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September 25, 2013 THE VILLADOM TIMES III • Page 3
Upper Saddle River
Church earns ground-breaking GreenFaith honors
On Oct. 20, the Church of the Presen-
tation in Upper Saddle River will become
the first Catholic religious institution in the
United States to be certified as a GreenFaith
Sanctuary. Presentation is also the largest
religious institution of any denomination to
receive this distinction.
GreenFaith (www.greenfaith.org) is an
interfaith coalition for the environment that
was founded in 1992. GreenFaith’s mission
is to inspire, educate, and mobilize people
of diverse religious backgrounds for envi-
ronmental leadership. The group’s work is
based on beliefs shared by the world’s great
religions: protecting the earth is a religious
value, and environmental stewardship is a
moral responsibility.
The GreenFaith designation acknowl-
edges religious-environmental leaders who
have carried out a range of initiatives to
integrate environmental themes into their
worship, religious education for adults and
children, facility maintenance, and social
outreach over a two-year period.
“The Church of the Presentation entered
into the rigorous GreenFaith certification
process because it aligns with our beliefs
that a Creator God has called us to be
responsible stewards for our planet’s ongo-
ing health and life,” said Father Bob Stagg,
Presentation’s pastor. “Becoming a Green-
Faith Sanctuary marks the beginning of our
ongoing efforts to bring about awareness,
acceptance, and action for this responsibil-
ity.” GreenFaith Executive Director Rev.
Fletcher Harper said, “Presentation is the
largest parish, to date, to receive the Green-
Faith Sanctuary designation. We have been
impressed with the considerable effort that
the community put into achieving this sig-
nificant designation.”
A GreenFaith Team was established
to organize and track progress toward the
requirements for the certification designa-
tion. These requirements were focused on
three categories: spirit, stewardship, and
environmental justice. Subcommittees
were created for each of these areas.
The Spirit Subcommittee undertook fos-
tering eco-themed worship services each
year, along with other spiritually related
activities. Three classes were designed for
various age groups: adults, teenagers, and
children in the various religious education
programs. Outdoor religious environmental
activities were held by a number of groups
in the community of nearly 4,000 families.
The Stewardship Subcommittee over-
saw the integration of environmental con-
servation and the use of environmentally
sensitive products. This included a focus
on energy, food, water, waste, toxics, and
transportation along with ground mainte-
nance initiatives in all of these areas. The
parish has undertaken a number of initia-
tives such as installing solar panels on the
roof of the church, putting in eco-friendly
and energy-efficient bathroom facilities,
and lessening the use of Styrofoam and plas-
tic water bottles. Presentation also installed
five beehives on church property.
The Environmental Justice Ministry
brought educational programs to the parish
and advocated for environmental justice on
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Pastor Bob Stagg offers a blessing over the solar panels on the church roof. The panels are
part of Presentation’s wider energy conservation program.