Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Shouldn't Birds of a Feather...

Ephesians 4:1-6  1 I therefore, the prisoner in the Lord, beg you to lead a life worthy of the calling to which you have been called,  2 with all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love,  3 making every effort to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.  4 There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to the one hope of your calling,  5 one Lord, one faith, one baptism,  6 one God and Father of all, who is above all and through all and in all.

 Not long ago my wife and I brought dinner to some dear friends who recently celebrated the birth of their first child. Our time together was a warm experience full of joy and a palpable closeness that only such monumental life moments can generate. When reflecting on the word ‘community’ as part of a class assignment, I thought of this experience and these friends because they are two people (now three) whom I consider to be beloved parts of my community. They also came to mind because they are Orthodox Christians and my wife and I are Episcopalians—a divide that hasn’t caused any difficulty amongst us as friends, but that has created a largely, silent aching between us. By this I mean that as friends and as people whose faith is central to our lives, each of us would love nothing more than to worship alongside one another. I have come to view this yearning as a telling microcosm of the many rifts separating today’s global Christian body. I must confess to being deeply troubled by the divisions within Christ’s Church that have caused so many of us to no longer feel welcomed at each other’s tables, but having grown up in fragmentary, locally-focused Baptist and non-denominational churches, this concern over “catholicity”—in its truest, unified sense—is, for me, a newly acquired sensation.
   
 In part, it was this same desire for proximity and union that originally compelled my wife and me to leave our former church, which was Baptist, to join the Episcopal Church. For us, the Episcopal Church provides a life-giving sense of place within the cloud of saints who have come before us as well as sense of unity with fellow travelers throughout the worldwide Anglican Communion. This is by no means solves the issue, but we view it as a step in the right direction. For simplicity’s sake, I trace the emergence of my yearning for “catholicity” to my time in India volunteering with Mother Teresa’s order of Roman Catholic nuns and the scores of other Christians who had come from around the world to also volunteer there. That time gave me a generous understanding of the compassionate and justice oriented work we as Christ’s hands and feet on this earth are to be about. There, I also garnered a foretaste of what being a part of a unified body and the great work it could accomplish could be like. This place was also where I was first confronted by the seemingly, cold and exclusionary Roman Catholic practice of not allowing non-Catholics to share in the Eucharist. About a year later, while visiting a Catholic monastery in the U.S., my wife and I again faced this. Since those experiences, I have been troubled by the notion that we as Christians, who share a common narrative shaping our relationship with God, cannot seem to come together in unity around the same table.      

The rationales behind these fragmentary factions are legion, with probably several for each splintered denomination, but if the Church (universal) is to take Christ’s call for unity seriously we should be about the hard work of reconciliation. These words might be easy to write off as those of a starry-eyed, idealist, but scholar S. Steve Kang agrees that this work is vital and has some ideas that could possibly help those who would see the merit of this pursuit. In his book, A Many Colored Kingdom, Kang highlights the many voices that have emerged from the myriad of Christian cultures globally, each possessing their own distinct experiences, all relevant when interpreting scripture, and how none of these perspectives are without value.[1] Recognizing that many of today’s divisions stem from this variety of perspectives, Kang recommends that our focus shift away from these divisive issues towards those promoting, “the well-being of the entire kingdom of God—female and male, adults and children, black and white, rich and poor—through engaging in righting relationships among all people.”[2] While this may sound like a lofty or unattainable goal, I believe it is the work Ephesians chapter four calls us to.[3] But, inherent to this pursuit is the difficult, but necessary task of humbling ourselves, which requires the laying down of dogmatic opinions and the equalization of all voices. Efforts to build stronger bonds within the global Church will require an intentional listening to the host of existing voices and, as Kang believes, a concerted educational effort by Christian educators.[4]
 
While I do not expect these suggestions to suddenly pry open the gates currently barring Christian unity, I do write with the hope of illuminating a portion of the task we are to be about. While solutions, on a broad scale, may prove elusive, I believe smaller victories of communal restoration can and are taking place. As Eric Jacobson discusses in his book, Sidewalks in the Kingdom, true community can only exist within a required sphere of proximity.[5] Thus, rather than pouring our efforts into the largely nebulous, universal context, our most productive means is probably to concentrate on building ties with those we know and regularly interact with. For me, this brings to mind students of the college Bible study that I have had the privilege of leading for the past few years.  

The group’s members come from Catholic, Episcopalian, Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, and non-denomination backgrounds, which, I believe, in today’s denominationally segregated climate, is quite exceptional. As a body, we strive to encourage openness and dialogue that fosters spiritual growth, all while seeking to know and understand the mystery that is God better. Scholar Elizabeth Conde-Frazier reminds us that each one of us possess the image of God. This is true regardless of our cultural or spiritual background. Our task is to learn to recognize that image in its many shapes and forms.[6] It is my contention that, because of each student’s varied history, we each act to shed light on the Divine from slightly different angles. This has proven to be enlightening for all. Furthermore, having shared in this experience, each of us is now less likely to one day write off people from different Christian traditions, which, given our present dilemma, may prove to be quite mending, one day.   

As we awaken to God’s desire for the Church be known by its love for one another, we must decide how to live into that communal calling. It would be easy to get lost in the argument that these suggestions simply overlook too many complex facets of this challenge, but that misses my point. Has not enough time been spent focusing on the obstacles holding us apart? Why should we believe that a further chasing of those questions will have any healing results? Gary Parrett points out that, “To love within a cultural context other than our own, we will likely need to let go of some things that have always been precious to us.” He then goes on to point out that Christ too had to empty himself.[7] What should be certain from the problem that I have outlined is the need for greater humility as we continue to work alongside one another. We must seek reconciliation within God’s unifying will. As we embark upon this journey, Kang recommends we, “take [our] cues from the vastness of God’s kingdom, namely the communion of saints which inextricably brings together the saints throughout history and all places.”[8] We can do so with assurance that our ultimate aim lies within the rich reward of holy friendships and the Godly inheritance of true community.

Bibliography
Elizabeth Conde-Frazier, S. Steve Kang, and Gary A. Parrett, A Many Colored Kingdom: Multicultural Dynamics for Spiritual Formation (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Academic, 2004).

Eric O. Jacobsen, Sidewalks in the Kingdom: New Urbanism and the Christian Faith (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Brazos Press, 2003).


[1] S. Steve Kang. A Many Colored Kingdom, 88.
[2] S. Steve Kang. A Many Colored Kingdom, 94.
[3] Ephesians 4:1-6
[4] S. Steve Kang. A Many Colored Kingdom, 94-96.
[5] Eric O. Jacobsen, Sidewalks in the Kingdom, 65.
[6] Elizabeth Conde-Frasier. A Many Colored Kingdom, 107.
[7] Gary Parrett. A Many Colored Kingdom, 126.
[8] S. Steve Kang. A Many Colored Kingdom, 103.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Chickens and Holiday Saturninity-- An Advent Meditation for Winter's Solstice

Today marks the last day before the winter solstice-- the shortest day of the year. Symbolically, this time is seen as the sun's 'death'. The three days following this 'death' are marked by an uncertain lingering of the sun at such a diminished level. After three days, on December 25th, daylight will gradually begin to lengthen, marking the sun's return (or resurrection). Etiologically speaking, this occurrence explains the timing of our celebration of Christ's birth-- God's Son. But, while mostly we approach this time with joyful anticipation, for many, this season can be one of painful reminders and dashed hopes. 

In one of today's lectionary readings, Zephaniah 3:14-20, we find an admonition not to let ourselves be consumed with worry or fear. Here, God's people are reminded that the LORD is "in our midst" and that God will rise to protect us. Note that the text reads 'our' and not 'your'-- thus stressing the significance of community. In this passage, we also find imagery of the LORD gathering us up-- words that (as someone who used to keep backyard chickens) remind me of a mother hen with her baby chicks.

In the coming spring, which at this time looms in the distance like a warm glow on the horizon, mother hens will carefully guide their newborn chicks out of the hen house for their first exploratory voyage into the outer world. Each doting mother will guard her offspring with tenderness and, if need be, defiant bravery. As she watches her young stumble out into the yard and begin poking around at their strange new surroundings, she will help them as they learn to scratch and forage. Under their mother's watchful eye, they will learn from older birds and each other how to thrive.

In today's reading, the prophet Zephaniah assures Israel that God will, "renew [them] in his love"-- a claim that is still valid for God's people today. This line particularly grabs me, because, as many of you know, my wife and I have recently had to deal with some hard moments. For me, this was a first-- finally being the one that everyone else rushed in to care for. For a time, we received calls, letters, emails, meals, and other generous gifts. Before now, I had often heard the Church likened to Christ's earthly hands and feet, but it was not until this trial that this imagery really began to take on a new and deeper meaning, for me. Truly, through Christ's body-- the very real and tangible presence of our friends and family-- we were lovingly gathered near to God and set on a path towards renewal. Having learned from others, we now look forward to one day passing on these same blessings to another in need.

Recalling this cycle of loving and learning can be encouraging for anyone approaching the holiday season with an unsettling sense of dread. In times so built up with festive expectation, it is easy to harbor unrealistic dreams of 'what should be,' only to have those hopes quelled by life's sometimes harsh realities. But, we must remember God's words to us in these troubling times-- that, like a mother hen collecting her young, we will be gathered up into God's presence, protected, and renewed in love. But for this healing to occur, we must avail ourselves to community and communion with God.

The dark days may seem to linger and we may begin to doubt the Son's return, but a new light will dawn and we will once again emerge into the newness of spring's vigor. In God's created order, periods of dormancy and decay often precede new life. At the risk of sounding too proscriptive, perhaps passages such as today's remind us that we ought to periodically invite the Holy Spirit to show us things we are clinging to-- lost hopes, bitterness, fears-- that we need to let die. From their absence, and through God's continual work making all things new, life can once again spring forth formed by the richness of a renewed faith.

And finally, for those at peace with this season's tidings, let us find our joy in blessing those who struggle with our solidarity-- for it is often in our presence and generosity that God's loving, support is revealed. For such is our hope-- and on this, our hearts can rest. Amen.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Songs for Advent

Some appropriate music for the approaching lunar eclipse on the winter solstice. Enjoy!





Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Of Grizzly Bears and Sanctification

As followers of Christ, that which compels us to wrestle and claw our way towards the Divine Mystery hounds us with the resolve of a Grizzly Bear that, upon emerging from its long winter fast and aching with hunger, catches the scent of a vole’s burrow beneath a rotting stump. It is with this compelling force, imparted by God, that our striving is provoked—a process of refinement in pursuit of the Holy. Frequently, we hear this ‘striving’ described as discipleship or spiritual formation, but what exactly do these words mean and how does this process actually transpire? Moreover, what is it that we are pursuing, given today’s context—a world in which scientists predict we may lose one-third of all species on Earth in the next forty years—and how will success be measured in light of this reality?[1] In conversation with Jurgen Moltmann’s book, The Source of Life, these are some of the questions I hope to address below.

Each stream within the broader Christian tradition has favored words and understandings about the task of pursuing Godly lives. For example, Methodists are renowned for their use of the word sanctification, and Baptists for their concepts of justification, while Orthodox Christians employ the term theosis. All of these are meant to convey the notion of one’s journey towards holiness. But to what are we referring when we say the word holy? Moltmann contends that holiness is that which belongs to the sphere of the Divine and is “Wholly Other” from ourselves.” By this he means, “that which fascinates us, holding us spellbound.” The feeling he describes reminds me of a time when I accidentally approached a bear while hiking. There I found myself standing before this incredible beast utterly, helpless and quite aware of my vulnerability. Much like this humbling encounter, the Holy can inspire both terror and awe. These are attributes of that which we call God—the Divine Mystery who solely possesses both perfect harmony and oneness. 

From this, Moltmann concludes that God’s Spirit, which we call the Holy Spirit, works to continually bring harmony and perfection wherever it ventures—thus, the Holy Spirit continually sanctifies whatever it encounters.[2] As beings created by this life-giving Source, we naturally seek a return to that source, which gives rise to our reconciliatory pursuit of sanctification. As we pursue this relationship, through our communal act of following Jesus, our discipleship engages us in the process of sanctification. Here Moltmann makes the observation that sanctification is both harmony with God and a learned ability to encounter things with reverence. As we will discuss further below, in light of today’s ecological problems, this distinction seems rather significant. As God is perceived to be both fully in harmony with God’s Self and simultaneously working to make all things holy, encountering these forces ought to replicate them in our lives. In a world whose environment has been shattered by industrial exploitation and the extraction of resources at unsustainable levels, where the natural realm has been over taxed for too long and has seemingly little left to give, we, as Christ’s disciples, ought to be busy creatively working to halt these harmful patterns and working to restore the earth as God’s House.

Interestingly, when considering the outcome of spiritual formation in today’s context, Moltmann points out that, during the early part of the Twentieth Century, Methodists, and other Christians, busied themselves stamping out vices perceived to be evil, such as alcohol, tobacco, and overly extravagant living. He brings this up to highlight our current ecological crisis as today’s prevailing evil.[3] According to author Derrick Jensen, “Ninety percent of all large fish in the oceans are gone, there are 6-10 times as much plastic as phytoplankton in parts of the sea, and there is dioxin in every mother’s breast milk,” [4] Given this information, Christians, as well as all other people, need to turn their collective attention towards the sanctification of life on this planet. When discussing the fruits of discipleship, Moltmann introduces the term charismata, to signify the various gifts people undergoing sanctification receive. These include things like leadership, proclamation, service, and even healing.[5] For us to stave off further ecological disaster, all of these gifts will be needed.

The urgency of the tasks before this generation cannot be overstated. As activist Dave Foreman frames things, over the next 40 years, our response to today’s unprecedented extinction rates will directly determine whether or not animals, such as grizzly bears and other large mammals, exist for thousands of years to come.[6] Despite such imperative stakes, many Christians tune out messages like this due to beliefs that God will soon rapture ‘true believers’ or other eschatological theories of abandonment. This anticipation influences large numbers of evangelical Christians, many Baptists, Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Seventh Day Adventists, and today’s fastest growing religious sect, Pentecostals. Importantly, Moltmann reminds us that we will not be redeemed, “from this earth…” but, “with it.” He stresses that, “We human beings are earthly creatures, not candidates for angelic status. Nor are we here on a visit to a beautiful star, so as to make our home somewhere else after we die.”[7] Here, his understanding of the Bible’s apocalyptic texts differs from those mentioned above—Moltmann envisions a world fully restored, not one that is ethereal and elsewhere. Thus, our proper response ought to be one of care for creation. Beliefs that we will soon be lifted from this planet can lead to reckless treatment of the environment. Notions that our negligence will not have dire future repercussions can incite dangerous consequences. For these reasons, in recognition of the Spirit’s harmonizing work in all things, our aim should be the restoration of a healthy, wisely-construed balance with the natural order. Ultimately, stemming from the words of Psalm 24:1 that, “The earth is the LORD's and all that is in it…,” reverence for creation should be seen as a natural outgrowth of our participation in God’s work of making all things new. 

Returning to our original question—Asking how we, as Christians, participate in God’s purifying action and what fruits that process brings, our vision of God as Creator and the Source of all life beckons our response of reverence for that which only God can give—life. Our intrinsic quest for unity with that Source then underlies efforts seeking to harmonize our relationship within God’s created order. As Moltmann points out, the gifts and talents imparted to us by God’s Spirit aid us in accomplishing these tasks and evidence our immersion in the process of sanctification. Our present need to for a concerted effort to restore the balance between nature and humanity does not erase our ever-present duty as Christians to spread the Gospel, but, in light of today’s predicament, it does give us a focus. The planet’s wounded state is not only symptomatic of humanity’s failed embodiment of God’s will, it is today’s primary area in need of God’s redemptive healing. Thus, our participation in God’s ever-sanctifying work must include a healing of humanity’s ecological failures.                    


Bibliography

Dave Foreman and Derrick Jensen, Listening to the Land: Conversations about Nature, Culture, and Eros, (White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green Publishing, 2004).

Jurgen Moltmann, Source of Life: The Holy Spirit and the Theology of Life, (Great Britain: Fortress Press,1997).


[1] Dave Foreman and Derrick Jensen, Listening to the Land, 7.
[2] Jurgen Moltmann, The Source of Life: The Holy Spirit and the Theology of Life, 43-45.
[3] Jurgen Moltmann, The Source of Life: The Holy Spirit and the Theology of Life, 50.
[4] From the Democracy Now interview found at this link: http://www.democracynow.org/2010/11/15/author_and_activist_derrick_jensen_the
[5] Jurgen Moltmann, The Source of Life: The Holy Spirit and the Theology of Life, 55-66.
[6] Dave Foreman and Derrick Jensen, Listening to the Land, 7.
[7] Jurgen Moltmann, The Source of Life: The Holy Spirit and the Theology of Life, 74.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Four Views of God

Here's an interesting article about a recent study that explores the four main views people have in mind when sharing how they conceptualize God. It was passed along to me by one of my professors and I found it quite helpful for understanding other people's conceptions of and relations to the Divine.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/religion/2010-10-07-1Agod07_CV_N.htm

Thursday, November 25, 2010

An Exercise of Ceaseless Intercession

In conjunction with today's intentional focus on thankfulness, I would like to propose a prayerful exercise I have been batting around for the past few days. In the coming weeks, as you find yourself walking down a neighborhood street, a city block, or through a bustling, holiday market, imagine yourself as a shinning, simmering thurible from which praises continually rise.
(For those who, like myself, didn't grow up in churches that used these, thuribles are the often ornately designed incense holders priests wave around during liturgical services. From them, a pleasing smoke pours upwards, which is symbolic of our prayers as the ascend towards the heavens).

This exercise can be seen as a variation on Brother Lawrence's famous concept of practicing ceaseless prayer. It's purpose can be manifold, but for me it helps as I try and fix my constant attention on the recognition of God's presence and cultivate a general posture of thankfulness for the blessings of life. As you walk, picture plumes of prayer pouring skywards from your body, permeating the area in which you pace with intercessions of peace, pleas for restoration, and thankful praises.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

A Beautiful Vision for Creation

Hey friends,

Earlier, I ran across this speech given by the Eastern Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew on today's ecological crises. I found it refreshing, visionary, and worth your listen. I hope you enjoy it!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M8_msl4ach4

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Oneness

"You cannot devalue the body and value the soul-- or value anything else. The isolation of the body sets it into direct conflict with everything else in Creation. Nothing could be more absurd than to despise the body and yet yearn for its resurrection."

-Wendell Berry

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Trailside Magnificat

You, chanting in my eardrums, forever driving me forward, upwards and always—round the next bend, are the one who called me to this place.

As this crumbly path of rock rises beneath my feet, world without end, and my nerves are lulled to rest by a continual, gritty churning that processes like the ageless tides, you are here.

You are the taste of water from my canister, the frosty air that fills my lungs; I pull You in and rejoice.

My breath, rising like incense in this alpine air, wafts praises skyward.

The swirl of pinyon pines surrounding me and the bravura of building monsoon clouds in the distance all stand testament to Your presence.


“Christ be with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me,
Christ beneath me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in hearts of all that love me,
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger.”
-St. Patrick: 372 – 466CE


photo taken near Ouray, Colorado

Friday, November 12, 2010

Continual Worship: Excerpts from Morning Prayer



Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of Sabaoth;
Heaven and earth are full of the majesty of thy glory.
The glorious company of the apostles praise thee.
The goodly fellowship of the prophets praise thee.
The noble army of martyrs praise thee.
The holy Church throughout all the world doth acknowledge thee,
the Father, of an infinite majesty,
thine adorable, true, and only Son,
also the Holy Ghost of the Comforter...







Let the earth glorify the Lord,
praise him and highly exalt him for ever.
Glorify the Lord, O mountains and hills,
and all that grows upon the earth,
praise him and highly exalt him for ever.

Glorify the Lord, O springs of water, seas, and streams,
O whales and all that move in the waters.
All birds of the air, glorify the Lord,
praise him and highly exalt him for ever.

Glorify the Lord, O beasts of the wild,
and all you flocks and herds.
O men and women everywhere, glorify the Lord,
praise him and highly exalt him for ever.

On Learning to Mind the Gaps


In today’s post-modern, post-Christian culture, it is common to hear someone describe themselves as spiritual, but not religious. The phrase has become vogue as of late. But have we ever stopped to ask ourselves what this word "spiritual" means? Undoubtedly, people use the word in different ways, so much so that, to many, it has ceased to carry any specificity or relevance. For this reason, my task here will be to grapple with the meaning of the word spiritual in hopes of emerging with some sense of why the idea it seeks to communicate is important. Upon first considering the topic, I was reminded of the research by which many of the scientists at my former job were consumed.

Before coming to seminary, I worked for the McDonald Observatory, one of the world’s foremost astronomical research facilities. Its scientists are amongst the brightest in their field and many of them worked right down the hall from my office. A major focus of today’s research in the field of astrophysics centers on the phenomena called Dark Energy and Dark Matter, two things postulated to exist based upon research of their gravitational effects, but both presently undetectable and un-provable. Scientists’ describe Dark Energy as a mysterious, unseen force propelling the ever-constant expansion of our Universe and Dark Matter as that which fills all the space thought to be empty in the voids between cosmic bodies. They even have come up with mathematical formulas to deduce that 74 percent of the Universe is Dark Energy, 22 percent is Dark Matter, and 3.6 percent is made up of intergalactic gases. This only leaves .4 percent to form everything else known to exist—namely planets, stars, and even ourselves. You would think that, given these rather specific figures, we would have more of a handle on what, if anything, these mysterious substances are, but that knowledge has yet to present itself. I bring all of this up because it provides a convenient illustration for explaining my conceptualization of things spiritual.

Much like the evasive task of pinpointing and defining the above astronomical conundrums, we face same kind of dilemma when trying to describe what we mean by the word spiritual. Surely, the word is laden with much societal and historical baggage. This only serves to further cloud an already murky discussion. For this reason, it might be helpful to first describe what the word spiritual is not. It is often used to connote the opposite of tangible, physical, measurable, and knowable. It functions as a symbolic reference to the mysterious, the miraculous, or the Divine. While some of these things may not be far off, it would be mistaken to define spiritual in such terms as to deny its physicality. After all, at its root, the word spiritual alludes to a greater source—the Great Spirit—from which all things flow and to which all things are connected. In that sense, the word spiritual is more accurately described as that which contains all reality or rather from which all reality proceeds. If one accepts the notion of a Creator or Great Spirit from which all things are generated and sustained, then it follows that all things are permeated by that force or presence which we call spirit. As the theologian Jurgen Moltmann puts it, “[all] created things on earth and in heaven point beyond themselves…” In essence, although we cannot detect this pointing with any of our five senses, somehow, cumulatively perhaps, we pick up traces of reality’s continuation.

When trying to articulate these intimations, we must resort to experiences, stories, and poetry. Each of these provide us with linguistic vehicles that allow our words to carry more meaning than any dry, intellectual portrayal could muster. Once I was driving home from a friend’s house when suddenly my mind was overcome by the very real and instantaneous flash of an image of a car slamming into the side of mine. It was so vivid that it caused me to immediately hit my brakes and drive slower. No sooner than my car had slowed did another car veer into mine. I escaped the collision unharmed, but astounded by my vision-like experience preceding the crash. I bring this story up because it falls outside of the realm of most people’s normal, everyday experience and because it evades easy explanation by orthodox religious views. For me, this instance’s sheer unexplainable nature left me with only spiritual descriptors to fill in the gaps of what had happened.

Much like Dark Matter, our encounters with these gaps, these spaces between the knowable and the unknowable, are what cause us to resort to the language of spirituality. Similar to hypothetical ponderings about Dark Matter, the spiritual is a realm that both fills the voids between the known and connects those things between which it spans. As such, the spiritual can be thought of as a conduit, for it both connects all things to one another and to their ultimate Source. It is my belief that this connection can only be proven by the individual experiences one gathers in a lifetime. Years ago, I remember encountering this connectedness when volunteering at a hospice facility established by Mother Teresa in Kolkata, India. I had been asked to cut the fingernails of all the male patients in my ward. This task required me to get up close and personal with each of the men staying there. While making my rounds, I came to a patient about my age that had been crippled and horribly disfigured by leprosy. Although we could not speak to one another, his eyes told me of his pain and frustration—they revealed his aching desire to be normal and healthy. He wanted to work, to perhaps marry and have children, and certainly to be loved by others. Instead he found himself forgotten about and languishing in a clinic for the destitute and dying. What’s more—we both recognized the random, unfairness of the disparity between us. We both knew that my health, the wealth that enabled me to travel around the world to meet him, and my quickly approaching trip home and return to my normal life were all gifts that had been bestowed upon me arbitrarily. But when I think back on that experience I recognize that, in the space between our eyes, there was something there—a mutual sharing between us that both connected us then and still connects us today. That something, that presence which facilitated that sharing, bestowed upon me a changed heart and a new lens through which I now view life. Because of the indelible memory that encounter left, I have no doubt of my continued connection with that man who lives half way around the world. And that connection, even if only relevant because of the awareness it whispered into my life, now functions more as a conduit than a barrier. But if we speak of that which is called spiritual as an awareness of our mutual connectivity—even perhaps that which fuses us to the ultimate Reality—what can be said of its significance to our lives?

The full quote of the Moltmann passage I shared earlier reads:

“Every human being is born with a hunger for God in the soul. Our whole nature is longing, desire, craving. People are never sufficient for themselves. They always thrust beyond themselves. Nothing in the created world can still the hunger for God in their souls. With their longing for God, people overtax created things and destroy their finite, fragile and transitory beauty. But all these other created things on earth and in heaven point beyond themselves to the infinite Creator, and lead the endless hunger of the soul to the infinite, which alone can satisfy it.”

Here Moltmann suggests that our spiritual instincts are innately ingrained. As spiritual beings, we are driven to seek out a fullness and satisfaction that only the infinite Source can quench. To some, this lovely, poetic portrayal of life’s condition might seem quaint, but unrealistic. My guess is that if we search our memories, allowing our intuition to guide us, we will discover the resonating truth Moltmann speaks of. But again, why does any of this matter? Many people know of the great 19th century outdoorsman and philosopher John Muir’s rapturous passion for wilderness and his valiant efforts as one of the first great naturalists that earned him the title, “Father of the National Parks,” but my guess is that not many have stopped to consider what separates their own experience of nature from his. I would argue that the key distinction lies in his perspective. When viewing a valley, a forest, or a mountain John Muir didn’t see resources to be utilized or even a charming picturesque backdrop, he saw grandiose cathedrals of intricate beauty all crafted by the loving hands divinely, artistic Creator. Surely, we can surmise that, when walking down a forest trail, the awe he recounts in many of his writings filled his heart with joy and thankfulness. All of this, because of his refined sense of awareness. It is this same transformed perspective that familiarity with the spiritual plain makes possible. We too can enjoy this grace if we allow ourselves to come alive to the Spirit which permeates, sustains, and joins together all things. Moltmann describes this paradigm shift as, “the rebirth of the full and undivided love of life” and “the total Yes to life.” This newfound vantage requires of us a complete redefinition both of our relationship to the Creator and the rest of creation. It is from this starting point that our own rapturous joy can begin unfolding.

Our conclusion then is that the word spiritual, or rather the concept it seeks to denote, can be viewed as both a language and a vehicle. It enables us to probe the gaps where our rational, measurable knowledge drops away. Thus, as Dark Matter is to the seemingly empty space between planets in our Universe, so the spiritual realm is between that which we can definitely know and that which remains a mystery. Similarly, as the force of Dark Energy acts upon bodies traveling through space, we too are impacted by Divine unseen forces. For as long as people come together to share in each other’s stories, we will always have to sometimes resort to spiritual language to fill in the gaps. Furthermore, people will always find and retain connections with each other through the connectivity of spirit. All of this matters because, as Moltmann points out, it is through our awakening to this reality and our relationship with the Divine Spirit that we can be truly fulfilled. That, after all, is consistent with our created nature, whether we choose to acknowledge this or not. But, it is only from this place, a grounding relationship with God, that our hunger can be satiated. This alone releases us to turn our attention towards blessing others. Like John Muir, whose work was propelled his abundant, radiating sense of fullness, we too, through our own nourished spirits, can come alive to the work God has for us, but this transformation can only occur when we, by God’s grace and guidance, embody God’s empowering Spirit.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Grace for a season


Yesterday evening, Meredith and I had the joy of taking a walk in the finally cool autumn air. As if being outside in that weather wasn't already gift enough, we went scouting for fallen pecans in the parks near our house. I had gotten the idea from an elderly couple that I spotted doing the same during my morning jog. After all, a wealth of experience can be gleaned from observing one's elders, right? I can't tell you how fun it was to fill a bag full of free, delicious, and healthy food from right around my neighborhood! A free walk in the park and free reminders of God's loving provision for us. I like to think that, by the very measure of our delight, these small acts of thanksgiving are somehow rendered as sacramental. Surely, this event will now have to be a part of my perennial plans. Cheers!

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Negotiating the Already with the Not Yet


In the theologian Jurgen Moltmann’s book, The Source of Life, he says that, “Every beginning reaches forward to its completion.” He makes this comment while discussing Christianity’s anticipatory, waiting for the coming of God’s Kingdom. When I read this earlier I was captivated by its beautiful simplicity. His thought sent my mind on one of its frequent detours where I began thinking about the intersection of our intentions and what we as humans both create and become. With much of theology these days turning its attention towards seeing ourselves as co-creators who work alongside God—a natural extension of the idea of being the hands and feet of Christ—it makes sense to stop and give deliberate thought to that which we are creating as a society. After all, shouldn’t we want to know that the things we put our efforts into are good?

A profound, yet common way of understanding ourselves as part of God’s creation tells us that we can bring God joy by fully living into and becoming that which we were made to be. By this I mean that if God gifts a person in a particular way or gives someone a certain interest, then God intentionally willed this by design. Thus, to live a life pleasing to God, one needs to meticulously cultivate that peculiar facet of him/herself which God has preordained. Of course, this is just my over-simplified version of this concept, but I bring it up because I like where it leads. Following this logic, we see that God sanctions the further exploration and cultivation of our natural talents and abilities. And who could want to argue with that?

Moltmann’s above thought inspires me because it highlights our agency in becoming the person we one day hope to be. On a personal level, it connects the “where I want to be” with the “who I am right now,” which I find exciting. This connection is vitally significant because a life spent in delayed fulfillment is a life never fully lived. As a person with dreams of what I one day crave to create and be a part of, I can find hope that in my very dreaming those acts have already begun formation. Plus, this understanding teaches us to look ahead and anticipate the outcomes of our trajectories. As people responsible for how the world will continue to unfold, it is our duty to approach the future with wide and attentive eyes. Will the world we one day leave behind be a toxic waste dump or will we see the errors of our current societal path and change our course? With regards to how we relate with others, will our response to today’s unprecedented experience of instantaneous global communication be one of isolationism and protectionism or will we learn to revel in our commonly held humanity? Will we learn to share the best of what our cultures have learned with one another? Or, if we put aside those notions momentarily, why not ask why we as God's children often require the immanent threat of some serious repercussion to convince ourselves from heading down paths of known destructive negligence? Why do we not instinctively choose to do the merciful, generous, or even courageous thing at every juncture? After all, if Moltmann's claim that, “Every beginning reaches forward to its completion” is true, then whatever we are already ambling towards is ultimately, already our final destination.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Prayer for October 20th, 2010


O how precious is the Life that fills us all and draws us together. Neighbors and friends, fellow worshipers and the distracted—let us rejoice and be glad in it. May we revel in our every moment—side by side—and lose ourselves in eternal communion. Let us seek the Divine even as we slumber and cast blessings indiscriminately.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Introverts and the Church


Not long ago, a friend of mine posted a fascinating excerpt from a new book on his facebook page (see below). As someone who tests solidly on the "Introvert" end of the Myers-Briggs spectrum, this writer's observations hold a deep resonance for me. I have often felt the tensions he so aptly describes.

Basically, he shows how today's evangelical churches are modeled after our culture's preference for extroverted personalities and how this factor can be problematic for the 50.7 percent of us who are not extroverted.

Having read it, I think I have a greater understanding of my attraction to the Episcopalian Church, despite my evangelical upbringing. Very interesting.

Check it out: http://www.ivpress.com/title/exc/3702-1.pdf

Monday, May 3, 2010

The Ecological Wisdom of Martin Buber and the Unheeded Message of St. Francis


In recent years, news headlines have been a blur with stories about the threat of climate change and whether or not it will affect us. From the lay perspective, the opinions of experts seem to change with the moon’s phases. The overwhelming deluge of conflicting studies and the incessant lapping of pundits drove most of us from the debate a long time ago. Meanwhile, conservative estimates say our planet forever looses another animal species every eight hours. According to Norman Myers, a leading ecological expert, around 600,000 species have disappeared since the year 1950. This tragic die-off, which some have labeled a “biotic holocaust,” seems to be taking place just beyond reach of the nightly news cameras. Despite the lack of attention it has garnered, this problem’s causes are no mystery. Scientists’ blame factors such as the exponential growth of the human population, the destruction of habitat, and the use of pesticides to name a few. It is my fear that our society’s fixation on the contentious climate change debate is blocking any real discourse on these more pressing, tangible concerns. While the public awaits a final verdict, we are losing precious time to make needed changes. Most importantly, we need to ask the deeper theological question of what a healthy human relationship with God’s creation should look like.

Figures like the ones above have appropriately aroused the alarm of some who have set out to find answers. In 1967, one such person, scholar Lynn Townsend White, Jr., released an article linking the modern ecological crisis to what he describes as the exploitive attitudes fostered by the theological tenets of the Judeo-Christian religions. His thesis hinges upon the assertion that, “What people do about their ecology depends on what they think about themselves in relation to things around them.” White, along with a host of other ecological theorists, asserts that the creation accounts found in Genesis have traditionally been used to establish humanity’s dominion over nature and its set apartness as “made in God’s image.” He contrasts this doctrine with his understanding of St. Francis’ view of humanity’s place in nature. According to White, “The key to an understanding of Francis is his belief in the virtue of humility—not merely for the individual but for man as a species.” White intends his message to be a wakeup call for Christians, prompting them to recognize their complicity in creation’s pillaging and begin searching for solutions. Believing the cause our predicament to be spiritual in origin, his words act as a challenge to theologians, charging them with the task of rethinking our relationship with creation and redeeming our historically blemished record. To those who would question White’s assessment I offer that the frightening numbers noted earlier alone provide sufficient warrant for addressing this matter. If the way we view ourselves in relation to our surrounding world affects our treatment of it, then I believe the radical, yet simple insights of the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber could be of help.

In 1923, a man named Martin Buber published his dynamic manifesto, I and Thou, unveiling a new way of conceptualizing one’s identity in relation to others. His message highlights humanity’s interdependence, both as a cornerstone for self-understanding and as our hope for survival. The key to his theory is the weight he assigns to the intrinsic reciprocal aspects embedded within all relationships—the crux of which relies on one’s acknowledgment and acceptance of a relationship’s implied responsibilities. Also, Buber’s conception of the world is one that is holistically integrated. He blurs conventional lines separating humanity, creation, and God, thereby calling into question our ability to objectify and commodify things. Historically, I and Thou was hailed as providing a much needed perspective to the burgeoning study of identity and social relations. On a deeper level, it forged a bold new understanding of humanity’s place in the Universe with relation to the Divine. The lines of connection drawn by Buber’s theories lend much wisdom to righting the problems raised by White’s polemic.

The key premise of Buber’s concept is that there are two basic ways we can understand ourselves in relation to others. To explain this he uses two phrases he calls the “primary words” I-It and I-Thou. As Alexander Kohanski explains, “When man says I, he means either I-Thou or I-It, for whenever I is spoken, the second word of one or the other word pair is implied.” Within this framework, the word I-It represents an individual’s view of an “other,” be it object or person, as a different and quantifiable entity. Whether the subject in question is an inanimate thing or a living being, the mental act of differentiation carries with it an implied objectification. It is also this facet that allows the mind to make convenient generalizations. Despite these qualities, the I-It perspective is not viewed negatively. As Lowell Streiker explains, “To perceive, to feel, to imagine, to will, to think—all of these I-It relations are essential operations of our daily existence.” Without I-It, our ability to perform routine functions would not be possible.

The alternative primary word to I-It is I-Thou. From the I-Thou perspective, all attempts to exhaustively distinguish between oneself and an “other” are abandoned and replaced by a relational reality. Details fill space once occupied by generalizations. Here, emphasis is paid to the natural give-and-take that is universally present and mutually shared. As Streiker explains, “Although I live by virtue of my I-It objectivity, it is only when I address another being as “you” and am myself so addressed that my distinctive nature, my life as a person standing in relation to another person, is realized.” I-Thou then refers to the way of seeing another that takes note of their intricacy—it requires proximity and intention.

In the following passage, Buber demonstrates the two ways of thinking:

“I consider a tree. I can look on it as a picture: stiff column in a shock of light, or splash of green shot with the delicate blue and silver of the background. I can perceive it as movement: flowing veins on clinging, pressing pith, suck of the roots, breathing of the leaves, ceaseless commerce with earth and air—and the obscure growth itself. I can classify it in a species and study it as a type in its structure and mode of life. I can subdue its actual presence and form so sternly that I recognize it only as an expression of law… I can dissipate it and perpetuate it in number, in pure numerical relation. In all this the tree remains my object, occupies space and time, and has its nature and constitution. It can, however, also come about, if I have both will and grace, that in considering the tree I become bound up in relation to it. The tree is now no longer It… It is not necessary for me to give up any of the ways in which I consider the tree… Rather is everything, picture and movement, species and type, law and number, indivisibly united in the event.”

Here Buber exhibits the variety of vantage points at our disposal and makes clear our agency in the matter. He can choose to see the tree as a measurable and discrete It, or relate to the tree as a Thou, thus acknowledging their boundless ability to affect one another. His awareness of their relationship confers this possibility. Expounding upon this Strieker notes, “Where life touches life deeply as in a good marriage or a genuine friendship, each partner steps forward in the unique singleness of his nature, achieving an extent of personal development which otherwise remains hidden and unrealized.” These examples reveal the significance Buber assigns to relationship. Strieker adds that, “Through such relationships and only through them can the healing, teaching, reforming, and redeeming of persons be accomplished in either the individual or the corporate spheres of man’s life.” Applied more broadly, it is only by our acknowledgment of and participation within community that large scale transformation and growth can occur. Buber’s ideas were spawned during a unique period of ideological sparring between Marxist, influenced collectivism and individualism. Gleaning truths from both perspectives, Buber asserts that people needn’t abandon their singular selfhood, while simultaneously affirming community’s vital role in the formation of that selfhood. Whereas the French philosopher Renee’ Descartes posits, “I think, therefore I am,” Buber seems to be saying, “We are, therefore you can.” From within this framework of relational interdependence, we can move to understand how our choices affect one another.

Inherently, the mind’s decision between I-It and I-Thou requires that a value judgment be made. The detachment of I-It allows for a commodification not afforded by I-Thou. Herein we realize the potential embodied by the two primary words. Within I-It there is separation, but in I-Thou we find relation. Here we derive our ability to make assessments and form emotions. I-Thou provides edification and transcendence, while I-It allows for categorization and commodification. To illustrate this Buber contends that, “Only part of a being can be hated,” because for one to really see an “other,” a full recognition of the “other’s” intricacy must take place. Therefore, to view an “other” negatively, one must disassociate from the entity as only the I-It perspective allows. Conversely, with I-Thou, we see the possibility for positive evaluation and love.

The meeting of one’s being with another is the birthplace of care and compassion. These are the primordial byproducts of Thou. Thus, our ability to love and show affection stems from our capacity to see. It is this facet of Buber’s philosophy that seems to bolster White’s assertion that our treatment of the environment is dependent upon how we view ourselves within it. But for one to willfully assume this relation of care, one’s vision must be attuned. The transcendence from I-It to I-Thou requires a gained familiarity. To Buber, the lines of connection between himself and others ultimately trace back to God. While I-Thou’s validity is not dependent upon one’s acceptance of this spiritual component, its inclusion is greatly enriching.

By tethering everything to the Divine, all things become anchored as one. To Buber, “There is no such thing as seeking God, for there is nothing in which He could not be found.” But to some, this may be a tough theological pill to swallow. For me, the metaphysical recalibration we are being asked to accept is more easily understood when compared with two practices from other faith traditions. The first is the Hindu concept of Namaste. In many South Asian countries where Hinduism is the dominate religion, people greet one another by putting their palms together with their fingers pointing upwards, bowing their heads, and speaking the word Namaste. While there is no exact English translation for this, Namaste is generally understood to mean, “The light of God in me sees and recognizes the light of God in you.” Similarly, from the Christian faith, there is a discipline known as “practicing His presence.” This concept, first popularized by a monk named Brother Lawrence, teaches the meditative practice of maintaining one’s awareness of God’s presence at all times. In part, this is done in the hope of seeing the world through God’s eyes. Both concepts involve conscious decisions to foster an awareness and appreciation of the Divine spark animating us all. The similarities between these aims and that of I and Thou are manifold.

For some, the theological insinuations of Buber’s perspective are laden with troubling implications. The lines of connection he uses to link God and creation do more to highlight oneness, than to spell out distinctions. Or as he puts it, “Of course God is the “wholly Other”; but He is also the wholly Same, the wholly Present.” In theological terms, Buber’s perspective is described as panentheistic: “not that everything is God, but that God may be in everything.” When looking at how humanity might care for creation differently if it viewed the natural world as imbued with God’s presence we positive potential of this conception. From Buber, “To look away from the world, or to stare at it, does not help a man to reach God; but he who sees the world in Him Stands in His presence.” This innately intertwined view of things, offers a rapturous prescription for humanity to live in relation with God. For one to live in such mindfulness, surely their vision must be altered. Embedded within Buber’s conception of relational reciprocity is the requisite of respect.

These words may lead one to assume the aim in this relational endeavor is the cultivation of warm feelings, but that is not the case. Buber reminds us that, “Feelings are ‘entertained’: love comes to pass.” But for anything to transpire, action is necessitated. Thus, inherent to the reciprocal dynamic of a relationship, which Buber expresses as, “My Thou affects me as I affect it,” a cost is introduced to the equation. In love’s case, that cost is the, “responsibility of an I for a Thou.” It is precisely this reciprocal facet of the I-Thou relationship that proves relevant in our discussion on humanity’s right relation with the natural world.

Earlier, I gave some figures revealing our planet’s relatively poor health. If we accept the notion of humanity’s reciprocal relationship with the earth and that our relationship is shaped by our vision, then at least part of White’s hypothesis is true—our attitudes towards the environment are made manifest in our treatment of it. After all, what is viewed as sacred, we prize, and what is viewed neutrally, we’re indifferent to. As Buber’s account points out so well, a tree can be seen as a simple, inanimate object, bound by nature’s laws, or as a captivating and mysterious being whose experience of life is wholly unknown to our minds. So then we might ask, is a forest solely a resource for the meeting of our needs or is it a habitat in which to live? A deer might say it depends upon whom you ask. Bearing all this in mind, and in keeping with Buber’s tree theme, what can be discovered about our society’s perspective by taking a closer look at modern forestry practices?

Sadly, we learn that loggers still routinely clearcut entire forests—a practice whose devastating impact has not only affected the survival and ecological health of forests globally, but also the millions of other living organisms whose survival is threatened by loss of habitat. Stephen Bouma-Prediger writes that, “Half of the forests that once covered the earth are now gone. Between 1980 and 1995 alone at least two hundred million hectares of forests vanished—an area larger than Mexico.” Already, we begin to see the heavy hand with which humanity has left its mark. This fact is made worse by knowing that, “In the United States nearly 20 percent of all lumber is used to make shipping pallets and crates, most of which are quickly discarded.” I’m reminded of all the junk mail that lays daily siege to my mailbox. Truly, our recklessness compounds our wastefulness.

If we were to take a closer look at a single facet of this complex issue, for example logging for new home construction, we would uncover an entire sector of the market propped up by government subsidies, laziness, greed, and unforgivable wastefulness. Simply put, it is far less expensive and easier for lumber companies to obtain wood by felling new trees than to salvage boards from the vast stockpiles of still usable wood sitting unused in the form of abandoned homes and buildings. This also neglects the amount of lumber wasted in inefficient saw mills (estimates say it’s over 50 percent) and deposited in landfills after demolitions. Thus, the decision to cut down what is left of our remaining woodlands is made in spite of the needs and priorities of non-human creatures. True to Buber’s reciprocal understanding of things, our planet’s deforestation is directly linked its growing roster of extinct species. So, how do we view and therefore value our forests?

Although we only glanced at one small variable within the larger equation, this kind of dismal news runs par for the course. With the exception of a few remaining indigenous cultures, our meager observations have made the prevailing I-It view of nature plain. Aside from the presence of a few token national and state parks, our land ethic has been detached utilitarianism. There is no other explanation for our rapacious liquidation of what once was nature’s bounty. It is from here that we return to our original question—asking what a healthy human relation with God’s creation should look like. Secondly, if we truly believe scriptures that proclaim the earth to be “full of God’s glory,” what has our negligence communicated to God?

Our survey also stumbled across a vastly held, yet questionable assumption that humanity’s interests supersede that of other creatures. In a sense, we have usurped God’s authority and declared ourselves to be lords and masters of creation. We now decide what has value and what does not; who will live and who will die. On this, White argues that our self-exalted ideals are the unfortunate remnants of errant theological interpretations. Buber seems to make no such assumptions, but neither is the issue ever directly raised. What we can see, is the dangerous playing out of this kind of reasoning in our own history. One need only look back as far as the Jewish Holocaust to understand the potential pitfalls of this logic. As finite creatures with such limited perspectives, we ought not play God. With that in mind, returning focus to our tattered planetary sphere, it does not take a great imagination to see we may have been mistaken.

I and Thou’s primary message can be characterized as an attempt to teach us sight. Buber’s ostentatious claim that, “if you hallow this life you meet the living God,” is an invitation to us all. We are being called to leave behind our broken I-It mindsets so that we might embrace the eternal Thou. The need for this conversion extends far beyond care for the environment and into our very souls. As R.G. Smith clarifies, we’re not, “being invited… to impose a veil of sacrality upon our experiences,” but as Buber explains, “to step into pure relation is not to disregard everything but to see everything in the Thou, not to renounce the world but to establish it on its true basis.” Thus, the world we have always known remains unchanged, but we come to see it as it truly is. There is a mythical Jewish saying that, “In the mother’s body man knows the universe—in birth he forgets it.” If we are to remember, it will take intentionality. And it is from this action that our perception of the natural world and our treatment of it can be redeemed.

There will be no false scenario laid before you urging your response. The numbers representing the story of humanity’s ecological transgressions cannot be bargained with and will not go away. We have seen the repercussions of viewing creation as an It, and we now know where that paths leads. The question remains—will we pick up the I-Thou lens recognizing the infinite interconnectedness and possibility of the natural world and assume the inherent responsibility of care that comes alongside that acknowledgment, or will we persist in seeing things from the detached I-It vantage?

It should be clear that at least some of our relational and therefore reciprocal responsibilities to ourselves as well as our fellow creatures have gone ignored under current practices. I believe that a wellspring of creative solutions to the problems at hand have, so far, been overlooked because our present priorities were formulated by asking the wrong questions. Our inability to properly view the world has distorted our discernment of its value. For much of humanity, and especially in Western countries, instead of harmonizing our lifestyles with God’s equitable and just nature, we have cast prudence aside and consumed with reckless abandon. For convenience sake, we have denied the sacredness of our surrounding world trading the eternal possibilities of Thou for the instant gratification of It. While a lasting consensus in our search for a workable theology of responsible creation care may still linger slightly out of reach, the recommendation to incorporate this small, but potent shift towards the I-Thou mindset must certainly play a key role in whatever remedy it eventually ratifies.

My call then is not merely that we should be better about enjoying more sunsets or remembering to recycle. Enjoyment and intentionality do matter, but we’ve reached a point of crisis. It wouldn’t even be enough to suggest a sweeping mandate for a wholesale switch to electric-hybrid vehicles, although that would help. For us to recognize God’s will in God’s continual action as the sustainer of all things and begin taking our ecological responsibilities seriously, an entirely new outlook is in order. Not only must we recognize creation as Thou, we must also reckon with the full humility that view entails. As White so poignantly alludes to, perhaps we should give the wisdom of St. Francis a second hearing. And from that place of humility a sustainable harmony with the rest of creation may be found.


Bibliography
Brother Lawrence. The Library of Spiritual Classics: Vol.1. Practicing His Presence. Jacksonville, FL: The Seed Sowers.

Bouma-Prediger, Steven. 2001. For the Beauty of the Earth. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Academic.

Buber, Martin. 1970. I and Thou. Trans. Walter Kaufmann. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.
Kohanski, Alexander. 1982. Martin Buber’s Philosophy on Interhuman Relation. Rutherford, Madison, Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press & London and Toronto: Associated University Press.

Myers, Norman. "What Must We Do to Counter the Biotic Holocaust?" International Wildlife. Mar. 1999. Web. 29 Jan. 2010. .

R.G. Smith. 1967. Martin Buber. Richmond, Virginia. John Knox Press.
Streiker, Lowell. 1969. The Promise of Buber: Desultory Philippics and Irenic Affirmations. Philadelphia and New York: J.B. Lippincott Company.

White, Lynn. "The Historical Roots of our Ecological Crisis." 1967. MS. University of California. University of Vermont. University of Vermont. Web. 29 Jan. 2010. .

For the BP oil spill


“There is another kind of revolution, one that does not emerge from the culture, from philosophy, from theory, from thought abstracted from sense, but instead from our bodies, and from the land… It is the salmon battering themselves against the concrete [dams], using the only thing they have, their flesh, to try to break down that which keeps them from their homes… If we only begin to feel in our bodies the immensity of what we are losing—intact ecosystems, hours sold for wages, childhoods lost to violence, women’s capacity to walk unafraid—we will know precisely what we need to do.”

– Derrick Jensen, A Language Older Than Words