Sommaire
Pagination de l'dition papier
Guide
InterVarsity Press
P.O. Box 1400, Downers Grove, IL 60515-1426
ivpress.com
2020 by Sandra L. Richter
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from InterVarsity Press.
InterVarsity Press is the book-publishing division of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA, a movement of students and faculty active on campus at hundreds of universities, colleges, and schools of nursing in the United States of America, and a member movement of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students. For information about local and regional activities, visit intervarsity.org.
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are the authors translation.
While any stories in this book are true, some names and identifying information may have been changed to protect the privacy of individuals.
Excerpt from A Biblical Theology of Creation Care, Sandra Richter, Asbury Journal 62.1 (2007): 67-76. Used by permission of The Asbury Journal.
Excerpt from Bulletin for Biblical Research, 20.3, Environmental Law in Deuteronomy: One Lens on a Biblical Theology of Creation Care, Sandra Richter (author), Richard Hess (editor), copyright 2010. This article is used by permission of The Pennsylvania State University Press.
Excerpt from Bulletin for Biblical Research, 24.3, Environmental Law: Wisdom from the Ancients, Sandra Richter (author), Richard Hess (editor), copyright 2014. This article is used by permission of The Pennsylvania State University Press.
Excerpt from Handbook of Religion edited by Terry C. Muck, Harold A. Netland, and Gerald R. McDermott, copyright 2014. Used by permission of Baker Academic, a division of Baker Publishing Group.
Cover design and image composite: David Fassett
Interior design: Jeanna Wiggins
Images: floral design: CSA Images / Getty Images
Great Barrier Reef: Satellite Earth Art / 500px Prime / Getty Images
green plant leaf: Iev Anc / EyeEm / Getty Images
green plants: Sven Krobot / EyeEm / Getty Images
glacial floes-Iceland: Abstract Aerial Art / Digital Vision / Getty Images
green forest: Alexander Schitschka / EyeEm / Getty Images
cardboard texture: Katsumi Murouchi / Moment Collection / Getty Images
mountain view: Ivan / Moment Collection / Getty Images
wooden cross section: Sergey Ryumin / Moment Collection / Getty Images
ISBN 978-0-8308-4927-7 (digital)
ISBN 978-0-8308-4926-0 (print)
This digital document has been produced by Nord Compo.
FOR MY DAUGHTERS
Nol and Elise
image bearers of their Creator
and beloved in every way
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
T HIS LITTLE BOOK has been a long time in the birthing. My passion for Gods good creation and for good theology in addressing the stewardship of this good creation has accompanied me throughout my career. As a result I have spoken, taught, and written on this topic in more venues than I can recall to more audiences than I can list. As I am an academic, many of these venues have been colleges, graduate schools, and professional academic societies. But many have been popular as well. Over the years Ive served on the board of Blessed Earth, attended the Lausanne Creation Care conferences, and built relationships with numerous national, parachurch and missionary organizations that are spending their lives making a difference for both the environment and the marginalized dependent on it. My dream has been to take this material, which has evolved over a decade of inquiry, and has spoken into the lives and hearts of so many (not the least my own), and place it into the hands of the everyday believer in a form that they can use. And as so many within the church simply dont know what to do with the topic of environmental stewardship, my ambition has been to put my research into a format that is as accessible to the college student as it is to his or her parents and grandparents. Between these covers is that effort.
As so many have journeyed with me toward this goal, I wish to acknowledge the past publishers and organizations that have so kindly allowed me a platform to develop my thoughts on this topic. Below please find a list of all those endeavors that have found their way into print. May I also use this opportunity to thank Lawson Stone, who has so generously shared his beautiful images with me. To Matthew and Nancy Sleeth, who have offered me unending support and the best of friendships, for their organization Blessed Earth, and for allowing me to blog with them for a time. My thanks to Wheaton College, which granted Kristen Page and me the opportunity to coteach a full-semester course on this important topic to some of the finest students in the country. The Institute of Biblical Research and the Evangelical Theological Society deserve recognition for welcoming plenary and sectional presentations from me on this topic when it was still considered edgy and allowing me to reutilize my material in this publication. To Asbury University, Biola University, Evangel University, Living Faith Bible Fellowship in Tampa, Florida, and Arise City Summit, as well as the Mississippi Conference of the United Methodist Church, who took the risk of inviting me to address this issue as an aspect of contemporary holiness to their constituencies. To Asbury Theological Seminary, which has always supported me in this quest, and to Westmont College, which has provided me the professional space to write this book, I owe my gratitude. There are many more on the list who have listened, chastened, and joined their voices as Ive developed this material. It is my great hope that, in this last incarnation of all the communications that have come before, we the church will be inspired to action. And in taking our place in this current crisis, we can do what we have always been called to do: change the world.
The Bible and American Environmental Practice: An Ancient Code Addresses a Current Crisis. In The Bible and the American Future, edited by Robert Jewett with Wayne L. Alloway Jr. and John G. Lacey, 108-29. Eugene, OR: Cascade, 2009.
A Biblical Theology of Creation Care: Is Environmentalism a Christian Value? Asbury Journal 62, no. 1 (2007): 67-76.
Blog posts from Blessed Earth, 20102012. www.blessedearth.org/.
Environmental Law in Deuteronomy: One Lens on a Biblical Theology of Creation Care. Bulletin for Biblical Research 20, no. 3 (2010): 331-54.
Environmental Law: Wisdom from the Ancients. Bulletin for Biblical Research 24, no. 3 (2014): 307-29.
Environmentalism and the Evangelical: Just the Bible for Those Justly Concerned. Westmont Magazine, spring 2019, 38-46.
Religion and the Environment. In Handbook of Religion: A Christian Engagement with Traditions, Teachings, and Practices, edited by Terry C. Muck, Harold A. Netland, and Gerald R. McDermott, 746-55. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2014.
INTRODUCTION
Can a Christian Be an Environmentalist?
T HE SUBJECT MATTER of this book is, in my opinion, one of the most misunderstood topics of holiness and social justice in the Christian community today. The topic is obviously important, relevant, contemporary, and compelling. It is an issue our neighbors (both locally and globally) care about deeply. As a result, this is a subject that profoundly influences the churchs witness to the world. But as I have traveled, written, and spoken on this issue in Christian circles for more than a decade, I have found that the church is largely paralyzed on this topic. From college students to CEOs, seminarians to pastors, cattle ranchers to coal miners, Californians to Kentuckianswe the church are MIA on the issue of environmental stewardship.