Current:Home > ContactYoung Evangelicals fight climate change from inside the church: "We can solve this crisis in multiple ways" -Secure Growth Solutions
Young Evangelicals fight climate change from inside the church: "We can solve this crisis in multiple ways"
View
Date:2025-04-14 11:32:26
Ahead of September's U.N. General Assembly in New York City, thousands of youth activists flooded the streets of Manhattan, calling for the end of the use of fossil fuels. Among them was Elsa Barron, 24, a young Evangelical Christian looking to make change in her community.
Barron, a climate research fellow at the Center for Climate and Security, a non-partisan institute of the Council on Strategic Risks, told CBS News that she is hoping to change the minds of those in her church who don't believe in climate change. A Pew Research Center poll from 2022 found that 53% of Americans say human activity is responsible for a warming planet, but only 32% of Evangelical Christians agree. That's the lowest amount of support from any of the religious groups surveyed, 45% of Christians said that human activity is responsible for a warming planet, and 50% of Catholics said the same. In general, Evangelical Christians are the most skeptical religious group when it comes to climate change.
"There's a lot of emphasis on sort of God's divine care for the world and his good plan for the world," Barron told CBS News. "But some people kind of take that and say ... 'If you think the world is at risk, then maybe you don't have enough trust or faith in God.'"
Barron tries to speak to her community the best way she knows how: by quoting from the Bible. With passages like Genesis 2:15, which says that "the Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to cultivate and keep it," she hopes to encourage peers in the church to look seriously at the impacts of climate change.
"What does loving our neighbors really look like in a world where the sorts of decisions are directly impacting people's ability to live in their homes across the world, or to manage their crops or have food or water to drink?" Barron said.
Barron isn't the only Evangelical Christian trying to make a difference. In November 2022, Galen Carey, the vice president of government relations at the National Association of Evangelicals, issued a sweeping report urging members to help curb or mitigate climate change on a biblical basis. The Evangelical skepticism around climate change, Curry said, started when the issue became politicized. In the 1970s, Evangelical Christians were early leaders in raising concerns about environmental degradation, but in the 1990s, political conservatives began to emphasize economic growth over environmental concerns by casting doubt on climate science.
"Well, very sadly, this whole issue has become politicized in an unhelpful way," Curry said. "And they say, 'Oh, well, if I am conservative then, or if I'm Republican, or whatever, then I must be opposed to this stuff.' ... I think that's unfortunately where the issue is wound up for a lot of people. But we still have the Bible. It hasn't changed. And so we continue to call people back to that."
Barron said she can understand the skepticism: It's something she once experienced. Growing up in Wheaton, Illinois, where Evangelical Christianity is firmly rooted, she said she was known as the "Creation Girl" for her strongly held beliefs and literal interpretation of the Bible. However, she was "very passionate" about science, and soon began to question some of her beliefs about evolution.
"I was starting to really see the evidence behind things like evolution or even climate change," said Barron, who now lives in Washington, D.C. to work at the Center for Climate and Security. "It was definitely a moment of questioning for me, in crisis of whether I could still hold on to my faith at all. ... Do I stay or do I go, because I didn't know if I should go find a faith community that was more in line with my values. That was very much a turning point for me trying to dig in my heels and really have these tough conversations that I hope will inspire the kind of change we need."
Barron said that her beliefs and attempts to change the church's attitudes from the inside have caused some friction with peers and loved ones, including her own family. While her father recognizes a responsibility to care for the planet, he has doubts about the cause of extreme weather. However, she said she just tries to "keep opening spaces for conversation to happen" and work to meet those who doubt her message with compassion and kindness.
"We can solve this crisis in multiple ways," she said.
- In:
- Climate Change
- Religion
- Evangelicals
Kerry Breen is a news editor and reporter for CBS News. Her reporting focuses on current events, breaking news and substance use.
veryGood! (1433)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Shohei Ohtani 50/50 home run ball headed to auction. How much will it be sold for?
- Tropical Weather Latest: Hurricane Helene is upgraded to Category 2 as it heads toward Florida
- Browns QB Deshaun Watson won't ask for designed runs: 'I'm not a running back'
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- NASA, Boeing and Coast Guard representatives to testify about implosion of Titan submersible
- Utah Supreme Court to decide viability of a ballot question deemed ‘counterfactual’ by lower court
- Inside Hoda Kotb's Private World: Her Amazing Journey to Motherhood
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Kelsey Grammer's Frasier, Peri Gilpin's Roz are back together, maybe until the end
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Judge orders a stop to referendum in Georgia slave descendants’ zoning battle with county officials
- California fire agency employee charged with arson spent months as inmate firefighter
- Garland says officers’ torture of 2 Black men was betrayal of community they swore to protect
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Companies back away from Oregon floating offshore wind project as opposition grows
- Catherine Zeta-Jones Bares All in Nude Photo for Michael Douglas’ Birthday
- 5 women, 1 man shot during Los Angeles drive-by shooting; 3 suspects at large
Recommendation
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Northern lights forecast: Aurora borealis may appear in multiple US states, NOAA says
Police in small Mississippi city discriminate against Black residents, Justice Department finds
Jon and Kate Gosselin's Son Collin Gosselin's College Plans Revealed
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Hurricane Helene threatens ‘unsurvivable’ storm surge and vast inland damage, forecasters say
Police in small Mississippi city discriminate against Black residents, Justice Department finds
Man charged with killing 13-year-old Detroit girl whose body remains missing