Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age

Twentieth century environmentalist literature tends to blame Christian religious tradition, especially its influence upon Western culture, for introducing ways of “seeing” (theoria) the world of nature (non-human creation) that produce anti-environmental practices. But does Christianity – in its bib...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Longbons, Jarrod
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56422/
_version_ 1848799327409930240
author Longbons, Jarrod
author_facet Longbons, Jarrod
author_sort Longbons, Jarrod
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Twentieth century environmentalist literature tends to blame Christian religious tradition, especially its influence upon Western culture, for introducing ways of “seeing” (theoria) the world of nature (non-human creation) that produce anti-environmental practices. But does Christianity – in its biblical, and ancient/early medieval sources that explain the notions of creation, human uniqueness, and purpose – really promote a vision of nature-culture dualism, despotic anthropocentricism, and thus natural disenchantment? By analyzing the hexameronic material of church fathers, both East and West, we discover that Genesis must not be read in the anti-natural way that modern environmental critics have argued, but as a proto-environmentalist text which, properly interpreted, underwrites responses to modern environmental needs. Maximus the Confessor joins the conversation with dogmatic assistance about environmentalism via the doctrine of creation. Maximus’ work carries the ancient vision of creation into the medieval period, entirely supportive of environmentalist concerns; indeed, his Christological interpretation of creation is perhaps the “greenest” theology of all, for its evaluation of creation’s source and end is wrapped up in divine destiny. Also, Maximus’ Eucharistic theology expresses the idea that the church is ultimately the “community of creation,” implying a dual task of “seeing” creation sacramentally and an ethos for earth care. When Maximus’ creation dogma is synthesized with the “leisure” practice of Josef Pieper, we find a helpful tool for Christian environmental care that affirms the goodness of the world’s being. In conclusion, both the theological foundation in the church fathers and the praxis of Pieper combine to reveal that the broad tradition of Christianity and its mode of “seeing” the world are environmentally sound.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:33:54Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-56422
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:33:54Z
publishDate 2019
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-564222025-02-28T14:27:59Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56422/ Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age Longbons, Jarrod Twentieth century environmentalist literature tends to blame Christian religious tradition, especially its influence upon Western culture, for introducing ways of “seeing” (theoria) the world of nature (non-human creation) that produce anti-environmental practices. But does Christianity – in its biblical, and ancient/early medieval sources that explain the notions of creation, human uniqueness, and purpose – really promote a vision of nature-culture dualism, despotic anthropocentricism, and thus natural disenchantment? By analyzing the hexameronic material of church fathers, both East and West, we discover that Genesis must not be read in the anti-natural way that modern environmental critics have argued, but as a proto-environmentalist text which, properly interpreted, underwrites responses to modern environmental needs. Maximus the Confessor joins the conversation with dogmatic assistance about environmentalism via the doctrine of creation. Maximus’ work carries the ancient vision of creation into the medieval period, entirely supportive of environmentalist concerns; indeed, his Christological interpretation of creation is perhaps the “greenest” theology of all, for its evaluation of creation’s source and end is wrapped up in divine destiny. Also, Maximus’ Eucharistic theology expresses the idea that the church is ultimately the “community of creation,” implying a dual task of “seeing” creation sacramentally and an ethos for earth care. When Maximus’ creation dogma is synthesized with the “leisure” practice of Josef Pieper, we find a helpful tool for Christian environmental care that affirms the goodness of the world’s being. In conclusion, both the theological foundation in the church fathers and the praxis of Pieper combine to reveal that the broad tradition of Christianity and its mode of “seeing” the world are environmentally sound. 2019-07-23 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56422/1/Longbons_PhD_2018%20Final.pdf Longbons, Jarrod (2019) Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Creation Environmentalism Maximus the Confessor Lynn White Jr. Theoria Physike Hexameron Logos Logoi New Creation Church Fathers on Creation Jarrod Longbons Peachtree Christian Church
spellingShingle Creation
Environmentalism
Maximus the Confessor
Lynn White Jr.
Theoria
Physike
Hexameron
Logos
Logoi
New Creation
Church Fathers on Creation
Jarrod Longbons
Peachtree Christian Church
Longbons, Jarrod
Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age
title Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age
title_full Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age
title_fullStr Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age
title_full_unstemmed Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age
title_short Seeing the world as creation: Christian sources for an environmentalist age
title_sort seeing the world as creation: christian sources for an environmentalist age
topic Creation
Environmentalism
Maximus the Confessor
Lynn White Jr.
Theoria
Physike
Hexameron
Logos
Logoi
New Creation
Church Fathers on Creation
Jarrod Longbons
Peachtree Christian Church
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56422/