Director of Community Outreach for Lutheran Congregational Services, a service of Liberty Lutheran, Julia Menzo, recently attended the Climate Reality Project training to confront the challenges of climate change. In this excerpt of her essay that was previously published on the ELCA’s blog, she writes about the importance of this event and her gratitude for having the opportunity to attend on behalf of the church. Furthermore, she expresses how this training reminded her that amidst all challenges, there will always be hope and faith. Written below are her thoughts after attending the Climate Reality Project training in Minneapolis, Minnesota on August 2-4, 2019.

Climate Reality Project training in Minneapolis

LDR Facilitator, Julia Menzo, Attends Climate Reality Project

It’s only been in the last five years or so that the disaster response community has started to talk about climate change in the daily context of our work. Here in the Northeastern part of the US, according to the 2018 National Climate Assessment, the amount of rain falling in the heaviest 1% of storms has increased 71% from 1958 to 2012.

Julia at The Climate Reality Project training in Minneapolis

In my daily life, this means a lot of work around flash flood preparedness and response. It means community discussions about the few options available to low-income communities in flood-prone areas. It means talking about upstream development and the impact on communities downstream. It should also mean talking about the impact of human activity on climate, which the scientific community overwhelmingly agrees exists.

Given our shared interest in climate change, vulnerable people, and the church, Lutheran Advocacy Ministry Director in Pennsylvania, Tracey DePasquale, suggested the Climate Reality Project training to me. I looked up the training goals and agenda. I discovered that The Climate Reality Project was founded by Vice President Al Gore, shortly after he wrote the screenplay for the film An Inconvenient Truth in 2006.

While the training looked robust, I was a little concerned that there would be political undertones. But just a few days after Tracey approached me, my daughter, a high school sophomore, came home fired up about this old film they watched in social studies, An Inconvenient Truth, and that’s when I decided to attend. Like many at the training, I am motivated by our obligation and caring for my own and all children in generations to come.

The Climate Reality Project training provided me with the latest information on climate change, access to a new network of advocates, and most importantly provided a context to consider the critical role of the church in the face of climate change.

The heart of the training was around learning how to utilize the most up to date slides and information from An Inconvenient Truth in the context of our own lives. The training challenged us to explore how to relate those slides to issues related to justice, indigenous rights, belief systems, spirituality, religion, economic development, and more.

Another key component of the training was the experience of identifying and composing our own climate story. It was amazing to me that a room of 1,200 people could be silent as we were guided through the story writing process by well thought out prompts.

Those completing the training leave with access to a global network of partners in this work, with their own stories to tell, and with the challenge to participate or lead ten related outreach activities over the next year. Outreach activities can include writing letters to the editor, hosting community forums, participating in local environmental fairs, and more.

When you support Lutheran Disaster Response, a ministry of Lutheran Congregational Services, you help vulnerable populations build strength and resiliency after surviving the impacts of disastrous weather. Your generosity brings hope and security to those recovering through challenging times. Make your gift today and visit LDR’s Giving Page by clicking here.

Working for a Lutheran Social Ministry Organization, and also being a part of the ELCA’s Lutheran Disaster Response program, and being a Christian who happens to be Lutheran, the training was really helpful to me in these ways:

  • Having access to tools to share with the Lutheran Disaster Response network for continued efforts related to climate change and disaster
  • Being welcomed into a global network of people facing a variety of issues related to climate change, and the opportunity to help each other problem solve
  • Discovering new partners in the church, such as leadership from Interfaith Power and Light, who have developed best practices for having discussions around climate change with church groups
  • Challenging myself to host two carbon-neutral events this next year

What was most valuable to me coming out of the training was hope. Hope that there are people using creativity and innovation to solve problems related to global emissions; hope in the fact that young people see the future as theirs and calling for bold policy action, and hope that there is still time to act on the information that has been gathered the past half-century.

And, in the power and truth of the Resurrection, I was reminded at the event that there is hope and love to face any challenge. Through that lens, the church must be a leader in spirit, action, and partnership as we confront the challenges of climate change.

I am grateful for having had the opportunity to attend this training on behalf of the church.

This essay was originally published at ELCA.org. To read the full article on their website click here.

Discover how Lutheran Congregational Services and Lutheran Disaster Response support vulnerable populations and rebuild communities in the wake of disaster, click here to visit their website.