(Photo Credit: Jim Davidson) Jewish leaders were among 50 religious leaders who prayed and visited Capitol Hill together during the week of February 22 to tell US legislators that action on climate change is urgently needed.
Religious faith and concern for the environment should really go hand in hand. If you believe in God and in God’s creations, then you are invested in protecting and caring for them.
Here on Green Prophet we have repeatedly demonstrated the correlation between religion and the earth. To name a few related stories, we have written about Islam’s green agenda, the Eco-Rabbi series, and interfaith environmental initiatives.
The concern for the environment among the faithful was demonstrated during recent weeks by the National Religious Coalition on Creation Care (NRCCC) in the US. A delegation of approximately 50 people from a variety of backgrounds and religions met in Washington D.C. from February 21-24 for the NRCCC’s annual Washington Week and National Prayer Breakfast on Creation Care. The delegation’s mission was to remind legislators of the moral need for strong environmental legislation now.
The NRCC, which brings together Catholics, Jews, Evangelicals, Protestants, Bahaiis and Buddhists (among others), describes its mission as “serv[ing] God and the health of creation by bringing together the formal environmental policy positions of religious institutions and by communicating those positions to elected officials and government leaders.”

Moshe Safdie’s Habitat ’67 designed for Montreal World Fair a model of sustainable living. Image via

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