On July 26, a group of Jewish, Muslim and Christian leaders met at the Jerusalem Press Club to encourage people of all faiths to help curb climate change. The event, organized by the interfaith Center for Sustainable Development (ICSD), focused on the critical role faith leaders can play in increasing public awareness about environmental issues. These religious leaders are not members of liberal denominations – quite the contrary; religiously speaking, they are conservatives.
Their aim is three-fold, to convince religious people of all faiths that,
• Protecting the environment is a religious obligation.
• Climate change is an urgent problem.
• Interfaith cooperation is required to properly address it.
Rabbi Yonatan Neril, ICSD’s director, moderated a panel that included Rabbi David Rosen, AJC International Director of Interreligious Affairs; Father Francesco Patton, Custodian of the Holy Land (Franciscan); and Kadi Iyad Zahalka, judge of the Muslim Sharia Courts in Israel reached a consensus on the religious basis for environmental sustainability and addressing climate change.
“We are part of creation, so we have to take care of our common home and take responsibility for creation,” Patton said.
Rosen, citing Deuteronomy 30:19 (“Choose life in order that you and your children shall live”) said that climate change today is a matter of life and death. “Because of this, everything else becomes secondary — it’s like rearranging the deck chairs on the ship Titanic as we head for the iceberg.”
Zahalka spoke to the importance of “taking care of everything for the coming generation. We need to do our part in saving and preserving nature and all the earth.”
At the event, a letter signed by 37 Israeli Orthodox rabbis was released, calling for action on climate change. Neril cited studies linking climate change to increased drought and extreme heat in the Middle East, and said they are exacerbating conflict and threat multipliers. “We can only address climate change by religious figures taking a leading role in helping to reorient humanity toward sustainable lifestyles,” said Neril.
Religious leaders have found an issue that they intend to use to further unite religions in an ecumenical alliance for planet survival. In his encyclical Laudato Si, Pope Francis emphasized the need for the planet to rest, giving Sunday observance as one of the keys to success.
“In the last conflict the Sabbath will be the special point of controversy throughout all Christendom. Secular rulers and religious leaders will unite to enforce the observance of the Sunday; and as milder measures fail, the most oppressive laws will be enacted.” The Spirit of Prophecy, Vol. 4, page 444.
The unity of religious leaders is part of the fulfilling of this prophecy.
Source References
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All faiths must unite to fight climate change, clergy urge
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ENCYCLICAL LETTER LAUDATO SI’ OF THE HOLY FATHER FRANCIS ON CARE FOR OUR COMMON HOME
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Climate change: It’s not just for liberals anymore
Please pray for India and for Sijo and his ministry in India. Rising persecution is creating stress on the Hindu nation, especially for Christians. The government enacts repressive laws against Christianity. Persecution is especially difficult in the north where there are killings and torture of Christians, the spread of anti-Christian propaganda. India apparently intends to abolish Christianity in India by 2020.
Comments
Shelley Senner
Friday August 4th, 2017 at 01:36 PMIt is about spiritual climate change and the uniting of all religions under the one who has promoted the climate change agenda, the Pope.
Mike Bisson
Monday August 7th, 2017 at 06:44 AMClimate Change will be one of the main issues that will bring apostate Protestantism together with the Papacy and the secular Progressive movement.
charles post
Wednesday August 9th, 2017 at 06:35 PMClimate change has ben occurring since the dawn of earth. To think that man can change climate is around the globe through his own efforts is the height of egotism. Even huge volcanic eruptions modify the climate only for a few years and then it’s back to normal. Citing rising temps in major cities completely ignores the fact that all major cities are getting warmer because of massive construction of roads, tall buildings and urban outreach that stores heat like a giant thermos mistakenly leading to the conclusion that the earth is getting warmer for ever and ever. Do we forget that in the 1970ies, scientists were warning of global cooling and we were all going to starve to death because of not being able to grow food crops as usual? If the climate is going to change, it is going to change with you or without you. Remember the Ice Age 10,000 years ago? Now there’s a real example of climate change without man’s say so.
Richard Potter
Sunday August 13th, 2017 at 01:40 AMIt’s nothing but a scare tactic of Rome to initiate a Sunday law. You’ll see real climate change when they con some country into lighting off a few nukes, … or better yet, lighting one off on a less significant town of their own and blaming it on terrorists. That will be climate change.