Golo., B.-W.K2018-11-022018-11-022014-0720413599Vol. 13(2):197-216DOI: 10.1558/ptcs.v13i2.197http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/25175From the angle of theology of mission it is imperative for the Christian faith to respond to the complex environmental challenges facing Africa. In this article, I explore the attitudes and responses of Ghana's Charismatic churches, as a case study of neo-Pentecostal responses to Ghana's environmental challenges. I further explore some theological and ethical imperatives that require neo-Pentecostals to integrate environmental protection into their missions agenda in today's Ghana, in order to become environmentally friendly, as their "mission of reconciliation" requires of them. I argue that, as required by their theology of mission, Ghana's neo-Pentecostals must reconcile with the earth and "be of the earth" through a re-interpretation of their "mission of reconciliation". Source data for this work are both secondary and primary, utilizing both participant observation and analysis of interviews with selected neo-Pentecostal members and leaders in Ghana.enGhana’s neo-Pentecostalsneo-Pentecostal environmentalismenvironmental challengesgroaning earthmission of reconciliationenvironmental missionThe groaning earth and the greening of neo-pentecostalism in twenty-first-century GhanaOther