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In The News |
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November
4 - Ban
Ki-moon
Urges
Faith
Leaders
to
Impact
Climate
Deal
Article:
Social
Gospel
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged religious leaders on Tuesday to push their governments to take bolder action on climate change at a key U.N. summit next month.
Religious leaders have “the longest, widest and deepest reach” in society, Ban told representatives of major faith groups gathered for the faith-based climate change summit in England, according to U.K.-based Guardian newspaper. Faith groups run more than half of the world’s schools, operate more weeky publications than “all the secular press” in the European Union, control financial investments worth trillions, and own nearly eight percent of habitable land on the planet. “Your potential impact is enormous,” Ban said. The U.N. secretary-general urged faith leaders to harness their influence to encourage more environmentally friendly lifestyles and to “provoke, challenge and inspire political leaders” to “act more boldly” on tackling the climate change problem. Religious groups attending the three-day summit, which ends Wednesday, reported various plans on how they would contribute to a healthier planet. Buddhists in China would promote vegetarianism and moderation in burning incense sticks. In India, Sikhs pledged to use solar power in the temples and conduct energy audits.“If Earth is in some way a museum of divine intent, it’s pretty horrible to be defacing all that creation,” said McKibben, who is also serves occasionally as a Methodist minister, according to Agence France-Presse. “And if, in Christianity and other faiths, we are called upon above all else to love God and love our neighbors, drowning your neighbor in Bangladesh is a pretty bad way to go about it,” he added. Among Muslims, some 200 leaders of the faith had gathered in Istanbul in July to form a seven-year climate change action plan. One of the measures agreed on was the creation of a “Muslim eco-label” for products and services ranging from the printing of the Qur’an to organized pilgrimages. Read More ....
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