Is your church green?
In the United States, buildings account for over forty percent of energy consumption and process over fifty percent of greenhouse gases. Are churches concerned about the environmental impact of their church buildings? Have you ever heard environmental impact discussed in a building committee report? Most churches argue more about carpet color than whether or not their church building is environmentally sustainable.
The US Green Building Council has developed a wonderful system to guide churches in new construction and renovation to provide an example to the world of what environmental stewardship can look like. The system is called LEED. The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System “encourages and accelerates global adoption of sustainable green building and development practices through the creation and implementation of universally understood and accepted tools and performance criteria.”
And why should we care? Remember in the Genesis creation narrative that in his sovereign act of creating, God calls all of creation into covenant relationship with himself and calls humans to manage it? “God covenantally binds himself to creation,” says Dr. Michael Williams in the book As Far As The Curse is Found. Additionally, remember that the fall affected all of creation (Gen. 3), and all of creation needs redemption (Rom. 8-9). God has placed mankind into creation to manage it as a spiritual discipline. How a church uses its building is as much about the environment as it is its ministry usefulness.
The Cornwall Declaration reminds us that “a clean environment is a costly good; consequently, growing affluence, technological innovation, and the application of human and material capital are integral to environmental improvement.”
Undergoing a LEED-evaluation is a great voluntary first step to show the world that faithfulness to Christ includes caring for the environment in which redemption takes places. LEED gives “building owners and operators the tools they need to have an immediate and measurable impact on their buildings’ performance.” LEED promotes a “whole-building approach” to sustainability in five key areas of social development: “sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, materials selection and indoor environmental quality.”
A church can be an additional blessing to its community simply by reducing the environmental impact of its building because all of life is a witness to the story of the Christ-centered cosmic redemption of creation.



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back to top17 Comments to “Is your church green?”
Our church is white (made so by the blood of the Lamb).
So is our building (made so by generations of white paint).
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Whatever physical energy Christian churches consume they likely make up for with even more spiritual energy.
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Our church is “green” in the sense that it’s a 100+ year old building that is in very good shape; there are no “building plans” as with so many churches today. This is the first church in 10+ years we’ve been a part of for which this is true, and it is part of what drew us to this body of believers (because it is indicative of *other* things like being hip and cool — with a sparkly new building — isn’t what they’re after; following Jesus is).
As the saying goes, “The greenest building is the one that is already built.”
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Speaking of church buildings, I was blown away to read about the history of the church building, where it came from, in George Barna’s new release “Pagan Christianity? Exposing the Roots of Our Church Practices.” It explained why we put so much stock in buildings in the first place, why we call them the house of God, and why we even call them “churches” and the unconscious affects they have on us. The book was fascinating and challenging for me. Barna is certainly getting a lot of attention for this one.
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My mother recorded a song in 1971 called “The Church is More Than a Pulpit and Steeple.” It was a reminder that a church is a body of believers, not a building at all.
Ergo, the only way a church could be “green” would be from envy.
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Yeah, yeah … of course the “church” is people; but the question has to do with the article quoted above, which is defining “church” as the building in which believers meet on Sunday. So let’s discuss it from *that* perspective instead of getting all hyper-spiritual, lol.
Is your church concerned with treating God’s creation with great care, or not? Are there recycle bins set up in the garbage area for all the plastic water bottles people throw out each weekend? Are the groundskeepers pouring liter after liter of pesticides on the lawn to keep it looking beautiful (while polluting water sources)? Are folks encouraged to live close to the church they attend, walking to the weekend service if possible? Etc. etc.
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Our church meets in the home so no additional fossil fuels are generated by our Sunday meetings.
Our Boy Scout roundtable meetings are at a United Methodist church that has all manner of posters hanging in every room and hallway with quasi-spiritual left-wing messages. Here in the wintertime, the heat is turned up so high that I’m usually baking to death in short sleeves. Meanwhile, at home we turn the thermostat way down and everyone wears a couple layers of long sleeves. But we all know that liberals are more interested in making people feel guilty about their “carbon footprint” than actually doing anything themselves.
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The picture looks uncannily like the church that I attend.
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Our church is building a new building after 30 years of moving from one place to another as we have grown; this is the first time we have built a building.
We are as green as we can be. Building completely green can be cost prohibative. So we had to weigh good-earth stewardship against financial stewardship (we are only building what we can already afford).
The city in which we are building, however, gives incentives to building green and assists with the most current research and lending green-educated engineers. Once the building is finished it will conserve much more than the old building by way of water, cooling, heating, etc. The landscape will be CA, drought resistent natives. And the church was situated in such a way as to not disturb California gnatcatcher habitat (gnatchachers do not adapt to new habitat well, if at all).
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This “green” stuff is mostly hogwash and should be ignored.
However, the church should be concerned about being energy efficient for multiple reasons. Ours isn’t, and the utility bills prove it. A lot of church buildings are old, built before high utility prices and need to be updated.
It was interesting to see that buildings of all types consume over 40% of the energy in this country. Why isn’t someone putting serious effort into reducing this number instead of trying to shoehorn large people into pipsqueak cars – since cars use less energy than buildings anyway??
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Don’t Christians think that this is an important issue? We are stewards of this earth that God gave us to take care of.
What kind of witness is it to our unsaved neighbors when we put up big buildings that use a lot of energy, pave acres with parking lots that cause runoff and don’t even think of using the land to help the community. (How many community gardens used to help feed the poor have you seen on church property?)
There is a lot more to caring for God’s earth than just green buildings. What about caring for creation by not using plastic or paper plates and plastic silverware at church functions? What about not using plastic bags to collect trash? How many families take more than one car to church functions (or even walk or bicycle when they can?
There is lots to be done here!
Check out http://www.careofcreation.org
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My church is white too.
Should we form a committee to make it more green?
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Has anyone seen that famous online quiz about environmentalism? They show you a bunch of different passages, and you have to guess if each one came from Al Gore’s Earth In The Balance, or the Unabomber Manifesto. I took it, and only got about half right.
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Here’s the link if you want to check it out.
http://snipurl.com/1ymxf
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I would add a sixth area of environmental concern in the development of church facilities: aesthetics. Are the building and grounds beautiful? Francis Schaeffer said, “One of the first fruits of that healing [as an application of Christ's redemption] is a new sense of beauty.”
Aesthetics doesn’t have to be expensive.
“I looked at the Christian community and saw ugliness.” — Francis Schaeffer, Pollution and the Death of Man
Grace and Peace
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#11: Don’t Christians think that this is an important issue? We are stewards of this earth that God gave us to take care of.
You’d think so, but every time an environmental issue comes up here, at least half of the Christians respond with mocking scorn at the idea of even caring about it.
Or as #7 does, they take a question intended to ask them to examine themselves and turn it outward into an unnecessary, irrelevant political attack.
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I agree with Steveg (#16) that conservative Christians often have a mocking attitude towards the environment, but I’m not sure that comment #7 was an example of that. Jayfromcleveland gave a possible environmentally-friendly alternative to having a church building, and pointed out that his alternative might be better for the environment than those of the liberal church where the Boy Scouts meet.
I’m glad to see churches, and Christians in general, who do more than give lip service to the idea of stewardship of the creation.
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