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Today in the Mission Yearbook

Pennsylvania congregation commits to nurturing nature

 

Berwyn congregation’s new landscape reflects environmental stewardship

September 7, 2019

From Sept. 1 to Oct. 4, Christians around the world celebrate the Season of Creation. Some pray, some do hands-on projects, some advocate. It’s powerfully good work that’s urgently needed.

Photo Credit: Mary Westervelt

Trinity Presbyterian Church in Berwyn, Pennsylvania, a certified Earth Care Congregation, decided to change the church grounds as one way to be better stewards of God’s Creation. One church member offers the following reflection on the beginning of that project:

I’ve always loved growing plants but never had much interest in formal gardens. I love walking in the woods or the meadow and seeing what’s growing with what, what’s blooming and what’s attracting birds and butterflies, among other creatures. On the other hand, gardens populated with whatever’s in bloom at the box garden store, each individual surrounded by a mound of mulch, bore me and just make me think of the chore of maintaining that look. Is this really “curb appeal”? How many others feel the way I do when they see the usual landscaping in the latest suburban development?

In 2013 I read Doug Tallamy’s book Bringing Nature Home. I learned that the sterile landscaping I found so distasteful was actually something to resist for a more important reason: It provides no support for life. The non-native trees and shrubs can’t support native insect species that pollinate plants or serve as nutritious bird food. The landscaping practice of removing twigs and leaves starves the plants while allowing soil to bake and erode. Then adding chemical fertilizers, weed killers and insecticides kills the life in the soil that would have worked with roots to provide nutrition for the plants. Surrounding it all with lawn maintained with tractor mowers, leaf blowers and chemicals puts the final touch on a lifeless landscape. All of this increases stormwater runoff, which spreads the degradation from land to waterways. And as more and more land is subjected to this sort of landscaping, serious harm is done to wildlife populations and to the watersheds we all depend on.

Suddenly I had a focus for the environmental studies degree program I had undertaken: Learn what I could about healthy habitats, learn how to create and nurture healthy habitats in the home garden and find a way to bring the native-landscaping message to my neighbors in the suburbs.

How to demonstrate that we could do things differently? I began looking for a public place to integrate native plants and water-retention features into the landscape.

The property at Trinity Presbyterian Church seemed ideal for the purpose: The traditional landscaping was tired and unappealing, not to mention expensive to maintain, and the runoff problem from the roofs created regular flooding and made some entrances unusable. A bonus from the point of view of sharing the message with neighbors was that Trinity is located in a densely populated neighborhood with fairly regular foot traffic, so people would see the changes. And this goal fit with goals stated by the larger faith community, including our own General Assembly, of being good stewards of God’s Creation by nurturing it and sharing it with “the least of these” — not only our brothers and sisters around the world, but also God’s creatures everywhere.

In 2015, I presented the idea to our pastor and the head of building and grounds, and they were enthusiastic. A guide, Nature that Nurtures, was written to journal the process and lessons learned at Trinity as we moved from landscaping that harms the environment to landscaping that maximizes health in our local environment. While doing so, we’ve been able to create gardens that appeal to people as well — thereby working to change the meaning of the term curb appeal!

I hope our journey inspires other congregations and homeowners to do the same.

 Mary Westervelt, Environmental Stewardship Coordinator, Trinity Presbyterian Church

Today’s Focus:  Environmental Stewardship

Let us join in prayer for: 

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Shawn Ellison, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)
Cynthia Embry, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)

Let us pray:

God of wisdom, remind us that you have called us to be good stewards of your astounding Creation by nurturing it and sharing it with “the least of these” — not only our brothers and sisters around the world, but also all creatures everywhere. Amen.