Cool Congregation: Congregation Beth HaTephila
Congratulations to Congregation Beth HaTephila in Asheville, North Carolina, our newest Cool Congregation! Nominated by Richard Fireman, the Public Policy Coordinator of North Carolina IPL, Beth HaTephila is being honored for its comprehensive and longstanding commitment to creation care.
The members of Congregation Beth HaTephila, a Reform congregation in the mountains of Western North Carolina, have an understanding of the call to care for creation that is rooted deeply within the Jewish tradition. Idelle Packer, a member of Beth HaTephila’s Social Justice Committee, explains that for Jews, “ the environmental crisis is a religious challenge.” For example, the tenants of tikkun olam, a Hebrew phrase that means, “repairing the world,” include a responsibility to take care of the earth. Other Jewish values stress the danger of waste and the importance of preserving what we have been given for future generations.
While the congregation has always been concerned with creation care, it was only recently that this issue became the main concern of the Social Justice Committee at Beth HaTephila. Before, the committee was working on issues ranging from conflict in Darfur to economic justice, but they began to wonder how effectively they engaged members of their community. So the committee took the advice of the Religious Action Center, the social justice arm of Reform Judaism, and decided to refine their approach by building an organizational structure based upon the interests of their congregants.
Six months later, the members of the Social Justice Committee had conducted a total of 55 one-on-one interviews with a diverse selection of the congregation’s members. The results from these interviews indicated that members of the congregation not only share a concern for the environment; they also share a common expertise on the topic that makes creation care an ideal focus for the congregation.
In response to these results, the Social Justice Committee at Beth HaTephila formulated a new action plan called “Preserving Our Planet.” The committee formed working groups that began planning around what developed into the four foci of the initiative: Energy, Recycling, Transportation, and Agriculture. Each working group approaches creation care from a unique angle, which allows Beth HaTephila to address the issue comprehensively. For example, the agriculture committee connects congregants to a Community Supported Agriculture program that allows congregants to purchase produce from local farmers.
Congratulations again to the members of Congregation Beth HaTephila and the Social Justice Committee, whose comprehensive Preserving Our Planet initiative has earned Congregation Beth HaTephila the title of a Cool Congregation!
Cool Congregations are faith communities recognized by the national Interfaith Power & Light campaign for their outstanding work toward reducing their carbon footprint and promoting creation care.
Reclaiming Creation
PoweringaNation.org has a great section called “Reclaiming Creation,” featuring some Interfaith Power & Light leaders. The article “Religion rejuvenates environmentalism” by Courtney Woo offers an outstanding overview of what faith groups are doing around the country to protect Creation, and features a video with North Carolina IPL’s Richard Fireman and Greater Washington IPL’s Allison Fisher.
There is also a series of short segments with faith leaders, and one of them features Tim Darst from Kentucky IPL.
Click on the video images to watch them over at Powering a Nation.
News Coverage of Pullen Memorial Baptist Church and Jill Rios of NC IPL
Click on the image to watch the video
Pullen Memorial Baptist Church Goes Green
Tuesday, the Rev. Canon Sally Bingham honored Pullen Memorial Baptist Church in Raleigh, NC for green improvements. The church recently completed a state-of-the-art green addition, which includes a geothermal pump for heating and cooling.
Here are some photos from the event:

Revs. Sally Bingham, Nancy Petty, and Jack McKinney in front of the new green building addition
Web Wednesday

The latest IPL news from around the web this week:
- A coal plant is abandoned because of pressure from advocacy organizations including Iowa IPL. Another One Bites the Dust: Coal Victory in Iowa!
- NC IPL and the Rev. Canon Sally Bingham honor Pullen Memorial Baptist Church for going green. Raleigh Church Wins Award For Going Green
DC North Carolina Rhode Island Web Wednesday: Allison Fisher coal Duke Energy Howie Brown sally bingham
by Chad Crawford
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Web Wednesday
IPL links:
- Allison Fisher, Greater Washington IPL: Faith-Based and Secular Groups Join Forces to Fight Big Coal in Virginia
- Jill Rios, NC IPL: video of press statement in opposition to Duke Energy’s proposed expansion of a coal plant in Rutherford County.
- Howie Brown, RI IPL and Sally Bingham, The Regeneration Project: “Faith Lights Our Way Toward a Sustainable Future” – annual interfaith conference on climate change






