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CREATION JUSTICE MINISTRIES
  • About
    • Join Our Email List!
    • Mission
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Members and Partners
    • Impact Report
  • Action
    • Be a Creation Justice Advocate
    • Protect Oak Flat
    • Protect NHTSA CAFE Standards
    • Oppose Drilling!
    • Urge the Administration to Protect the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program
    • Protect Marine Sanctuaries
    • Protect Public Lands
  • Programs
    • Faithful Resilience >
      • Participatory Education in Faith Communities for Climate Resilience
    • Tree Equity >
      • Austin, TX Tree Equity
      • Baltimore, MD Tree Equity
      • Durham, NC Tree Equity
      • Hampton Roads, VA Tree Equity
    • Transformative Leadership Program
    • Thriving Earth
    • EcoPreacher Cohort >
      • Sermon Coaching Groups
    • One Home, One Future
    • Events >
      • Advocacy 101 Webinar
      • Transformative Leadership for Effective Climate Action in Christian Communities
  • Donate
    • Year-End Giving
    • Monthly Giving
  • Resources
    • Resource Hub
    • EcoPreacher Resource Hub
    • Green Lectionary Podcast
    • Seasonal Resources >
      • Lent
      • Season of Creation
      • Advent
    • Truth and Healing
    • The Power of God
    • Earth Day Resources
    • 52 Ways to Care for Creation 2026
    • Services
  • Blog
  • Creation Justice Store
    • Power of God
    • Plastic Jesus: Real Faith in a Synthetic World
    • Truth, Healing and Repair: ​A Resource for Churches on Environmental Justice with Indigenous Peoples
    • (Digital) Power of God: From Extractive Theology to Transformative Faith
    • (Digital) Plastic Jesus: Real Faith in a Synthetic World
    • (Digital) Truth, Healing and Repair: ​A Resource for Churches on Environmental Justice with Indigenous Peoples
    • (Digital) Faithful Resilience: The Six-Part Guide to Building Spiritual, Physical, and Social Climate Resilience

When God Does a New Thing: A New Year Reflection

12/29/2025

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Do not remember the former things
    or consider the things of old.
I am about to do a new thing;
    now it springs forth; do you not perceive it?
I will make a way in the wilderness
    and rivers in the desert
The wild animals will honor me,
    the jackals and the ostriches,
for I give water in the wilderness,
    rivers in the desert,
to give drink to my chosen people,
    the people whom I formed for myself
so that they might declare my praise.
Isaiah 43:18-21
Isn’t it telling that when the prophet declares that God is up to something new, it is signified by a healing in the ecology, a restoration of the wildlife, and an opportunity for God’s people to be a part of the new flourishing of Creation? The “new” is never just for humanity. It’s for all of Creation to rejoice in the falling away of the systems of brokenness and abuse and to seek a bold, hopeful future. 
 
A new year doesn’t solve everything. It doesn’t right all of the wrongs of the 365 days that preceded it. It doesn’t undo the damages done nor bring back the lives lost. A new year doesn’t erase the feelings of fear, anger, hopelessness, and despair that we just lived through. It doesn’t mend the heartbreak. It doesn’t restore the devastation. That would be asking too much of a turn of the calendar. 
 
Yet a new year is filled with potential. It is ripe with opportunity. A new year brings with it the hope that this one will be better, that this one will be more just and more loving.
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 A new year asks us to reflect on what we want to leave behind and what we’d like to see emerge. Granted, we won’t be able to leave it all behind, not at first. Not on day one. But we can step into this new year in the hopes that the good news will outweigh the bad. After all, we are people of good news! 
 
There’s nothing magical that happens when we move from December 31st to January 1st. But we can approach this as a year as a time when maybe God will do a new thing.

​Because if we believe that God is doing a new thing, then we’ll live in a new way and find ourselves right in the middle of the new thing that God is doing. 
​
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​Derrick Weston
​Director of Theological Education & Formation
Creation Justice Ministries

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What the Trees Teach Us at Christmas: A Christmas Reflection

12/19/2025

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The Christmas season is a time when we are close to trees. 

This feels a bit paradoxical, however, because the reason that there may be a tree in our living rooms, whether the tree is natural or artificial, is that it had to be chopped down. And yet it's the time of the year when nature is close to us, because we’ve drawn near to this tree by bringing it inside our house. Not for shade. Not for lumber. But because this tree has become a spiritual symbol for us in the Christmas season of a saviour who dwelled and dwells with us. 

This year, I’ve been thinking about those other trees that aren’t in our living rooms and have been chopped down for more utilitarian reasons. I’ve been thinking about how 90% of forest in the United States was chopped down between the 17th and 20th centuries–a loss we may never replace and may never ecologically and spiritually recover from. 

Even though it’s the heart of winter, I’m thinking about the trees that provide shade in the summer, and the unshaded places longing for trees that have been chopped down. I’m thinking of concrete-lined neighborhoods where asthma rates are high and tree canopy is low and the nearest tree is indeed in the living room. 
A shoot will come up from the stump of Jesse; from his roots a Branch will bear fruit. ~ Isaiah 11:1
The prophecy in Isaiah 11 illustrates a tree that has been chopped down, but despite this apparent destruction, life would one day begin to emerge. 

A small shoot would come out of this lineage and legacy that is seemingly in shambles, and from these same roots, a branch would emerge, likely providing shade, as well as fruit. 

In 2025, there has been a lot of destruction to bear witness and attend to. ​

Christmas is a reminder that God is familiar and particularly adept with bringing forth life and hope out of destruction.
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And like our trees, paradoxically chopped down by our own hands, God brings forth hope through an embodied closeness to us, despite the ways we’ve collectively missed the mark.
For we know that the whole creation groans and suffers the pains of childbirth together until now. ~ Romans 8:22
Christmas is a celebration of the birth of a baby who personified a young shoot emerging out of a felled tree. 

Perhaps thousands of years before major deforestation would occur, Christ’s birth is about being a tree with us, God with us, a destroyed forest with us. Using our ecological imaginations, we might find Jesus in solidarity with the felled trees, each felled tree a symbol of His eventual crucifixion.  And even more so we find Jesus in solidarity with the children born into unshaded neighborhoods–a shoot of hope growing out of areas with stumps. 

The prophecy reminds us that liberation begins with small sprouts. Jesus did not incarnate as a 33-year-old. Likewise, our work for the liberation of God’s planet and people begins with small, hopeful actions. We can’t re-plant all that’s been lost in one day, but we can start by planting a tree. Or by seeding hope. 

May the eternal story of new life emerging out of dead ends give us hope, strength, and resilience for the work ahead.
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Kat Gonzales
Faithful Resilience Program Director
Creation Justice Ministries



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Blue Christmas: What the Blake Plateau teaches us about Advent

12/9/2025

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Off the coast of Georgia and South Carolina is an ecological treasure trove found in a region called the Blake Plateau. This extraordinary sacred ecosystem is home to the world's largest deep-sea coral reef habitat, where floating Sargassum seaweed meadows nurture colossal sperm whales, bluefin tuna, whale sharks, threatened loggerhead sea turtles, rare seabirds, and thousands of other species. 
When we think of coral reefs and the life they hold, it’s natural and easy to imagine bright colors and sunlight weaving through the water. What is fascinating about the Blake Plateau is how life is formed in complete darkness. The reef-like structures in the Blake Plateau are mainly made up of a deep-sea coral named Lophelia, which is a ghostly white. The Lophelia coral “mounds” grow in complete darkness over tens of thousands of years, supporting a diverse community of wildlife, including close to 100 species of fish.
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In addition to providing an important habitat for fish and marine life, the deepsea corals on the Blake Plateau consume organic matter that rains down from the ocean’s surface and recycle it into essential nutrients for the entire ecosystem. As the Gulf Stream rolls over the plateau, it pushes these nutrients back up to the surface, supporting the ocean’s wildlife. These nutrients ultimately sustain the region’s fisheries, and all of us who rely on them. 

As the Blake Plateau reminds us of the beauty of the darkness, the Season of Advent invites us to sit with the darkness, creating space for quiet and centering. Like the deep sea coral offers life giving nutrients across the Ocean, Advent offers hope and reignites our imagination of healing and restoration for all of Creation. This Advent, may we embrace this Season of darkness to sustain our collective work together.
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Madison Mayhew
Policy and Advocacy Manager
Creation Justice Ministries

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Celebrating World Fisheries Day: Honoring the Life of Our Oceans

12/5/2025

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World Fisheries Day is celebrated annually on November 21 and is designed to raise awareness about the importance of healthy aquatic ecosystems and the sustainable management of fisheries.  Millions of people depend on healthy and sustainable marine ecosystems to provide food for their survival and livelihood.  It is equally important that fish populations are protected from overfishing and allowed to thrive.  As we celebrate the protection and thriving of fisheries, we can also give thanks and feel gratitude for this amazing planet and all the life that it supports. 
 
As we recognize and feel the interconnectedness between people and all living things, such as the world’s fisheries, we expand the Body of Christ to encompass all of the natural world, not just humans.  We see how each ecosystem, when it is working in balance, sustains life and supports neighboring ecosystems.  It is humbling to slow down enough to think how amazing this planet is and how the Earth provides everything we need to survive and thrive.  And not just for humanity but for all of life from the microscopic organisms to the Blue Whales.  The Earth is truly amazing and life giving.
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Harbor Christian Church has established a program called Living Coast Ministry (formerly Blue Theology) that focuses on the interconnection between the natural marine world and the divine.  Our Living Coast Theologians enjoy a week-long summer residential program at Harbor Christian Church in Newport Beach, California.  Harbor is located just across the street from the Upper Newport Back Bay.  Being located in coastal Southern California gives us access to many wild places that most people never have the opportunity to experience.  Living Coast Ministry at Harbor supports participants in visiting these natural wonders while helping to develop an ecological spirituality.
 
What do we mean by ecological spirituality? Throughout the week, each group enjoys hands-on experiences that deeply connect them to the surrounding ocean and shoreline ecology. Each evening participants are led in discussions, sacred experiences and activities that support them in crafting their unique ecological lens on spirituality. In other words, Living Coast Ministry brings together real world experience and the sacred, allowing participants to ask new questions of their faith and to open to more expansive experiences of the divine. ​
 
We love the opportunity to host youth groups and their chaperones from all over the country.  To date we have hosted groups from Minnesota, Colorado, Maryland, Kentucky as well as local groups from Southern California. Our Living Coast Ministry team would love to hear from and potentially host you and your group. 
 
Click here for more information on Living Coast Ministry in Newport Beach.​
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Ryan Cullumber
Associate Pastor
Harbor Christian Church

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The Holy Work Happening Underground: How Advent Teaches Us to Prepare in Stillness

12/5/2025

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Advent is a season that teaches us how to live in the tension between what is and what could be. It invites us into the quiet, expectant posture of creation itself: the way the earth grows still while life below the surface gathers strength for renewal.
​

In winter, the mycelial networks beneath the forest floor quietly expand. The earthworms move deeper into the soil, slowing their metabolism. The dormant seeds of wildflowers lie in wait, needing the cold to prepare them for growth. None of this looks dramatic. But it is holy work, the slow, faithful preparation that allows life to rise again.

This year, I’ve been holding close the truth that Advent offers: stillness does not mean stagnation. Waiting is not the absence of work. Hope is not naïve; it is preparatory.
Stillness does not mean stagnation. Waiting is not the absence of work. Hope is not naïve; it is preparatory.
And when I look at the movement for creation justice, I see that same holy, subterranean work happening all around us.
​

In a year when protections for God’s creation were rolled back and environmental harms intensified, our community did not retreat. Instead, it rooted itself.

Beneath the headlines, beneath the noise, something powerful has been stirring.


Here at Creation Justice Ministries, we have felt that stirring in so many ways:
  • In public witness, as Christians gathered in Washington, D.C., and across the country to pray, lament, and proclaim peace with God’s creation.
  • In pulpits and classrooms, where more than 250 faith leaders were trained through EcoPreacher and Creation Justice Coaches to preach hope and courage in a climate-changed world.
  • In congregations, where resources like Power of God and Truth, Healing, and Repair helped communities deepen their discipleship and root themselves in restorative practice.
  • In resilience work, where local churches in Baltimore, Austin, Orlando, and so many other places work toward planting trees, restoring ecosystems, and strengthening their capacity to care for one another.
  • In advocacy, as thousands of Christians spoke up to defend clean air, protect marine sanctuaries, and uphold the laws that safeguard God’s creation.​
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Season of Creation Public Witness (Washington, DC)
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Christian Leaders for Creation Justice Retreat (June 2025)
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Avery post preaching at New Hope Camp for Earth Sabbath
None of this makes the nightly news. But like the root systems beneath frozen soil, it is strengthening us for what is coming. It is preparing us to meet the world’s pain with the light of Christ, a light Advent promises is already on its way.

So I find myself asking this Advent:
What strength is God stirring in us now?
What quiet preparation is happening in our congregations, in our communities, in the corners of our own hearts?


My prayer is that we enter this season with the humility of creation, willing to rest, willing to listen, and willing to be renewed so that we can rise with hope into the year ahead.

Below you’ll find ways to take action this month. May each step be part of the strength we are stirring up together.
With the hope of peace on earth for all creation,
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​Avery Davis Lamb

Executive Director
Creation Justice Ministries

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Interior Department Proposes Plan to Wreck America’s Coasts with Offshore Drilling

12/2/2025

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Draft proposal of five-year offshore plan opens nearly all U.S. waters to drilling

​Press Release Date: November 20, 2025
Location: Washington, D.C.
Contact: Cory Gunkel, Megan Jordan | email: [email protected], [email protected] | tel: Cory Gunkel, 202.868.4061

Today, the Trump administration released a draft of its new offshore drilling plan for the next five years, which proposes opening the coast of California to oil and gas leasing. The plan also opens a portion of the eastern Gulf of Mexico, and vast areas off Alaska, to offshore leasing.

The plan proposes six offshore lease sales in California between 2027 and 2030. There have been no new leases issued in federal waters off California since the mid-1980s. The leasing proposal would also allow offshore drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, including Florida, outside of a 100-mile “buffer.” The Arctic Ocean would also see lease sales in the draft plan. Almost a decade ago, oil companies abandoned leases they owned in the Arctic Ocean following a series of mishaps, fines, government investigations, and, most famously, the grounding of the drill rig Kulluk.

The National Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program, also known as the Five-Year Plan, determines where the federal government will sell leases for offshore drilling from 2026-2031. The proposed draft plan would allow drilling across more than 1 billion acres of U.S. federal waters, including protected areas.

Oceana Campaign Director Joseph Gordon released the following statement condemning the new proposal:
​
“This draft plan is an oil spill nightmare! The last thing America needs now is a massive expansion of offshore drilling that could shut down our shores with catastrophic oil spills. Our coastal communities, and their multi-billion-dollar economies, rely on healthy oceans to survive. The Atlantic Coast will thankfully be spared, but this dangerous proposal to still sell off millions of acres of our oceans is a betrayal of the bipartisan voices — including U.S. lawmakers, business leaders, and the people who live along these coasts — who oppose more offshore drilling. Congress, and coastal state leaders, must stand together to defend all of our coasts and demand that the Trump administration go back to the drawing board to take their states out of the final plan. Our coastlines must be safeguarded, not given away to oil and gas interests.”

The introduction of this new draft opens a 60-day comment period in which the public can voice its concerns. After this comment period is complete, the Trump administration will issue a proposed program, with an additional 90-day comment period. Following that 90-day comment period, the administration will release the Proposed Final Program that will be sent to Congress for at least 60 days for consideration prior to finalizing the Five-Year Plan.

The process began with a Request For Information (RFI) on April 30 that started a 45-day comment period to allow stakeholders to provide input on offshore oil and gas drilling. The period closed with more than 85,000 comments, most of which opposed expanded lease sales.

A poll released by Oceana in July 2024 revealed that two-thirds of American voters (64%) support their elected officials protecting U.S. coastlines from new offshore drilling, with similar support among registered voters in coastal states (66%). 

“We cannot allow for offshore oil and gas expansion on the West Coast.  Coastal property owners, businesses, their communities and visitors were severely harmed by California’s 2015 and 2021 offshore oil spills,” said Grant Bixby, Principal Broker, Bixby Residential Group, and founding member of the Business Alliance for Protecting the Pacific Coast (@BAPPC), which represents over 8,100 West Coast business members. “Our own clients who operate vacation rentals received cancellations for months, and those visitors were lost to hundreds of other local businesses up and down the coast. Our harbors and beaches were completely shut down. Any offshore drilling is not worth the economic and environmental risk to our state which relies on a clean coast with open beaches, harbors, and wetlands.” 

“News that the Trump Administration’s Five-Year Plan dramatically expands drilling in the Gulf is a breach of the public’s right to clean and healthy waters,” said Martha Collins, Executive Director for Healthy Gulf. “The Gulf is already a sacrifice zone of air and water pollution and abandoned oil wells, and new drilling will be even more dangerous as the industry expands into deeper and riskier waters. The opening of the eastern Gulf to drilling directly contradicts Trump’s previous moratoriums keeping Florida waters off the table. Opening up waters from the high arctic to the Gulf will not move our country forward to a clean energy future and energy independence this administration so craves.”

“This plan is a dangerous gift to the oil and gas industry at the expense of our planet and shared future,” said Marce Gutiérrez-Graudiņš, Azul Founder and Executive Director. “This administration wants to open vast new areas of the West Coast, the Gulf of Mexico, and Alaska to drilling – gutting environmental safeguards and endangering communities in the process. Latino voters across the country, and across party lines, overwhelmingly reject more offshore drilling, as seen in our 2024 National Azul Poll. Our communities have lived the consequences of oil spills and pollution, and they are calling on our leaders to move us beyond fossil fuels.”

“When we consider the earth as God’s beloved Creation and our neighbor as deeply connected to the land, air, and water we share, we must question decisions which appear to favor short-term gain over long-term flourishing,” said Avery Davis Lamb, Executive Director of Creation Justice Ministries. “The proposed expansion of offshore drilling in our nation’s waters not only threatens precious marine ecosystems, but also threatens the livelihoods of our neighbors who will be more exposed to toxic pollution. This announcement fails to provide the vision and justice our times demand. We strongly oppose this proposal and call for a transformative way forward — one that honors Creation, protects the vulnerable, and sets a course toward renewed life.” 

“The Business Alliance for Protecting the Atlantic Coast lauds the exclusion of East Coast planning areas from the Draft Proposed Program, but we are disappointed to see what is still a serious expansion of oil and gas infrastructure in American waters. No coastal community deserves dirty oil drilling off their shores and the inevitable spills it will bring,” said Sandra Bundy, President of the Business Alliance for Protecting the Atlantic Coast. “Coastal economies across the country will be impacted for decades into the future if this plan is finalized and we continue to see the results of reliance on fossil fuels at a time when we know we can and should do better.”

“The South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce wants to thank all our state’s elected officials for their public opposition to drilling for oil in the Atlantic,” said Frank Knapp, President and CEO of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce. “Not only were their voices important at the beginning of this planning process, but they were extremely critical after the news several weeks ago that the Atlantic would be included in the drilling plan.  Appreciation is well-deserved for the advocacy of Governor McMaster and our Congressional delegation led by Senator Graham.”

Over the past decade, hundreds of municipalities, 60,000 businesses, and 500,000 fishing families — as well as thousands of elected officials from both parties — have opposed offshore drilling activities off their waters.

There are significant risks with offshore drilling today, and oil spills continue to be an ongoing problem. More than 7,300 oil spills occurred in federal waters between 2010 and 2022 — an average of more than one spill every day. Offshore oil and gas drilling causes harmful pollution at every phase of the process, including exploration, production, and transportation.

A 2021 analysis by Oceana found that ending new leasing could prevent more than $720 billion in damage to people, property, and the environment. The oil industry currently holds more than 2,000 leases, according to a 2023 Oceana report, with 75% of that ocean acreage unused.
​
For more information about Oceana’s campaign to prevent the expansion of offshore drilling in the United States, please click here.
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    This blog shares the activities of Creation Justice Ministries. We educate and equip Christians to protect, restore, and rightly share God's creation.

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Creation Justice Ministries

 Address

245 2nd St NE
​Washington, DC 20002

Email

[email protected]

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(240) 528-7282‬
‪
Creation Justice Ministries

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  • About
    • Join Our Email List!
    • Mission
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Members and Partners
    • Impact Report
  • Action
    • Be a Creation Justice Advocate
    • Protect Oak Flat
    • Protect NHTSA CAFE Standards
    • Oppose Drilling!
    • Urge the Administration to Protect the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program
    • Protect Marine Sanctuaries
    • Protect Public Lands
  • Programs
    • Faithful Resilience >
      • Participatory Education in Faith Communities for Climate Resilience
    • Tree Equity >
      • Austin, TX Tree Equity
      • Baltimore, MD Tree Equity
      • Durham, NC Tree Equity
      • Hampton Roads, VA Tree Equity
    • Transformative Leadership Program
    • Thriving Earth
    • EcoPreacher Cohort >
      • Sermon Coaching Groups
    • One Home, One Future
    • Events >
      • Advocacy 101 Webinar
      • Transformative Leadership for Effective Climate Action in Christian Communities
  • Donate
    • Year-End Giving
    • Monthly Giving
  • Resources
    • Resource Hub
    • EcoPreacher Resource Hub
    • Green Lectionary Podcast
    • Seasonal Resources >
      • Lent
      • Season of Creation
      • Advent
    • Truth and Healing
    • The Power of God
    • Earth Day Resources
    • 52 Ways to Care for Creation 2026
    • Services
  • Blog
  • Creation Justice Store
    • Power of God
    • Plastic Jesus: Real Faith in a Synthetic World
    • Truth, Healing and Repair: ​A Resource for Churches on Environmental Justice with Indigenous Peoples
    • (Digital) Power of God: From Extractive Theology to Transformative Faith
    • (Digital) Plastic Jesus: Real Faith in a Synthetic World
    • (Digital) Truth, Healing and Repair: ​A Resource for Churches on Environmental Justice with Indigenous Peoples
    • (Digital) Faithful Resilience: The Six-Part Guide to Building Spiritual, Physical, and Social Climate Resilience