Archive for ‘religion’ Category
What do Animals have to do With Religion?
September 6th, 2011
Gavin Van Horn, the Center’s Midwest Director, explores this question in a recently published chapter entitled, “The Buzzing, Breathing, Clicking, Clacking, Biting, Stinging, Chirping, Howling Landscape of Religious Studies.” The chapter is part of the volume Inherited Land: The Changing Grounds of Religion and Ecology, which explores the history and shifting terrain of the field of Religion and Ecology. As you may have surmised from the chapter’s title, Gavin argues that nonhuman animals are critical to understandings of human identity and to all religious orientations. He also emphasizes the importance of engaged scholarship with the lived realities of other animals. For more on Gavin’s chapter and this volume, see Inherited Land: The Changing Grounds of Religion and Ecology.
“Solar Nun” Headlines Creation Care Events in South Carolina
Regional Cultures of Conservation,May 26th, 2010
Sister Paul Gonzalez, PhD, a member of the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati, delivered the keynote addresses at two recent conferences in South Carolina devoted to the care of creation within faith-based communities. On May 20, more than fifty religious leaders from a wide variety of Christian denominations met at Mepkin Abbey in Moncks Corner, SC, where the Center for Humans and Nature (CHN) joined with Audubon-South Carolina and the brothers of the Abbey to offer “Caring for Creation: A Forum for Religious Education Leaders.” On May 21-22, John Wesley United Methodist Church in Charleston hosted “God’s Wonderful World: Creation Care for the Lowcountry Faith Community,” a gathering also sponsored by CHN and Audubon-South Carolina.
On both occasions Sr. Paula, introduced by Fr. Guerric Heckel, OCSO, as an “ecological evangelist” and known as “the solar nun” because of her commitment to a solar-powered future, spoke on the urgent need for humans to undergo a conversion, to repent of self-serving exploitation of the earth and become God’s hands in the world. Drawing upon the Earth Charter, in her words a “spiritual document,” she declared that humans are to live with renewed reverence for the earth; deeper gratitude for the gift of life; and genuine humility in their relationship with nature. “Liberation theology,” Sr. Paula stated, “has democratized theology,” so that we can choose to move radically toward a sustainable economy, freed from an outmoded industrial model.
Sister Paula’s theological challenges were supplemented by practical training during the afternoon sessions of each day. Church leaders and environmental professionals offered workshops on energy conservation; teaching creation care; and the promotion of sound environmental practices within churches and homes.
Regional Cultures of Conservation Program in SC Works with Faith-Based Communities
Regional Cultures of Conservation,April 14th, 2010
CHN’s South Carolina Regional Cultures of Conservation program has teamed with Audubon-SC to sponsor two forums promoting better stewardship of the Earth among South Carolina’s Faith Communities.
The first forum is: Caring for Creation: A Forum for Religious Education Leaders, and it will be held on May 20, 2010, in cooperation with Mepkin Abbey, a Trappist Monastery in Moncks Corner, SC. This forum will focus on providing religious education leaders with information and ideas to use in their places of worship. The discussion will center on the theological basis of creation-care education and provide practical advice on both making houses of worship less consumptive and congregants better stewards of the Earth. The forum’s keynote speaker and leader is Sister Paul Gonzalez, Sisters of Charity, Cincinnati, OH and co-founder of Ohio Power and Light.
The second forum is: God’s Wonderful World: Creation Care for the Lowcountry Faith Community. It will be hosted by John Wesley United Methodist Church, Charleston on May 21-22 and is aimed at a regional, ecumenical audience. Sister Paula Gonzalez and Rudy Mancke, a well-known Southeastern US naturalist, will give plenary and keynote addresses respectively. In addition, Sister Paula will conduct an energy-resources-use audit of the host facility and report her findings. Workshops will be offered on green construction, energy stewardship, sustainable landscaping and religious education for the Earth. The forum will conclude with presentations from local faith communities on what they have done to promote sound environmental practices, as well as the challenges and opportunities ahead.
There is no ‘Last Word’
December 20th, 2009
I begin with a caveat, one given by Wendell Berry this past October to a crowd of 2000 gathered to hear him read some of his writing in Madison, Wisconsin. “There is no Last Word,” Berry said. In that spirit, I offer these thoughts.
As I write this, it is almost Christmas. Perhaps more than 2 billion people worldwide are liturgically anticipating the life of an unborn child, a child who comes so “that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly” (John 10:10)
What is life? And what about it’s abundance?
I recall a blustery winter night when I was invited to give a lecture at the Lutheran School of Theology in the midst of the University of Chicago campus. After a journey through heavily falling snow, I was met by several dozen divinity students, gathered to learn about ecology and evolution.
One of the things I wanted to share that night was my understanding of the interconnectedness among living things. The science on the relatedness between humans and chimpanzees, for example, has become widely accessible. What amazes me about these studies is not just the percentage of relatedness between humans and various living things (which is remarkable), but that there is relatedness at all. We share the stuff of life, not just with chimpanzees, but with daffodils and yeast. While we sometimes do not easily recognize other living creatures as kin, we are all intimately related.
There is relatedness, and then there is relationship. Our interconnection with the rest of life goes beyond genetics – family ties, so to speak. To me, this is one of the deeply beautiful revelations of evolutionary history. We are not only related to the rest of life, but also we are in relationship with it. Over time and across space, organisms shape one another and the world around them, just as they themselves are shaped by these interactions. The upshot of this is not necessarily “survival of the fittest” as most people assume. In fact, as evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould has noted, the process of evolution shifts between forgiving periods where there is only “elimination of the worst” and more bleak periods of “survival of the fittest.”
What may come as a surprise is that we humans are shifting the evolutionary trajectory away from the more forgiving path, putting life on the harsh road of survival of the fittest. And with that comes abundant suffering of life. Viewing the history of humanity within the evolutionary context does not free humans from moral considerations, but on the contrary forces us to face our responsibilities to the rest of life and the relationships we are shaping within it.
We humans have a moral obligation to address the critical changes to the system of life we are affecting with respect to climate change, stratospheric ozone, land use change, freshwater use, biological diversity, ocean acidification, nitrogen and phosphorus inputs to the biosphere and oceans, aerosol loading and chemical pollution. These are the nine “tipping points” recently outlined by the Stockholm Resilience Centre that are shifting life as we know it. (For a review of these issues, see “Tipping Towards the Unknown” http://www.stockholmresilience.org/planetary-boundaries) We humans are responsible for creating these tipping points and the accompanying negative relationships they create within the web of life.
When I finished my lecture, one of the students asked, “What do you want us to do with this information?” It was a great question; I didn’t have an answer. So, I stumbled on with a few sentences and then responded to several more questions. Suddenly, it came to me how I wanted to answer. I told the students I would share some of my core beliefs about Jesus. I could see their curiosity piqued.
Jesus broke down barriers in ways that were unthinkable to the spiritual elite of his day. St. Paul distilled the radicalism of Jesus’ teaching in the following way: “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28). What did I want the students to do with what I shared about ecology and evolution? Jesus broke down barriers among different kinds of people, including all people in God’s love. In the same way, I hoped these emerging faith leaders would break down barriers to love within the greater web of life. I hoped for a time when our care for the poor, tired, and hungry would be extended to the entire family of life. The Good Samaritan came to mind, and I told them I hoped we would begin to be neighbors to the plants and animals with whom we share this life journey, with whom we share both relatedness and relationship.
In this season, as we anticipate the birth of a child who comes to bring abundant life, let us expand our definition of “life” and how we will protect it.
Let us redefine ourselves as well – more humbly, not lording ourselves over the landscape but recognizing our place within it, as kin and neighbor to life.
— Brooke Hecht, Ph.D.
President, Center for Humans and Nature
CHN’s Ron Engel Gives Lecture on Indiana Dunes to Nelson Institute Faculty and Students
May 20th, 2009
Ron Engel, CHN Senior Fellow, gave a lecture at the headquarters of the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore on the ecological, political, ethical, and religious significance of the century long struggle to preserve the Indiana Dunes to a group of thirty faculty and students from the Nelson Institute for Environmental Affairs at the University of Wisconsin, led by Professors William Cronon and Gregg Mitmann.
2nd Annual Father Francis Kline Memorial Lectures held at Mepkin Abbey
Regional Cultures of Conservation,April 24th, 2009
CHN, along with Mepkin Abbey, the Penn Center and the Gullah Heritage Institute sponsored the second series of Father Francis Kline Memorial Lectures at Mepkin Abbey. The first day of presentations and discussions, entitled “Ecumenical Views on the Environment,” brought together a group of approximately 30 people for discussions of our shared ethical responsibility toward the earth and our dependence upon the environment. The speakers were drawn from Roman Catholic, Jewish, Buddhist, and evangelical Christian traditions. The second day’s events, presented under the title “Reflections of the Gullah Community: Work, the Environment, and Spirituality,” engaged the relationship of the Gullah people to the environment. Speakers from the Gullah Community spoke of the importance of the natural world to the Gullah people and their dependence upon it for both inspiration and their livelihood. Approximately one hundred people attended this event that included demonstrations by a Gullah basket maker, storyteller, and net maker. Click here to download a summary of the day’s presentations.
Before his death in 2008, Dr. Strachan Donnelley, Founding President of CHN established the Father Francis Kline Memorial Lecture Series as a means of honoring the life and work of the late Abbot of Mepkin, the first series taking place at Mepkin Abbey, near Moncks Corner, South Carolina in April 2008, only a short time before Dr. Donnelley’s death later that year.
CHN and Mepkin Abbey host Inaugural Father Francis Kline Memorial Lecture Series
Regional Cultures of Conservation,April 11th, 2008
The Center for Humans and Nature and Mepkin Abbey hosted the first Father Francis Kline Memorial Lecture Series on April 10-11, 2008, at Mepkin Abbey in Moncks Corner, South Carolina.
April 10: Care of Creation: The Environmental Ethics of Monastic Spirituality
Father Francis Kline, Mepkin Abbey’s abbot from 1990 until his death in 2006, saw monks as people who chose to live on the social fringe and who were, therefore, called to think and work beyond the comfortable boundaries of conventional wisdom. Dr. Strachan Donnelley, the President of the Center for Humans and Nature and Fr. Kline’s close friend, saw CHN as operating in a similar fashion in carrying out its mission “To explore and promote moral and civic responsibilities to human communities and to natural ecosystems and landscapes.” This first day of the series brought together approximately two dozen philosophers, theologians, and civic leaders to study the monastic commitment to the environment and its implications beyond the monastery’s walls.
April 11: Gullah History, Spirituality and the Environment
Under the leadership of Emory Campbell, President of the Gullah Heritage Foundation the focus of this event was on the connections among Gullah religious traditions, spirituality and the natural world of the Sea Islands. The visual arts, creative writing, rites, beliefs and customs were of special interest, along with a discussion of the closeness of the people to the land. The conference was led by members of the Gullah community and experts on Gullah history and traditions.
Click here to download a summary of the meeting series.
CHN and American Rivers Host “South Carolina Rivers Forum: Global Climate Change and the Future of South Carolina’s Rivers”
, Regional Cultures of ConservationMarch 18th, 2008
Forty-five participants from diverse backgrounds and with a variety of interests participated in the South Carolina Rivers Forum March 17 and 18, 2008, in Columbia, SC. There were three groups of participants: university faculty and staff, state and federal agency staff, and representatives of nongovernmental conservation organizations. Organized by American Rivers and the Center for Humans and Nature, the goals of the forum were to:
- Increase awareness of potential effects of global climate change on the state’s rivers and water resources.
- Identify related threats, actions and strategies.
- Facilitate networking among river advocates.
- Assess the interest in developing a statewide river collaborative to increase the effectiveness of river and water advocates.
Discussion groups assessed (1) climate change events that affect, or could affect, rivers and water resources (2) actions that will better protect rivers from climate change, and (3) strategies to build awareness and effect changes needed to address the threats. Download a summary of the meeting here.
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May 2012
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Honoring Landscape in Decision Making
by Ingrid Leman Stefanovic
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- New Book on Care Ethics by Center Staff Member
May 12, 2012 - Route 53: To Build or Not to Build…
May 02, 2012 - Soundwalk in the Indiana Dunes
May 02, 2012 - CHN helps launch the Marseille Water Ethic
April 16, 2012 - Curt Meine Speaks to the Relevancy of Leopold’s Land Ethic on Wisconsin Public Radio to Contemporary Environmental Issues
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