Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Society|Mon, Apr. 20 2009 11:47 AM EDT

Evangelical Richard Cizik Re-Emerges for Green Cause

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

WASHINGTON – Not much has been heard about Richard Cizik since his forced resignation as vice president of the National Association of Evangelicals last year. But the evangelical leader re-emerged in Washington, D.C., on Sunday to give a lecture on interfaith creation care in observance of Earth Day.

  • (Photo: The Christian Post)
    Evangelical Christian leader Richard Cizik speaks at the 5th Richard W. Snowdon Lecture hosted by the Interfaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington on Sunday, April 19, 2009 in Washington, D.C.

Surrounded by Muslims, Sikhs, Jews, and Christians sitting in the pews of a United Methodist church, Cizik spoke about the need for new strategies and ideas to advance the environmental issue.

“The best strategy is to bring religious communities together with scientists,” Cizik declared as the keynote speaker of the Interfaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington’s Fifth Richard W. Snowdon Lecture. “Yes, together the same we must do this. So the strategy has to be what you are about at the Interfaith Conference.”

People of diverse faiths and spiritualities, as well as people with no faith at all, Cizik said, can easily have dialogue and work together when it comes to protecting the Earth.

“The tinder is dry, the condition is right and all it takes is a heart here and a match there and the interfaith religious community is going to wake up,” he said during the “Hearing Each Other, Healing the Earth” program.

Sunday’s event was an early observance of the official Earth Day which falls on Wednesday. Before the interfaith event, Cizik had spoken to the crowd of thousands gathered at the National Mall for the Earth Day Concert.

Cizik has been at the forefront of the green evangelical movement and an outspoken advocate for evangelicals to put creation care among their top priorities. He was named by Time magazine as one of the top 100 most influential people in the world in 2008 for his work on climate change.

For years, Cizik traveled across the country to speak at churches, Christian colleges and secular universities about the need for environmental care through a change in personal lifestyle combined with government policies. With evangelicals, he argues that creation care is a more holistic understanding of the evangelical pro-life stance.

In 2007, Cizik partnered with Harvard scientist and Nobel laureate Eric Chivian to form a coalition of evangelicals and scientists to press the U.S. government to change its environmental policies while at the same time mobilizing members of the faith community to make personal lifestyle changes.

Later that same year, Cizik also teamed up with the U.S. government to host a luncheon where dozens of evangelical leaders learned how to make their church building more energy efficient. The event was the first religious-government partnership to tackle energy consumption in religious facilities.

But Cizik’s evangelical-environment push has not gone without obstacles. Several prominent evangelical leaders, including James C. Dobson, Gary L. Bauer, and Tony Perkins, were angry that Cizik seemingly spoke on behalf of all evangelicals on the issue of global warming. They argue that there is no consensus within the evangelical community that global warming is real and mainly man-made.

The conservative evangelical leaders also charged Cizik of diverting attention away from more important issues like homosexuality and abortion.

However, the NAE board members sided with Cizik and affirmed that creation care is an important moral issue for the organization.

Although Cizik survived that storm, another more serious controversy emerged in late 2008 that resulted in his resignation. In a National Public Radio interview in December, Cizik remarked that a pro-life Christian could find reason to vote for an abortion rights candidate. He also said that although he does not support gay marriage, he is “shifting” on the issue and does believe in homosexual civil unions.

The overwhelming majority of NAE constituencies do not support gay civil unions, the NAE later said in response to the statements. NAE President Leith Anderson said Cizik made statements that “do not appropriately represent the values and convictions of NAE and our constituents,” and that he had lost trust and credibility as a spokesman for the 30-million member organization.

Cizik resigned as the NAE vice president of governmental affairs in December, a week after the interview aired, after nearly 30 years with the organization.

Since leaving the NAE, Cizik has been speaking at colleges across the country on environmental issues and is a senior fellow at the United Nations Foundation, he told The Christian Post after the lecture.

While he says he is under agreement to not talk in detail about his future plans, Cizik did disclose that he will be part of a new evangelical movement that will soon be unveiled.

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  • Wed Apr 22, 2009 1:57 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Someone blamed Cizik on Rick Warren. Is there anything that Rick Warren is not to be blamed for by some? :(

  • Tue Apr 21, 2009 1:32 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    response (sorry for typo-a bit heated while writing)

  • Tue Apr 21, 2009 1:28 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    By the way, all this socialistic gospel mentality has derived from none other than the evangelical Pope himself, Rick Warren. He has muddied the waters and has distanced himself from conservative Christians, even calling Christian Fundamentalist, extremist, and one of the greatest enemies of the 21st century.

    His agenda is not to "seek and to save that which was lost" , but to seek and to save the earth. So many have fallen prey to his message of "its not my agenda."

    Hence, Richard Cizik, following the new church leader, Rick Warren, in the path of working with anyone no matter what they believe or what their lifestyle. Let's talk about everything except the moral issues which God is concerned about: life(abortion) and lifestlye(same sex marriage. Who cares? "I'm oblivious to that." That was Warren's respond to Larry King's question on the Iowa decision on legalizing same sex marriage. Imagine that...oblivious!

    Folks, it's time to wake up from the agenda of Rick Warren and his ilk. The evangelical church was in a stupor when it blindly followed the Purpose Driven Piped Piper and his program!

    Its time to wake up and follow The Christ and HIS agenda, the Word of God!

    Jorge Moreno

  • Tue Apr 21, 2009 1:10 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    cmrk3wrote:
    "He is a true Jesus follower."

    Which Jesus are you talking about, the cultural one or the biblical One?
    Jorge

  • Tue Apr 21, 2009 12:36 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    I have a great deal of respect for Richard Cizik who take courageous stands for what they believe even when it costs them their jobs. He is a true Jesus follower.

  • Tue Apr 21, 2009 4:36 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 1

    Imagine, Christians using science to inform their positions. The end is near.

  • Mon Apr 20, 2009 2:26 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 1

    I lost confidence in the NAE many years ago. I don't remember why. Probably because they seem to stick their heads in the sand when it comes to growing in their own spirituality. God expects us to change and not keep a military stance on social topics. If Paul did that, his name would have been Saul when he died and we would not have that champion of faith in our histories and the Christian faith might look much different throughout western history. Now I am not setting Cizik up against Paul as an icon, but would like to look at him as someone who is not afraid of scientific exploration (which God created for us to better understand our use and lack of good stewardship of the earth) and who calls us to not be arrogant working with people of other or no faiths. We all have a responsibility to be good caretakers of this wonderful gift of creation.

  • Mon Apr 20, 2009 1:22 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 2

    Maybe it's the Jimmy Carter syndrome. Maybe he has lost his mind in his old age.

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