| Representing a range
of Christian and Jewish communities in the United
States, the National Religious Partnership for
the Environment (NRPE) seeks to incorporate environmental
concern into religious life on various levels.
NRPE is comprised of four major organizations that
together serve more than 100 million Americans:
the United States (US) Conference of Catholic Bishops
(USCCB), the
National Council of Churches of Christ (NCCC),
the Coalition on Environment and Jewish Life (COEJL),
and the Evangelical Environmental Network (EEN).
The Partnership engages scholars in the task of
exploring and publicizing the connections between
religious traditions and the environment through
conferences and publications. By providing leadership
training and congregational resource kits, NRPE
helps clergy and lay leaders incorporate care for
creation into congregational activities and worship
services. Each of the four organizational partners
has created and distributed an array of eco-religious
materials for use in their respective communities,
including resources for sermons, religious education,
action committees, and institutional resource management.
NRPE initiates and supports advocacy campaigns
around topics such as global climate change and
energy use, children’s environmental health,
biodiversity, and deforestation. It also works
to incorporate environmental concerns into the
agendas of religion-based social agencies such
as Catholic Charities USA, the United Jewish Appeal,
and the Association of Evangelical Relief and Development
Agencies. In addition to working with leaders of
religious institutions, NRPE has held retreats
and workshops for leaders of non-religious groups
as well, such as labor unions, corporations, and
environmental groups. Finally, NRPE has helped
publicize the emergence of religious environmentalism
by encouraging media coverage of its initiatives
in national, local, secular, and religious presses. |
| Inter-religious: Jewish |
| United States of America |
| 1993–Present |
The National Religious
Partnership for the Environment was established
in the fall of 1993 to help religious communities
in the United States respond to the global environmental
crisis. As religious leaders started to recognize
the spiritual dimensions of the ecological crisis,
they began to call for a faith-based environmentalism
that would mobilize the religious community to
take better care of the Earth. One catalyst of
this emerging environmental awareness was the
circulation in 1991 of an “Open Letter
to the American Religious Community” written
by prominent scientists and Nobel laureate. The
letter encouraged
religious leaders to address the spiritual and
moral dimensions of the ecological crisis and
to incorporate environmental awareness into the
various
dimensions of religious life. Through organizations
such as the United States Catholic Conference,
the Jewish Theological Seminary, the Eco-Justice
Working
Group of the National Council of Churches, and
the evangelical
Leaders of World Vision, religious leaders responded
by issuing statements and publications and by
gathering for discussions about how to proceed.
In March
of 1992, prominent religious leaders met in the
nation’s capital to plan an inter-religious
environmental initiative, that resulted in the
birth of the National Religious Partnership for
the Environment (NRPE) the following fall.
Since 1993, NRPE and its institutional partners
have sponsored or facilitated a number of initiatives.
Most recently, in November 2002, COEJL and the
NCCC launched the Interfaith
Climate and Energy Campaign. This campaign
has educated tens of thousands of people about
the need to manufacture and drive vehicles with
greater fuel economy. Fuel economy fairs were held
in congregations in fifteen states featuring sermons,
distribution of educational materials, and displays
of hybrid electric automobiles in congregational
parking lots following services. An Open Letter
to American Automobile Company Executives was signed
by more than 100 heads of denominations and senior
religious leaders describing fuel economy as a
matter of “values,
not just vehicles; ethics, not just engineering,” and
campaign leaders met with automobile executives
and United Auto Workers leaders in a delegation
to Detroit, following a press conference releasing
the Open Letter. Concurrently, EEN launched a national
campaign called “What
Would Jesus Drive?”,
which focused attention on the need for fuel economy.
Other recent initiatives by NRPE partners address
children’s environmental health: the Catholic
Coalition for Children and a Safe Environment (CASE);
EEN’s
educational efforts and website;
and a four-state campaign on children’s environmental
health involving leaders from Women of Reform Judaism
and the National Council of Catholic Women in 2001–2002.
In addition to these and other recent initiatives,
NRPE moved the headquarters of its secretariat
from New York to Amherst, Massachusetts in 2002. |
| “The National
Religious Partnership for the Environment seeks
to weave care for God’s creation throughout
religious life in such a way as to provide inspiration,
moral vision, and commitment to social justice
for all efforts to protect the natural world and
human well-being within it. It calls upon multiple
resources to enact a comprehensive vision.” |
Coalition on the Environment
and Jewish Life (COEJL)
Evangelical Environmental
Network (EEN)
National Council of Churches of
Christ (NCCC)
United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops (USCCB) |
| None Listed |
| None Listed |
| None Listed |
National Religious Partnership
for the Environment
49 South Pleasant Street, Suite 301
Amherst, MA 01002
Ph: 413.253.1515
Fax: 413.253.1414
Email: nrpe@nrpe.org |