Religious Declaration of UNPRECEDENTED HUMAN EmergenCY
National Religious Coalition on Creation Care
RELIGIOUS DECLARATION OF UNPRECEDENTED HUMAN EMERGENCY
§1. The climate change problem we face today is unlike any previous challenge
confronted by society because it is largely irreversible “for 1,000 years after
emissions stop” with “profound impacts on global climate, ecosystems and human
societies for the next ten millennia and beyond.”1 The shocking truth is that
decisions we make now could, in the words of climate economist Ross Garnaut,
“haunt humanity until the end of time.”2 Nuclear war, while also irreversible, is only
a possibility. Human-induced climate change is underway now, and its impacts are
greater and more extensive than scientific models predicted. We will significantly alter the
future of civilization as we know it and may eventually cause its collapse if we continue
down this path.
§2. As people of faith, we believe that our planet – which nurtures and sustains life – is a
gift, and that we have a responsibility to cultivate a world in which all beings can
thrive, physically and spiritually. We are committed to safeguarding the Earth entrusted
to our care. Protecting God’s Creation is a spiritual and moral imperative, not an
ideological or narrow partisan issue. We recognize that the National Council of
Churches, U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the Central Conference of
American Rabbis, National Association of Evangelicals, and the Standing Conference of
Canonical Orthodox Bishops have all called on policymakers and elected officials
to take strong action to address global climate change.
§3. We are seeing great suffering caused by extreme storms, heat waves, massive
wildfires, floods and drought, crop failures, rising and acidifying seas, food and water
shortages, the spread of vector-borne diseases, and conflicts over scarce resources. Climate
migrants are already on the move – with millions more likely to be uprooted in the near
future.
“Civilization requires energy, but energy use must not destroy civilization...
[We] need to devise a long-term global strategy to provide energy security and
...commitments to meet the problem of climate change.”
– Pope Francis, Statement to oil company executives, June 19, 2018
§4. Human civilization emerged during an extensive period of stable climactic conditions.
Climate change caused by the burning of fossil fuels and the logging of forests could rapidly
destabilize civilization as billions of people worldwide find themselves in an increasingly
desperate struggle for survival. The multiple, simultaneous consequences of climate change
could break down human societies and push them toward civil unrest, anarchy, tyranny, and
war, including nuclear war. This is why more than one Secretary General of the United
Nations has called the world’s present course “suicidal,” and why the Pentagon has classified
climate change as a threat to national security.
§5. Scientists have been warning for decades, with increasing certainty and alarm, about the dire
consequences of continuing to burn coal, gas, and oil and release methane. Nevertheless, the
United States, responsible for 26% of cumulative fossil fuel greenhouse gas emissions despite
being less than 5% of the world’s population, has failed to take these warnings seriously.
Leadership in the United States has proposed inadequate solutions, has denied scientific and
economic consensus 3 and continues to promote fossil fuel extraction. Mainstream media
has betrayed its role as the fourth estate by confusing the public. For instance, Fox News
has made misleading statements about climate change 72% of the time, and CNN 30%
of the time.4
Global Temperatures Are On A Steep Rise
The National Academy of Sciences 2005 Report to Congress
“The crisis facing God's earth is clear. Human activities
are leading to a warming of the planet. Christians must take action
now to reduce global warming pollution....”
– Official statement, The United Methodist Church, 2012
§6. Decades of delay on climate action have made small corrective measures and incremental
approaches useless. Those who are invested in maintaining the status quo, or who put forth
proposals that are clearly incompatible with what climate science demands, are condemning
innocent young people – including their own children and generations to come – to a future of
unimaginable suffering: the mass death of human populations and the extinction of species.
§7. Further delay in addressing climate change is a radical evil that as people of faith we
vigorously oppose.
§8. We support the bold direction of the Green New Deal, or other similar science-based proposals, as
an opportunity for this country to commit to stabilizing the climate while creating
“unprecedented levels of prosperity and economic security for all people of the United States.”
This specifically includes low-income communities, communities of color, and those that have
historically been marginalized or underserved. The Green New Deal is the first resolution
that addresses the climate crisis with the urgency, focus, and comprehensiveness that the
situation requires. Our nation mobilized every part of society during World War II and the
Great Depression. Like the Greatest Generation, we must rise to the occasion and commit
to doing what science says it takes to avoid irreversible catastrophic climate chaos and make
a rapid and just transition to a clean energy economy. Today, renewable- energy-with-storage
technology is out-bidding all other energy options.5 Broadly and quickly implemented, this could
provide an unequalled and sustainable economic boom.
§9. We believe that the primary strategies that will accomplish these goals include: carbon
pricing; governmental intervention; divestment from fossil-fuel based industries and
investment in sustainable alternatives; carbon sequestration by terminating logging in our
national forests; extensive reforestation and native grass replanting; alternative energy
incentives; methane leakage restrictions; increased renewable and battery research; and
greenhouse gas targeted regulations. We strongly support bipartisan legislation that puts
a price on carbon in a way that will reduce emissions quickly, accelerate the transition to
a clean energy economy, and protect low-to-middle income communities from financial
harm. While the means are open for debate, the end of preserving a stable climate is not.
“Climate change is one of the most pressing issues facing all of God’s creation.”
– Official Declaration of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 2009
“We now face the unprecedented challenge of climate change due to greenhouse gas
emissions, and the need for urgent action has never been clearer."
– Reform Judaism Statement on Climate Change and Energy, 2009
§10. We are committed to responding to the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor.
The harsh and often deadly impacts of climate change increasingly weigh upon the
human spirit. Therefore, we call upon elected officials, faith communities, and the
public-at-large to combat climate change at the scale and pace this emergency requires.
We demand that policy-makers work together to reach the science-based climate goals
of the IPCC to cut greenhouse gas emissions to at least 45% below 2010 levels by 2030. We
also urge policy-makers to work together to ensure a just transition that protects the safety,
health, and dignity of low-income and historically under-served communities. We look
forward to the spiritual, health, and economic benefits of living more simply, gently,
and lovingly on God’s good Earth.
“We believe climate change to be a profoundly pro-life issue....”
– Florida Christians for Climate Action
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Notes:
1. Susan Solomon, Gian-Kasper Plattner, Reto Knutti, Pierre Friedlingstein, (2009) Irreversible Climate Change Due to Carbon
Dioxide Emissions,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106 (6) 1704-1709, at 1704; DOI:10.1073/pnas.0812721106;
and Peter U. Clark et al, (2016). Consequences of Twenty-First-Century Policy for Multi-Millennial Climate and Sea-Level Change.
Nature Climate Change. 6.10.1038/nclimate2923
2. http://www.garnautreview.org.au/pdf/Garnaut_Chapter24.pdf 597 (last lines of the review)
https://cosmosmagazine.com/climate/ross-garnaut-s-bright-idea
3. Dana Nuccitelli, “95% consensus of expert economists: cut carbon pollution,” The Guardian, January 4, 2016,
www.theguardian.com/environment/climate-consensus-97-per-cent/2016/jan/04/consensus-of-economists-cut-carbon-pollution
4. “Science or Spin? Assessing the Accuracy of Cable News Coverage of Climate Science (2014), Union of Concerned
Scientists, www.ucsusa.org/global-warming/solutions/fight-misinformation/cable-news-coverage-climate-change-science.html
5. www.pv-magazine-usa.com/2018/03/12/worlds-largest-batteries-hiding-in-colorado-bids/
Global Warming Is Steadily Advancing
v v
This NASA map shows Earth’s average global temperature from 2013 to 2017, as compared to a baseline
average from 1951 to 1980. Yellows, oranges, and reds show regions warmer than the baseline
This is an interfaith movement sponsored by the nonprofit World Stewardship Institute (WSI) and the National Religious Coalition on Creation Care (NRCCC) in coordination with many partner religious organizations.