Earth Centered Spirituality in Christianity
There is a strong earth-centered tradition in Christianity. By considering it, we can learn more about positive Christianity and nature based tradition.
We seem to be on a roll
with Earth Centered Spirituality.
We haven't been
on as much of a roll with Christianity
among all the religions
that we have been studying together.
I'm convinced that there is a strong component
of earth centered spirituality
in the Christian tradition.
With this month's emphasis on it,
I have high hopes
of moving into some new territory
to provide some different perspectives.
Since Christianity is still dominant
in much of the culture in which we live,
it will be well to acquaint ourselves
with possible alliances in its traditions.
I still consider myself a Christian
in that my personal faith is based deeply
in the Jesus story.
I find meaning there,
even though the name of Jesus
and His story
are too often misused
by those who claim the name of Christian
to try to impose their own beliefs
and standards
on others.
At the same time,
the story of Jesus provides us an alternative view
of what it means to be human.
His story and His sayings
also provide an alternative way
of relating to the natural world.
In Matthew 6:28 and 29 we read how Jesus used
the blooming flowers of the countryside
to encourage us not to worry too much
about the clothes we have and wear.
"Why do you worry about clothes?
Consider how the wild flowers grow.
They neither work nor weave,
but I tell you that even Solomon in all his glory
was never arrayed like one of these!"
PHILLIPS MODERN ENGLISH BIBLE, by J. B. Phillips, "The New Testament in Modern English", Copyright© 1962 edition, published by HarperCollins.
My feeling is that one cannot easily look
at the beauty of nature, appreciating Gaia's gift,
and soon thereafter seek to harm or exploit
the environment in which we all live.
I know that I'm being a bit naive,
but I still believe that there is value
in the communication of wonder
as we contemplate the beauty of nature,
no matter the season of the year.
Speaking of seasons,
today marks the beginning of a new season
on the calendar of liturgical Christian churches.
Today is the Feast of the Epiphany,
remembering the arrival of the Magi,
the Wise Men from the East,
who famously brought gifts of
Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh
to the Christ child.
They were probably Persian astrologers
who read the signs in the stars
of the birth of a newborn world ruler
among the Jews.
I'm not advocating any kind
of superstitious astrology,
but the metaphors that come to us
from ancient wisdom
can sometimes help us make sense
of the things we see around us.
At the very least,
sometimes those same metaphors
can help us appreciate the vastness
of the world of nature
as we seek to recover our reverence
for the Earth itself
and the many living things
with whom we share life
and existence here and now.
In the years of the development of Christianity,
some key events and people
helped develop a positive relationship
between faith and nature.
First and foremost in forming and informing
our understanding of Gaia
is the development of natural science.
With the entry
of Greek philosophy and Arabic science
into the medieval Christian universities,
the study of nature
according to the scientific method
as done in the West
was born into human history.
Gaia must have been pleased
as some of her children began
to know and understand her better.
Love and understanding of Gaia grew
with the life and ministry
of St. Francis of Assisi.
His statue is often portrayed with animals and birds.
His preaching
was often portrayed as being appreciated
by birds and animals, also children of Gaia.
as was the preaching of his disciple,
St. Anthony of Padua,
patron saint of my home town
of San Antonio, Texas,
Isaac Newton was another famous Christian
whose life work expanded
our understanding of Mother Nature.
The famous story of his insight into
the natural law of gravity
as he sat under an apple tree
is one small example of iconography
that can be shared
by devotees of both Christ and Gaia.
Charles Darwin has been repudiated
by many Christians who know little about him.
He was a person of faith,
a bridge between Unitarian Universalism
and Christianity.
Darwin was an Anglican
whose faith was very much in line
with Unitarian Universalism.
As I have said before,
the Anglican Communion is one of many examples
of the possibility of Unitarian Universalism
and Christianity
coexisting in peace
within a single faith community.
Darwin definitely considered himself a theist,
believing that his theory of evolution
was a description of how
new and wondrous forms of life come to be.
His life's work
gave the world a beautiful perspective
on the way Gaia is creating and developing
the forms of life on our small planet.
The great Jesuit theologian of the 20th Century,
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin,
is for me without a doubt
among the leading Christian advocates
for Earth based spirituality.
I have spoken before, including last month,
of his concept of the noosphere,
a metaphor for Gaia's thoughts,
and to me, a prophecy about the internet.
In the context of Christian earth based spirituality,
I have to share a little bit about Teilhard's
"Mass on the World."
On Easter Sunday, 1923, Father Pierre Teilhard
was in the steppes of Asia
without altar, bread or wine
to fulfill his priestly obligation to say mass.
Instead of lamenting his unfortunate situation,
he wrote the great, prayerful essay,
"Mass on the World,"
in which he offered the planet as a whole,
with all its blood, sweat and tears
to be consecrated
as divine substance.
In the Mass on the World, he wrote,
“With neither bread, nor wine, nor altar, I, your priest, will make the whole earth my altar and on it will offer you all the labors and sufferings of the world.”
“No visible tremor marks this transformation; and yet, at the touch of your Word the immense host, which is the universe, is made flesh. Through your incarnation, my God, all matter is henceforth incarnate.”
This was no conceit on his part.
He was uniquely placed in time, space and mind
to provide the insights
that enable us to this day
to see our world
as a means of grace,
as a physcial context
for the presence of the Divine.
Teilhard thus was and is
among the most powerful witnesses
of the importance of Earth based spirituality
among Christians.
Thomas Merton, the great Christian teacher,
was another advocate for the importance
of Earth centered spirituality.
His life and work intersected the development
of the progressive movement
both spiritually and politically
in the crucial years of the mid-20th Century.
Finally, there is one more Christian leader
who is also teaching and promoting
Earth-based spirituality, Matthew Fox.
(not to be confused with the actor)
He has a website, http://www.matthewfox.org ,
where we can read the following introduction
to his work and teachings:
CREATION SPIRITUALITY:
REAWAKENING MYSTICISM,
PROTECTING MOTHER EARTH
Born in the wonderment
of our earliest human ancestors,
rooted in ancient Judeo-Christian tradition,
supported by leading-edge science,
bearing witness for social, environmental,
and gender justice,
and voiced most powerfully for this generation
by spiritual theologian Matthew Fox
Matthew Fox's book, Original Blessing,
was a primer in creation spirituality, as he calls it.
The concept of original blessing is offered
as an antidote for the dark, pessimistic side
of the doctrine of original sin.
In another book,
A Way to God:
Thomas Merton's Creation Spirituality Journey
Matthew Fox writes that much of the trouble
he's gotten into with the Catholic church
is because of Thomas Merton.
To my way of thinking, that is high praise!
As keeps happening in these sermons
on Earth Centered Spirituality,
I seem to be able only to list
and briefly comment on resources.
Each of the Christian leaders of creation spirituality
from Francis to Fox
could be the basis of a whole sermon.
If it seems to us a good idea,
it's a direction in which we might move
for the next several months.
In any case,
it's deeply encouraging to me
to find so much support
for a positive view of the world in which we live
among leading Christians
of other times as well as our own.
It gives me hope for the unfolding of spiritual life
in our own time.
Amen.
Blessed be.