The Evangelical Climate Initiative was launched in February 2006 by the
National Association of Evangelicals. The NAE worked with the
Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School to bring scientists and
evangelical Christian leaders together to mitigate climate change. The two groups agreed that the Earth "is seriously imperiled by human behavior," and that this was affecting the "poorest of the poor, well over a billion people, who have little chance to improve their lives". The initiative stated that saving the creation required nothing short of a new moral awakening "clearly articulated in Scripture and supported by science”. At this time
Richard Cizik was the vice-president for governmental affairs at the NAE and an advocate of
creation care. At this time, not all NAE members were in agreement with the ECI initiative and its statements calling for protecting the earth from
global warming, pollution and extinctions. The ECI was initially signed by 86 evangelical leaders and the presidents of 39 evangelical colleges. The number of signatories had risen to over 100 by December 2007, and as of July 2011 over 220 evangelical leaders (including the NAE) had signed the call to action.
David P. Gushee, a professor of Christian ethics at
Mercer University, helped draft the document. ==Reception==