June 9 was a special day for me and compost. T’was the
day I installed a compost bin at my church in Burlington, MA and it happened to
be the day I learned what other churches are doing with compost. I saw an
exciting webinar with the Presbyterian Hunger Program (the keepers of this
blog) that went rapid fire through 8 awesome food and sustainability projects
going on at Presbyterian camps, church basements, roofs, and yards. One of those
church yards, "Sacred Greens" at Church of the Pilgrims in
Washington, DC provided some liturgy and faith background on compost for me to
incorporate into my church’s journey with our new compost bin. I'd like
to share some of my thoughts on compost as well as some from Ashley Goff at
Church of the Pilgrims featured in the webinar. (watch the entire webinar here,
Sacred Greens begins around 48min.)
Our church in Burlington hosts a weekly distribution of
Farmer Dave's Community Supported Agriculture (CSA). Customers pay the
farm directly at the beginning of the season and get a weekly "share"
of whatever's ready to harvest. The farm drops it off at the church, and
we set it up in the playground. The parent's let their kids play while we
help them identify the veggies and give cooking ideas. A fun time for
all!
We got the compost bin so brown leaves, carrot tops, thick
stems, or other scraps that get left behind from the farm customers don't end
up in the landfill. And we are working to direct more waste from the
church kitchen and from members’ homes into the bin.
Food scraps such as greens and coffee contain high levels of
organic matter that generate high levels of methane gas when decomposing in
landfills. Landfills are the third largest source of atmospheric
methane—a greenhouse gas over 10 times worse than carbon dioxide 1.
And food waste is the largest category of waste in our nation’s landfills2.
In a small way, throwing the vegetable scraps from the farm share and church
events in the trash can, we are contributing to a larger environmental
problem.
Composting can significantly reduce the amount of waste we
put in the landfills, reduce the stench of trash cans, and it provides a
natural nutritious soil amendment for a vegetable garden, or the church flowers
if nothing else. Consider composting in your own yard, contributing to
your neighborhood's compost, or start one at your own church! It’s a
very simple process.
But why should a church compost? Is there any theological
reason for it? Other than doing justice to our planet, I answer these
questions with some help from Ashley Goff of Washington, DC featured in that
webinar.
Sacred Greens’ compost began with a verma-compost bin (worm
bin) where church members could bring vegetable scraps that earthworms could
transform into vibrant, life-giving soil for the church garden—which supplies
some food to their weekly meals program. Their trash could feed worms
that feed some plants that feed hungry people in their community. The trash
deemed for disposal and death was rescued, saved and made into new life.
Kind of like how God rescues and saves us from the death of sin, and through
Jesus Christ makes for us a new life.
This church dove more into the theology and liturgy.
They came up with what they called a “God story for the garden” with three
parts: 1. Compost is an act of resurrection. 2. Growing is an act of
resistance. 3. Eating is an act of remembrance.
Compost is an act of resurrection? Hmm? “Dying
with the old to create the new,” Ashley Goff said. That’s what compost
does to plants. Living things we put in the bin die, rot, and decay to
welcome the way for new life. Ashley likened this to Christ dying on the
cross, and being resurrected to new life so our lives become new. We must
die completely from sin, so that God can fill us with new life, His life and
his spirit. I see it as a clever Sunday school lesson or even a sermon illustration,
but this church did something I never would have thought with the theology of
compost and new life. They used the compost pile as a communion
table. Yes, you heard me correctly. Here is the story:
During a special fall sermon series on food and faith, they
had a wheelbarrow of veggie scraps at door, midway decomposed compost in the
Baptismal font, and in the front of the sanctuary, the bread and cup sitting on
top of a pile of fully composted compost.
Symbolically this represented the journey of transformation
we go through as Christians. In Christ we are transformed from one thing,
perhaps a bunch of scraps, into something better. At Baptism we know this
and we have started to be transformed, but we are only midway there. Like
the partially rotted compost you can still see there is work to be done before
our minds and hearts are entirely God’s. And at communion we are
completely transformed, like the compost ready to feed someone else.
Photos used with permission from Ashley Goff, taken by Andrew Satter asatter.com These images and others are shown on the PHP Webinar mentioned above. |
The church sat on the floor around the compost pile and
shared communion recognizing the mortality of our bodies we usually only recall
on Ash Wednesday; remembering the adamah, the soil that God made
into Adam. The soil and dust we will all return to and
shouldn’t distance ourselves from. The soil that feeds the food we eat,
that was once alive and is now dead but full of life. They also shared
the eternity we have through Christ that we will be transformed through
him. God’s love and spirit will become new after death. Likewise
this compost is dead, new, and ready to feed next year’s garden.
This story of compost at Sacred Greens is featured in the Washington
Post and soon to be in the Union Theological Seminary Quarterly
Review.
It’s a little weird, new and different, but it makes sense
if you think about it. Compost can be part of your life, your church’s
life, or even your church’s communion. So let it rot!!! That’s what’s
been on my mind since June 9 as I encourage composting at church. Thanks for
reading!
Thanks to Ashley Goff for her resources, and Andrew Satter
for the images. More of his photos at asatter.com.
- EPA (2014). “Overview of Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Methane Emissions.” EPA official website. Retrieved from http://epa.gov/climatechange/ghgemissions/gases/ch4.html
- EPA (2012). Municipal Solid Waste Generation, Recycling, and Disposal in the United States: Facts and Figures for 2012. Retrieved from http://www.epa.gov/osw/nonhaz/municipal/pubs/2012_msw_fs.pdf
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