‘Care For All That
Exists : A Symposium on Creation Spirituality’
Thursday 26th
and Friday 27th May, with a retreat on Saturday
The Carmelite Centre and
Carmelite Library, Middle Park, Melbourne
Summaries
of Papers
Father
Ken Petersen, OCarm
Towards
a Universal Communion: Meditation and Interreligious Dialogue
Pope
Francis emphasises the importance of universal communion as an antidote to the
exploitation of the planet. This presentation will explore the practice of
meditation and the contribution of the world’s faith traditions in promoting
this communion. As Pope Francis writes, “A sense of deep communion with the
rest of nature cannot be real if our hearts lack tenderness, compassion and
concern for our fellow human beings.” Laudato Si, 19
Dr Geoff Lacey
Towards
Ecological Conversion: a response to Laudato si
This
paper explores some implications of the ecological conversion called for by
Pope Francis. It discusses an engagement with the land in which groups are
working to restore the indigenous ecology and to monitor animal species. This
work leads to an understanding of the ecological matrix: the intricate network
of landforms and vegetation systems that criss-cross the land. Corridors of
biodiversity make possible the movements of mammal and bird species. This
landscape is full of power and meaning. This insight has economic consequences.
For our culture and economy to be sustainable, all productive processes and
urban planning must take place within the limits of the matrix. Creative
examples of sustainable activity include those where people are developing
diverse and productive food gardens in which trees, vegetables and animals are
all integrated, mimicking wild ecosystems.
The Revd Dr Stephen Ames
Creation Spirituality
and the Problem of Natural Evil
He is currently
preparing a book on this theme.
After
the tsunami on Boxing Day 2004 I noticed that prayers offered in the Cathedral
still thanked God for the wonder and beauty of creation. Prayers were
offered for those suffering and for all who responded with compassion and
care. In relation to God no mention of the tsunami, of its
extraordinary, devastating power. My impression is that we Anglicans, and
other Christians, don’t know how to look God in the face when it comes to
suffering and death produced by natural processes in the created world. I
hope to reflect usefully on this issue in Christian creation spirituality.
The Revd Dr Graeme
Garrett & Dr Jan Morgan
Praying in the
Anthropocene
Does
the ecological crisis have implications for our spiritual lives? This session
introduces a form of prayer that is a practice of attention to God’s living,
communicative world around us, and of which we are part. The French
philosopher/theologian Jean-Louis Chrétien speaks about the ‘visible voice’ of
the Earth and of the creatures within it. The world which God creates and
sustains is not dumb, but alive with speech. We describe a journey of learning
to attend to the visible voice of ocean at Tathra on the NSW south coast, and
the unexpected, radical transformations it held, especially in relation to our
imperilled Earth home.
Professor Denis Edwards
Keynote
address: Deep Incarnation: The Meaning of Incarnation for the Natural World
A report of the address, written by Deborah Guess, is published in the July 2016 issue of The Melbourne Anglican at this link: http://tma.melbourneanglican.org.au/inner-life/creation-transformative-140716
A report of the address, written by Deborah Guess, is published in the July 2016 issue of The Melbourne Anglican at this link: http://tma.melbourneanglican.org.au/inner-life/creation-transformative-140716
Barbara Daniel
“The Greening of the
Self” : on Joanna Macy
Always
involved with the issues that affect the well-being of people and the natural
world Joanna Macy has written books and run workshops to bring about change in
perceptions and to educate for understanding a better way forward to mitigate
the damage done by the “Industrial Growth Society”. Her embrace of Buddhism has
strengthened the spiritual insights of her Christian upbringing, affording her
hope and the impetus to continue when life seems hopeless.
Br Trevor Parton
The Dream of the Earth: How
a more intimate relationship to the Earth suggests a New Cosmology
Dream of the Earth was one of the early
(1988) books written by Thomas Berry on a renewed vision about how we might
relate to the Earth in the face of its ecological devastation. Thomas Berry’s
thinking goes beyond the concepts of stewardship and care of Earth to an
attitude of deep kinship with the planet, the Earth Community, with a shared
sacred destiny. This relationship is both intimate and mystical. The relevant
topics mentioned are The Earth Community, The Ecologial Age, and The New Story
Dr. Deborah Guess
God
in All That Is: Panentheism as a
Framework for Ecological Theology and Spirituality
Panentheism emphasizes divine presence in the world
and is thereby consistent with the foundational (if occasionally neglected)
claim of the Christian tradition that God is immanent as well as transcendent.
The understanding that God is present in and to creation shares common ground
with an ecological ethos which allocates a high level of intrinsic value to the
natural world. Versions of panentheism from the twentieth century onwards have
also posited that God is (to some degree) subject to influence or development,
a claim which may depart from traditional Christian claims of divine
immutability yet resonates with an ecological affirmation that the biophysical
world operates through evolutionary processes. Panentheism can provide an
effective framework for ecological spirituality and theology because it
dialectically affirms traditional claims of God as transcendent and immutable
along with current emphases on divine immanence and dynamism.
Dr Mick Pope
All things bright and
beautiful? Towards an aesthetic ecotheology
His paper will appear
at this site: http://ecocare.perth.anglican.org/journal/
Human beings now
dominate the globe in what is referred to as the Anthropocene. Pragmatic
concerns for maintaining biosphere integrity and ecosystem services, and
justice concerns should be sufficient to motivate action. However, ideas of
natural beauty still have power to emotionally connect us to the other, even in
a culture increasingly disconnected from nature. This paper will begin to
develop an aesthetic ecotheology that is grounded, is built both bottom up,
i.e. based on evolutionary theory but also top down, driven by theological
considerations. Such an aesthetic ecotheology will focus not only on “all
things bright and beautiful” but all of God’s creatures.
Dr Lynne Reeder
Creation Spirituality through a Franciscan Lens: interdependence, mysticism, science and the passion of creativity
Creation Spirituality through a Franciscan Lens: interdependence, mysticism, science and the passion of creativity
Framework-:
INTRODUCTION
·
Context – a new study has found that humans have
reached total domination on Earth, becoming the top predator on land and sea.
The study from the University of Leicester shows human power over the natural
environment has caused shifts in world ecosystems unprecedented in the last 500
million years.
INTERDEPENDENCE
·
a holistic approach – can’t separate how we treat
the world from how we treat the environment, ourselves and others
·
Structures – away from power as expressed in money
and influence
·
Women – Clare first female order to have their
charter blessed
·
Connecting with others empathy
·
requires an ability to engage with diversity
MYSTICISM
·
re-gaining our sense of wonder
·
Direct experience
SCIENCE
·
Inspired science - The Oxford Franciscan school
·
The subject of the 1st 3D images
CREATIVITY
·
Intuitively knew what neuroscience is telling us
know – the body is the connection
·
Consciousness important – Damisio – quote the time will come when we will take into
account our consciousness in all justice matters - perhaps that time is now
·
Passion - What is mine to do?
Dr Anne Elvey
Creatures
among creatures: Laudato Si’
and beyond -- being human in a more than human world
Recognising
an “ecological conversion” among environmentally aware individuals and groups
that might include Christians but were not themselves principally Christian,
Pope John Paul II called Christians to a change of heart in their relationship
with, and treatment of, Earth and its myriad creatures, including other humans.
In Pope Francis’ Laudato Si’
this call is grounded in a Christian doctrine of creation where humankind are
creatures among creatures, called to be at home, and responsibly so, on Earth.
My paper brings this idea of being “creatures among creatures” into critical
conversation with broader ecophilosophical understandings of what it is to be
human in a more than human world.
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