NASHVILLE, Tenn. (ABP) — A total of 140 moderate Baptist leaders signed a June 18 letter urging passage of a comprehensive energy bill that includes caps on emissions linked to global warming.
Drafted by the Baptist Center for Ethics, a Cooperative Baptist Fellowship partner organization, the letter asks members of Congress to strengthen and pass “The American Clean Energy and Security Act,” expected to make its way through Congress in coming weeks.
National, regional and local Baptist church leaders from 26 states and the District of Columbia said the bill, sponsored by Reps. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Edward Markey (D-Mass.), “advances practically the moral demands to care for the Earth and its poorest inhabitants.”
The 932-page act (H.R. 2454), also called the Waxman-Markey bill, is designed to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions across the economy 17 percent by 2020.
Signers of the Baptist letter said they wished the legislation provided more funding for marginalized people most at risk because of — and least responsible for — climate change, but they are “determined that the tyranny of moral perfectionism will not block the urgency of moral realism.”
National Baptist leaders signing the June 18 letter included Daniel Vestal, executive coordinator of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship; CBF moderator Jack Glasgow; Roy Medley, general secretary of the American Baptist Churches USA; William Shaw, president of the National Baptist Convention USA, Inc.; and David Goatley, executive secretary-treasurer of the Lott Carey Baptist Foreign Mission Convention.
State CBF leaders in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina also signed the letter. So did Molly Marshall, president of Central Baptist Theological Seminary in Shawnee, Kan.; Jim Hill, executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Missouri; and Bruce Prescott, executive director of Mainstream Oklahoma Baptists.