A prayer from Archbishop Desmond Tutu:

Creator God, you have called us to be keepers of your earth. Through greed we have established an economy that destroys the web of life. We have changed our climate and we drown in despair. Let oceans of justice flow. May we learn to sustain and renew the life of our Mother Earth. We stand with Indigenous people worldwide who are demanding restoration of their ancestral lands. We pray for our leaders, custodians of Mother Earth, that they may negotiate with wisdom and fairness. May they act with compassion and courage; and lead us into the path of justice for the sake of our children and our children's children. Amen.

- from All Creation Sings, p. 48
Food Shelves and Climate Change:
What is the Connection?
St Paul Area Synod Care of Creation Work Group Story

The primary mission of community Food Shelves is to feed the hungry and providing support for families and individuals in economic distress. But they also provide an important link in the dynamic struggle to combat climate change.

The US Department of Agriculture says that, in the United States, over 1/3 of all available food goes uneaten through loss or waste. Community or faith-based food shelves provide an avenue for rescuing edible food from commercial entities and redistributing it to people in need. But many of those food shelves provide an extra service that would otherwise not happen, programs like Mission Outpost at the Prince of Peace Lutheran Church (ELCA, St Paul Area Synod) in Burnsville, MN.

Mission Outpost, in collaboration with the Salvation Army operates several programs, including a food shelf, to meet the needs of the communities around Burnsville. They receive food items from local commercial businesses as well as from Second Harvest Heartland (a Minneapolis/St. Paul food bank) and individual donors. Some of those commercial businesses, such as the major grocery chains, may have some arrangement to send dated produce to local farmers for animal feed. But they otherwise do not have a mechanism for converting that organic waste. This would require separating the organics from any packaging and sending it to a commercial compost site. Therefore, much wasted food ends up in local landfill where it rots and produces unwanted methane gas, a potent environmental hazard. But here is the “special service” that the food shelf provides.

Through its contract with a local waste management provider, Mission Outpost’s unusable organics are collected and sent to one of two commercial compost sites in the South Metro area. There, the organics are converted to commercial grade compost and re-sold. Eric Elton, Director of the Prince of Peace Mission Outreach, provides some impressive figures. For the time period of June-September 2019 (a more “typical” quarter of activity in the pre-Covid times), Mission Outpost received 386,256 lbs of rescued food items. Of that amount, 251,857 lbs was distributed to families. An additional 50,000 lbs of non-perishables remained on the shelves for future distribution. The remainder, a full 84,399 lbs of unusable food was separated from its containers and collected as organics waste to be converted to compost. That compost is then used to help replenish soil health and contribute to future growth.

Wow!! Who would have known that the mission of feeding the people would also help the planet? Thank you, Mission Outpost and all other Food Shelf programs that provide a similar service.
Upcoming Events
Green Team Webinar
Minnesota Interfaith Power and Light
7:00-8:00 pm CT on Tuesday, August 3; Zoom

Other Side of the Hill Documentary Screening
Congregations Caring for the Earth
Tuesday, August 10
Hope Presbyterian Church, Virginia, MN
Noon – 1:30 p.m.

More info here.

Solar 101- Solar United Neighbors and the
Iron Range Solar Co-op
August 11th, Grand Rapids

More info here.

Here Comes the Sun: Range Solar Tour Summer Events-
Iron Range Partnership for Sustainability

More info here.


Minnesota Field School Climate Action Training
More info here.

EcoFaith Network Leadership Retreat
September 10-11
Camp Hiawatha
If you are interested, email co-chairpersons, Rev. Kristin Foster (revkristinfoster@gmail.com) or Rev. Dave Carlson (dcarlson001@luthersem.edu)
Planning a Season of Creation?
For those unable to attend the Workshop on the Season of Creation led by Pastors David Carlson and Mark Ditmanson on May 27, the recording is available here
Passcode: T&T4MF=# 

Share with your worship team, and get in touch with us with your questions and ideas!

EcoFaith in Worship and the Word
Preaching for the Whole Creation
Creation in Preaching

August 8th Tammy Walhof, Lutheran Advocacy MN

Readings: 1 Kings 19:4-8; Psalm 34:1-8 (8); Ephesians 4:25—5:2; John 6:35, 41-51

Jesus said, “I am the Bread of Life” Jesus refers to himself as God by using “I AM” language, and suggests that he came down from heaven (like manna). It happens right after the feeding of the 5000. Some listening are upset because they know him as Jesus of Nazareth, son of Joseph and Mary. They struggle to understand Jesus as God the Son, sent by God the Father, who renews and sustains through God, the Holy Spirit. Jesus represents and is God, unchanging in nature and always present, yet actively concerned about every tiny thing that happens throughout all creation. Jesus was, is, and will be the healer of broken relationships, whether between us and God, among people, within (and between) communities, and among all of creation. Jesus provides enough sustenance for the well-being and joy of all that God created. But he doesn’t just provide sustenance, he is sustenance, and by repairing and restoring relationships allows the whole creation to live into the full, abundant life.

Read the whole reflection here.

August 15th Pastor John Dietz

Today we sing with Mary of her joy and excitement of bearing God’s eternal Word into the world. And in her song, Mary re-invites us to include in our own personal mission of “bearing God’s creative and redeeming word to all the world” (ELW page 231) the care for all creation. We might even come to see this as an extension of Mary’s work as God-bearer/ Theotokos, as one who brings Christ into the realities and challenges of our world, including, and especially, the real challenge of caring for our common home. 


Read the whole reflection here.

August 22nd Pastor David Carlson

Joshua’s question is akin to what is asked of us when we affirm our baptism:
“You have made public profession of your faith,” we say in that liturgy. “Do you intend
to continue in the covenant God made with you in Holy Baptism: to live among God’s
faithful people, to hear his Word and share in his supper, to proclaim the good news of
God in Christ through word and deed, to serve all people, following the example of our
Lord Jesus, and to strive for justice and peace in all the earth?” The response of each
person affirming baptism is, “I do, and I ask God to help and guide me.” Justice and
peace in all the earth – cultivating right relationships not only among people but also
within the web of creation – that our baptismal calling is lived out in, with, and for this
wide scope of all the earth is crucially important to emphasize today. It’s also a tall order,
but one in which we are assured of God’s help and guidance.

Read the whole reflection here.

Preface to a three Sunday series by John Sippola
(August 29th, September 5th & 12th)

But, note how much of Jesus; most memorable ministry occurs in the great outdoor cathedral: how the out of doors serves to build a more diverse and inclusive community, affords safe space for confidential one on ones and small group gatherings, and how hillsides provide ample space for crowds to gather, listen to Jesus teach, eat together, connect, and converse!

Read the preface here.

August 29th Pastor John Sippola

We begin with Eastern Orthodox theology’s unusual description of the Eucharist as the medicine of eternal life (pharmakώn tώn aeώn). Indigenous theology starts with the assumption that Creator breathed Eternity in human hearts from the beginning. And not only human hearts, but in other elements of nature!

Read the whole reflection here.


***Thank you again to Dianne Loufman for her contribution last month for July 18th. Note there was a spelling error in her name.***

This Month's Green Tips


Feel free to use these striking Green Tips created by two Synod members for your bulletins and general knowledge! These are meant to inspire earthkeeping action!

This month, Laura Raedeke green tips focus on food.

Here are Laura Raedeke's Green Tips Lutheran Church of the Cross in Nisswa and here are Steve Spigarelli's Green Tips from First Lutheran in Aitkin.

Connections with Creation
August-September 2021

August 15 – Lectionary 20/ Pentecost 12
Christ used the metaphors of eating his flesh and drinking his blood to emphasize that his followers must take on his life. Paul recalled the bread and wine Jesus shared with his disciples before his death, and spoke to members of the young Christian church about the Eucharist (1 Corinthians 11:23-26). In this sacrament, we believe that Christ’s healing presence is manifested in the natural elements of the meal, the bread and wine. The elements are unchanged, but they convey Christ to us and exemplify God’s presence in all things. Martin Luther wrote: “God is substantially present everywhere, in and through all creatures, in all parts and places, so that the world is full of God and He fills all” (LW 37:59). How does receiving these earthly elements with all your senses connect you not only to God and the Christian community but also to creation “in all parts and places”?

Read all of the Connections with Creation here.

Book Review
The Hours of the Universe
by Ilia Delio

Ilia Delio is a Franciscan Sister of Washington, D.C. and teaches at Villanova University. Having founded the Center for Christogenesis, it signals that she has been greatly influenced by the writings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, whose works I have struggled with over the years. Ilia has cleared up much of de Chardin’s theories for me, primarily in the bringing together the concept of evolution and religious thought.

Love is a theme throught Ilia’s writing, because it is the essence of the living God. She writes: “Whether or not sin ever existed, Christ would have come, because Christ is first in God’s intention to love. And in order for Christ to come there must be humans, and for humans to exist there must be a creation; hence, Christ is first in God’s will to love and thus to create. The reason for Jesus Christ is not sin but the fullness of love.”  

I am also including recommendation to get recent issue of the magazine, YES, spring of 2021 that is dedicated to the environment, and includes an article of Hemp farming by Winona LaDuke, well known by many in these parts.


Read the whole book review here.






This book review is by John Hanson, a retired pastor living on Turtle Lake, north of Grand Rapids, with his wife, Linda. He is a member of the NE MN Synod EcoFaith Leadership Team.
Read. Watch. Listen. Share!

Summer Action Items from the Sierra Club
Check out Inside Climate News for updated climate news
Star Tribune 7/22/21 Are the Drought’s Effects on Gooseberry Falls a Sign of Bigger Problems for North Shore Waterways? 
Podcast - Sunday Read – Engine Number One: Little Hedge Fund Taking Down Big Oil
Hemp Farming - Yes! Magazine about Winona Laduke's hemp farm

In Case You Missed These EcoFaith Events...

Moments of Arising video recordings
Season of Creation Workshop recording of the event

EcoFaith Summit
Here is the link for the full video recording of the EcoFaith Summit:
Here is a link to the playlist for all the pieces from the Summit:
Here is a description of the speakers.

Click here to see previous
Green Blades Rising newsletters

The EcoFaith Network of Northeastern MN is a growing network of ELCA Lutheran congregations and their members in northeastern Minnesota with a mission to live out God's call to be stewards of the earth for the sake of the whole creation. Through social media, seminars, resources on current environmental justice issues, project micro-grants and active inter-and intra- congregational conversations, the EcoFaith Network encourages grassroots creation care actions among the Synod’s 133 congregations and leadership within their communities.