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* Helps bridge the gap between love of God and love of nature * A
separate Facilitator's Guide accompanies the book for small group
usage Many people experience God most strongly in nature but do not
know how to incorporate this experience into their spiritual life.
Others question whether Christianity has room for nature at all and
seek alternatives elsewhere, often leaving Christianity entirely.
This book addresses this crucial issue by providing a resource for
fostering a closer relationship with God and creation. With a
step-by-step approach, this book provides a framework integrating
asceticism with the contemplation of nature. Each chapter contains
a "take it home" section for applying the lessons learned outdoors
to everyday life, connecting God and nature as seamless components
of spirituality. Topics include gratitude, delight, ppreciation,
wonder, discernment, reverence, mortality, love, beauty, humility,
silence, and hope.
Even though the Eastern Orthodox Church is widely recognized as
having a deep and profound theological understanding of the world
as God's creation, practice of this theology has been elusive. To
address this dilemma this text provides guidance on the spiritual
and physical steps that are necessary for Orthodox Christians to
apply their theology to ecological issues. This book includes a
special foreword by His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew who introduces the challenge of greening the Church. In
his commentary, he sees that the application of this book's themes
can lead to the creation of "green parishes" and even "green
priests" throughout the world. Throughout the book the principles
and practices underlying the transformation and transfiguration of
creation are emphasized. The result is a simple yet comprehensive
"hands-on" approach to a Christian caring for the earth. This is
accomplished by providing an organic sequence of themes that engage
the development of ecological consciousness within the Church. The
book unfolds in the following manner. First, Greening the Orthodox
Parish provides theological foundations for ecological action. This
includes the writings of the Orthodox patriarchs as they translate
theology into a call for Christian action on ecology; the
Scriptural passages which lead to care for the earth; and the
writings of the saints which provide historical perspective on
ecology as a perennial imperative for the Church. Second, upon
these foundations - the Scriptures, the saints, and the voice of
the Church, a series of issues are examined through Orthodox
theology and modern science. This leads to spiritual direction on
how to extend the teachings of the Church into issues such as
global warming, toxic chemicals, forests, consumerism, etc., so
that healing direction results for parishioners, the surrounding
culture, and through these, the environment. Third, a process for
developing parish groups is identified so that any parish may
address environmental issues. The task is not only the greening of
parish action, but a greening of attitudes. For this task
principles are provided including a check list for pastors to
ensure that the parish is using suitable methods for energy and
conservation. Guidelines are also available for parishioner
attitudes so that they may develop ecological consciousness that is
at once obedience to God, fidelity to the Church, and an engagement
with the issues that assault the life of the parish. Fourth, a
further orientation to Orthodox ecological awareness is cultivated
through the inclusion of a study course that uses key writings by
Orthodox hierarchs and theologians. The task of greening the parish
requires study and application. This course launches a journey of
learning and growing in ecological awareness that becomes an
extension of the life of the parish into the life of the world.
Throughout the book a special emphasis exists on the ecological
witness of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew. Not only is this book
dedicated to His All-Holiness, but it relies on his writings for a
stream of quotations. These citations indicate that this greening
theme is not some modern innovation creeping into Orthodox thought.
Rather, it is an extension of timeless theological principles to
the serious issues facing our world. Creation care is akin to new
wine drawn from old wineskins; it is a continuation of the gospel
message that allows an addressing of the problems facing the modern
world. Jesus Christ taught us the need to do the will of God "on
earth as it is in heaven." This Handbook is only a contemporary
pathway for the application of the timeless Orthodox faith to the
issues of the modern world.
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