Church Organization: Climate Change Must Be Stopped

(photo: Pixabay)
By Mei ManuelNovember 10th, 2018

Before the major summit on climate change in Poland next month, the World Council of Churches called for countries to take urgent action in preventing climate change from destroying the world.

The WCC said that immediate measures and 'deep behavioral change' are needed to mitigate the worst damage from climate change.

It also called on leaders who are scheduled to meet for the COP24 climate conference in Katowice from December 2 to 15 to push forward their pledges to ensure that global temperatures do not rise further.

In a statement issued following its meeting this week in Uppsala, Sweden, the WCC said current government commitments to cut greenhouse gas emissions were 'vastly insufficient' to meet the goal of a 1.5C increase. 

'There is no more time to waste in short-term self-interestedness,' the statement said.

'Urgent adaptation and mitigation measures, transformation of economic systems, deep behavioural change, and supportive national and global policies and institutional arrangements are needed now to avoid potentially catastrophic consequences of climate change.'

The WCC also called for leaders to create a sustainable global economy that listens to the poor and ensure that they are not worst affected by the changing climate.

'Amidst all these shifts, our Christian faith calls us to ensure that "the least among us" are not made to pay the price for a global ecological problem to which they contributed the least,' it said. 

'Today the world stands in front of a great transition.  If we are to build a future of wellbeing for coming generations, the profound understanding of being one humanity on one Earth created by a loving and faithful God so that 'they may have life, and have it abundantly.' (John 10:10), must be internalised at all levels of society, from individuals to the global community.

'The biblical teaching, 'the earth is the Lord's and all that is in it' (Psalm 24:1), must be reaffirmed in this time of climate change.'

 

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