Carbon Fast 2015

14th February : Earth Keepers day

Valentines Day has become a rather over commercialized celebration of individual romantic love. This year we would like to encourage you to celebrate Earthkeepers day – love your Earth day! With Valentine’s Day falling very early in spring in the northern hemisphere, it is often associated with the advent of spring.  In Slovenia, St Valentine, or Zdravko, was considered to be one of the saints of spring and good health, and the patron of beekeepers and pilgrims.  A proverb says that St Valentine “brings the keys of roots”, with plants and flowers starting to grow on this day. It is with this in mind that we would like to turn Valentine’s Day into a day that honours and shows love for the Earth, just like St Valentine did. We would like to see it as a day in which we can all feel a deep sense of connection and love for Creation. So we invite you to unite in prayer, creative fun and play with faith communities across Southern Africa and celebrate all life around us. We live in a time where a greater ecological awareness is needed and thus we extend the challenge to all faith communities to replace the consumerism of this weekend with a spiritual and pragmatic honouring of this day as keepers of the earth to express awe, respect and love for the sanctity of all life. What about having a “Practical picnic” with your loved ones  on this day. http://safcei.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/EKD-additional-event_practical-picnic.pdf Today’s Task: Think about how your church is showing LOVE for the environment? Our theme for this week of our Carbon Fast is food. How does your church cater? Where do you buy your food, is it local or shipped in from far away. Do you use free range chicken or factory farmed? What happens to leftover food? Do you use Styrofoam or do you wash up? A prayer to say at your church Creator God, we gather in this sanctuary to praise and honour You, yet there are many things that we do in caring for this space that destroy Your creation and make life easier for us in this place, but do not bring honour and glory to You as Creator. Help us to raise the necessary motivation and commitment to make radical changes in our mode of thinking and our actions to avoid further damages to the environment and the earth that sustains us. Help us to honour in every possible way that we can, the sanctity of all life and You, Lord God, as the ultimate giver and sustainer of all that lives on earth. Amen  

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13th Feb : Get outside!

“God writes the Gospel, not in the Bible alone, but also on trees, and in the flowers and clouds and stars.” Martin Luther THE SECOND BOOK OF GOD Traditionally theologians referred to  the Bible and nature as “two books,” which when read side by side combine to reveal the God of creation. The first book, the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament, is called “special revelation.” The Scriptures are special, in part, because if God had not chosen human writers who were inspired by the Spirit of truth to disclose this unique and specific knowledge, we would not be aware of it. The second of God’s two revelations is the book of nature, termed “general revelation.” This is the record of our Creator that is revealed in the natural world around us. We call it a general revelation because it has been generally available to people throughout all the ages. It is a revelation that is available to all people regardless of age or literacy  levels! Nature  showcases the handiwork of God in the creation, and records  God’s actions on the earth and in human history. The apostle Paul wrote, “Since the creation of the world ,the Creator’s invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead” (Rom. 1:20).  The Hebrew author of Psalm 19 expressed a similar observation when he wrote, “The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament shows His handiwork. Day unto day utters speech, and night unto night reveals knowledge. There is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard. Their line has gone out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world” (vv.1-4). Do we take time to listen to God in trees, animals, flowers and stars? God is speaking, but are we listening? Season of Creation  3: ACSA Environmental Network Daily Action:  Take a walk in your area, or hike somewhere nearby.  Sit quietly, look at the sky, feel the breeze, hear the birds . Listen for the voice of God in Creation.   A PRAYER OF ST AIDAN Leave me alone with God as much as may be. As the tide draws the waters close in upon the shore, Make me an island, set apart, alone with you, God, holy to you.   Then with the turning of the tide prepare me to carry your presence to the busy world beyond, the world that rushes in on me till the waters come again and fold me back to you.        

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12th Feb : We are part of the web of life

“Be glad, earth and sky! Roar, sea, and every creature in you; Be glad, fields, and everything in you! The trees of the wood will shout for joy when the Lord comes to rule the earth. He will rule the peoples of the world with justice and fairness.” Psalm 96:11-13 Today we continue our preparation for the actions of the Carbon Fast. Take time today to reflect on all the living creatures that rely on the Earth to survive. Start with the ones in your neighbourhood , then your country, your continent and the world. Picture the ones that are threatened and those that are already extinct. Our planet faces a life threatening disease. Each day we lose valuable parts of our biosphere as species become extinct and ecosystems destroyed – yet where is there funeral service.  Honoring our pain for the world is a way of valuing our awareness, first that we have noticed nd second that we care we needs to digest the bad news, that is what rouses us to respond Psychologists help us to understand that the task of grieving means to first accept the loss and second feel the pain of grief.  When we feel this emotion, we know not only that the loss is real but also that it matters to us.  This is the “digestion” phase – where the awareness sinks to a deeper place within us so that we take in what it means. Now take a piece of paper and draw a picture or sketch of those animals, plants or parts of the web of life who are threatened. Sit in silence and hear the cry of the Earth. Joanna Macy And now say this prayer This we know: the earth does not belong to us. The earth is the Lord’s and so are all its people This we know: we did not weave the web of life. The earth is the Lord’s and so is all that breathes on it. This we know: we are called to till and work the earth. The earth is the Lord’s and so are all who work the land. This we know: that we are called to take care of creation. The earth is the Lord’s yet we have polluted and abused it. This we know; that whatever befalls the earth Befalls the sons and daughters of the earth This we know: that the earth is the Lord’s And so we will serve Him in it Amen   Bishop Eric Pike: Port Elizabeth   As a practical response to the pain of the Earth , give thanks for the fish in the sea and for the oceans that sustain them.   As a traditional food during Lent, fish is healthy. The production of fish creates a quarter as many carbon emissions as red meat. So, it is good for your family and for the world! Make this a Lenten habit—Fish on Friday            – but make sure to eat only sustainable fish.    

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Friday March 27

Smart Fish Friday Ban bottled water, refill it with tap water, a great choice for the environment, saving money and possibly keeping you healthy “We must buy the water we drink; our wood can be had only at a price” Lamentations 5:4 Over the last ten years we have seen a huge increase in the use of bottled water Bottled water market tripled over past 10 years Many people drink only bottled water even though bottled water is thousands of times more expensive than tap water. Worldwide the bottled water market was estimated to be more than $100 billion . We have been sold a lie “It struck me that all you had to do is take water out of the ground and sell it for more than the price of wine, or for that matter oil.” Gustave Levin, former Chairman of Perrier “We sell water…so we need to be clever.” Jeffery Caso, former Vice-President of Nestlé. Advertising budgets run as high as $150 million Public water supplies deliver clean, safe, drinking water. Studies have shown that bottled water is no safer than tap water. Bottled water is actually less regulated than our public tap water . Making the plastic bottles for bottled water for sale in the U.S. required the equivalent of 17 million barrels of oil last year and generated 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide. To visualize the entire energy costs of the lifecycle of bottled water, imagine filling each bottle with a quarter of oil. – Each year, more than 4 billion pounds of PET plastic bottles end up in landfills or as roadside litter. Less than 20% of plastic water bottles are recycled. – Up to 40% of bottled water comes from already treated municipal water systems; paid for at taxpayer expense. Water bottlers then sell this water back to the public at thousands of times the price, virtually unchanged. – In Tap Water Challenges across the country, people can’t tell a difference Read More: Problems with bottled water 

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Thursday March 26

Check your flush: Fill a two litre bottle with water and put it in your toilet tank, count how many times your family flushes and figure your savings! “You shall have a place outside the camp, and you shall go out to it. And you shall have a trowel with your tools, and when you sit down outside, you shall dig a hole with it” Deut 23:12-14 Get a low-flow toilet. Flushing is the biggest water hog in the house. Older, conventional toilets can use 5 to 7 gallons per flush, but low-flow models use as little as 1.6 gallons. Since the average person flushes five times a day, the gallons can really add up.  If you can’t replace your higher volume toilet, put a plastic bottle filled with water in your toilettank to reduce the amount of water used per flush. To check for a toilet leak, put dye or food coloring into the tank. If color appears in the bowl without flushing, there’s a leak that should be repaired. “If it’s yellow, let it mellow.” The saying may be cliché, but it’s good advice. If you’re grossed out by the “yellow,” just put the toilet lid down.  Don’t flush things down the toilet to dispose of them. Throw tissues and other bathroom waste in the garbage can, which doesn’t require gallons of water. Water saving tips in the bathroom

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