Red China Struggles to Go Green

Tuesday, March 4, 2008
OSD’s Annual Report to Congress on the Military Power of the People’s Republic of China has some illuminating - and somewhat staggering - insight on the current state of affairs with respect to China’s environment and how it influences their national strategic policies. It’s a fascinating look at how the emerging communist nation is dealing with the realities of becoming a global superpower.

Continue reading "Red China Struggles to Go Green"
Bookmark Red China Struggles to Go Green  at del.icio.us Digg Red China Struggles to Go Green Bloglines Red China Struggles to Go Green Technorati Red China Struggles to Go Green Bookmark Red China Struggles to Go Green  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Red China Struggles to Go Green  at Furl.net Bookmark Red China Struggles to Go Green  at reddit.com Bookmark Red China Struggles to Go Green  with wists Bookmark using any bookmark manager!

Where do we go from here?

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Matt Stone asks the question: What do you think are some of the challenges that remain for Christian environmental theology?

I am presuming here that, if you’re the sort of Christian that likes a blog like mine, you’re not the sort of Christian who needs to have the dots joined between Christian ethics, creation care and environmental theology. But where do we go beyond the basic joining of the dots? How much more remains to be done... [snip]

Personally I think much work needs to be done with worship, with leadership training, with apologetics, and of course, with practice. Where do you see blind spots and opportunities for growth?

He offers a couple links as answers. I’d suggest this would be a great topic of discussion for the next Let’s Tend the Garden Conference (my notes from the first two here and here). Will shoot this link to the folks in Boise and see what they think.

Have you got a different answer for him? For that matter, has Christian ecology gotten too theological for its own good?

[Don’s other habitat is The Evangelical Ecologist.]

Bookmark Where do we go from here?  at del.icio.us Digg Where do we go from here? Bloglines Where do we go from here? Technorati Where do we go from here? Bookmark Where do we go from here?  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Where do we go from here?  at Furl.net Bookmark Where do we go from here?  at reddit.com Bookmark Where do we go from here?  with wists Bookmark using any bookmark manager!

Rome Seminar on Populorum Progressio

Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Last week, I had the pleasure to attend one of the Acton Institute’s seminars here in Rome. Located at the campus of the Pontifical University of Regina Apostolorum, the seminar drew more than 100 religious and lay persons from all over the world. It was apparent that the topic was not only an interesting one, but also a personal one for many in the room. The presentations dealt with the papal encyclical Populorum Progressio forty years later. Asking the pertinent question of whether or not progress has failed the developing world, each presentation dealt with a different aspect of the theory and the praxis of this topic.

Acton’s own Michael Miller opened the seminar with a few thoughts on Populorum Progressio and society today. Referring to the enhanced living conditions of the developing world, Mr. Miller mentioned the advances of progress. However, he was not blind to the failures felt in the past few decades. Too often the focus is on poverty, but he believes the focus needs to be on wealth. We know what makes people poor, we need to study what makes people rich. Another example Mr. Miller used is the idea of population control to alleviate the sufferings of the poor. Calling to mind the words of Pope John Paul II, man’s best resource is man himself.

This idea of human resources and their importance to development was a key aspect of the next speaker’s presentation. Fr. Thomas Williams, Legionary of Christ priest and teacher at Regina Apostolorum, theorized about the necessity and effects of development. He reasoned that a way to understand development and progress is to understand their nature. Delving into the papal documents from recent history, Fr. Williams gave an excellent exegesis of their meaning. Paul VI wrote, six years after Populorum Progressio, that development cannot be measured by mere economic growth, but also as an improvement for the very being of the human person. But many critics of Christianity say that Christians are anti-wealth, anti-progress. While Christians love the poor, they do not promulgate poverty. Similarly, they love the sick but hate sickness, love the sinner but hate the sin. The difficulty arises when the human person is secondary to economic success; when wealth becomes the supreme good at the cost of human dignity. This attitude of greed leads to avarice. However, Pope Paul VI comments that both rich and poor fall prey to this vice. He adds that just as the Ancient philosophers loved leisure because it led to contemplation, Christians love prosperity because it leads to time for prayer.

Continue reading "Rome Seminar on Populorum Progressio"
Bookmark Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i>  at del.icio.us Digg Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i> Bloglines Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i> Technorati Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i> Bookmark Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i>  at YahooMyWeb Bookmark Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i>  at Furl.net Bookmark Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i>  at reddit.com Bookmark Rome Seminar on <i>Populorum Progressio</i>  with wists Bookmark using any bookmark manager!