how
green is green?
by
john o'keefe
How
green is green?
Not too long ago we were posed with, what I
believe, a silly question, “what kind of car
would Jesus drive?”
Many non-believers i know found the question
ridiculous. one actually said to me, “It is silly
for Christians to keep asking such questions; they are
so obvious rhetorical in nature, yet somehow they demand an
answer.” So true, so very true.
For
me, more so as of late, I think it belittles a
very important issue facing the church and society
at large, the issue of the environment.
The question then becomes, what are we
going to do about it?
You see, when we ask such a silly question
we simply open Christianity to ridicule and show
that our faith has no connection to the current
world and current issues.
Let’s be honest, I could give a good rat
“butt” what kind of car Jesus would drive,
but I do care about the quality of the drinking
water that goes down the old pipes of my friends
and family. So,
before we get our panties in a twist over the car
Jesus would drive, let’s ask a even more
important question; “How green is your
church?”
Think
about that for a second, how green is your church?
How connected to the environment is your
church? How
much does your church handle environmental
issues? Does
your church do a “church/environment impact
study” every year to see how well it is doing?
What is your church, and you for that
matter, doing to protect the environment?
How green is your church?
how green are you? Now, before we get too deep, let me say
this – I am not talking about those little
“orange stickers” you place on the light
switches to remind people to turn off the lights
when they leave the bathroom.
Besides, they kind of reminds me of my
father, every time we would leave a room my father
would shout, “Hey, turn off those lights, do you
think we own ConEdison?”
– I am not talking about stickers or
catchy little slogans, I mean, how “down in the
trenches,” “grab the bull by the horns and
run” green is your church? Light Green? Median
Green? Full-blown
Kelly Green?
How green?
I
do not desire to bombard you with a ton of useless
stats on greenhouse gasses, or depleting ozone.
I figure you get smacked with that enough,
but I do want to smack you enough for you to
realize that this is important – and it starts
with you and me – we need to be the role models;
we need to take the lead in this important reality
– we need to be green.
So, the question becomes, “How do we get
green in the church?”
How do we do a “church/environment
impact study?”
Church/environment
impact study:
I
think the first thing to do is be open and honest.
Look around the church and see what you do
now, and what you can do simply. The
next think I think you need to do is create an
atmosphere in the church were the environment is
seen as an important part of God’s plan.
Next, encourage all the people in the
community of faith to develop ideas on how to be
greener. Have
them look around and truly examine all areas of
the church, then do something about it. Here are some examples of what you can do to be greener; keep
in mind these are simply some examples of starting
points – these areas are not meant to be the
“end all” list.
Target
Other Modes of Transportation:
It is not just carpooling any more.
I know, this is not the coolest idea, and
not the most original – but it works.
Take a bus, carpool, ride a bike, walk.
Think of it this way, does the church
“silently” defeat the idea of “alternate
forms of transportation?”
Look around the church and ask yourselves
these questions: Does your church even have secure
“bike parking” area?
Does the church list the bus routes from
different areas of town to help people find the
church? Does
the church list names and numbers of people
willing to “carpool” from different areas of
town? We
need to get past our “my car, my freedom” idea
of life. We
need to realize that sharing a ride to church has
many benefits.
You build community, you make friends and
you save a ton of gas.
Get
“E’ed”
– Move past paper and move to cyberspace.
I get three newsletters from three
different churches (none of them I attend).
I get a “let us take your money” letter
every three months from a church I do not attend. I receive a tone of snail mail from churches I just visited,
and do not attend.
Every snail mail I receive could be done
sent via email; nothing I receive in the snail
mail could not get from my email.
The problem has been that most churches
feel, for what ever reason, if there is no paper
trail then it’s not worth doing – but email is
not the only way to keep information flowing, it
is a way to keep information flowing without
killing trees.
Another
thing that all churches need is a good website.
Places like “Prairie Fusion,”
www.ginkworld.net (under
“web development”
link) and others help churches develop
killer, informative sites that can be used by all
members of the church.
A church website needs to be a place where
information is updated on a regular basis.
I have been to some sites where information
has not been updated for six months, and even a
few that have not updated in over a year.
Get
Real:
Let’s be honest, how many people read the
Sunday program?
10%, if we’re lucky.
So, why print them?
i love it when people complain that they have no idea
what's happening in the church, and when you ask - you
find out that they do not read the program. Each and every week your church follows the
same routine, the only thing that changes are the
hymn numbers – so why print something that no
one reads and never changes?
Either skip the whole thing, or print less
for those who want it, and then offer a place
where they can drop used bulletins for
recycling.
“Zeroscape:”
For those of us living in the Southwest this is a
no brainier – it cost’s too much to water the
lawn. So,
instead of watering, we created landscaping that
looks natural and uses plants native to the area
that grow wild and need no, or little, water.
Our lawns look like out natural
surroundings.
But why can’t this be done in the East,
or the Northwest, or any part of the country?
Natural landscaping that requires a
“zero” watering system – rain – can be
developed for each area of the country.
Closing:
Someone
once said that for these ideas to work you need to
show people how they benefit them personally.
They said that people would not want to
recycle if it is an inconvenience.
An that person is right, but as Christians
we do not have that problem, right?
As Christians we are given a “new
nature” that transcends our greedy, little
selves and moves us to a higher place closer to
God – that is what Scripture teaches.
As such, we need to be the example of a
place where people are loved, forgiven, accepted,
and taught that we can change and we must change
– if not, we are no better then the rest of the
world – and we are called “out of the
world.”
We are the ones who must take the first
steps for change.
|