Religion Today: Synagogues, Churches Build Green

April 29, 2009

Author: Staff Writer

Source: The New York Times

Wire Service: AP

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/04/29/us/AP-US-REL-Religion-Today.html?scp=3&sq=religion&st=nyt

When it rained, water filled the basement a foot high, flooding the preschool room at least once a year. The air conditioner wouldn't work in two rooms at the same time. The Jewish Reconstructionist Congregation desperately needed a new synagogue.

As members planned their new building, they decided it should reflect the belief, shared by many faiths, that God calls them to be responsible stewards of the earth.

They decided to go green from the ground up.

Cypress wood reclaimed from barns in upstate New York was used for the new synagogue's exterior, white cinder blocks from the old building were crushed and recycled, and brown cabinet doors made from sunflower husks were hung in the offices.

As Americans are becoming more environmentally conscious, more religious groups are looking to make their worship spaces sustainable. The efforts range from small country congregations using energy-efficient bulbs to megachurches complying with complex green-building codes.

''It was about making a sacred statement,'' Rabbi Brant Rosen said of the synagogue in Evanston, a Chicago suburb. ''If we were going to talk the talk, we needed to walk the walk. The whole process forced us to look at our values in a deeper way.''