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Dear Justice-Seeker,

This issue of MFSAVoices is jam-packed with resources and information. So much so that it won't all fit in your email message so be sure to click view entire message at the bottom of this email to view the entire issue. Our newsletters are designed to be used all month long. So take a quick glance and take note of important dates to add to your calendar but also come back in the following weeks to work your way through the action items.  

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We continue to see the urgency of our work to make broad systemic change. Change that honors the dignity and worth of all people, puts people over money, and honors the earth and all her inhabitants. Since 1907, MFSA has been shining a light on injustice and organizing to change it.  

You make our collective work possible by your witness for justice every day in your church, community, and Annual Conference. MFSA does not receive any financial support from the United Methodist Church's giving channels. 100% of our budget is funded through your membership dues and your generosity in giving.

 

2024 Lent Devotional: Week 4

By Rev. Richenda Fairhurst

From Mount Hor they set out by the way to the Red Sea, to go around the land of Edom; but the people became impatient on the way. The people spoke against God and against Moses, "Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? For there is no food and no water, and we detest this miserable food." Then the LORD sent poisonous serpents among the people, and they bit the people, so that many Israelites died…. So Moses made a serpent of bronze, and put it upon a pole; and whenever a serpent bit someone, that person would look at the serpent of bronze and live. 

Numbers 21:4-6, 9

When our children were small, our family lived in the verdant Pacific Northwest. Our yard was filled with evergreens, ferns, pink, clumpy rhododendrons, and banana slugs. We learned things about slugs most people would be glad never to know, such as the fact that banana slugs can grow 10 inches in length, and they have more teeth than sharks.

We have family also in Arizona and New Mexico, and one summer we traveled to see the mesas, canyons, and landscapes of the Desert Southwest. As we were driving a particularly long stretch of desert road, my daughter spoke up, ‘why is everything here dead?’ I looked where she was looking, the dry land with shrubby brush and low cactus—spiny things. And, it seemed to go on endlessly. A banana slug wouldn’t last five minutes, regardless of all those teeth.

For my children, this was an entirely unfamiliar and unknown landscape. They had never seen such a dusty horizon. For me, however, I spent a number of years in Arizona growing up. I knew the hues of blues, golds and purples in this desert garden. I knew how to see the beauty of the sage-y green and sudden yellow of the land against distant blue-bronze mountains. Her observation opened a conversation in the car about how life looks different in different places. We deepened our appreciation of the colors of the desert together.

In reflecting on this reading from Numbers during Lent this year, I am thinking about Moses and the people who followed him. For the Hebrews, Egypt had been their home. They knew the land, what grew there, what lived there, how to find water, and where to find food. They knew which plants grew tall, and which insects to avoid (banana slugs or scorpions).

When Moses led God’s people out of Egypt, they traveled into the unknown. Suddenly in a new land—to them a wilderness—every rock and shrub was new. They had to find water, they had to find food. They found themselves in all new ecosystems, including one with poisonous snakes. They weren’t just on the move, they were experiencing changes to the land that they didn’t yet know how to navigate.

Climate change is here. Where I live now, fire is here more than ever. With the heat and drought, the Douglas Fir forests are dying. They won’t thrive here again for hundreds of years, if ever. Their replacements will be madrones and Ponderosa Pine.

Burning fossil fuels has changed the very character of the globe. Millions are migrating to lands they do not know, trying to figure out what to plant, what to eat, where to find water. Others are living where they always did, but asking the same questions as the climate changes around them, familiar things die, and new creatures move in. These creatures are escaping, too, and on the move seeking an ecosystem they remember.

Death is in the eye of the beholder. The people who followed Moses complained that they would die in this new place. We in our time might also be looking at our own landscapes and noticing what is dying off.

As people of faith, and especially at Lent, even as we see the reality of climate change around us, we know that death does not have the last word. For us, words like resurrection have the final authority. We are a restoration people. We can make choices about how we will respond to the changing climate. We can divest from fossil fuels and step away from complicity with those who profit from this tragedy.

We can raise the staff of life in our church yards, for all to see. We can restore natural landscapes where we worship. We need to stop adding petrochemicals to the soil to kill this or kill that; there has been enough killing. It’s time for life again. It’s time to see the hues that are in this new place, and changing in our old place. We can plant native plants, restore soils, make way for mighty oaks, nurture food forests, build a biodiversity highway across our cities and in our towns where migrating birds can rest, and butterflies can sample nectar.

This year, General Conference legislation includes a resolution to attend to our sacred ground: the church land where we worship. We can rewild and replant and restore this land, get to know where we are again, and learn how to be stewards of this good earth.

Prayer

Restoration God, you made a stable climate, and life-filled landscapes with every kind of creature. You made us to live among the living things, and to admire the majestic carving of canyons, upwellings of oceans, and vast mountains. Yet heat and floods and drought have made death visible. The plundering of earth has taken untold billions of lives: depleting vast populations of birds, lizards, crabs, and whole forests. Even the land on which we have planted our churches has not escaped. Forgive us. Let us replant and restore our sanctuaries. Let us be a restoration people, with a new understanding of your landscape, and your love for creation. Amen. 

Rev. Richenda Fairhurst is active in the United Methodist Creation Justice Movement. She is a member of the Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon board, where she chairs the Creation Justice Committee / Oregon Interfaith Power and Light. She is a member of the Pacific Northwest Annual Conference, living in Southern Oregon. Find her at JustCreation.org

You make our collective work possible by your witness for justice every day in your church, community, and Annual Conference. MFSA does not receive any financial support from the United Methodist Church's giving channels. 100% of our budget is funded through your membership dues and your generosity in giving.

 

There are 47 days until General Conference


Methodist Federation for Social Action (MFSA) believes in the connection of the United Methodist Church and is committed to working toward a more justice-filled, inclusive, and equitable denomination at the upcoming General Conference. We will be working in coalition across our denomination to move our legislative priorities forward. Want to learn more please participate in a any and all of the webinars listed below. Three things to do to make a difference at this General Conference GC.

  1. Share our resources with your delegation
  2. Make a gift to MFSA to support our work at GC 
  3. Volunteer at GC

Want to volunteer at General Conference? Register to be a volunteer with the Love Your Neighbor Coalition (LYNC). If you are planning to be at General Conference we encourage you to book your accommodation now. There is no group rate or hotel block available and rooms are going fast.

Curious about what legislation will be before the General Conference in 2024? You can check out all of the legilslation in the Advance Daily Christian Advocate (ADCA).

New to General Conference or want a good resource to share? Check out this Beginner's Guide to General Conference.

 

BONUS Movement Café

A Conversation on Divestment with Bill McKibben

Hosted by Fossil Free UMC, the UMCJ Movement Cafe, and Climate Cafe Multifaith

Our conversation will center the divestment efforts of people of faith, and the effort to divest in the United Methodist Church. We will hear from Bill McKibben and also William H. Morris. There will be time for Q&A, and to learn out what we can do as United Methodists to be good stewards and faithful investors.

Register Here
 

Introducing This Month’s Speakers

Bill McKibben is founder of Third Act, which organizes people over the age of 60 for action on climate and justice. His 1989 book The End of Nature is regarded as the first book for a general audience about climate change, and has appeared in 24 languages. He’s gone on to write 20 books, and his work appears regularly in periodicals from the New Yorker to Rolling Stone. He serves as the Schumann Distinguished Scholar in Environmental Studies at Middlebury College, as a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and he has won the Gandhi Peace Prize as well as honorary degrees from 20 colleges and universities. He was awarded the Right Livelihood Award, sometimes called the alternative Nobel, in the Swedish Parliament. Foreign Policy named him to its inaugural list of the world’s 100 most important global thinkers.

McKibben helped found 350.org, the first global grassroots climate campaign, which has organized protests on every continent, including Antarctica, for climate action. He played a leading role in launching the opposition to big oil pipeline projects like Keystone XL, and the fossil fuel divestment campaign, which has become the biggest anti-corporate campaign in history, with endowments worth more than $40 trillion stepping back from oil, gas and coal. He stepped down as board chair of 350 in 2015, and left the board and stepped down from his volunteer role as senior adviser in 2020, accepting emeritus status. He lives in the mountains above Lake Champlain with his wife, the writer Sue Halpern, where he spends as much time as possible outdoors. In 2014, biologists credited his career by naming a new species of woodland gnat—Megophthalmidia mckibbeni–in his honor.

William Morris (he/him) is a 26-year-old climate activist located in Torrance, CA. He holds his degree in environmental science with an emphasis on ecological restoration and a minor in watershed management from Humboldt State University. William is a Faith Organizer with GreenFaith working on the People vs. Fossil Fuels campaign. He also works with Young Evangelicals for Climate Action (YECA) serving first as a field organizer and is now Co-chair of the steering committee. He volunteers with The Climate Reality Project, is the founder and chair of the Los Angeles chapter’s Faith-based Communities Committee, founder and chair of the creation care committee at Faith United Methodist Church, is part of the leadership team with Faiths4Future, and a member of the board at Circle Faith Future. William also has worked with faith organizations abroad spending time in Kenya, Chad and Indonesia. He spends his time engaging with faith communities, schools, universities, and organizations around the topics of faith-based climate justice and education. His work has been featured in Rolling Stone MagazineABC News and the BBC.

 

Climate Justice: Our Food Systems

Food justice requires us to examine the risks and benefits of where, what, and how food is grown and produced; how food is transported and distributed; how food is accessed and eaten; and the implications that all these things have on members in society, especially the poor, vulnerable and marginalized. One way we can do this is by examining the dominant food systems that are in place in our countries and contexts.

A food system is a network for organizing food production and distribution. There are several types of food systems in the world, some based on equal distribution and affordability of food and others based on profits and maximizing output. In the US, the dominant food system is one based on prioritizing efficiency. The problem with such a system is that even though cheap food is produced, it is not necessarily good for the consumer, the environment, the workers, the livestock, crops, or soil. The Union of Concerned Scientists said that the dominant food system in the United States: “[is characterized by] large-scale monoculture, heavy use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and meat production in CAFOs (confined animal feeding operations)… [as well as] its heavy emphasis on a few crops that overwhelmingly end up as animal feed, biofuels, and processed junk food ingredients.”

 

Preparing for General Conference: A Briefing hosted by New York MFSA and MFSA

Learn about the legislative priorities of many of our General Agencies.

 
 

Reconciling Ministry Network Releases VBS Curriculum

Reconciling Ministry Network announced the release of JUST Like Me: an innovative and adaptable, multigenerational Vacation Bible School (VBS) curriculum for congregations and communities of all sizes.

JUST Like Me centers the deep and active faith lives of children and engages the real-world contexts in which children live. Built on theologies of inclusion, this unique curriculum uses First and Second Testament Bible characters to help students build vital social and spiritual skills to support active faith development.

 

Racial Audit Implementation Team 

In 2017, MFSA committed to becoming an intentionally anti-racist organization. We worked to recruit people of color (POC) to serve on our Board of Directors and staff. At the end of 2019 we continued on our journey towards becoming a more anti-racist organization by forming a Racial Audit Team and partnering with Crossroads Antiracism and Training, a non-profit that focuses on dismantling systemic racism and building anti-racist multicultural diversity within institutions and communities, to conduct a full organizational racial audit. This Racial audit was completed/adopted in Jan 2023 and presented publicly in Feb 2023. In June 2023 the MFSA Board of Directors created the MFSA Racial Audit Implementation Team to implement the recommendations of the Racial Audit. Our goal is to be better structured to perpetuate justice and equity throughout MFSA, our church, and our world.

 

Now's the Time for Action

Here are a few ways you can seek justice and work for broad systemic change:

  1. Call for a ceasefire now 

  2. Here is a list of products and services to boycott of companies that are supporting Israel's apartheid of Palestine.

  3. Take the pledge to bring racial justice into our education system. From curriculum to student life, there is so much we can do to make schools a safe and equitable place for all children.

  4. Support and protect families who face emotional, financial, and legal strains after being forcibly separated at the border.

  5. Support studying and developing a system of reparations to make up for our many sins as a nation.

  6. Protect public lands in Alaska today.

  7. Call for independent oversight to Federal prisons to ensure justice comes first.

  8. Demand Congress pass the Equality Act and expand non-discrimination protections for LGBTQIA+ people.

 

In Case You Missed It

  1. First article in the MFSA Climate Teach in Series Climate Justice and MFSA.
  2. Access the latest recording and resources from MFSA and UMKR's webinar, "Methodists in Palestine in a Time of War"
  3. Visit the Racial Audit Report page on our website. 
 
 
 

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Methodist Federation for Social Action
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(202) 240-2546
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