Ecospirit: Religions and Philosophies for the Earth

Front Cover
Laurel Kearns, Catherine Keller
Fordham Univ Press, Aug 25, 2009 - Science - 544 pages

We hope—even as we doubt—that the environmental crisis can be controlled. Public awareness of our species’ self-destructiveness as material beings in a material world is growing—but so is the destructiveness. The practical interventions needed for saving and restoring the earth will require a collective shift of such magnitude as to take on a spiritual and religious intensity.

This transformation has in part already begun. Traditions of ecological theology and ecologically aware religious practice have been preparing the way for decades. Yet these traditions still remain marginal to society, academy, and church.

With a fresh, transdisciplinary approach, Ecospirit probes the possibility of a green shift radical enough to permeate the ancient roots of our sensibility and the social sources of our practice. From new language for imagining the earth as a living ground to current constructions of nature in theology, science, and philosophy; from environmentalism’s questioning of postmodern thought to a garden of green doctrines, rituals, and liturgies for contemporary religion, these original essays explore and expand our sense of how to proceed in the face of an ecological crisis that demands new thinking and acting. In the midst of planetary crisis, they activate
imagination, humor, ritual, and hope.

 

Contents

Grounding TheoryEarth in Religion and Philosophy
1
LANGUAGE MATRIX PRACTICE
19
SCIENCE FAITH PHILOSOPHY
95
THEORY AND THEOLOGY
215
SPIRIT CREATION ATONEMENT ESCHATON
289
DESECRATION SACRALITY PLACE
413
ENACTMENTS POETICS LITURGICS
493
Notes
543
Contributors
637
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About the author (2009)

Catherine Keller is professor of constructive theology at the Theological School of Drew University. In her teaching, lecturing, and writing, she develops the relational potential of a theology of becoming. Her books reconfigure ancient symbols of divinity for the sake of a planetary conviviality—a life together, across vast webs of difference. Thriving in the interplay of ecological and gender politics, process cosmology, poststructuralist philosophy, and religious pluralism, her work is both deconstructive and constructive in strategy. She is the author and editor of many publications including, Cloud of the Impossible (Columbia University Press, 2014) and Facing Apocalypse: Climate, Democracy, and Other Last Chances (Orbis Books, 2021).

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