At La Capilla de Santa María, parishioners weatherized their church in an effort to decrease the utility bills that took up a fifth of the annual budget. At Jubilee Community Church, parents and the education coordinator revised the Sunday School curriculum to integrate care of creation for all age levels. And at All People's Church in Milwaukee, the sanctuary became a free farmer's market on Sundays with produce grown by
youth.Natural Saints shares the stories and strategies of contemporary church leaders, parishioners, and religious environmentalists working to define a new environmental movement, where justice as a priority for the church
means a clean and safe environment for all. Mallory McDuff shows that a focus on God's earth is transforming both people and congregations, creating more relevant and powerful ministries . As a result, people of faith are forming a new environmental movement with a moral mandate to care for God's earth.McDuff highlights eight key ministries: protecting human dignity, feeding the hungry, creating sacred spaces, responding to natural disasters, promoting justice, making a
pilgrimage, educating youth, and bearing witness. With two daughters in tow, she traveled across the country to document environmental actions grounded in faith. This journey transformed the author's own
faith and hope for a sustainable future. Congregations and individuals seeking to integrate care of creation into their faith community will find inspiration and concrete advice in the lives of these natural saints.
At La Capilla de Santa María, parishioners weatherized their church in an effort to decrease the utility bills that took up a fifth of the annual budget. At Jubilee Community Church, parents and the education coordinator revised the Sunday School curriculum to integrate care of creation for all age levels. And at All People's Church in Milwaukee, the sanctuary became a free farmer's market on Sundays with produce grown by
youth.Natural Saints shares the stories and strategies of contemporary church leaders, parishioners, and religious environmentalists working to define a new environmental movement, where justice as a priority for the church
means a clean and safe environment for all. Mallory McDuff shows that a focus on God's earth is transforming both people and congregations, creating more relevant and powerful ministries . As a result, people of faith are forming a new environmental movement with a moral mandate to care for God's earth.McDuff highlights eight key ministries: protecting human dignity, feeding the hungry, creating sacred spaces, responding to natural disasters, promoting justice, making a
pilgrimage, educating youth, and bearing witness. With two daughters in tow, she traveled across the country to document environmental actions grounded in faith. This journey transformed the author's own
faith and hope for a sustainable future. Congregations and individuals seeking to integrate care of creation into their faith community will find inspiration and concrete advice in the lives of these natural saints.
Acknowledgements
Introduction - The Doxology and a Communion of Saints: A Journey
with Faith and Earth
Chapter 1 Protecting Human Dignity: Fair Food, Farmworker Rights,
and the Church
Chapter 2 Feeding the Hungry: Gardening for God's Children
Chapter 3 Creating Sacred Spaces: Energy Efficiency, Green Jobs,
and Green Building
Chapter 4 Responding to Natural Disaster and Rebuilding: Loss and
Resurrection on the Gulf Coast
Chapter 5 Promoting Justice: Environmental Justice, Toxic Tours,
and GreenFaith
Chapter 6 Making a Pilgrimage: Mountaintop Removal, Water, and
Wildflowers
Chapter 7 Educating Youth: Solar Panels at Camp, Creation Care at
Sunday School
Chapter 8 Bearing Witness: Engaging People of Faith in
Environmental Advocacy
Conclusion
Afterword by Reverend Brian Cole
Notes
Index
Mallory McDuff teaches at Warren Wilson College in the Swannanoa Valley near Asheville, North Carolina, where she lives with her two daughters. She grew up on the Gulf Coast in Fairhope, Alabama, where her parents connected faith to environmentalism through actions such as giving up driving for Lent. She has a Ph.D. in wildlife ecology and conservation, with a focus on environmental education.
"Mallory McDuff provides a narrative on the church's role with
environmental issues that is rich with stories and contextual
detail. This book is a must read for anyone interested in how
churches are working to protect God's Creation." --Cassandra
Carmichael, Director of Washington Office and Eco-Justice Programs,
National Council of Churches
"In her stories about cob ovens, toxic tours, mountaintop removal,
and eco-Shabbat prayer, Mallory McDuff gives voice to grassroots
individuals and movements that address hard questions of race,
poverty, hunger and economics in 21st century America. She
challenges religious communities to be 'partners for justice' not
mere 'givers of charity.' We should all take notice." --Bill J.
Leonard, Professor of Church History, the Divinity School, Wake
Forest University
"The action needed to protect the environment and provide a
sustainable future will not happen without the moral voice that
religion brings to the dialogue. McDuff brings those actions
motivated by Christian values together with crucial environmental
needs, demonstrating that merging the two will result in justice
and reconciliation. This is an important book for understanding the
role that religion will and must play in healing this wounded
Creation." --The
Reverend Sally G. Bingham, President, The Regeneration Project,
Interfaith Power and Light Campaign
"This plain-spoken book is both unsettling and hope-inspiring, as
it surveys works of destruction and of healing across our land.
McDuff offers detailed yet clear analyses of what motivates
individuals, congregations, and organizations, and what makes their
ministries effective. The breadth of coverage here gives readers
the opportunity to widen their concerns and perhaps to find their
own calling to work for the healing of the earth and of local
communities."
--Ellen F. Davis, author of Scripture, Culture, and Agriculture: An
Agrarian Reading of the Bible
"Every now and then a book takes hold of you and you can't stop
thinking about it. As you read it, slowly you realize that if you
were to really do what the book advises, you could change your
life. When you close the book, you realize you could change the
planet . . . such a book is Natural Saints. . . [McDuff's] book,
the result of visits to churches across the country, is proof that
American churches are now actively combining environmental
theology
with traditional spirituality."--Rapid River Arts & Culture
Magazine
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