Hope for Planet Earth: A Rocha 2009 Environment Resource Pack
A Rocha’s 2009 Environment Resource Pack, examining the question ‘Whose world is it anyway?’
A Rocha’s 2009 Environment Resource Pack, examining the question ‘Whose world is it anyway?’
This church service order in Arabic is centred around the topic of the groaning creation.
A Rocha UK’s 2010 Environment Resource Pack, under the theme of biodiversity and Psalm 104
Food is God’s gift in creation, but today it’s often either cheap junk, grabbed on-the-run, or an ethical nightmare and a cause of injustice and suffering. This pack aims to help you reclaim a biblical understanding of food – as something at the centre of our lives, a source of celebration and joy and a way of bringing God’s Kingdom values of justice and restored relationships into our lives.
This material for study and discussion was written by Prof R J ‘Sam’ Berry for inclusion in the 2011 Just Food Environment Resource Pack, by A Rocha UK.
A set of PowerPoint slides that follow the creation story in Genesis 1 and draw connections between the Bible verses and our call to environmental stewardship
A Rocha’s 2012 Environment Resource Pack is freely available to churches worldwide. It can be used on Environment Sunday (the nearest Sunday to the UN’s World Environment Day, June 5th), during Time for Creation (1st September – 5th October, promoted by the World Council of Churches), or on any suitable date.
Creation Care is one of more than 30 priority gospel issues out of The Third Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization: Cape Town 2010. A Call to Action has been released, which can be used to bring the issue of creation care to the forefront.
This sermon was preached by Dr Robert Sluka at Dorchester Abbey in the UK.
Where is your home? The Bible actually says that God’s home will be with humanity, and God calls us to put down roots and bear good fruit in the places where we’ve been planted. This Environment Resource Pack on Home provides resources for churches to celebrate their local area – the human and wildlife communities they share it with – and to seek ways to be involved in caring for their homes.