sunday Picnic Celebration - May 15, 11:30 a.m.
Our Earth Week celebration comes to an exciting finish with a picnic catered by the VIP Room. Join us for great food, enjoying the outdoors (if the weather is nice), drawings, prizes and much more!

Thursday, January 27, 2011

A Recent Victory for Creation Care

Celebrate Veto of Mountaintop Removal Permits

An email notice was mailed out today from the National Council of Churches USA for Eco-Justice Programs announcing that after years of litigation and debate, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said "no" to the devastation that Mountaintop Removal mining has on God's Creation. According to the NCC Eco-Justice Team, "Two weeks ago the EPA finalized a veto of permits for a new mountaintop removal coal mine in West Virginia, specifically the Spruce Number One Mine.

The following thank you note was sent to the EPA by the NCC Eco-Justice team:

"Dear Administrator Jackson,
We are writing to express our gratitude for the Environmental Protection Agency's decision to veto the Spruce Number One mine permit in West Virginia. As people of faith, we believe that we are called to be stewards of the Earth and to manage our land, water and other resources for the benefit of all of creation and for future generations. For years we have, as a community, expressed great concern over the destructive practice of mountaintop removal coal mining in the Appalachian Mountains, which favors short term economic gain over the protection of these ancient mountains and the unique culture and communities that depend upon them.

Over the years, mountaintop removal mining has led to polluted drinking water, increased risk of flooding, damage to homes and buildings due to mining blasts, massive amounts of dust, related health ailments, and a devastated landscape.

Your decision to revoke the permits for the Spruce Number One mine reflects the often overlooked negative impacts that mountaintop removal mining has on Appalachia. High rates of poverty, high unemployment, and high illiteracy rates along with damaged ecosystems and degraded human health are being borne by the people who get little benefit and can least afford to adjust to these circumstances.

We support your decision and look forward to working with you in the future to slow the growth of mountaintop removal mining and help communities that have been affected seek justice for their families and future generations."


Click here if you would like to sign this thank you note to the EPA.

To learn more about the NCC Eco-Justice Program click here.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Let There Be... Stuff?


Have you ever heard of the internet sensation, The Story of Stuff? Do you ever wonder what you can do to make the biggest difference on the future of the planet? Do you want ot feel closer to God while you're at it?

If the answer is "YES!" and you're between 13 and 18 years old, then you have a great adventure ahead. Come be part of the Let There Be... Stuff? program. Commit to six sessions and change the world.

Contact Melissa, Minister for Youth & Family Discipleship (yfd@oursaviorsmoorhead.org), to sign up!

Starting Sunday, January 9, the Youth & Familiy Discipleship program is offering this special, six-week program for our Sr. High students and the Lutheran Campus Ministry students at MN State University, Moorhead. Study sessions will be Sundays in the Youth Room, 6:00-7:00 p.m.

Recycled Paper for the Future of the Planet

Have you noticed in your bulletins this past year that Our Savior's uses paper from sustainably managed forrests as well as recycled paper? Though you may have seen it printed you might still be wondering "what does that mean?"

The Sustainable Forrest Stewardship Council, whose seal can be found on the packaging ofthe paper filling the shelves in our church office, has been certified by Scientific Certification Systems, meaning the wood used to create our bulletins comes from forrests that are being managed in an environmentally responsible way.

Even better, we have recently been using more and more recycled paper - anywhere from 50% to 100% post-consumer content - meaning fewer trees have to be cut down to make it and less damage to God's creation.

Recycled paper does cost more in the catalog than non-recycled paper and that can deter people from choosing the recycled option. Even the sales rep from our supply company who sells us our paper commented one day when an order was placed, "You know, not many people order that recycled stuff. It's too expensive!" And then he asked the inevitable question, "So why are you buying the recycled paper?"

Why? Because it's the right thing to do. Because God never promised His way would be easy. But He did promise to be with us along the journey - and what an incredible journey it will be, the more and more we choose God's way over the easy way.