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Statement of the National Council of Churches Eco-Justice Working Group
Adopted at the Eco-Justice Working
Group Oct. 3-4, 2005, meeting
The tragedy of
Hurricane Katrina and Rita compels us to bring our most cherished values
and finest resources to the rebuilding. The desire to restore and
rebuild must be guided by principles that will ensure that a just
society will emerge from the receding waters. The Gospel compels the
church to advocate on behalf of the voiceless, to be a champion for the
rights of the powerless and an ardent guardian of God’s creation. The
foundations of these renewed communities must be sound ecology, social
equity, racial justice and pervasive compassion towards the least, the
voiceless and the marginalized.
The process of clean
up is critical. It must be undertaken using the strictest guidelines and
should be designed to protect public health and the environment. The
tools of science not expediency must guide this process. The health and
safety of all involved in the clean up must be a primary concern and all
the pertinent safety regulations must be adhered to. The future
habitability of the region must be assessed by sound scientific
principles and regulatory compliance not merely economic concerns. The
rebuilding expenditures must not be offset at the cost of environmental
damage to other regions and not be used to justify weakening
environmental safeguards.
The church must
therefore be an active presence, not only as a place of comfort and
solace, but as a watchful steward of community health: social, economic
and ecological justice; and the rights of racial-ethnic minorities. Out
of destruction and death can thus emerge a new society that better
reflects the earthly concerns of the Reign of God. |