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.
Where Kentucky Meets Somalia
A Message and a Verse
Subterranean Chop Suey
Hungry in the Mississippi Delta
Hostesses of the Movement
Dispatch from Duplin County
Home with the Armadillo: The Austin Sound, with a Side of Nachos
Hidden in Plain Sight: Las Pulgas of New Orleans
Baptism by Biryani
A Taste of Place: Whiskey as Food
A Most Civil Union: from Reconstruction to Restaurateur
Stories from the Hem of my Mother's Apron
Of Hunger and Humanity: Resilience on the Texas Coast
The Wise Family at Work: A Sound Portrait
Booze Legends
Kimchi and Cornbread
Shad Stories: The Ebb and Flow of the Founding Fish
Pie by Another Name: The Burekas of Or Ve Shalom
Hostesses of the Movement
The Mala Project: Chinese Flavors, Tennessee Family
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
Gulliver’s Travels
The Turn of the Screw
The Splendid Table: Conversations & Recipes For Curious Cooks & Eaters
The Menu