"Environmental Care: An Opportunity for Muslim-Evangelical Cooperation," a Commentary by Eboo Patel

February 12, 2007

Author: Eboo Patel

Source: The Washington Post

http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/eboo_patel/2007/02/environmental_stewardship_an_o.html

The first time I met the Rev. Richard Cizik, vice president of the National Association of Evangelicals, we talked about earth, not heaven.

He told me that the most important new initiative among evangelicals is "creation care." Google it and you will find literally hundreds of projects, including a Declaration whose first item reads: "Because we worship and honor the Creator, we seek to cherish and care for the creation."

That sounds like a Muslim value, I said.

The Holy Qur'an teaches that God created Adam to be His servant and representative on earth with the primary task of caring for the beauty and diversity of creation.

I started telling the story of this meeting on college campuses where my organization the Interfaith Youth Core works, and discovered that students were already one step ahead of us. They were organizing practical envrionmental stewardship projects on Earth Day and the Days of Interfaith Youth Service, sometimes with evangelicals and Muslims in the lead.

I like this partnership precisely because it is unlikely. Evangelicals and Muslims are often viewed as aggressive communities bent on domination. Lord knows there are enough people in both camps who deserve the label. But it is both inaccurate and immoral to assume that every evangelical is Pat Robertson and every Muslim is Osama bin Laden.