Anna Shine is an Episcopal parish priest in Boone, North Carolina. Her focus, both during her education and now in her work, has been 'creation care,' which is theologically motivated environmentalism. She sees food security and climate change as intrinsically Christian issues, with representation and instruction present in scripture. And she's not alone. Other church leaders in the South—who continue to hold sway that clergy in less religious parts of the country may not—are also renewing their commitment to environmental issues. In Black churches, where the connections between ecology and religion have been severed by the history of slavery, those conversations are particularly important and, some leaders say, timely.
Cooking Up Social Change with Julia Turshen
Catering: Behind the Pipe and Drape
JoAnn Clevenger: New Orleans’ Uptown Girl Scout
Spring Season Trailer
A Table for All?
Pop-Up Identity
Home-Cooked Expectations
Bottled Myth
A New Recipe for Charlotte
Y'all Have Chilaquiles?
Smoking on the South Side
Vinegar & Char
Visible Yam
The Swamp Witches
Comfort Food
Agave Diplomacy
What Is Latino Enough?
Catfish Dream
The Price of Cheap Milk
Native Strangers of the South
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Gastropod
Dinner SOS by Bon Appétit
The Clever Cookstr’s Quick and Dirty Tips from the World’s Best Cooks
Great Expectations
Anne of Green Gables
The Splendid Table: Conversations & Recipes For Curious Cooks & Eaters
The Menu