FRIENDS OF MOUNT ATHOS BOOK REVIEWS
© 1995
So That God's Creation Might Live: The Orthodox Church Responds to the Ecological Crisis. Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, 1992. 118 pages. Price p/b £10. No ISBN. Copies available from Dr Dimitri Conomos, 4A Northmoor Road, Oxford.
This book of
essays represents the proceedings of the historic Inter-Orthodox Conference on
Environmental Protection held at the Orthodox Academy of Crete in November
1991. For the first time ever, representatives of all the Orthodox Churches
came together to discuss the ways in which Orthodox tradition, both theological
and practical, could respond to the environmental crisis. Addressed by HRH the
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, in his capacity as President of the World Wide
Fund for Nature International, it also marked the strengthening of ties between
the Orthodox Churches, especially the Ecumenical Patriarchate, and secular
conservation bodies.
The
essays in the book cover two areas, the first theological, the second ecological.
The conference attracted some of the best thinkers from both disciplines, and
their interaction under one cover is what makes this book such a fascinating
and stimulating one to read. Two papers in particular stand out for me, not
because they are better than the others, but because they demonstrate the
dialogue between disciplines and the fruits that emerge from this. The opening
keynote lecture by Metropolitan John of Pergamon on 'Orthodoxy and the Problem
of the Protection of the Natural Environment' offers an illuminating overview
of different perceptions of nature arising from diverse traditions, both
Christian and post- or non-Christian. It is an intellectual tour de force, illustrating the interaction between
concept and action. Take, for example, the list of spiritual implications of
the ecological problem which Metropolitan John gives on pages 22-3. To take
just one, he explores the 'eudaemonistic concept of life. The search for
individual happiness becomes an “individual right”.' He looks at the impact of
this on both the use and the abuse of the natural world and at its impact upon
spirituality and morality.
The
second paper I would highlight is that of Oliver Rackham of the University of
Cambridge on 'Conservation in the Historical Landscape: The Historical Context
and the Story of Crete'. Dr Rackham takes us on a journey in time and in ideas.
He shows how human notions of being and relationships with both the Divine and
the rest of Creation manifest themselves in the very landscape that lies around
us. Although focusing upon Crete, the way of seeing which he outlines opens our
eyes to look anew at any landscape and to realize that it can be read almost as
easily as a book. The message he sees in this 'Book of Nature' is a dire
warning about human stupidity and abuse over against traditions of sustainable
use.
The
essays range from liturgy to water pollution; from climate change to Byzantine
iconography; from Orthodox monastic tradition ('The Monk and Nature in the
Orthodox Tradition' by Fr Makarios of the Monastery of Simonopetra on Mount
Athos) to the economics of the environment. It is perhaps a testimony to the
implications of such a vast and rich tradition as Orthodoxy becoming involved
in environmental issues that a book entitled So That God's Creation Might
Live should cover such a
range. It is without doubt one of the most useful and thus potentially
important resources available for Orthodox reflection upon nature, and for
conservationists wishing to understand the role of religion. It deserves a wide
readership; but, even more importantly, its insights need to be urgently
applied.
Martin Palmer
Manchester