Avery Davis Lamb鈥檚 journey to faith-based environmental advocacy began, fittingly enough, in a garden.
As a boy growing up in Topeka, Kan., he loved working with his mother in the family鈥檚 yard, a mini-Eden of flowers and foliage where, between all the weeding and staking and deadheading, he came to appreciate the value a gardener brings to a garden, and vice versa.
鈥淏eing outside and working with plants was such an affirming part of my childhood,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淚t definitely planted a seed, even if I didn鈥檛 start thinking about the environment from a faith or vocational perspective until years later.鈥
Lamb鈥檚 鈥渆cological conversion鈥 came while attending a Christian conference during his days as a biology major at Pepperdine University. When the conference鈥檚 discussion turned to Christian ethics on climate change and sustainability, he realized that though he grew up in the church he had never heard much there about caring for the environment. That puzzled him, because looking back, he knew how formative his childhood experiences in the garden had been for cultivating his own connection to God.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the moment I realized that my faith has in it a call to care for God鈥檚 creation,鈥 he said.
After graduating from Pepperdine in 2016, Lamb heeded that call by heading to Washington, D.C., for a year-long internship at the faith-based social and environmental justice advocacy organization Sojourners.
鈥淚t was an interesting time to be in Washington. On one hand, I was able to take part in the People鈥檚 Climate March and do lobbying and advocacy on important issues that were finally gaining momentum, like climate justice,鈥 he said. 鈥淥n the other hand, we were in the midst of the Trump Era environmental rollbacks, so there were lows as well as highs.鈥
Most people of faith are on board about caring for the environment and wanting clean energy. They just may not use the same words to convey it or necessarily view advocacy as a natural expression of their faith.鈥
鈥揂very Davis Lamb
When his internship ended, Lamb signed on as a policy advocate at another D.C.-area faith-based NGO called Interfaith Power & Light (IP&L). There, he advocated for climate policy on Capitol Hill on behalf of the 20,000 congregations in IP&L鈥檚 network and organized grassroots campaigns to address environmental issues affecting local communities.
鈥淭here were two campaigns I鈥檓 especially proud of,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n the first, we successfully organized communities of faith in Baltimore to oppose the city鈥檚 practice of allowing trains carrying crude oil, which poses an explosion risk, to pass through a low-income, mostly minority neighborhood on their way to port. City council members said hearing the moral voice of the city鈥檚 united communities of faith made the case.鈥
In the second campaign, he led efforts to bring leaders from multiple faiths together to advocate for a bill mandating the District of Columbia to switch to 100% clean energy by 2032, the most ambitious municipal goal of its kind at the time. 鈥淚 held prayer meetings with the leaders and asked them to talk to the D.C. Council about the moral imperative of switching to clean energy,鈥 Lamb said.
The united voices of faith once again carried the day, and the bill became law on Dec. 18, 2018.
While presenting a unified front was critical to the success of both campaigns, Lamb learned that respecting differences between communities was just as imperative.
鈥淔aith communities are as diverse as the rest of the American public, both politically and theologically, but it鈥檚 not an unbridgeable divide if you鈥檙e willing to listen to them and see the issues from their perspectives,鈥 he said. 鈥淢ost people of faith are on board about caring for the environment and wanting clean energy. They just may not use the same words to convey it or necessarily view advocacy as a natural expression of their faith.鈥
And that, Lamb explains, is what has brought him to 51爆料 to pursue Master of Environmental Management and Master of Divinity degrees, and a Certificate in Community-Based Environmental Management.
鈥淎fter reading the 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report that shows we have 10 years to enact unprecedented changes if we want to avoid the worst effects of climate change, I realized the training I had received up to that point wasn鈥檛 going to be adequate to help bring about the changes we need in the time we have left,鈥 Lamb said. 鈥淚 needed much better spiritual and scientific toolkits, and 51爆料 was the place to get them.鈥
Elizabeth Shapiro-Garza鈥檚 courses on community-based environmental management have been especially helpful in 鈥渁ffirming that rather than always looking for large-scale technocratic solutions to problems, it鈥檚 often better to draw solutions from individuals and communities who know the local environment and have a vested interest in seeing it flourish,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a takeaway that will definitely help guide my future work.鈥
Post-graduation, Lamb hopes to apply his expanded skill set to a career, most likely in faith-based advocacy, that helps bring about meaningful environmental and social progress while strengthening people鈥檚 connections to God and nature. His time as a board member at the Center for Spirituality in Nature in Arlington, Va., has piqued his interest in creating opportunities for people to experience the divine through outdoor meditation and other nature-based experiences. He鈥檚 also intrigued by the Church of the Wild movement, in which congregations meet outside to see what their encounters with God are like when their altar is a rock or stump and they take a 20-minute walk through the woods instead of listening to a sermon.
鈥淔or me, it all comes back to the Garden of Eden story, which I consider the foundational Biblical text on the relationship between God, humans and nature,鈥 Lamb said. 鈥淚n that story, God is not a king or a philosopher. He鈥檚 a gardener. He scoops up soil from the ground and breathes life into it. What a beautiful story.鈥