Caring for God’s green earth
Alex Coolman
As the skies to the east of Costa Mesa grow brown with smog and the
waters to the west of Newport Beach are increasingly threatened with
mysterious pollutants, Bob Parry worries about a passage in the Bible.
Specifically, he worries about Psalm 24 , where it says “the earth is the
lord’s.” It’s a passage Parry thinks is too frequently ignored, not only
by America’s environmentally reckless society in general, but also by the
religious communities who have a particular obligation to consider the
relationship between faith and ecology.
Parry, a Costa Mesa resident and a former chaplain for Hoag Hospital, is
one of the organizers of “Caring for Creation II,” a conference on
religion and the environment to be held on Oct. 23 at St. Mark
Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach. It’s an event Parry hopes will
bring greater attention to the obligations of the spiritually minded to
help care for the earth.
“It’s not up to us to use all of these natural resources for our own
purposes without a keen concern for protecting them as we’re using them,”
Parry said. “We’re not to exploit them as we benefit from God’s having
put them there for us to use.”
The conference will bring together environmentally concerned participants
from diverse walks of life, including keynote speakers Dean
Freudenberger, a former professor of social ethics at Claremont School of
Theology, and television and film actor Ed Begley Jr.
Parry says the practical goal of the conference is “to foster a
relationship between the environmental and spiritualcommunities in Orange
County” via various networking groups, literature tables and lectures.
Parry said he thinks there are many environmental and religious groups
whose goals are probably similar, but who are unaware of the importance
of working together.
“They may be motivated for a concern for animals or a need to plant
trees,” Parry said. “Whatever their motive is, we’ve found that we agree
with them.”
The philosophical impetus for forming such connections, he said, is
derived from the event organizers’ understanding of God’s relationship to
the natural world.
“God has given us this earth as a gift as a part of his creation, and it
basically is up to us, as we read the scripture, to take care of it,”
Parry said.This particular interpretation of humans’ obligations toward
the earth is distinctive, Freudenberger said, simply because scriptural
passages have often been interpreted in the past as giving unlimited
license for the consumption of natural resources.
One of the core problems, said Freudenberger -- who will give a talk
titled “Creation in Crisis: A Challenge to the Spiritual and
Environmental Communities” -- is the way the word “dominion” has been
interpreted in a religious context.
God is said in the Bible to give humans dominion over the earth, and for
a long time this was understood to mean that cutting down forests and
depleting rivers of their fish was not merely a permitted but actually an
encouraged and virtuous activity.
But Freudenberger says this interpretation of the idea of dominion is
misguided, and that communities of faith have an obligation to recognize
the true nature of the concept.
“Dominion does not mean license to exploit,” he said. “In ancient Hebrew
thought, it means a responsibility. If a ruler or a king or a queen or a
governor fails in this righteous rule of dominion, then that person
forfeits their right to rule.”
In modern times, the Judeo-Christian tradition hasn’t payed a great deal
of attention to its environmental responsibilities, and Freudenberger
thinks the result has been unfortunate both in its effects on the earth
and in its effects on the nature of the religion.
“That [incorrect] theological focus has isolated a good part of the faith
community from the care of creation and those themes which you find in
every major world tradition,” Freudenberger said.
“I’m trying to help the faith community to say that, ‘Hey, we’ve gotten
sidetracked over times with the preoccupation with ourselves, and we’ve
misunderstood one of the first commandments in the Judeo-Christian
tradition.”’
For Parry, the urge to address environmental concerns has less to do with
doctrinal questions than with the sheer immediacy of the threats the
earth faces. All the problems of social justice that Christians hope to
address, he points out, depend for their ultimate solution on the
foundation of a sound ecosystem.
“The solution to every other need is based on a healthy and stable
environment, whether it’s hunger, whether it’s education, whatever it
is,” he said.
“When you get right down to it, you are dependent on having clean water
and clean air to breathe. If you don’t have those things, you don’t have
a chance to solve these other issues.”
FYI
WHAT: “Caring for Creation II,” a conference on religion and the
environment
WHERE: St. Mark Presbyterian Church, 2100 Mar Vista Drive, Newport Beach
WHEN: Oct. 23, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
HOW MUCH: $15
PHONE: (714) 731-6775
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