At the World Gathering of Friends in
Kenya in 2012, Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC)
delegates came to unity on the
Kabarak Call to Peace and Ecojustice, a prophetic document calling our generation to the kind of
awakened response that early Friends called and held each other to
during the English Civil War of the seventeenth century. In Pisac,
Peru this February, delegates came to unity on another minute, this
one calling each yearly meeting to discern specific actions to slow
down the pace of global warming, habitat loss, and other egregious
ecological problems. Kabarak asked us to search our souls and act.
Pisac, observing the lack of action, urged meetings to come up with
two actions within a year to address the greatest challenge we have
ever faced.
The essential text from the
Pisac minute follows: “The Light of Christ...calls us to preserve this
Earth for our children, our grandchildren and all future generations
to come, working as though life were to continue for 10,000 years to
come...Our faith as Quakers is inseparable from our care for the
health of our planet Earth. We see that our misuse of the Earth’s
resources creates inequality, destroys community, affects health and
well-being, leads to war and erodes our integrity. We are all
responsible for stewardship of our natural world. We love this world
as God’s gift to us all. Our hearts are crying for our beloved
mother Earth, who is sick and in need of our care.”
“When we've been there 10,000 years”
says the great hymn, Amazing Grace. This unit is what the Greeks
called the “great year,” and it is the length of time of settled
agriculture, basically the span of the Holocene Epoch, the sweet spot
in which our species grew, thrived, and came to overweening
dominance. There is a quaintness to the language, no doubt coming
from the evangelicals on the committee in Pisac. Of course life on
Earth will continue for 10,000 years, and at least another billion,
after which the sun will enter its final stages and earth's
life-forms will be toasted. But, in a document which is everywhere
saturated with the essential command to stewardship found in Genesis,
what is being said implicitly is to work as though human
life [would continue]
for 10,000 years to come. Amendments
to this kind of language, such as my friend Mary's “manage
landscapes for the benefit of the whole biosphere” - were not
accepted. But the important point, which was even more true in Kenya
with regard to the landmark Kabarak Call, is that those whose primary
focus is saving souls have joined with liberal Quaker tree-huggers to
insist upon stewardship of Creation. If the language continually
refers back to Genesis, then it brings recognition that the Earth
is the Lord's – not ours.
Pantheists can make their own substitutions.
So we have another
fine minute from the Quakers. The problem here is that the Kabarak
Call from 2012 should have been enough. Its eloquence was profound,
its moral authority unshakable. We studied that document in our
little Appalachian meeting, and some preached about it. As a
concrete step, we adopted a small pastoralist Samburu community in
Kenya, committing to women's education. Four years later, our
mission is winding down, and we are getting tired. Those
specifically working on earthcare have increased by one active
member. I have been the Celo Meeting member who has seized climate
change as my fundamental moral issue, and once spoke quite frequently
about it in meeting, brought several initiatives to meeting for
business, and asked for support for my earthcare ministry outside of
Meeting. But after being thrice eldered for inappropriate messages
(too detailed, too dark), I have virtually stopped speaking on what
is foremost on my heart, opting for the same kind of personal,
quietistic messages that our beloved little meeting appreciates.
I recently came upon a document aimed
at a broad coalition of mainline Christian denominations, dated 2002,
Greening Congregations Handbook,
edited by Tanya Barnett. It is a comprehensive, imaginative, focused
document, its moral imperative clearly set forth. Two things
struck me about this discovery. One was that I had intended, back in
2004-5 when I first encountered it, to share it with faith leaders in
my local community. But after having the minister of the largest
local Baptist church lose, unread, my copy of Matt Sleeth's fine call
to action aimed at evangelicals, Serve God Save the Planet,
and looking sceptically
at the remaining landscape of steeples, I let it moulder.
Secondly, a few
weeks ago I encountered the woman who had loaned me the handbook,
and tried to return it to her. She looked at it in surprise, saying
I was free to give it to anybody to whom it would be of use. We had
met as fellow members of an ecumenical green group in Yancey County,
whose main work was to interview pastors (gingerly) about earthcare,
but now she had moved on to other concerns. Towards the end of the
committee's life, I attempted to announce the upcoming workshop I was
leading at Celo Friends Meeting on ecological footprints. The leader
of the committee stopped me, saying we did not have consensus that
global warming existed.
Yes, we have a
Paris Accord, with nations lining up to sign it. Yes, faith groups
have risen to the forefront in exhorting us to take up the mantle of
stewardship. Yes, the US has lowered its emissions (unless the
outlying figures on methane emissions from fracking are accepted), by
changing energy sources and through continuing increases in
efficiency. Many of us have made grudging progress in lowering
emissions by altering our consumption habits. But the basic
capitalist model remains in place, which does not price pollution of
the commons, and that model rests upon our consumption habits and
lifestyle, to which we remain addicted. Even well-meaning folk,
including those who consider themselves “progressive,” live
vastly beyond our means, beyond what Michael Dowd calls
“grace limits.” St Paul nailed it: “For the good that I want, I
do not do, but I practice the very evil that I do not want.” Romans
7:19
In the United
States, we desperately need a carbon tax to get us to do the right
thing. Countries like China can enforce their climate pledges driven
by an enlightened despot. Liberal European countries can follow the
electorate into the same territory, though subject to the checks and
backsliding of the democratic process. The bottom line is that
governments of all forms must provide protection from human nature,
which so easily falls into practicing the evil we do not want. A
global price on carbon would provide a correction to a capitalist
model that still treats the earth as inexhaustible. Through an
electoral miracle, aided by
evangelical greens and the
Citizens Climate Lobby, the next Congress must enact such a tax, showing
the rest of the world we are serious about joining them in this
historic battle.
Geeta and I go
to Chicago next weekend to the
Quaker Earthcare Witness steering
committee meeting to present a panel on the union of liberal and
evangelical Friends at Pisac, urging Friends everywhere to live their
lives as if they cared about our Mother. I will report after we
return. It is time for a new Lamb's War, this time to preserve God's
earthly Nature, the blessed and only occasion we know for the spirit
to incarnate and manifest – for at least another 10,000 years.