The
Church of the Brethren’s Christian Citizenship Seminar (CCS) in 2012
will consider carbon footprints and large-scale responses to elevated
levels of carbon in the atmosphere, such as carbon labeling. The event
for high school youth and adult advisors takes place April 14-19 in New
York City and Washington, D.C.
Participants will focus on how individuals and the country might
respond to the high level of carbon in today’s atmosphere. Rather than
debate global warming, participants will explore questions like "How
much carbon do everyday tasks, such as driving to school or eating a
banana, put into the atmosphere?" "What is our country’s carbon
footprint?" "How does that footprint compare to other developed
countries?" "Are there actions we can encourage our government to
implement?"
As always, after a number of educational sessions, CCS participants
will visit their legislators to discuss what they have learned and what
changes they would like to see in government policy as a result.
Online registration opens at www.brethren.org
on Dec. 1. Registration is limited to the first 100 participants.
Churches sending over four youth are required to send at least one adult
advisor to insure an adequate number of adults. Cost is $375, which
includes lodging for five nights, dinner on the opening evening of the
seminar, and transportation from New York to Washington. Each
participant should bring additional money for meals, sightseeing,
personal expenses, and a few subway or taxi fares.
“Our task is nothing less than to join God in preserving, renewing,
and fulfilling the creation. It is to relate to nature in ways that
sustain life on the planet, provide for the essential material and
physical needs of all humankind, and increase justice and wellbeing for
all life in a peaceful world” (from the “Creation: Called to Care”
statement approved by the Church of the Brethren Annual Conference in
1991).
Visit www.brethren.org/ccs for more information, to download a flyer, or to register.
-- Carol Fike and Becky Ullom of the Youth and Young Adult Ministry provided this report.
Source:11/16/2011 Newsline
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