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Book List:
Basic Quakerism
Corporate Discernment

Green Christianity

Green Christianity

Green Christianity

Five Ways To A Sustainable Future

BY MARK WALLACE

Brief Description:
Religion has a special role to play in saving the planet, it has the unique power to fire the imagination and empower the will to break the cycle of addiction to nonrenewable energy. The environmental crisis is a crisis not of the head but of the heart. The problem is not that we do not know how to stop climate change but rather that we lack the inner strength to redirect our culture and economy toward a sustainable future. This book is a call to hope, not despair - a survey of promising directions and a call for readers to discover meaning and purpose in their lives through a spiritually charged commitment to saving the Earth.

Fortress 2010 256 PP. Paper

$25.00 (in stock)

 

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It's Easy Being Green: A Handbook For Earth-friendly Living, BY CRISSY TRASK The Green Belt Movement: Sharing The Approach And The Experience, BY WANGARI MAATHAI The Other Side Of The Coin: The Emerging Vision Of Economics And Our Place In The World, BY DAVID ORRELL The Weather Makers: How Man Is Changing The Climate And What It Means For Life On Earth, BY TIM FLANNERY

Reviews (1)

Religion has a special role to play in saving the planet, says theologian Mark Wallace. Indeed, Christianity, with its incarnational orientation, has the unique power to affirm the sacredness of embodied life, fire the imagination, and empower the will to break the cycle of addiction to nonrenewable energy. The environmental crisis, he argues,is a crisis not of the head but of the heart. The problem is not that we do not know how to stop climate change but rather that we lack the spiritual resolve to redirect our culture, our economy, and even our religious faith toward a sustainable future. Bold and courageous, Wallace's book is a call to hope, not despair—a call for readers to discover meaning and purpose in their embodied lives through a spiritually and erotically charged commitment to saving the Earth. It then profiles successful religious communities, as featured in the Renewal project and excerpted in the enclosed DVD,that have creatively confronted the challenge of refashioning our lives.

At last: an erotically charged eco-Christianity! Brimming with the sensuous spirit of the creation-and of our most intimate participation in it-this work by a leading ecological theologian will make green converts not by apocalyptic threat but by joyful attraction.

–Catherine Keller, Professor of Constructive Theology, Drew Theological School

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