Book review - "Environmental Stewardship"

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book.jpgSteve Bishop reviews Environmental Stewardship Critical Perspectives - Past and Present edited by R. J. Berry.

After touching on the often-overlooked influence of Thomas Malthus on Charles Darwin, Bishop notes:

Christians cannot be culture transformers and shapers if they follow such cultural ebbs and flows. We have a responsibility to God's good creation irrespective if it fashionable to be green or not. Unfortunately, the shadow of Lynn White's seminal paper 'The historical roots of our ecologic crisis' Science 155 (10 March 1967) has loomed large over Christian discussion of the environment. Until recently most Christian writing has been to defend Christianity against the accusation of Lyn White that Christianity with its emphasis on dominion has been to blame for the environmental crisis. The debate, however, must move on. And that is exactly what these essays do. Christianity is not merely environmentally benign but it has something vital to contribute to a robust theocentric environmental ethic. An ethic that avoids the excesses of anthropic approaches and the sloppy mysticism of biocentric approaches.

The role of humans as stewards is a crucial issue and it is this that volume, Environmental Stewardship, seeks to address. Stewardship has been the 'default position' for most Christians. However, not many stop to consider it and examine its implications. What does it mean to be a steward? As Gandalf once said we are all stewards now. But is stewardship dominion and technological imperialism by another name?

Looks like a good read. 

God is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow. His Word, taken daily, is the asprin for environmental doublemindedness.

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In the Word

We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. - Romans 8:22

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