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The
Emerging Alliance of World Religions and Ecology
Mary Evelyn Tucker
The growing alliance of religion and ecology
within the academic world and within religious
communities is bringing together for the first
time diverse perspectives from the world's
religious traditions, regarding attitudes
toward nature with reflections from science,
policy and ethics. Scholars of religion from
various parts of the world have begun to identify
symbolic, scriptural, and ethical dimensions
within particular religions in their relations
with the natural world. They are examining
these dimensions both historically and in
response to contemporary environmental problems.
Religious practitioners and environmentalists
are utilizing these resources as a source
of inspiration and activism to motivate long
term changes regarding the environment in
many parts of the world.
The State of the World 2000 report
notes that in solving environmental problems,
"all of society's institutions-from organized
religion to corporations-have a role to play."
That religions have a role to play along with
other institutions and academic disciplines
is also the premise of this emerging alliance
of religion and ecology.
Several qualifications regarding the various
roles of religion should be mentioned at the
outset. First, we do not wish to suggest that
any one religious tradition has a privileged
ecological perspective. Rather, multiple perspectives
may be the most helpful in identifying the
contributions of the world's religions to
the flourishing of life for future generations.
This is an interreligious project.
Second, while we assume that religions are
necessary partners in the current ecological
movement, they are not sufficient without
the indispensable contributions of science,
economics, education, and policy to the varied
challenges of current environmental problems.
Therefore, this is an interdisciplinary effort
in which religions can play a part.
Third, we acknowledge that there is frequently
a disjunction between principles and practices:
ecologically sensitive ideas in religions
are not always evident in environmental practices
in particular civilizations. Many civilizations
have overused their environments, with or
without religious sanction.
Finally, we are keenly aware that religions
have all too frequently contributed to tensions
and conflict among ethnic groups, both historically
and at present. Dogmatic rigidity, inflexible
claims of truth, and misuse of institutional
and communal power by religions have led to
tragic consequences in various parts of the
globe.
Nonetheless, while religions have sometimes
preserved traditional ways, they have also
provoked social change. They can be limiting
but also liberating in their outlooks. In
the twentieth century, for example, religious
leaders and theologians helped to give birth
to progressive movements such as civil rights
for minorities, social justice for the poor,
and liberation for women. More recently, religious
groups were instrumental in launching a movement
called Jubilee 2000 for debt reduction for
poor nations. Although the world's religions
have been slow to respond to our current environmental
crises, their moral authority and their institutional
power may help effect a change in attitudes,
practices, and public policies.
As key repositories of enduring civilizational
values and as indispensable motivators in
moral transformation, religions have an important
role to play in projecting persuasive visions
of a more sustainable future. This is especially
true because our attitudes toward nature have
been consciously and unconsciously conditioned
by our religious worldviews. Over thirty years
ago the historian Lynn White observed this
when he noted: "What people do about their
ecology depends on what they think about themselves
in relation to things around them. Human ecology
is deeply conditioned by beliefs about our
nature and destiny-that is, by religion."
White's article signaled the beginning of
contemporary reflection on how environmental
attitudes are shaped by religious worldviews.
It is only in recent years, however, that
this topic has been more fully explored, especially
in the ten conferences on world religions
and ecology held at the Center for the Study
of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School
from 1996-1998. Over 700 scholars and environmentalists
participated in these conferences. The published
conference volumes identify religious perspectives
especially rich in resources for defining
principles that may help us preserve nature
and protect the earth.
In soliciting essays for these conferences
and volumes scholars of particular religions
were asked to address a few key questions:
1) What cosmological dimensions in this tradition
help relates humans to nature? 2) How does
this tradition and its sacred texts support
or challenge the idea of nature as simply
a utilitarian resource? 3) What are the core
values from this tradition that can lead to
the creation of an effective environmental
ethics? 4) From within this religious tradition,
can we identify responsible human practices
toward natural systems, sustainable communities,
and future generations? It was considered
important to have the religion scholars reflect
on these broad questions in order to identify
those attitudes, values, and practices that
might be most appropriate in addressing contemporary
environmental problems.
Call for the participation of religious
communities
Many organizations and individuals have been
calling for greater participation by various
religious communities in meeting the growing
environmental crisis by reorienting humans
to show more respect, restraint, and responsibility
toward the earth. Consider, for example, a
statement by scientists, "Preserving and Cherishing
the Earth: An Appeal for Joint Commitment
in Science and Religion," issued at a Global
Forum meeting in Moscow in January of 1990.
It suggests that the human community is committing
"crimes against creation" and notes that "problems
of such magnitude, and solutions demanding
so broad a perspective must be recognized
from the outset as having a religious as well
as a scientific dimension. Mindful of our
common responsibility, we scientists-many
of us long engaged in combating the environmental
crisis-urgently appeal to the world religious
community to commit, in word and deed, and
as boldly as is required, to preserve the
environment of the Earth." It goes on to declare
that "the environmental crisis requires radical
changes not only in public policy, but in
individual behavior. The historical record
makes clear that religious teaching, example,
and leadership are powerfully able to influence
personal conduct and commitment. As scientists,
many of us have had profound experiences of
awe and reverence before the universe. We
understand that what is regarded as sacred
is more likely to be treated with care and
respect. Our planetary home should be so regarded.
Efforts to safeguard and cherish the environment
need to be infused with a vision of the sacred."
A second important document, "World Scientists'
Warning to Humanity," was produced by the
Union of Concerned Scientists in 1992 and
was signed by more than two thousand scientists,
including more than two hundred Nobel Laureates.
It states that: "Human beings and the natural
world are on a collision course…. Human activities
inflict harsh and often irreversible damage
on the environment and on critical resources.
If not checked, many of our current practices
put at risk the future that we wish for human
society and the plant and animal kingdoms,
and may so alter the living world that it
will be unable to sustain life in the manner
that we know. Fundamental changes are urgent
if we are to avoid the collision our present
course will bring about." These changes will
require the special assistance and commitment
of those in the religious community. Indeed,
the document calls for the cooperation of
natural and social scientists, business and
industrial leaders-and also religious leaders.
It concludes with a call for environmentally
sensitive attitudes and behaviors, which religious
communities can help to articulate: "A new
ethic is required-a new attitude towards discharging
our responsibilities for caring for ourselves
and for the earth. We must recognize the earth's
limited capacity to provide for us. We must
recognize its fragility. We must no longer
allow it to be ravaged. This ethic must motivate
a great movement, convincing reluctant leaders
and reluctant governments and reluctant peoples
themselves to effect the needed changes."
Responses from the world's religions: Although
the responses of religions to the global environmental
crisis were slow at first, they have been
steadily growing over the last twenty-five
years. Several years after the first UN Conference
on Environment and Development in Stockholm
in 1972, some Christian churches began to
address the growing environmental and social
challenges. At the fifth Assembly of the World
Council of Churches (WCC) in Nairobi in 1975,
there was a call to establish the conditions
for a "just, participatory, and sustainable
[global] society." In 1979, a follow-up WCC
conference was held at Massachusetts Institute
of Technology on "Faith, Science, and the
Future." The 1983 Vancouver Assembly of the
WCC revised the theme of the Nairobi conference
to include "Justice, Peace, and the Integrity
of Creation." The 1991 WCC Canberra conference
expanded on these ideas with the theme of
the "Holy Spirit Renewing the Whole of Creation."
After Canberra, the WCC theme for mission
in society became "Theology of Life." This
has brought theological reflection to bear
on environmental destruction and social inequities
resulting from economic globalization. In
1992, at the time of the UN Earth Summit in
Rio, the WCC facilitated a gathering of Christian
leaders that issued a "Letter to the Churches,"
calling for attention to pressing eco-justice
concerns: solidarity with other people and
all creatures; ecological sustainability;
sufficiency as a standard of distributive
justice; and socially just participation in
decisions for the common good. In addition
to major conferences held by the Christian
churches, various interreligious meetings
have been held, and various religious movements
have emerged. Some of these include the interreligious
gatherings on the environment in Assisi in
1984 under the sponsorship of the World Wildlife
Fund (WWF) and under the auspices of the Vatican
in 1986. Moreover, the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) has established an Interfaith
Partnership for the Environment (IPE) that
has distributed thousands of packets of materials
for use in local congregations and religious
communities for more than fifteen years. The
two most recent Parliaments of World Religions-held
in Chicago in 1993, and in Cape Town, South
Africa, in 1999-both issued major statements
on global ethics, stressing environmental
issues as well as human rights. The Global
Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders
held international meetings in Oxford in 1988,
Moscow in 1990, Rio in 1992, and Kyoto in
1993-and each time devoted significant attention
to environmental issues. Since 1995 a critical
Alliance of Religion and Conservation (ARC)
has been active in England, while the National
Religious Partnership for the Environment
(NRPE) has organized Jewish and Christian
groups around this issue in the United States.
A member group of NRPE, the Coalition on Environment
and Jewish Life (COEJL), is helping to mobilize
the American Jewish communities regarding
environmental issues, especially global warming.
The World Bank has developed a World Faiths
Development Dialogue on poverty and development
issues with a select group of international
religious leaders. Religious groups have also
contributed over the last five years to the
drafting of the Earth Charter, which arose
out of concerns for equitable means of sustainable
development identified at the 1992 Earth Summit
in Rio. For the three years during the drafting
process discussions of the Earth Charter were
central components of the Harvard conference
series on religion and ecology. Many religious
groups are currently helping to support the
Charter in their communities. Represented
in the Charter are long standing concerns
of many of the world's religions for the alleviation
of poverty, the equitable distribution of
wealth, respect for human rights, an end to
war and violence, and the extension of compassion
to all living things. In addition, current
religious sensibilities regarding respect
for the environment are also present in the
Charter. The religious communities are increasingly
aware of the growing need for a Global Environmental
Ethics and they see the Earth Charter as representing
this in a comprehensive and inclusive way.
In light of this, religious leaders and lay
persons are increasingly speaking out for
protection of the environment. The Dalai Lama
has made numerous statements on the importance
of environmental protection and has proposed
that Tibet should be designated a zone of
special ecological integrity. Rabbi Ishmar
Schorsch of the Jewish Theological Seminary
in New York has frequently spoken on the critical
state of the environment. The Greek Orthodox
Patriarch Bartholomew has sponsored several
seminars to highlight environmental destruction
in the Black Sea and along the Danube River,
calling such examples of negligence "ecological
sin." From the Islamic perspective, Seyyed
Hossein Nasr has written and spoken widely
on the sacred nature of the environment for
more than two decades. In the Christian world,
along with the efforts of the Protestant community,
the Catholic Church has issued several important
pastoral letters over the last decade. Pope
John Paul II wrote a message for the World
Day of Peace, on January 1, 1990, entitled
"The Ecological Crisis: A Common Responsibility."
More recently, John Paul II has spoken of
the need for ecological conversion, namely,
a deep turning to the needs of the larger
community of life. In August of 2000, at a
historic gathering of more than one thousand
religious leaders at the UN for the Millennium
World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual
Leaders, the environment was a major topic
of discussion. The UN Secretary General, Kofi
Annan, called for a new ethic of global stewardship,
recognizing the urgent situation posed by
current unsustainable trends. Religions of
the world and ecology project It was in light
of these various initiatives that a three-year
intensive conference series, entitled "Religions
of the World and Ecology," was organized at
the Center for the Study of World Religions
at Harvard Divinity School to examine the
varied ways in which human-Earth relations
have been conceived in the world's religious
traditions. From 1996-1998 the series of ten
conferences examined the traditions of Judaism,
Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism,
Daoism, Confucianism, Shinto, and indigenous
religions. The conferences, organized by Mary
Evelyn Tucker and John Grim in collaboration
with a team of area specialists, brought together
international scholars of the world's religions
as well as environmental activists and grassroots
leaders. Recognizing that religions are key
shapers of people's worldviews and formulators
of their most cherished values, this broad
research project has identified both ideas
and practices supporting a sustainable environmental
future. Three culminating conferences were
also held at the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences, at the United Nations, and at
the American Museum of Natural History in
New York. These conferences brought representatives
of the world's religions into conversation
with one another as well as into dialogue
with key scientists, economists, educators,
and policy makers in the environmental field.
At the United Nations press conference an
ongoing Forum on Religion and Ecology was
announced to continue the research, education,
and outreach begun at these earlier conferences.
A primary goal of the forum is to help to
establish a field of study in religion and
ecology that has implications for public policy.
The forum has held various scholarly conferences
at Harvard and on the West coast. In addition,
it has been initiating workshops for high-school
teachers, distributing curricular resources
for college courses, supporting a journal
on Worldviews and Ecology, and creating a
comprehensive web site under the Harvard Center
for the Environment (http://environment.harvard.edu/religion).
Just as religions played an important role
in creating sociopolitical changes in the
twentieth century (e.g., human and civil rights),
so now religions are poised in the twenty-first
century to contribute to the emergence of
a broader environmental ethics based on diverse
sensibilities regarding the sacred dimensions
of the natural world. Whether it is from the
perspective of Western religions that the
earth is part of divine Creation and therefore
should be respected, or from the perspective
of indigenous traditions that nature is infused
with a sacred presence, or from the perspective
of particular Asian religions that the universe
participates in ongoing creative transformations
with which humans should harmonize themselves,
the notion of nature as a numinous reality
to be reverenced is widespread. How to identify
and foreground these views most effectively
is the task of both the Harvard research and
publishing project and the ongoing efforts
of the Forum on Religion and Ecology.
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