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The global Church cares for creation

Christians around the world are embracing the call to care for God’s world, and creation care programmes are taking root in their churches. While A Rocha UK’s iconic Eco Church network turns ten this year, new programmes are emerging throughout the A Rocha Worldwide Family, each with a unique flavour based on the country, cultureand needs of the local church.  

At the end of 2025, A Rocha Lebanon partnered with the Middle East Council of Churches to launch Eco Church Middle East, a programme that spans from Morocco to Iran. Eco Church will reach more than 20 Christian traditions in the region – including Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant groups – with materials available in at least five languages.  

Similar in scope, the new Eco Church Australia covers a vast area of the country, which includes a wide range of climates and ecosystems from desert to tropical rainforest. This means that the most sustainable approaches and priorities will differ between churches, but planting indigenous plant species for native bees, birds and other wildlife will be a priority everywhere.  

Eco Church / ‘Eco Igrejas’ has also sprouted in Portugal, leading to an unprecedented cooperation between the Roman Catholic majority, Evangelical and Historic Protestant churches. Representatives from these groups are all coming together on the Eco Church team. The project also makes a deliberate and unique effort to use language that is shared and accessible across these different Christian traditions. 

In the United States, Christians are not necessarily known for caring for creation. A Rocha USA is challenging this through Churches of Restoration. Rev. Sarah Robinson, pastor at Audubon Park Covenant, explains her approach: ‘Beyond just simply loving what God loves, we were created out of the earth and dependent on it.’ See how church members are responding in the video below.

Eco Eglise’ invites Christians in Switzerland to evaluate the ‘frenetic pace’ of modern lifestyles and embrace the long, slow work of creation care. Through gardens, seasonal celebrations, reducing waste and sourcing food locally, among many other actions, Swiss Eco Churches present an alternative and intentional way of living with God’s creation.  

In New Zealand, the Eco Church Network is called ‘whānau’, a Māori word for an extended family group. It’s an invitation for churches and creation to journey together as kin. This ecumenical, nationwide movement seeks to care for God’s earth, with a special emphasis on art and storytelling alongside practical action. Similarly, A Rocha Ghana’s Eco Church programme emphasizes ‘being a friend to the environment’, equipping churches to demonstrate their care for God’s creation within their worship, their church compound and the community around them. 

Since A Rocha UK and their partners launched Eco Church in 2016, over 9,000 churches have joined – around 23% of churches across England and Wales! Over 4,500 churches have achieved Eco Church awards, with initiatives like buzzing biodiversity gardens, outdoor services in nature, sharing low-mile food items, and making historic buildings climate-smart.  

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Micah Global conference

At the end of September last year, over 230 people gathered in Cape Town for the Micah Consultation. Each day began with vibrant ululations of worship in Zulu and Xhosa – an amazing expression of faith that set the tone for the days ahead. It was a privilege to witness how faith brings together people from diverse cultures and organizations: those providing relief, running toward crisis, caring for vulnerable communities, and protecting creation. The four days were deeply rooted in shared knowledge, reflection, and prayer for every person present. 

For the first time, the Micah Consultation included a Creation Care track, led by A Rocha’s Dave Bookless and Kuki Rokhum, alongside Laura Yoder from Wheaton College. 

With the magnificent Table Mountain as our backdrop, the creation care team set out to experience God’s beauty firsthand, sitting on the rocks at Kalk Bay as waves crashed against the shore, and enjoying a surprise visit from a friendly seal at the harbour. We also heard powerful local stories of resilience, including efforts to protect green spaces such as Princess Vlei Park, where communities stood firm against plans to convert the land into shopping malls or residential developments. 

Throughout the consultation, conversations revealed the deep pain many carry from the work they do. Dave offered a reflective presentation on lament that brought a fresh and transformative perspective to many.  

‘Tears are the seeds on which hope can grow,’ he said. It was a powerful reminder of what can emerge from brokenness, drawing us back to hope and faith. 

The women of Micah also spent a full day at Intaka Island, engaging with one another. They spoke honestly about the gender-specific challenges they face and explored ways to navigate and mitigate them. Women in leadership encouraged those just beginning their journeys not to give up, even when the path feels lonely. 

Renowned Filipina writer Melba Maggay left us inspired with these words: ‘Do not think of your empty spaces as a place of deprivation, but as a place of consecration.’ 

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IUCN World Conservation Congress: panel discussion

In October 2025 the IUCN World Conservation Congress brought together governments, NGOs, Indigenous people groups and volunteer scientists who are working urgently to protect nature and conserve life on Earth.  The Congress is responsible for shaping the global conservation agenda and as the only global Christian Conservation organization, we brought a distinctive perspective. 

We held an event last November to hear reflections and observations from A Rocha delegates Avinash Krishnan, Judith Ochieng and Ed Walker about the purpose and impact of the congress, which you can watch below. 

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From Inherited Faith To Living Hope

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Sylvia Muia

From Inherited Faith To Living Hope

Rediscovering faith and wonder through creation.

A reflection on moving from inherited belief to lived faith—finding resilience, purpose, and hope through Christ, and rediscovering creation not as a source of anxiety, but as a place of wonder, presence, and renewed trust in God.

For a long time, being a Christian was more of an identity chosen for me by default, having been born into a Christian family. You start with Sunday school, learn Bible songs, graduate to teens’ church and eventually reach adulthood. It is then, I think, that the real question pops up: Why am I a Christian? 

For me, it all came back to how my relationship with Christ held me through some of the toughest parts of life – unemployment, brokenness, heartbreak and illness. Through it all, He was there. Even in the darkest moments, there was joy, as Psalm 16:11 (NIV) says:
‘You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.’ 

Living in a secular world made this connection deeply relevant and kept me sane practically, but it became much deeper once I began working with A Rocha. It felt like I had been walking through life zoomed in, only seeing what was right in front of me. I cared about the environment, but I had never fully regarded it as God’s creation – never fully zoomed out to recognize the hand of the Creator in every boulder and lake, each curved into its unique shape. 

When I worked as an environmental journalist, attending meetings and reading scientific reports, my mind was constantly crippled with anxiety, wondering what we would do once the climate clock ran out. It was a never-ending cycle of bad news. Most of the time, I would look at nature and immediately pick out what was going wrong, becoming a very negative environmentalist. 

Nature is calming and beautiful, and it has always been one of the places where I felt closer to God – but my anger blinded me from appreciating it fully. 

Nature... has always been one of the places where I felt closer to God - but my anger blinded me from appreciating it fully.

I recently finished my first year at A Rocha, and I am happy to say that this worry no longer looms over my head. One of the greatest lessons I learned early on was that we cannot care for the world without involving the Creator. Being reminded that the world is God’s, and everything in it, helped lift a burden that had been crushing me. What a relief!

I also have the privilege of being part of the first cohort of the A Rocha Conservation Certificate, alongside amazing people from all over the world – those actively caring for creation and others simply curious about it. One of the theology-based modules explored how God is not only the Creator of the world, but also deeply present within it. In pre-colonial times, many Indigenous communities in Africa and Latin America respected nature and its elements so deeply because of how they reflected God. 

Our first encounter with God is through creation, as Romans 1:20 reminds us:
‘For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities – his eternal power and divine nature – have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.’ 

One of my favourite parts of the Conservation Certificate is the weekly awe and wonder time, where people share both the glorious and wondrous, and the destructive and terrifying parts of creation they experience, whether in New Zealand or Hong Kong or elsewhere. In all of it, we are drawn back to look up to the Creator in reverence and worship, continually amazed by the wonders he orchestrates. 

 

Picture of Sylvia Muia

Sylvia Muia

Based in the bustling Nairobi city, Sylvia connects A Rocha to the world through creative writing and social media posts. Sylvia is a trained journalist and has a degree in Corporate Communications and Management. Sometimes, she can be spotted knitting, painting or baking cottage pies if she is not catching up on her favourite show.

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