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Hope for God’s Creation: Stewardship in an Age of Futility

Andrew J. Spencer
Published by B & H Academic in 2023

Creation Care Discipleship: Why Earthkeeping is an Essential Christian Practice

Steven Bouma-­Prediger
Published by Baker Academic in 2023

Contra to Spencer’s demand for orthodoxy, Creation Care Discipleship commits a chapter to “Ecumenical Insights,” drawing on wisdom from representative socially conscious Christian lineages. Providing a brief overview of denominational contributions, Chapter 4 leads with the visions of Pope Francis, Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I, and Lutheran ethicist Paul Santmire. Bouma-­Prediger carefully selects generally applicable concepts, such as the Pope’s critique of contemporary culture and his emphasis on the interrelated nature of environmental and social issues, including the root causes of poverty. The chapter concludes with ecofeminist Rosemary Radford Ruether’s analysis of human exploitation of each other and of nature and Native American activist Randy Woodley’s application of Native American concepts, such as harmony, as a foundation for Christian relationship building. Having taught at Baylor University, where Roman Catholic students have displaced Methodists as the second largest denominational cohort after Baptists, I found the presentation compatible with the demands of holding civil conversations in a theologically diverse classroom. Creation Care Discipleship treats Catholic contributions to global conversations as valid and worthy and recognizes ecofeminists for their leadership relative to social justice without demanding that the readers accept the doctrinal or philosophical foundations of either. The volume captures the need for Christians to overcome divisions and sectarianism to take coordinated and effective action in countering environmental degradation at a global scale.

After describing the difficulties of being a good shepherd, with Christ as the model, Steven Bouma-­Prediger climbs back in his canoe and appraises the demanding Christian calling of culturally paddling upstream. The priorities are living simply, overcoming fear, pursuing environmental justice, seeking reconciliation, and educating others for “a flourishing life for all” (146). The book summarizes strategies from the environmental mainstream writings of Wendell Berry, David Orr, and Robin Wall Kimmerer, without taking a socio-­economic deep dive into the origins of the unnavigable low water and flash flooding. The chapter on “faith in action” appropriately introduces the necessity of risk-­taking in doing the right thing, and then returns to the comfort, if constant demands, of greening one’s own backyard. It’s hard to discern, however, what constitutes simplicity relative to creation’s groaning versus the spiritual and ethical entrapment materialism promotes. Bouma-­Prediger closes by bringing the creative and eschatological themes full circle with a vision of biblical shalom.

In contrast to Bouma-­Prediger’s ecumenical framing, Andrew Spencer presents environmentalism not just as conflicted but as potentially dangerous to right belief. The Baptist theologian claims he is providing “a warning of some of the dangers of an excessive focus on environmental well-­being,” and promises to avoid “the dangers that have shipwrecked the faith of others” (21). In an ethical realm, where indifference or avoiding action out of self-­interest are common failures, discouraging passion for the cause is an oddly self-­critical way to begin. Hope for God’s Creation immediately accepts some common models for melding creation care with Christian concerns for human welfare, including acting for the common good, building a holy city, caring for those most at environmental risk, and “building gospel friendships” via seeking common cause with neighbors (24). Yet, Spencer’s first full chapter continues by eschewing “the dangers of environmental entanglement” or investing oneself too fully in any cultural activity, including sports or working to eradicate poverty (25–26). Shying away from the ecumenical, Spencer warns: “If we lose sight of our theological convictions for the sake of cooperation, we can find ourselves drifting into soul-­sapping heterodoxy or worse” (26). He presents accepting any environmental ideology as a potential dilution of Christian commitment because Christianity has just one “big idea: the gospel” (27). Hope for God’s Creation worries that pursuing a Christian environmental ethic will cause “theological drift” by taking up the liberal Protestant tenets of interpreting doctrines “through a practical moral lens” (29). “The danger is that holiness, the Great Commission, and the glory of God will become secondary to the pragmatic concerns of the environment” (31).

The second chapter then follows up by quoting the declaration of Michael Shellenberger that environmentalism “is the dominant secular religion of the educated, upper-­middle-­class elites” (36). The book analyzes critics like Lynn White, yet confesses that for theological conservatives, environmental ethics “is not one of our points of strength” (50). Hope for God’s Creation briefly covers leaders like Francis Schaeffer, who tried to build bridges between Evangelicalism and 20th-­century culture while simultaneously casting response to environmental issues as a centerpiece in culture wars. It identifies genuine points of division between denominations like the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) and many environmental advocacy organizations over issues like population policy but does not discuss the melding of ideologically-­charged conservative economic policies with faith-­based conservatism. Unlike Bouma-­Prediger, Spencer does not credit the multitude of Christian efforts in the past fifty years to introduce churches to recycling or to provide moderate, functional environmental ethical guidance. From an educator’s perspective, the vague doctrinal foundations, the fear of engaging in simple community service, the lack of evidence for sweeping cultural assumptions, and the de facto narrow focus on the SBC’s worries are disadvantages for assigning this book in multidenominational classroom settings. Theological beginners will have difficulties placing Spencer’s position and many students, such as mainline Presbyterians and Roman Catholics, will find the creation care endeavors and successes of their faith communities dismissed out of hand. Conversely, schools and churches which share Spencer’s concerns for heterodoxy may find his appraisal of the risks of environmentalism a necessary first step to tackling the practical aspects of global change.

Hope for God’s Creation tries to avoid the pitfalls of the 19th-­century social gospel movement and liberal Protestantism and place doctrine before ethics, by dedicating a chapter to each of four doctrinal questions, including what is the Christian source for authority, why is creation worthy of consideration, what should the human relationship to creation be, and what is the end of creation? The volume then covers special revelation and recommends careful engagement with science and patience with new scientific theories. It distinguishes among three forms of value commonly discussed in philosophical environmental ethics—intrinsic, instrumental, and inherent—and, with C. S. Lewis, favors inherent value in reference to God. The discussion of values cites Francis Schaeffer on the Fall and Christian pursuit of moral order via shalom. Spencer identifies humans as unique and as producers. He thus backs stewardship as a valid model, subject to limitations, including sin, distortions of rationality, and, interestingly, the temporal limitations of Christ’s historic earthly ministry. His volume handles the potential conflict between God’s promise to renew all creation and the contemporary church taking restorative action by encouraging Christians to “embody substantial healing” until God’s promises are fulfilled (158).

In the practice of creation care, Spencer converges with Bouma-­Prediger on the importance of holistic discipleship as necessary to actualizing Christian missions, and forwards Francis Schaeffer’s concept of the church as a “pilot plant” for the greater society (171). Maintaining his patrol for theological error, Spencer remains wary of “the proclivity to drift” and “distracted worship” (177–179). Although Spencer reserves only two of ten chapters for addressing specific environmental concerns, he demonstrates courage in logically dismissing climate conspiracies and campaigning to replace conspiracy thinking with “Gospel credibility” (186). Consistent with the cultivation of hope, he advises against demonizing the opposition and polarizing public discourse. For the climate skeptics among his readers, he recommends Pascal’s wager as a means to evaluate the costs of making a mistake. Identifying the church as an ecological community, his agenda lauds localism, self-­restraint, sharing resources, living thoughtfully, and recapturing wonder. Nonetheless, even as he concludes, Spencer takes a swipe at the liberal Green New Deal and eco-­philosopher Whitney Bauman for packaging societal needs, like childcare and student loan relief, with low-­carbon economic planning, without offering a politically viable alternative (196).

As someone already familiar with environmental ethics, exploring the books in tandem was informative for me because it made me think about the differences between today’s Christians and the faith communities of the 1970s and 1980s, when earthkeeping and creation care emerged as Christian ethical strategies. Back then, there were liberals and conservatives who were unhappy with each other, and atmospheric change, including global warming and the hole in the ozone, was already a prominent environmental concern. Many Christians, though, were not connecting their faith with the science, and the surge of theological studies utilizing key scriptural sources to specifically address environmental questions was just beginning. In comparison, today’s youth are much better scientifically and politically informed and more frustrated with their elders for their unwillingness to protect future generations. What will they think when Spencer largely cites mid-­20th-­century theologians when addressing Christ and culture, betraying the deficit of “orthodox Evangelical” environmental engagement over the last half-­century? Have we become theologically afraid of our own shadows? While Bouma-­Prediger captures the difficulties of confronting cultural resistance, is a general plea for simplicity going to make much difference when the energy economy also underpins farm tractors, driving to school, and keeping the lights on? Will the younger generation notice that the theologians are not confidently sailing into the storm?

Susan Bratton

Susan P. Bratton is Professor Emeritus of Environmental Science, Baylor University

One Comment

  • Jerome Van Kuiken says:

    I appreciate the desire of these books’ authors and of the reviewer to encourage Christians (particularly evangelicals) to take ecological ethics seriously. I do think the reviewer’s contrast between the “orthodox” and the “ecumenical” is overstated. Roman Catholicism, Greek Orthodoxy, Lutheranism, and Presbyterianism may all be considered confessionally orthodox–indeed, the early Catholic-Orthodox tradition defined “orthodoxy” at its ecumenical councils in a manner that still heavily influences later Protestant traditions. The comma in Spencer’s appeal to “orthodox, evangelical theology” is significant: “orthodox theology” is a bigger tent than its subset of self-identifying “evangelical theology.” Spencer’s doctrinal touchstones of special revelation, creation as good yet fallen, and an eschatological orientation are ecumenically orthodox, not merely “evangelical” or Southern Baptist (though of course certain nuancing of those doctrines, like sola Scriptura for special revelation, would be distinctively Protestant). Perhaps the distance between Spencer and Bouma-Prediger is less substantial than what the reviewer has imagined?

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