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Mountain Sky Outlook: Renewal of Creation Blog #1

3/11/2015

5 Comments

 
From Bishop Elaine J. W. Stanovsky
Mountain Sky Outlook: Renewal of Creation Blog #1
March 2015


Cultivating the Tree of Life: Faithful and Fruitful

                Renewal of Creation


Jesus said he came so that people could live life to the fullest. What would Jesus think if he lived today with oil pipeline breaks spilling into rivers, trains derailing with catastrophic consequences, devastating hurricanes, tornadoes and blizzards, unprecedented earthquake swarms and groundwater contamination near shale oil fracking sites? How would Jesus teach if he lived today?

Remember the Tree of Life? - Growing at the center of the Garden of Eden in Genesis, and growing in the middle of the New Jerusalem in Revelation? The TREE OF LIFE - offering fruit that is good to eat, and leaves for the healing of the nations.

What does it mean to live life to the fullest as disciples of Jesus Christ? It means learning to live our lives in ways that contribute to the fullness of life for all people. Founder of Methodism, John Wesley, called this HOLINESS. He spoke of personal holiness and social holiness. It was the idea that if people grew in their knowledge and love of Jesus (personal holiness) we would experience abundance of life and we would be moved to help others experience it (social holiness). In Wesley's time, Methodists visited people in prisons and cared for orphans. They organized labor collectives, and started schools and hospitals in poor neighborhoods. Wesley believed that our faith would lead us into the world in ways that helped others enjoy life to the fullest.

For four years, as lay and clergy members gather for Annual Conference, we are cultivating God's Tree of Life, focusing on four life-affirming themes. In June 2015, we will gather under the broad, graceful branches of God's promise of abundant life with a focus on the theme: Renewal of Creation. Renewal of Creation builds on the themes of the past two years.

2013: IMAGINE NO MALARIA. Full life means health. In 2013 we said that living life to the fullest means working to end death by malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. We sent a team to distribute bed nets in Bom Jesus, Angola, and we raised more than $1.5 million to continue the work. Well done!

2014: SAND CREEK MASSACRE - HEALING RELATIONSHIPS. Living life fully means healing ancient wounds. We met with Native American neighbors in 2014 and listened, remembered, and repented of a long and violent history to clear the land of American Indians so it could be occupied by settlers. We commemorated the 150th anniversary of the Sand Creek Massacre, honoring those whose lives were taken, repenting of a history of broken relationships, and beginning to form new relations of trust.

2015: RENEWAL OF CREATION. Relationships between human beings and the rest of God's creation are delicate both theologically and ecologically. Genesis describes the power and the beauty of God's creation. We live in a time when we see almost daily the harmful effects of human activity on God's creation. What does holy living look like in our time and place? How do we live fully? How do we live so that others may live fully? I'm very pleased that Dr. Rebecca Parker will be our speaker and bible study leader in both conferences. Rebecca is a clergy member of the Pacific Northwest Annual Conference and co-author, with Rita Nakashima Brock, of Saving Paradise: How Christianity Traded Love of This World for Crucifixion and Empire.

This Mountain Sky Outlook is the first installment of a blog on Renewal of Creation. In 2009 the Council of Bishops issued a Pastoral Letter, "God's Renewed Creation." As we prepare for Annual Conference in June, let's think together about what our faith in Jesus means for how we live in God's creation.

I invite you to pay attention to the world around you these weeks. Where do you encounter God's creation: the sun and the moon; the waters and the dry land; plants and trees with all their fruits; swarms of living creatures that swim and fly and creep upon the Earth? As you read your Bible notice Jesus in nature: on the sea, on a mountain, in the garden. Pay attention to yourself - you are a precious and beloved child of God. Pay attention to others. Pay attention to how you fit into God's whole creation: how you tend it, how you use it, how you take it for granted.

In the comments section of the blog share your reflections on this question: How does the way I live care for God's creation?

The earth is the Lord's, and all that is in it. The world and those who live in it.
Psalm 24: 1, NRSV

Christ shine in your life,
Bishop Elaine J. W. Stanovsky

Read about "Assuming role of 'creation care' as God's mandate" by UMNS writer Linda Bloom

5 Comments
Sojourner
3/11/2015 07:51:56 am

A very thoughtful question! When I am in the Great Outdoors of Montana, I always pack out what I pack in - I literally walk as lightly as possible. This past year, I distinctly recall sending frequent prayers of thanks and appreciation for the astonishing beauty of my surroundings! At home, I recycle as much as possible, keep unnecessary lights turned off, use energy efficient appliances and lights, use as little water as possible (and still keep clean!) and drive my car as economically as possible.

Reply
Lena Whitson
3/11/2015 01:16:36 pm

Psalm 8 and Psalm 19 are two of my favorite Psalms because they proclaim the majesty of God's creation and our place in it. I memorized Psalm 8 and will memorize Psalm 19 to keep my mind on these things. I try to do my part to be a good steward of what we have been given.

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Norman A. Bishop
3/12/2015 02:44:28 am

For 36 years, I interpreted natural history n national parks, with a personal goal of elevating park visitors through sensation, perception, intellection, and husbandry, to a theology of the Earth. Now retired, I am engaged in preservation of biodiversity and prevention of the destruction of the Earth by changing its climate or destroying it by nuclear war.

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Kevin Witt link
3/14/2015 01:26:07 am

It is inspiring to read this blog and to celebrate that the community of faith is focusing on loving the creator and embracing the creation in love. It is so important. I am blessed to inspire UM Camp and Retreat leaders across our denomination to more fully live out the essential foundations for which the church has established us. One of those 7 Foundations is Teach and Model Creation Care and Appreciation. This includes the deep recognition that whole creation is born with us in the heart and love and God and that time spent in the natural world is a true and constant means of grace in which God becomes present to us in very real and meaningful ways. Our relationship with creation is an expression of Christian discipleship because the way of Christ is the way of love and that happens through relationships. In a world where many people have less and less time with nature, our camp and retreat centers are one of the ways that the Church invites people into encounters with God through time in the natural world getting to know the creation that God cherishes and cherishing it ourselves. This time at its very best is also an experience of what a life of being with and caring for creation can be like in our every day lives. Camp and Retreat experiences are immersions into what is possible - seeds of experience taken beyond the boundaries of these sacred places in a growing recognize that the whole world is sacred and beloved. I give thanks for the United Methodist Church - for our camp and retreat centers - for the churches and communities of faith spread far and wide who extend the wide embrace of God to all life both people and planet. It is a beautiful and vital aspect of following Jesus Christ. I am reminded of this thought from Barbara Brown Taylor

"Take off your shoes. Feel the earth under your feet, as if the ground on which you are standing really is holy ground."

Thank you Bishop for keeping us attuned to our Creator and all that is beloved by God.

Reply
Chuck Stephens link
5/27/2015 04:08:44 am

Proverbs 3:18-20 describes wisdom as "a tree of life to those who lay hold of her; those who hold her fast are called happy. The Lord by wisdom founded the earth; by understanding her established the heavens; by his knowledge the deeps broke open, and the clouds drop down the dew." The wisdom in caring for creation comes from knowing that it is all in, of and through God. It is important to see that our physical selves are no less part of the cosmic order than the rocks, trees and rain. The wisdom comes in our understanding of the divine nature of our souls and, therefore, the responsibility given to us to honor God's creation. Our mission community is embarking on a campaign of "Hands On" caring for all of creation. I invite all to get their hands dirty; not just by touching your money, but by touching the hands, face and ground of those living on the margins, walking in brokenness and lost in the darkness.

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