National Council of Churches Earth Day Press Release
April 22, Washington, D.C. - With a major mobilization of its base, U.S. Christian leaders are using their clout to call attention to the Bush Administration’s "clean air" policy that they say goes against Christian principles of stewardship and care for God’s creation and God’s children.
In a letter sent today to President Bush, 100 national and state Christian leaders in the country, representing millions of congregants, expressed grave moral concern and dismay over the President’s stewardship of America’s environment and the implications for Americans’ health - particularly for children, women and the elderly.
“Ever since taking office, the Administration has weakened critical health standards, especially the Clean Air Act,” said Bob Edgar, General Secretary of the National Council of Churches, whose 36 member denominations count 45 million adherents in more than 100,000 congregations nationwide.
Edgar, one of the faith leaders who signed the letter to the President, added that President Bush “says that moral values are a cornerstone in this Administration, but this Administration is failing the call to protect God’s children. As our Bible teaches us, whatever one fails to do to the humblest of our brothers and sisters, one fails to do to God (Matthew 25:45).”
Citing passages from the Bible such as “defend the poor and the orphan; do justice to the afflicted and the needy” (Psalm 82:3), the letter highlights Christian values of protecting God’s creation, caring for one’s neighbor, and protecting the least fortunate among us. Other signatures include those of Bishop Melvin G. Talbert, Ecumenical Officer, Council of Bishops, The United Methodist Church and the Rev. Dr. A. Roy Medley, General Secretary of the American Baptist Churches (U.S.A.)
Their concerns also are reflected in a national advertisement set to run in The New York Times, calling on President Bush to stop dismantling the New Source Review (NSR) provisions of the Clean Air Act and to vigorously enforce the integrity of the Act, to protect public health against mercury pollution, and to include carbon among the pollutants regulated from power plant emissions.
Religious Americans from across the country have joined national religious leaders in a growing concern over the quality of the air they breathe. Over 100,000 congregations have received a resource titled “Life-giving Breath of God: Protecting the Sacred Gift of Air” (available on-line at www.nccecojustice.org), resulting in a coordinated national congregational effort to celebrate Earth Day Sunday on April 25.
Sunday services will include liturgy praising the “Creator God, the ruler of the sky,” and study pieces on the state of air quality that includes ideas for personal and congregational actions. Congregants will also be called to pressure the president to strengthen air quality standards. In addition to congregational efforts, nearly 4,000 local religious leaders have signed “A Call for Power Plant Cleanup” that applies moral principles of justice and stewardship and concludes with: “Cleaning up dirty power plants that cause harmful pollution must therefore be a policy priority.”
“These are moral values shared by millions of people across America,” Edgar added. “Yet the Bush Administration continues to prioritize the interests of polluting energy corporations over the health and well-being of God’s children.”
According to information recently released by the Environmental Protection Agency, more than half of Americans live in or around areas where air pollution levels exceed clean air standards. Most of them are minority groups from low-income families who often lack the means to relocate to cleaner, environmentally safer neighborhoods and have limited access to health care.
President Bush’s record on the environment has repeatedly come under fire not only from environmentalists, but from leading scientists as well as other Republicans. In February, the Union of Concerned Scientists issued a statement signed by dozens of scientists, medical experts, and Nobel laureates questioning the integrity of the scientific research behind administration environment policies, and leading U.S. Senators sent a letter to EPA Administrator Michael Leavitt asking him not to stall expected implementation of mercury protections from dirty power plants.
Read the letter to the President.
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