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Greening the Children of God uncovers the theological roots of the
growing ethical imperative to reconnect children to their natural
environment. In their different traditions, theologians,
environmental educators and psychologists all affirm that knowing
their place in the natural environment helps a child develop an
intersubjective 'ecological' identity that nurtures virtues of
mutuality and care. During the Scientific Revolution this ethical
harmony was threatened as science and moral theology began to adopt
different epistemological methods, something the Anglican priest
and poet Thomas Traherne was all too aware of. Traherne insisted
that education should promote a child's attention to the moral
dimensions woven into 'the tapestry of creation', and professed
that play, wonder, and a sensory relationship to diverse creatures
play a pedagogical role in a child's moral formation. Greening the
Children of God establishes the contemporary significance of
Traherne's moral theory in conversation with child psychologists,
educators, philosophers, and theologians who know that cultivating
a place-based relationship to the local ecology helps children
perceive creation's deep mutuality and develop a moral identity in
the image of a caring Creator.
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