Showing posts with label Jessica Maudlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jessica Maudlin. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Today in the Mission Yearbook - Presbyterian Hunger Program associate reports on White House conference for faith leaders

Jessica Maudlin was among faith leaders convening on climate, clean energy and environmental justice

October 15, 2024

Jessica Maudlin of the Presbyterian Hunger Program 

attended the White House faith Leaders Convening on 

Climate, Clean Energy and Environmental Justice. 

(Contributed photo)

The White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) recently held a White House Faith Leaders Convening on Climate, Clean Energy and Environmental Justice.

The event, attended by Jessica Maudlin, associate for Sustainability and Earth Care Concerns in the Presbyterian Hunger Program, along with other board members and staff of Creation Justice Ministries, gathered faith leaders and representatives of faith-based organizations from across the country, with the goal of discussing opportunities to benefit from and further engage their communities on President Biden’s climate, clean energy and environmental justice agenda.

That agenda includes Direct Pay, a novel provision provided through the Inflation Reduction Act that enables tax-exempt entities, including houses of worship, to benefit from federal clean energy tax incentives. Participants at the 226th General Assembly learned more about Direct Pay during the Environmental Justice Committee’s presentation when Ronald Newman addressed the Assembly and during a recent Presbyterians for Earth Care webinar.

The event recognized faith leaders for their unique ability to connect their communities with the information, resources, and support needed to create a more equitable and just clean energy future.

“It was truly an honor to be gathered together at the White House with so many people of faith,” said Maudlin. “I get to do this work with Presbyterians, day in and day out, but to be reminded again that we are not alone in our commitment to care for Creation and to see the ways in which policy and federal funding can support those commitments was so encouraging. People of faith truly bring something special to this shared vocation of ours.”

White House National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi pointed out that post-pandemic, houses of worship have been faced with what he called powerful head winds, citing less giving, being asked to do more with less, increased prices of energy costs and unprecedented heat waves requiring more use of energy. And despite all of that, Zaidi said, people of faith are asking themselves, “Are we powerful enough to deliver the services our most vulnerable need? Do we have the ability to be the light that is still on while the storm is raging?”

Board members for Creation Justice Ministries, including 

Jessica Maudlin, second from right, pose for a group photo. 

(Contributed photo)

Participants also heard from several church and nonprofit leaders as they shared success stories and best practices for leveraging Direct Pay and other federal investments.

RE-volv Executive Director Andreas Karelas was one such leader. As he started to share, he pointed out a wall sculpture hanging in the ornate gathering room. An angel holding a gear, keys and a toolbelt graced the sculpture. Karelas drew the comparison between the artwork and the work of faith leaders in the room having all the tools and keys to creating a just and equitable transition. Solar panels are just one of the ways houses of worship can be part of the transition to clean energy. He went on to share data from a Berkeley Lab study that indicates that the result of one house of worship installing solar panels could translate to as many as 80 residential installations over the next five years.

The Rev. Betty Holley, a presiding elder in the African Methodist Episcopal Church in the Ohio Conference, a professor of environmental ethics at Payne Theological Seminary and another member of CJM’s board who also attended the meeting, shared that she was struck by another example of Direct Pay utilization: battery storage updates, which allow houses of worship to retain energy even when power grids are hit.

“One group talked about how they became a resilient community church. People could come to them to get their phones recharged, to get their medication stored in a battery-operated refrigerated machine, both of which were one of the church’s projects through this IRA initiative,” Holley said.

Holley believes that religious leaders should be a “beacon” for their communities in the environmental movement.

“We’re looking toward sustainability. How can we sustain ourselves on Earth?” she said. “You know, we all have but one home and one future.”

Jessica Maudlin, Associate for Sustainable Living and Earth Care Concerns, Presbyterian Hunger Program

Today’s Focus: Jessica Maudlin was among faith leaders convening on climate, clean energy and environmental justice

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Keren Strothman, Mission Specialist II, Theology, Formation & Evangelism, Presbyterian Mission Agency 
Shawnda Styles, Client Services Specialists, Presbyterian Foundation 

Let us pray

Dear Creator, help us make every day one of celebration of and protection for your creation. For all the wonders of Creation, we give thanks. Help us remember members of Creation, human and non-human, who are threatened. Give us strength to stand up for the most vulnerable, who are the most affected by environmental degradation.

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Minute for Mission: World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation

September 1, 2022

Photo credit: Nancy Corson Carter

If we learn how to listen, we can hear in the voice of Creation a kind of dissonance. On the one hand, we can hear a sweet song in praise of our beloved Creator; on the other, an anguished plea, lamenting our mistreatment of this our common home.”

MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS, POPE FRANCIS, FOR THE WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR THE CARE OF CREATION 2022

 In 2015, Pope Francis proclaimed Sept. 1 as the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation. This day kicks off the Season of Creation, which runs from then until Oct. 4 each year. This ecumenical season is dedicated to prayer and action for the protection of Creation.

We give thanks for all that God has made, repent for the damage that we have caused and commit ourselves to take action to protect the earth our common home.

“Listen to the voice of Creation” is the theme and invitation of this year’s Season of Creation. And resources are available in a variety of languages.

The environmental work of the Presbyterian Hunger Program is grounded in Scripture, Reformed theology, the numerous General Assembly policies that call us to care for Creation (including the 1990 foundational policy “Restoring Creation for Ecology and Justice”) and prayer.

Jessica Maudlin (She/Her/Hers), Associate for Sustainable Living and Earth Care Concerns, Presbyterian Hunger Program, Presbyterian Mission Agency

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff

Mark DeSantis, Director, Infrastructure Systems & Cyber Security, Board of Pensions
Ann DeVilbiss, Production Associate, Presbyterian Publishing Corporation

Let us pray

On this World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation, we offer this prayer from Sister Gemma Corbett of the Catholic Agency For Overseas Development:

O Holy Spirit, you hovered over the deep at the dawn of Creation.
You fashioned time and space itself in the initial magnificent flaring forth.
You breathed life into all beings and you continue to dwell and work in all
Creation to sustain that life.

Be with us now at this critical moment of our history.

Open our ears to the cry of the earth, suffering the effects of human
exploitation and unbridled consumption.

Open our ears to the cries of our brothers and sisters living in the midst of
extreme poverty and hunger.

Give us a deeper awareness that we are part of all that you have made,
that we are intimately connected to all that has been, all that is and all that will
be.

Grant us a spirit of awe and wonder as we contemplate the marvels of your
creation, recognizing and giving thanks for your presence within and around
us.

Give us a deep respect for all life and help us to renew our commitment to
foster life wherever we are.

Give us the courage to denounce all that disfigures your creation and to
commit fully to caring for our earthly home and for all the created beings we
share it with.

May we live lives characterized by compassion and service and may we
embody your love in our relationships with one another and with all Creation.
Amen.

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

Today in the Mission Yearbook - Eco-Palms: Creativity and caring for Creation in trying times

Orders help the communities that harvest them

February 8, 2022

South-Broadland Presbyterian Church in Kansas City, Missouri, was able to deliver palms to members in time for use in an online processional. (Contributed photo)

I recently learned a new word that I thought was appropriate for the year we have all just navigated together:

Tohubohu

toh-hoo-BOH-hoo

a state of chaos; utter confusion.

If ever a year was appropriate to be deemed tohubohu it was 2020. It is hard to believe after all that has happened, that it could even possibly be time to turn our attentions toward planning for Palm Sunday. But even in such a state, with so many things looking different, including how we worship together, life continues.

Eco-Palms are a project of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Integrated Natural Resources and Agricultural Management (CINRAM), which works with the Rainforest Alliance TREES program and SmartWood to certify palms for sale to Christian congregations in the United States. Other entities that have been involved include wholesaler Continental Floral Greens and distributors Greenwing and Hermes Floral.

In 2020, the harvesting community expressed deep gratitude for the 1030 Presbyterian congregations that those of you who chose to keep your orders in place despite the tohubohu. And for the Presbyterian Hunger Program it was so inspiring to see that from utter chaos came an abundance of creativity.

As everyone came together in these new ways to protect the health of our communities, we also protected forests, local jobs and sustainable livelihoods in the harvesting communities. Community members in the Maya Biosphere Reserve sort, package and sell the palms themselves — not via middlemen — so more of the money paid for the palms stays with the people who worked the hardest to provide them. Through the Eco-Palms project 25% of the cost of each frond is going directly back to the communities that harvest them.

Rosa Moreno, a member of the Cooperative Carmelita, has been doing quality control for palm selection since 2007. She shares that her work with Eco-Palms has allowed her to contribute financially to the care of her home and children and that she isn’t alone in that. “Everyone, from the harvesters to the transporters to the quality control selectors to the folks who package the palms for shipping, benefits in this way. We particularly thank the churches that annually make a special order. These orders provide a bonus to the communities that contribute to both education and health funds and strengthens the (emergency) fund set aside for the harvesters. Thank you on behalf of the board of directors and the Carmelita Cooperative … for your gesture of kindness in supporting the work of the Palm workers within the Maya Biosphere Reserve.”

The Presbyterian Hunger Program believes in the empowering work of Eco-Palms, perhaps now more than ever. Even though many of us aren’t gathering in a traditional sense, there is still a place for them in your virtual worship, so we hope that you will consider ordering in 2022. Even if you place a smaller order than usual for this Palm Sunday, your orders are still having a big impact. Learn more about the Eco-Palm project here.

Working together, we do make a difference!

Jessica Maudlin, Associate of Sustainable Living and Earth Care Concerns, Presbyterian Hunger Program

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
José Jones, Mission co-worker serving in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Ray Jones, Director, Theology, Formation & Evangelism, Presbyterian Mission Agency

Let us pray

God of Justice, as we prepare to raise our palms in celebration, help us to remember we play an important role in protecting forests, local jobs and sustainable livelihoods in harvesting communities. May your spirit work in us and bring about more compassion, peace and justice. Amen., Associate of Sustainable Living and Earth Care Concerns, Presbyterian Hunger Program

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