Can the World's Religions Help Save Us from Ecological Peril?
Scholars and religious leaders argue that a spiritual connection to nature is essential for environmental recovery.
Recommendation
Human-caused climate change spurs extreme weather events – which keep getting worse. Such crises disproportionately affect poor, vulnerable people. Karenna Gore – founder of the Center for Earth Ethics at the Union Theological Center in New York and daughter of former US Vice President Al Gore, an international leader on the environment – calls for advocates to tackle climate emergencies the way they fought in the civil rights movement, on an interfaith basis where people united in a common cause. This emerging “religion and ecology” movement seeks to link faith traditions with environmentalism to focus people on being Earth’s stewards.
Summary
About the Author
Paul Hond is an associate editor at Columbia Magazine, as well as the author of two novels, The Baker and Mothers and Sons.
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