Shirin Busharar Yanayi
Shirin Yanayi na Bishara (ECI)kamfen ne na shugabannin cocin Amurka,da ƙungiyoyin don inganta hanyoyin da ke kasuwa don rage dumamar yanayi.
Tarihi
gyara sasheAn ƙaddamar da shirin yanayin Bishara, a watan Fabrairun shekara ta 2006, ta Ƙungiyar Bishara ta ƙasa.[1] NAE tayi aiki tareda Cibiyar Lafiya da Muhalli ta Duniya, a Makarantar Kiwon Lafiya ta Harvard, don kawo masana kimiyya da shugabannin Kirista don bishara tare, don rage canjin yanayi.
Ƙungiyoyin biyu sun amince cewa duniya"tana cikin haɗari sosai ta hanyar halayyar ɗan adam,"kuma wannan yana shafar "mafi talauci daga cikin matalauta, sama da mutane biliyan,waɗanda ba suda damar inganta rayuwarsu". Shirin ya bayyana cewa ceton halitta bai buƙaci komaiba sai sabon farkawar ɗabi'a "wanda aka bayyana acikin Nassi kuma kimiyya ta goyi baya".[2]
A wannan lokacin Richard Cizik ya kasance mataimakin shugaban kasa na harkokin gwamnati a NAE kuma mai ba da shawara game da kula da halitta.[3][4] A wannan lokacin, ba duk membobin NAE sun yarda da shirin ECI da maganganunsa da ke kira ga kare duniya daga dumamar yanayi, gurɓataccen yanayi da halakawa.
Shugabannin bishara 86 da shugabannin kwalejojin bishara 39 ne suka sanya hannu kan ECI. Adadin masu sanya hannu ya karu zuwa sama da 100 a watan Disamba na shekara ta 2007, kuma a watan Yulin shekara ta 2011 sama da shugabannin bishara 220 (ciki har da NAE) sun sanya hannu kan kiran zuwa aiki. David P. Gushee, farfesa a fannin ka'idojin Kirista a Jami'ar Mercer, ya taimaka wajen tsara takardar.
Karɓar baƙi
gyara sasheDa farko an karɓi shirin sosai, tare da amincewa daga jama'a ciki har da Pat Robertson, Al Sharpton da Mike Huckabee. Ya bayyana cewa matsin lamba daga masu jefa kuri'a na iya canza manufofin gwamnati.
- ↑ Brian Steensland, Philip Goff, The New Evangelical Social Engagement, Oxford University Press USA, USA, 2014, p. 163
- ↑ ABC news
- ↑ National Association of Evangelicals Executive Leaders Archived 2006-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Cizik Matters: An interview with green evangelical leader Richard Cizik, by Amanda Griscom Little, Grist Magazine, October 5, 2005]