1st Edition

Ecoflourishing and Virtue Christian Perspectives Across the Disciplines

Edited By Steven Bouma-Prediger, Nathan Carson Copyright 2024
324 Pages
by Routledge

324 Pages
by Routledge

324 Pages
by Routledge

This book brings together the interdisciplinary reflections of Christian scholars and poets, to explore how ecological virtues can foster the flourishing of our home planet in the face of unprecedented environmental change and devastation. Its central questions are: What virtues are needed for us to be better caretakers of our home planet? What vices must we extinguish if we are to flourish on the... Read more

Foreword

Bill McKibben

Acknowledgements

Credits

Poetic Reflection: Materfamilias Luci Shaw

Introduction

I. Gifts in Retrospection: Mentors in Ecoflourishing

Poetic Reflection: Of This World Todd Davis

1 From Shenandoah to the Mountain West

Holmes Rolston III

2 Crossing Lehigh Gap: Discerning Christian Contributions and Misdirection in Wilderness Preservation

Susan Power Bratton

3 Beholding Earth through the Eye of its Maker

Calvin B. DeWitt

4 Prophets and Poets: The Capture of the Creative Vision

Luci Shaw

5 A Table and a Planet: From Hearthkeeping to Earthkeeping

Mary Ruth Wilkinson and Loren Wilkinson

Poetic Reflection: In the Garden Todd Davis

 

II. Grounding Narratives of Ecoflourishing and Virtue: Stories Worth Telling

Poetic Reflection: Disarm Laura Kathryn Dvořák

6 When Good Christians Destroy the Earth: The Virtue of Limits and the Limits of Virtue

Jonathan A. Moo

7 "Ecoflourishing" and Story: Fantasy, Science Fiction and Hope

Loren Wilkinson

8 ‘I all-creation sing’: Christina Rossetti’s Cosmic Liturgy and Challenge to Anthropocentrism

Joshua King

9 John Muir, Deep Time, and the Hope of Ecoflourishing

Michael Kunz

Poetic Reflection: Homes for Prayer Laura Kathryn Dvořák

 

III. Biblical and Theological Soundings: Ecological Ruin, Restoration, and Community Virtues

Poetic Reflection: Humphrey’s Basin Paul Willis

10 Subverting Metaphor, Transforming Identity: An Eco-Anthropological Analysis of Job’s Shift from Ruler to Member of the Creation Community

Alexander W. Breitkopf

11 Paul, Generosity, and Ecological Flourishing

Julien C. H. Smith

12 Ecoflourishing: Life, Death and Natural Disasters

Robert S. White

Poetic Reflection: San Rafael Mountain Paul Willis

 

IV. Global Ecoflourishing: Biospheric, Intercultural, and Interreligious

Poetic Reflection: A Common Sight Pattiann Rogers

13 Interdisciplinary Voices of the Ecoflourishing ‘Glocal’ Dialogue from Non-Western Cultural and Literary Perspectives

Graciela Susana Boruszko

14 Becoming Citizens of the Biosphere: Character, Ecoflourishing, and Control in Our Newfound Common Home

Calvin B. DeWitt

15 Becoming Human, Intercultural, and Inter-creational: Movements toward Achieving Ecoflourishing

Anthony Le Duc

Poetic Reflection: The Family Is All There Is Pattiann Rogers

 

V. Philosophical Remedies: Relationship, Work, Economy

Poetic Reflection: Still Life George David Clark

 

16 Primary Encounters: Relational Ontology and Ecoflourishing

Amy E. Smallwood

17 Toward a Christian Ecological Philosophy of Work

Karl Clifton-Soderstrom

18 Fairy Tales and True Stories: Economic Talk for Ecological Flourishing

Kathryn D. Blanchard

Poetic Reflection: Shiversong George David Clark

 

VI. Virtue and Vice in Ecological Practice: Confronting Current Challenges

Poetic Reflection: Garden Micheal O’Siadhail

19 The Christian Ethics of Waste, Contaminants, and Emerging Pollutants in Marine Ecosystems

Susan Power Bratton

20 Reconciling the Food Chain with the Great Chain of Being: A Philosopher’s Reflection on Raising Sheep for Meat

Gregory S. Poore

21 Justice, Biocentrism, and White Supremacy: John Muir’s Romantic Christian Ethics

Russell C. Powell

22 The Virtue of Intersectionality in Environmental Ethics

Kevin J. O’Brien

Poetic Reflection: Forebears Micheal O’Siadhail

Conclusion

Index

Biography

Steven Bouma-Prediger is Professor of Religion at Hope College in Michigan, USA. He is best known for his book – For the Beauty of the Earth: A Christian Vision for Creation Care and his most recent book Earthkeeping and Character: Exploring A Christian Ecological Virtue Ethic. At Hope he oversees the Environmental Studies program and co-chairs the Campus Sustainability Advisory Committee.

Nathan P. Carson is Associate Professor and Program Director of Philosophy at Fresno Pacific University in Fresno, California, USA, directing also its Sierra Program which integrates wilderness, conservation, and community with environmentally thematized courses. His philosophical publications have appeared in Dao, Philosophy and Literature, International Philosophical Quarterly, History of Philosophy Quarterly, and Journal of Chinese Philosophy.

"This book is essential reading for every student and scholar alike. By focusing on one of the most important themes of our generation – articulating the place of virtue in ecological flourishing – it challenges the reader to weave together the insights of diverse disciplines both practically and creatively. The overall intent is to build a more constructive approach to thinking and acting differently in a rapidly changing and globalized world. The editors can be congratulated for bringing together a superlative line up of essayists whose approaches to earthkeeping from a variety of disciplines serve to complement each other. A predominance of essays by Christian scholars alongside a handful of poems in this collection, reinforces the argument in a way that will touch both hearts and minds." - Celia Deane-Drummond, Director, Laudato Si’ Research Institute, and Senior Research Fellow, Campion Hall, University of Oxford.

​​"This rich anthology shows the down-to-earth power of Christian virtue ethics in this time of global ecojustice crisis. Carry this book with you. Dip into it often. Be inspired." - Paul Santmire, author of seven books on ecological theology, including The Travail of Nature and EcoActivist Testament.

"Few books in the study of Christian environmental virtue ethics engage such a far-ranging set of issues from multiple disciplinary perspectives – and by each field’s leading scholars and writers on top of it. This volume will be a guide for years to come for those intentional about reflecting on what it means to be better caretakers of planet earth." - Gretel Van Wieren, Professor of Religious Studies and Philosophy, Michigan State University.