Showing posts with label Thomas Berry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Berry. Show all posts

2021/03/03

EARTH MATTERS: THOMAS BERRY, ECOJUSTICE

 EARTH MATTERS: THOMAS BERRY, THE PACIFISM OF RELIGIOUS

COSMOLOGY AND THE NEED FOR ECOJUSTICE

Christopher Hrynkow and Dennis O'Hara

Abstract

This article begins by unfolding Thomas Berry's notion of Pax Gala, using the concept as a key to unlock cogent aspects of his geobiological thought. Then, suggesting an addition to John Howard Yoder's typologies, the authors argue that Berry's vision of the peace of the Earth can be categorized as a "the pacifism of religious cosmology?' Berry's cosmology of peace is then grounded with reference to concrete issues of ecojustice, with a particular focus on the interrelated concepts of "biocide" and "geocide." The article ends by highlighting the need for reinvention of the human, which emerges from the moral imperatives associated with the pacifism of religious cosmology.

"In the end, I suspect it will all come down to a decision of ethics—how we value the natural worlds in which we evolved and now, increasingly, how we regard our status as individuals?"

-E.O. Wilson (1999, 16).

"Every particular being has the universe for context. To challenge this principle by try­ing to establish humans as self-referent and other beings as human referent in their pri­mary value subverts the most basic principle of the universe. Once we accept that we exist as an integral member of this larger community of existence, we can begin to act in a more appropriate human way."

-Thomas Berry (2009, 138).

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Thomas Berry's Peace of the Earth and a Geological View of Violence

In the closing chapter of The Dream of the Earth, North American historian of world religions and cultures Thomas Berry (1914-2009) lays out his vision for a cosmology of peace. Reflecting the principles of his Earth-centered focus, he argues for a peace beyond conceptions like Pax Romana or Pax Humana towards "Pax Gaia." Berry's chosen term signifies "the Peace of Earth [and is derived] from the ancient mythic name for the planet" (1990, 220). Berry identifies four characteristics of Pax Gaia, which rest on a recognition of: (1) the indivisibility of the Earth; (2) the dynamic nature of the Peace of the Earth; (3) a progressive dependence of human decision-making; and (4) the necessity of hopefulness (1990, 220-221). A more detailed exposition of each of these characteristics of Pax Gala will demonstrate how, from Berry's perspective, "Earth matters" if one desires a substantive peace and justice.

First, Berry identifies the need to recognize that "the earth is a single community composed of all its geological, biological and human components" (1990, 220). Earth and its inhabitants have emerged from a continuous evolutionary process that began with the birth of the universe 13.7 billion years ago. Following on this understanding, Berry declares "that the universe is a communion of subjects, not a collection of objects," since every player who has emerged within this epic of evolution has contributed in some way to the furtherance of this story (1999, 82). Within a reality of Pax Gala, every member of Earth's community, whether human or other, belongs and cannot be discounted. Berry's perspective echoes Irving Goldman's description of "consubstantiality" that typifies the unity of organic life in the Kwakiutl woridview (1975, 201). Building on the work of pioneering anthropologist Franz Boas, Goldman reports that the Kwakiutl people of north-eastern Vancouver Island, "as genuine naturalists. . . accept the parity and the indestructible uniqueness of all other members of the common universe. Kwakiutl religion represents the concern of the people to occupy their own proper place within the total system of life, and to act responsibly within it" (1975, 201).

In line with this principle of consubstantiality, Berry argues that the universe forms a single, integral community in which all Earth's inhabitants are interde­pendent subjects. As such, the level of analysis for decision-making becomes the entire planet (1999, 4). Whereas the realist school of international relations sees the nation-state as the most significant unit in world politics (Morgenthau 1978, 4-15), Berry holds up the entire Earth community as the referential unit. On this bio-global level, issues that negatively affect ecosystem health in one area of the

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planet are seen as ultimately problematic for all life! Here, Berry is naming the crisis of relationship that occurs when the forces of greed and patriarchy damage human-Earth relationships (1990, 157). As such, Berry argues that it is not a United Nations that we need to carry us through the current planetary crisis, but rather, a "United Species" (1990, 161). Furthermore, Berry reminds us that the nations themselves are dependent on the Earth; without a viable planet, the nations would cease to exist. Indeed, because they have arisen on this Earth within the evolutionary processes of its geobiological history, Berry asserts that the nations also have a responsibility to allow for the continuance of the active functioning of diverse biosystems.

To save the earth is a necessity for every nation. No part of the earth in its essential func­tioning can be the exclusive possession or concern of any nation. The air cannot be nationalized or privatized; it must circulate everywhere on the planet to fulfill its life giving function anywhere on the planet. It must be available for the nonhuman as well as for the human lifeforms if it is to sustain life. So it is with the waters on the earth. They must circulate throughout the planet if they are to benefit any of the lifeforms on the planet (1990, 220).'

Secondly, Pax Gaia is "not some fixed condition, but a creative process activated by polarity tension requiring a high level of endurance" (1990, 220). Pax Gaia does not promote a static vision of peace. Rather, it recognizes that, just as a creative evolutionary disequilibrium has prompted Earth's transfor­mations to new levels of greater complexity and organization, any life-giving peace will necessarily emerge out of a similar creative tension (Berry 1999, 52). Sometimes the nature of this creative tension or conflict can be quite violent, such as the eruption of a volcano or the fury of a forest fire. Nonetheless, as Berry notes,

The Earth has found its way into being amid an amazing sequence of both destructive and creative experiences. A long sequence of cataclysmic events has shaped the conti­nents and the various forms of life have themselves engaged in a continuing struggle for survival (1999, 167).

To grasp why Berry does not advocate static tranquility—a state that he describes as "bovine placidity"—in order to achieve peace, and why he favours creative tension in order to realize a "creative resolution of our present antagonisms' it is necessary to understand his perspective on the role of violence in the "long arc" of geobiological history (1999, 217-219). According to Berry, the creative conflict associated with natural antagonisms is beneficial

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since it is within such a context that geobiological history evolves to greater levels of complexity and diversity. For example,

Many of the inventions of the natural world arose out of beings meeting the constraints of the universe with creative responses. Only by dealing with the difficulty does the creativ­ity come forth. The violence associated with the hawk starving to death or the vole being consumed are intrinsically tied to the creativity of each (Swimme and Berry 1992, 56).

Indeed, evolutionary history has many moments of supreme creativity fostered in a violent disruption of the status quo. Recognizing some of these innovative moments in planetary history, without embracing a methodology that would justify deliberate and oppressive (human) violence, is one of the crucial challenges of telling the universe story that Berry considers so central to his biocratic project. In telling that story, Berry and his colleague, mathematical cosmologist Brian Swimme, demonstrate how such moments of supreme creativity have emerged out of violent antagonisms at various moments in the epic of evolution. These instances of creative conflict have undeniably shaped both where the present Earth community has come from and where the universe is headed.

For example, the Pauli exclusion principle declares that two particles cannot occupy the same quantum state at the same time. In a universe comprised of distinct entities and not "an infinitely extended homogenous smudge" (Berry 1990, 106), these diverse entities will resist attempts to remove them from their existence, thereby maintaining both their unique identity, which has emerged through the creativity of cosmogenesis, as well as their creative contributions to that same continuing cosmogenesis. In this manner, the law of nature "in protecting the viability of the elementary particle, works to ensure the particle of its place, of its role in the unfolding story" (Swimme and Berry1992, 52). Through such means, these elementary particles emerge as the nexus for all creative antagonism in the universe.

Creativity, however, takes energy. In opposition to the notion of limitless growth, this cosmological perspective recognizes that an energy payment is necessary for any change of state (Swimme and Berry1992, 52). What we experience as beauty, good, and evil cannot come into being without energy expenditures. We humans (and indeed everything that exists) need a certain amount of energy in order to be molded into intelligible forms. How we seek and tap into that energy depends upon our inner nature—the dolphin needs to eat the fish; the female mosquito needs to find mammalian blood. Herein lays the origin of all violence in the universe: because energy is finite, conflict will necessarily

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occur as every entity seeks the energy it requires to fuel its existence. This point is not meant to assert that life is a necessarily a zero-sum game but, rather, that the amount of energy in the cosmological system is finite, which in turn has important implications for conflict.

For instance, invoking Thomist and Marxist images, consider what happens when an acorn asserts its species-specific being and does its best to become an oak tree. Its creativity lies in getting itself implanted in the soil and reaching up and out with its shoots and young branches as well as deep and out with its roots. While doing so, the acorn limits the possibilities for other life around it. Even as it realizes its full potential, in responding creatively to its context, the acorn is in conflict with life forms seeking the same energy sources. Variations on this story are replicated over and over again in geobiological history. Creativity and conflict thus come to be viewed as inseparable from the universe story. It is from working within this very framework of creative antagonisms that the present diverse life community emerged.

Without such creative tension, the universe would have remained a single primal point, static and fixed. The almost incomprehensible violence of the "big bang" set everything in motion. Now that humans have begun to grasp the implication of an evolving universe, our retrospective assessment notes that a creatively turbulent cosmogenesis has made us who we are. However, according to Berry and Swimme, we are now forming pathological responses to the very dynamic processes that have created and sustained us. When humanity's awareness of the struggle and violence inherent in creation sparked feelings of terror, we did not limit our response to mere self-preservation. Forgetting our status as a member of the larger geobiological community, we used our increasing technological skills to manufacture a Saccharin world that would be as free as possible of the risks, dangers, and wants associated with life in the Earth community; we sought to control and tame nature in unsustainable ways (Swimme and Berry 1992, 56). In a twist of irony, human endeavors to avoid terror too often increased tenor, especially when the resultant efforts spurred on the current Western war against the rest of the natural world. Swimme and Berry further assert that it is the pathological woridview that all insecurity could be eliminated which has "eventuated racism, militarism, sexism and anthropocentrism., dysfunctional efforts of the human species to deal with what it regarded as the unacceptable aspects of the universe" (1992, 56). This point is not meant to assert that in place of our determined efforts to shield ourselves from life's struggles and violence we should seek out violence and pain for their own sake, since that too would

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represent a similarly pathological response as maladaptive as the current mass effort to deny the costs and demands of existence.

According to Swimme and Berry's analysis, in contrast to both these forms of human pathology stands the life-giving tension of the natural world. For instance, reflect on the wonder-inspiring adaptation of cyano-bacterium to the concentration of oxygen on this planet, even as previous life forms were bursting into flames due to that element's very presence (Swimme and Berry 1992,  94­98). Or ponder the feat of ingenuity when eukaryotes invented meiotic sex and the Earth's diversity multiplied as two genetically different beings were able to "unite and fashion out of their genetic endowment a radically new being" (Swimme and Berry1992, 9). Or consider the manner in which a springbok grazes with its ears aloft, ready to dart off (when it perceives danger) in a stunning and speedy pattern that South Africa's very best rugby players can only dream of emulating.' When the option of total control over all the variables in life does not exist, a fear of death and violence can spawn remarkable innovation. Today, we can bear witness to a contextually significant alternative to disembodied escapism, one that is present in the powerful innovative tendencies that accompany the creative antagonisms all around us in the larger life community.

Given that the violence associated with natural rhythms can foster such life-enriching creativity, the main issue of the current Earth crisis is brought more clearly into view. The deep moral issue at hand becomes evident when we consider the possibility that we humans, in spite of our ability to image the future and our capacity for self-reflective consciousness, may be instrumental in shutting down the life-sustaining functions of this planet and causing ecological collapse. Thus, in addition to its acknowledgment of the indivisibility of the Earth and its identification of the dynamic nature of the Peace of the Earth, Pax Gala, thirdly, looks to the responsibility of humanity for both the institution and transformation of the ecological crisis. This recognizes the unique role of human agency in Earth history. Homo sapiens have now arrived at the point where we, a single species, are in a position to change the chemical and biological makeup of the world on a global scale (Wilson 1994, 5). No other species has ever had this ability. Currently, human violence directed towards the natural world is effecting change on a level that has not been witnessed since the constitutive period of planetary history (Berry 1990, 219).

In terms of the geobiological story, the present danger marks the first time that there has been "a conscious intrusion on this scale into the natural rhythms of Earth processes" (Berry 1999, 167). Yet, because humans have brought about

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this crisis we (at least for now) still have the chance to avoid ecological collapse. Today, we can witness how this opportunity for creativity is arrived at when we use our very human ability to reason and reflect on the consequences of our way of being for the entire life community. Indeed, from a geobiological perspective, humans are the one member of the universe community known to fully possess the ability for self-reflective consciousness. Applied within the ecosphere, this ability allows us to see that we are members of the global life community and thus our fate is tied together with the fate of the rest of the natural world.

The pioneering conservationist Aldo Leopold (1887-1948) set the concomitant challenge more than a half-century ago. When considering possible responses to the ecological crisis, Leopold suggested that "a special nobility inherent in the human race—a special cosmic value, distinctive from and superior to all other life" (1997, 642) is only available to humans. As such, we can choose to be remembered either as

a society respectful of its own and all other life, capable of inhabiting the earth without defiling it or [as] a society like that of John Burroughs' potato bug, which exterminated the potato, and thereby exterminated itself. As one or the other, shall we be judged in 'the derisive silence of history' (Leopold 1997, 642).

Fourthly, in line with the positive option in Leopold's thought, Berry reminds us that Pax Gaia is representative of a deep hope (1990, 221). Such optimism is centered on the way geobiological history bears witness to the survival of the planet through previous violent crisis moments. For Berry, it is essential that we have hope. By not surrendering to despair, the vision of Pax Gaia and our ability to grasp the consequences of our actions in an integral manner may allow us to demonstrate our special cosmic value. In this manner, integral human knowing allows us to use our human agency to avoid a destructively violent rupture in Earth processes. Additionally, it provides for the continuance of homo sapiens as a species located within (and not somehow trying to establish itself as apart from) a diverse community of life. Otherwise, we risk a drift into a type of pathological disconnect from the universe that nurtures and sustains us. To avoid this danger, hope must be "grounded" in the sense that it serves to reconnect us with the Earth community.

Misappropriated hope is indeed a feature of our recent past. To counteract such misdirection, Berry's hope for a sustainable future is centered on multiple possibilities for the integration of a new story, informed by the principle that Earth matters and we are essentially located within the aforementioned communion of subjects. As Berry writes in partnership with Swimme, a

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reconfiguration of our understanding of who or what constitutes the ethical community is increasingly necessary:

Without entrancement within this new context of existence it is unlikely that the human community will have the psychic energy needed for the renewal of the Earth. This entrancement comes from the immediate communion of the human with the natural world, a capacity to appreciate the ultimate subjectivity and spontaneities within every form of natural being (1992, 268).

To realize such entrancement, an integration of the "new story" into our collective being is needed. At the very least, our responsibility to a lively future mandates the presence of something akin to the "new story" in our human cultures. Our ability to be self-creating allows for this possible future to be incarnated in a vital manner. It is well within the human potential to foster a future that is respectful and nourishing towards all life forms. Intervention in ecological violence on this level is at once simple and challenging: we need only to grasp the possibility of a future of mutually enhancing human-Earth community relationships and act to make it a reality. Yet, such a possible world seems too often to be beyond our grasp. In this regard Berry advocates a movement "beyond democracy to biocracy" (Berry 1990, xiii). In such a biocratic movement, the larger life community is factored into our human decision-making processes. Within this expanded context, human affairs gain their meaning through intercom-munion (Berry 1990, 136). When a biocratic reality has been fully realized, the value of all professions, occupations and activities will be determined by precisely to what degree they enhance and contribute to the larger life community. This formulation rings true, in Berry's estimation, because it is only when we take our cues "from the very structure and functioning of the universe [that] we can have confidence in the future that awaits the human venture" (Berry 1990, 137). In light of the magnitude of these proposed changes to human-Earth relationships, Pax Gaia's image of the moral community will also have important implications for the way we think about pacifism.

The Pacifism of Religious Cosmology—

Adding a New Variety to Yoder's Typologies

In his monograph., Nevertheless, Mennonite theological ethicist and former Notre Dame Professor John Howard Yoder (1927-1997) identifies and then comments on over twenty-five varieties of religious pacifism. Because it grows out of Berry's reflections on his Roman Catholic identity, Christian faith and his interactions with both Eastern religions and Indigenous spiritualities, it is not

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surprising that Pax Gala displays certain characteristics identified in Yoder's typologies. For instance, in so much as Pax Gala holds a vision of a global community, it corresponds with aspects of what Yoder labels "the pacifism of Christian cosmopolitanism" Yoder, 2002, 19). Yet, on the whole, Yoder's criteria fail to adequately capture Berry's more biocentric form of religious pacifism since Yoder deals with relational categories that are mostly inter-human and transcendent (in the other worldly sense). Thus, Yoder's project does not take into account the mediating presence of the cosmos and the Earth community in these social and divine relationships. Therefore, in this contextual sense, it is appropriate to conclude that Berry's vision of Pax Gaia exposes the need to add another category to Yoder's typologies, namely a cosmological one. This conclusion is based on Yoder's recognition of categories like "the pacifism of honest study of cases" under which he included the exercise of Roman Catholic just war "pacifism" because such approaches are, according to Yoder's analysis, geared towards violence limitation. For instance, Yoder points out how the many thinkers employing the just war tradition have concluded, based on the realities of the "disproportionate destructiveness of uncontrolled high-tech weapons" (1992, 24), that mass military violence between two international actors is no longer morally tenable according to established ethical criteria. Further, contra the misconception that just war invokes a general support of war, he adds that as one of its central organizing principles a just war perspective "constitutes a denial that war can ever be generally justified" (Yoder, 1992, 25 [emphasis in the original]).

The very existence of such categories as the "pacifism of the honest study of cases" offers a response to an objection that Pax Gaia's notion of "creative antagonism" disqualifies the geobiological perspective from being authentically characterized as a form of pacifism in light of Yoder's typologies of religious peacebuilding. Additionally, as David Cortright (2008) argues, moving beyond naiveté, recovering a sense of "pacifism" as not solely a moral stance, and embracing a definition of the term that encompasses all those working on the problems of how to prevent war and build peace, can help overcome the utopianism associated with contemporary peace movements. In this light, the most effective excises of pacifism might well be contextual, in the sense of being grounded in the reality of the human and Earth communities.

Building on Yoder's work in this regard, it follows that a cosmology of religious pacifism can be described as centered on the idea that right relationship with the transcendent (i.e., Berry's "numinous presence") and among humans includes an aspect of right relationship with the natural world. From the human

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perspective, our embodiment leads us towards seeing the value of this world, not only in terms of a testing ground for the afterlife, but as morally worthy in and of itself. This type of religious pacifism is not content with a single or static vision of conflict which pits peace and violence as opposites. Rather, it hopes to establish diverse ways of existing in life-giving creative tension amongst the transcendent, humanity, and the rest of the natural world.

This formulation of Pax Gaia challenges the norms of an absolute moral vision of peace as represented by the Quaker, Edward Hick's, famous series of paintings, The Peaceable Kingdom. In some sixty versions of The Peaceable Kingdom, the accord among the white settlers, William Penn and the Lenape (Delaware) people in the background is accompanied by the absence of any "red tooth and claw" as children, the lion and the lamb (amongst other representatives of the larger life community) literally lie down together in the foreground.' By rejecting such a vision of placidity, a perspective inspired by Berry's work is well-poised to discern the "spirals of violence" that oppress marginalized humans through poverty, inequity, injustice and militarism (Câmara 1971, 77) as well as other forces, such as patriarchy. In this sense, Berry's perspective returns to the essential commitments that lie at the heart of "the mission" of many nonviolent activists who struggle for social and political equity. The call by Pax Gaia for a comprehensive and profound reinvention of human structures and behaviors seeks a socially just peace. This confluence between many nonviolent activists and Pax Gaia can be found in the type of reflection encouraged by various Psalms, capturing what we might term the "unsustainability of repression." For instance, commenting on Jacqueline Osherow's poetic re-imaging of Psalm 37 at Auschwitz, Ellen Davies offers a poignant illustration of the type of hope, one with a deep ethical dimension, which emerges when one becomes cognizant of the unsustainable qualities of repressive systems:

In such a situation, hope cannot mean naive expectation of personal prosperity, nor even perhaps one's own survival. Rather, it means looking to the inevitable collapse of the system, with the visionary realism that often emerges amongst the oppressed, knowing that on the other side of destruction there may be within a radically different kind of social and economic system, one that might truly be called community (2009, 117).

Such powerful exegesis, a form that invokes longing for ethical interconnec-tivity, can serve to liberate all creation as emancipatory concerns for humans extend to the structural injustices that plague both human society and the rest of the natural world. Through such means, hope becomes centered not so much on the destruction of a repressive system, as Davies would shade it, but rather hope

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begins to seek a positive transformation of relationships previously charac­terized by destructive conflict and oppression. This transformation is intimately connected to what is identified in this section as the pacifism of religious cosmology. Similar visions have been rhetorically extolled at the highest levels of social teaching in the Roman Catholic Church. For instance, in 1990, John Paul II's "World Peace Day" message highlighted the ecological crisis as a common responsibility for all humanity and situated "peace with God the creator [in] peace with all of creation" (#1). War, that more traditional "peace issue," is also classified in that same address as an environmental issue and as a waste of precious resources:

Today, any form of war on a global scale would lead to incalculable ecological damage. But even local or regional wars, however limited, not only destroy human life and social structures but also damage the land, ruining crops and vegetation as well as poisoning soil and water. The survivors of war are forced to begin a new life in very difficult envi­ronmental conditions, which in turn create situations of extreme social unrest, with fur­ther negative consequences for the environment (John Paul 111990, #13).

Given present lived realities, such as ecological degradation, the loss of biodiversity and the presence of landmines left over from conflicts, these words of John Paul II remain particularly poignant. They remind us of the value of cosmological pacifism for all members of the natural world, and they foreshadow the call of the United Nations each year, since 2001, to recognize November 6 as the "International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict."6

Recognizing this substantive value of cosmological pacifism, we consider a geobiological perspective to be helpful for addressing issues of structural violence and inequity in order to move toward a more substantively peaceful and just world. If embraced holistically, such deep green thought has the potential to correct injustice and effect healing relationships on many levels because it is representative of a dynamic life-enriching force. Nevertheless, incarnating this view in the lived reality of humans, when so much injustice, inequity and ecological degradation are present all around us, remains a pressing and complex contextual challenge.

Any movement toward such a dynamic peace would represent a contextually cogent application of the principles of Pax Gala. However, we must note a further characteristic of the type of relational social change that Berry is recommending. Berry is not engaged in prophetic or technological prediction, which, as highlighted by Karl Popper, can lead to a social-scientific

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methodology for social change based on "engineering" (2007, 38). In contrast, Berry's approach to social change is based much more upon expanding ethical categories than social-scientific methodology. Indeed, because they have not corresponded to an integral worldview, he explicitly decries both prophetic and technological traditions of social change in his work. In their place, Berry suggests that what is needed to effectively address the current ecological and social crises is not a prophetic reply (the mode in which some have misinter­preted his work) but rather a shamanic response (1996a). Departing from normative anthropological renderings of the shaman (see Lessa and Vogt 1997, 301-302), Berry prefers the shamanic personality over the prophetic voice in our contemporary context because of the way the former

journeys into the far regions of the cosmic mystery and brings back the vision and power needed by the human community at the most elementary level. This shamanic person­ality speaks and best understands the language of the various creatures of the earth.... This shamanic insight is especially important just now when history is being made not primarily within nations or between nations, but between humans and the earth, with all its living creatures. In this context all our professions and institutions must be judged primarily by the extent to which they foster this mutually enhancing human-earth rela­tionship (Berry 1990, 211-212).

In this manner, Berry is asserting that the spirituality of the shaman represents "what is going forward" (Lonergan 1990, 189) for the human project. Berry further argues that, in the contemporary world: "Our spiritual guidance must now come from those who combine shamanic and scientific sensibilities" (1996a).

Returning to the dangers that Popper associates with the social-scientific predictive methodology leading to social engineering (2007, 38), let us consider Berry's recommendations for the contemporary context. Berry writes that:

We need to move from a spirituality of alienation from the natural world to a spiritual­ity of intimacy with the natural world, from a spirituality of the divine as revealed in the written scriptures to a spirituality of the divine as revealed in the visible world about us, from a spirituality concerned with justice only for humans to a spirituality ofjustice for the devastated Earth community, from the spirituality of the prophet to the spirituality of the shaman (2009b).

With the emancipatory and justice-based ethical implications of this integral spirituality of the shaman in mind, we shall now move toward applying Berry's vision to concrete issues of substantive peace and justice in this world. In so doing, we will demonstrate how cosmological pacifism, if embraced holistically,

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has the potential to heal and prevent even the most heinous acts of violence. The ecofeminist liberation theologian Heather Eaton adds that the response to the current global climate crisis needs to work more out of insight and less from a mere data-based perspective (2007b). In this spirit, we shall now ground Thomas Berry's thought with a focus on the urgent need for ecological justice.

The Need for Ecojustice:

An Appropriate Role for Humans in the Earth Community

Although our jurisprudence systems are relatively well equipped to deal with categories such as "suicide," "homicide," and even "genocide," we have no effective ethical or legal systems to deal with "biocide," the destruction of Earth's life systems,' or "geocide," the destruction of Earth's systems and therefore of the planet itself (See Berry 1996b). In light of the pacifism of religious cosmology, this is a major oversight requiring our attention. Similarly, in the West, we have fashioned ethical principles to guide human behavior. However, at their best, these systems mainly focus on conduct that will promote flourishing among humans within a human community. Such an anthropocentric focus on human well-being and personal behavior has detrimentally affected the well-being of the planet on which we depend for our survival. When the accompanying malaise of undervaluing the Earth's well-being is added to this anthropocentric mix, there emerge many ethical implications to the interrelated problems of biocide and genocide. To highlight some of the moral content of these problems and to ground our more theoretical reflections presented above, we will focus on two timely issues of ecojustice: species loss and climate justice.

Connecting these problems, Oberlin College Environmental Studies and Politics Professor David On posits that the whole Earth faces the prospect of ecological collapse, which would severely reduce biodiversity. He further asserts that this outcome has occurred because of human over-consumption and exploitation of the planet. On writes:

If today is a typical day on planet earth, we will lose 166 square miles of rain forest, or about an acre a second. We will lose another 72 square miles to encroaching deserts, the result of human mismanagement and overpopulation. We will lose 40 to 250 species, and no one knows whether the number is 40 or 250. Today the human population will increase by 250,000. And today we will add 2,700 tons of chlorofluorocarbons and 15 million tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Tonight the earth will be a little hot­ter, its waters more acidic and the fabric of life more threadbare.... [P]erhaps as much as 20% of the life forms extant on the planet in the year 1900... [are now] extinct (2004, 7).

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With particular reference to species loss, some biologists rightly label this phenomenon the "biodiversity crisis" (Butler 2007). In terms relevant to this article, the existence of the biodiversity crisis and the accompanying moral phenomenon of biocide can be linked to a lack of a specific form of love: biophilia. Translated from Greek, the term biophilia is centered on human love for the biological world. Yet, the first popular use of the term went beyond this to encompass the deep biological need of humans for relationship. In 1984, the Harvard biologist, Edward Wilson, wrote Biophilia, in which he defined his main term as "the connections that human beings subconsciously seek with the rest of life" (1984, 350). He connects his love-based project to the biodiversity crisis and humanity's responsibility to future generations: "The one process now going on that will take millions of years to correct is the loss of genetic and species diversity by the destruction of natural habitats. This is the folly our descendants are least likely to forgive us" (Wilson 1984, 121).

Wilson was not, however, the first person to connect love with a solution to the biodiversity crisis. For example, in the late 1940s, Leopold argued that a key part of this new imaging of rights for the natural world would involve recognition by humans that the force of love should mediate relations with the land. He concluded that extending the moral community to cover the land could mean only one thing—that the force of love has a real presence. Leopold posits: "It is inconceivable ... that an ethical relation to land can... exist without love, respect, and admiration for land and a high regard for its value. By value, I of course mean something far broader than mere economic value; I mean value in the philosophical sense" (1997, 638).

Understood in this integrated sense, love represents a community-building force that necessarily accompanies any movement toward an integrated manner of imaging human-Earth relationships. Love, for the inter-layered community of the Earth, can be seen to have the power to solidify the connection among all members of the life community. Such a spiritual love comes into being when it is recognized that, "In the measure that the community becomes a community of love and so capable of making real and great sacrifices, in that measure it can wipe out grievances and correct the objective absurdities that its unauthenticity has brought about" (Lonergan quoted in Crowe 1992,34). To be an effective tool of community-building, this love requires looking beyond selfish and immediate concerns, instead moving toward the needs of the whole community and future generations. This shift is necessary for any diverse and compassionate society to come into being. Such a caring society would respect diverse forms of life on this planet, and its legal and ethical systems would foster a multi-species and

EARTH MATTERS 17

multi-generational form of respect. This is a vision of the future that is both biophiliC and biocratic.

A possible objection to the constitution of a biophilic future, where humans mediate a biocratic reality, is the notion that we are such selfish animals that it lies beyond our basic mammalian capability to work co-operatively with each other and the rest of the natural world in Order to avoid the pending biodiversity collapse. Certainly, Western civilization, in particular, provides far too much supporting evidence for the conclusion that humans are resolutely selfish animals. According to the joint analysis of Brian Swimme and Thomas Berry, this conclusion is particularly problematic because the growing Western influence in various cultures around the globe is generating an all-pervasive "addiction to commercial-industrial progress" (Swimme and Berry 1992, 254).

In terms of human justice, this "addiction" has been born out in a hugely unequal distribution of wealth and resources, so that today 97.5% of the world's eco-footprint is made by a mere 20% of the global population! This selfishness is particularly worrisome when the Earth's carrying capacity is finite, and we may be reaching the point where the collective impact of human lifestyles on the planet is unsustainable. At the present time, the Western vision of commercial consumption is being propagated around the world, and the "overshoot of the human economy" (Wackernagel et. al. 2002, 9266) is already placing multiple stressors on the continuance of diverse life in many bioregions. From the perspective of the pacifism of religious cosmology, it would be highly problematic if humans have evolved to be so selfish as to be pathologically incapable of steering a course that prevents the collapse of the biologically diverse world that has nurtured and sustained us. Unfortunately, such a negative outcome is implied by Oxford ethologist Richard Dawkins' rereading of Darwin. Dawkins famously concludes that evolution, especially amongst larger animals, has advantaged selfishness as a behavioral trait (Dawkins 1989, 47).

This new shading of competitive advantage is not as highly individualist as it may seem on the surface because even Dawkins recognizes that the more complex animals are themselves examples of cooperation amongst both genes (2004, 433) and cells (1989, 258). He further contends that "nice guys can finish first" even if the rules of the game of life are essentially governed by selfishness (Dawkins 1989, 202). According to Dawkins' reading of Darwinian theory, "nice guys" are those who behave in such ways that that they act unselfishly so that others from their species may continue. Dawkins sees such a being as destined to die a Darwinian death. He does, however, concede the possibility

18 PEACE AND JUSTICE STUDIES

that a sort of symbiotic "reciprocal altruism" may be evolutionarily advantageous even across species (Dawkins 1989, 202).

In recognizing the ethical tensions associated with anthropocentrism, it is possible to envision individuals whose entire being is connected to an integrated epistemology of biodiversity. These people would take the opening conceded by Dawkins for "nice guys" and remove many speciesist tendencies from this sphere of action. Their orientation would be so total in this regard that they would enter into a symbiotic and solidarity-driven relationship with the entire life community.9 Such individuals would think, act and love in ways that support the continuance of diverse life of this planet. This does not mean that they would always be successful in achieving these goals. Nonetheless, these people would endeavor with the spirit of love, in their thoughts and in their actions, to counteract the negative effects of the biodiversity crisis and act in ways that are mutually enhancing for all humanity and the rest of the ecosystem (Berry 1990, 80).

Unless this all sound overly utopian, it should be remembered that we can bear witness to people who are able to transcend human selfishness and live in this integrated fashion today. A prime example of such integrated living is found in the community of Dominican Sisters of Blairstown, New Jersey and other "Green Sisters" who commit their lives in services to the poor, the Earth, and God in the spirit of "engaged monasticism" (McFarland Taylor, 124). At Blairstown, inspired and nourished by Berry's thought, their entire vocation is lived out intellectually, morally, and religiously in line with biocratic principles (see Dominican Sisters of Blairstown 2010). Other poignant examples include the Jain who lives all of her life doing as little harm as possible to other members of the natural world," the native leader in the Chiapas who seeks to keep his people outside of the money economy so that they may live in harmony with the forest ecosystem (see Action for Community and Ecology in the Region of Central America 1998), and the ecofeminist who, through a special expression of embodied knowing, ties her being and liberationist project to the plight of the Earth." In responding to the ecological crisis in a manner which is authentic in relation to their own being (Knitter 2000, 366), such individuals can be understood as holders of a woridview which is supportive of the pacifism of religious cosmology.

Applied to the problems of the climate justice, this worldview exposes significant moral dimensions that relate to any movement towards geocide. For instance, consider a reading of the following passage, informed by an understanding of Pax Gaia:

EARTH MATTERS 19

The issue of the environment, now so crucial, ties us to one another as never before. Selfishness is no longer merely immoral, it is becoming suicidal. ...[I]t is impossible to protect the environment if entire areas of continents continue to live in misery. Many of our brothers and sisters are forced into a way of life that is unacceptable and unworthy of their human condition. We are more aware of this than ever, but we behave as if we were blind, deaf and insensible (The Social Affairs Commission of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops 2008, 5).

Building on such statements, a perspective in accord with the pacifism of religious cosmology would note that it is not just an act of suicide that we are committing as we use up the Earth's resources, but also an act of homicide. The truth of this somewhat provocative statement is manifested by those human beings on the periphery of both global and local societies who pay the ultimate price for our military industrial model of consumption and its manifestations in climate and ecological crises. In this sense, Dom Helder Câmara was correct to speak of poverty as a horrible form of violence akin to a bomb (1971, 29). It understandable, therefore, that in continuing Câmara's legacy of praxis-based work with the poor in Northeastern Brazil, ecofeminist liberation theologian, Ivone Gebara, connects the suffering of the poor with the suffering of the Earth community, despite the resistance of the current bishop." This link between ecology, poverty, and violence is all around us. Hence, the importance of the vision of the future that Arthur Walker-Jones has discerned as operative in the spiritual tradition of the Psalms in which "social justice is interrelated with the well-being of Earth" (2009, 65).

Despite such a vision of integral justice, under present conditions, we are left with inequality for the Earth and its human inhabitants when market morality is made normative. Environmental harms are distributed unequally in the present context, raising important ecojustice issues about the health and well-being of both people and the planet (Deane-Drummond 2008, 27). In terms of human justice, developing countries and those with access to the fewest resources are bearing the greatest cost of the present climate crisis. Regrettably, in our present circumstances, those who have contributed the most to climate change are those who are the least vulnerable and the best able to adapt to the impacts of shifting weather patterns (with, for example, heating and air conditioning, dikes, irrigation, increased health care). At the same time those who have contributed the least are the most vulnerable and the least able to adapt to the consequences of shifting climatic conditions, which result in drought, desertification, flooding and extreme weather patterns (Stern 2009, 37). In this regard, when focusing on climate justice, the pacifism of religious cosmology recognizes the moral

20 PEACE AND JUSTICE STUDIES

problems inherent in our current way of being. But even societies with a high capacity for adaptability are vulnerable to climate-related events, such as the 2003 heat wave in Europe and Hurricane Katrina in the USA (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2007, 56). Climate change not only threatens each person's fundamental and inalienable "right to life, liberty, and personal security" as guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948, article 3), it is also already responsible for considerable death and enormous hardship. In one snapshot of this problem, the World Health Organization concluded that in the year 2000 climate change caused the deaths of approxi­mately 150,000 people and resulted in the loss of about 5.5 million Disability Adjusted Life Years" (2003, 31). Further, adding to the issues of genocide, biocide and homicide, there is a sense in which climate change can be connected to cultural genocide as members of societies whose cultures are intimately connected to specific bioregions are forced to migrate away from their traditional lands. This point has even been made by The Australian Human Rights Commission's Aboriginal and Tones Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner's Office in their 2008 Native Title Report. During their discussion of the impacts of climate change on indigenous Australians, the report's authors noted that one of the challenges that Aboriginal and Tones Strait Islanders "will" face is

people being forced to leave their lands particularly in coastal areas. Dispossession and a loss of access to traditional lands, waters, and natural resources may be described as cul­tural genocide; a loss of our ancestral, spiritual, totemic and language connections to lands and associated areas (Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission 2009, 117).

It follows that the factors that cause climate change and the efforts to both mitigate and adapt to climate change are moral issues that require an ethical response.

In addition to concerns for social justice, the IPCC report also lends statistical support to moral vision of connectivity mentioned above by demonstrating that not only will poorer human communities, and particularly those in high risk areas, be especially vulnerable as a result of the impacts of future anthropogenic climate change (IPCC 2007, 48) but simultaneously, the report notes,

approximately 20 to 30% of plant and animal species assessed so far are likely to be at increased risk of extinction if increases in global average temperature exceed 1.5 to 2.5°C over 1980-1999 levels. Confidence has increased that a Ito 2°C increase in glob­al mean temperature above 1990 levels (about 1.5 to 2.5°C above pre-industrial) poses significant risks to many unique and threatened systems including many biodiversity hotspots. Corals are vulnerable to thermal stress and have low adaptive capacity.

EARTH MATTERS 21

Increases in sea surface temperature of about I to 3°C are projected to result in more frequent coral bleaching events and widespread mortality, unless there is thermal adap­tation or acclimatization by corals. Increasing vulnerability of Arctic indigenous com­munities and small island communities to warming is projected (IPCC 2007, 56).

These negative effects on the larger, life community are additional reasons for speaking of climate change as a moral crisis. In the spirit of liberation theologians who called to our attention the need for a preferential option for the poor in order to overcome social injustice, and given the current effects of the climate crisis, we might also now speak of the need for a preferential option for the earth made poorer by human abuse (The Social Affairs Commission of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops 2003, #7).

Conclusion: Moving Forward as One Earth Community

It follows from the perspective of the pacifism of religious cosmology and indeed most other ethical systems, that when we know that our actions are causing the death of others but we persist in those actions, we are contributing to a moral problem. As part of his favored "historical-cosmological approach to such problems" (Berry 2009a, 24), Berry encourages us to see that this present moment has required billions of years to come into being. 14 Change any part of the Universe story during those 137 billion years, and the current context would be different. As cosmological processes have unfolded, we have been formed by and remain dependent upon our irreducible location as part of the universe and its story. On the planetary level, like everything else in Earth's community, we are the way we are because of our interactions with the other members of that community. Today, as part of our responsibility to where we have come from and to where we are going as a communion of subjects, there emerges duties in relation to the other actors in the universe story. From the perspective of the pacifism of religious cosmology, a zone of respect among all life forms needs to be fostered by humans not only because of the inherent rights of other members of the Earth community, but because to do less imperils the essential human qualities of our existence. Just as we resist the notion of another part of the brger life community extinguishing our lives—we would likely strive to prevent a lion from eating our child or our self—so should we resist any actions that would extinguish other life forms unnecessarily since they too are an integral part of this one biodynamic community. It follows that the pacifism of religious cosmology holds that other-than-human creatures and the natural systems of Earth need to be respected, valued and considered in decision-making for the 21st century and beyond. In integral terms, concern for sustainability includes both humans and the rest of

22 PEACE AND JUSTICE STUDIES

Earth community. Given the present realties of the interrelated ecological and social crises, the road toward human flourishing will be constituted in proper relationships with each other and the rest of the natural world.

Mindsets that choose to flee the world, to ignore the moral problems associated with ecojustice, or to subdue the natural world solely or primarily to meet human needs are not representative of ways of being that will guide humanity to live on Earth in a manner that is mutually enhancing for us and the rest of the Earth's ecosystems. In ethical and legal terms, the anthropocentric exaltation of the human that has informed Christianity and Western humanism will not adequately address our current state of affairs. As Berry summarizes, 'O'we begin to realize that the devastation taking place cannot be critiqued effectively from within the traditional religions or humanist ethics. Nor can it be dealt with from within the perspectives of the industrial society that brought it about" (Berry 1996b).

When considering the ecological updating of the human project proposed by a pacifism of religious cosmology, it is important to note the inclusion of a sufficient focus on basic human needs because meeting such needs is a necessary precondition for our survival and our flourishing in proper relationships within a communion of subjects. Simultaneously, Berry's geobio-logical perspective demonstrates that a focus on the human that excludes the survival and flourishing of the rest of the ecosystem is a narcissism which previews our demise. For Berry, we require a more functional cosmology to underlie all religions and ethics, a woridview which firmly situates humanity within the universe story. As Berry writes, "[t]he basic ethical norm is the well­being of the comprehensive community, and the attainment of human well-being within this comprehensive community. The Earth is not part of the human story, the human story is part of the Earth story" (1996b). In short, to fully recognize that Earth matters and to deal with a crisis that affects the entire planet, we will need to embrace the reinvention of the human. Such reinvention will be fostered by a vision and inspiration of comparable magnitude. Happily, as evidenced by our framing of the pacifism of religious cosmology, humanity has within its traditions the resources that can inform a contextually appropriate reinvention of the human. Such an integral orientation to the problems of ecojustice can provide a vital source of hope for a vibrant and just future.

EARTH MATTERS 23

================

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----.1996a. An Ecologically Sensitive Spirituality. http://www.csco.caldocuments/ cotent_91.doc. Accessed March 23, 2010.

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2009a The Christian Future and the Fate of the Earth. Maiyknoll, NY: Orbis Books.

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Our Relationship with the Environment: A Need for Conversion. Ottawa: Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.

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Swimme, Brian and Thomas Berry. 1992. The Universe Story. New York: HarperCollins.

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Wackemagel, Mathis et. al. 2002. Tracking The Ecological Overshoot of the Human Economy" In The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States ofAmerica (July 2002), 9266-71.

Walker-Jones, Arthur. 2009. The Green Psalter: Resources for an Ecological Spirituality. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press.

Wilson, Edward 0.. 1984. Biophilia. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

1989. The Current State of Biological Diversity. In Biodiversity, ed. E. 0. Wilson

National Academy Press, 1989.

"Biodiversity: Challenge, Science, Opportunity." American Zoologist 34, no. 1 (1994): 5-11.

World Health Organization. 2003 Climate Change and Human Health: Risks and Responses. Geneva: World Health Organization.

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ENDNOTES

'Berry described himself as a "geologian" (i.e., an earth-thinker), a label that denotes Berry's deep commitment to discerning humanity's proper place within Earth's evolu­tion and the integral ecological ethics that result. For a comment on the origins of Berry's self-identification as a geologian, see Tucker and Grim (2009, xxvi).

2As Swimme and Berry write, "Earth cannot survive in fragments.... The well-being of the planet is a condition for the well-being of any of the component members of the

planetary community. To preserve the economic viability of the planet must be the first law of economics. ...The well-being of the Earth is primary. Human well-being is deriv­ative" (1992, 243).

'Berry's discussion of the atmosphere and seas being held in common anticipates cli­mate change debates on the atmospheric commons. See: P. Baer, J Harte, and et al. 2000. Equity and greenhouse gas responsibility. Science 289 (5488):2287.

4The South African national Rugby team is known as the Springboks. For an inter­esting comment on the rehabilitation of this symbol in post-Apartheid South Africa see Carlin (2008).

'See, for example, The Worcester Art Museum's 1833 version of Edward Hicks The Peaceable Kingdom at http://www.worcesterart.org/Co1lection1American11934.65.html.

6See: United Nations "International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict." http:llwww.un.orglenlevents/environment-conflictday/. Accessed April 2, 2011.

'Other ecological thinkers have commented on ecocide's moral significance. For instance, Mark Hathaway and Leonardo Boff recently wrote that "the threat of eco­cide. . . [is]. . .the key ethical challenge of our day" (Hathaway and Boff 2009, 348).

'For an explanation of the concept of eco-footprint (and the source of this statistic) see Addison (2007).

91n Judeo-Christian terms, this solidarity could be supported by "the good news that Creator and creation are bound together in a relationship that is trustworthy but at the same time delicate" (Binz 2007, 61).

'°Sital Prashad offers a good description of the efforts of Jams to live holistic lives that are respectful of the entire life community (1995).

"It follows from this tying together of the plight of women and the plight of the Earth based in a realization of the interlocking patterns of oppression that the emancipatory

project of feminism would be included in the ecological project and vice versa so that various expression of the women's movement can seek inspiration and nourishment from an identification with the diverse natural world (Gebera 2000, 29-46).

"2Câmara's successor, Bishop José Cardoso, thought that the pastoral work in the dio­cese had been too focussed on social questions, to the point that "spiritual matters" had

been severely neglected (Marin 1995, 325). Hence, many of the reforms Câmara insti‑

tuted in the diocese of Recife were reversed. Cardoso's actions included the closing of

of‑

28 PEACE AND JUSTICE STUDIES

the praxis-based seminary where Ivone Gebara was employed (Radford Ruether 1999, 24). Cardoso even tried to silence Gebara by bringing the full weight of Vatican disci­pline down upon her (Gebara 2009).

'A disability adjusted life year is a measure of the number of years lost over a per­son's life span due to ill-effects of disease and environmental factors.

"For a discussion of the importance of cosmological consciousness for contempo­rary spirituality and ethical practice, see Eaton (2007a, 6-31).


The Dream of the Earth Thomas Berry

The Dream of the Earth

 The Dream of the Earth
By Thomas Berry; Preface by Terry Tempest Williams & Foreword by Brian Swimme
List Price: $16.95

June 9, 2015 | Paperback | 5-1/2 x 8-1/4, 264 pages | ISBN 9781619025325Order Now From



This landmark work, first published by Sierra Club Books in 1988, has established itself as a foundational volume in the ecological canon. In it, noted cultural historian Thomas Berry provides nothing less than a new intellectual–ethical framework for the human community by positing planetary well–being as the measure of all human activity.

Drawing on the wisdom of Western philosophy, Asian thought, and Native American traditions, as well as contemporary physics and evolutionary biology, Berry offers a new perspective that recasts our understanding of science, technology, politics, religion, ecology, and education. He shows us why it is important for us to respond to the Earth’s need for planetary renewal, and what we must do to break free of the “technological trance” that drives a misguided dream of progress. Only then, he suggests, can we foster mutually enhancing human–Earth relationships that can heal our traumatized global biosystem.

ABOUT THOMAS BERRY
Thomas Berry (1914-2009), one of the leading environmental thinkers in North America, was the director of the Riverdale Center for Religious Research and founder of the History of Religions Program at Fordham University. His other major publications include The Dream of the Earth (1988), The Universe Story, with Brian Swimme (1992), and The Great Work (1999).

Mary Evelyn Tucker is coordinator of the Forum on Religion and Ecology and a visiting professor at Yale University's Institute for Social and Public Policy. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut.

PRAISE
Praise for The Dream of the Earth

"This first volume in a new series, the Sierra Club Nature and Natural Philosophy Library, explores human–earth relations and seeks a new, non–anthropocentric approach to the natural world. According to cultural historian Berry, our immediate danger is not nuclear war but industrial plundering; our entire society, he argues, is trapped in a closed cycle of production and consumption. Berry points out that our perception of the earth is the product of cultural conditioning, and that most of us fail to think of ourselves as a species but rather as national, ethnic, religious or economic groups. Describing education as "a process of cultural coding somewhat parallel to genetic coding," he proposes a curriculum based on awareness of the earth. He discusses "patriarchy" as a new interpretation of Western historical development, naming four patriachies that have controlled Western history, becoming progressively destructive: the classical empires, the ecclesiastical establishment, the nation–state and the modern corporation. We must reject partial solutions and embrace profound changes toward a "biocracy" that will heal the earth, urges the author who defines problems and causes with eloquence. " – Publishers Weekly

"With this classic book, Thomas Berry broke crucial new ground in the human relationship with the planet. Its ripples will spread for generations to come."—Bill McKibben, author of Hope, Human and Wild

"The Dream of the Earth is a landmark. There is no wiser or more hopeful guide through the years ahead."—David Orr, counselor to the President, Oberlin College

"Thomas Berry brings us into the presence of the entire cosmic order, of body–earth–body, and with his hand on the pulse—on ours and on what he calls ‘the basic structure and functioning of the Earth,' we re–find the deep interior, the ‘Everywhere'." —Gretel Ehrlich, author of Facing the Wave

"....a profoundly important and contemplative vision of how we should relate to this privileged planet which nurtured the rise of civilization."—Thomas E. Lovejoy, Blue Planet Prize Laureate 2012

"Thomas Berry is an exemplar in a tradition that includes a diverse group of spiritually radiant individuals (Gandhi, the monk Thomas Merton, the Lakota elder Black Elk), visionaries (Jacques Ellul, Terry Tempest Williams, Rachel Carson), and writers (Wendell Berry, Gary Snyder, Rebecca Solnit, Loren Eiseley). For these people the pressing issue has always been the preservation of an enduring community. Berry is a superb guide on the road that leads us back to the tradition of wisdom keepers, the ones who keep us awake." —Barry Lopez, author of Arctic Dreams

Praise for Evening Thoughts: Reflecting on Earth as a Sacred Community

"The wisdom of Thomas Berry is a mountain stream – clear, brilliant, revealing, bracing and sustaining, flowing from deep time and the essential Earth. In these bewildering years, I thirst for Thomas Berry's insights. I drink him in great gulps. I give thanks for the beautiful, inspiring Evening Thoughts, which collects his wisdom and offers it in cupped hands."—Kathleen Dean Moore, author, Riverwalking and coeditor, Moral Ground

"In darkening times Thomas Berry announces the dawn of a new Earth–centered consciousness grounded in a larger view of humankind and a deeper sense of the sacred. Evening Thoughts is a very great gift from a very wise man."—David Orr, counselor to the President, Oberlin College

"If we listen deeply to Thomas Berry's persistent articulation of the voice of the Earth, we can begin to learn to join the Earth Community as the authentic way of fully embodying our humanity."—Tu Weiming, Professor of Philosophy and Dean of the Institute for Advanced Humanistic Studies, Peking University

"One of the great thinkers of our time, Berry offers a vision of intimacy with the Earth as our way to intimacy with each other. This is a marvelous continuation of the Berry canon."—James Gustave Speth, author of America the Possible: Manifesto for a New Economy

"As always, the voice of Thomas Berry manages to be simultaneously calm, sweeping, insistent, particular. It's a voice we badly need to keep hearing."—Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

A Prophetic Voice: Thomas Berry | Center for Ecozoic Studies

A Prophetic Voice: Thomas Berry | Center for Ecozoic Studies
A Prophetic Voice: Thomas Berry
by Herman Greene

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A Prophetic Voice: Thomas Berry

By Marjorie Hope and James Young

Introduction

Whenever Thomas Berry looks out over the Hudson River from his home at the Riverdale Center for Religious Research, he experiences anew “the gorgeousness of the natural world.” The Earth brings forth a display of beauty in such unending profusion, a display so overwhelming to human consciousness, he says, that “we might very well speak of it as being dreamed into existence.”

But this Passionist priest and cultural historian—who calls himself a geologian—also reflects on the disastrous damage humans have wrought on the Earth. What is happening today is unprecedented, it is not just another change, he says. We are changing the very structure of the planet. We are even extinguishing many of the major life systems that have emerged in the 65 million years of this, the Cenozoic era—an era that has witnessed a spectrum of wonders, including the development of flowers, birds, and insects, the spreading of grasses and forests across the land, and the emergence of humans.

The Earth is changing, and we ourselves, integral aspects of the Earth, are being changed, he says. Religion must now function within this context, at this order of magnitude. But Western religion has been assuming little or no responsibility for the state or fate of the planet. Theology has become dysfunctional.

As a member of a Roman Catholic order, Berry directs much of his criticism at the tradition he knows best, Christianity. But his intention is to address people of any belief, and his searching mind and wide acquaintance with Chinese, Indian, Southeast Asian, Native American, and other cultures ‐ indeed, the entire pageant of cultural history ‐ make him catholic in the, non‐ sectarian sense of the term. His whole lifetime has been devoted to pursuing an understanding of the human condition and the condition of other beings on this planet.

Of course, he is thinking of present‐day human beings who live under the spell of Western culture when he writes: “We have lost our sense of courtesy toward the Earth and its inhabitants, our sense of gratitude, our willingness to recognize the sacred character of habitat, our capacity for the awesome, for the numinous quality of every earthly reality.” For Berry, the capacity for intensive sharing with the natural world lies deep within each of us, but has become submerged by an addiction to “progress.” Arrogantly we have placed ourselves above other creatures, deluding ourselves with the notion that we always know best what is good for the Earth and good for ourselves. Ultimately, custody of the Earth belongs to the Earth.

In the past, the story of the universe has been told in many ways by the peoples of the Earth, but today we are without one that is comprehensive. What is needed is nothing short of a new creation story, a new story of the universe, he asserts. Creation must be perceived and experienced as the emergence of the universe as both a psychic‐spiritual and material‐physical reality from the very beginning.

Human beings are integral with this emergent process. Indeed, the human is that being in whom the universe reflects on and celebrates itself in the deep mysteries of its existence in a special mode of conscious self‐awareness.

Everything tells the story of the universe ‐ the wind, trees, birds, stones. They are our cousins. Today it is harder to hear them. Berry has concentrated over the years on listening to the story told by the physical sciences, the story narrated by human cultures, the story recounted through cave paintings, visions of shamans, the pyramids of the Egyptians and Mayans. Each narrative is unique. But ultimately, they all tell the same story too.

We need a narrative that will demonstrate that every aspect of the universe is integral with a single organic whole, he insists. Its primary basis is the account of the emergent universe as communicated through our observational sciences. The universe as we know it today not only has cyclical modes of functioning, but also irreversible sequential modes of transformations. From the beginning of human consciousness, all cultures experienced the cyclical modes: the ever‐renewing sequence of seasons, of life and death. But today scientists and some others have begun to move from that dominant spatial mode of consciousness to a dominant time‐ developmental mode, time as an evolutionary sequence of irreversible transformations. We are beginning to recognize that our might can do temporal damage that is also eternal damage.

The new narrative will encompass a new type of history, a new type of science, a new type of economics, a new mode of awareness of the divine—in the very widest sense, a new kind of religious sensitivity. Such ideas as these do not always sit well with traditional Christians, nor with the followers of some other religions.

We realized on our first meeting with him at the Riverdale Center that Berry does not fit the common image of a nonconformist. A man with a gentle smile, bright eyes, and tousled whitening hair opened the door of the three story brown house and introduced himself simply as “Tom Berry.” It was a little hard to imagine that this retiring man, dressed in an old shirt and subdued in his speech could write so passionately of the dance, song, poetry, and drumbeats through which human beings have expressed their exultation and sense of participating in the universe as a single community. He led us through the inside of the house, which appeared to be one vast library with special collections of books, many in original languages, on Hindu, Confucian, Buddhist, Shinto, and Native American cultures. He then seated us on the plant‐ filled sun‐veranda overlooking the Hudson. Despite his shy manner, he responded easily to our questions, and sometimes took the initiative.

Noticing that our eyes had been drawn to the majestic red oak outside the window, he told us that it had endured more than four hundred years of nature’s buffets, and had withstood even human‐made disasters, like the massive tremors from a gas tank explosion that uprooted its fellow oak several years ago. To him it stood as a symbol of hope. Indeed, it was to this tree that he had dedicated The Dream of the Earth: “To the Great Red Oak, beneath whose sheltering branches this book was written.”

As we listened, occasionally looking across the river at the Palisades, we sensed that the Riverdale Center, set in the valley that had witnessed a story that included the emergence of the Palisades, the appearance of trees and birds and bears, then the long habitation by Native Americans, is a fitting place to contemplate the fate of Earth. It seemed fitting, too, that scientists, educators, environmentalists, and people of many faiths from all over the world would gather here, in small groups, to dream a new vision of the Earth into being.

Although clearly reticent about personal matters, he told us that his own life story began in 1914 in Greensboro, North Carolina. The third of thirteen children in a middle‐class Catholic family, he managed to develop a congenial relationship with his parents, but at the same time a certain distance.

This trait of distance, combined with a growing attachment to the land, surfaced often as he talked of his boyhood. The family had a horse, cow, chickens, and dogs; he felt close to the animal world. He often roamed the hills alone, except for the companionship of a collie, sensing the freedom of the woodlands and delighting in the clear streams, the songs of the birds, the subtle smells of the meadows. “But even at the age of eight,” he recalled, “I saw that development was damaging nature. At nine, I was collecting catalogues for camping equipment, canoes, knives, all the things I’d need to live in the Northwest forest. I felt the confrontation between civilization and wilderness, and I was acting on it.”

At nineteen, Berry went on, he decided to enter a religious community that would offer the best opportunity for contemplation and writing. He wanted to “get away from the trivial.” Sometimes he has wondered how he got through religious life, but he did, and yet managed to maintain that certain distance between himself and the establishment all the way.

After ten years in various monasteries, he pursued a doctorate in history at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., then spent a year studying Chinese in Beijing. After teaching at the Passionist seminary college, he became a chaplain with NATO in Germany; traveled in Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East; and went to England to meet the distinguished historian of cultures, Christopher Dawson, who had helped awaken him to the role of religion as a powerful factor in shaping culture. Later he taught Japanese history at Seton Hall University, helped found a seminar on Oriental thought and religion at Columbia University and an Asian Institute at St. John’s University, built up Fordham University’s history of religions program, and for eleven years served as President of the American Teilhard Association. During these years he continued his search to discover how people find meaning in life. Always drawn to Native Americans because of their sense of integrity and freedom, their bond with the riches of nature, he came to know many, including Sioux chief Lame Deer, Onondagan leader Oren Lyons, and the poet Paula Gunn Allen. He continued his studies of history and philosophy, and aided by knowledge of Sanskrit and Chinese, deepened his exploration of Eastern religious traditions. Over the years he also published a large number of papers and books on subjects ranging from Buddhism to the religions of India, the creative role of the elderly, the spiritual transformation of Carl Jung, and the thought of Teilhard de Chardin. Philosophers ranging from Confucius to Thoreau and Bergson; poet/visionaries extending from Dante to Blake and Chief Seattle; ecologists and scientists from Rachel Carson and Ilya Prigogine to Anne and Paul Ehrlich, all came to influence his conception of the Earth Community.

“But Teilhard had the greatest influence on what might be called your ecological vision?”

“Yes. As a paleontologist as well as philosopher, he had a grasp of the need for healing the rift between science and religion. I would say that he appreciated the important role of science as a basic mystical discipline of the West. He was the first great thinker in the modern scientific tradition to describe the universe as having a psychic‐spiritual as well as a physical‐material dimension from the very beginning. Teilhard had a comprehensive vision of the universe in its evolutionary unfolding. He saw the human as inseparable from the history of the universe. Also, he was keenly aware of the need in Western religious thought to move from excessive concern with redemption to greater emphasis on the creation process.”

“And Teilhard’s thought inspired you to delve into science?”

He nodded. “I needed some general knowledge of geology, astronomy, physics, other sciences. But I must emphasize that in an ecological age, Teilhard’s framework has its limitations. Remember, he died in 1955. He believed in technological ‘progress,’ and saw the evolutionary process as concentrated in the human, which would ultimately achieve super‐human status. He could not understand humans’ destructive impact on the Earth. When others pointed it out, he could not see it. Science would discover other forms of life! Well, his work remains tremendously important. The challenge is to extend Teilhard’s principal concerns further, to help light the way toward an Ecozoic Age.”

“Teilhard posed the greatest challenge of our time: to move from the spatial mode of consciousness to the historical, from being to becoming. The Church finds difficulty in recognizing the evolution of the Earth. For a long time it wouldn’t accept even the evolution of animal forms. To this day there is no real acceptance of our modern story of the universe as sacred story. As a child I was taught by the catechism that Earth was created in seven days, 5000 years ago. There was no sense of developmental, transformative time in the natural world.”

“And the church, as so often, is behind the times instead of leading?”

He looked at us for a long moment. “There is some concern, of course, but it does not go far enough,” he said slowly. “The Vatican, for example, makes vague statements on being careful about the environment, but there is emphasis on making the natural world useful to human beings. So far, the most impressive Catholic bishops’ statement comes from the Philippines. It’s called ‘What is Happening to our Beautiful Land?’“ Over lunch we learned more about the ever‐widening scope of Thomas Berry’s activities and about some of the people who are helping to carry out his work. He told us that on occasion he spoke at New York’s Cathedral of St. John the Divine, which has become the most ecologically‐ minded church that he knows of, largely because of the enthusiasm of its Dean, James Parks Morton. He speaks on occasion at gatherings at Genesis Farm, a religiously‐based center seeking to develop a model of bioregional community; at the California‐based Institute in Culture and Creation Spirituality, headed by radical priest Matthew Fox; and at Grailville, an educational center and laywoman’s community stressing ecological living. He also has spoken at Au Sable Institute where practical and theoretical programs in ecology are integrated with biblical studies. He has participated in many conferences, including the seminal 1988 meeting of the North American Conference on Christianity and Ecology, the first (1988) Global Conference of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders on Human Survival, and international gatherings in Costa Rica at the United Nations University for Peace. He helped the Holy Cross Center in Port Burwell, Ontario build an institution for spirituality and ecology. In Puebla, Mexico, a Jesuit group has founded the Institute for Ecological Personalism based on his ideas. Letters come in continually from people in countries all over the world.

During the afternoon our talks continued, touching on animism, Taoism, and Buddhism, as well as Buddhist ideas for human habitats, which Berry considered models of ecological functioning because they disturb the natural world very little.

Pulling the Strands of Berry’s Thought Together

Since that day we have met Berry several times, studied his more recent writings, and gradually gained a clearer picture of the transforming vision he presents.

In 1988 Berry brought out a collection of his essays in a volume entitled The Dream of the Earth. In 1991 he and Jesuit priest Thomas Clarke published a dialogue, Befriending the Earth: a Theology of Reconciliation Between Humans and the Earth, which had appeared as a thirteen‐ part series on Canadian television. Years earlier, in 1982, he teamed up with Brian Swimme to begin a decade of work on a daring venture: The Universe Story: From the Primordial Flaring Forth to the Ecozoic Era, which was published in 1992.

Their partnership has been an unusual one. Swimme, a physicist and a mathematical cosmologist, is younger, and lives thousands of miles away, on the West Coast. Brian Swimme’s early book is entitled The Universe is a Green Dragon. Now they have written the story of the universe as a single comprehensive narrative of the sequence of transformations that the universe has experienced. Grounded in present‐day scientific understanding, it parallels the mythic narratives of the past as they were told in poetry, music, painting, dance, and ritual. Nothing quite like this coupling of science and human history has been published before..

Planet Earth is surely a mysterious planet, say Swimme and Berry. One need only observe how much more brilliant it is than other planets of our solar system in the diversity of its manifestations and the complexity of the joy of its development. Earth appears to have developed with the simple aim of celebrating the joy of existence. Through this story, they hope that the human community will become present to the larger Earth community in a mutually enhancing way. Our role is to enable Earth and the entire universe to reflect on and celebrate itself in a special mode of conscious self awareness. We have become desensitized to the glories of the natural world and are making awesome decisions without the sense of awe and humility commensurate with their impact. We need a new mystique as we move into the Ecozoic era, and this process will need the participation of all members of the planetary community.

The various living and nonliving members of the Earth community have a common genetic line of development, the authors tell us. It begins with the Beginning: the primordial Flaring Forth of the universe some 15 billion years ago. It starts as stupendous energy, and evolves into gravitational, strong nuclear, weak nuclear, and electromagnetic interactions. Before a millionth of a second has passed, the particles stabilize. From this point we are carried through the seeding of galaxies, and the appearance of galactic clouds, primal stars, the first elements, supernovas, and galaxies. These are magnificent spiraling moments, carrying the destiny of everything that followed. They are moments of grace. Some five billion years ago the solar system forms, and a billion years later, the living Earth. We travel through the Paleozoic Era (in which vertebrates, jawed fishes, and insects appear); the Mesozoic Era (witnessing the first dinosaurs, birds, and mammals), and the Cenozoic (beginning with the emergence of the first rodents and bats, and carrying through to the arrival of various orders of mammals and humans), up to today.

After the emergence of the first humans, Homo habilis, some 2.6 million years ago, the new species evolves to Homo erectus, and then to Homo sapiens, with its marvelous new gifts of expression—ritual burials at first, then language, musical instruments, cave paintings, and other skills and artifacts that we associate with human civilization. Homo sapiens evolved through periods of the Neolithic village, classical civilizations, the rise of nations, and the “modern revelation.”

The latter refers to a new awareness of how the ultimate mysteries of existence are being manifested in the universe. This revelation, a gradual change from a dominant spatial mode of consciousness to perception of the universe as an irreversible sequence of transformations, might be called a change from “cosmos” to ever‐evolving “cosmogenesis”. It can be seen as beginning with the discoveries of Copernicus, and embracing those of Kepler, Galileo, Francis Bacon, Descartes, Newton, Kant, Darwin, Einstein, Whitehead, Teilhard, Rachel Carson, and many other scientists and philosophers.

Throughout the book the two men write from a unified point of view as they present some cardinal principles. Among them, that the birth of the universe was not an event in time; time begins simultaneously with the birth of existence. There was no “before,” and there was no “outside.” All the energy that would ever exist erupted as a single existence. The stars that later would blaze, the lizards that would crawl on the land, the actions of the human species, would be powered by the same mysterious energy that burst forth at the first dawn. Another cardinal principle is that the universe holds all things together, and is itself the primary activating power in every activity. It is not a thing, but a mode of being of everything. Recent scientific work has shown that it is not workable to think of a particle or event as completely determined by its immediate vicinity. Although in practical terms their influence may be negligible, events taking place elsewhere in the universe are directly related to the physical parameters of the situation. It is beyond the scope of this summary to present the authors’ account of this phenomenon. However, it underlines their conclusion that “since the universe blossomed from a seed point, this means that a full understanding of a proton requires a full understanding of the universe.”

Articulating the new story so that humans can enter creatively into the web of relationships in the universe will require, to some degree, reinventing language and the meaning we attach to words. For example: what is gravitation? In classical mechanistic understanding, it is a particular attraction things have to each other. Newton called it force, and Einstein, the curvature of the space‐time manifold. But the bond holding each thing in the universe to everything else is simply the universe acting. Therefore, to say “The stone falls to Earth” misses the active quality of that event. To say that gravity pulls the stone to Earth implies a mechanism that does not exist. To say that Earth pulls the rock misses the presence of the universe to each of its parts. It is more helpful, say Berry and Swimme, to see the planet Earth and the rock as drawn by the universe into bonded relationship, a profound intimacy. “The bonding simply happens; it simply is. The bonding is the perdurable fact of the universe, and happens primevally in each instant, a welling up of an inescapable togetherness of things.” Thus we can begin to grasp what is meant by the statement that gravity is not an independent power; it is the universe in both its physical and spiritual aspects that holds things together and is the primary activating power in every activity. We can begin to understand the idea that the universe acts, that it is not a thing, but a mode of being of everything. Each process, then, is ultimately indivisible.

Primal peoples of every continent understood this bonding, this intimacy, although obviously not with the tools and complex theories developed by modern science. Recent centuries have witnessed a concerted effort to rid scientific language of all anthropomorphisms. Instead, it has become mechanomorphic and reductionist. But let us consider the Milky Way. Its truth cannot be realized by focusing only on its early components, helium and hydrogen. Its truth also rests on the fact that in its later modes of being it is capable of thinking and feeling and creating—of evolving into creatures such as human beings. The Milky Way expresses its inner depths in Emily Dickinson’s poetry, for Emily Dickinson is a dimension of the galaxy’s development. In the long process of evolution, the sensibility of a poet derives from the Milky Way, and her or his feelings are an evocation of being, involving sunlight, thunderstorms, grass, mountains, animals, and human history. They are the evocation of mountain, animal, world. Poets do not think on the universe; rather, the universe thinks itself, in them and through them.

Thus, the vibrations and fluctuations in the universe are the music that called forth the galaxies and their powers of weaving elements into life. Our responsibility is to develop our capacity to listen. The eye that searches the Milky Way—the eye of humans or that of telescopes—is itself an eye shaped by the Milky Way. The mind searching for contact with the Milky Way is the very mind of the Milky Way searching for its inner depths.

The appearance of humans on this planet brought with it a new faculty of understanding, a consciousness characterized by a sense of wonder and celebration, and an ability to use parts of its external environment as instruments. Even in the time of Homo habilis (2.6 million to 1.5 million years ago), an intimate rapport between humans and the natural world was developing. And in the much later period of classical civilizations (3500 BCE to 1600 CE), the human social order was integrated with the cosmological order. Neither was conceivable without the other.

Yet while there was a great deal of teaching about humans’ relationship with the natural world in the Western, and especially the Eastern classical civilizations, there was also great devastation. Many Chinese philosophers and painters, for example, depicted that intimacy in eloquent terms, but endless wars and stripping the forests for more cultivation despoiled the countryside.

In the West, particularly, there developed an exaggerated anthropocentrism. When the Plague struck Europe in 1347, this changed to theocentrism, for since there was no germ theory to explain such a calamity, humans concluded that they must be too attached to Earth and should commit themselves to salvation from the Earth, absorption into the divine. Anthropocentrism and theocentrism, however, both denied the unity between the natural, human, and divine world. The mystical bonding of the human with the natural world was becoming progressively weaker. Closely associated with this insensitivity to the natural world was an insensitivity to women; patriarchal dominance reigned.

Since the late eighteenth century, the West has considered its most important mission to be that the peoples of Earth achieve their identity within the democratic setting of the modern nation‐state. Nationalism, progress, democratic freedoms, and virtually limitless rights to private property are the four fundamentals of this mystique. That unless their limits are recognized, these might bring catastrophe upon the natural world was not even considered. Land became something to be exploited economically rather than communed with spiritually. Wars of colonial conquest were related to the mission of propagating Western bourgeois values.

The “modern revelation”—characterized as it is by gradual awareness that the universe has emerged as an irreversible sequence of transformations enabling it to gain greater complexity in structure and greater variety in its modes of conscious expression—is a new mode of consciousness. This change in perception from an enduring cosmos to an ever‐transforming cosmogenesis has awesome implications that humans have not yet come to grips with. Our predicament is itself the result of a myth—the myth of Wonderland. If only we continue on the path of progress it tells us, happiness will be ours—happiness virtually equated with the ever‐ increasing consumption of products that have been taken violently from Earth or that react violently on it.

We need a new myth to guide human activity into the future. It should be analogous to the sense of mythic harmonies that suffused the fifteenth century Renaissance. At the beginning of the scientific age, the universe was perceived as one of order and harmony, in which each mode of being resonates with every other mode of being.

Somehow this sense of an intelligibly ordered universe has directed the scientific quest, say Swimme and Berry. But only recently have we been able to comprehend the depths of these harmonies, and thus fully recognize the mission of science. The scientific meditation on the structure and functioning of the universe that began centuries ago has yielded a sense of what can be called “the curvature of the universe whereby all things are held together in their intimate presence to each other.” Each thing is sustained by everything else.

We are on the verge of the Ecozoic era. What will it mean? This is a question explored in The Universe Story and Befriending the Earth, and in essays on economics, technology, law, bioregionalism, education, and planetary socialism in The Dream of the Earth. The basic answer begins to be found when we question some of our implicit assumptions:

 The assumption that we need constant economic growth, for example. How could we believe that human well‐being could be attained by diminishing the well‐being of the Earth? That we could achieve an ever‐expanding Gross Domestic Product when the Gross Earth Product is declining? Since the threat to both economics and religion comes from one source, the disruption of the natural world, should economics not also be seen as a religious issue? If the water is polluted, it can neither be drunk nor used for baptism.

 The implicit assumption that we could cure sick people by technologies and by focusing on their present problems. How can we have well people on a sick planet?

 The widespread idea that the primary purpose of education is to train people for jobs. We need jobs, certainly, but is it not more important for people to be educated for a diversity of roles and functions? Is it not more realistic, in the long run, to view education as coming to know the story of the universe, of life systems, of consciousness as a single story—and to help people understand and fulfil their role in this larger pattern of meaning? Even in the arts, rather than focusing on producing specialized professionals, would it not be better if all of us played music, if all children painted and wrote poetry?

 The conviction that a democracy that is exploiting the natural world is the highest form of governance. The anthropocentrism of the word is implicit in the root; “demo” refers to people, not to all beings on Earth, beings whose fate we are controlling in the name of human life, liberty, and happiness. We need a biocracy, a rule that will emerge from and be concerned with all the members of the community.

Re‐evaluating these and other “truths” that we hold as “self‐ evident” should enable us to realize that Earth is primary, while the human is secondary; that the universe is a communion of subjects, not a collection of objects. We should be enabled to step back a little from our diligent efforts to impose our will on life systems. We will then be free to listen to the natural world with an attunement that goes beyond our scientific perceptions and reaches the spontaneous sensitivities in our own inner being.

All human professions need to recognize that their primary source is the integral functioning of the Earth community. It is the natural world that is the primary economic reality, the primary educator, the primary governance, the primary technologist, the primary healer, the primary presence of the sacred, the primary moral value. The professions do not have the words for the type of transformation required; we need a new language. We need to transform the legal profession, for instance, and invent a new language in law, and then move from the ideal of democracy toward the more comprehensive paradigm of biocracy. One example: a constitution that recognizes not only the human on this continent, but the entire North American community, including animate beings, geographical structures, life systems.

Religion needs to appreciate that the primary sacred community is the universe itself. Our ethical sensitivities need to expand beyond suicide, homicide, and genocide, to include biocide and geocide.

Interwoven in all this is the need to fully recognize women’s gifts and their roles in the future, both for themselves and for the well‐being of Earth. The need to limit human population is modifying the traditional roles of women and men, indeed the entire human situation. As women are liberated from the oppressions they have endured in most traditional civilizations, a new energy should be released throughout the Earth.

Albeit slowly, changes are already happening, as divisions of learning begin to overcome their isolation. Fundamental to a real sea‐change, however, will be the move from a human‐centered to an Earth‐centered language. Words like good, evil, freedom, society, justice, literacy, progress, praise should be broadened to include other beings of the natural world.

A basic principle of the emerging Ecozoic era is that the universe requires two modes of understanding: it has cyclical modes of functioning, yes, but also irreversible sequential modes of transformation. The law of entropy must evoke a certain foreboding in human consciousness.

The Cenozoic era emerged quite independent of human influence, but Homo sapiens will enter into virtually every phase of the Ecozoic era. We cannot create trees, fish, or birdsong, but they could well disappear unless we choose to temper our awesome power with humility. We must follow three basic axioms in our relations with the natural world: acceptance, protection, fostering: Acceptance of the given order of things. Protection of the life‐systems at the base of the planetary community. Fostering a sense of active responsibility for the larger Earth community, a responsibility that devolves upon us through our unique capacity for understanding the universe story.

Our fundamental commitment in the Ecozoic era should be to perceive the universe as a communion of subjects rather than as a collection of objects. A major obstacle to this is our reluctance to think of the human as one among many species. Moreover, the change in consciousness required is of such enormous proportions and significance that it might be likened to a new type of revelatory experience.

In the new era we shall need to recapture the basic principle of balance. Its prototype lies in the awesome reality that the expansive original energy of the primordial Flaring Forth keeps the universe from collapsing and gravitational attraction holds the parts together, enabling the universe to flourish. So, too, on Earth: The balance of containing and expanding forces keeps the Earth in a state of balanced turbulence.

In the industrial age, however, humans have upset the equilibrium. In the Ecozoic era the task will be to achieve a creative balance between human activities and other forces on this planet. When the curvature of the universe, the curvature of the Earth, and the curvature of the human are in proper relation, then the Earth and its human aspect will have come into celebratory experience that is the fulfilment of Earthly existence.

Where does God fit into this story? This is a word that Berry rarely uses. It has been overused, and trivialized, he says. The word has many different meanings to people. His principal concern is to reach the larger society, including people who would not call themselves religious.

Although Berry does not say it in so many words, he implies that in the West, especially, we spend too much time defining God and arguing over definitions rather than recognizing—in both theological and experiential ways—the ineffable. The term “God,” he says, refers to the ultimate mystery of things, something beyond that which we can truly comprehend. Many primal peoples experience this as the Great Spirit, a mysterious power pervading every aspect of the natural world. Some people dance this experience, some express it in song, some find it in the laughter of children, the sweetness of an apple, or the sound of wind through the trees. At every moment we are experiencing the overwhelming mystery of existence.

Berry prefers to speak of the Divine, of the numinous presence in the world about us. This is what all of us, child or elder, Christian or Muslim or Buddhist or agnostic, can experience; this is the ground that all of us can truly know.

Since the universe story is the way the Divine is revealing itself, humans become sacred by participating in this larger sacred community. The gratitude that we feel in this experience, we call “religion.” For Berry, it would seem, all this is more real and less abstract than theology, because it emanates from experience of the emergent universe, an experience so basic that it is shared by other members of the Earth community.

Perhaps because of his comprehensive Weltanschauung, embracing non‐theistic faiths, Berry never speaks of a God who commands, judges, rules over a paradisiacal afterlife, or watches over human actions. He does not go into traditional religious questions like good, evil, Heaven, Hell, or individual salvation. Yet he points out that his position follows quite directly from Saint Paul’s Epistle to the Romans. In the first chapter Paul declares that “Ever since God created the world, this everlasting power and deity—however invisible—have been there for the mind to see in the things He has made.”

CES Monthly Musings – September‐October, 2013 Page 29 of 45

In our discussions with Berry, he has stressed that his primary interest is that humans come to see the visible created world with whatever clarity is available. In his writings he does not go into all the basic theological questions like that of ultimate origins, but the first step, as Saint Paul suggests, is perception of the created world. In Berry’s view, God is not our first clear perception. Rather, the sense of God emerges in and through our perception of the universe. Just how the divine is perceived obviously varies among different peoples. In any case, it seems that the divine is perceived “in the things He has made.” The knowledge of God emerges in the human mind not directly, but through this manifestation.

Perhaps a major difficulty for many believers lies in Berry’s view that the universe is not a puppet world without an inner power through which it functions. Rather, God enables beings to be themselves, and to act in a way to bring themselves into being—not independently of deity, but still with a valid inner principle of life and activity. This activity of creatures is known as Second Cause, while the deity remains First Cause. These causes are not “real” in the same way, nor do they function in the same manner. But to deny the reality of the created world and the validity of its proper mode of activity, is to deny the capacity of the divine origin of things to produce anything other than ephemeral appearances. Ultimately our perception of the divine depends precisely on our perception of the reality of the visible world about us.

Speaking of the universe as a single multiform sequential celebratory event and of the human as that being in whom the universe reflects on and celebrates itself in a special mode of conscious self‐awareness, is speaking in and of the “created” order. That it says nothing directly about “God,” does not to Berry indicate any denial of the divine. It is, rather, the proper way of speaking to our times without getting into a preaching mode that would do more damage to religion than anything else. Humans can participate in the great celebration that is the universe itself, and the celebration is ultimately the finest manifestation of the divine. It is our way of seeing the divine “in all things that are made.” This great celebration might also be considered the Grand Liturgy of the universe, the shared liturgy that we enter into through our own humanly contrived pluralistic liturgies.

As we have seen, Berry is highly critical of many aspects of Christian doctrine and practice, since all of Western civilization has been profoundly affected by the biblical Christian tradition. Thus Christianity is involved not as a direct cause of our ecological crisis, but as creating the context. To summarize briefly:

 Thefirstproblemistheemphasisonatranscendent,personaldivinebeing,asclearly distinct from the universe.

 AsecondrelatedproblemisChristianity’sexaltationofthehumanasaspiritualbeingas against the physical nature of other beings—the human is so special that the human soul has to be created directly by God in every single case.

 Thethirdproblemisthatredemptionisseenassomekindofout‐of‐this‐world liberation.

 Thefourthistheidea,developedparticularlybyadevoutChristiannamedDescartes, that the world is a mechanism.

CES Monthly Musings – September‐October, 2013 Page 30 of 45

All these “transcendencies” ‐ transcendent God, transcendent human, transcendent redemption, transcendent mind—foster entrancement with a transcendent technology which shall liberate us from following the basic biological laws of the natural world. In this manner we create a transcendent goal, a millennial vision harkening back to the Book of Revelation, with which to go beyond the human condition, says Berry.

While the Christian tradition until the Renaissance included elements of seeing the natural world as having a soul, since the time of Descartes, particularly, there has been a progressive loss of the cosmic dimension. Although there have always been strands in the tradition that deal well with the natural world, this is not emphasized in Christianity as it is preached. There is no adequate emphasis in the catechism, or Biblical commandments concerning the natural world.

The Bible introduced an emphasis on the divine in historical events. Its historical realism stimulates a dynamism toward developmental processes.

Like many other religions, Christianity, with its intense monotheism, tends toward narrowness. Among religious people, the more intense the commitment, the more fundamentalist they tend to be. What is needed today is not intensity, but expansiveness. By the same token, humans should have moved beyond the idea that any one religion has the fullness of revelation.

Narrowness also is evident in the traditional Christian hostility to animism. Saint Boniface, for example, cut down sacred oak trees. Today that would seem absurd. Could we not entertain the idea that instead, the future of Christianity will involve assimilating elements of paganism?

In view of all this, Berry makes the startling suggestion that we consider putting the Bible on the shelf for perhaps twenty years, so that we can truly listen to creation. One of the best ways to discover the deep meaning of things, he says, is to give them up for a while. Thus, we would be able to recover the ancient Christian view that there are two Scriptures, that of the natural world and that of the Bible. We would be able to create a new language, more adequate to deal with our present revelatory moment. Unfortunately, at present we are still reading the book instead of reading the world about us. We will drown reading the book.

Organized religion is frequently a destructive force—yet religion in the more basic sense is an important part of our being, he asserts. Among other things, it brings us together in celebration, and gives us the gift of delighting in existence.

We must recognize that the revelations of most religions as they are practiced today are inadequate to deal with the task before us. The traditions of the past cannot do what needs to be done, but we cannot do what needs to be done without all traditions. The new story of the universe does not replace them; it provides a more comprehensive context in which all the earlier stories can discover a more expansive interpretation.

It is of pivotal importance, Berry says, to be open to ongoing revelations, including those emerging from the scientific venture. Science does not reduce the mystery of the world, but actually enhances it. Indeed, in a broad sense scientific understanding is the key to the future of religion.

It is too early to appraise Berry’s influence, especially in a period when economic growth, land development, invention of mega‐technologies, and winning computerized wars against Third World upstarts continue to define our nation’s measures of might and our sense of personal power. The full import of Berry’s message may not sink in for many years.

But some of his influence is clearly visible. He cannot keep up with requests for speaking engagements. The demand for his writings grows every year, and his work is now being translated into other languages. During the course of our own travels, in conversations with people as diverse as Buddhists in Japan, Muslims in Egypt, and agnostics in Russia, speaking of Berry has always provoked great interest and requests for copies of his work.

One criticism of his thought is that he exaggerates the extent to which the Bible provides a context for an exploitative attitude toward the Earth. Another is that the challenges we face are more complex than rediscovering an integral relationship with Earth, and inevitably involve specific, personal, economic, and political questions about our own communities. A frequent objection is that his biocentric vision denies the chosen status of “man,” vice‐regent of God. Berry listens to such criticisms, sometimes adapts his thought to accommodate them, and sometimes replies with a helpful rejoinder.

Even critics admire his realism, sweeping synthesis, imaginative insights, and courage to confront the narrowness of traditional theology. They also respect the fact that although he often uses abstract terms, he always lends them a vivid—at times biting—concreteness. He describes environmental, economic, and political problems with down‐to‐earth examples. When looking to the future, he illustrates his ideas with examples ranging from methods of appropriate technology to bioregionalism or steady‐state economics. He even proposes, not entirely tongue‐in‐cheek, running every other truck on our highways into a ravine. It is not that he eschews all technological advances. But our new technologies must harmonize with natural processes, which operate on self‐nourishing, self‐ healing, self‐governing principles.

It is our observation that Berry, contrary to conventional wisdom, is becoming not less but more radical as he advances in years—and sees the time left for saving the planet running out. He is “radical” in the original sense of the word, harkening back to the Latin word radices, roots. It is as if he is driven by the thought “They just don’t get it. They don’t comprehend how deeply rooted it is, the crisis that confronts us!”

Sometimes one can hear the anger in this gentle man as he speaks of “the order of magnitude of the present catastrophic situation.” It is, he says, “so enormous, so widespread, and we don’t know what we are doing.” The people who built the automobile, the people who built the nuclear program, the people who dreamed up the Green Revolution in agriculture, were unable to make the connection between these and their adverse effects. Vandana Shiva says the Green Revolution initially produced great increases in India’s food supply, but in the end, it devastated the whole agricultural system. We made 50,000 nuclear bombs, and now we don’t know what to do with them!

We fool ourselves into thinking that recycling cans and papers will do it. Of course we must recycle. But basically that is designed to keep the system going. It can help mitigate the problem, but only until we can do the fundamental changes. Meanwhile, when ecology groups try to protect the last bit of our first‐growth forest, the entrepreneur types say these radicals are trying to do away with jobs. If these are the only jobs we can imagine, it is a sick society, and we need cultural therapy. We can’t solve this crisis by meliorism.

Yet Berry sees hope in the upwellinging of movements and modes of perception that suggest an awakening. He points to the growth of bioregional movements, Green political organizations, and confrontational movements launched by activist groups such as Greenpeace and Earth First! He talks about shifts of consciousness revealed in New Age thinkers, countercultural writers, and feminist, antipatriarchal movements. On the international level, he has been encouraged by shifts within the World Bank toward more viable programs, and the addition of an environmental department; the spread of vital information through organizations like The International Union for the Conservation of Nature, the World Resources Institute, the Worldwatch Institute, and various United Nations programs; and even stirrings among some national and multinational business organizations.

Our awesome power spells our danger, but it also presents our opportunity, an unparalleled opening to a larger creativity, he observes. The danger lies in the mystique that pervades our patriarchal, plundering industrial society. It is a mystique that could propel us not into an Ecozoic era, but into one that could be called Technozoic, led by people—epitomized in the corporate establishment—who are committed to an even more controlled order. In the future. The dominant struggle will be the struggle between entrepreneur and ecologist. Our task is to reinvent the human, at the species level. Basic to this task is creating a new integration of the human with the forces of the natural world, and celebrating that integration.

Who will lead us into the future? The intimacy with the cosmic process that is needed describes the shamanic personality, a type that is emerging again in our society. As in earlier cultures, today the shaman may be woman as well as man. Certainly, to fulfil the function of healers, shamans must represent the feminine principle, embodied in the growing scientific perception of our planet as a single organism, alive, self‐governing, self‐ healing. True, nurturance is not the only role for women. Nurturing roles, however, are the key to the future; they are epitomized in the archetype of woman but reside in the capacities of each one of us.

Taking our cues from earlier peoples, we can create, or recreate, renewal ceremonies. We need to celebrate the great historical moments in the unfolding of the universe, cosmic events that constituted psychic‐spiritual as well as physical transformations. Such celebrations might begin with the primordial Flaring Forth and the supernova implosions, moments of grace that set the pattern for emergence of this planet. They might go on to include the beginning of photosynthesis, followed by the arrival of trees, then flowers, then birds, and other aspects of this wondrous evolution.

CES Monthly Musings – September‐October, 2013 Page 33 of 45

Once we begin to celebrate this story we will understand the fascination that draws scientists to their work. Without entrancement in this new context it is unlikely that humans will have the psychic energy needed for renewal of Earth.

That entrancement comes from the immediate communion of humans with the natural world. We are rediscovering our capacity for entering into the larger community of life. Every form of being is integral with this story. Nothing is itself without everything else.

Berry’s shamanic voice raises a challenge. Is the human species viable, or are we careening toward self‐destruction, carrying with us our fellow Earthlings? Can we move from an anthropocentric to a biocentric vision—and more importantly, actualize it in a biocracy? How can we help activate the intercommunion of all members of the Earth community? What shall we be leaving the children—the young of our own families, our own species and of other species whose fate we share?

Can we find the guidance we need in religions as they exist today?

References

Berry, Thomas. 1991. The Dream of the Earth. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.
Berry, Thomas with Clarke, Thomas. 1991. Befriending the Earth. Mystic: Twenty‐Third

Publications.

Swimme, Brian and Berry, Thomas. 1992. The Universe Story. San Francisco: Harper, San Francisco.

Copyright retained by author(s)

This article has been reprinted from Trumpeter (Vol. 11, No. 1, 1994), ISSN: 0832‐6193. Marjorie Hope and James Young, deceased, are the authors of The Faces of Homelessness, Macmillan/Lexington, 1986; The South African Churches in a Revolutionary Situation, Orbis, 1982; The Struggle for Humanity, Orbis, 1977. This paper, “A Prophetic Voice,” was intended to be a chapter of their book‐in‐progress, tentatively entitled The New Alliance: Faith and Ecology.

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