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A UMNS Report
By Joey Butler*
6:00 A.M. EST May 23, 2011
Students from Joseph High School in Enterprise, Ore., show off art they created
from recycled roofing to plant around their new garden. Photo courtesy of
Elane Dickenson/Wallowa County Chieftain.
View in Photo Gallery
Change the World 2011 had a decidedly “green” feel — in many cases, a “green thumb” feel.
Change the World,
part of the Rethink Church initiative, incorporates outreach to make a
positive difference in the world beyond the church doors. During last
year’s inaugural event, more than 100,000 people from over 1,000
churches hosted events and undertook projects to help others.
During the second annual event on May 14-15,
more than 2,000 individual churches in 15 countries participated.
United Methodist churches around the globe got outside their buildings
and performed acts of service in their communities — and many did so
with the environment in mind.
In the bulb, there is a flower
In New Jersey, The United Methodist Church in Wayne was back for a
second year of Change the World, planting a community garden in nearby
Paterson. Church members distributed the produce from last year’s
project to the local food pantry and to area families, and this year the
church added more vegetable beds and perennial flowers.
Wayne staff member Don Matthews said last year’s event got a lot of positive feedback from participants and area neighbors.
“Neighbors saw the work being done, the excitement of the children and
adults, and asked why there was no press coverage for such a positive
event.”
Matthews expressed hope that the event would “enable the participants to
experience and understand the impact that serving others has on those
in service, as well as the served, and that this once-a-year event
becomes our plan for daily living.”
Joseph United Methodist Church in Oregon partnered with a rural, local
school district to start an effort called The Magic Garden. Striving to
fight childhood obesity, they introduced students to fresh produce and
taught them healthier eating habits.
A dilapidated greenhouse at the school was repaired, and art students
created giant decorative creatures out of the recycled greenhouse
roofing. Volunteers and students planted vegetable and flower “starts.”
They also installed fencing to keep out deer.
Members of Blackman United Methodist Church join forces with the
Murfreesboro, Tenn., Parks and Recreation Department to clear brush and
spread mulch. A UMNS photo by Jason Onks.
View in Photo Gallery
“Many students don’t have access to fresh produce because of financial
issues or lack of knowledge,” said the Rev. Kaye Garver, Joseph’s
pastor.
According to Garver, this is a three-year project. She hopes that when
the garden is harvested in the fall, there will be a community dinner
where high-school students can teach younger children how to prepare the
produce.
Faith, while trees are still in blossom
In Murfreesboro, Tenn., Blackman United Methodist Church members helped
the Murfreesboro Parks and Recreation Department clear brush and spread
mulch at local elementary schools for outside wilderness classrooms that
will help teachers instruct their students about nature.
Jason Onks, who leads the church’s BERT (Blackman Emergency Response
Team) ministry, said the group had not formed by the time Change the
World occurred last year.
“When I noticed it was happening again this year, we started kicking
around ideas and ultimately got hooked up with the Parks Department,” he
said. “The outdoor classrooms are a pretty cool project, and we feel
blessed to have been a part of it. We have some exciting ideas for next
year, too.”
During the month of May, a team from Davis (Calif.) United Methodist
Church will participate in the Sacramento region’s “May is Bike Month.”
They will log bicycle miles for commuting to work, going to church, and
for errands or pleasure.
The project seeks to reduce carbon emissions by encouraging church
members to use “greener” modes of transportation, including bicycling,
walking, public transportation and carpooling. Davis also runs Grace
Garden, a faith-based ministry to feed the hungry of the community. It
is a sustainable garden growing vegetables, herbs and flowers. Both
projects are part of the church’s larger effort of reducing its own
carbon footprint.
Volunteers of all ages from The United Methodist Church inWayne, N.J., plant raised garden beds.
View in Photo Gallery
Go, tell it on the mountain
United Methodist-related Union College in Barbourville, Ky., joined the
Kentucky Annual (regional) Conference Justice Team at a Mountaintop
Removal Witness Tour. They spent their days touring mining sites and
seeing the environmental damage
done by the practice. They also spent time talking with locals who
shared stories of chemicals in their water, increased rates of asthma
and cancer, and damage to their homes.
Students at Union plan to produce a documentary video on their experience to share at the 2012 annual conference sessions.
“The political situation in Kentucky is that our government is very
heavily influenced by the coal industry,” said the Rev. David Miller,
Union’s chaplain. “We hope to challenge the Methodist people of Kentucky
to become involved in fighting mountaintop removal.”
The Rev. Donna Aros, who serves on the Kentucky Conference Justice Team
that sponsored the event, said, “I think the experience helped me define
how important my voice is to the human-rights issues that surround
mountaintop removal.”
The Green Ministry at Almaden Hills’ United Methodist Church in San
Jose, Calif., celebrates creation through worship and education. This
year, the ministry dedicated the week of May 15-21 to the significance
of water in God's world.
The church’s May 15 worship service focused on many facets of water: as a
foundation of life, an unfairly shared resource, a symbol of spirit, an
object of environmental degradation and a source of healing. On May 20,
the church will screen “A Sea Change,” which explores the relationship
between clean oceans and future generations. The next day, church
members joined others in the National River Cleanup Day at Hellyer Park
in San Jose.
“We have seen how many smaller groups, when connected with others, can
grow into a force,” said Sue Bowling, Almaden Hills’ chair of Green
Ministry. “Being connected with others means being a part of something
greater than ourselves.”
*Butler is editor of young adult content for United Methodist Communications, Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Joey Butler, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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