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God & the Environment: A Grist Special Series
Main Dish

Born Again, Again

Will evangelicals help save the earth?

By Bill McKibben
05 Oct 2006
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Copyright 2006 by Bill McKibben. First published in OnEarth, a publication of the Natural Resources Defense Council. Reprinted by permission.

First came the mighty winds, blowing across the Gulf with unprecedented fury, leveling cities and towns, washing away the houses built on sand. Toss in record flooding across the Northeast, and one of the warmest winters humans have known on this continent, and a prolonged and deepening drought in the desert West. For Americans, this has been the year the earth turned biblical. Pharaoh may have faced plagues and frogs and darkness; we got Katrina and Rita and Wilma.

An ecological survival guide?
An ecological survival guide?
Photo: iStockphoto
But this was also the year the environmental movement turned biblical -- the year when people of faith began in large numbers to join the first rank of those trying to protect creation. The key symbolic moment came in February, when 86 of the country's leading evangelical scholars and pastors signed on to the Evangelical Climate Initiative, a document that may turn out to be as important in the fight against global warming as any stack of studies and computer models. It made clear, among other things, that even in the evangelical community, "right wing" and "Christian" are not synonyms, and in so doing it may have opened the door to a deeper and more interesting politics than we've experienced in the last decade of fierce ideological divide.

That document seemed, to many newspaper readers, to come out of nowhere. But, of course, it was the result of long and patient groundwork from a small corps of people. Understanding that history helps illuminate what the future might hold for this effort. And given that 85 percent of Americans identify themselves as Christian, and that we manage to emit 25 percent of the world's carbon dioxide -- well, the future of Christian environmentalism may have something significant to do with the future of the planet.

In the beginning (say, The Reagan Era), all was darkness. To liberal American Christians, the environment was largely a luxury item, well down on the list below war and poverty. "I remember one Catholic bishop asking me, 'How come there aren't any people on those Sierra Club calendars?'" says one of the few religious conservationists of that era. To conservative Christians, environmentalism was a dirty word -- it stank of paganism, of interference with the free market, of the sixties. Meanwhile, many environmentalists were more secular than the American norm, and often infected with the notion spread by the historian Lynn White in his famous 1967 essay, "The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis," that Christianity lay at the root of ecological devastation. Everyone, in short, was scared of everyone else.

God & the Environment
Introduction to the series.
Interview with Bill Moyers about his PBS special Is God Green?
Article by Bill McKibben on the spread of environmental concern among evangelicals
Interview with J. Matthew Sleeth, evangelical environmentalist and author
Interview with E.O. Wilson about his new book on religion and science
Interview with environmental scientist and evangelical leader Calvin DeWitt
Interview with Joel Hunter on broadening the evangelical agenda
But there were a few lights starting to shine in that gloom. Calvin DeWitt carried one lantern. A mild-mannered Midwesterner with a Ph.D. in zoology, he helped in 1979 to found the Au Sable Institute in northern Michigan. The institute devotes itself to organizing field courses and conferences that teach ecology, always stressing the Christian notion of stewardship, the idea that, as it says in Genesis, we are to "dress and keep" the fertile earth. To understand what a religious environmental worldview might look like, consider this from one of DeWitt's early statements: "Creation itself is a complex functioning whole of people, plants, animals, natural systems, physical processes, social structures, and more, all of which are sustained by God's love and ordered by God's wisdom. Thus, Au Sable brings together the full range of disciplines -- from chemistry to economics to marine biology to theology -- that we need if we are to be good stewards of God's household." That doesn't sound too frightening, right?

In DeWitt's Reformed Church tradition, God has left us two books to read. First, the book of creation, "in which each creature is as a letter of text leading us to know God's divinity and everlasting power." And second, the Bible. It's easy to see how environmentalism connects with the first of these, but it's taken longer to understand its relevance to the second.

"When we started, for the first two or three or four years almost everything we were dealing with was an Old Testament text, from the Hebrew Bible," says DeWitt. That makes sense. Since the Old Testament starts at the beginning, it almost has to deal with questions about the relationship between people and land. There's Noah, the first radical green, saving a breeding pair of everything; there are the Jewish laws mandating a Sabbath for the land every seventh year; there's the soliloquy at the end of the book of Job, which is both God's longest speech in the whole Bible and the first and best piece of nature writing in the Western tradition.

Who will save us this time?
Who will save us this time?
"Noah's Ark" by Edward Hicks, 1846

But the sparer, more compressed text of the Gospels and Epistles had never been read with an eye to its ecological meaning -- in large part because it wasn't necessary. Medieval Christians, say, weren't living in a time of planetary peril. But now that we were, people started finding passages like this from Colossians: Jesus "is the image of the invisible God, the first-born of all creation; for in him all things were created, in heaven and on earth ... all things were created before him and through him." It may not sound exactly like an Audubon Society mailer, but the insistence on this world as well as the next was important in helping many pastors open up to environmental thinking. Or this, from Revelation, describing the final judgment, when the time would come for rewarding the servants and prophets and "for destroying the destroyers of the earth." (That's a little scarier to secular ears, but if you've ever sung Handel's Messiah, the "trumpet shall sound" stuff echoes the same passage.) The point is, once people started looking, the Scriptures started speaking.

Something else happened too: the emergence of climate change as the key question for the environmental movement. On the one hand, confronting global warming made everything harder -- environmental groups suddenly found themselves contending with the main engine of our economy. But for many religious environmentalists, heightening the stakes may have made progress easier -- this was a cosmological question, one about the ultimate fate of our species, our planet, God's creation. Unlike, say, clean drinking water, where simple, practical wisdom was enough to offer you an answer, global warming almost demanded a theological response. In that sense, it was like the dawn of the nuclear age. "The magnitude, the comprehensiveness, the totality of the challenge it represents to God's creation on earth, the profoundly intergenerational nature of the damage that was being done -- it became the central axis," says Paul Gorman.

Gorman is a story in himself. A former speechwriter for Eugene McCarthy, in 1993 he cofounded the National Religious Partnership for the Environment, which, with generous amounts of foundation money, set out to build environmental support among American Jews, Catholics, mainline Protestants (like Methodists and Lutherans), and evangelical Christians. Crucially, it was willing to go slowly enough to build a solid foundation. "It's not going to be the environmental movement at prayer," says Gorman, "not about providing more shock troops for the embattled American greens. We have to see the inescapable, thrilling, renewing religious dimension of this challenge." A thousand Sunday-school curriculums and special liturgies and summer camps later, Gorman's effort is bearing real fruit. In 2001, for instance, America's Catholic bishops issued a pastoral statement on the environment, one that fits the question into their long-standing theology of "prudence" and relates it to their centuries of work against hunger and poverty around the world. "If you measure [the change] against the speed with which religious life integrates fundamental new perspectives, then historically it's been kind of brisk," says Gorman.

On occasion, the religious environmental movement flared into public view. At the turn of the century, for instance, while spending a year as a fellow at Harvard Divinity School, I helped organize a series of demonstrations outside SUV dealerships in Boston. Before one demonstration with a bunch of mainline clerics, I joined Dan Smith -- then the associate pastor of the Hancock United Church of Christ in Lexington, Mass., where I'd grown up -- in painting a banner that said "WWJD: What Would Jesus Drive?" The initials were borrowed from evangelical circles, where they stood for What Would Jesus Do? and usually referred to questions of sex or drugs. But we liked the emphasis on personal responsibility -- and we guessed that the newspapers might like it too. Guessed correctly, as it turned out, for the sign was splashed across front pages and websites the next day. Within a matter of months, it wound up back in more conservative circles, where the Evangelical Environmental Network, of which DeWitt was a founder, used the slogan as part of a multistate advertising campaign.

Pilgrim's Progress


Most of the time, though, the progress has been slower, steadier, and less visible. The Evangelical Climate Initiative document, for instance, grew out of a very private retreat for select leaders at a Christian conference center on the Maryland shore, a gathering that included many of the evangelical movement's luminaries, most of whom had not been deeply involved in environmental issues. The opening remarks came from Sir John Houghton, an English physicist and climate expert who had served as chair of the scientific assessment team for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the group that definitively broke the news that humans were indeed heating the planet. Sir John was also a lifelong British evangelical (on a continent where Christians are less politically polarized) and a friend of John Stott, another Brit and a beloved elder statesman in evangelical circles. Sir John also could point to his collaborations with business leaders in Europe, like John Browne, chair of BP, who were far more open to acknowledging global warming than were their American counterparts at companies like Exxon.

"When John Houghton speaks, he speaks with both biblical authority and scientific authority," says DeWitt. "The critic, the detractor, the naysayer has to deal with a person who is both the scientist and the evangelical scholar in one and the same person. As an evangelical, Bible-believing, God-fearing Christian as well as a scientist, he'd made sure that the IPCC reports were absolutely the best and most truthfully stated documents ever produced in science." And, he adds, "It helps that he's got a British accent."

By the conference's close, the participants had made a covenant to address the issue, and then spent months gathering signatures. When it was eventually released, some leaders of the Christian right, like Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, and James Dobson, demanded that it be retracted. Climate science was unsettled, they said. Speaking anonymously, one conservative Christian lobbyist scoffed to a reporter, "Is God really going to let the earth burn up?" The National Association of Evangelicals, the umbrella group for the entire movement, feared a split and stayed officially neutral. But the bulk of the 86 signers (who included seminary presidents, charity directors, and prominent pastors like Rick Warren, author of The Purpose-Driven Life) held strong, some of them quietly relishing the chance to say that their movement was larger than high-profile televangelists and not necessarily a steady date of the GOP. "The grace of it!" says Gorman. "I think you could say this is one of the first significant events of the post-Bush era."

It's had legs, too. This spring The New Republic reported that in Pennsylvania the incumbent Republican senator Rick Santorum has come under religious fire for his stand on climate change. At a panel on the subject, a biology professor at Messiah College in Grantham, Penn., "tore into the senator, accusing him of selling out the environment to business interests." In the words of Richard Cizik, the chief lobbyist for evangelical causes in Washington, "there's going to be a lot of political reconsideration on this in the coming year. The old fault lines are no more."

Other evangelicals are less political, but at least as subversive. A former emergency room doctor named Matthew Sleeth, for instance, quit his job to preach the green gospel and says the reaction has been far greater than he could have guessed. His book Serve God, Save the Planet was published this past spring, and he has been traveling to churches ever since. Everywhere his message is the same: God asks us to surrender some of our earth-wrecking wealth. "Bible-believing Christians have confused the kingdom of heaven with capitalism and consumerism," Sleeth says. He's not attracted to electoral politics. Instead he's been downsizing his life -- putting up the clothesline, selling his stuff, buying a Prius. (He writes his books on a lifetime supply of old computer paper he rescued from a Dumpster.) The ecological battles ahead of us compare to the greatest battles in American history, he says, and his models include people like the abolitionist John Brown, who practiced exactly what he preached, sharing his farm with freed slaves. "There's a longing for a spiritual life in this country," he says, over and over. "A great hunger for something more than capitalism."

As Faith Would Have It


It's far from clear, however, that faith communities will take this fight as far as it needs to go. Simply breaking ranks with the Bush administration on this issue took enormous courage for evangelical leaders. So if some legislator offers any kind of deal to "fix" the problem of global warming, it may win all-too-easy endorsement. Some kind of Kyoto-lite measure, like the one proposed by Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Joe Lieberman (D-Conn.), might pass the Congress in the next few years. If it does, the bar has been set so low that environmentalists of all stripes, but especially those out on a limb like the evangelicals, might well sign on, even though the steadily worsening scientific findings make it very clear that bold and rapid action is required.

Here's Houghton, speaking hard words to Americans: "You've got to cut your own greenhouse-gas emissions, on the fastest time scale you can possibly do. You've got to help China and India develop in ways that are environmentally friendly and don't emit too much, but allow them to develop at the same time." Those are precisely the fights -- over scale, speed, and international equity -- that will bedevil whatever steps we take to fight global warming, and it's not clear that the faithful are really girded for the fight. "Will this groundswell have the real moral edge to keep the pressure on over the long haul?" asks Gorman, and he doesn't answer his own question.

If the answer is going to be yes, a couple of things may need to happen. One, the mainline Protestant denominations will have to step up to the plate. They long ago passed all the proper resolutions decrying the destruction of creation, and certain congregations have launched interesting initiatives. (An upstart group called Episcopal Power and Light, for instance, pioneered the practice of supplying congregations with green power.) But not many mainline Protestants have stepped far outside their comfort zones -- in part because the denominations themselves are dwindling in number and beset by internal divisions over questions like the ordination of gay clergy. Still, there are increasing hints of future activism: Planning for possible widespread nonviolent civil disobedience to draw attention to global warming, for instance, was widely discussed at a recent National Council of Churches meeting in storm-wrecked New Orleans. Protests at Ford headquarters? Blocking the entrance to the EPA? Sitting on the tracks of coal trains? Whatever the strategy, it will play better on TV if there are some clerical collars near the front.

The critique from all quarters will need to get sharper too. DeWitt pulls no punches: "We've spiritualized the devil," he says. "But when Exxon is funding think tanks to basically confuse the lessons that we're getting from this great book of creation, that's devilish work. We find ourselves praying to God to protect us from the wiles of the devil, but we can't see him when he's staring us in the face."

Much of the uncertainty about the future of such efforts stems from this: Christianity in America has grown very comfortable with the hyperindividualism of our consumer lives. In one recent poll, three-quarters of Christians said they thought the phrase "God helps those who help themselves" came from the Bible, when in fact it derives from Aesop via Ben Franklin and expresses almost the exact opposite of the Gospel injunction to "love your neighbor as yourself." Says DeWitt, "By accommodating to a new philosophy about how society works, we've flipped Matthew 6:33 on its head. Instead of 'Seek ye first the kingdom of God and all the rest shall be added unto you,' we're looking out for No. 1." Which makes it a lot harder for politicians to start talking about carbon taxes or other measures that might actually start to bring our emissions under control.

Still, there are continuing signs of progress -- what Christians might call evidence of the Holy Spirit at work. In August, after the hottest early summer on record in the United States, even Pat Robertson announced his conversion -- people were heating the planet, he said, and something needed to be done. In the end, it's clear that this battle is not only for the preservation of creation. In certain ways, it offers the chance for American Christianity to rescue itself from the smothering embrace of a culture fixated on economic growth, on individual abundance. A new chance to emerge as the countercultural force that the Gospels clearly envisioned. And also a chance to heal at least a few of the splits in American Christianity. Fighting over creation versus evolution, for instance, seems a little less crucial in an era when de-creation has become the real challenge.

Tools: print | email | discuss | write to the editor | subscribe | RSS
 Bill McKibben Bill McKibben is the author of The End of Nature and the forthcoming Deep Economy. He is a scholar in residence at Middlebury College, and he serves on Grist's board of directors.
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"wrestling"

This is amazing, David, and I shall be reading this interview and writing one or another kind of response for a bit more.

Very well done!  Bravo!

Given that Bill Moyers is a hero of mine, whom I have admired for decades, and given that I am a Christian and a member of the Society of Biblical Literature and the American Academy of Religion, my first reaction was, "This is totally unfair, that David gets to do this interview, and not me!"

My next reaction was, along the same lines, "He asked him all the wrong questions!  What a waste!  I would have known what to ask Bill Moyers, and clearly that stoopy ol' David did not know what he was doing!"

But my third reaction, after I read Moyers' long and thoughtful responses more carefully, was, "David did an excellent job; he elicited from Bill Moyers some very important responses that probably I would not have been able to do."

So, thank you very much David, for this interview, and for the entire series.  I look forward to reading it more at length, and likely shall find more to comment on.

At present, I would just like to point out what is to me, a Catholic and a humanist, a very odd, recurring expression, "wrestling" with a scriptural text.  The metaphor comes from a puzzling little episode that begins at Genesis 32:24, in which the future patriarch Jacob wrestles with some anthropomorphic divine Being, and this Being (an angel of God?; Yahweh himself?), in the course of the struggle, blesses Jacob, and gives him a new name, Israel (32:28).

Or something like that.

Bill Moyers talks about "wrestling" with the important text, Genesis 1:28, "And God blessed them [the male and female human beings whom he had just created], and God said unto them.  Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth."  (King James Version, with its quaint punctuation.)

The literal interpretation would seem to be, first: OK, boys and girls, this is the first commandment that God is giving you: Go forth and fuck; and the point is not to have any fun doing so, but to make sure the girls get pregnant, and in due course give birth to lots and lots of babies.

Then: Notice the military/political vocabulary, "subdue" and "dominion."  The point of all these girls' getting pregnant is so that their babies will grow up and, army-like, take charge of all the plants and animals.

This Creation narrative is a text written toward the end of the Babylonian Captivity, or soon after the reintroduction of the Israelites into their homeland (late 6th century, early 5th century BCE).  The verse in question apparently serves as an aetiological myth, first, to explain why human beings have sex and as a result have babies; then, to explain why human beings are hunters, gatherers, agriculturalists, pastoralists, and fishers.

N.B., notice very well, that in Judaism, the fact that men want to have sex with women is, rather oddly, an act of obedience to a divine decree.  By contrast, in contemporary Greek theology, Aphrodite is the goddess of sexual desire, and she inspires whom she wills; so, horniness, and what one does with one's horniness, are not (immediately) moral issues.

My principal concern is that Bill Moyers should confess himself to be "wrestling" with a biblical text -- that means, what?, struggling about how to interpret it?, with an element of fear if he should arrive at a false interpretation?  If so, that strikes me as really stupid, and beneath the intelligence of the Bill Moyers that I have come to admire over the years.

He surely knows as much biblical criticism as I.  He surely knows everything that I have written here.  He surely knows that biblical texts are words written by human beings.  He surely knows that human beings who write, write all sorts of odd, crazy, socially practical things.

So what in the world is he doing, wearing himself out by "wrestling" with a verse of Genesis?

If he loves the world, if he loves the environment, if he loves humanity, if he loves all living beings, why can he not just go with that?  Why does he require some divine commission, written in a biblical text?

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

iLoveMountains.org

Allen Johnson, head of Christians for the Mountains, gives his prayers and take on mountaintop removal mining on the "Go Tell it on the Mountains" section of iLoveMountains.org.

Here national religious leaders share their prayers and thoughts and stories about God's mountains.

Mr. Johnson will be heavily featured in Mr. Moyers documentary! I had the pleasure of meeting him last month, and know that he will move everyone who sees him speak to tears.

Appalachian Voices and several other regional organizations have recently put up a website called "iLoveMountains.org" in order to raise awareness about mountaintop removal. Its also a great educational resource if you want to learn more about the issues that Mr. Moyers plans to cover.

It exhibits the first ever National Memorial for the Mountains, which documents every single one of the 460+ Appalachian mountains destroyed by mountaintop removal coal-mining.

Please pay us a visit! And enjoy this short YouTube clip featuring Mr. Allen Johnson himself!


Yes, interesting

My principal concern is that Bill Moyers should confess himself to be "wrestling" with a biblical text -- that means, what?, struggling about how to interpret it?, with an element of fear if he should arrive at a false interpretation? If so, that strikes me as really stupid, and beneath the intelligence of the Bill Moyers that I have come to admire over the years.

The Bible is a collection of musings written by multiple obscure authors in languages Jesus didn't even speak hundreds of years after his death and is obviously completely open to interpretation. If Moyer's does not realize that, well, I'm with Canis.

For example, Yah-sh-ua (Hebrew) was translated to Le-s-ous (Greek) to le-so-us (Latin) and finally Je-s-us (English). The Hebrew alphabet doesn't even have a "J" sound in it. Look at the original name and the last one. They bear no resemblance to one another.

In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Poison Darts--Protecting the biodiversity of our world

Nothing is more irritating (to me) ...

... than those who claim to know the Truth.

The Bible is a collection of musings written by multiple obscure authors

Although I am not in this camp, there are folks (lots of them) who believe that the words in the Bible are straight from the mouth of God. Might I suggest, especially in the context of the God & the Environment series, that we are careful to temper what we believe with "I believe" statements? It's a fragile bond between evangelicals and environmentalists, and needs no extra straining.

Unless, of course, scientific proof exists that the authors mused of their own accord. Then by all means, state it as fact.

biblical writings, Truth

Canis et al.:

By wrestling with difficult and contradictory passages, one can arrive at one's own truth. This is the point of "wrestling" with a text as rich as the Bible. You read things you might not quite agree with, which makes you define more carefully exactly what you believe, thus transforming and strengthening your belief. [Just like a classic liberal education.] This should be an ongoing exercise, because things and people change. Bill Moyers is doing what a responsible thinker should do: constantly re-examine his beliefs. Many of us surround ourselves with people who think the same way we do, so we get lazy about this. The same goes for things like sexual orientation, in my book: it should always be re-examined.

Even if you're not religious, "struggling" with other texts is fruitful. For me, this happens with certain novels. I re-read them and sometimes find new truths the second, third, or fourth time around.

Sarah:

Scholars do, indeed, believe that the bible was literally written by multiple authors at different times. At any rate, I remember having to remember dates and authors in my religion class in college. "Straight from the mouth of God" doesn't mean that God literally wrote the Bible (unlike the Commandments). The divergence comes when one considers how much influence (all to none) God had in what was actually put to parchment.

The "obscure" and "musings" parts are sneaky and gratuitous, I'll give you that.

A hopeful sign


   Frankly, I do not believe in God, but I welcome the idea that folks of faith will find their own ways to environmentalism, no matter what they call it.

   BTW, the idea that humans are to have "dominion" over the earth is very much a Western idea, and is not shared in the same way by much of the world's population.

pace,

patrick

Sarah,

Your point is well taken.

One of potential pitfalls of this series is that it will degenerate into a running religious argument having little or nothing to do with environmental issues or science. In hindsight, I can see that my post agreeing with Canis (an unabashed Christian) certainly fell into that category. I have edited my remark to meet your criteria that everything stated must be proceeded by "I believe" unless supported by peer reviewed scientific evidence:

The Bible is a collection of musings written writings by multiple obscure authors in languages Jesus didn't even speak hundreds of years after his death and is completely open to interpretation.

That sentence now meets your requirements for having reams of scientific evidence to back it up, although it may still offend many evangelicals. If someone had come back to my remark arguing that the Bible is the literal word of God I would not have said a word. Anyone who has tried to debate evolution with intelligent design advocates knows the meaning of the word futile. It always comes down to a matter of faith, which, because it does not rely on evidence, is immune to refutation. And rest easy, I have no intention of participating in a religious debate here or anywhere else.


In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Poison Darts--Protecting the biodiversity of our world

Dominion


The primary message of the early Old Testament is that Man is given Dominion over the Earth.

Dominion...it means responsibility.   It means that Man has the Right to bend Nature to serve him.  And, as in any goodly owner or caretaker, there is some sense that Man should be a good taker -- for his own sake in as much as his relationship with God.

However, Dominion means first and foremost control and subservience.   Nature serves Man -- not the other way around.   This is the missing philosophic understanding of almost all environmentalists who are more like archivists trying to perserve and transform nature in to a Man-less state.

That is purely wrong.   The argument should only be how well we are being served by our charges.  We should be allowed to make note of "defects" in Nature -- where the Environmentalist only sees Perfection in Nature -- someone who understands Dominion can criticize not only Man's use of Nature, but Nature itself!

There is nothing perfect about Nature.   Every landscape is a battle of change and competion.  There is always incompleteness...nothing is static.  There is no Perfect State to go back to.

With Dominion we see a more dynamic approach to Nature -- one where Man plays a central part is shaping and Using the forces and resources.

Man gives Nature purpose, the way a Furnace gives Coal a purpose.   You cannot defend Nature apart from Man.


"unabashed" indeed!

Gosh, dear Biodiv, sometimes I feel quite abashed, and sometimes just plain bashed.

Mihan has written some wonderful things, including:
<<
By wrestling with difficult and contradictory passages, one can arrive at one's own truth. This is the point of "wrestling" with a text as rich as the Bible. You read things you might not quite agree with, which makes you define more carefully exactly what you believe, thus transforming and strengthening your belief. [Just like a classic liberal education.]
>>

Right, I entirely agree with that, and indeed that idea has been an important part of all my adult life.  At present I am feeling rather miserable, coming home following teaching two silly classes, as I see it, on the hardest book to teach in existence, Aeschylus' Agamemnon.  Well, Dante is just as hard, and I have never succeeded with him any more than with Aeschylus, but for different reasons.  But that first choral ode is a real monster.  And the second one is hardly any gentler.  So "wrestling" is not even the half of it.  I feel like a fool for assigning it.

But as for Bill Moyers and the Bible, I feel that that wrestling is very different, and is not a wrestling that I particularly respect.  And because I like Moyers a great deal, I very much hope I am wrong.  What it looks like is, he is not wrestling with a thoughtful, complicated, intelligent author whose words and thoughts are difficult to comprehend and accept.  With biblical texts, the words are clear and straightforward; and what Moyers is wrestling with, rather disgracefully in my opinion, is how to live with the option of saying NO to God.

If God is asking something unacceptable, then it is the moral responsibility of every human being to stand up and say, "God, go fuck yourself."

An aside: "Dominion" and "subdue" and "rule" (used in some translations) are challenging words.  It is most certainly important for all people in biblical traditions to come to an understanding of them, personally and with respect to their communities, as well as to allow for different interpretations.  But I would not call that kind of discussion "wrestling."

Mihan writes this amazing, wonderful sentence, the likes of which I have never ever seen:
<<
The same goes for things like sexual orientation, in my book: it should always be re-examined.
>>

That is powerful.  That is revolutionary.  In fact, I think I am going to have it printed up on cards, and slip them into the hands of certain guys ...

Mihan also says:
<<
Even if you're not religious, "struggling" with other texts is fruitful. For me, this happens with certain novels. I re-read them and sometimes find new truths the second, third, or fourth time around.
>>

Yes, this is the earlier subject again.  But I do not know what "even if you're not religious" has to do with anything.  If I were not religious, I think I would find that sentence very offensive.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

Great work Grist!

Excellent to focus on this crucial area just before the election, and it will follow right into the '08 cycle.  Nobody better to do it than Moyers.

The sex scandal and coverup in the Foley case is shaking the fundament of the fundamentalists.  And now eco issues might just give progressive evangelicals a chance to swing enough votes away from the religious right.

Like it or not, that is the battleground.  The environmental movement has to get "some churchin' up".  (Cab calloway to the Blues brothers)

Are we on a mission from God?  I think it's possible anyway.  Give the benefit of the doubt to our progressive evangelical allies.

http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin

Regarding "control and subservience"

"... Dominion means first and foremost control and subservience.   Nature serves Man -- not the other way around. This is the missing philosophic understanding of almost all environmentalists who are more like archivists trying to perserve and transform nature in to a Man-less state."

One might call me an environmentalist, so I think it is safe to respond to this. I and the environmentalist I know wish to preserve nature for the sake of human survival. Without clean air and clean water, we will die. Without complete natural cycles for processing our waste, we will die. Without nature to draw upon for resources, we will die.

A problem with "control and subservience" is that we do not fully understand the role of each element in God's Creation. We might destroy a forest for "jobs", but commit suicide in the process.

Environmentalist are ultimately CONSERVATIVES. They want to preserve the natural order because it has worked well in the past. Only a radical and reckless individual would advocate making nature submit to our will when we do not even understand God's intent and what will be affected by our actions.

An environmentalist is preserving what God created for us. He or she is not assuming humans know better how to operate the natural world than God does.

Bill Moyers & Objectivity

Here's what GRIST has to say in introducing Moyers:
 "Like so many people, he seems to regard conservative evangelicals with an unresolved mix of admiration and exasperation, at once vexed by their political alliances and hopeful about their ability to pull their compatriots in a green direction." --
   I've been reading Bill Moyers and hearing his 'take' on things ever since he was Lyndon Johnson's White House spokesman. Moyers lost my respect then -- and his output consistently runs in the same rut.
   He's never "admired" conservative evangelicals although he sails under that flag when it's convenient. If I'm wrong about this, please print something Moyers has said or written of a complimentary nature about conservative Christians or Republicans.
   Current evidence is his pre-occupation with what he sees as the fine hand of Karl Rove evidenced even in this interview.
   Moyers is and always has been first and foremost a political animal. As fine as one might sift him, and as much as he might protest, or profess -- he still comes up as a partisan with a big "D"...  That's OK IF he would quit claiming to be speaking out of a conservative, evangelical foundation of belief.  But the record shows -- over decades now -- that he has always favored the liberal Democrat outlook. No matter how he tries to disguise it, the 'smell' still comes through.
    I have no problem with him having and expressing his views.  Everybody in America ought to be able to do that. I do so and readily claim a conservative, Republican (for the most part) outlook. I just get so tired of having to endure the Moyers masquerade -- and now one of my favorite grass-roots American publications bows down at the Moyers shrine. It's sad, and sickening. I'm sorry to see you go.

    Jack Buttram
    Rutherfordton NC

Best of Both Worlds

How nice to read articles about evangelism and environmentalism that don't include snide asides about any people group.

I grew up in a rich, secular household and was taught in school about Earth Day and the importance of conserving our resources. In college, I spent a year living in a small co-op with "green" friends.

After encountering God one day while alone in a meadow, I spent a long time looking for evidence before realizing the most realistic test of God's existence, for me, was to believe first and see what happened next. (Sort of the happy antithesis to the dreadful "shoot first, ask questions later" saying.) I eventually converted to Christianity.

But it was strange to suddenly be "one of them"! I had always thought all Christians were morons at best and evil at worst. (Of course, I've learned otherwise.)

Several years ago, I saw the Bible as many people's humble attempts to describe their own experiences with God. Now, after applying many parts of the Bible to my life, I'm amazed at the way seemingly ridiculous guidance can have beautiful results. I am more inclined to trust the Bible as being inspired by God.

Many of my values have changed because of my faith, some quite drastically. One that hasn't changed is my environmentalism.

The Bible doesn't say why God made Creation, but my personal opinion is He did for sheer joy. There is something about Him that is generous beyond belief. He loves extravagantly. Also, the Bible often describes the stars as singing or trees and hills as rejoicing when good things happen. It's hard for me to imagine that God would treat His own Creation with less than loving care.

In fact, as a side note, I'd argue that the environment had already become corrupted back when God kicked Adam and Eve out of Paradise and that the Earth won't be fully restored and peaceful until the "end" of time. My Bible study group has enjoyed exploring this idea. (If you're interested, start with Romans 8:19-21 as an example.)

I'm glad to see environmentalism taking hold in the evangelical community. For example, my local megachurch (www.frontline.to) used to include a Starbucks on the premises, but when missionaries informed the pastoral leadership about what's going on with greedy coffee growers, the church switched to a Christian company that offers fairly bought coffee.

I was thrilled and touched to see this happen, because sometimes it's lonely being one of the minority Christians who follow environmental news. Now if we can just get capitalism out of the church altogether. But that's another story...

Rita Nolan, 28


priorities

[Now, this is crazy talk: "Now if we can just get capitalism out of the church altogether."]

I think the reason a lot of Christians don't put environmental concerns at the top of their list is because politicians and some Christian leaders tell them not to.

I had an interesting moment when I heard Sister Helen Prejean speak. Someone asked what she thought about abortion. The questioner was obviously baiting her (I mean, she's a nun), but her response was so wise and unforced. She said that, with all the other suffering in the world, abortion is the least of our worries: when we've solved world malnutrition/hunger and gotten everyone out of poverty and established fair governments all over the world, then we can worry about abortion.

The climate crisis is like that: who cares about abortion if we're all dead or infertile?

Missing the point

First of all, I'm reading through these comments and I realize that so many of you are missing the point.  Instead of attacking fellow environmentalists because of their religious views, rejoice that more and more Christians are embracing environmental and social justice causes.  Be happy that more and more of us see justice for the poor and respect for creation as something that Jesus taught.

That said, I can't just ignore some of these posts.

"The Bible is a collection of musings written by multiple obscure authors in languages Jesus didn't even speak hundreds of years after his death..."
     This is not quite the case.  Jesus, like any well-educated Jewish man, would have been fluent in Hebrew.  In fact, the title Rabbi implies among other things, that he would have committed the entire Hebrew scriptures to memory.  

"For example, Yah-sh-ua (Hebrew) was translated to Le-s-ous (Greek) to le-so-us (Latin) and finally Je-s-us (English)."
     If you're going to discuss language, please get it right.  Also, make sure there's a point.  The Greek for Jesus was "iesous" with an accent over the "i" making it an "h" sound.  Secondly, so what?  John in Spanish is Juan.  Peter in in Spanish is Pedro, etc.  We're talking about different languages with different sounds.

getting it right

Yes, Metmerc, I had noticed those things too, but decided to let them go.

The usual transliteration of Jesus' Hebrew/Aramaic name that I have seen is "Yeshua."  But that is apparently a later development of the earlier name "Yehoshua," which comes into English as "Joshua."  If in fact the first element of the name refers to Yahweh -- and I am not sure that is beyond controversy -- , then it is possible that Biodiv saw "Yahshua" written somewhere.

He certainly did not see "Lesous" written anywhere.  

The diacritical mark written before the initial Iota in the Greek name "Iesous" is a smooth breathing, indicating that there is no aspiration, no "h" sound.

The Latin form of the name is "Iesus," not "Iesous."  Initial I in Latin was often written by scribes in a calligraphic way that evolved into the form of the letter J.  In Latin, the letter was in fact a consonant in this position, like the Y in "yes."  But in other European languages, that consonant in borrowed Latin names came to be pronounced in a number of ways.

I agree with your point that the fact that the same biblical name has different forms in different languages is no argument at all for discrediting the Bible.

But I agree with Biodiv that the circumstances in which the multiple biblical documents were written suggest that the Bible does not deserve quite the same kind of absolute authority that many Christians, and not just fundamentalists, are prepared to accord it.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

God is Gray

Patchwork Films was commissioned by Christians for the Mountains to produce a series of movies covering the subject of Mountaintop removal.

Global warming may be esoteric and difficult to touch, but witnessing thousands of acres of forestland being whacked off the face of the earth and dumped into rivers is easily described as one of the most devastating sights one can ever behold.  

Our mission was not based on theology or philosophy.  We simply went out to film what once was a mountain range and to interview the people who lived in and around the destruction areas.  At the first sight of landscape turning to moonscape our director, BJ Gudmundsson started crying so hard she had to hand off the camera for she could no longer hold it steady.

If you are agnostic you will understand that mountaintop removal makes no logical scientific sense.  You may even wonder what higher being would create such beauty then create men with the will to destroy it.  If you are a person of faith then you may find the allegiance of religious leaders who oppose eco-justice suspect.

This is not just putting molecules into the atmosphere.  This is wanton destruction of the land beneath our feet - and it is coming your way soon.  Where there is coal there will be men with dynamite.  In the past ten years over 400 mountains have been lopped off and dumped into the rivers below them.  To understand this issue you just have to see it.

So.  Is God Green?  Give the coal companies another decade and the earth will be the color of gray slate and clay and the answer to Mr. Moyer's question will be no, God is Gray.

Mountains

I live in Utah: "the hills where the Lord hides." Sorry this sounds like a shameless self-promotion because it is. This argument is at the core of the fight for human survival. What do moose have to do with it? Watch my documentary "Our Other Neighbors at
http://schreinervideo.com/OurOtherNeighbors.html

http://schreinervideo.blogspot.com
The Truth

I'm not sure who's right, but I know we have to do something. And what they're doing in Maine is pretty darn good. Sorry this sounds like a shameless self-promotion because it is. But this argument is at the core of the fight for human survival. What do moose have to do with it? Watch my documentary "Our Other Neighbors at
http://schreinervideo.com/OurOtherNeighbors.html

http://schreinervideo.blogspot.com
Dominion?

"Everything animate or inanimate that is within the universe is controlled and owned by the Lord. One should therefore accept only those things necessary for himself, which are set aside as his quota, and one should not accept other things, knowing well to whom they belong." - Sri Isopanishad, verse 1


Other Christians

I love this discussion - the topic of Christians and the environment is dear to me, as a Christian and an environmentalist.

I have found that Christians and environmentalists often have similar views on a variety of subjects.  This ranges from a distrust of the "conveniences" our culture offers us (such as fast food and credit cards) to a desire to help the needy.

My reason for posting, though, is to comment on the existence of many other Christians, who may not fall in, or even near, the evangelical camp.

Catholics, certainly, have had some leadership from Pope John Paul II.  He even touches on the "dominion" question argued here:

In fact, 'the dominion' granted to man by the Creator is not an absolute power, nor can one speak of a freedom to 'use and misuse', or to dispose of things as one pleases.  The limitation imposed from the beginning by the Creator himself and expressed symbolically by the prohibition not to 'eat of the fruit of the tree' (cf. Gen 2:16-17) shows clearly enough that, when it comes to the natural world, we are subject not only to biological laws but also to moral ones, which cannot be violated with impunity.

The Greek Orthodox Church Diocese of America has posted on its website excerpts from the Inter-Orthodox Consultation from 1987 in Bulgaria, among other excellent articles.

Environmental issues like air and water pollution, depletion of non-renewable resources, destruction of the ozone layer, increasing nuclear radiation, deforestation and desertification of vast areas, etc. threaten the life itself on this planet. The gifts of science and technology are being misused by human beings to the extent of abusing nature and turning today's life on earth into a hell, not only for the many millions of existing people but also for the generations to come. The voice of those who call for a just development, equal distribution of resources and ecological life­styles is being systematically suppressed.

The United Methodist Women have a similar statement:

The Bible sends a strong message that being faithful requires just and right relationships with God, other human beings and with the rest of creation. Likewise, the United Methodist Church's Social Principles and numerous General Conference resolutions call for sound stewardship of the earth and environmentally friendly lifestyles that preserve creation for the benefit of present and future generations. United Methodist Women's environmental advocacy responds to this call.

Additionally, there are many non-denominational Christians who have found God to lead them into environmental action, as well.

In the end, the reason someone becomes an environmentalist is less important than the work that person does for the environment.

-Apta

Catholic leadership?

Thanks, Apta, for returning us to this thread.  Your quotes are interesting, and mostly encouraging.  The Inter-Orthodox Consultation's words are especially fine.  They are twenty years old at this point, but the passage of time has never bothered the Orthodox.

I would not want to over-estimate the influence of the late Pope John Paul II's words on this subject, however.  For one thing, his reading of that text in Genesis is quite idiosyncratic.  More important, as I have written before, environmental issues remain a rather low moral priority among most Catholics.  Most prominent teachers among us RCs, and most people who wish to become prominent RC teachers, stick these days to a pretty narrow moral agenda, in which environmental issues do not have a place, however well deserving they truly are.

To be sure, there are a good number of relatively independent religious communities, of men and of women, who are doing excellent work.  And there are similarly a few independent-minded parish priests.  God bless them all.

But for the most part, the environment, pollution, eco-justice, biodiversity, the extinction crisis, deforestation, and, greatest of all, global warming, generally have not yet been recognized as church-worthy subjects.

Let us hope that that changes.  Very soon.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

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