A Cloud of Witnesses
The Ecological Legacy of Christianity
Contents
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Private property The divine art of the Creator is hidden in
How the universe has become an ocean of creation
blessing God’s invisible nature is seen through creation
Men and women in creation Dominion through the Holy Spirit
What we find thru meditation on creation An eternal creation
A right attitude toward worldly possessions Release from the ancient curse
Knowledge of God through creation Meanings of the tabernacle for man and the
A method of discerning God through creation cosmos
Men and women equal in the sight of God
Tertullian (160? - 230?) 41 Two kinds of dominion
God fashioned the universe The requirement for contemplation of nature
Renewal as a universal lesson in creation
Nature reflects the resurrection St. Anthony the Great (251 - 356) 54
Simplicity and sufficiency The reason for man's creation
God teaches through creation The animals and the garden in the desert
The prayer of the animals Creation of the animals
Discerning the Law of God The directing power of providence
The action of divine providence
Creation declares its Creator
The meaning of creation
Minucius Felix (167? - 249) 43 Creation and the power over good and evil
Knowledge of the cosmos aids in self- Contemplation of nature gives knowledge of
knowledge God
God cares for every part of creation The souls of animals
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The Earth as a great body
Knowledge of God through knowledge of St. Basil the Great (329 - 379)
creation 77
Christ, the ordering principle of the universe Remembrance of God through the creation
What the Word of God in creation reveals The nature of the creatures
The divinizing work of Jesus Christ The wisdom in creation
The beginning and renewal of creation Lessons from the bees
Only a pure heart understands saint’s lessons Lessons from the birds
Christ's purpose of renewal of mankind Creation as a theophany of wisdom
Only humans fail in their purpose in all creation Ascent from the world
Creation declares its Creator A prayer for the earth
Apply tests for discerning the true cosmology The land as a common inheritance
The presence of the Holy Spirit in creation A conception of God from His creation
God is within and yet encloses all things The beginning of time
Creation and salvation are of the same Word Magnifying the Lord through creation
God encloses all things Creation reminds us of the Creator
Limits to our knowledge about creation And God saw that it was good
The Spirit of the Lord fills the universe God's creation teaches His qualities
The wisdom of God harmonizes creation A lesson about vigor through natural diversity
How the Logos binds creation together How to understand creation's lessons about God
From Word to world: a single melody The limits of creation's ability to teach us
Intuiting a Creator from the heavens The cause of evil
Each animal is different
St. Ephraim the Syrian (306 - 373) 68 Each thing in creation has reason and purpose
The symbols of God fill creation Creation helps us to know the Creator
Mysterious emblems of the Trinity in nature Why contemplate nature?
The creation of the creatures A definition of self-control
The holy cross in nature The sweetest of places
Nature and Scripture The most difficult of Sciences
The tree as judge The divine order penetrates the smallest things
Paradise is like the wind Before the creation of the world
The keys to knowledge of creation Man is made in the image of God
The world as great art
St. Hilary of Poitiers (315 - 367) 72 Man and creation
Why creation is beautiful The action of the Holy Trinity in creation
How God is in heaven and on earth Prayer for the animals
Before this world
St. Cyril of Jerusalem (315 - 386) 74
God and creation St. Gregory Nazianzus (329 - 389) 90
Perceiving the Divine through the creatures Man as microcosm of the world
To restrain defilement of creation Man in transition to deification
The witness of creation The challenge to each person of selflessness
To understand creation, know its Creator How is the universe maintained?
In wisdom hast thou made them all Human work in paradise
God creates all parts of creation Creation is a system of earth and sky
The Holy Spirit and creation Appreciation of the beauty of natural scenery
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Prayer to the Creator of creation The meaning of dominion
A new creation is coming to birth A definition of nature
How He infuses the world God's image refers to all of human nature
Christ cleanses the entire world Human nature in the new creation
The cosmos as inaccessible beauty The end of time and history
The animals reflect their Maker Man as microcosm of the universe
Humanity is called to contemplate creation Man unites the spiritual and physical
The creation proclaims the Creator
St. Gregory of Nyssa (330 - 395) 95 The resurrection promises paradisal restoration
Perception of God through nature The creation proclaims the Creator
How the Church recreates the world Man the microcosm
Reflection on dominion
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In the image of God Practice of the virtues
Woman is in the image of God God makes creatures through power and
All that is God's good resides in man wisdom
Nature is also the image of God Creation as a means for knowing God
The visible as springboard for contemplation Preparation for seeing creation in God
How all creation becomes one body Limits to discerning God in creation
In God there is no past or future Learning from creation difficult
Creation as evidence of the Creator
The great catechism St. John Chrysostom (347 - 407) 116
Traversing time and space to know God Love for the creatures
Creation is a form of doctrine
St. Ambrose of Milan (340 - 397) 102
Each thing in creation has its own purpose
The elements of creation are free gifts to all
The wisdom of God's plan of Creation
The earth and its goods belong to all
God rests in redeemed humanity, not nature
The private usurpation of nature
The earth is not cursed
A lesson from the birds
The faithful replication of species
The generation of species through God’s Word
The meaning of the world
On paradise
Why paradise existed on earth
The beasts of the field
The creation of Eve
The world exemplifies the workings of God
The origin of evil in nature
The value of natural foods
Every thing in creation has a reason and purpose
We better know ourselves by knowing creatures
Made in the Image of God
The nature of God in creation
The Holy Spirit is the Creator
The nature of the Holy Spirit in creation
The originating cause of creation
Grace in creation
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A rule for self control St. Columba (521 - 597)
150
St. Nilus of Ankyra (363? - 430?) 135 The power of God rules over all the Land
The whole creation is within you The will of God
Adhering to limits of consumption True adoration in the world
Excess consumption is contrary to nature The delights of the world
A proper diet as God intended Attitudes toward the world
Spiritual questions from agriculture My fear of the sound of an axe
Why monks seek the wilderness Why I love the oakwood of Doire
Other spiritual benefits of wilderness A stranger guest, tired and weary
The weight of possessions St. Gregory the Great (540 - 604) 154
God is equally in all things
St. Patrick (385 - 471) Why human perspectives of creation vary
139 The Bible as a great river
The nature of our God God as the necessity for all created things
A prayer, called "The Deer's Cry"
A blessing on Munster St. Columbanus (543 - 615) 156
God of all Attitudes toward the world
God in all The rowing hymn
The world is but a road
St. Benedict of Nursia (480 - 547) 142 Know the Creator through creation
How he loved the creatures Encounter with animals
Monastery tools as sacred vessels The bear cave
Friend of woodland creatures
Dionysius the Areopagite (485? - 535?) 143 To understand the Creator
God's beauty infuses creation
Beauty reflects an invisible harmony St. Leontios of Cyprus (556 - 634) 159
Matter participates in the Good How Creation gives glory to God
The mysteries are hidden in the secret silence
St. Maximus the Confessor (580 - 662) 160
St. David of Garesja (497 - 569?) 145 Creation as cosmic Church
The hunters and the milking deer The Church is an image of the material world
The hawk and the partridge The human role in creation
Christ's mediations in creation
St. John Climacus (509 - 649) 147 Creation as a mirror for God
Dispassion before the world and the senses The transfiguration of nature
Each animal bears the wisdom of the Creator Death and resurrection are for all creation
The human soul differs from plants and animals
St. Kevin of Glendalough (513? - 618?) 148 Humans are part of creation in order to raise it
A Response to an angel on behalf of the animals up
Hell and a short life How the saints will inherit the earth
The lesson of the missing otter The unreality of evil in creation
The hunters and the wild boar Creatures participate in God's joy
Contemplating the inner essence of creatures
Symbols in the physical world
Using symbols to see the Invisible
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The cosmos as Scripture; Scripture as a cosmos The purpose of creatures
The unity of the spiritual and perceptible worlds The key to understanding creation
The contemplation of spiritual things How creation instructs us in virtue
Attaining knowledge of the mysteries of Contemplation of creation
creation What hinders the contemplation of created
In Christ all creation is illumined things?
Knowing the mysteries brings knowledge of God reveals Himself according to one’s
meaning concepts
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Learning from the law of nature We lose dominion by failing to serve God
The Incarnation: the key to understanding All things join together in God
Creation The song of Guthlac
Christ hidden in creation
The Logos: hidden but revealed in the visible St. John Damascene (675 - 749) 178
world The creation as a reflection of the Creator
Worship God and honor creation
St. Isaac the Syrian (640? - 8th century) 171 The unique quality of each creature and plant
A charitable heart The place of paradise
Perspective on the world The dual nature of paradise
Peace with the world through peace with God The fruit of the Tree of Life
The response of animals to humility Trees
Silent praise for creation's grandeur There is usefulness in every plant
Faith as a doorway of spiritual sight Creation is not derived directly from God
The secrets of God’s glory are in creation The divine nature penetrates all creation
Two sets of eyes How the heavens declare the glory of God
How the saints tame the wild beasts Man is a microcosm of the community of life
The origin of evil
St. Hubertus (650 - 727) How the heavens reveal the glory of God
175 Criteria for a healthy intelligence
God's revelation about respect for the deer Life is energy
Concerning worship toward the East
St. Guthlac (673 - 714) The properties of the divine nature
176 God creates by thought
Holiness tames the beasts
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II. Writings from the Medieval Church (801 - 1453)
John Scotus Eriugena (810 - 877) 185 What is meant by the term “the world”?
God and His creatures Sanctifying the temple of the world
Every creature is a manifestation of God
The universe is permeated with divine goodness St. Peter of Damascus (1027? - 1107?) 197
The cycles of nature The wonder of creation
God exists in creatures Contemplation of God’s qualities in creation
God as the cause of all goodness The wonder of creation’s processes
The reasons for divisions in nature There is nothing incidental or evil in creation
Understanding the Creator from the creation Moderation in contemplation
A contemplation of creation Give thanks to God for all things
Two ways of knowing the divine light Spiritual sight
All things always existed in God The great value of stillness
God is the essence of all things Lessons from the night
God sustains creation God’s marvelous care for creation
What God punishes in creation
Uses of the word “world” in the Bible Hildebert of Lavardin (1056 - 1133) 201
God is always present
St. Symeon New Theologian (949-1022) 190
A prayer of thanksgiving St. Bernard of Clairvaux (1090 - 1153) 202
The things of the world belong to all people A stream through the meadow
Material possessions Learning from creation
Distributing possessions sets one's heart free A contemporary view of Bernard
The purpose and destiny of creation The effect of prayer on the land
The root cause of failure to share the world’s Human valuation of possessions
goods The road to God
All creation is within Healing remedies in nature
The new man brings the new creation How stones become holy
Awakening to God's presence Recreating Paradise
Searching for God
Glimpsing the Creator through creation Hugh of St. Victor (1096 - 1141) 205
Contemplating reality The Book of Nature
Adam in the paradise of this world All nature speaks of God
The nature of “will” in creatures The light of the wisdom of God in creation
Two suns for two bodies The wisdom of the structure of creation
God and the laws of nature
All things are in God St. Hildegard of Bingen, (1098 - 1179) 207
The redemption of creation The love of God for creation
The bright condition of the future creation Earth as an all-encompassing vessel
Paradise is for the whole earth God gives creation to humanity
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The effect of sin on the world
The Holy Spirit moves creation
God's Word in creation is indivisible from God
The future of creation resides in our hearts
Creatures are sparks of God’s radiance
God’s fiery life in creation
At one with God and creation
The visible and the temporal
God’s power made the world
Man is part of creation
The visible is a manifestation of the invisible
The Creator loves his creation
Creation can punish humanity
A pattern of service in nature
All creation is Good
Signs of God in the world
God’s justice fills creation
Honor God by honoring the earth
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St. Aelred of Rievaulx (1110 - 1167) 213 Creatures as reflections of eternal wisdom
God's goodness dwells in every creature The universe as a ladder
Three methods for finding God in creation
St. Francis of Assisi (1182 - 1226) 214 The universe as a book
Love of creation Traces of the Creator dwell in creatures
A loving attitude toward flowers and all nature St. Francis: Loving God through creation
Instruction to the birds The world as a great mirror
Our sister, the cricket
The creatures minister to human needs St. Thomas Aquinas (1225 - 1274) 231
Dominion through holy obedience Human care for the creatures
A vision in the night God's art is to endure
Canticle of the sun Why God dwells in all things
Sermon to the birds Animal nature is not changed by man's sin
The blessing of God for my sisters, the birds All of creation participates in the divine
The creatures as teachers of obedience goodness
Treat the animals with kindness The purpose of creation's diversity
How obedience shapes attitudes toward creation Why so many different kinds of creatures
Human need for the creatures A proof of God from creation
For the love of God and larks The multiplicity of forms in creation
A ladder to heaven through creation Caring for creatures
Ownership of possessions
St. Albert the Great (1193 - 1280) 220 Errors about creation distort theology
Creatures and the likeness of God The universe represents the divine goodness
Knowledge of nature as craft and art Compassion for animals brings love for people
The unfriendly features of the landscape God is beyond the created order
Natural disasters as the punishments of God The universe participates in the divine goodness
Why creatures help us to know God Rational for a utilitarian view of creatures
Two ways of considering the creatures All things are made for man
The divine plan and the ideal civil plan Creatures and the likeness of God
The aim of the natural sciences Time and the universe
Learning the lessons of nature Two sacred texts
Perspective on the landscape of the universe
Mechthild of Magdeberg, (1210 - 1297) 224
Each creature must live in its own nature Meister Eckhart (1260 - 1329)
A vision of God in all things 237
An attitude to creation which helps to know
St. Bonaventure (1217 - 1274) God
225 God's "seed" presence in man
Perceiving the Divine in creation Creatures and creation
The creatures help us to see God Sermons in creatures
The greatness of God is demonstrated in To penetrate nature's secrets
creation Every creature is a word of God
The creation reflects the secrets of the Creator An inner and outer perception of creatures
About St. Francis' view of animals Knowledge of God through creatures
The different attributes of the creatures The journey to spirituality
Acquiring a love for creatures Creation is only loaned to humanity
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Criteria for knowing God in nature Julian of Norwich (1342 - 1423)
Beyond time 252
To discover nature's essence Gardening as a metaphor for the spiritual life
To know God There is no defect in nature
Where is God? A vision of everything that has been created
The interdependence of creatures Insight into creation
How nature searches for unity The unity between Christ and His creatures
All things are in God God as Creator, lover and protector
Possessions and experience of God
When God is present in everything St. Catherine of Siena (1347 - 1380) 254
Purpose for the world The fire of Christ in all people and all creation
Seeking first the will of God
St. Gregory of Sinai (1265 - 1346) 243 God’s fire provides knowledge of self and
Right view of created things creation
How the true philosopher views creation Creation in God's Image
A description of paradise The source of compassion for the animals
In the renewal of man is the renewal of creation Who sees their Lord in creation?
Creation’s laws apply to earth and human body Everything is good and perfect
Man as a second world Discernment in saving creation
Finding divine wisdom in creation All people share a unity in the vineyard of
Who is the true spiritual teacher? Christ
Knowledge of God through knowledge of Why Christ’s servants love animals
creation
The initiated teacher Ramon Sibiude (1378? - 1438)
A right view of created things 258
Instructions for monks on building thanksgiving How creatures become a book
Two great reservoirs of knowledge
Benefits of a natural theology
St. Gregory Palamas (1296 - 1359) 247 The Book of Nature is before the Book of
Body and soul both mediate the image of God Scripture
Understanding nature through the Holy Spirit
The qualities of dominion within the soul Thomas Kempis (1380-1471)
The energies of creation 260
God’s sustaining energy and essence The creatures form a book of holy doctrine
Beholding the nature of all things Disdain for material things
The extent of God’s presence
Ten aspects of creation Nicholas of Cusa (1401 - 1464)
261
St. Birgitta (1303 - 1373) Divinity is in all things
250 The wall of the Lord
God watches over the creatures The generative power of a tree
Creating and creation are one
St. Sergius of Radonezh (1314 - 1392) 251 The call of wisdom in all things
Serving food to the bear God cares for creatures the same as the cosmos
Perspective on saints and wild animals
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III. Writings from the Modern Church (1453 - present)
Martin Luther (1483 - 1546) 263 The keys to a knowledge of heaven and earth
Humanity is sustained by God's providence The effect of knowledge of the mysteries
Incarnation increases appreciation for Creation The path to blissfulness
Our body and creation reflect God's wrath for Man must learn the secrets of nature by craft
sin Why we must investigate creation
God's power sustains creation Everything needed for healing is in nature
The world is full of God
The wonderful works of God reflect His John Calvin (1509 - 1564)
majesty 274
God is the Creator The custody of the garden
God's other gospel A duty to reflect on the creatures
Earth is innocent of sin Stewards of God’s creation
Who has worldly riches? The beauty of creation reflects the divine glory
The power of God is present in creation Every part of creation reflects the Creator
God is in the flowers The overwhelming beauty of the universe
The animals are God’s footprints Paul on creatures: commentary on Romans 8:21
God’s nature dwells in Creatures The conditions of human stewardship of the
God gives me everything I have earth
Creation as a book Responsibility for the future of the land
A disposition toward God's gifts
St. Ignatius of Loyola (1491 - 1556) 268 A theology of nature
The majesty of God in the world Those who are wise search out God's works
A reward of all creation Opening to the grandeur of God in creation
God's presence in the world The works of God are everywhere
Seek to know God through His creation
Paracelsus (1493 - 1541) 269 A test of faith: appreciating God's creatures
Nature is the universal teacher God before the creation of the world
Reading the lessons of nature The history of the creation of the world
An understanding of plants as healing agents Our duty toward animals
The perfection of dominion How God discloses Himself through creation
What a clergyman should be Investigating God through His creation
Discerning God's truth No excuse for not knowing God through
Nature is a light creation
All of the truths of creation are within man How the Bible brings God’s lessons into focus
To know the inner side of nature Seek ministry, not dominion
Faith unravels the deeper mysteries of nature A condition for an unacceptable dominion
The search for wisdom
Knowledge of nature fortifies faith St. Therese of Avila (1515 - 1582) 283
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The hidden treasure of the Lord The visible springs from the invisible
Nature as an aid to the remembrance of God God's presence in creation
Detachment from the world Surrender opens the door to experience
Discovering a new world of life and meaning Spiritual regeneration
Understanding God's presence
St. Robert Bellarmine (1542 - 1621) 284 Prayer for a right relationship to creation
Knowing God through His creatures God and the elements form each other
The beauty of created things The world as battleground
Creation as a divine work The signature of all things
The wisdom of the Creator The location of heaven
Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642) 285 George Herbert (1593 - 1633) 297
Living symbols in creation Teach me my God and King
The sun still ripens grapes Providence
Man
William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616) 286 Teach Me, My God and King
The uses of adversity Providence II
Possessions are not thine own Brotherhood in all parts of creation
Sonnet XCIV "An attitude toward nature"
A touch of nature William Penn (1644 - 1718) 299
Nature’s infinite book of secrecy The Country Life
Sonnet LXXXVIII "The end of man and How little we learn of creation
nature" The Creator’s Face in creation
The library of the philosopher
Jacob Boehme (1575 - 1624) 288
God's truth in nature Cotton Mather (1663 - 1728) 300
The world as a manifestation of the Holy Spirit The Two-fold Book of God
The location of Heaven is within The study of nature
Reflection on human responsibility
Reflection on dominion Jean Pierre de Caussade (1675-1751) 301
The Word of God in the world Divinity fills Creation
A true Christian In the Hand of God
Grasping God in creation God’s love is present in every creature
The eternal is hidden in the temporal Jesus Christ lives in every thing
The earth is filled with life The ultimate value of knowledge and ideas
The earthly influence of the stars As we use creation, we use God’s manifestations
The signatures in nature An attitude toward the creatures
Dominion over nature through self-dominion When faith shows us God in creation
Hearing the Word of God
How creation is a manifestation of God St. Alphonsus Liguori (1696 - 1787) 304
All things are both in time and eternity How God's Presence Sustains Us
The greatest challenge in understanding
creation John Wesley (1701 - 1791) 305
The nature of plants Creation's restoration
Christian allegiance Dominion and creation
An experience of God's presence in creation Each creature has a share in the heavenly life
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Love creatures for God’s sake God, not their
own
Seeking Christian perfection
Jesus Christ leads us to creation concern
Doing God's will in earth as it is in heaven
Human dominion over the creatures
A reflection about the purpose of the animals
The book of nature
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William Wordsworth (1770 - 1850) 320 The laws of nature are just
The world is too much with us Teaching children gentleness
Up! Up! My Friend, and Quit Your Books Nature
Insights from flowers
Why should we turn away from natural John Greenleaf Whittier (1807 - 1892) 333
wisdom? The mercy of God extends to the creatures
The worship of nature
St. Paisius Velichkovsky (1772 - 1794) 322
"Dressing and Keeping" the garden
Metropolitan Philaret (1782 - 1867) 322 Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809 - 1892) 335
Each creature exists in the middle of creation Flower in the Crannied Wall
Prayer
William Cullen Bryant (1794 - 1878) 323 O Yet We Trust
Thanatopsis One God
Inscription for the entrance to a wood The Higher Pantheism
God's first temples Oh yet we trust
Listen to nature’s teachings
Thanatopsis (excerpt) Athanasia Logacheva (1809 - 1875) 338
Love of creation
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803 - 1882) 325
Views of nature St. Theophan the Recluse (1815 - 1894) 339
All science seeks a theory of nature Educating children requires a sense of the holy
The mystery of nature and man The true aim of man on earth
The happiest man All things in creation witness to the Father
The beauty of nature The narrowing spiritual effect of specialization
Nature is medicinal A test for spiritual and secular literature
The secret to the pace of nature Contemplation of creation makes the mind sober
The art of taking a walk The authoritarian hand of the world
Facts in nature symbolize spiritual facts Contemplation of creation brings perspective
The rich and royal man The meaning of ‘leaving the world’
Some effects of the wisdom in nature Discerning symbols in creation
In the woods
God’s lessons in fields Henry David Thoreau (1817 - 1862) 343
The heart of every creature Seeing God through nature
The world teaches trust in God The wealth of the natural philosopher
The utilitarian mentality toward nature The need to prevent private usurpation of nature
On the alert for God in nature
Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861 ) 329 The passing away of life builds for new life
Glory in the commonplace Nature heals every wound
Work My motive
Insufficiency My search for primitive nature
Without Thee, we do no good (hymn excerpt) Perspective on forests
The clouds are safe
Henry Longfellow (1807 - 1882) 331 The character of the logger
The manuscripts of God Solitude is my companion
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A free and adventurous life
Guidance
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God's transparent universe Solutions in the mind of God
All of nature is in man God's little workshop
A religious approach to nature The credit for my work
God’s first temples "Golden Moments"
Walks in nature Nature as a broadcasting station
When a man plants a tree The joy of reading from God’s creation
We hide from the lessons of nature Communing with nature
Reaching the heart of wilderness Nature as God’s broadcasting system
Alone in the woods at night Learn from Mother Nature
Invisible divine influences Reading God out of Nature’s Great Book
The song of the wilderness
God has care for the trees St. Therese of Lisieux (1873 - 1897) 370
Modern culture versus the worth of animals The imprint of nature’s poetry
A “felted together” universe The flowers in the book of nature
God as beauty God and nature and our souls
The heart of the wilderness The impression of the sea
Pine tree sermons Nature reflects the mode of the soul
A path into the cosmos Inspiration from mountain grandeur
Jesus’ bouquet of flowers
Gerard Manly Hopkins, SJ (1844-1889) 358
God's Grandeur
Pied Beauty Evelyn Underhill (1875 - 1941) 373
The Caged Skylark The meaning of symbols in creation
The variable state of the earth
Vladimir Soloviev (1853 - 1900) 360 Forest Epiphany
Love holds the cosmos together To perceive nature’s secrets
The social and cosmic environmnt as living Christ transfigures the cosmos
entities Immanence
The path to integration with nature A sea of Spirit
A cosmic view of liberation of nature
Albert Schweitzer (1875 - 1965) 376
George Washington Carver (1864-1943) 362 Reverence for life
Talking to flowers A spiritual relationship with the world
A guidance for the future The unity of all life
The method in my discoveries An absolute ethic of nature
The presence of God Life is sacred to the truly religious man
God's handiwork in nature A prayer for the animals
My great search for meaning The beginning of reverence for life
The voice of God in the farmyard The only way out of chaos
The measure of success All life is sacred
Letter to Booker T. Washington Avoiding sins against life
Lessons from nature early in the morning Our duty to help the animals
The spirit of my life The solidarity of all life
Mysteries and faith The fields speak of God
Growing for the future Reverence for life is ethical mysticism
"Live at Home" The ethical man
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The only way out of chaos
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Helen Keller (1880 - 1968) 386 Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1998) 401
In the garden of the Lord We need silence to find God
The joy of the world Accept everything with joy
Life is an adventure
Contentment in creation Francis Schaeffer (1912 - 1984) 402
Earth and sky A new sense of beauty
Feeling creation The Christian duty of respect
I feel eternity in my soul The nature of human dominion
Nature is to be honored
T. S. Eliot (1888 - 1965) 389 A right and a wrong dominion
A consequence of materialism We respect creation because God made it
The creatures affirm Thee, O God Failure to teach a correct dominion
The value of a tree
C. S. Lewis (1893 - 1963) 390
Pan's Purge A test of how we really love the Creator
Experiments on animals The root of human problems
Perspective on dominion
Nicholas Zernov (1898 - 1980) 392 Creation gives glory to God
Icons as witnesses to a transfigured cosmos The universe tells us of God
The human body, east and west The nature of dominion
Creation and the sacraments
Thomas Merton (1915 - 1968) 407
Dumitru Staniloae (1903-1993) What is the world?
394 A society of barbarism
The deification and salvation of the world The beginning of the interior life
“World” means man and nature together Listening to silence
West and East on the salvation of nature and Silent roots
man The cosmic dance
Nature reflects the human condition Art and craft
Spiritual growth through nature Selling the rain
Nature as a medium for grace or evil To find one’s place in creation
The connection between God, people and The cosmos as revelation of God
creation What are the rights of beavers?
Creation as tool for deeper communion with The love of creation for its Creator
God The transparency of the world
The things of the world as gift Overwork: the most insidious form of violence
Created things as basis for dialogue with God Christian tradition
Articulating the meanings imbued into creation Listening to the rain
Effort is required to learn from creation
Population and industrialization: challenges to Rev. Billy Graham (1918 - ) 413
love Christian responsibility for the world
Natural revelation and supernatural revelation The right treatment of animals
Man and the cosmos as natural revelation God’s purpose for our planet
Microcosm and macrocosm Our Christian duty
Human meaning in relation to the world Our own neglect and excess
The seriousness of ecological problems
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Pope John Paul II (1920 - 2005) 415
The ecological crisis is a moral crisis
Breaking with consumerism
The wrong of super-development and
consumerism
Distinguishing motives for owning and using
The importance of ecological teachings
Humanity and the animals
Dominion and obedience
The evil which faces us
The solution of the Church
The root cause of environmental degradation
A universal duty to safeguard creation
Disobedience to God causes disorder in
creation
The human causes of desertification
Creation as a map pointing to heaven
The contemplation of creation
The majesty of the mountains
A call to ecological conversion
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Patriarch Ignatius IV (1921 - ) 424
Recovering Christianity’s cosmic dimensions Mar Paulos Gregorios (1924 - 1997) 438
The birth of the cosmos Humanity is on the wrong path
Deciphering the “book of the world” How we know that our modern vision is
Contemplation of nature defective
An effect of the contemplation of nature The concept of nature
The world as theophany Respect for the created order: A Christian duty
The spirit of fasting Giving back to nature
Why do we have an ecological problem? Why Creation is Incomprehensible
Transfiguration or disfiguration Stewardship versus dominion
Creative exorcism through asceticism The concept of nature
The great task before us
Patriarch Bartholomew (1940 - ) 441
Philip Sherrard (1922 - 1995) 430 The cosmic liturgy
The Ecological Crisis The world as a sacrament of thanksgiving
A Crisis of Vision Humans are part of the environment
The Desanctification of Nature To hurt the earth is a sin
Our own depravity writ large Priests of creation
Recovering a sense of holiness Environmental care urgent for every person
The path to the desanctification of nature Asceticism as a key to environmental healing
Recovering Christian purpose Repentance for failure to respect life
How creatures take their being from God Dominion is not domination or tyranny
A kind of second fall A call to halt global climate change
The deepening perversion of man and nature Defining our relationship to God
Enmeshment in the “Second Fall” The Lord suffuses all creation
Can we be in grace and live in modern society? Love God, love His creation
God creates within Himself Sensitive souls admire and respect creation
The conception of creation ex nihilo Each person has a role
Man’s priestly role in creation Care of the environment is also care for justice
Interdependence between God, man and Each person has responsibility for climate
creation change
The most crucial issue that we confront today
The natural world represents the spiritual world
Creation ex nihilo: the root of our ecological
crisis
xxxi
A Cloud of Witnesses
The Deep Ecological Legacy of Christianity
Let us turn our eyes to the Father and Creator of the universe, and when we
consider how precious and peerless are His gifts of peace, let us embrace them
eagerly for ourselves.
Let us contemplate his purposes in creation, and consider how free from all
anger he is toward his creatures and the total absence of any friction that marks
the ordering of His whole creation.
The heavens, as they revolve beneath His government, do so in quiet submission to Him. The
day and the night run the course He has laid down for them, and neither of them interferes
with the other. Sun, moon and starry choirs roll on in harmony at His command, none
swerving from its appointed orbit.
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Letter to the Corinthians 1:20
The heavens as a servant of God (alternate translation)
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By his order the heavens moving in the world obey him day and night, they perform the
movement determined for them.... The sun and the stars shine following in harmony the ways
determined by Him without deviation... The unlimited sea, by his will united in great water
masses, does not go beyond the limits established by him.... The ocean impenetrable for man,
the worlds behind it, are administered by the same orders of God. The seasons — spring,
summer, autumn and winter — peacefully replace each other. The winds determined for
each season, perform their ministry without obstacles. The inexhaustible sources created for
delight and health, provide water necessary for human life.
Letter to the Corinthians 1:20,
translation: Early Fathers of the Church
series, Brussels, 1987, pp. 55-56.
The seasons of spring, summer, autumn, and winter give way to one another in
peace. The winds blow from north, east, south and west as he calls them, and
springs of water break through the rocks to supply drink for animals and men.
God in all his creation willed that there should be perfect peace and concord,
without any attempt to alter even the least of His decrees. Laws of the same
kind sustain the fathomless deeps of the abyss and the untold regions of the
underworld.
Nor does the illimitable basin of the sea, gathered by the operations of His hand into its
various centers, overflow at any time the barriers encircling it, but does as He has bidden it --
for His word was, Thus far shall you come; at this point shall your waves be broken within
you. The impassable ocean and all the worlds that lie beyond it are themselves ruled by the
like ordinances of the Lord.
Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter succeed one another peaceably; the winds fulfill
their punctual duties, each from its own quarter, and give no offense; the ever-flowing
streams... and even the minutest of living creatures mingle together in peaceful accord. Upon
all of these the Great Architect and Lord of the universe has enjoined peace and harmony, for
the good of all alike, and preeminently for the good of ourselves who have sought refuge in
His mercies through our Lord Jesus Christ.
1 Clement 14:1-4
For thou did make manifest the everlasting constitution of the world through the forces set in
operation. Thou, Lord, did create the world. ...
I Clement 60:1
I Clement 59:3
26
27
This early theologian is sometimes described as the first biblical theologian. He lived during the
first generation after the apostles. His emphasis is on the importance of mystic experience as a
fortifying aspect of faith. Irenaeus was called the "Apostle of Unity between the Churches" for his
efforts to preserve harmony within the Church. He served as Bishop of Gaul (France) from the city
of Lyons and wrote against the doctrines of the gnostics. "To reveal their doctrines is to defeat
them," he wrote, regarding his effort to preserve the revealed truth of Jesus Christ. His opposition
to the Gnostics was based upon their denial of the presence of God in the natural creation. His
writings have continuing ecological relevance because they affirm the divinity in the world and
because they depict the providential activity of God alive everywhere in the natural order. More
vigorously than many of his contemporaries, he asserts the goodness of all creation because God’s
loving presence permeates its every part.
Against Heresies
Neither the structure nor the substance of creation is destroyed. It is only the "outward form
of the world" (I Corinthians 7:31) that passes away – and that is to say, the conditions
produced by the fall. And when this "outward form" has passed away, man will be renewed
and will flourish in a prime of life that is incorruptible, so that it is no longer possible for
him to grow old any more. There will be a "new heaven and a new earth" (Rev. 21:1); and in
this new heaven and new earth, man shall abide, forever new and forever conversing with
God.
Against Heresies
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He it is who fills the heavens, and views the abysses, who is also present with
every one of us. For He says, "Am I a God at hand, and not a God afar off? If
any man is hid in secret places, shall I not see him?" For His hand lays hold of
all things, and that it is which illumines the heavens, and lightens also the things
which are under the heavens, and trieth the reins and the hearts, is also present in
the hidden things, and in our secret thoughts, and does openly nourish and
preserve us.
In discussing the new life of the Christian and the strength to make changes in one's life,
Irenaeus relates that this life comes by personal experiential knowledge of Christ.
Man was not made for the sake of the creation, but creation for the sake of
man.
But vain in every respect are they who despise the entire dispensation of God, and disallow the
salvation of the flesh, and treat with contempt its regeneration, maintaining that it is not capable
of incorruption. But if this indeed does not obtain salvation, then neither did the Lord redeem
us with His blood, nor is the cup of the Eucharist the communion of His blood, not the bread
which we break the communion of His Body.... And as we are His members, we are also
nourished by means of the creation (and He Himself grants the creation to us, for He causes His
sun to rise, and sends rain when He wills). He has acknowledged the cup (which is part of the
creation) as His own Blood, from which He bedews our blood; and the bread (also a part of the
creation) He has established as His own Body, from which He gives increase to our bodies.
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30
Creation reveals Him Who formed it
That God is the Creator of the world is accepted even by those very persons who in many ways
speak against Him, and yet acknowledge Him, styling Him the Creator.... while the very
heathen learned it from the creation itself. For even creation reveals Him who formed it, and
the very work made suggests Him who made it, and the world manifests Him who ordered it.
The universal Church, moreover, through the whole world, has received this tradition from the
apostles themselves.
God exercises a providence over all things, and therefore He also gives counsel; and when
giving counsel, He is present with those who attend to moral discipline.... The Maker and
Framer of the Universe is good. “And to be good,” no envy ever springs up with regard to
anything; thus establishing the goodness of God, as the beginning and the cause of the
creation of the world.
For the Lord taught us that no man is capable of knowing God, unless he be taught of God:
that is, that God cannot be known without God: but that this is the express will of the Father
that God should be known.
And for this purpose did the Father reveal the Son, that through His instrumentality He
might be manifested to all, and might receive those righteous ones who believe in Him into
incorruption and everlasting enjoyment.... The Father therefore has revealed Himself to all, by
making His Word visible to all; and, conversely, the Word has declared to all the Father and
the Son, since He has become visible to all....
For by means of the creation itself, the Word reveals God, the Creator; and by means
of the world does He declare the Lord as Maker of the world; and by means of the formation
of man, the Artificer who formed him.
God, by wisdom, founded the earth, and by understanding hath He established the heaven,
declares Solomon....
There is therefore one God, who by the Word and Wisdom created and arranged all things;
but this is the Creator who has granted this world to the human race, and who as regards His
greatness, is indeed unknown to all who have been made by Him...; but as regards His love, He is
always known through Him by whose means He ordained all things. Now this is His Word, our
Lord Jesus Christ, who in the last times was made a man among men, that He might join the end to
the beginning, that is, man to God. ... Wherefore the prophets... (and) the Word of God foretelling
from the beginning that God should be seen by men, and hold converse with them upon earth,
should confer with them, and should be present with His own creation, saving it, and becoming
capable of being perceived by it, and freeing us from the hands of all that hate us, that is, from every
spirit of wickedness; and causing us to serve Him in holiness and righteousness all our days, in
order that man, having embraced the Spirit of God, might pass into the glory of the Father....
The prophets indicated beforehand that God should be seen by men; as the Lord also
says, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.” But in response to His greatness
and His wonderful glory, “no man shall see God and live” (Ex. 33:20)... For man does not see
God by his own powers; but when He wills and as He wills. For God is powerful in all
things... and He shall also be seen paternally in the kingdom of heaven, the Spirit truly
preparing man in the Son of God, and the Son leading him to the Father, while the Father, too,
confers incorruption upon him for eternal life, which comes to every one from the fact of his
seeing God. For as those who see the light are within the light, and partake of its brilliancy;
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even so, those who see God are in God, and receive of His splendor. And His splendor
vivifies them; those, therefore, who see God, do receive life....
Men, therefore, shall see God, that they may live, being made immortal by that sight,
and attaining even unto God....
For the glory of God is a living man; and the life of man consists in beholding God.
For if the manifestation of God which is made by means of the creation, affords life to all
living in the earth, much more does that revelation of the Father which comes through the
Word, give life to those who see God.
Seven heavens
The world is encompassed by seven heavens in which dwell powers and angels
and archangels, all worshiping the Almighty God who created all things....
The first heaven, which encloses the rest, is that of wisdom; the second, of
understanding; the third, of council; the fourth, of might; the fifth, of
knowledge; the sixth, of godliness; and the seventh, this firmament of ours, is
full of the fear of that Spirit which gives light to the heavens (cf. Job 26:13).
As a pattern of this, Moses was given the seven-branched candlestick, to burn
continually in the holy place. This we know for it was a pattern of the heavens
that he received the liturgy of the tabernacle, as the Word spoke to him: “You
shall make it according to the pattern of the things which you have seen on the
mountain” (Exodus 25:40).
This is our Lord, who in the last times was made man, existing in this world, and who in an
invisible manner contains all things created, and is inherent in the entire creation, since the
Word governs and arranges all things; and therefore He came to his own, in a visible manner,
and was made flesh, and hung upon the tree, that He might sum up all things in Himself.
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Nothing is without symbolic meaning
The whole of the heavenly host offers glory to God the Father of all. With, and
by, the Word He has created the whole world, including the angels,
establishing laws, so that every creature keeps within his proper bounds and
does the work appointed for him by God.
For the glory of God is a living man; and the life of man consists in beholding God. For if the
manifestation of God, which is made by means of the creation, affords life to all living in the
earth, much more does that revelation of the Father which comes through the Word, give life
to those who seek God.
The Creator of the world is the Word of God: and this is our
Lord, who was made man, existing in this world, and who in an
invisible manner contains all things created, and is inherent in
the entire creation, since the Word of God governs and arranges
all things; and therefore He came to His own in a visible
manner, and was made flesh, and hung upon a tree, that He
might sum up all things in Himself.
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Against Heresies 5:18.3
Since the Lord has power to infuse life into what He has
fashioned, and since the flesh is capable of being quickened,
what remains to prevent its participating in incorruption, which
is a blissful and never-ending life granted by God?
Neither the substance nor the essence of creation will be annihilated, but the “fashion” of the
world passes away.
Against the Heresies, ch. 5, 36:1
In an invisible manner [the eternal Logos] contains all things created, and is
inherent in the entire creation, since the Word of God governs all things.
Against Heresies, 5:28.3
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36
St. Clement of Alexandria (150 - 220)
Clement of Alexandria was anciently called "the educator of souls." He was the first of Christ’s
disciples to formulate a theology of lifestyle and shape it into a body of practical doctrine with
disciplines for daily activity. Because he lived during a time in which persecutions were declining
in North Africa, he and other Church leaders saw a great need for Christians to distinguish
themselves from the pagans and those caught up in the worldliness which characterized that region
of the Roman Empire. Clement taught Christians to think in terms of "a Christian way of life" and
his distinctive theology of lifestyle was such that it aided spiritual striving and intertwined with
creation. His writings are important today because they provide timeless guidance for avoiding the
consumer mentality which fuels so much of modern ecological degradation.
Contemplation of nature
Other men, indeed, live that they may eat, just like unreasoning animals; for them life is only
their belly. But as for us, our Educator has given the command that we eat only to live. Eating is
not our main occupation, nor is pleasure our chief ambition. Food is permitted us simply because
of our stay in this world, which the Word is shaping for immortality by His education. Our food
should be plain and ungarnished, suitable to children who are plain and unpretentious, adapted to
maintaining life, not self-indulgence.
Excessive variety of food must be avoided, for it gives rise to every kind of bad effect....
Yet there are those who grow dissatisfied with this truth in their restless ostentation, and reject
simplicity of diet to engage in a frantic search for expensive menus that must be imported from
across the seas. ...
It is a natural law that the body is not benefitted by excessively rich food: quite the
contrary, those who live on simpler foods are stronger and healthier and more alert, as servants
are, for example, in comparison with their masters, or farmer-tenants in comparison with their
landlords.
Let the meal be plain and restrained, of such sort that it will quicken the spirit. Let it be
free of too rich a variety, and let not such a meal be withdrawn from the guidance of the
Educator.... If the diet oversteps the limits of self-sufficiency, it harms man by dulling his mind
and making his body susceptible to disease. Indeed, the pleasures of a luxurious table inflict
untold damage: gluttony, squeamishness, gourmandizing, insatiability of appetite, voraciousness.
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If a person is wealthy, yet eats without restraint and shows himself insatiable, he
disgraces himself in a special way and does wrong on two scores: first he adds to the burden of
those who do not have, and he lays bare, before those who do have, his own lack of
temperance.
Clement also speaks against the scouring of the world for expensive foods. "Do not for the sake
of food destroy the work of God.... We must restrain the belly and keep it under the control of
heaven. True food is thanksgiving. He who offers up thanks will not indulge excessively in
pleasure. Our examples of virtue will draw out fellow banqueters to virtue.”
The Christian way of life is not achieved by self-indulgence. Far from "lust-exciting
delicacies" is the table of truth. Even though all things have been created particularly for man, it
is not well to make use of all things, nor to use them at all times. Surely the occasion and the
time, the manner and the motive, make some difference to one who is educated (by Christ) to
what is profitable. It is this goal that provides the strength we need to restrain ourselves from
living lives centered around the table. Wealth chooses that sort of life, for its vision is blunted;
it is abundance that blinds in the matter of gluttony.
Christ the Educator, Book II:1-2
Household utensils
Food and clothing and dishes, and in a word, all of the items of the household ought to be, as a
general rule, in keeping with a Christian way of life, and in conformity with what is simple,
fitting, adapted to person, age, occupation and occasion. For we are servants of the one God,
and so ought to ensure that our belongings and the equipment needed for them manifest the one
noble way of life.
The Lord ate His meal from an inexpensive bowl; made His disciples recline on the
ground, upon grass; washed their feet, girding Himself with a linen towel.... He did not seek the
gold of kings, but taught us to rest content with what will quench thirst. Beyond question, He
confined Himself to the useful, not the ostentatious, good. When He ate and drank at banquets,
He did not require metals dug out of the earth, or dishes that tasted of gold or silver.
We must then get rid of our multiplicity of vessels, our silver and gold drinking cups....
In fact we must walk according to reason even if we have a wife and children in our home. A
household is not a burden if it has but learned to follow in the lead of the wayfarer who knows
self-control.
The wife who loves her husband will be his faithful reflection, both of them wayfarers
carrying provisions best suited for a journey toward heaven: frugality, together with a united
and determined practice of self-restraint.
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The use of possessions
To spend money on foolish desires comes more under the heading of destruction than under
expenditure. God has given us the authority to use our possessions, I admit, but only to the
extent that it is necessary: He wishes them to be common. It is absurd that one man live in
luxury when there are so many who labor in poverty.
He who holds possessions holds them as gifts of God.... and knows that he possesses
them for his brother's sake rather than his own.... Such is the man who is blessed by the Lord
and a ready inheritor of the kingdom of God.
Homily: "Quis Dives Salvatur?" 16
Those concerned for their salvation should take this as their first principle, that, although the
whole of creation is ours to use, the universe is made for the sake of self-sufficiency, which
anyone can acquire by a few things. They who rejoice in the holdings in their storehouses are
foolish in their greed. "He that hath earned wages," scripture reminds us, "puts them into a bag
of holes." Such is the man who gathers and stores up his harvest, for by not sharing his wealth
with anyone, he becomes worse off....
To know oneself has always been, so it seems, the greatest of all lessons. For, if anyone
knows himself, he will know God; and in knowing God, he will become like Him, not by
wearing golden ornaments or by trailing long flowing robes, but by performing good deeds and
cultivating an independence of as many things as possible. God alone has no needs, and He
rejoices in a particular way when He sees us pure in the adornment of our minds and our bodies
clothed with the adornment of the holy garment of self-control.
Those people, then, who run down created existence and vilify the body are wrong, and do not
consider that the frame of man was formed erect for the contemplation of heaven, and that the
organization of the senses tends to knowledge; and that the members and parts are arranged for
good, not pleasure.
We must now describe what the man who is called a Christian ought to be during
the whole of his life. We must accordingly begin with ourselves and how we
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ought to regulate ourselves. For whenever anyone has been brought away by the
Word of God from external things... he will know that he is not to be earnestly
occupied with external things, but about what is proper and peculiar to man -- to
purge the eye of the soul and to sanctify his flesh.
Some men live that they may eat, as the irrational creatures, "whose life is their belly, and
nothing else." But the Instructor (Christ) enjoins us to eat that we may live. For neither is food
our business, not is pleasure our aim; but both are on account of our life here, which the Word
is training up to immortality. Wherefore there is discrimination to be employed in reference to
food. Our food is to be simple, truly plain, as ministering unto life, not to luxury.... Plain fare is
conducive to digestion and lightness of body from which come growth and health and
strength....
There is no limit to epicurianism among men. For it has driven them to sweetmeats,
and honey cakes, and sugar plums; inventing a multitude of deserts, hunting after all manner of
dishes. A man like this seems to me to be all jaw and nothing else. "Desire not," says the
scripture, "rich men's dainties" (Proverbs 23:3) for they belong to a false and base life. But we
who seek the heavenly bread must rule the belly....
For excess, which in all things is an evil, is very highly reprehensible in the manner of
food.
Miscellanies V, XI 9,112
as quoted in Patr. Gr., 9:112
On the whole, gold and silver, both publicly and privately, are an invidious possession when
they exceed what is necessary, seldom to be acquired, difficult to keep, and not adapted for use.
...
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Silver couches and pans and vinegar-saucers... and bowls, vessels of silver and gold...,
proofs of tasteless luxury, ... are all to be relinquished, as having nothing whatsoever worth our
pains. ...
For my part, I approve of Plato, who plainly lays it down as a law, that a man is not to
labor for wealth of gold or silver, nor to possess a useless vessel which is not for some
necessary purpose....
The Lord ate from a common bowl, and made the disciples recline on the grass on the
ground, and washed their feet, girded with a linen towel. He did not bring down a silver foot-
bath from heaven. He made use, not extravagance His aim. ...
In food and clothes, and vessels, and everything else belonging to the house, I say that
one must follow the institutions of the Christian man, as is serviceable and suitable to one's
person, age, pursuits, time of life. For it becomes those that are servants of one God, that their
possessions and furniture should exhibit the tokens of one beautiful life; and that each
individually should be seen in faith, which shows no difference, practicing all things which are
comfortable to this uniform mode of life, and harmonious with this one scheme.
The Instructor, Book II:3
We ought not to misuse the gifts of the Father, then, acting the
part of the spendthrift like the rich son in the Gospel. Let us
rather, make use of them with detachment, keeping them under
control.
Christ the Educator, Eerdman’s transl., pg.
100
It is God Himself Who brought our race to possession of things in common, first by sharing
Himself and by sending His Word to all men alike, and by making all things for all. Therefore,
everything is in common, and the rich should not grasp a greater share.
The expression, “I own something and have more than enough; why should I not enjoy
it?” is not worthy of man nor does it indicate any community feeling. The alternative
expression however does: “I have something, why should I not share it with those in need?
Such a one is one the right path, and fulfills the command: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself.
Christ the Educator, p. 192.
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Prayer for a right relationship to God and creation
Private property
Private property is the fruit of inequity... I know that God has given us the use of
goods, but only as far as is necessary; and he has determined that the use shall
be common. ... The use of all things that are found in this world ought to be
common to all men. Only the most manifest inequity makes one say to another,
“This belongs to me; that to you.” Hence the origin of contention among men.
For with a celerity unsurpassable and benevolence, the divine power, casting its radiance on the
earth, hath filled the universe with the seed of salvation. For it was not without divine care that
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so great a work was accomplished in so brief a space by the Lord, who, though despised as to
appearance, was in reality adored, the expiator of sin, the Saviour, the clement, the Divine
Word, He that is truly most manifest Deity, He that is made equal to the Lord of the universe;
because He was His Son, and the Word was in God, not disbelieved in by all when He was first
preached, nor altogether unknown when, assuming the character of man, and fashioning
Himself in flesh, He enacted the drama of human salvation: for He was a true champion and a
fellow-champion with the creature. And being communicated most speedily to men, having
dawned from His Father's counsel quicker than the sun, with the most perfect ease He made
God shine on us. Whence He was and what He was, He showed by what He taught and
exhibited, manifesting Himself as the Herald of the Covenant, ...diffused over the whole face of
the earth; by whom the universe has become an ocean of blessings.
Regarding monks and the suitability of men and women to contemplate creation and find the
transcendence of person necessary to come to experiences of the celestial realms, Clement
asserts equal dignity and access to spiritual verities between men and women.
Woman has the same spiritual dignity as man. Both of them have the same God,
the same Teacher, the same Church. They breathe, see, hear, hope and love in
the same way. Beings who have the same life, grace and salvation are called... to
the same manner of being.
For he who holds possessions, and gold, and houses, as the gifts of God, and ministers from
them to God who gives them for the salvation of men, and knows that he possesses them more
for the sake of the brethren than his own, and is superior to the possession of them, not the
slave of the things he possesses, and does not carry them about in his soul, nor bind his life
within them, but is ever laboring at some good and divine work, even should he be deprived of
them, this man is able with cheerful mind to bear their removal equally with their abundance.
This is he who is blessed by the Lord, and a meet heir of the kingdom of heaven, not one who
could not live rich.
But he who carries his riches in his soul, and instead of God's Spirit bears in his heart
gold or land, and is always acquiring possessions without end, and is perpetually on the outlook
for more, bending downwards and fettered in the toils of the world, whence can he be able to
desire and to mind the kingdom of heaven, -- a man who carries not a heart, but land or metal,
who must perforce be found in the midst of the objects he has chosen? For where the mind of
man is, there is also his treasure.
We may gain some inkling of what God is if we attempt by means of every sensation to reach
the reality of each creature, not giving up until we are alive to what transcends it ...
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Tertullian (160 - 230?)
One of the most learned scholars of his age, Tertullian was born in Carthage of North Africa of
pagan parents. Eventually he traveled to Rome where he became a legal expert. After disgust at the
corruption in the practice of law, and through admiration of the integrity which he witnessed among
the Christians, he converted to Christianity and was soon ordained a priest. He was a prolific and
original writer who turned his legal and mental skills to the defense of the Church. His contribution
to a theology of creation lies in his emphasis upon how every aspect of creation is renewed and
sustained by the power of God. In his later years, he criticized what he considered the excessive
authority of the clergy and became associated with the Montanist sect. This created what is a
continuing shadow over his later writings. Tertullian was the first of the fathers to write in Latin.
We worship the one God who fashioned the whole fabric with the instrument of elements,
bodies, spirits, and by His Word commanded it, by the reason with which He ordered it...
whence it came about that the Greeks also give the universe the name of "kosmos." Invisible
though He is, He is seen. Incomprehensible though He is, He is by grace revealed.
Apologius XVII
Gaze now on these examples of divine power. Day dies into night, and is
everywhere entombed in shadows. All things grow dull, voiceless, dumb.
Everywhere there is quiet and rest. And so we mourn for the lost light. And yet
once more, with all its own beauty, its power, its sun, the same and unharmed, it
revives for the universal world, slaying night, which is its death, rending asunder
its own sepulcher of darkness....
De Resurrectione Carnis I
Now winter and summer roll around in season, and the blessings of spring and autumn with
their power and their fruits, while the earth receives from heaven the knowledge of how to
clothe the trees after they are stripped bare, the knowledge of how to give color to flowers and
spread the herbage over the earth again, and then those same seeds which were parched by the
sun display themselves until at last they are consumed. Oh marvelous method of God, which
preserves after denuding, which cuts only to restore, which destroys only to retain, which spoils
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only to renew, and diminishes only to enlarge. Indeed, by this miracle, greater and riper
blessings are received than any which were taken away -- so that destruction becomes increase,
and all loss is gain. Let me say again: the condition of all things is renewal. All things when
they have departed return to their first condition. Nothing perishes save into salvation.
Therefore the whole revolving wheel of existence bears witness to the resurrection of the dead.
De Resurrectione Carnis I
Nature is school-mistress, the soul the pupil; and whatever one has taught or the other has
learned has come from God – the Teacher of the teacher.
De Testimonio Animae
Cattle and wild beasts pray, and bend their knees, and in coming forth from
their stalls and lairs look up to heaven, their mouths not idle, making the
Spirit move in their fashion. Moreover, the birds taking flight lift themselves
up to heaven and, instead of hands, spread out the cross of their wings, while
saying something which may be supposed to be a prayer.
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If you are looking for the law of God, you have it in that common one prevailing
throughout the world, inscribed on tables of nature, to which the Apostle was
wont to appeal, as when, speaking of the veiling of women, he says, “Does not
nature teach you?”
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48
One of the most eloquent of the western fathers, Marcus Minucius Felix was born in Certa of North
Africa and traveled to Rome where he became a lawyer. Not much is known about his early life; he
apparently converted to Christianity rather late – in middle age. His discourses on the Christian life
follow the Ciceronean style of conversations between friends, and he uses this approach to address a
number of theological issues. His writing is ranked as the most artistic and eloquent of all the early
writers. His contribution to a theology of ecology lies in his emphasis upon the Beauty of nature and
its ability to lead the soul into appreciation of divinity hidden in all things. He teaches that latent in
creation is a subtle reflection of the promise of the Resurrection.
God does not care only for the universe, He also cares for all of its parts. ... If on
enterring a house, you should behold everything refined, well arranged and
adorned, you would believe that a master presided over it, and that he was much
better and above all those excellent things. So in this house of the world, when
you look upon the heaven and the earth, its providence, its ordering, its law,
believe that there is a Lord and Parent of the universe far more glorious than the
stars themselves, and the parts of the whole world.
49
50
Eminent theologian of the early Church, Origen was born in Alexandria, and became a brilliant
philosopher and biblical exegete by the age of eighteen. He was the most prolific of the early
Christian writers. Eusebius in his History of the Early Church lists over 2,000 articles and sermons
which Origen authored. Early Christians considered Origen the “father of theology,” and he was the
most influential of the Greek patristic writers. His writings outline the journey to knowledge of God
as having three stages: the acquisition of the virtues which purifies the individual which eventually
allows one to hear the “still, small voice”; the contemplation of nature by which one enters into
dialogue with God; and finally for a few, "theologia," which involves actual experience of the
"Logos." He teaches that knowledge of creation is like Scripture: both require ascesis and
contemplation for depth of understanding, and both can lead to a full knowledge of God. Only a
small number of his writings remain, largely because three hundred years after his death, some of
his concepts were declared uncanonical and destroyed. Like most early Christians, much of his
writing is based upon inspired knowledge and experience of Christ. He often uses creation as a
fertile field for insight into the divine nature, and says that everything in creation represents some
aspect of the nature of God. Among his controversial teachings is the concept that it is a necessity to
affirm an eternal creation in order to affirm the immutable and eternal nature of the Creator-God.
Origin was martyred during the Decian persecution after a period of prolonged and cruel torture.
There is a beginning in a matter of origin, as might appear in the saying, "In the beginning God
made the heaven and the earth" (Genesis 1:1). This meaning, however, appears more plainly in
the Book of Job in the passage, "This is the beginning of God's creation, made for His angels to
mock at" (Job 40:19). One would suppose that the heavens and the earth were made first, of all
that was made at the creation of the world. But the second passage suggests a better view,
namely, that as many beings were framed with a body, the first made of these was the creature
called dragon, but called in another passage the great whale (i.e., “leviathan,” in Job 41:1)
which the Lord tamed. We must ask about this, whether, when the saints were living a blessed
life apart from matter and from any body, the dragon, falling from the pure life, became fit to
be bound in matter and in a body, so that the Lord could say, speaking through storm and
clouds, "This is the beginning of the creation of God, made for His angels to mock at." It is
possible, however, that the dragon is not positively the beginning of the creation of the Lord,
but that there were many creatures made with a body for the angels to mock at, and that the
dragon was the first of these, while others could subsist in a body without such reproach.
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Knowledge of creation
Now among spiritual gifts there is one that is indeed the greatest of them all, namely that word
of knowledge which is imparted by the Holy Spirit (I Corinthians 12:8).... The supreme
function of knowledge is therefore, to know the Trinity; and, in the second place, to know
God's creation, even as did he who said, "For He hath given me the true knowledge of the
things that are..." (Wisdom 7:17).
Understand that you have within yourself, upon a small scale, a second universe:
within you is a sun, there is a moon, and there are also stars.
On Prayer
The world in all its diversity and varying conditions is composed not only of rational and
diviner natures, but of dumb animals, wild and tame beasts, of birds and of all the things which
live in the waters.... Seeing there is so great a variety in the world, and so great a diversity
among rational beings themselves, what cause ought to be assigned for the existence of the
world? But God, by ineffable skill of His wisdom, transforming and restoring all things, recalls
those very creatures which differed so much from each other in mental conformation to one
agreement of labor and purpose, so that although they are under the influence of different
motives, they nevertheless complete the fullness and perfection of one world, and the very
variety of minds tends to one end of perfection.
And although the world is arranged into different kinds of offices and conditions,
nevertheless the whole world ought to be regarded as some huge and immense animal, which is
kept together by the power and reason of God as one soul. This is indicated in sacred scripture
by the declaration of the prophet, "Do not I fill heaven and earth? saith the Lord" (Jeremiah
23:24), and again, "The heaven is my throne and the earth is my footstool" (Isaiah 66:1).
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If then we too want to see the Word of God, the Bridegroom of the soul, "leaping upon the
mountains and skipping over the hills," we must first hear his voice and then when we have
heard him in all things, we shall be able to see Him under the same conditions as those in which
the Bride is said to have seen Him here.
Man is made "in the image" and toward the “likeness” of God.
Man received the honor of the image of God at his first creation, but the full
perfection of God's likeness will only be conferred upon him at the
consummation of all things.
On Prayer
There are things in creation hard to understand, or even undiscoverable for human beings. We
are not in consequence to condemn the Creator of the universe just because we cannot discover
the reason for the creation of scorpions or other venomous beasts. The right thing for a man
who is aware of the weakness of our race and who knows it is impossible to understand the
reasons of God's design even when most minutely examined, is to ascribe the knowledge of
these things to God, who will later on, if we are judged worthy, reveal to us the matters about
which we are now reverently in doubt.
De Principiis IV:1:3
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If you obey God, creation serves you
Regarding the parting of the Dead Sea by Moses when the Israelites were fleeing the Egyptians,
Origen writes,
Notice the goodness of God, the Creator. If you obey his will, if you follow his
Law, he compels the elements themselves to serve you even against their own
nature.
“In the beginning God made heaven and earth.” Likewise Scripture says, “And God made two
great lights.” And now again, “Let us make man.” The work of God is attributed to these alone,
but to none of the others. Only heaven and earth, the sun, moon and stars, and now man have
been made by God, but all the rest is said to be made by his command. From this, therefore,
consider how great is man’s greatness, who is made equal to such great and distinguished
elements, who has the honor of heaven for which reason also the kingdom of heaven is
promised to him. ...
I see, however, something even more distinguished in the condition of man, which is
not said elsewhere. “And God made man, according to the image of God He made him.” We
find this attribute neither to heaven nor earth nor the sun or moon.
We do not understand, however, this man whom Scripture says was made “according to
the image of God,” to be corporeal. For the form of the body does not contain the image of
God, nor is the corporeal man said to be “made,” but “formed,” as is written in the words which
follow. For the text says: “And God formed man,” that is fashioned, “from the slime of the
earth.”
But it is our inner man, invisible, incorporeal, incorruptible, and immortal which is
made “according to the image of God.” For it is in such qualities as these that the image of God
is more correctly understood.
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These words (of Genesis 1:28) have already been interpreted in their literal meaning. But
allegorically, those things no less of which we spoke above seem to me to be indicated in the
fish and birds or animals and creeping things of the earth. I mean, either the things which
proceed from the inclination of the soul and the thoughts of the heart, of those things which are
brought forth from bodily desires and the impulses of the flesh. The saints and all who preserve
the blessing of God in themselves exercise dominion over these things (of creation) guiding the
total man by the will of the spirit. But on the other hand, the same things which are brought
forth by the vices of the flesh and pleasures of the body hold dominion over sinners.
There is a parallel between nature and Scripture that is so complete, says Origen, that we learn
the same things from one source as the other. This he says is true because of a common origin
in the Word of God. This explains why
“we must necessarily believe that the person who is asking questions of nature
and the person who is asking questions of the Scriptures are bound to arrive at
the same conclusions.”
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The divine art that is manifested in the structure of the world is not only to be seen in the sun,
the moon and the stars; it operates also on earth on a reduced scale. The hand of the Lord has
not neglected the bodies of the smallest animals – and still less their souls – because each one
of them is seen to possess some feature that is personal to it, for instance, the way it protects
itself.
Nor has the hand of the Lord neglected the plants of the earth, each of which has some
detail bearing the mark of the divine art, whether it be the roots, the leaves, the fruits or the
variety of species. In the same way, in books written under the influence of divine inspiration,
Providence imparts to the human race a wisdom that is more than human, sowing in each letter
some saving truth in so far as that letter can convey it, marking out thus the path of wisdom.
For once it has been granted that the Scriptures have God himself for their author, we must
necessarily believe that the person who is asking questions of nature, and the person who is
asking questions of the Scriptures, are bound to arrive at the same conclusions.
The apostle Paul teaches us that God’s “invisible nature” has been “clearly perceived in the
things that have been made” (Romans 1:20). He shows us that this visible world contains
teaching about the invisible world, and that this earth includes “images of celestial realities...”
It could even be that God who made the human race “in His own image and likeness” (Genesis
1:27) also gave to other creatures a likeness to certain celestial realities. Perhaps this
resemblance is so detailed that even the grain of mustard seed has its counterpart in the
kingdom of heaven. If so, by that law of its nature that makes it the smallest of seeds and yet
capable of becoming larger than all the others and of sheltering in its branches the birds of the
air, it would represent for us not a particular celestial reality, but the kingdom of heaven as a
whole.
In this sense it is possible that other seeds of the earth also contain an analogy with
celestial objects and are a sign of them. And if that is true for seeds, it must be the same for
plants. And if it is true for plants, it cannot be otherwise for animals, birds, reptiles and four-
footed beasts.... It may be granted that these creatures, seeds, plants, roots and animals, are
undoubtedly at the service of humanity’s physical needs. However they include the shape and
image of the invisible world, and they also have the task of elevating the soul and guiding it to
the contemplation of celestial objects. Perhaps this is what the spokesman of Divine Wisdom
means when he expresses himself in the words: “It is he who gave me unerring knowledge of
what exists, to know the structure of the world and the activity of the elements; the beginning
and end and middle of times, the alternation of the solstices and the changes of the seasons, the
cycles of the year and the constellations of the stars, the natures of animals and the tempers of
wild beasts, the powers of spirits..., the varieties of plants and the virtues of roots; I learned
both what is secret and what is manifest” (Wisdom of Solomon 7:17-21). He shows thus,
without any doubt, that everything that is seen is related to something that is hidden. That is to
say that each visible reality is a symbol, and it refers to an invisible reality to which it is related.
The saints and all who preserve the blessing of God in themselves exercise dominion over these
things [of creation] guiding the total man by the will of the spirit. But on the other hand, the
same things which are brought forth by the vices of the flesh and pleasures of the body hold
dominion over sinners.
An eternal creation
We can therefore imagine no moment whence the power of God was not
engaged in acts of well-doing; whence it follows that there always existed
objects for this well-doing, namely, God’s works or creatures.
If anyone should give his attention to these matters [regarding the form of the Hebrew
tabernacle given to Moses on Mount Sinai and the exodus out of Egypt into the desert] in the
order of their sequence and spiritually fulfilling each [requirement], that man can consequently
attain to the contemplation and understanding of the ancient holy tabernacle.
The divine Scriptures speak about this tabernacle in many places. They appear to
indicate certain things of which human hearing can scarcely be capable. The Apostle Paul
especially relates to us certain indications of a more excellent knowledge about the
understanding of this tabernacle, but, perhaps considering the weakness of his hearers, closes,
as it were, those very things which he opens. For he says, writing to the Hebrews, “For a first
tabernacle was made which contained the candlestick and the setting forth of loaves. This was
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called the Holy of Holies. After the second veil, however, is the tabernacle which is called Holy
and contains the golden altar of incense and the ark of the covenant which contained the two
tablets and the manna and Aaron’s rod which had blossomed” (Hebrews 9:2-4). But he adds
these words: “which are not to be spoken of now” (Hebrews 9:5). Some take the words, “which
are not to be spoken of now,” to refer to [the difficulty of explaining these things] ... because of
the greatness of the mysteries. But the Apostle does not leave us completely dejected [or
without clue]. As is his custom, he opens a few things among many so that it might be closed to
the indifferent, but might be discovered by those who seek and opened to those who knock. He
repeats, therefore, about the tabernacle and says, “For Jesus has not entered into holy places
made with hands, patterns of the true, but into heaven itself, that he may appear now in the
sight of God through the veil, that is his flesh.” He, therefore, who has interpreted the veil of
the interior of the tabernacle as the flesh of Christ, the holy places themselves as heaven or the
heavens, the high priest as the Lord Christ, and says that he entered “once into the holy places
after he discovered an eternal redemption,” from these few words, if anyone knows how to
understand Paul’s meaning, he can observe how great a sea of understanding he has disclosed
to us. But they who love the letter of the Law of Moses too much, but flee its spirit, hold the
Apostle Paul suspect when he brings forth interpretations of this kind.
Let us see, therefore, if some of the holy men of old also did not hold an opinion of the
tabernacle far different than those latter [men] now suppose. Hear how magnificently David, a
distinguished man of the prophets, felt about the tabernacle: “While,” he says, “it is said to me
day after day, where is your God? I have remembered these things, and I have poured out my
soul in me, since I shall enter the place of the wonderful tabernacle, unto the house of God”
(Psalm 41:4-50.
And again he says in the fourteenth Psalm, “Lord, who will dwell in your tabernacle?
Or who will rest on your holy mountain? He who enters without a spot and works justice,” etc.
What then is that “place of the wonderful tabernacle” from which one enters “the house of
God,” because of whose memory his soul has been poured out in him and, as it were, has been
dissipated in a kind of intolerable desire. Are we really to believe that the prophet, desiring that
tabernacle which consisted of hides and curtains and goat-hair coverings and other common
materials was poured out in soul and failed in his whole mind? Or certainly how will it be true
to say about that tabernacle that only “the innocent in hands and pure in heart, who did not
receive his soul in vain” (Psalm 23:4), will inhabit it, when the history of the kings transmits
that the worst priests, “sons of pestilence,” have dwelt in the tabernacle of God and the ark of
the covenant itself also was captured by foreigners and detained with the impious and the
profane?” (1 Kings 4). From all of this it is evident that the prophet felt in a far different sense
about this tabernacle in which he says that only “the innocent of hands and pure in heart, who
did not receive his soul in vain, nor do evil to his neighbor, and did not accept reproach against
his neighbor,” will dwell. It is necessary, therefore, that the inhabitant of this tabernacle which
the Lord erected, not man, be such a person....
Is a way not yet opened to you from all these words by which you may leave earth
behind, following the understanding of the prophet and Apostle and... with your whole mind
and understanding, ascend to heaven and there seek the magnificence of the eternal tabernacle
whose form is imperfectly represented on earth by Moses?
For thus also the Lord says to him, “See to it,” the text says, “you shall make all things
according to the form which was shown to you on the mountain” (Exodus 25:40). But the
human mind, and especially ours, who know that we are the least or even nobodies in divine
wisdom, can perhaps arrive at the point that it may perceive that these things which are
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introduced in the divine books are not said of earthly things, but of heavenly, and are forms...
not of corporeal things, but of spiritual....
The whole people [in the original story of building the Ark of the Covenant] are ordered
to construct the tabernacle, with each one contributing all he can, that in a certain sense all at
the same time might be one tabernacle.... For God says to Moses that each one, “as it seemed
good in his heart, should offer for the construction of the tabernacle gold, silver, precious
stones, bronze, then in addition, linen, scarlet, blue, and purple, also red and blue hides of rams,
and wood not subject to rot, and goats hair. Women wise in the skill of weaving are also
required, and craftsmen who know how to prepare gold, silver, bronze and stones and to
fashion wood with gold.
Next the measurements of the courts are delivered. These courts are made secure,
stretched out in curtains, erected on columns, made firm with bars, and stretched tight with
ropes. There are, in addition, curtain places which are separated by veils. One is called the Holy
Place and the other divided no less by a second veil is called the Holy of Holies. The ark of the
covenant is placed inside. The cherubim stand over it with wings outstretched and touching one
another. A kind of base and seat, as it were, is made for them from gold and placed there,
which is called the place of atonement. The golden altar of incense is also there. Then in the
outer place the golden candlestick is set in the southern part that it might face north.... And also
the altar of whole burnt offerings is placed next to the inner veil. But why am I going through
these things piece by piece? ...
The reason for constructing the tabernacle is found already mentioned in the words
above when the Lord says to Moses, “You shall make for me a sanctuary and thence I will be
seen by you” (Exodus 25:8). God wishes, therefore, that we make a sanctuary for him. For he
promises that if we make a sanctuary for him, he can be seen by us. Whence also the Apostle
says to the Hebrews, “Follow peace and the sanctuary, without which no one will see God”
(Hebrews 12:14). ...
Each of us can also build a tabernacle for God in himself. For if, as some before have
said, this tabernacle represents the whole cosmos, and each individual can also contain an
image of the world, why cannot each one also complete a form of the tabernacle in himself? He
ought, therefore, to apply the pillars of the virtues to himself, silver pillars, that is, rational
patience.... And let him place that candlestick in the south that it may look to the north. For
when the light has been lit, ... it ought always to look to the north and watch for “him who is
from the north.” ... Let him have an altar of incense in his innermost heart also, that he may say,
“We are a good odor of Christ.” And let him have an ark of the covenant in which are the tables
of the Law, that “he may meditate on the Law of God day and night” (Psalm 1:2)....
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But over and above all this splendor let him wear the adornment of the high priest. For
that part which is the most precious in man can hold the office of high priest. Some call it the
overseer in the heart, others rational understanding, or intellectual substance, but whatever it is
called, it is that part of us in which we can have a capacity for God. Let that part in us,
therefore, as a kind of high priest, be adorned with garments and costly jewels, with a long
linen priestly garment.... If you, therefore, wish to perform the high priesthood properly for
God, let the message of the Gospel and the faith in the Holy Trinity always be held in your
breast.... In this manner, therefore, our inner man is adorned as high priest to God that he may
be able to enter not only the sanctuary, but also the Holy of Holies; that he may approach the
mercy seat where the cherubim are and thence God may appear to him. The sanctuary can be
those things which a holy way of life can have in the present world. But the Holy of Holies,
which is entered only once, is, I think, the passage to heaven, where the mercy seat and the
cherubim are located, and where God will be able to appear to the pure in heart, because the
Lord says, “Behold, the kingdom of God is within you.”
The saints and all those who preserve the blessings of God in themselves exercise dominion
over these things guiding the total man by the will of the Spirit. But on the other hand, the same
things which are brought forth by the vices of the flesh and pleasures of the body hold
dominion over sinners.
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St. Anthony is one of the founders of Christian monasticism in Egypt. Saints and emperors
journeyed to his desert cave for counsel. He maintained a small subsistence garden and is known
for his rigorous asceticism and his struggles with demonic forces. He acquired an intimate
knowledge of God's presence through prayer, but also through the animals and the things in the
created world. Once when a visiting philosopher asked how such a learned man as he got along in
the desert without the benefit of books, Anthony replied, "My book is the nature of created things,
and as often as I have a mind to read the words of God, they are at my hand." St. Anthony is
known for his great love and affection for all the animals which surrounded his desert abode. He
reposed in the Lord on Mt. Colzim near the Red Sea at the age of 105.
Why was man created? In order that, by apprehending God's creatures, he might contemplate
and glorify Him who created them for man's sake. The intellect responsive to God's love is an
invisible blessing given by God to those whose life by its virtue commends itself to Him.
A man is free (to fulfill this role) if he is not a slave to sensual pleasures, but through
good judgement and self-restraint he masters the body and with true gratitude is satisfied with
what God gives him, even though it is quite scanty.
Anthony was drawn to the desert at an early age after he heard a sermon from the Gospel of St.
Matthew in which Christ said, “If you would be perfect, go, sell what you possess and give to
the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come and follow me.” Anthony then sold
all of his belongings and went deep into the Egyptian desert.
He moved to a place near a small spring and planted a few vegetables in order that
visitors would find a little relief from the rigor of that hard trip to his remote location. At first,
however, when the antelope and other beasts came to the spring for water, they would often
damage his crops. One time he came to one of the animals and said, “Why do you hurt me
when I do you no injury? Leave, and in the name of the Lord do not come here any longer.”
From that time on, they did not come near his little garden.
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Creation of the animals
God, by His Logos, created the different kinds of animals to meet the variety of our needs:
some for our food, others for our service. And He created man to apprehend them and their
actions and to appraise them gratefully. Man should therefore strive not to die, like the non-
rational animals, without having attained some apprehension of God and His works.
Philokalia, Vol. 1:47, p. 336.
For creation, as if written in characters and by means of its order and harmony, declares in a
loud voice its own Master and Creator.... For this reason, God, by his own Word, gave
creation such order as is found therein, so that while He is by nature invisible, men might yet
be able to know Him through His works.
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The meaning of creation
For man's sake God has created everything: earth and heaven and the beauty of the stars. Men
cultivate the earth for themselves, but if they fail to recognize how great is God's Providence,
their souls lack all spiritual understanding.
God, being eternally good and bounteous, gave man power over good and evil. He made him
the gift of spiritual knowledge so that, through contemplating the world and what is in it, he
might come to know Him who created all things for man's sake. But the impious are free to
choose not to know. They are free to disbelieve, to make mistakes and to conceive ideas
which are contrary to the truth. Such is the degree to which man has power over good and
evil.
For one who has faith and determination, it is not difficult to gain
spiritual understanding of God. If you wish to contemplate Him,
look to the providential harmony in all things created by His
Logos.
Because some people impiously dare to say that plants and vegetables have a soul, I will write
briefly about this for the guidance of the simple. Plants have a natural life, but they do not have
a soul.
Man is called an intelligent animal because he has intellect and is capable of acquiring
knowledge. The other animals and the birds can make sounds because they possess breath and
soul. All things that are subject to growth and decline are alive; but the fact that they live and
grow does not necessarily mean that they all have souls.
There are four categories of living beings. The first are immortal and have souls, such as
angels. The second have intellect, soul and breath, such as men. The third have breath and soul,
such as the animals. The fourth have only life, such as plants. The life of plants is without soul,
breath, intellect or immortality. These four attributes, on the other hand, presuppose the
possession of life.
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Philokalia, Volume 1, Section on St.
Anthony, Faber and Faber, London, 1979, p.
354.
You have been born for the sake of seeing the sky and the sun: who has led you to this
spectacle, or what does your vision confer to heaven and the nature of things? To be sure, it is
that you may praise this immense and marvelous work. Confess, then, that God is the
establisher of all things who has brought you into this world a witness, as it were, and a
praiser of His work so mighty. You believe it is great to see the sky and the sun. Why,
therefore, do you not thank Him who is the Author of this benefit? Why do you not estimate
with your mind the virtue, providence, and power of Him whose works you admire?
Divine Institutes
It is fitting to proclaim again that verse from Persius, "O minds bent upon the earth and
empty of heavenly things!" ... (For those who fail to pray) why do you deprive yourselves of
celestial benefits and of your own will fall prone to the ground? For you are turned into
miserable ones of the earth when you seek below that which you ought to have sought on
high. When you submit yourselves to the earth by itself, you submit yourself to what is
lower and make yourself lowlier.... Therefore to despise and tread upon the earth is nothing
else than not to adore images because they are made of earth; and likewise, it is not to
desire riches and to spurn the delights of the body, since wealth and the body itself, whose
hospitality we make use of, is of the earth. Cherish the living, that you may live.
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Now let us seal the whole argument with a brief summarization. The world was made for this
reason, that we might be born. We, in turn, are born, that we might know God, the Maker of the
world and of us. We know, in turn, that we may worship. And again, we worship so that we
may receive immortality as the reward of our labors -- for the worship of God entails great
labors indeed. And, in turn, we are recompensed with the reward of immortality so that, having
been made like the angels, we may serve the Most High Father and Lord forever and may be an
everlasting kingdom unto God.
We are born that we might contemplate the Maker of all things, that is that we may discern
Him with our minds. So, if anyone should ask a man who is truly wise for what reason he
was born, he will answer fearlessly that he has been born of the favor of God who has
generated us so that we may serve Him. Now to serve God is nothing other than to behold
how good are His works and to observe justice.
But if he had said that he was born to behold the world, he would not have fulfilled the
function of man because the soul is of as much more worth than the body as God is greater
than the world. The world then ought not to be beheld by our eyes because both are bodies,
but God ought to be contemplated by our souls, because God, as He is Himself immortal,
has intended the soul to last forever.
There is nothing else in life on which our plan and condition can depend but the knowledge of
God who created us, and the religious and pious worship of Him; and since the philosophers
have wandered from this, it is plain that they were not wise. They sought wisdom, indeed, but
because they did not seek it in a right manner, they sunk down to a greater distance, and fell
into such great errors that they did not even possess common wisdom....
For they, either being ignorant by whom the world was made, or wishing to persuade
men that nothing was completed by divine intelligence, said that nature was the mother of all
things, as though they should say that all things were produced of their own accord, by which
word they altogether confess their own ignorance. For nature, apart from divine providence
and power, is absolutely nothing. But if they call God nature, what perverseness is it, to use
the name of nature rather than of God? But if nature is the plan, or necessity, or condition of
birth, it is not by itself capable of sensation; but there must necessarily be a divine mind,
which by its foresight furnishes the beginning of their existence to all things. Or, if nature is
heaven and earth, and everything which is created, nature is not God, but the work of God.
St. Pachomius was the abbot of a remote monastery far out in the Egyptian desert. One time,
relate the brothers, the demons tried to tempt him into frivolous laughter by bouncing a leaf
around his cell. But Pachomius, realizing the source of this strange phenomena, groaned and
called upon the Lord with his prayers, and immediately this strange movement was halted.
Through experiences like this, and many others, Pachomius was taught to place all of
his trust in God. And so he was able to walk through swamps infested with poisonous snakes
and scorpions, and even crocodiles, and he was never bothered. Such was his holiness and
loving connection to the animals that if he ever had to cross the river, the crocodiles or
hippopotamus would come to his aid and help him across the river. Then with the utmost
subservience they would set him down on the opposite bank at whatever spot he wished.
Do not go from one place to another, saying, "I will find God
here or I will find God there." God has said, "I fill the earth, I fill
the heavens."
And again He has said, "If you cross over the water, I am with
you."
My son, be aware that God is within you, so that you may dwell
in his law and commandments.
The Instructions 25
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St. Athanasius (297 - 373)
Bishop of Alexandria and patron saint of conferences, Athanasius entered into many dialogues to
articulate and preserve an authentic Christian understanding of Church doctrine. He frequently
used lessons from nature to exemplify his instruction and his writings are filled with a sense of
creation as a primary instructor of Christian life. Athanasius was instrumental in selecting the
books of the modern New Testament. He saw creation as “a living book” which spoke of its
Creator as it revealed the Logos. He praises this "Book of Creation" and says, "the creatures are
like letters proclaiming in loud voices to their Divine Master and Creator the harmony and order
of things." Athanasius especially witnesses to the immanence of God in creation by showing how
actively God is involved in both the creation and the fulfillment of man. Athanasius participated in
the first great Ecumenical Council at Nicea, and he holds the title, "the defender of Orthodoxy."
But since man's carelessness, little by little, descends to lower things, God made
provision even for this weakness of theirs, by sending a law, and prophets, men
such as they knew, so that even if they were not ready to look up to heaven and
know their Creator, they might have their instruction from those near at hand.
For men are able to learn from men more directly about higher things. So it was
open to them, by looking into the height of heaven, and perceiving the harmony
of creation, to know its Ruler, the Word of the Father, who by his own
providence over all things makes known the Father to all, and to this end moves
all things, that through Him all may know God.
On the Incarnation I
For He was not, as might be imagined, circumscribed in the body, nor, while present in the
body, was he absent elsewhere; nor, while he moved the body, was the universe left void of
his workings and providence; but, thing most marvelous, Word as He was, so far from being
contained by anything, he rather contained all things himself; and just as while present in the
whole creation, he is at once distinct in being from the universe, and present in all things by
his own power -- giving orders to all things, and over all and in all revealing his own
providence, and giving life to each thing and all things, including the whole without being
included, but being in His own Father alone wholly and in every respect, thus, even while
present in a human body and himself quickening it, he was, without inconsistency,
quickening the universe as well, and was in every process of nature, and was outside the
whole, and while known from the body by his works, he was none the less manifest from the
working of the universe as well.
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On the Incarnation I
The philosophers of the Greeks say that the universe is a great body; and rightly
so. For we see it and its parts as objects of our senses. If then the Word of God is
in the universe, which is a body, and has united Himself with the whole, and with
all its parts, what is there surprising or absurd if we say that He has united himself
with man also.
On the Incarnation I
By the greatness and the beauty of the creatures proportionately the Maker of them is seen.
For just as by looking up to the heaven and seeing its order and the light of the stars, it is
possible to infer the Word Who ordered these things, so by beholding the Word of God, one
needs must behold also God His Father, proceeding from Whom He is rightly called His
Father's Interpreter and Messenger. And this one may see from our own experience; for if
when a word proceeds from men we infer that the mind is its source, and by thinking about
the word, see with our reason the mind which it reveals, by far greater evidence and
incomparably more, seeing the power of the Word, we receive knowledge also of His good
Father, as the Saviour Himself says, "He that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father."
The beginning of creation and its renewal are from the same Word
We will begin with the creation of the world and with God its Maker. The first fact you must
grasp is this: the renewal of creation has been wrought by the Self-same Word Who made it in
the beginning. There is thus no inconsistency between creation and salvation; for the One
Father has employed the same Agent for both works, effecting the salvation of the world
through the same Word Who made it at the first.
In regard to the making of the universe and the creation of all things there have been
various opinions, and each person has propounded the theory that suited his own taste.... But
the impiety of their foolish talk is plainly declared by the divine teaching of the Christian
faith. From it we know that, because there is Mind behind the Universe, it did not originate
itself; because God is infinite, not finite, it was not made from pre-existent matter, but out of
nothing and out of non-existence absolute and utter, God brought it into being through the
Word. He says as much in Genesis... and again through that most helpful book, "The
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Shepherd" (The Shepherd of Hermas, Book II:1), "Believe thou first and foremost that there is
one God Who created and arranged all things and brought them out of non-existence into
being." Paul indicates the same thing... (Hebrews 11:3).
He made all things out of nothing through His own Word, our Lord Jesus Christ; and of
all these His earthly creatures He reserved special mercy for the race of men. Upon them,
therefore, upon men who, as animals, were essentially impermanent, He bestowed a grace
which other creatures lacked, the impress of His own Image... so that, reflecting Him... they
might continue forever in the blessed and only true life of the saints in paradise.... But if they
went astray and became vile, throwing away their birthright of beauty, then they would come
under the natural law of death and live no longer in paradise, but, dying outside of it, continue
in death and in corruption....
What was God to do in the face of this dehumanizing of mankind (through the sin
which emerged)? ... What else could He possibly do, being God, but renew His Image in
mankind, so that through it men might once more come to know Him? And how could this be
done save by the coming of the very Image Himself, our Saviour Jesus Christ? ... In order to
effect this re-creation, He had first to do away with death and corruption. Therefore He
assumed a human body, in order that in it death might once for all be destroyed, and that men
might be renewed according to the Image....
Fitting indeed, then, and wholly constant was the death on the cross for us; and we can
see how reasonable it was, and why it is that the salvation of the world could be accomplished
in no other way.
From the scriptures you will learn also of His second manifestation to us, glorious and
divine indeed, when He shall come not in lowliness, but in His proper glory, no longer in
humiliation but in majesty, no longer to suffer but to bestow on us all the fruit of His cross –
the Resurrection and incorruptibility.
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But for the searching and right understanding of the scriptures there is need of a good life and
a pure soul, and for Christian virtue to guide the mind to grasp, so far as human nature can,
the truth concerning God the Word. One cannot possibly understand the teaching of the saints
unless one has a pure mind and is trying to imitate their life.... Similarly anyone who wishes
to understand the mind of the sacred writers must first cleanse his own life, and approach the
saints by copying their deeds. Thus united with them in the fellowship of life, he will both
understand the things revealed to them by God and thenceforth escaping the peril that
threatens sinners in the judgement, will receive that which is laid up for the saints in the
kingdom of heaven.
You know what happens when a portrait that has been painted on a panel
becomes obliterated through external stains. The artist does not throw away the
panel, but the subject of the portrait has to come and sit for it again, and the
likeness is re-drawn on the same material. Even so was it with the All-holy Son of
God. He, the image of the Father, came and dwelt in our mist, in order that He
might renew mankind made after Himself....
Nothing in creation has erred from the path of God's purpose for it, save only man. Sun,
moon, stars, water, air, none of these has swerved from their order, but, knowing the Word as
their Maker and their King, remained as they were made. Men alone, having rejected what is
good, have invented nothings instead of the truth, and have ascribed the honor due to God and
knowledge concerning Him to demons and men in the form of stones.
God is self-existent, enclosing all things and enclosed by none; within all things
according to His goodness and power, and yet without all [things] in His proper
nature.
De Decretis, 3:11
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Apply tests for discerning the true cosmology
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Athanasius tells us that there are many opinions about creation, but that a true cosmology
must accord with all of the other elements of Christian faith. This means that a holy unity
exists within Christian doctrine in which each part integrates with all of the other parts. It also
means that tests are necessary to discern whether a new doctrine about creation is valid or not:
In regard to the making of the universe and the creation of all things, there have
been various opinions, and each person has propounded the theory that suited his
own taste.... But the impiety of their foolish talk is plainly declared by the divine
teaching of the Christian faith.
As the creative will of a sculptor hovers over a piece of wood, or as the spiritual soul spreads
through all the limbs of the body, thus it is with the Holy Spirit: it hovers over all things with
a creative and formative power.
There is no inconsistency between creation and salvation; for the one Father has employed the
same agent for both works, effecting the salvation of the world through the same Word who
made it in the beginning.
God is self-existent, enclosing all things and enclosed by none; within all things
according to His goodness and power, and yet without all [things] in His proper
nature.
De Decretis, 3:11
The Spirit of the Lord fills the universe. Thus David sings, “Whither shall I go from thy
Spirit?” (Psalm 139:7) Again in the Book of Wisdom it is written: “Thine incorruptible Spirit is
in all things” (Wisdom 12:1). “And the angels came to stand before the face of the Lord,” as it
is written in Job. And Jacob the patriarch dreamed: “And behold! A ladder set up on the earth,
and the top of it reached to heaven; and the angels of God ascended and descended upon it”
(Genesis 28:12). But if the Spirit fills all things, and in the Word is present in the midst of all
things; and if the angels, being his inferiors, are circumscribed, and where they are sent forth,
there are they present: it is not to be doubted that the Spirit does not belong to things originated,
nor is He an angel at all, as you say, but by nature is above the angels.
On the Incarnation I
Like a musician who has tuned his lyre, and by the artistic blending of
low and high and medium tones produces a single melody, so the
Wisdom of God, holding the universe like a lyre, adapting things
heavenly to things earthly, and earthly things to heavenly, harmonizes
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them all, and leading them by His will, makes one world and one world
order in beauty and harmony.
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Contra Gentes, 41, pg. 26, in George
Maloney, SJ, The Cosmic Christ, Sheed
and Ward, NY, 1968, p. 261
The Holy Word of the Father then, almighty and perfect, uniting with the universe and having
everywhere unfolded His own powers, and having illumined all, both things seen and things
invisible, holds them together and binds them to Himself, having left nothing void of His
power, but on the contrary he quickens and sustains all things everywhere, each severally and
all collectively; while He mingles in one the principles of all sensible existence, heat namely
and cold, and wet and dry, and caused them not to conflict, but to make up one concordant
harmony....
Obeying Him, even God the Word, things on earth have life and things in heaven have
their order, for there is nothing that is and that takes place, but it has been made and stands by
Him and through Him.
Against the Heathen, pg. 26
[The Logos] produces a single melody... holding the universe like a lyre, draws together the
things in the air with those on earth, and those in the heaven with those in the air, and
combines the whole with the parts, linking them with his command and will, and thus
producing in beauty and harmony, a single world and a single order within it.... [The Logos]
extends his power everywhere, illuminating all things visible and invisible, containing and
enclosing them in himself, [giving] life and everything, everywhere, to each individually and
to all together, creating an exquisite single euphonious harmony.
For seeing the circling of heaven and the course of sun and moon, the positions and revolutions of
the stars which are opposed and different, but in their difference all keep a common order, who
would not think that they do not order themselves but that there is another who orders and made
them? And who, seeing the sun rise by day and the moon shining by night, waning and waxing
unchangingly according to an exacting number of days, and some stars crossing and variously
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changing their paths while others keep a fixed place, who then would not consider that there must
a Creator who governs them?
Contra Gentes, 35:95-97, in J. Schaefer,
“Acting Reverently in God’s Sacramental
World,” Ethical Dilemmas in the New
Millennium, Villanova Univ. Press, 2001,
p. 41.
Wherever you turn your eyes, there is God's symbol; wherever you
read, you will find there his archetypes... Look and see how nature
and scripture are linked together.... Praise for the Lord of Nature.
Glory for the Lord of Scripture.
The sun is our light, and none is able to know it, much the less to know man, and
still less God! ... The sun itself and also the light and the heat, dwelling one in the
other, and agreeing without grudging. Mingled, yet not confused; blended, yet not
bound; assembled, yet not compelled; free, yet not divergent. There is a marvel in
these things which silences us. For man is three, and will rise when he is perfected,
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as the sun which, though one, is a uniform nature with three mingled in him,
distinct, yet not divided....
The young of a bird, unless it be matured, is not able to break through its imperfect covering.
Oh perfect it, Thou that perfects all things! The bird is brought first from the belly to the egg,
and then to the nest. When it is perfected, it flies in the air: it spreads its wings in the mystery
of the cross.
Faith too is perfected three-foldly — through the Father, through the Son, and
through the Holy Spirit, and then flies to the four quarters, in the mystery of the cross.
The three-fold names are sown in the three-fold way: in the spirit and in the soul and in the
body. The Trinity was perfected by the Threefold One and reigns unto the ends of the earth. If
the spirit suffers, it becomes one with the Father; if the soul suffers, it is blended with the Son;
if the body confesses, it communicates with the Spirit. And if the little bird drew in its wings
and refused to use the silly mystery of the cross, the air would then refuse her, and not bear her
up: But her wings praise the cross....
And if a ship spread her sail for the sea, in the mystery of the Cross, and from the
yoke of wood, she makes a bosom for the wind; and when she has spread forth the Cross, then
is the course spread out clearly for the voyage.
Neither does the land yield itself without the fair mystery of the Cross -- it is the sign
of the Cross which works the land and softens it, and scatters the seeds therein.
...And when wheat is hidden in the earth, the living seed preaches the Resurrection.
The flock is kept by the Rod; the vineyard is full of his blood...
And when, upon his tree, the fruit hangs, it is a type of Cross, and the Fruit of his
body: Yet that sleep, arise, be watchful! Lo! the Resurrection of the dead is proclaimed to the
buried living man.
And if in her nest by mere touch her womb conceives from the warmth of the
cherishing wings of her mate, then the bird also in his own house is a mirror of Mary!
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The Eighteenth Rhythm
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Nature and Scripture
I read the opening of this book and was filled with joy,
for its verses and lines spread out their arms to welcome me;
The first rushed out and kissed me, and led me on to its companion;
And when I reached that verse wherein is written the story of Paradise,
it lifted me up and transported me from the bosom of the book
to the very bosom of Paradise.
My brethren, consider the wind: although its blast is tumultuous, it lacks any color
by which it can be seen, for it is hidden in its manifestation, having no outer array
or substance at all. It is both hidden and yet manifest when it is blowing. So too the
abode of Paradise is both hidden and manifest: while it can be perceived to exist,
what it really is cannot be perceived.
The Tree of Knowledge – awareness of truth and spiritual reality – is the gate to
Paradise through which the mind can enter. But the Tree of Knowledge has to be
approached in the right spirit and in obedience to God; otherwise it will lead to
destruction and loss as both Adam and Uzziah discovered. Further, once led astray
by eating the fruit of the Tree of Disobedience, man goes on to blame the fruit
rather than his greed for the consequence of his grasping.
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The Tree as judge of human obedience
Had Adam conquered, he would have acquired glory upon his limbs,
and discernment...
Hymn III:10-15
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Hilary is the most important Father of Roman Gaul, sometimes called the “Athanasius of the
West.” He was born into a pagan family of landowner magistrates in Poitiers of Aquitaine, the
most Roman of the provinces of Gaul. As a youth he relentlessly sought to understand God. He
first studied hedonism; moved on to stoicism, explored a variety of cults and esoteric sects, and
then Judaism before he converted to Christianity after reading the Gospel of John. For several
years he studied in Asia Minor and absorbed the mystical theology of the Greek fathers. The heart
of Hilary’s theology is the uniqueness of Christianity among all the religions of the world because
it manifests the highest intuitions of God into the physical world and because it teaches us how to
know God by following the example and path of Jesus Christ. After battling the Arian heresy, he
gave up polemics and devoted himself to exegesis of the Scriptures. The theme of the beauty of
God shining from the Father through the Son into the details of creation permeates his writings.
He teaches that the individual, transformed by Christ, transforms even the physical matter of
creation and brings God’s blessings into the world. Through Hilary the Eastern themes of
transformation of creation through the light of Christ come into the West which was more
accustomed to a moral approach to Christianity.
The words 'I AM THAT I AM' are clearly adequate as an indication of God's infinity, but, in
addition, we need to apprehend the operation of His majesty and power. For while absolute
existence is peculiar to Him Who, abiding eternally, had no beginning in a past however
remote, we hear again an utterance worthy of Himself issuing from the eternal and Holy God,
Who says, “Who holds the heaven in His palm and the earth in His hand,” and again, “The
heaven is My throne and the earth is the footstool of My feet. What house will ye build Me, or
what shall be the place of My rest?” The whole heaven is held in the palm of God, the whole
earth grasped in His hand.
Now the word of God ...reveals a deeper meaning to the patient student than to the
momentary hearer. For this heaven which is held in the palm of God is also His throne, and the
earth which is grasped in His hand is the footstool beneath His feet. From this ...we should
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conclude that He has extension in space, as of a body, for that which is His throne and footstool
is also held in hand and palm by that infinite Omnipotence. It was written that in all born and
created things God might be known within them and without, overshadowing and indwelling,
surrounding all and interfused through all, since palm and hand, which hold, reveal the might of
His external control, while throne and footstool, by their support of a sitter, display the
subservience of outward things to One within Who, Himself outside them, encloses all in His
grasp, yet dwells within the external world which is His own. In this wise does God, from
within and from without, control and correspond to the universe; being infinite, He is present in
all things, in Him Who is infinite all are included. ... Whether shall I go from Thy Spirit? Or
whither shall I flee from Thy face? If I ascend up into heaven, Thou art there; if I go down into
hell, Thou art there also; if I have taken my wings before dawn and made my dwelling in the
uttermost parts of the sea, Thou art there. For thither Thy hand shall guide me and Thy right
hand shall hold me. There is no space where God is not; space does not exist apart from Him.
He is in heaven, in hell, beyond the seas; dwelling in all things and enveloping all. Thus He
embraces, and is embraced by, the universe, confined to no part of it but pervading all.
Therefore, ... by the greatness of His works and the beauty of the things that He hath made
the Creator of worlds is rightly discerned. The Creator of great things is supreme in greatness,
of beautiful things in beauty. Since the work transcends our thoughts, all thought must be
transcended by the Maker. Thus heaven and air and earth and seas are fair: fair also the whole
universe, as the Greeks agree, who from its beautiful ordering call it “kosmos,” that is, order.
But if our thought can estimate this beauty of the universe by a natural instinct – an instinct
such as we see in certain birds and beasts whose voice, though it fall below the level of our
understanding, yet has a sense clear to them though they cannot utter it, and in which, since all
speech is the expression of some thought, there lies a meaning patent to themselves--must not
the Lord of this universal beauty be recognized as Himself most beautiful amid all the beauty
that surrounds Him? For though the splendor of His eternal glory overtax our mind's best
powers, it cannot fail to see that He is beautiful.
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One of the Eastern Fathers, a Metropolitan (Archbishop) of Jerusalem and author of a series of
lectures on the Christian sacraments and instructions for catechumens,
St. Cyril lived in a time of great theological conflicts. He was banished three times for his
theological views and went through great trials for his personal integrity. He was once condemned
by the Arians for selling church property to feed the poor. He attended the Council of
Constantinople and helped develop the Nicene Creed and the concept of "homoousios" which
identifies the unity inherent in Christ's spiritual-physical nature. His writings about creation are
characterized by their emphasis upon physical nature as a window into the Divine Nature.
There is then only one God, Maker of souls and bodies; One Creator of heaven and
earth, the Maker of angels and archangels.... This Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is
not circumscribed in any place, nor is He less than the heavens; but the heavens are
the works of His fingers, and the whole world is held in His grasp: He is in all
things and around all things.
The Divine Nature is impossible to see with eyes of flesh: but from the works, which are
Divine, it is possible to attain to some conception of His power, according to Solomon, who
says, "For by the greatness and beauty of the creatures proportionately the Maker of them is
seen" (Wisdom 13:5). For God appears the greater to every man in proportion as he has grasped
a larger survey of the creatures: and when his heart is lifted up by that larger survey, he gains
withal a greater conception of God.
Catechetical Lectures IX:2
Enter within yourself, and from within your own nature consider the Author of
creation. What is there to find fault with in the framing of this body? Be master of
yourself, and nothing evil shall proceed out from any of your members.... The
members are not the cause of sin, but they who use their members amiss; and the
Maker thereof is wise.
Catechetical Lectures IX
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The witness of Creation
For what fault have they (the heretics and pagans) to find with the vast harmony of God? They
who ought to have been struck with amazement on beholding the vaultings of the heavens:
they, who ought to have worshiped Him Who reared the sky as a dome, Who formed the stable
substance of heaven. ...
Is there not cause to wonder when one looks at the constitution of the sun? ... See also how
the days alternately respond each to the other in due order in summer increasing and in winter
decreasing.... For the heretics who have no ears, they all but cry aloud, and by their good order
say, that there is none other God save the Creator who hath set them their bounds, and laid out
the order of the Universe.
Is not the Artificer (or Creator) worthy the rather to be glorified? And for what
purpose? If you do not know the nature of all things, do the things that have been
made forthwith become useless? Can you know the purpose and efficacy of all the
herbs? Or can you learn the good and service which resides in every animal? Do
you know that even from venomous adders (poisonous snakes) have come
antidotes for the preservation of men. But some of you will say to me, "the snake is
terrible." Fear the Lord and it shall not be able to hurt you.
Or you may say, "the lion is a blood-thirsty creature." Fear the Lord, and he shall
lie down beside you, as he did alongside of Daniel. But truly wonderful are the
actions of the animals: how some, such as the scorpion, have sharpness in their
sting; and others have power in their teeth; and others do battle with their claws....
So then from this varied workmanship, understand the Creator's power.
Catechetical Lectures IX
My discussion has left out many things, and especially left out things incorporeal and invisible,
that you may abhor those who blaspheme the wise and good Artificer, and from what is spoken
and read, and whatever you can discover or conceive, from the greatness and beauty of the
creatures, you may proportionately see the Maker of them. And bending the knee with godly
reverence to the Maker of the worlds, the worlds of sense and thought, both visible and
invisible, you may with a single and holy tongue, with unwearied lips and heart, praise God,
and say how wonderful are thy works, O Lord; in wisdom hast thou made them all.
Catechetical Lectures IX
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God creates all parts of creation
Let no one tolerate anyone who says that God is the Creator of the
light, but another is the creator of darkness. For let him remember
how Isaiah says, "I am the God who made the light, and created
darkness..." Let us not then admit the evil thought that another is the
Maker of darkness, for experience shows that this also is good and
useful.
Catechetical Lectures IX
For He [the Holy Spirit] is the supremely Great Power, divine and unsearchable,
living and rational, and it belongs to Him to sanctify all things that were made by
God through Christ.... It is the Holy Spirit who knows the mysteries, searching all
things, even the depths of God.... For there is one God... one Lord... and one Holy
Spirit who has power to sanctify and deify all, who spoke in the Law and the
Prophets, in the Old and New Testament alike.
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A founder of Eastern communal monastic life, Archbishop of Caesarea, brother of St. Gregory of
Nyssa, doctor of the Church, and the first of the Cappadocian (Anatolian Greek) Fathers, Basil
describes the handiwork of the Creator as “everywhere in creation” and probes deeply into the
reasons for creation's structure. He lays out a Christian cosmology that he says existed before
time, that goes beyond spatial limitations, that remains orderly and intentional, and that is filled
with an intelligible hierarchy beyond human comprehension. This marvelous creation he calls
the "supreme icon" of Christian faith which leads to knowledge of the "Supreme Artisan." His
interests were as much in social relief and schools as theology. Throughout his life he
relentlessly sought a comprehensive vision of how Christian faith applied to all aspects of
livelihood. He is one of the most prolific and wide ranging of all the patristic writers on themes
of creation.
I want creation to penetrate you with so much admiration that wherever you go, the least plant
may bring you the clear remembrance of the Creator....
Scripture depicts to us the Supreme Artist, praising each one of His works; soon when
His work is complete He will accord praise to the whole together....
A single plant, a blade of grass or one speck of dust is sufficient to occupy all your
intelligence in beholding the art with which it has been made.
When I reflect upon the inexhaustible wisdom which is displayed in the works
of creation, I seem to be but at the beginning of my story.
"And God said, 'Let the earth bring forth the living creatures after their own kind, cattle and
creeping things, and beasts of the earth, after their own kind; and it was so.'"
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The command of God advanced step by step and earth thus received its adornment....
When the earth heard this command, "Let the earth bring forth grass and the tree yielding
fruit," it was not grass that it had hidden in it that it caused to bring spring forth... It is the
Word of God which forms the natures of things created....
Without doubt the terrestrial animals are devoid of a human-like reason. At the same
time how many affections of the soul each one of them expresses by the voice of nature! They
express by cries their joys and sadness, recognition of what is familiar to them, the need for
food, regret at being separated from their companions, and numerous emotions.
Listen, Christians, you to whom it is forbidden to "recompense evil for evil" and
who are commanded "to overcome evil with good." Take the bee for your
model, which constructs its cells without injuring anyone and without interfering
with the goods of others. It gathers openly pollen from the flowers, drawing in
the basis for the honey scattered over them like dew, and injects it into the
hollow of its cells. At first this honey is liquid; time thickens it and gives it its
sweetness. The Book of Proverbs has given the bee the most honorable and the
best praise by calling her wise and industrious. How much activity she exerts in
gathering this precious nourishment, by which both kings and men of low
degree are brought to health! How great is the art and cunning she displays in
the construction of the storehouses which are destined to receive the honey?
After having spread the pollen like a thin membrane, she distributes it in
contiguous compartments which, weak though they are, by their number and by
their mass, sustain the whole edifice. Each cell in fact holds to the one next to it,
and is separated by one upon another. The bee takes care not to make one vast
cavity, for fear it mike break under the weight of the liquid, and allow it to
escape. See how the discoveries of geometry are mere by-works to the wise bee!
The solicitude of storks for their old would be sufficient, if our children would reflect upon it,
to make them love their parents, because there is no one so failing in good sense as not to
deem it a shame to be surpassed in virtue by birds devoid of reason. The storks surround their
father when old age makes his feathers drop off, warm him with their wings, and provide
abundantly for his support. Even in their flight, they help him as much as they are able,
raising him gently on each side upon their wings, a conduct so famous that it has given to
gratitude the name of "antipelargosis."
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Let no one lament poverty; let not the man whose house is bare despair of his life, when
he considers the industry of the swallow. To build her nest, she brings bits of straw in her
beak; and as she cannot raise the mud in her claws, she moistens the ends of her wings in
water and then rolls in very fine dust and thus procures mud. After having mixed, little by
little, the bits of straw with this mud, as with glue, she feeds her young; and if any one of
them has its eyes injured, she has a natural remedy to heal the sight of her little ones.
This sight ought to warn you not to take to evil ways on account of poverty; and, even if
you are reduced to the last extremity, not to lose all hope; not to abandon yourself to inaction
and idleness, but to have recourse to God. If He is so bountiful to the swallow, what will He
not do for those who call upon Him with all their hearts?
You have then heaven adorned, earth beautified, the sea populated with its own creatures,
the air filled with birds which scour it in every direction. Studious listener, think of all these
creations which God has drawn out of nothing, think of all those which my speech has left
out, to avoid tediousness, and not to exceed my limits, recognize everywhere the wisdom of
God; never cease to wonder, and through every creature, to glorify the Creator.
You have then heaven and earth adorned, earth beautified, the sea peopled with
its own creatures, the air filled with birds which scour in every direction.
Studious listener, think of all these creations..., think of all those which my
narration has left out to avoid tediousness; recognize everywhere the wisdom
of God; never cease to wonder, and through every creature, to glorify the
Creator.
When the intellect is no longer dissipated among external things or dispersed across the world
through the senses, it returns to itself; and by means of itself it ascends to the thought of God.
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A prayer for the earth
God has poured the rains on a land tilled by avaricious hands; He has given the sun to keep
the seeds warm, and to multiply the fruit through His productivity. Things of this kind are
from God: the fertile land, moderate winds, abundance of seeds, the work of the oxen, and
other things by which a farm is brought into productivity and abundance.... But the avaricious
one has not remembered our common nature and has not thought of distribution.
Let us glorify the Master Craftsman for all that has been done wisely and
skillfully; and from the beauty of the visible things, let us form an idea of
Him Who is more than beautiful; and from the greatness of these
perceptible and circumscribed bodies let us conceive of Him Who is
infinite and immense and Who surpasses all understanding in the
plenitude of His power. For even if we are ignorant of things made, yet,
at least, that which in general comes under our observation is so
wonderful that even the most acute mind is shown to be at a loss as
regards the least of the things in the world, either in the ability to explain
it worthily or to render due praise to the Creator, to Whom be all glory,
honor and power forever.
Hexaemeron I:11
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The beginning of time
The genesis of the world is the beginning of time. This beginning is not yet time, not even a
fraction of time, just as the beginning of a road is not yet the road itself.
Hexaemeron 1:6
He magnifies the Lord who observes with a keen understanding and most profound
contemplation the greatness of creation, so that from the greatness and beauty of
creatures he may contemplate their Creator. The deeper one penetrates into the
reasons for which things in existence were made and were governed, the more he
contemplates the magnificence of the Lord and, as far as it lies in him, magnifies
the Lord.
Homily 16:3
May God grant you the intelligence of His truth, so that you may raise yourself from visible
things to the invisible Being, and that the grandeur and beauty of creatures may give you a
just idea of the Creator. For the visible things of Him from the creation of the world are
clearly seen, and His power and divinity are eternal. Thus earth, air, sky, water, day, night, all
visible things, remind us of who is our Benefactor.
It is not with eyes that the Creator views the beauty of His works. He contemplates them in
His ineffable wisdom.... However, it is not in this that Scripture makes God find the goodness
and charm of the sea. Here it is the purpose of the work which makes the goodness.
In the first place sea water is the source of all the moisture of the earth. It filters through
imperceptible conduits, as is proved by the subterranean openings and caves whither its
waters penetrate; it is received in oblique and sinuous canals; ... it rises to the surface of the
earth, having become drinkable and free from its bitterness by this long percolation....
In the eyes of God, the sea is good, because it makes the undercurrent of moisture in the
depths of the earth. It is good again because all the rivers without exceeding its limits. It is
good because it is the origin and source of the waters of the air. Warmed by the rays of the
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sun, it escapes as vapor, is attracted into the high regions of the air, and there it is cooled on
account of its rising high above the refraction of the rays from the ground, and the shade of
the clouds adding to this refrigeration, it is changed into rain and fattens the earth....
Finally, the sea is good in the eyes of God, because it girdles the isles, of which it forms
at the same time the rampart and the beauty, because it brings together the most distant parts
of the earth, and facilitates the intercommunication of mariners. By this means it gives us the
boon of general information, supplies the merchant with his wealth, and easily provides for
the necessities of life, allowing the rich to export their excesses and blessing the poor with the
supply of what they lack....
"And God saw that it was good." God does not judge the beauty of his work by the charm of
the eyes, and He does not hold to the same idea of beauty that we do. What He esteems
beautiful is that which presents in its perfection all the fitness of art, and that which tends to
the usefulness of its end. ...
May God who after having made such great things... grant you the intelligence of His
truth so that you may raise yourselves from visible things to the invisible Being, and that the
grandeur and beauty of creatures may give you a just idea of the Creator. For the visible
things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, and His power and divinity are
eternal. Thus earth, air, sky, water, day, night, all visible things, remind us of Him who is our
Benefactor.
Some [gardeners] plant wild fig trees near cultivated fig trees, and there are others who, to
remedy the weakness of the productive fruit tree of our gardens, attach to the branches unripe
figs and so retain the fruit which had already begun to drop and to be lost. What lesson does
nature here give us? That we must often borrow, even from those who are strangers to the
faith, a certain vigor to show forth good works. If you see outside the Church, in pagan life, or
in the midst of a pernicious heresy, the example of virtue and fidelity to moral laws, redouble
your efforts to resemble the productive fig tree, who by the side of the wild fig tree, gains
strength, prevents the fruit from being shed, and nourishes it with more care.
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Hexaemeron, Homily V, "The
Germination
of the Earth," 7.2
How to understand creation's lessons about God
To investigate the great and prodigious show of creation, to understand supreme and ineffable
wisdom, you must bring personal light for the contemplation of the wonders which I spread
before your eyes, and help me, according to your power, in this struggle, where you are not so
much judges as fellow combatants, for fear lest the truth might escape you.... Why these
words? It is because we propose to study the world as a whole, and to consider the universe,
not by the light of worldly wisdom, but by that with which God wills to enlighten His servant,
when He speaks to him in person and without enigmas. It is because it is absolutely necessary
that all lovers of great and grand shows should bring a mind well prepared to study them....
If sometimes, on a bright night, while gazing with watchful eyes on the inexpressible
beauty of the stars, you have thought of the Creator of all things; if you have asked yourself
who it is that has dotten heaven with such flowers, and why visible things are even more
useful than beautiful; ... if you have raised yourself by the visible things to the invisible
Being, then you are a well prepared auditor, and you can take your place in this august and
blessed amphitheatre.
Come in the same way that any one not knowing a town is taken by the hand and led
through it; thus I am going to lead you, like strangers, through the mysterious marvels of this
great city of the universe....
You will know that you are formed of earth, but the work of God's hands, much weaker
than the brute [creatures], but ordained to command beings without reason and soul.... If we
are penetrated by these truths, we shall know God, we shall adore our Creator, we shall serve
our Master, we shall glorify our Father, we shall love our Sustainer, we shall bless our
Benefactor, we shall not cease to honor the Prince of present and future life, Who, by the
riches that He showers upon us in this world, makes us believe in His promises and uses
present good things to strengthen our expectations of the future. Truly, if such are the good
things of time, what will be those of eternity? If such is the beauty of visible things, what shall
we think of invisible things? If the grandeur of heaven exceeds the measure of human
intelligence, what mind shall be able to trace the nature of the everlasting?
If evil is neither uncreated nor created by God, from whence comes its nature?
Certainly that evil exists, no one living in the world will deny. What shall we
say then? Evil is not a living animated essence; it is a condition of the soul
opposed to virtue, developed in the careless on account of their falling away
from good.
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Hexaemeron, Homily II, "The Earth
was invisible and unfinished," 4
May He who has given us intelligence to recognize in the smallest objects of creation the
great wisdom of the Contriver, make us find in great celestial bodies a still higher idea of their
Creator. However, compared with their Author, the sun and moon are but a fly and an ant.
The whole universe cannot give us a right idea of the greatness of God; and is is only by
signs, weak and slight in themselves, often by the help of the smallest insects and of the least
plants, that we raise ourselves to Him. Content with these words, let us offer our thanks... to
Him who feeds us.... May He feed you forever, and in proportion to your faith grant you the
manifestation of the Spirit, in Jesus Christ our Lord, to whom be glory and power for ever and
ever.
Each animal is distinguished by particular qualities. The ox is steady, the horse has strong
passions, the wolf cannot be tamed, the fox is deceptive, the stag timid, the ant industrious,
the dog grateful and faithful in his friendships. As each animal was created, the distinctive
character of his nature appeared in him in due measure; in the lion spirit, taste for solitary life,
an unsociable character....
In the rich treasures of creation it is difficult to select what is most precious; the loss of what
is omitted is too severe. “Let the earth bring forth grasses” and with useful plants appear
noxious plants; with corn, hemlock; with the other nutritious plants, hellebore, monkshood,
mandrake and the poppy. What then? Shall we show no gratitude for so many beneficial gifts,
and reproach the Cretor for those which may be harmful to our life? ... But in creation, not a
single thing has been created without a reason, not a single thing is useless. One serves as
food to some animal; medicine is found in another, a relief for our maladies. Thus the starling
eats hemlock, its constitution rendering it insusceptible to the action of the poison.... The
quail, thanks to its peculiar temperment, feeds on hellebore. There are even circumstances
where poisons are useful to men: with mankrake, doctors give us sleep; with opium they lull
violent pain. Hemlock has been used to appease the rage of unruly diseases; and many times
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hellebore has taken away long standing diseases. These plants, then, instead of making you
accuse the Creator, give you a new subject for gratitude.
May He who has given us intelligence to recognize in the smallest objects of creation the
great wisdom of the Contriver make us find in great celestial bodies a still higher idea of their
Creator. However, compared with their Author, the sun and moon are but a fly and an ant.
The whole universe cannot give us a right idea of the greatness of God; and it is o nly by
signs, weak and slight in themselves, often by the help of the smallest insects and of the least
plants, that we raise ourselves to Him.
The contemplation of nature abates the fever of the soul, and banishes all
insincerity and presumption.
A definition of self-control
Let this be the best definition and rule of self-control, to look neither after luxury of flesh nor
its mortification, but to avoid the lack of proportion in each of these, so that it should not
become gross and disturbed, nor yet fall ill and thus unable to carry out the work of the
commandments...
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A place of tranquility
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It is a lofty mountain overshadowed with a deep wood, ... irrigated on the north by cold and
transparent streams. At its foot is spread a low plain, enriched perpetually with the streams
from the mountains. The wood, a virgin forest of trees of various kinds and foliage which
grows around it, almost serves as a rampart.... My hut is built on another point, which uplifts
lofty pinnacles on the summit, so that the plain is outspread before the gaze, and from the
height I can catch a glimpse of the river flowing around... flowing with a swifter course than
any river I know, for a short space billows along the adjacent rock, and then, plunging over it,
rolls into a deep whirlpool, affording a most delightful view to me and to every spectator, and
abundantly supplying the needs of the inhabitants, for it nurtures an incredible number of fish
in its eddies. Why need I tell you the sweet exhalations from the earth or the breezes of the
river? Other persons might admire the multitude of the flowers, or the lyric birds, but I have no
time to attend to them. But my highest eulogy of the spot is, that, prolific as it is of all kinds of
fruits from its happy situation, it bears for me the sweetest of all fruits, tranquility.
Beasts bear witness to the faith... (but) in truth the most difficult of sciences is to
know one's self. Not only our eye, from which nothing outside us escapes, cannot see
itself, but our mind, so piercing to discover the sins of others, is slow to recognize its
own faults. Thus my speech, after eagerly investigating what is external to myself, is
slow and hesitating in exploring my own nature. Yet the beholding of heaven and
earth does not make us know God better than the attentive study of our being does. I
am, says the Prophet (Psalm 139:14), fearfully and wonderfully made; that is to say,
in observing myself I have known Thy infinite wisdom.
See how the divine order embraces and extends to the smallest object. A fish does not resist
God’s law, yet we men cannot endure His precepts of salvation! Do not despise fish because
they are unreasoning; rather fear lest, in your resistance to the disposition of the Creator, you
have even less reason than they. Listen to the fish, who by their actions all but speak and say:
it is for the perpetuation of our species that we undertake this long voyage. They have not the
gift of reason, but they have the law of nature firmly seated within them, to show them what
they have to do.
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Hexaemeron 7.4
It appears, indeed, that even before this world an order of things existed of which our mind can
attain by contemplation, but which has been left uninvestigated because it is too lofty a subject
for men who are but beginners and babes in knowledge. The birth of the world was preceded by
a condition of things suitable for the exercise of supernatural powers, outstripping the limits of
time, eternal and infinite. The Creator and Demiurge of the universe perfected His works in it,
spiritual light for the happiness of all who love the Lord, intellectual and invisible natures, all
the orderly arrangement of pure intelligences who are beyond the reach of our mind and of
whom we cannot even discover the names. They fill the essence of this invisible world, as Paul
teaches us. “For by him were all things created that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible
and invisible, whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers,” or virtues or
hosts of angels, or the dignities of archangels.
To this world it was necessary to add a new world, both a school and training place, where
the souls of men should be taught and a home for beings destined to be born and to die. Thus
was created of a nature analogous to this world and the animals and plants which live thereon,
the succession of time, forever pressing on and passing away and never stopping in its course.
Is not this the nature of time, where the past is no more, the future does not exist, and the
present escapes before being recognized? And such also is the nature of the creature which
lives in time, condemned to grow or to perish without rest and without certain stability. It is
therefore fit that the bodies of animals and plants, obliged to follow a sort of current, and
carried away by the motion which leads to birth or to death, s hould live in the midst of
surroundings whose nature is in accord with being subject to change. Thus the writer who
wisely tells us of the birth of the Universe does not fail to put these words at the head of the
narrative, “In the beginning, God created;” that is to say, in the beginning of time.
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God made man according to his image and likeness. He deemed him worthy of
the knowledge of Himself, that in preference to all of the animals He adorned
him with rationality, bestowed upon him the opportunity of taking his delight
in the unbelievable beauties of paradise, and made him the chief of the
creatures on earth.
Among arts, some have production, or practice, or performance, as their object. ... Thus
dancing and music leave nothing behind; they have no object but themselves. In creative arts,
on the contrary, the work lasts after the operation. Such is architecture – and such are the arts
which use wood, brass or weaving. Even when the artist has departed, each shows the
industrious intelligence of the artist and allows the architect, the brass worker or the weaver to
be admired on account of his work. ... The world too is a work of art displayed for the
beholding of all people; to make them know Him who created it.
This is man: a mind united with a fitting and serviceable body. This mode of existence was
prepared by the All-wise Artificer of the universe in our mother’s wombs. This being it is
which was appointed to rule over the earth. For him, creation lies outspread, an exercise
ground for virtue.
For him the law was made, commanding the imitation of the Creator in accordance
with his powers and a reproducing upon earth as if in rough outline, of the good order of
heaven.
Homily on Detachment
109
Thy great tenderness of heart,
for Thou has promised to save both man and beast,
and great is Thy loving kindness,
O Master, Saviour of the world.
Even before this world, an order of things existed of which our mind can form
an idea, but which was left untold [in Genesis], because it is too lofty a subject
for men who are but beginners and are still babes in knowledge. The birth of the
world was preceded by a condition of things suitable for the exercise of
supernatural powers, out-stripping the limits of time, eternal and infinite... the
intellectual and invisible natures, all the orderly arrangement of pure
intelligences who are beyond the reach of our mind and of whom we cannot ever
discover the names... the host of angels or the dignities of archangels.
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111
St. Gregory Nazianzus (329 - 389)
A gentle and peaceful man who was not prolific with his writings so much as profound, St. Gregory
Nazianzus has been uniquely honored as the only Greek father with the special title, "the
theologian." He is known as one of the three Cappadocean Fathers, one of the four Eastern doctors
of the Church, and one of those especially responsible for the defeat of the Arian heresy. He loved
solitude and was easily dismayed by the strife and conflict of the world. Even though he sought a
quiet, simple life, circumstances combined with his brilliant oratorical skills continually called him
out of seclusion into positions of leadership. He sees all of creation as recapitulated within the
microcosm of the human person, not just because both are creatures of God, but because of the
manner in which the individual carries the image of God.
This man He (God) set upon the earth as a kind of second world, a microcosm; another kind of
angel.... He was king of all upon the earth, but a subject of heaven; earthly and heavenly,
transient yet immortal; belonging both to the visible and to the intelligible order...; combining
in the same being spirit and flesh.... Thus he is a living creature under God's Providence here,
while in transition to another state and ... in process of deification by reason of his natural
tendency toward God.
Orations 45:8
The Craftsman-Word... produced a single living being formed out of both (I mean the invisible
and the visible natures); he produced man. He took the body from already existing matter and
put in it a breath taken from himself (which the Word [of Scripture] knows as the intelligent
soul and image of God).
This man He (God) set upon the earth as a kind of second world, a microcosm; another
kind of angel, a worshiper of blended nature, a full initiate of the visible creation but a mere
neophyte in respect of the intelligible world. He was king of all upon the earth, but a subject of
heaven; earthly and heavenly, transient yet immortal; belonging both to the visible and to the
intelligible order; midway between greatness and lowliness; combining in the same being spirit
and flesh; spirit because of God’s grace; flesh because raised up from the dust; spirit, so that he
may endure, and glory his benefactor; flesh that he may suffer, and by suffering, may be
reminded and chastened when his greatness makes him ambitious. Thus he is a living creature
under God's Providence here, while in transition to another state and ... in process of deification
by reason of his natural tendency toward God.
Orations 45:8
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The challenge to each person of selflessness
God created man like an animal who has received the order to become God. To
execute this order, one must refuse it.
Orations,
quoted by Vladimir Lossky
Let us suppose that the existence of the universe is spontaneous. To what will you ascribe its
order? If you like, we will grant even that (that it also emerged spontaneously). But to what
then will you ascribe its preservation and its being maintained in the terms of its first existence?
Something else, or is that also spontaneous? Surely to something other than chance! But what
else can this be, except God? Thus reason, which is from God, and is implanted in all of us,
which is our first law and is participated in by all, leads us to God through the things which we
can see.
Orations 28
Creation is a system and compound of earth and sky and all that is in them, an admirable
creation indeed when we look at the beautiful form of every part, but yet more worthy of
admiration when we consider the harmony and unison of the whole, and how each part fits with
every other in fair order, and all with the whole, tending to the perfect completion of the world
as a unit.
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114
Appreciation of the beauty of natural scenery
(Gregory describes the view around his hermitage.) There is a high mountain covered with a
thick forest, watered on its northerly side by cool and transparent streams. At its base is
outstretched an evenly sloping plain, ever enriched by moisture from the mountains. A forest of
many-colored and multifarious trees, a spontaneous growth, surrounding the place, acts almost as
a hedge to enclose it, so that even Calypso's isle, which Homer seems to have admired above all
others for itself....
Adjoining my dwelling is another neck of land which supports at its summit a lofty ridge.
so that from the former the plain below lies outspread before the eyes, and from the elevation we
may gaze upon the encircling river, which in my mind at least furnishes no less pleasure than
they who receive their first impression from the top of the Amphipolis....
Why need I mention the exhalations from the land, or the breezes from the river? Someone
else might well marvel at the multitudes of the flowers or of the song of birds; but I have not
leisure to turn my thoughts to these. The highest praise however which I can give to the place is
that, although it is well adapted by its admirable situation to producing fruits of every kind, for
me the most pleasing fruit it nourishes is tranquility, not only because it is far removed from the
disturbances of the city, but also because it attracts not even a wayfarer, except the guests who
join me. Besides its other excellencies, it abounds in game, not those of bears and wolves, but it
feeds herds of deer and wild goats, hares and animals like these.
For He is the Maker of all these things, filling all with His essence, containing all things, filling
the world in His essence, yet incapable of being comprehended in His power by the world; good,
upright, princely, by nature not by adoption; sanctifying, not sanctified; measuring, but not
measured; shared, not sharing; filling, not filled; containing, not contained....
Today is the day of salvation for the world. Christ is risen from the dead: arise
with him.... The old Adam is superseded, the new perfected. In Christ a new
creation is coming to birth: therefore renew yourselves.
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Oration 45, “For Easter,” 1:1 (PG 36: 624)
The great Son is the glory of the Father and shone out from him like light.... He assumed a
body to bring help to suffering creatures.... He was both sacrifice and celebrant, sacrificial
priest and God himself. He offered blood to God to cleanse the entire world.
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The animals reflect their Maker
Who among men knows all the names of the wild beasts? Or who can accurately discern the
physiology of each? But if of the wild beasts we know not even their names, how shall we
comprehend the Maker of them? God’s command was but one which said, “Let the earth bring
forth wild beasts, and cattle, and creeping things, after their kinds” (Gen. 1:24), and from one
earth and from one command have sprung diverse natures, the gentle sheep and the carnivorous
lion, and the various instincts of irrational animals, bearing resemblance to the various
characters within men; the fox to manifest the craft that is in men, and the snake the venomous
treachery of friends, and the neighing horse the wantonness of young men, and the laborious
ant to arouse the sluggish and the dull: for when a man passes his youth in idleness, then he is
instructed by the irrational animals, being reproved by the divine Scripture saying, “Go to the
ant, thou sluggard, see and emulate her ways, and become wiser than she” (Proverbs 6:6). For
w hen you see her treasuring up her food, imitate her and treasure up for yourself fruits of good
works for the world to come....
Is not the Artificer worthy the rather to be glorified? For what? If you know not the nature
of all things, do the things which have been made then become useless? Can you know the
efficacy of all herbs? OR can you learn the benefits which derive from every animal? Even
from venomous adders have come antidotes for the preservation of men. But you will say to
me, “the poisonous snake is terrible.” Fear you the Lord and it will not be able to hurt you. “A
scorpion stings.” Fear the Lord and it shall not sting you. “A lion is blood-thirsty.” Fear the
Lord, and he shall lie down beside you, as by Daniel. But truly wonderful also is the action of
the animals: how some, as the scorpion, have the sharpness of a sting; and others have power in
their teeth; and others do battle with their claws; while the basilisk’s power is his gaze. So then
from this varied workmanship, understand the Creator’s power.
The great architect of the universe conceived and produced a being endowed with both natures,
the visible and the invisible. God created the human being, bringing its body forth from the pre-
existing matter which he animated with His own Spirit.... Thus in some way a new universe
was born, small and great at one and the same time.
God set this “hybrid” worshiper on earth to contemplate the visible world, and to be
initiated into the invisible; to reign over earth’s creatures, and to obey orders from on high. He
created a being at once earthly and heavenly, insecure and immortal, visible and invisible,
halfway between greatness and nothingness, flesh and spirit at the same time... an animal en
route to another native land, and, most mysterious of all, made to resemble God by simple
submission to the divine will.
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Oration 45, For Easter 7 (PG 36:850) as
quoted in Olivier Clement, The Roots of
Christian Mysticism, New City Press, New
York, NY, 1995, p. 77.
The one who gazes on the physical universe and perceives the wisdom which is reflected in the
beauty of created realities, can reason from the visible to the invisible beauty, the Source of
Wisdom, whose influence established the nature of all reality. So also can one who looks upon
this new universe of creation which is the Church see in it the one Who is all in all, and thus be
led by our faith from things which are intelligible and understandable to a knowledge of the One
who is beyond all knowledge.
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The establishment of the Church is a re-creation of the world. In the Church there is a
new heaven... Here too there is a new firmament, which is, as Paul tells us, faith in
Christ. A new earth is formed... Man is created once again, for by his rebirth from on
high, he is renewed according to the image of his Creator. There is also a new light, of
which He speaks: "You are the light of the world."
On the New Creation, Sermon 13:1049-
1050
Reflection on dominion
Man was brought into the world last after the creation, not being rejected to the last as
worthless, but as one whom it behooved to be king over his subjects at his very birth.... The
Maker of All gives him as foundations the instincts of a two-fold organization, blending the
Divine with the earthly, that by means of both he may be naturally and properly (to enjoy both)
God by means of his more divine nature, and the good things of earth by the sense that is akin
to them. ... He has a rank assigned to him before his genesis and possesses rule over the things
that are before his coming into being.
Man must acquire kingship (dominion) by his own effort. We see the royal
stature of man best in those who have become really free by learning to control
their own wills. When man wears the purple of virtue and the crown of justice,
he becomes a living image of the King of kings, of God himself.
A definition of nature
We learn from scripture in the account of the first Creation, that first the earth
brought forth "the green herb" and that then from this plant, seed was yielded, from
which, when it was shed on the ground, the same form of the original plant again
sprang up. The Apostle, it is to be observed, declares that this very same thing
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happens in the Resurrection. And so we learn from him the fact, not only that our
humanity will then be changed into something nobler, but also that what we have
therein to expect is nothing else than that which was at the beginning.
For the name Adam... is not now given to a created object. For created man has no special
name; he is universal man, encompassing in himself all of humanity. So then, by this
designation of Adam's universal nature, we are led to understand that divine providence and
energy embrace in primordial creation the whole human race. For God's image is not confined
to one part of nature, nor grace to only one individual among those belonging to it.... There is
no distinction between man formed at the beginning of the world's creation, and him who will
come at the end: they bear in themselves the same image of God. Consequently, man, made in
God's image, is nature understood as a whole, reflecting the likeness of God. God's image,
proper to Adam's person, relates to all of humanity, to "universal man."
When the formation of man is completed, time also should terminate. Then comes the
total reconstitution of the whole universe; along with the transformation of the whole
shall take place the reconstitution of human existence, from the earth-bound and
corruptible to the unchangeable and eternal.
There is nothing remarkable in man being in the image and likeness of the
universe. For the earth passes away, the sky changes, and all that is
contained therein is as transient as that which contains it.... In thinking to
exalt human nature through this imposing name..., they did not notice that
man has found himself invested at the same time with the qualities of
mosquitoes and mice.
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Man unites the spiritual and physical
There is a connection between the physical and the spiritual; God has created both and rules
over them. Therefore, nothing in creation is to be rejected, nor is anything excluded from the
community of God. This union of spiritual and physical is embodied by God in man.
The creation proclaims outright the Creator. For the very heavens, as the Psalmist says, declare
the glory of God (Psalm 19:1)with their unutterable words. We see the universal harmony in
the wondrous sky and on the wondrous earth; how elements essentially opposed to each other
are all woven together in an ineffable union to serve one common end, each contributing its
particular force to maintain the whole....
We see all this with the piercing eyes of mind, nor can we fail to be taught by means of
such a spectacle that a Divine power, working with skill and method, is manifesting itself in
this actual world, and, penetrating each portion, combines those portions with the whole and
completes the whole by the portions, and encompasses the universe with a single all-controlling
force, self-centered, never ceasing from its motion, yet never altering the position which it
holds.
The resurrection promises us the restoration of the fallen to their ancient state; for the grace we
look for is a certain return to the first life, bringing back again to Paradise him who was cast out
from it. If then, the life of those restored is closely related to that of the angels, it is clear that
the life before the transgression was a kind of angelic life, and hence also our return to the
ancient condition of life is compared to the angels.
The fact of being created in the image of God means that humanity, right from the moment of
creation, was endowed with a royal character.... The godhead is wisdom and logos [reason and
meaning]; in yourself too you see intelligence and thought, images of the original intelligence
and thought.... God is love and source of love: the divine Creator has drawn this feature on our
faces too.
Woman is in the image of God equally with man. The sexes are of equal
worth. Their virtues are equal, their struggles are equal... Would a man be
able to compete with a woman who lives her life to its fullness?
He who created human beings in order to make them share in his own fullness so disposed
their nature that it contains the principle of all that is good, and each of these dispositions
draws them to desire the corresponding divine attribute. So God could not have deprived
them of the best and most precious of his attributes, self-determination, freedom.
It is not in a part of human nature that the image of God is found, but nature in
its totality is the image of God.
When someone whose mind is but partially developed sees something clothed in some
semblance of beauty, he believes that this thing is beautiful in its own nature. But someone
who has purified the eyes of his soul and is trained to see beautiful things... makes use of the
visible as a springboard to rise to the contemplation of the spiritual.
Since He is in all, He takes into Himself all who are united with Him by the participation of His
body; He makes them all members of His body, in such wise that the many members are but
one body. Having thus united us with Himself and Himself with us, and having become one
with us in all things, He makes His own all that is ours. But the greatest of all our goods is
submission to God, which brings all creation into harmony.... Thus all creation becomes one
body, all are grafted one upon the other, and Christ speaks of the submission of His body to the
Father as His own submission.
To the power of God, there is nothing that has passed nor anything that is yet to
happen, but even that which is expected later on as well as that which is present
are equally grasped by the all-embracing power.
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Belief in God rests on the art and wisdom displayed in the order of the world: the belief in the
Unity of God, on the perfection that must belong to Him in respect of power, goodness,
wisdom, etc.
For how can our understanding, traversing the diastemic (i.e., the vast separation caused by
time-space) extension, comprehend the unextended nature? The inquiry, proceeding through
temporal sequence by analysis, goes on to the antecedents of that which has been discovered.
Even if diligent research were to traverse all that is known, it would discover no mechanism by
which to traverse the very conception of time (Gr.: aion) itself, being unable to stand outside of
itself and to surpass time which is the presupposition for all existents... So when language
(reason or discourse, i.e., Logos) arrives at that which is beyond language, it is time to be silent
(Eccles. 3:7), and to marvel at the wonder of this ineffable power, uninterpreted and forbidden
to the understanding, realizing that it was only of the works of God and not of God himself that
even the great ones (prophets) spoke: “Who shall declare the powers of the Lord?” (Psalm
105:2), and “I will narrate all thy works” (Psalm 9:2), and “Generations and generations shall
praise thy works” (Psalm 144:4). Of these works they speak and of these they relate the details;
to declare events which have happened, they lend their voices. But when discourse comes to
that which concerns him who is above all conception, they prescribe utter silence. For they
say, “For the majesty of the glory of His holiness there is no limit (Psalm 144:1-5). Ah! How
marvelous! How the discourse fears to approach the vicinity of the knowledge of God’s nature!
So much so, that it does not seek to comprehend even some of the external phenomena that we
can apprehend about God. For the text does not say: “The “ousia” of God has no limits,”
judging it too presumptuous to make even such a statement about the concept (of the ousia of
God), but devotes the discourse merely to marveling at the magnificence in the glory that is
seen around God.
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In Ecclesiasen VII, Gregorii Nysseni
Opera, Vol. V, pp 412-418, as quoted in
The Human Presence: Ecological
Spirituality in the Age of the Spirit,
translation by Mar Paulos Gregorios,
Amity House Press, Amity, NY, 1989, p.
58
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St. Ambrose is one of the four great fathers of the West and the teacher of Augustine. He was
born in Treves (modern Trier, Germany) on the Roman frontier. He became governor of Northern
Italy, residing in Milan, and there was influenced by the local Christians to became a catechumen.
From catechumen he became priest, and then with great reluctance he accepted election as bishop
of Milan. He took the Gospel literally and one of his first acts was to divest himself and the entire
diocese of Milan of all extraneous possessions and to give them to the poor. He found great
strength and inspiration in his rigorous application of Christ's commands and began to hear
Christ's word within. With amazing eloquence, he cried out against the inequity between the status
of the rich few and the numerous poor. He emphasized that creation and its resources were for all
people. His pastoral emphasis was the independence of the Church from secular authority. Other-
worldliness was a constant theme of his teaching.
Why do the injuries to nature delight you? For everyone has the world been created, which you
few rich are trying to keep for yourselves. For not merely the earth, but the very sky, the air,
and the sea are claimed for the use of the rich few. How many people can this air feed which
you include within your widespread estate?
De Nabuthe 3,
The earth belongs to everyone and every living thing, not just to the rich; but fewer are
they who do not use what belongs to all than those who do. Therefore in giving alms,
you are paying a debt, you are not bestowing what is not due. Scripture says to you, "If
a poor man speak to thee, lend him thy ear without grudging; give him his due, and let
him have patient and friendly answer" (Eccles. 4:8).
De Nabuthe 11
A possession ought to belong to the possessor, not the possessor to the possession.
Whosoever, therefore, does not use his patrimony as a possession, who does not know
how to give and distribute to the poor, he is a servant of his wealth, not its master...
De Nabuthe 14
It is not from part of your own goods that you give to the poor, but
rather from what belongs to them. This is because you have
appropriated to yourself what was originally given for the use of
everyone. The earth has been given for the whole world and not
merely for use by the wealthy.
De Nabuthe 12:53
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God rests in redeemed humanity, not nature
I give thanks to our Lord God, who made a work of such a nature that he could find rest
therein. He made the heavens. I do not read that He rested. He made the earth. I do not read
that he rested. He made the sun, moon and stars. I do not read that He found rest there. But I
do read that He made the human person and then found rest in one whose sins He would
remit.
Creation 6
Nature has poured forth all things for the common use of all men. And God has
ordained that all things should be produced that there might be food in common
for all. Nature created common rights, but usurpation has transformed them into
private rights.
Again, consider the fact that it is the serpent and not man who is cursed. And the earth is not
cursed in itself, but is "cursed in your work" (Genesis 3:17, John 6:50). This is said in reference
to the soul. The earth is cursed if your works are earthly, that is, of this world. It is not cursed
as a whole. It will merely bring forth thorns and thistles if it is not diligently cared for by the
labor of human hands.
Paradise
Look at the birds of the air... If there is enough produce from the
abundance of harvest for the birds of the air who do not sow, yet
nevertheless Divine Providence gives them unfailing nourishment,
then indeed avarice must be the cause of our need.... We lose the
things that are common when we claim things as our own....
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The faithful replication of species
In the pine cone nature seems to express an image of itself; it preserves its
peculiar properties which it received from that divine and celestial command
and it repeats in the succession and order of the years its generation until the end
of time is fulfilled....
The Six Days of Creation III,16
The Word of God permeates every creature in the constitution of the world. Hence, as God has
ordained, all kinds of living creatures were quickly produced from the earth. In compliance with a
fixed law they all succeed each other according to their aspect and species. The lion generates a
lion; the tiger a tiger; the ox an ox; the swan a swan; and the eagle an eagle. What was once
enjoined became in nature a pattern for all time. Hence the earth has not ceased to offer the
homage of her service. The original species of living creatures is reproduced for future ages by
successive generations of its kind.
The Six Days of Creation VI,3
Each and every thing which is produced from the earth has its own reason for existence,
which as far as it can fulfills the general plan of creation. Some things are created for our
consumption; other things serve other purposes. There is nothing without a purpose; there
is nothing superfluous in what generates from the earth. What you may consider useless
has other purposes.... The Creator, therefore, is not liable for blame on these matters; and
actually His bounty is increased thereby, inasmuch as what you believed was created to
bring danger to you is designed to bring you health-giving remedies.
The Six Days of Creation III
Although you may lack money, you are not therefore devoid of grace. Although your house is
not commodious, your possessions are not limited. For the sky is open and the expanse of the
world is free. The elements have been granted to all for their common use. Rich and poor alike
enjoy the splendid ornaments of the universe.
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The wisdom of God's plan of creation
And perhaps some may wonder why sustenance for animals was provided before food
for man was created. In this matter we ought to take note of the depths of God's
wisdom in that He does not neglect the least of things. For the divine wisdom utters
these words in the Gospel: "Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or
gather into barns, yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of much more
value than they?" If these have been given food through the kindness of God, then no
one ought to pride himself on his own industry and natural ability. And one ought to
give simple and natural foods precedence over the rest.
The Six Days of Creation III
On paradise
Ambrose reminds us that we must be very careful in discussing the "place" of Paradise and its
nature. " On approaching this subject I seem to be possessed by an unusual eagerness in my
quest to clarify the facts about Paradise, its place, and its nature to those who are desirous of
this knowledge. This is all the more remarkable since the Apostle did not know whether he was
in the body or out of the body, yet he says that he "was caught up to the third heaven" (II Cor.
12:2). And again he says: I know such a man-- whether in the body or out of the body I do not
know, God knows--that he was caught up into paradise and heard secret words that man may
not repeat" (II Cor. 12:3-5).... If Paradise, then, is of such a nature that Paul alone, or one like
Paul, could scarcely see it while alive, and still was unable to remember whether he saw it in
the body or out of the body, and moreover, heard words that he was forbidden to reveal-- if this
be true, how will it be possible for us to declare the position of Paradise which we have not
been able to see, and even if we had succeeded in seeing it, we would be forbidden to share this
information with others? And again, since Paul shrank from exalting himself by reason of the
sublimity of the revelation, how much more ought we to strive not to be too anxious to disclose
that which leads to danger by its very revelation! The subject of Paradise should not, therefore,
be treated lightly.
Paradise 1:287-288.
Take note that God placed man (in Paradise), not in respect to the image of God, but in respect
to the body of man. The incorporeal does not exist in a place. He placed man in Paradise, just
as He placed the sun in heaven.
Paradise 1:289
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The beasts of the field
The beasts of the field and the birds of the air which were brought to Adam are our irrational
senses, because beasts and animals represent the diverse passions of the body, whether of the
more violent kind or even of the more temperate.... God granted to you the power of being able
to discern by the application of sober logic the species of each and every object, in order that
you may be induced to form a judgement on all of them. God called them all to your attention,
so that you might realize that your mind is superior to all of them.
Paradise 11:329-330
Woman was made out of the rib of Adam. She was not made of the same earth
with which he was formed, in order that we might realize that the physical
nature of both man and woman is identical and that there was one source for the
propagation of the human race. For that reason, neither was man created
together with a woman, nor were two men and two women created at the
beginning, but first a man and after that a woman. God willed it that human
nature be established as one. Thus, from the very inception of the human stock
He eliminated the possibility that many disparate natures should arise.... Reflect
on the fact that He did not take a part from Adam's soul but a rib from his body,
that is to say, not soul from a soul, but "bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh"
will this woman be called.
The world is an example of the workings of God, because while we observe the work, the
Worker is brought before us.
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God created heaven and earth.... Why then do some say that God created evil, although from
principles contrary and opposed nothing whatsoever is generated? Light does not generate
death nor does light give birth to darkness....
From what source did nature derive it [evil]? No rational being denies that evil exists in
the world... in which accident and death are so frequent. Yet ... evil is not a living substance,
but a deviation of mind and soul away from the path of true virtue, a deviation which frequently
steals upon the souls of the unaware. The greater danger is not, therefore, from what is external
to us, but from our own selves. Our adversary is within us, within us in the author of error,
locked within our very selves. Look closely on your intentions; explore your disposition of
mind and the cupidities of your heart. You yourself are the cause of your wickedness.... Why
do you summon an alien nature to furnish an excuse for your sins.
Some may wonder why sustenance for animals was provided before food for man was created.
In this manner we ought to take note of the depths of God's wisdom, in that He does not neglect
the least of things. For the Divine Wisdom utters these words in the Gospel: "Look at the birds
of the air; they do not sow or reap or gather into barns, yet your heavenly Father feeds them.
Are not you of much more value than they?" If these birds have their food through the kindness
of God, then no one ought to pride himself on his own industry and natural ability. And no one
ought to despise simple and natural food.... The former is the food of the temperate; the rest of
foods contribute to delight and luxury. One is common to all living things; the other to a few.
Hence, such a fact furnishes us with an example for frugal living, and is a wise injunction that
we ought to be content to live on simple herbs, on cheap vegetables and fruits such as nature
has presented to us and the generosity of God has offered to us. This sort of food is also
wholesome and useful in that it wards off disease and prevents indigestion.
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Each and every thing which is produced from the earth has its own reason for existence, which,
as far as it can, fulfills the general plan for creation. Some things are created for our
consumption; other things serve other uses. There is nothing without a purpose; there is nothing
superfluous in what germinates from the earth. What you consider useless has use for others; as
a matter of fact, it often is useful to you in another way. That which does not serve for food has
medicinal qualities, and it often happens that what is harmful to you provides harmless food for
birds or wild beasts. Thus starlings feed on the hemlock without any ill effects, since by their
physical nature they are immune to its deadly and poisonous sap.... Those who are expert on the
nature of hellebore say that it provides food and sustenance to quail and that through a certain
natural composition of their bodies, these birds are immune to its harmful effects. The fact is
that through medical science this plant frequently serves to preserve the health of the human
body, to which it seems to be adverse. As a consequence, what the doctor's hand converts to the
preservation of our health becomes even to a greater degree, through its natural qualities, a
means for providing for others....
The Creator therefore is not liable to blame in these matters; actually His bounty is
increased inasmuch as what you believed was created to bring danger is designed to bring you
health-giving remedies. ...
Sheep and goats learn to shun what is harmful and for this they make use of smell. Do
they not go so far as to recognize a way of avoiding danger and of protecting their health? Do
they not distinguish between what is noxious and what is beneficial? They also discern what
herbs may be used as medicine in times of illness.
Therefore, if irrational animals know what herbs may serve as medicine or what
methods may bring assistance to them, can man, who is born with the faculty of reason, be
ignorant of this? Or is he such a stranger to truth that he cannot perceive what are the uses
especially designed for everything?
Enter with me into this mighty and wonderful theater of the whole of visible creation.
Not slight is the service rendered to strangers by one who watches for their arrival
with the intent to conduct them on a tour around the city and to point out to them the
more notable monuments. How much more ought you to welcome one who, as I do,
conducts you in this assembly by the guiding hand of my discourse through your own
native land and who points out to you each and every species and genus, with the
desire to show you from all these examples how the Creator of the universe has
conferred more abundant benefits on you than on all the rest of His creatures.... While
you share with the rest of creatures your corporeal weakness, you possess above and
beyond all other creatures a faculty of the soul which in itself has nothing in common
with the rest of created things....
[Some may say] How long are we to learn of other living creatures while we do not
know ourselves? Tell me what is to be for my benefit, that I may know myself. That is
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a just complaint. However, the order which Scripture laid down must however be
retained. We cannot fully know ourselves without first knowing the nature of all living
creatures.
Six Days of Creation, Book VI:
The Sixth Day, 1:2-2:3
The image of God is virtue, not infirmity. The image of God is wisdom. The
image of God is He alone who has said, "I and the Father are one," thus
possessing the likeness of the Father so as to have a unity of divinity and of
plentitude.
God is of an uncompounded nature; nothing can be added to Him, and that alone which is
divine has He in His nature; filling all things, yet nowhere Himself confounded with aught;
penetrating all things, yet Himself nowhere to be penetrated; present in all His fullness at one
and the same moment, in heaven, in earth, in the deepest depth of the sea; to sight invisible, by
speech not to be declared; by feeling not to be measured; to be followed by faith; to be adorned
with devotion; so that whatsoever title excels in depth of spiritual import, in setting forth glory
and honor, in exalting power, this you may know to belong of right to God.
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import, in setting forth glory and honor, in exalting power, this you may
know to belong of right to God.
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The Holy Spirit is the Creator
Who can doubt that the Holy Spirit gives life to all things? Since both He, as the Father and the
Son, is the Creator of all things; and the Almighty Father is understood to have done nothing
without the Holy Spirit; and since also in the beginning of creation the Spirit moved upon the
water.
So when the Spirit was moving upon the water, the creation was without grace; but after
this world, being created, underwent the operation of the Spirit, it gained all the beauty of that
grace, wherewith the world is illuminated. And because the grace of the universe cannot abide
without the Holy Spirit the prophet declared when he said "Thou will take away Thy Spirit, and
they will fail and be turned again into dust. Send forth Thy Spirit, and they shall be made, and
Thou wilt renew all the face of the earth." Not only, then, did he teach that no creature can
stand without the Holy Spirit, but also that the Spirit is the Creator of the whole creation.
And who can deny that the creation of the earth is the work of the Holy Spirit, Whose work
it is that creation is renewed? For if they desire to deny that it was created by the Spirit, since
they cannot deny that it must be renewed by the Spirit, they who desire to sever the Persons
must maintain that the operation of the Holy Spirit is superior to that of the Father and the Son,
which is far from the truth; for there is no doubt that the restored earth is better than it was
created. Or if at first, without the operation of the Holy Spirit, the Father and the Son made the
earth, but the operation of the Holy Spirit was joined on afterwards, it will seem that that which
was made required His aid, which was then added. But far be it from any one to think this,
namely, that the divine work should be believed to have a change in the Creator, an error
brought in by Manicheus.
Gentile writers have pointed out that the Spirit within nourishes heaven
and earth, and even the glittering orbs of moon and stars. They do not
deny that the strength of creatures exists through the Spirit. But you would
think that they refer to a Spirit produced of the air. If they declared a Spirit
of the air to be the Author of all things, do we doubt that the Spirit of God
is the Creator of all things?
Grace in creation
So when the Spirit was moving upon the water, the creation was without grace; but
after this world, being created, underwent the operation of the Spirit, it gained all the
beauty of that grace, wherewith the world is illuminated. And because the grace of the
universe cannot abide without the Holy Spirit the prophet declared when he said
"Thou will take away Thy Spirit, and they will fail and be turned again into dust. Send
forth Thy Spirit, and they shall be made, and Thou wilt renew all the face of the
earth." Not only, then, did he teach that no creature can stand without the Holy Spirit,
but also that the Spirit is the Creator of the whole creation.
And who can deny that the creation of the earth is the work of the Holy Spirit, Whose
work it is that creation is renewed? For if they desire to deny that it was created by the
Spirit, since they cannot deny that it must be renewed by the Spirit, they who desire to
sever the Persons must maintain that the operation of the Holy Spirit is superior to that
of the Father and the Son, which is far from the truth; for there is no doubt that the
restored earth is better than it was created. Or if at first, without the operation of the
Holy Spirit, the Father and the Son made the earth, but the operation of the Holy Spirit
was joined on afterwards, it will seem that that which was made required His aid,
which was then added. But far be it from any one to think this, namely, that the divine
work should be believed to have a change in the Creator, an error brought in by
Manicheus.
On the Holy Spirit, Book I, 5, 32-34
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One of the four western fathers, Saint Jerome is especially known for translating the Bible into
Latin, which we know today as the Vulgate translation. Jerome chronicled the stories of the monks
of the Egyptian desert and graphically related the amazing levels of spiritual development to which
they attained. His ecological importance is primarily as a chronicler of fourth and early fifth century
Christian experience and suppositions about wilderness and the animals. He describes in great detail
the rapport and friendships which often developed between the desert monks and the wild animals
which lived near their austere dwellings. These stories he provides us from the conventional
understanding of his day which was shaped largely by monastic experience.
Jerome relates that the desert fathers and mothers went to wild places to
flee the corruption of cities, to wage war with their passions, but especially
to encounter the holy. He writes, "to me the town is a prison, and solitude
is paradise."
One of the brothers of the monastery of the Blessed Apollo related to me this story:
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In the times which are past a certain holy man, whose name was Ammon,
used to dwell in this monastery, and he it was who converted me. Thieves
would sometimes vex him, for they stole his apparel and food, and by
reason of their vexatious attacks he went forth and departed into the desert.
And he returned with two great serpents and commanded them to guard the
door of his abode. When the thieves returned, according to their custom,
they saw the serpents and marveled, and, by reason of their fear, they fell
down on their faces upon the ground. Then, having gone forth and seen the
thieves, the blessed man spoke unto them, and reviled them, saying,
“Observe how much more worse you are than the serpents! These creatures
are, for God’s sake, obedient to our command, but you are neither afraid of
God, nor do you hold His servants in respect. And he took them into his
dwelling, and fed them, and admonished them, and told [them] that they
ought to change their way of life. And straightway they repented and took
up their habitation in a monastery, and they excelled more than many in
spiritual works, until at length they also were able to work miracles.
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143
144
An early monk and ascetical writer who lived near Sketis in the Egypt desert, his many texts on
prayer and holiness are still used as guidance for monastic life. He lived in the harsh, hot desert
and was renowned for his learning and austerity. His writing is abundant with references to nature
as a storehouse of lessons which he considers crucial for the attainment of a spiritually whole life.
Evagrius, following others before him, divided the spiritual journey into three stages, called
theoriae: praktike, physike, and theologia. In the first stage, praktike, a person learns to practice
virtue, becomes obedient to basic biblical commands, and finds purification of the passionate
nature. This leads to the second stage, physike, during which a person learns a natural form of
contemplation and becomes able to see created reality as it exists in God. In the final stage,
theologia, the disciple is ready for contemplation of God and experiential knowledge of the Logos
and the Trinity. The importance of Evagrius for modern ecology lies in his concise description of
the interior attitudes necessary to achieve contemplation of nature and literacy regarding God’s
lessons in creation.
There came to St. Anthony in the desert one of the educated men of that
time and he said, "Father, how can you endure to live here, deprived as
you are of all consolation from books?" Anthony answered, "My book,
philosopher, is the nature of created things, and whenever I wish, I can
read in it the works of God."
“Texts on Prayer,”
Quoted in Sources Chretiennes,
Cerf., Paris, 1971, p. 694.
As for those who are far from God..., God has made it possible for them to come near to the
knowledge of him and his love for them through the medium of creatures. These he has
produced, as the letters of the alphabet, so to speak, by his power and his wisdom, that is to
say, by his Son and by his Spirit.
The whole of this ministry is performed by creatures for the benefit of those who are
far from God.
“Letter to Melania,” (in Hausherr, p. 84)
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Practice of the virtues
Evagrius says that a sign that a person is ready to move up the ladder of spiritual formation
from the first stage of praktike [practice of the virtues which purifies] to the second stage of
physike, or the ability to enter into contemplation of nature, is:
Other signs which he lists are the ability of the person to pray at length without distraction and
awareness of the powers that reside in the soul.
“Only when these signs are present... can the world be seen as it truly
exists — in God.”
The Praktikos and Chapters on Prayer:
Evagrius Ponticus, Cistercian
Publications, Kalamazoo, 1981, pp. 33-
34.
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To progress in thinking about creatures is painful and wearisome. The contemplation
of the Holy Trinity is ineffable peace and silence.
Centuries 1:65
The saints are exceedingly loving and gentle to mankind, and even
to the beasts.... Surely we ought to show them great kindness and
gentleness for many reasons, but, above all, because they are of the
same origin as ourselves.
Homily XXXIX: 35
Comentary on Epistle to the Romans
The tree of life was in the midst of Paradise as a reward; the tree of knowledge as an
object of contest and struggle. Having kept the commandment regarding this tree, you
will receive a reward. And behold the wondrous thing. Everywhere in Paradise every
kind of tree blossoms, everywhere they are abundant in fruit; only in the center are
there two trees as an object of battle and exercise.
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On the Creation of the World V, 7
God leaves them who are not minded to receive what comes from Him.... But consider
this: He set before them a form of doctrine, which is the world; He gave them reason and
an understanding capable of perceiving what was needful....
God never made some people rich and others poor. God gave the earth
to everyone. The whole earth belongs to the Lord, and the fruits of the
earth should be available to all.
Homilies on Romans
Mark the wise dispensation of God.... He has made certain things common, as the sun, air,
earth, and water, the sky, the sea, the light, the stars, whose benefits are dispensed equally to all
as brethren.... And mark, that concerning things that remain common there is no contention but
all is peaceable. But when one attempts to possess himself of anything, to make it his own, then
contention is introduced, as if nature herself were indignant.
Tell me, then, how did you become rich? From whom did you receive it, and from
whom he who transmitted it to you? And can you, ascending through many generations, show
the acquisition as just? It cannot be. The root and origin of it must have been injustice. Why?
Because God in the beginning did not make one man rich and another poor. Nor did He
afterwards take and show to anyone treasures of gold, and deny to the others the right of
searching for it. Rather, He left the earth free to all alike.
Homilies on I Timothy
One way of coming to knowledge of God is that which is provided by the whole of creation;
and another, no less significant, is that which is offered by conscience, the whole of which we
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have expounded upon at great length, showing how you have a self-taught knowledge of what
is good and what is not so good, and how conscience urges all this upon you from within. Two
teachers, then, are given you from the beginning: creation and conscience. Neither of them has
voice to speak out; yet they teach men in silence.
This is robbery not to share one's resources. Perhaps what I am saying astonishes you. Yet be
not astonished. For I shall offer you the testimony of the sacred scriptures, which say that not
only to rob others' property, but also not to share your own with others, is robbery and
greediness and theft... "for the robbery of the poor is in your houses" (Malachi 3:10). Because
you have not made offerings, the prophet says, therefore have you robbed the things that belong
to the poor. This he says by way of showing the rich that they are in possession of the property
of the poor, even if it is a patrimony that they have received, even if they have gathered their
money elsewhere.
De Lazaro 2, 4, 48:987
God created everything, not only for our use, but also that we, seeing the great
wealth of his creations, might be astonished at the might of the Creator and might
understand that all this was created with wisdom and unutterable goodness, for
the honor of man, who was to appear.
"To till." What was lacking in Paradise? And even if a tiller was needed, where was the plow?
Where were the other implements of agriculture? The "tilling" (or "working") of God consisted
in tilling and keeping the commandments of God, remaining faithful to the commandment....
Just as to believe in God is the work of God (John 6:29), so also it was a work to believe the
commandments that if he touched (the forbidden tree) he would die, and if he did not touch it,
he would live. The work was the keeping of the spiritual words.... "To till and to keep it," it is
said. To keep it from whom? To keep it for oneself; not to lose it by transgressing the
commandments; to keep Paradise for oneself, observing the commandment.
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On the Creation of the World V, 5
"Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven." ... For you must long, says He, for heaven;
however, even before heaven, He has bidden us make the earth a heaven and do and say all
things, even while we are continuing in it, as having our conversation there.... For there is
nothing to hinder our reaching the perfection of the powers above, because we inhabit the
earth; but it is possible even while abiding here, to do all, as though already placed on high.
What He says, therefore is this: "As there all things are done without hindrance, and the angels
are not partly obedient and partly disobedient, but in all things yield and obey; so vouchsafe
that we men may not do Thy will by halves, but perform all things as Thou willest."
Do you see how He has also taught us to be modest, by making it clear that virtue is not
of our endeavors only, but also of the grace from above? And again, He has enjoined each one
of us, who pray, to take upon himself the care of the whole world. For He did not at all say,
"Thy will be done," in me, or in us, but everywhere on the earth; so that error may be
destroyed, and truth implanted, and all wickedness cast out, and virtue return, and no difference
in this respect be henceforth between heaven and earth.
Creation is good
Creation is not evil. It is both good and a pattern of God's wisdom, power and love of
mankind.... It leads us to knowledge of God (and) makes us know the Master better.
“The heavens declare the glory of God.” How then, tell me, do they declare it?
Voice have they none; mouth they do not possess; tongue is not theirs! How
then do they declare? By means of the spectacle itself! For when you see the
beauty, the breadth, the height, the position, the form, the stability thereof during
so long a period; hearing as it were a voice, and being instructed by the spectacle
itself, thou admires Him who created a body so fair and strange! The heavens
may be silent, but the sight of them emits a voice that is louder than a trumpet’s
sound.
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On the Statutes 9.4
God not only produced the creation, but He holds together what He produced. Whether you are
speaking about angels, archangels, the powers above, or simply about every creature both
visible and invisible, they all enjoy the benefit of His providence. And if they are ever deprived
of that providential action, they waste away, they perish, they are gone.
The Incomprehensible Nature of God
12:51
From the creation, learn to admire the Lord! And if any of the things which you
see exceed your comprehension, and you are not able to find the reason for its
existence, then for this reason, glorify the Creator that the wisdom of His works
surpasses your own understanding.
There is nothing that has been created [that is] without some reason, even if human
nature is incapable to knowing precisely the reason for some parts of creation.
God generously gives all things that are much more necessary than money, such as air, water,
fire, the sun – all such things. It is surely not true to say that the rich person enjoys the sun’s
rays more than the poor person does. It is not correct to say that the rich person takes in a more
abundant supply of air than the poor person does. No, all these things lie at the equal and
common disposition of all.
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Homilies on St. John
We do all things ignoring the fact that we shall have to give account of everything that goes
beyond our use, for we thus misuse the gifts of God. For He has not given us these things that
we alone may use them, but that we may alleviate the need of our fellow human beings.
Homilies on Genesis, 4
Indeed the magnitude and beauty of creation, and also the very manner of it,
display a God Who is the artificer of the universe. He has made the mode of this
creation to be our best teacher, by compounding all things in a manner that
transcends the course of nature.
“On the day God made Adam,” the text says, “in God’s image he made him.” This is to say, he
appointed him ruler of all visible things. This is the meaning of “in his image” in respect both
of his control and his lordship. You see, just as the God of all has control of all things both
visible and invisible, being Creator of everything as he is, so too after creating this rational
being he intended him to have control of all visible things. Hence he accorded him also a
spiritual being in his wish that he not see death for ever; but since through indifference he fell
and transgressed the command given him, out of fidelity to his own loving kindness he did not
turn away at this but while stripping him of immortality he placed this creature he had
condemned to death in almost the same position of control.
Commentary on Genesis, ver. 5:1-3, Homily
21
The Lord God said, “I will wipe off the face of the earth the human being I have made,
everything from human being to cattle.”
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Why is it that when human beings decline into evil, the wild animals endure the same
punishment? Everything was brought into existence for human beings, so once they were
removed from the circle, what need would there be of the animals? Hence they also share the
punishment so that you may learn the degree of God’s anger.
Just as in the beginning when the first formed person sinned, the earth received the curse,
so too in this case when the human being was on the point of being blotted out, the wild
animals also share the punishment. Just as on the other hand, when the human being is pleasing
to God, creation also shares in the human beings prosperity (as Paul also says, Creation, too,
will be set free from its servitude to decay WI th a view to the freedom of the children of God’s
glory), so too, when the human being is about to be punished on account of the great number of
sins and to be consigned to destruction, the cattle and the reptiles and birds are likewise caught
up in the deluge that is due to overcome the whole world.
Commentaries on Genesis, Ver. 6:7
Homily 22:17
“God said to Noah and his sons with him, ‘Lo, I am making my covenant with you and with
your offspring and with every living being that is with you, including both birds and cattle, and
with all the wild beasts of the earth that are with you’” (Genesis 9:8-11). This promise he had
in fact already made even before the blessing when He said, as you heard, “I will not proceed to
curse the earth (Genesis 8:21). Even if people continue to display their wickedness, yet I no
longer submit the human race to such terrible punishment. In other words, He shows His
ineffable love by making the promise once again so that the good man [Noah] may be able to
take heart [and not fear another calamity].
His [God’s] purpose, therefore, was to eliminate all apprehension from Noah’s thinking
and for him to be quite assured that this would not happen again. He said, remember, just as I
brought on the deluge out of love, so as to put a stop to their wickedness and prevent their
going to further extremes, so in this case too it is out of love that I promise never to do it again,
so that you may live free of all dread and in this way see your present life to its close....
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“I will keep my covenant with you: no more will all the creatures perish in the water of a
deluge, and never again will there be a deluge to destroy the whole earth.” Do you see the
extent of the agreement? Do you see the unspeakable generosity of the promises? Notice how
He once again extends His generosity to the animals and wild beasts, and rightly so.
“Think not that I am come to destroy, but to fulfill. For verily I say unto you, Til heaven and
earth pass, not one jot nor one tittle shall pass from the law until all comes to pass.”
And here he [the Lord] signifies to us obscurely that the fashion of the whole world is
being changed. Nor did he set it down without purpose, but... in order to introduce another
discipline: if at least the works of creation are to be transformed, and mankind is to be called to
another country and to a higher way of practicing how to live.
Wilderness as the mother of quiet
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The value of gold
Let us not consider that wealth is anything great, nor that gold is any better than clay. The value
of a substance does not come from its name but from what we think about it. For if we were to
investigate the matter carefully, iron is far more necessary than gold. Gold brings nothing
useful into our lives, but iron serves countless arts and supplies many of our needs.
Baptismal Instructions
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157
One of the great Latin Fathers, St. Augustine was a black Numidean and convert from
Manicheanism who became Bishop of North Africa. His writings depict the cosmos afire with a
radiant beauty which everywhere portrays the fecund qualities of God. Nature is so transparent of
the magnificence and "up-building" of God, says Augustine, that it can instruct those who are astute
regarding the right conduct of human life. Augustine continually taught that creation is good, for he
saw a trinitarian dimension permeating everything in the cosmos. The often quoted phrase,
"vestigium Trinitatis," or the "vestiges of the Holy Trinity" originates in his writings. He is known
for molding the structure of the Church in Africa as well as the mind of the Church in the West.
How can I tell you of the rest of creation with all of its beauty and utility, which the divine
greatness has given to man to please his eyes and serve his purposes? ...
Shall I speak of the manifold and various loveliness of sky and earth and sea; of the
plentiful supply and wonderful qualities of light, of sun, moon and stars; of the shade of trees;
of the colors and perfume and song; of the variety of animals, of which the smallest in size are
often the most wonderful — the works of ants and bees astonishing us more than the huge
bodies of whales?
Shall I speak of the sea, which itself is so grand a spectacle, when it arrays itself as it
were in vestures of various colors, now running through every shade of green, and again
becoming purple or blue? Is it not delightful to look at the storm and experience the soothing
complacency which it inspires...? What shall I say of the numberless foods to alleviate hunger,
the variety of seasonings to stimulate the appetite which are scattered everywhere by nature,
and for which we are not indebted to the art of cookery? How many natural herbs are there for
preserving and restoring health? How graceful is the alteration of day and night! How pleasant
the breezes that cool the air! How abundant the supply of clothing furnished us by plants, trees
and animals! Can we enumerate all the blessings which we enjoy?
God's governance is not by domination and not by the exercise of heteronomous [subject to
different laws of growth] might, but by allowing each creature and thing its own autonomy
within law.... God's governance is not just spiritual, but physical and includes the most
scorned creatures. He governs all things in such a way that he allows them to function and
behave in ways proper to them.
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Some people, in order to discover God, read books. But there is a
great book: the very appearance of created things. Look above you!
Look below you! Note it. Read it. God, whom you want to discover,
never wrote that book with ink. Instead He set before your eyes the
things that He had made. Can you ask for a louder voice than that?
Why, heaven and earth shout to you: "God made me!"
They (the heretics and pagans) do not consider how admirable these things (of creation) are in
their own places, how excellent in their own natures, how beautifully adjusted to the rest of
creation, and how much grace they contribute to the universe by their own contributions, as to a
commonwealth, and how serviceable they are to one another and even to ourselves, if we use
them with a knowledge of fit adaptations. And thus divine providence admonishes us not to
foolishly vituperate things, but to investigate their purpose with care, and where our mental
capacity or infirmity is at fault, to believe that there is a purpose though hidden.
Confessions XI:xxii
Letters 138:1
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New potentialities within creation
(There are "seminal reasons" for new developments within creation, and these lie hidden,
waiting to spring to life in their own time, Augustine says.) All these things indeed have
originally and primarily already been created in a kind of web of the elements; but they make
their appearance when they get the opportunity. For just as mothers are pregnant with their
young, so the world is pregnant with things that are still to come into being....
Human possessions
Whence does anyone possess what he or she has? Is it not from human law? For by divine law,
the earth and its fullness are the Lord's; the poor and the rich God has made from one mud, and
the poor and the rich He sustains on one earth. Nevertheless, by human law, one says, "This
estate is mine, this house is mine, this servant is mine." This is by human law therefore -- by
the law of emperors.
In Ioann 6:25
Evils abound in the world in order that the world may not engage our love.
But what is this evil in the world? For the sky and the earth and the waters
and the things that are in them, the fishes and the birds and the trees are
not evil. All these are good. It is the actions of men who make the world
evil.
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Sermones ad Populum, 1st sermon, 80:8
Many foolish men, unable to contemplate and discern creation, in its several places and rank,
performing its movements at the nod and commandment of God, think that God does indeed
rule all things above, but things below He despises, casts aside, abandons, so that He neither
cares for them nor guides nor rules them; but that they are ruled by chance. What sort of
Providence is this? they say. "If it were God that gave rain, would He rain into the sea? Getulia
is thirsty and it rains into the sea." They think that they handle the matter cleverly.
He that argues thusly is already satisfied. He thinks himself learned, but he is not willing to
learn, and he would find that everything happens upon earth by God's Providence, and he
would wonder at the arrangement of even the limbs of a flea. Attend to this, beloved. Who has
arranged the limbs of a flea and a gnat that they should have their proper order, life, motion?
Consider one little creature, even the very smallest. Consider the order of its limbs and the
animation of its life and how it moves. How does it avoid death, love life, seek pleasure, avoid
pain, exert diverse senses, vigorously use movements suitable to itself? Who gave the sting to
the mosquito for it to suck blood with? How narrow is the stinger whereby it sucks? Who
arranged all of this? If you are amazed at these smallest of things, praise Him who is great.
Hold this, my brothers, let none shake you from your faith or from sound doctrine. He who
made the Angel to dwell in heaven, the same also made the worm to dwell upon earth. He made
not the angel to creep in the mud nor the worm to move in heaven. Observe then the whole,
praise the whole. He then who ordered the limbs of the worm, does He not govern the clouds?
There is also in that sea something which transcends all creatures, great and small. What is
this? Let us hear the Psalm: "There is that Leviathan, whom Thou has formed to make sport of
him." This is a great mystery; and yet I am about utter what you already know. You know that a
certain serpent is the enemy of the Church; you have not seen him with the eyes of the flesh,
but you see him with the eyes of faith.
This serpent, our ancient enemy, glowing with rage, cunning in his wiles, is in the mighty
sea. "Here is that Leviathan, whom thou hast formed to make sport of him." Do thou now make
sport of the serpent; for, for this end was this serpent made. He, falling by his own sin from the
sublime realms of the heavens, and made devil instead of angel, received a certain region of his
own in this mighty and spacious sea. What thou thinkest his kingdom, is his prison.... How much
can he do? Unless by permission, he can do nothing. Do thou so act, that he may not be allowed
to attack thee, or, if he be allowed to tempt thee, he may depart vanquished, and may not gain
thee.
Learn in the creature to love the Creator, and in the work Him who made it. Let
not that which was made by Him take hold of thee, so that thou lose Him by
Whom thou also art thyself made.
Commentary on Psalm 39
The explanation, then, of the goodness of creation is in the goodness of God. This is a
reasonable and sufficient explanation whether considered in the light of philosophy or of faith.
It puts an end to all controversies concerning the origin of the world.
Thus man is “renewed unto the knowledge of God, according to the image
of his Creator,” and becoming “the spiritual man judges all things”....
Now, that he “judges all things,” — that means that he has dominion over
the fish of the sea and fowl that fly in the heavens, and all domestic and
wild animals, and every part of the earth, and all creeping creatures that
move upon the earth. This he exercises by virtue of the understanding of
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his mind, through which he “perceives the things that are of the Spirit of
God.”
Confessions 13:22-23
“He was in the world, and the world was made through Him.” Do not imagine that He was in
the world in such a way as the earth is in the world... or the trees, cattle and men are in the
world. He was not in the world in such a way. But how was He? As the master builder who
governs what He has made. For He did not make it in the way a craftsman makes a chest. The
chest which he makes is external to him; and when it is constructed, it has been situated in
another place. And however nearby he is, he who is constructing it sits in another place and is
external to that which he is constructing. ... But God constructs while infused in the world. He
constructs while situated everywhere. He does not withdraw from anywhere.
He does not direct the structure which He constructs as someone on the outside. By the
presence of His majesty, He makes what He makes; by His own presence He governs what He
has made.
Every creature has a special beauty proper to its nature, and when a man ponders the
matter well, these creatures are a cause of intense admiration and enthusiastic praise of
their all-powerful Maker. For He has wrought them all in His wisdom. ... He creates
them tiny in body, keen in sense, and full of life, so that we may feel a deeper wonder
at the agility of the mosquito on the wing than at the size of a beast of burden on the
hoof, and may admire more intensely the works of the smallest ants than the burdens
of the camels.
I cannot show you my God, but I can show you his works. “Everything was
made by him” (John 1:3). He created the world in its newness, he who has no
beginning. He who is eternal created time. He who is unmoved made movement.
Look at his works and praise their maker.
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Sermon 261, 2 (PL 38: 1203)
Everywhere let the common water of God have the glory, not the private falsehoods of men.
For it follows, “All the beasts of the wood shall drink” (Ps. 104:11). We indeed see this
in the visible creation, that the beasts of the wood drink of springs, and of streams that run
between the mountains. But since it has pleased God to hide his wisdom in the figures of such
things (as animals and parts of creation), not to take it away from earnest seekers, but to close it
to them who care not, and open it to them that knock. It has also pleased our Lord God Himself
to exhort you by us to this, that in all these things which are said as if of the bodily and visible
creation, we may seek something spiritually hidden, in which when found we may rejoice....
Holy Scripture witnesses this in many places...
“In wisdom hast thou made them all.” All therefore hast thou made in Christ....
The earth is full of the creation of Christ. And how so? We discern how: for
what was not made by the Father through the Son? Whatever walketh and doth
crawl on earth, whatever doth swim in the waters, whatever flieth in the air,
whatever doth revolve in heaven, how much more then the earth, the whole
universe, is the work of God. But he seems to me to speak here of some new
creation, of which the Apostle saith, “If any man be in Christ, he is a new
creature: old things have passed away; behold, all things are become new. And
all things are of God.” All who believe in Christ, who put off the old man and
put on the new, are a new creature. “The earth is full of thy works.” On one spot
of the earth He was crucified, in o ne small spot that seed feel into the earth, and
died; but it brought forth great fruit....
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“The earth is full of Thy creation.” Of what creation of Thine is the earth
full? Of all trees and shrubs, of all animals and flocks, and of the whole of
the human race; the earth is full of the creation of God. We see, now, read,
recognize, praise and in these we preach of Him; yet we are not able to
praise respecting these things, as fully as our heart doth abound with
praise after the beautiful contemplation of them.
“The earth is the Lord’s and the fulness thereof; the encompass of the world, and all they
that dwell therein”; when the Lord, being glorified, is announced for the believing of all
nations; the whole compass of the world becomes His Church. “He hath founded it above
the seas.” He hath most firmly established it above the waves of this world, that they
should be subdued by it, and should not hurt it.
Ask the loveliness of the earth, ask the loveliness of the sea, ask the
loveliness of the wide airy spaces, ask the loveliness of the sky, ask the
order of the stars, ask the sun, making the daylight with its beams, ask the
moon tempering the darkness of the night that follows, ask the living
things which move in the waters, which tarry on the land, which fly in the
air. Ask the souls that are hidden, the bodies that are perceptive, the visible
things which must be governed, the invisible things that govern — ask
these things, and they will all answer you.
Yes, see we are lovely. Their loveliness is their confession. And all these
lovely but mutable things, who has made them, but Beauty immutable.
Sermons, Nr. 242.2
It would be ridiculous... to regard the defects of beasts, trees and other mutable and mortal
things as deserving of condemnation. Such defects do indeed effect the decay of their nature,
which is liable to dissolution; but these creatures have received their mode of being by the will
of their Creator, whose purpose is that they should bring to perfection the beauty of the lower
parts of the universe by their alteration and succession in the passage of the seasons; and this is
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a beauty in its own kind, finding its place among the constituent parts of the world.... Therefore
it is the nature of things considered in itself, without regard to our convenience or
inconvenience, that gives glory to the Creator... And so all nature’s substances are good,
because they exist and therefore have their own mode and kind of being, and, in their fashion, a
peace and harmony among themselves.
God as beauty
Confessions, 10:27
“For I shall see Thy heavens, the works of Thy fingers.” We read that the law was written by
the finger of God, and given through Moses, His holy servant: by which finger of God many
understand the Holy Spirit. We understand consistently with this that the books of both
Testaments are called “the heavens.” Now it is said too of Moses, by the magicians of king
Pharaoh, when they were conquered by him, “This is the finger of God.” ...
Accordingly the heavens above may also be interpreted as books, where he says, “For
thy glory has been raised above the heavens:” so that the complete meaning should be this, For
thy glory hath exceeded the declarations of all the Scriptures. “Out of the mouth of babes and
sucklings Thou has made perfect praise,” that they should begin by belief in the Scriptures,
who would arrive at knowledge of Thy glory, which has been raised above the Scriptures, in
that it passes by and transcends the announcements of all words and languages. Therefore hath
God lowered the Scriptures even to the capacity of babes and sucklings as it is sung in another
Psalm “And he lowered the heaven and came down” (Ps. 18:9). ... Hence, then is the rash and
blind promiser of truth, who is the enemy, destroyed, when the heavens, the works of God’s
fingers, are seen, that is, when the Scriptures, brought down even to the slowness of babes, are
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understood.... For these heavens, that is, these books, are the works of God’s fingers; for by the
operation of the Holy Spirit in the saints they were completed.
“And God saw that it was good.” The assertion of the goodness of the
created work corresponded with the goodness that was the reason for its
creation. Now, if this goodness is rightly interpreted as the Holy Spirit,
then the whole united Trinity is revealed to us in its works.... The visible
and tangible signs... signify the invisible and intelligible God, not only the
Father, but also the Son and the Holy Spirit, from whom are all things,
through whom are all things, and in whom are all things.
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This extraordinarily gifted spiritual guide grew up in Roman Gaul (France) where he studied
philosophy and astronomy before giving himself entirely over to the absorption of Holy Scripture
and to a striving to fulfill Christ’s call to “be perfect.” John Cassian journeyed first to Bethlehem
and then to Egypt where he lived with the monks of Scetis and embraced the practice of the
virtues. After seven years in the desert in departed for Constantinople where he became a pupil of
St. John Chrysostom; he was ordained by him into the diaconate. He then returned to the West and
settled near Marseilles where he founded two monasteries. He exemplifies the ascetic striving for
the self-denial of the spiritual athletes of Christ, and the deep care for creation alive in the monks
of the Egyptian desert. He is numbered among the founders of monasticism in the West.
A clear rule for self-control handed down by the Fathers is this: stop eating while you
are still hungry and do not continue until you are satisfied. When the Apostle said
'Make no provision to fulfill the desires of the flesh' (Romans 13:14), he was not
forbidding us to provide for the needs of life; he was warning us against self-
indulgence... self-esteem and pride....
You are a world within a world. Become quiet and look within yourself,
and see there the whole creation. Do not look at exterior things but turn all
your attention to that which lies within. Gather together your whole mind
within the intellectual treasure-house of your soul, and make ready for the
Lord a shrine free from images.
Ascetic Discourses,
Philokalia, Vol. 1.
We should remain within the limits imposed by our basic needs and strive with all our power
not to exceed them. For once we are carried a little beyond these limits in our desire for the
pleasures of life, there is then no criterion by which to check our onward movement, since no
bounds can be set to that which exceeds the necessary....
Once a man has passed beyond the limits of his natural needs, as he grows more
materialistic, he wants to put jam on his bread; and to water he adds a modicum of wine
required for his health, and then the most expensive vintages. He does not rest content with
essential clothing....
Ascetic Discourses
All this is contrary to nature, for the Creator has ordained the same natural
way of life for both us and the animals. "Behold," says God to man, "I
have given you every herb of the field, to serve as food for you and for the
beasts." Thus we have been given a common diet with the animals; but if
we use our powers of invention to turn this into something extravagant,
shall we not rightly be judged more unintelligent than they?
Nilus, in a letter to monks, probes the motives of Christians and seeks a lesson from creation
about why people behave as they do.
“Why do we forsake the pursuit of spiritual wisdom, and engage in agriculture and
commerce? What can be better than to entrust our anxieties to God, so that He may
help us with the farming? The soil is tilled and the seeds are sown by human effort;
then God sends the rain, watering the seeds in the soft womb of the earth and enabling
them to develop roots. He makes the sun to rise, warming the soil, and with this
warmth He stimulates the growth of the plants. He sends winds tempered to their
development. When young shoots begin to come up, He fans them with gentle
breezes, so that the crop is not scorched by hot streams of air. Then with steady winds
He ripens the milky substance of the grains inside the husks. At threshing-time He
provides fiery heat; for winnowing, suitable breezes. If one of these factors is missing,
all our human toil is wasted; our efforts achieve nothing when they are not sealed by
God’s gifts. Often, even when all of these factors are present, a violent and untimely
storm of rain spoils the grain as it is being threshed or when it has been heaped up
clean. Sometimes again it is destroyed by worms in the granary; the table, as it were, is
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already laid and then the food is suddenly snatched from our very mouths. What, then,
is the use of relying on our own efforts, since God controls the helm and directs all
things as He wills?”
Nilus, writing to monks, says that the solution to the problems of a life with many uncertainties
is to return to a way of being in which priorities are shaped by a spiritual integrity in which we
do not seek to avoid sufferings at the expense of spiritual virtue or truth. Wilderness, he says, is
the place where this can be found.
Let us avoid staying in towns and villages. It is better for their inhabitants to come
and visit us. Let us seek the wilderness and so draw after us the people who now
shun us. For Scripture praises those who ‘leave the cities and dwell in the rocks,
and are like the dove’ (Jeremiah 48:28). John the Baptist lived in the wilderness
and the population of entire towns came out to him. Men dressed in garments of
silk hastened to see his leather girdle; those who lived in houses with gilded
ceilings chose to endure hardships in the open air; and rather than sleep on beds
adorned with jewels they preferred to lie on the sand. All this they endured,
although it was contrary to their usual habits; for in their desire to see John the
Baptist and in their wonder at his holiness they did not notice the hardships and
discomfort. For holiness is held in higher honor than wealth; and the life of
stillness wins greater fame than fortune. How many rich men were there at that
time, proud of their glory, and yet today they are quite forgotten; whereas the
miraculous life of this humble desert-dweller is acclaimed until this day, and his
memory is greatly revered by all. For the renown of holiness is eternal, and its
intrinsic virtues proclaim its value....
Why do we try to make other people’s property our own, weighing ourselves
down with material fetters, and paying no attention to the prophet’s imprecation:
‘Woe to him who gathers what is not his own, and heavily loads his yoke’ (cf.
Habbakuk 2:6, LXX transl). Those who pursue us are, as Jeremiah says, ‘swifter
than the eagles of heaven (Lam. 4:19); but we weigh ourselves down with
worldly things, move slowly along the road, and so are easily overtaken by our
pursuer, covetousness, which Paul taught us to flee (cf. Col. 3:5). Even if we are
not heavily laden, we must still run as fast as we can, or else the enemy will
overtake us.
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St. Patrick (385 - 471)
The patron saint of Ireland, his father was a deacon, his grandfather a priest (celibacy was not yet a
rule for the Western clergy); his uncle the renowned St. Martin of Tours. For six years, Patrick was
a slave in Ireland before he escaped to the continent. Around the year 432 Patrick returned to
Ireland as a priest to begin the missionary work of conversion. He climbed the high conical
mountain, now called Crough Patrick, over-looking the Atlantic Ocean and the islands of Clew Bay.
He meditated there for forty days and prayed for the conversion of the Irish people amidst stormy
winds and torrential rains. St. Patrick accomplished three great things: He organized the Christianity
which already existed in Ireland; he converted the kingdoms which were still pagan; he taught a
vision of Christ's presence in all things. His character and continual reliance upon Christ more than
his words converted the Irish. He made entry into the religious life the supreme adventure for youth
for it required a willingness to enter deep into a knowledge of the sacred mysteries and to sacrifice
oneself for the glory of God and for the raising up of human society in the example of Christ. He is
best known through his followers who continued with a fervency in invoking the Holy Trinity, and
in desiring experiential knowledge of Christ. His ecological relevance stems from his unwavering
emphasis of the Holy Trinity and its interpenetration with all parts of creation. For St. Patrick a holy
intimacy existed between the human, the divine and the natural. Together these formed a
sacramental universe in which birds, animals and natural phenomena often represented signs of
supernatural grace.
When Patrick was sent to Ireland as a bishop, he was confronted by a Druidic society headed
by kings and tribal chieftans. To reply to a question from a Druid's daughter about the nature of
the Christian God, Patrick replied, "Our God is the God of all men, the God of Heaven and
Earth, of sea and river, of sun and moon and stars, of the lofty mountain and the lowly valley,
the God above Heaven, the God in Heaven, the God under Heaven. He has his dwelling round
Heaven and Earth and the sea and all that in them is. He inspires all, he quickens all, he rules
over all, he sustains all. He lights the light of the sun; he furnishes the light of the light; he has
put springs in the dry land and has set stars to minister to the greater lights....
Tree of Life
Our God is the God of all, the God of heaven and earth, of the sea and of the rivers.
The God of the sun and of the moon and of all the stars;
The God of the lofty mountains and of the lowly valleys.
He has His dwelling around heaven and earth, and sea, and all that in them is.
A blessing on Munster
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A prayer, "The Deer's Cry"
I arise today
Through a mighty strength, the invocation of the Trinity,
Through belief in the Threeness,
Through confession of the oneness
Of the Creator of Creation. ...
I arise today
Through God's strength to pilot me:
God's might to uphold me,
God's wisdom to guide me,
God's eye to look before me,...
God's host to save me
From snares and devils,
From temptations and vices,
From everyone who shall wish me ill, afar and near,
Alone and in a multitude.
His biographer writes, "Men like St. Benedict, always intent on the
love of the Creator, could not withhold their love from the things He
had created. Hence, they felt themselves bound by bonds of fraternal
love with everything in God's universe.... These irrational animals,
by divine ordination, often gave their services to these holy men,
who, in the desert, far from human society, committed their lives
into the hands of God alone. Wherefore, though defenseless and
solitary, they never died from the violence of wild beasts.
In the Rule of St. Benedict, there is a requirement to treat with the utmost of care the equipment
which the monks product. A stewardship of barnyard implements is to be as careful as the
implements of the altar.
Look upon all the tools and all the property of the monastery as if they
were sacred altar vessels.
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Under this name, an unknown writer, claiming the name and authority of the first bishop of
Athens, published a series of enormously influential treatises and public letters early in the sixth
century. The unknown author brilliantly integrates an orthodox dogmatic theology, a
Christological cosmology and a profound spirituality into a depiction of creation that is entirely
grounded in tradition and Holy Scripture. His writing was important for Christianizing the ancient
pagan world because it was couched in the language of platonic philosophy which he transformed
into a vehicle for expressing a vision of God, man and creation that was Trinitarian, Christocentric
and Biblical. He believed that every created thing was an expression of the Divine will, and that
all nature fulfills its purpose by praising God and revealing His presence, each creature in its own
way. In this vision of the universe, which was not merely his individualistic interpretation, but the
vision of the ancient Church, Scripture and cosmos are two aspects of God's revelation. Just as
every word and event of Scripture reveal something about God, so too every being and activity is
also a revelation of God, worthy of respect and care. The awe-inspiring beauty, wisdom, power,
life and being of nature reflect the incomparable Beauty, Wisdom, Power, Life and Being of God,
which are the Names and cosmic and uncreated energies of God.
God is beauty. This beauty is the source of friendship and all mutual understanding.
It is this Beauty... which moves all living things and preserves them while filling them with
love and desire for their own particular sort of beauty. ... for it is by its likeness to beauty that
everything is defined. Thus true Beauty and Goodness are mixed together because, whatever
the force may be that moves living things, it tends always towards Beauty-and-Goodness, and
there is nothing that does not have a share in Beauty-and-Goodness. ...
By virtue of this reality, all creatures subsist, united and separate, identical and
opposite, alike and unlike, contraries are united and the united elements are not confused.
By virtue of Beauty-and-Goodness, everything is in communion with everything else,
each in its own way; creatures love one another without losing themselves in one another,
everything is in harmony, parts snugly fit into the whole... one generation succeeds another;
spirits, souls and bodies remain at the same time steady and mobile; because for all of them,
Beauty-and-Goodness is at once repose and movement, being itself beyond both.
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Beauty reflects an invisible harmony
For anyone who reflects, the appearances of beauty become the themes of
an invisible harmony. Perfumes as they strike our senses represent
spiritual illumination. Material lights point to that immaterial light of
which they are the images.
During the time of the Manichaeans a false but persistent understanding emerged which said
that matter was evil, but spirit was good. Dionysius the Areopagite bluntly refutes this perverse
and heretical notion.
The simple, absolute and unchangeable mysteries of heavenly Truth lie hidden in the
dazzling obscurity of the secret Silence, outshining all brilliance with the intensity of
their darkness.
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St. David of Garesja (497 - 569?)
St. David was born in the rugged Caucasus mountains of Eastern Georgia, along the rim of the
Mesopotamian valley of Assyria. He was baptized as a youth into the Syrian Church which is
today part of the Georgian Orthodox Church. It is probable that St. David was a Monophysite as
virtually all of his countrymen along with the neighboring Armenian and Caucasian Churches had
rejected the Council of Chalcedon. He lived in dry and desolate places so that by ascetic striving
he might win for himself eternal bliss and rest everlasting. St. David is revered as one of the
Syrian Fathers, most of whom are distinguished by their keen love of animals. St. David
epitomizes the character of Syrian Christian care for creation. He is know for befriending the local
deer who learned to take refuge from predators in his wilderness cave and eventually allowed his
monks to milk them for food. To the people of Georgia, he is their St. Francis.
Some hunters from Kakheti came near St. David's cave looking for wild goats and deer. The
deer saw them first and scrambled up to the hermit's cave where they took refuge. The
hunters were amazed that deer would run into a cave and climbed up the hill after them to
catch them in the close confines of the cave.
When they reached the cave entrance, they saw the deer behind St. David and his disciple,
Lucian, was milking them. The hunters were amazed and struck with fear. They asked him,
"How is it, holy father, that these deer, wild animals of the field, are so tame and more
peaceful than sheep brought up from a domestic farmyard?"
St. David said to them, "Why are you so astonished at the glories of God? Do you not know
that He tamed lions for the Prophet Daniel and saved the three children from the fiery
furnace? So what is so wonderful about these deer? Now go and hunt other game, for these
animals are granted by God for our feeble flesh."
One morning when St. David was praying in front of his cave, he saw a barbarian from the
district of Rustavi out hunting. The barbarian's falcon brought down a partridge which fell to
the ground near St. David, and the partridge took refuge by the hermit and perched at his feet
and the falcon landed and also perched nearby. The story says that this was by divine intent so
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that the hunter should himself be hunted by the grace of God. Then the hunter hurried up the
hillside to take the partridge from the falcon.
When he saw the saint standing in prayer, and the partridge sitting by his feet, he was
amazed, and said, "Who are you?"
David replied in the Armenian language, "I am a sinful man, a servant of our Lord Jesus
Christ, and I am imploring His mercy, to forgive me all of my sins, so that I may leave this
transitory life in peace and quietness."
The hunter asked again, "Who looks after you and feeds you here?"
David replied, "He whom I believe in and worship looks after and feeds all His
creatures, to whom He has given birth. By Him are brought up all men and all animals and all
plants, the birds of the sky and the fish of the sea. Behold, this partridge which was fleeing
from your falcon has taken refuge with me, the sinful servant of God. Now go away and hunt
other game, for today the partridge has found a haven with me, so that it may be saved from
death."
The barbarian replied, "I intend to kill you, so how do you expect to save the partridge
from death." But St. David replied, "You can neither kill me nor the partridge, for my God is
with me and He is powerful to protect."
At this word of the saint the barbarian, who was on horseback, drew his sword to strike
St. David on the neck. When he raised his arm, suddenly it became withered and stiff like
wood. Then the barbarian realized his wickedness, and got down from the horse and fell at the
hermit's feet and begged to be rescued from the error of his ways.
St. David had pity on him and besought the Lord, saying, "Lord Jesus Christ, our God,
who didst come down to give life to the human race, Kind and Merciful One who didst cure the
hand that was withered, likewise, O Heavenly King, so cure the arm of this barbarian that he
may understand and recognize Thee and glorify Thy name."
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John Climacus entered monastic struggle as a young teenager and spent most of his life in a
monastery on the slopes of Mt. Sinai. He is best known as the author of a famous text on spiritual
attainment, The Ladder of Divine Ascent. In this text based upon inspiration from prayer and the
wisdom gained from decades of ascetic labors, St. John lays out a step-by-step approach to
Godliness based upon the acquisition of the virtues and the purging of the vices. His works have
ecological relevance because they deal with the struggle to attain harmlessness, service, spiritual
insight and all of the other virtues. These taken together represent the qualities of Christ in human
form, and therefore epitomize a right relationship to God and neighbor. and have the effect of
helping to open the lessons of creation for the one who would read it as a book of wisdom.
The firmament has the stars for its beauty, and dispassion has the virtues for its
adornment. For by dispassion I mean nothing other than the Heaven of the mind
within the heart, which regards the wiles of the demons as mere pranks. And so he is
preeminently dispassionate who has made his flesh incorruptible, who has raised his
mind above creatures and has subdued all his senses to it, and who keeps his soul
before the face of the Lord, ever reaching out to Him even beyond his strength.
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St. Kevin of Glendalough (513 - 618)
Kevin was born to a noble Leinster family which was ousted from rulership. As a child he was
educated by monastics and chose to dedicate his life to God in prayer and adoration. He survived
on a frugal diet and slept on stones at the water’s edge. Despite his austere way of life, he lived to
a ripe old age of 105. According to one early version of his life, he is reported to have said that
“the branches and leaves of the trees sang sweet songs to him, and heavenly music alleviated the
severity of his life.” Saint Kevin is known as one of the first advocates of wilderness preservation
when he refused an angel's offer to level the land around his collection of crude huts and to build
elaborate monastic facilities. By this act, he demonstrated that human pursuit of the holy should
not destroy the rest of God's created order. Because Kevin would not expand his congregation if it
meant degrading the pristine mountains as God created them, he demonstrates the importance of
respecting the natural features of the land as a spiritual priority higher than development. His care
for animals was legendary and early artists depicted him with his hand out-stretched and an egg on
the flat of his palm which a bird laid while he was in the ecstasy of prayer. He is said to have held
the egg until it hatched. Numerous legends of Kevin survive, but few of his writings.
While praying in the rugged Wicklow mountains, about thirty miles from Dublin, an angel
appeared to Kevin and offers to make his life more comfortable. The angel says, "I would
sweep away these hills and crags and rocks and wooded dells where little grows and no one
dwells; I'll give you pastures lush and green for kine to graze, a winding stream, and gentle
fields to grow your grain in place of this uncouth domain."
Kevin declines this offer, replying, "I pray you humbly, let them stand, the rugged hills,
the broken land. For I do love like any child the hunted creatures of the wild; and every bird
that climbs the sky is free to wander just as I, or dwell in peace beside the lake, to make them
homeless for my sake would grieve me sorely night and day."
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The old Celtic manuscripts frequently tell of saints who intentionally went to the forests to
conduct prayers and special devotions. Kevin however went further in his protection of the
forests. “[He] promised hell and a short life to anyone who should burn either green wood or
dry from this wood (where he had a special experience in which the trees bowed down at his
prayers) till the day of doom.”
Another time some hunters were chasing a wild boar with their dogs in hot pursuit. As
soon as the boar saw the dogs near him, he raced down the slope to the glen where
Kevin was in prayer, to seek the saint’s protection. Kevin protected the boar and
commanded the dogs to stop chasing him. As he did so, the feet of the dogs became
stuck firmly to the ground, so that they could not move from that spot in any direction.
Shortly after that the hunters came running up and into Kevin’s presence. On seeing
their dogs fastened to the ground and the boar under Kevin’s protection, they were
astonished and filled with wonder. Humbly and penitently they asked Kevin to please
release their dogs and they promised him that they would never again hunt this boar.
So Kevin let the boar run back into the forest, and the name of God was glorified.
There was a monastery in Cell Eithfin to which an otter used to bring a salmon every day. One
day when Cellach, son of Dimma, saw the otter coming with a salmon in his mouth, he thought
that the otter’s skin would be profitable to the monks, and therefore thought that he would kill
the otter for its pelt. The otter immediately perceived the monk’s intention and dropped the
salmon in his mouth, dived into the river, and never showed himself again to the monks. As a
consequence the monks experienced a scarcity of food, so much so that they decided they must
go in different directions. When Kevin saw this, he prayed earnestly to God to reveal why the
otter had forsaken the monastery. God then influenced Cellach to go to Kevin and confess, with
regret and penitence, that he was to blame. He told how he had the thought of killing the otter,
and that it was at that moment when the otter sensed his intention and dived into the river and
permanently left the monks. When Kevin heard this, he sent Cellach away to do penance for the
evil intention that had caused so much harm.
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Edward Sellner, The Wisdom of the Celtic
Saints, “Kevin of Glendalough,” Ave
Maria
Press, Notre Dame, 1993, p. 163
St. Columba (521 - 597)
A poet, prophet and monk of royal Irish lineage, Columba went to Scotland to evangelize the
pagan Picts. He was a student of Finnian of Clonard. His name means “dove of the Church.”
Columba was born into a royal clan in Donegal, Ireland. He called Christ “his druid,” or teacher.
Columcille, his Irish name, or Columba, as he is known in Latin Britain, founded numerous
monasteries across the Irish land. All of these had oak groves, the favorite trees of the druids. He
was a scholar and writer who found great joy in solitude. A sixth century poem describes him as a
gentle sage “with faith in Christ,” and states that “being a priest was but one of his callings.”
Adamnan, an early biographer, writes, "Angelic in appearance, elegant in address, holy in work,
he would never spend the space of even one hour without study or prayer or writing." He radiated
a divine and celestial light, and is known for the booming power of his voice, and for his amazing
authority over the winds and seas and all the natural world. He had such a deep love for the woods
and for all of God's creation that he made sure that his monastery was built without a tree being
cut down. In one of his poems, he wrote that he was more afraid of the sound of an axe in
Derrywood, a nearby forest, than he was of the voice of hell itself. He founded what is reputed to
be the largest monastery in Christendom on the coastal island of Iona which became a great center
of learning and from which monasticism spread throughout Northern Europe. The character of the
monasticism which he built was marked by a commitment to community and keen appreciation
for the natural world as the vesture of the Holy Spirit.
The Almighty power of God rules over all things, and in His
Name all our movements are directed, Himself being our
governor.
What is the will of God for us in this world? That we should do what he has ordered, that is,
that we should live in righteousness and seek devotedly those things which are eternal. How do
we arrive at this? By study. We must therefore study devotedly and righteously. What is our
best help in maintaining this study? The Intellect, which probes everything and, finding none of
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the world's goods in which it can permanently rest, is converted by reason toward the one good
which is that which is eternal.
Life of Columba
151
True adoration in the world
I adore not the voice of the birds, nor sneezing, nor lots in this world: My druid
is Christ, the son of God, Christ, the son of Mary, the Great Abbot, the Father,
the Son and the Holy Ghost.
Song of Trust
Delightful would it be to me
to be in Uchd Ailiun (an Irish headland over the sea)
On the pinnacle of a rock,
That I might often see the face of the ocean;
That I might see its heaving waves over the wide ocean,
When they chant music to their Father upon the world's course;
That I might see its level of sparkling strand,
it would be no cause of sorrow;
That I might see the sea-monsters, the greatest of all wonders....
That contrition might come upon my heart upon looking at her;
That I might bewail my evils all,
though it were difficult to compute them;
That I might bless the Lord Who conserves all,
Heaven with its countless bright orders,
land, strand and flood;
That I might search the books all, that would be good for my soul;
At times kneeling to beloved Heaven;
At times psalm singing;
At times contemplating the King of Heaven, Holy the Chief;
At times at work without compulsion,
That would be delightful.
Songs of Columba
Celtic monks left the forest standing at the sites of their monasteries rather than cut them.
Adaman, Columba’s biographer, tells the story of how the Irish King Aedh gave a plot of land
in Doire to Columba:
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And he [Columba] had so great a love for Doire, and the cutting
of the oak trees went so greatly against him, that he could not
find a place for his church the time he was building it that
would let the front of it be to the east.... And he left it upon
those that came after him not to cut a tree that fell of itself or
was blown down by the wind in that place to the end of nine
days, and then to share it between the people of the townland,
bad and good, a third of it to the great house, and tenth to be
given to the poor. And he put a verse in a hymn after he was
gone away to Scotland that shows there was nothing worse to
him than the cutting of that oakwood: “Though there is fear in
me of death and of hell, I will not hide it that I have more fear
of the sound of an axe over in Doire.”
It is the reason I love Doire, for its quietness for its purity; it is quite full of white
angels from the one end to the other.
It is the reason I love Doire, for its quietness for its purity; quite full of white angels is
every leaf of the oaks of Doire.
My Doire, my little oakwood, my dwellings and my white cell;
O living God in heaven, it is a pity for him who harms it.
Commentary by Adamnan, as quoted in Lady
Isabella Gregory, A Book of Saints and
Wonders put down here by Lady Gregory
according to the Old Writings and Memory of
the People of Ireland, Irish University Press,
Shannon, 1971, p. 20
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St. Columba showed great kindness for the birds. On one occasion, it befell, while the saint was
living on Iona, that he called to a brother to go and sit by the shore and watch “for a stranger
guest, a crane, wind tossed and driven far from her course in the high air: tired out and weary....
The crane will fall to the beach at thy feet and lie there, her strength nigh gone.”
Columba told the brother, “tenderly lift the bird and carry it to the steading near by; make
her welcome there and cherish her with all care for three days and nights...,” and then release
her.
Three days later as the saint had said, the brother, stood as he was bidden, and when he
saw the crane, he did as Columba had instructed him.
And on his return that evening to the monastery, the Saint spoke to him, not as one
questioning, but as one speaks of a thing past, “May God bless thee, my son, for the kind
tending of this pilgrim guest: that shall make no long stay in her exile, but when three suns
have set, [she] shall turn back to her own land.”
And the thing fell out even as the Saint had foretold. “For when her three day housing was
ended, and as her host stood by, she rose from earth into high heaven, and after a while at gaze
to spy out her aerial way, took her straight flight above the quiet sea, and so to Ireland through
the tranquil weather.”
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St. Gregory the Great (540 - 604)
Pope Saint Gregory I was born in Rome of noble and wealthy parents. After lengthy reflection on
the moral conflicts associated with government and power, he renounced worldly ambitions,
distributed his substantial wealth and goods to the poor and retired to a monastery. He
administered the needs of his monastery so admirably that he was called to serve the Pope as the
papal ambassador to Constantinople. He is known first for his holiness and insight, and then for
his masterful rebuilding of the Western Church from the rubble of barbarian invasions which
completed the fall of the Roman Empire in the West. His writings portray creation as everywhere
filled with the glorious presence of Christ Who made all things translucent and transparent to the
illumined mind.
God is within all, over all, under all, is both above with His power
and beneath with His support, exterior in respect to magnitude and
interior in respect to subtlety, extending from the heights to the
depths, encompassing the outside and penetrating the inside; but He
is not in one part above, in another beneath, nor in one part exterior
and in another interior. Rather, one and the same wholly and
everywhere, He supports in presiding and presides in supporting,
penetrates in encompassing and encompasses in penetrating.
While the monks were still sleeping, Benedict, the man of God, was keeping vigil. Standing in
front of his window in the dead of night he was praying to the Lord when suddenly he was
filled with an extraordinarily bright blazing light, and it dispelled the darkness and radiated
with such brilliance that it would have outshone the light of day. While he was caught up in this
light, something extraordinary happened. As he described it later, the whole world was
gathered up before his eyes as if in a ray of sunlight....
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How is it possible for the whole world to be seen in this way by a human
being? ... For a soul who beholds the Creator, all creation is narrow in
compass. For when a person views the Creator's light, no matter how little
of it, all creation becomes small by comparison in his eyes. By the light of
interior contemplation or inner vision, the inner recesses of the mind are
opened up and so expanded in God that they are above the universe. In
fact, the soul of the beholder rises even above itself. When it is caught up
above itself, it is made ampler within. As it looks down from its height, it
grasps the smallness of what it could not take in its lowly state.
Therefore, as Benedict gazed at the fiery globe, he saw angels too returning to heaven....
To say that the world was gathered together before his eyes does not mean that heaven
and earth shrank, but that the mind of the beholder was expanded so that he could easily see
everything below God since he himself was caught up in God.
Dialogues II:35
All things would tend to nothing in virtue of their nature if they were not
governed by God.
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St. Columbanus (543? - 615)
A flaming red-haired Irish abbot from Leinster, he set out to continental Europe to teach the strict
Irish style of monasticism among the Franks. In his youth Columbanus was blessed with great
teachers and studied with some of the greatest of the Irish saints. He became known for his
miracle-working cures, for his wilderness adventures and particularly for an amazing rapport with
animals. Many stories tell of his experiences in the deep forests of the Vosges and the Swiss Alps
where he encountered wolves, bears, birds, rabbits and many other denizens of the primeval
European wilderness. His first monastery was built in the Vosges Mountains near the present
Swiss-German border. While traveling, he asked his monks to sing special hymns which hastened
their journey and framed a natural theology. Like many in the Celtic Church, he taught that
personal holiness and the qualities in prayer intimately shape creation as well as the response of
the animals to humans. He built his monasteries on places of previous pagan worship so that a
respect and a religious continuity were demonstrated to the local culture. His understanding of the
monastery was as a place for community service and a center for learning, healing, popular
education and social care. He vigorously insisted that the Irish Church had maintained the pure
Christian tradition from ancient times. He is considered the greatest of the Irish missionaries to the
European continent.
The man to whom a little is not enough, he will not benefit from more.
He who tramples upon the world, tramples upon himself.
Sayings
159
Thus the hated foe deals as he wearies our hearts,
And by ill temptation shakes the inward hearts with rage.
Let your mind, my men, recalling Christ, sound Ho!
A road to life art thou, not life itself. And as there is no man who makes his
dwelling in the road, but walks there: and those who fare along the road have
their dwelling in the fatherland. So thou art naught, O mortal life, naught but a
road, a fleeting ghost, an emptiness, a cloud uncertain and frail, a shadow and a
dream.
Sermons
Columbanus was walking alone through the forest as night began to fall. He carried
only a small satchel and somehow began to reflect on what he would chose if he had a
choice between suffering death at the hands of thieves and robbers, or being devoured
by savage wild beasts. After some reflection, he concluded that he would prefer to
suffer the ferocity of wild beasts because that was not sin on their parts. Just as he
came to this conclusion, he heard a pack of wolves running through the dense forest.
They quickly spotted him and came right toward him and soon stood about him on the
right and left sides, and he could only stand motionless in their midst, saying, “O God,
look to my help, and make haste to help me!”
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The wolves put their muzzles on his clothes, sniffed him, and while he stood
unshaken, ready to face death, if need be, they abruptly turned and left him here and
continued on their forest ranging.
On another occasion, he left the monastery and wandered deep into the
forest solitudes, where he came upon a great rock outcropping, its flanks
broken into small cliffs and its crest broken into jagged points of rock,
untrodden by man. And there up the side of the rock he spied a secret
hollow cave. He came up closer to examine the hiding place, and found
inside the cave of a bear’s den, and the bear himself inside. He gently told
the bear it was better for him to leave, and the bear did, never to return to
that place. And this was about seven miles from the Abbey of Annegrey
in the Vosges mountains.
Bishop Chamnoald from the Cathedral of Lyons who studied for some time with St.
Columbanus relates that we should not marvel at the way the birds and beasts responded to this
man of God. He often told those in the city that when Columbanus walked into the forest to fast
or pray, how he would call the creatures of the wild, birds or beasts to him, and how they would
come quickly at his call. Then he would stroke them with his hand and caress them; and the
wild things and the birds would leap and frisk about him for sheer happiness, jumping up on
him as young dogs jump on their masters. Even the usually fearful little squirrels would come
down from the tree-tops at his call, and the saint would take the creature in his hand and let it
scamper up onto his shoulder, and it would play running in and out of the folds on his cowl;
and this the bishop said he had often seen with his own eyes.
161
Original Sources of European History,
Phila, 1895, Nr. 30, p. 52.
162
St. Leontios of Cyprus (556 - 634)
A monk and one of the lesser known Greek Fathers, St. Leontios provides an eloquent and
unusual commentary on how creation gives glory to God. He was a vigorous defender of the
holy icons and his writings reflect a sense of the centrality of the human in creation as essential
for the completion of creation. His contribution regarding creation and a modern understanding
of a theology of the environment lies in his assessments about the numinous in creation which
makes it transparent to the handiwork of God.
Through heaven and earth and sea, through wood and stone,
through all creation visible and invisible, I offer veneration to the
Creator and Master and Maker of all things. For the creation does
not venerate the Maker directly and by itself, but it is through me
that the heavens declare the glory of God, through me the moon
worships God, through me the stars glorify Him, through me the
waters and showers of rain, the dews and all creation, venerate
God and give Him glory.
163
164
St. Maximus the Confessor (580 - 662)
One of the greatest fathers of the Church, St. Maximus represents the summit and synthesis of
early Christianity thought on creation. He grew up in Constantinople; received the finest education
of the day in the humanities, philosophy and science; and served as the secretary to the Imperial
Court of Emperor Heraclius. He soon abandoned the empty pomp of courtly life for the physical
austerity but spiritual richness of monastic life where he flourished under the guidance of St.
Sophronius, Patriarch of Jerusalem. St. Maximus is known for the sublimity of his theology of the
unity of all creation in Christ. Every created thing, from stone to seagull to the stars of heaven is
an expression of the creative thought and will of the Triune God. Creation is at once, a word, or
many words in a “book” of God, a gift of God, a symbol of God, and a song of God. Thus for St.
Maximus the universe is a vast “cosmic liturgy,” composed of word, gift, song and symbol in
which heaven and earth are joined in a sacrifice of praise, thanksgiving and worship. Human
nature, created in the image and likeness of God, is intended by God to be both microcosm and
mediator of, in and through this cosmic liturgy. This means, according to Maximus, that human
salvation and the transfiguration of the cosmos are inextricably linked. Just as all things are
recapitulated in human nature as microcosmos, so too the human being is meant to bear the
responsibility of mediator of creation, that is, to be the one in whom all things created are lifted up
to God.
The Church is one and the same in and throughout each section. The wise thus glimpse the
universe of things brought into existence by God's creation, divided between the spiritual
world, containing incorporeal intelligent substances, and the corporeal world, the object of
sense (so marvelously woven together from many natures and kinds of things) as if they were
all another church, not built by hands, but suggested by the ones we build; its sanctuary in the
world above, allotted to the powers above, its nave the world below, assigned to those whose
lot it is to live in the senses.
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The universe too is one, not split between its visible and invisible parts; on the contrary,
but the force of their reference to its own unity and indivisibility, it circumscribes their
differences in character. It shows itself to be the same, in the visible and invisible mutually
joined without confusion with each other. Each is wholly fixed in the whole of the other. As
parts of the whole, both make up the world, and as parts in the whole, both are completed and
fulfilled in a single form. For the whole intelligible world of thought is visible to those who
have eyes to see, spiritually expressed in symbolic form by the whole sensible universe. And
the sensible world is mentally present in the whole intelligible universe when it is verbally
expressed in the mind. For this visible world is verbally present in the world of thought; the
world of thought is present in its visible images. Their end result or work is all one, "as it were
a wheel in the middle of a wheel," says Ezekiel (1:16), that wonderful spectator of wonders,
speaking, I think, about these two worlds. And the divine Apostle says, "The invisible things of
him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are
made" (Romans 1:20).
If visible things can be observed through sense data, as it is written, visible phenomena
will often be understood spiritually through the medium of what is sensibly imperceptible, by
persons who devote themselves to spiritual contemplation. The contemplation of objects of
thought symbolized through the objects of sight means the spiritual understanding of the seen
through the unseen. Things which are significative of each other are bound to contain clear and
perfectly true expressions of each other, and a flawless relation to them.
The Mystagogia
The Mystagogia
Man was introduced last among existent things, as a natural bond between the extremes of the
whole through his own parts, and bringing into unity in his own person those things which by
nature are far distinct from each other. Drawing all things out of their former division and
bringing them united to God by means available in the right sequence and order, he finally
reaches the goal of the sublime ascent which is achieved through the union of all things,
attaining God in Whom there is no division. First, through his utterly dispassionate relationship
to divine virtue he frees the whole of nature from the attributes of male and female... Next by
uniting paradise with the inhabited land through holiness of life, he makes a single earth, not
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divided into different parts, but rather brought together, since he is not dominated by any
passionate attraction toward any of its parts....
And with us and for us, Christ embraced the whole creation through what is in the center, the
extremes as being part of Himself, and He wrapped them around Himself, insolubly united with
one another: Paradise and the inhabited world, heaven and earth, the sensible and the
intelligible, having Himself like us a body and sensibility showing that the whole creation is
one, as if it were also a man, achieved through the coming together of all its members,
according to the unique, simple, undefined and indifferent principle, stating the whole creation
can have one and the same, absolutely indistinguishable logos: that of having the "non-being"
before the being.
Ambigua 41:91
We do not know God in His essence. We know Him rather from the grandeur of
his creation and from His providential care for all creatures. By this means, as if
using a mirror, we attain insight into His infinite goodness, wisdom and power.
The shining vestments of the transfigured Christ symbolize the fact that when God, the son of
Righteousness, reveals Himself to the human soul, then all the "logoi" of things intelligible and
sensible in scripture and nature appear as if they were with him.
How the human soul differs from that of plants and animals
The Human Soul has three powers, first, the power of nourishment and growth;
second, that of imagination and instinct; third, that of intelligence and intellect.
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Plants share only in the first of these powers; animals share in the first and
second only; and men share in all three.
Philokalia 2:88
It is necessary that this world of things dies, just as a man dies, in order that it may rise again,
young instead of old as it was before death....
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And we who are man will also rise up, as part of the whole, as a small world within the
big universe. (Humanity and the universe) shall receive the definitive quality of incorruptibility,
the body receiving a new form identical with that of the soul, and sensible things will have a
form identical with spiritual things, as the divine power, which is beyond all things, in a
manifest and efficacious presence will spread its force on each thing according to its capacity
and hold all things together in its divine embrace, in an inseparable union, for all eternity.
The Mystagogia 7
Man is not a being isolated from the rest of creation. By his very nature, he is bound
up with the whole of the universe.... In his way to union with God, man in no way
leaves creatures aside, but gathers together in his love the whole cosmos disordered
by sin, that it may be transfigured by grace.
It is clear that the kingdom of God the Father belongs to the humble and gentle. "For blessed
are the gentle, for they will inherit the earth" (Matthew 5:5). It is not this physical earth, which
by nature occupies a middle place in the universe, that God promises as an inheritance for those
who love Him -- not, at least, if He is speaking truly when He says, "In the resurrection they
neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels in heaven" (Matthew 22:30)....
Since these things have been promised to those who love the Lord, what man prompted
by intelligence and wishing to serve it would ever say, from a literal reading of scripture alone,
that heaven, and the kingdom prepared from the foundation of the world, and the mystically
hidden joy of the Lord... are to be identified with the earth? In this text (Matt. 5:5) ... the word
"earth" signifies the resolution and strength of the inner stability, immovably rooted in
goodness, that is possessed by gentle people. This state of stability exists eternally with the
Lord, contains unfailing joy, enables the gentle to attain the kingdom prepared from the
beginning, and has its station and dignity in heaven.
169
As a reality in itself evil never has been and never will be in existence; for it does not in any
way whatsoever possess being, or reality, or substance or power, or activity among existent
things. It is neither a quantity, nor a quality, nor a relationship, nor a place, nor time, nor
position. It is not a making, or an activity, or a habitude, or a passion, such as may naturally
characterize certain beings, nor has it acquired any existence in its own right in any of these
things.
God, full beyond all fullness, brought creatures into being, not
because He had need of anything, but so that they might participate in
Him in proportion to their capacity and that He Himself might rejoice
in His works, through seeing them joyful and ever filled to
overflowing with His inexhaustible gifts.
If, instead of stopping short at the outward appearance which visible things present to the
senses, you seek with your intellect to contemplate their inner essences, seeing them as images
of spiritual realities or as the inward principles of sensible objects, you will be taught that
nothing belonging to the visible world is unclean. For by nature all things were created good.
The (physical and spiritual) worlds are one. For the spiritual world in its totality
is manifested in the totality of the perceptible world, mystically expressed in
symbolic pictures for those who have eyes to see. And the perceptible world in
its entirety is secretly fathomable by the spiritual world in its entirety.... The
former is embodied in the latter through the realities; the latter in the former
through the symbols. The operation of the two is one.
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in the Natural World, San Rafael, 1997,
pg. 45.
If invisible things are seen by means of the visible, the visible things are perceived in far
greater measure through the invisible by those who devote themselves to contemplation. For
the symbolic contemplation of spiritual things by means of the visible is nothing other than the
understanding in the Spirit of visible things by means of the invisible.
Creation is a bible whose letters and syllables are the particular aspects of all
creatures and whose words are the more universal aspects of creation.
Conversely, Scripture is like a cosmos constituted of heaven and earth and
things in between; that is, the ethical, the natural, the theological dimension.
The world is one.... for the spiritual world in its totality is manifested in the totality of the
perceptible world, mystically expressed in the symbolic pictures for those who have eyes to
see. And the perceptible world in its entirety is secretly fathomable by the spiritual world in its
entirety, when it has been simplified and amalgamated by means of the spiritual realities. The
former is embodied in the latter through the realities; the latter in the former through the
symbols. The operation of the two is one.
The divine apostle says: “Ever since the creation of the world his invisible nature... has been
clearly perceived in the things that have been made” (Romans 1:20). If the invisible things are
seen by means of visible, the visible things are perceived in a far greater measure through the
invisible by those who devote themselves to contemplation. For the symbolic contemplation of
spiritual things by means of the visible is nothing other than the understanding in the Spirit of
visible things by means of the invisible.
Just as the sun, when it rises up and lights up the world, manifests both itself and the things lit
up by it, so the Sun of Justice, rising upon a pure mind, manifests itself and the essences of all
things that have been and will brought to pass by it.
on Charity, Nr. 95
God, full beyond measure, brought creatures into being, not because He had need of anything,
but so that they might participate in Him in proportion to their capacity, and that He Himself
might rejoice in His works, through seeing them joyful and ever filled to overflowing with His
inexhaustible gifts.
172
Knowing the mysteries brings knowledge of meaning
The mystery of the Incarnation of the Word contains in itself the meaning of all
the symbols and all the enigmas of Scripture, as well as the hidden meaning of
all sensible and intelligible creation. But he, who knows the mystery of the
Cross and the Tomb, knows also the essential principle of all things. Finally, he
who penetrates yet further and finds himself initiated into the mystery of the
Resurrection, apprehends the end for which God created all things from the
beginning.
Contemplation of creation
How can the intellect not marvel when it contemplates that immense and more than astonishing
sea of goodness [which is creation]? Or how is it not astounded when it reflects on how and
from what source there have come into being both nature endowed with intelligence and
intellect, and the four elements which compose physical bodies...? What kind of potentiality
was it which, once actualized, brought these things into being? ...
God is the Creator from all eternity.... When the Creator willed, He gave being to and
manifested that knowledge of created things which already existed in Him from all eternity....
Try to learn why God created; for that is true knowledge. But do not try to learn how He
created or why He did so comparatively recently; for that does not come within the compass of
your intellect. Of divine realities some may be apprehended by men and others may not.
Unbridled speculation, as one of the saints has said, can drive one headlong over the precipice.
The mystery of the Incarnation of the Word contains within itself the whole
meaning of the created world. He who understands the mystery of the Cross and
the Tomb knows the meaning of all things, and he who is initiated into the
hidden meaning of the Resurrection understands the goal for which God created
everything from the very beginning.
God reveals Himself to each person according to each person’s mode of conceiving Him. To
those whose aspiration transcends the complex structure of matter, and whose psychic powers
are fully integrated in a single unceasing gyration around God, He reveals Himself as Unity and
Trinity. In this way He both shows forth His own existence and mystically makes known the
mode in which that existence subsists.
To those whose aspiration is limited to the complex structure of matter, and whose
psychic powers are not integrated, He reveals Himself, not as He is, but as they are, showing
that they are completely caught in the material dualism whereby the physical world is
conceived as composed of matter and form.
First Century of Various Texts, Nr. 95,
translated by Kallistos Ware and Philip
Sherrard, Philokalia, vol. II, p. 186.
When a sparrow tied by the leg tries to fly, it is held back by the string and
pulled down to the earth. Similarly, when the intellect that has not yet attained
dispassion flies up towards heavenly knowledge, it is held back by the passions
and pulled down to earth.
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The intellect, once totally free from passions, proceeds undistracted to the
contemplation of created beings, making its way towards knowledge of the Holy
Trinity. ...
175
He who has succeeded in attaining the virtues and is enriched with spiritual
knowledge sees things clearly in their true nature. Consequently, he both acts
and speaks with regard to all things in a manner which is fitting, and he is never
deluded. For according to whether we use things rightly or wrongly, we become
either good or bad.
Philokalia, Vol. II, First Century on Love,
Nrs 85-86, 92, Faber & Faber, London, pg.
63
So long as [a human being’s] will is stubborn and raw, [God] abandons him to the domination
of evil; for he has chosen the shameful passions of which the devil is the sower, in preference
to nature, of which God is the creator. God leaves him free to incline, if he so wishes, towards
the passions of the flesh, and actually to satisfy that inclination. Valuing the insubstantial
passions more highly than nature, in his concern for these passions he has become ignorant of
the principle of nature. Had he followed that principle, he would have known what constitutes
the law of nature and what constitutes the tyranny of the passions--a tyranny brought about, not
by nature, but by deliberate choice. He would then have accepted the law of nature that is
maintained through activities which are natural; and he would have expelled the tyranny of the
passions completely from his will. He would have obeyed nature with his intelligence, for
nature in itself is pure and undefiled, faultless, free from hatred and alienation, and he would
have made his will once more a companion of nature, totally stripped of everything not
bestowed by the principle of nature. In this way he would have eradicated all hatred for and all
alienation from what is by nature akin to him.”
Commentary on the Lord’s Prayer, The Philokalia, vol. II, Palmer, Sherrard, Ware, eds.
(London: Faber & Faber, 1981), p. 303.
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The Incarnation as the key to understand Creation
The mystery of the Incarnation of the Logos is the key to all the
arcane symbolism and typology of the Scriptures, and in addition
gives us knowledge of created things, both visible and
intelligible. He who apprehends the mystery of the cross and the
burial apprehends the inward essences of created things; while he
who is initiated into the inexpressible power of the resurrection
apprehends the purpose for which God first established
everything.
All visible realities need the cross, that is, the state in which they
are cut off from things acting upon them through the senses. All
intelligible realities need burial, that is, the total quiescence of the
things which act upon them through the intellect. When all
relationship with such things is severed, and their natural ability
and stimulus is cut off, then the Logos, who exists alone in
Himself, appears as if risen from the dead. He encompasses all
that comes from Him, but nothing enjoys kinship with Him by
virtue of natural relationship. For the salvation of the saved is by
grace and not by nature (cf. Eph. 2:5).
About the scriptures we say the words are the clothes of Christ. The words veil:
the meaning reveals. It is the same in the world where the forms of visible things
are like the clothing, and the ideas according to which they were created are like
the flesh. The former conceal, the latter reveal. For the universal creator and
law-maker, the word, both hides himself in his self-revelation and reveals
himself in his hiding of himself."
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St. Isaac the Syrian (640? - eighth century)
As a hermit and bishop of Ninevah in Syria, St. Isaac is one of the greatest figures of the Christian
East. His influence has always been strong from Lebanon to South India and throughout the
Monophysite (non-Chalcedonian) Churches from Armenia to Ethiopia. In the Churches of
Greece and Russia his writings have been a source of inspiration and study, even to this century.
He was born at Beth-Katrage in modern Qatar on the shores of the Persian Gulf. Isaac is known as
a spiritual master and as a powerful and prolific writer who reflects the Syrian emphasis upon
rigorous spiritual formation leading to a deep and continual love for all people and all creatures.
This, he says, cultivates a “cosmic love” which enables one to perceive the divine fire which
indwells all things. Through the one who submits to the cross and follows Christ into the
crucifixion, a transfiguration takes place so that the peace of paradise radiates forth. Within this
radiance wild beasts and even people become changed. He authored over ninety texts of which
only about half have been translated into Greek; few exist in English. For modern ecology, St.
Isaac epitomizes the heart-felt love for God and His creation which the ascetics of the Eastern
desert bring to Christian vision, thought and practice.
A charitable heart
What is a charitable heart? It is a heart which is burning with a loving charity for the whole of
creation, for men, for the birds, for the beasts, for the demons -- for all creatures. He who has
such a heart cannot see or call to mind a creature without his eyes being filled with tears by
reason of the immense compassion which seizes his heart; a heart which is so softened and can
no longer bear to hear or learn from others of any suffering, even the smallest pain, being
inflicted upon any creature. This is why such a man never ceases to pray also for the animals,
for the enemies of truth, and for those who do him evil, that they may be preserved and purified.
He will pray even for the lizards and reptiles, moved by the infinite pity which reigns in the
hearts of those who are becoming united with God.
Mystic Treatises XXIII
The world is an arena and a running place... and this (our time in this earthly life)
is a time of struggle.... In order to overcome in this struggle, our attention must
be constantly directed toward God: for the Lord is... the omnipotent, the
almighty, the victorious at all times, whenever he descends into the body of
mortals to fight for them. But it is manifest that those who are defeated... are
those whose will is stripped of Him because of their injustice.
Homily LXIII
Peace with the world through peace with God
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Be at peace with your soul; then heaven and earth will be at peace with you. Enter eagerly into
the treasure house that is within you, and so you will see the things that are in heaven; for there
is but one single entry to them both. The ladder that leads to the kingdom is hidden within your
soul. Flee from sin, dive into yourself, and in your soul you will discover the stairs by which to
ascend.
Mystic Treatises
From henceforth you will gaze at all times upon the spectacle of
God's continual loving care for his handiwork. Your mind will be
swallowed up in awestruck wonder, your senses will be silent, and
you, O feeble man, will lie prostrate on your face in prayer, your
tongue unable to speak, and your heart incapable of praying; for in
wonder at these divine acts of the Creator even prayer becomes
inactive. This is the inactivity which is superior to work, when a
person is completely still in his senses and thoughts, and he lies
continually prostrate before his Lord. Then even his bones in their
silence will offer up praise to God during this apparent inactivity,
as the prophet says, "All my bones shall say, O Lord, who is like
you? (Psalm 34:10).
Everyone who has truly been clothed in humility becomes like him who came down from his
exalted place and hid the splendor of his majesty, concealing his glory in lowliness, so that the
created world should not be utterly consumed at the sight of him....
Creation could not behold him unless he took part of it to himself and thus conversed with
it; only thus was creation able to hear the words of his mouth face to face....
No one ever hates, or wounds with words, or despises the person who is humble; and
because his Lord loves him, he is dear to all. Everyone loves him, everyone cherishes him, and
wherever he approaches, people look on him as an angel of light and accord honor to him....
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The humble man approaches wild animals, and the moment they catch sight of him their
ferocity is tamed. They come up and cling to him as to their Master, wagging their tails and
licking his hands and feet. They scent as coming from him the same fragrance that came from
Adam before the transgression, the time when they were gathered together before him and he
gave them names in Paradise. This scent was taken away from us, but Christ has renewed it and
given it back to us at his coming. It is this which has sweetened the fragrance of humanity. Even
the demons with their malice and fierceness, with the pride of their minds, become like dust
once they have encountered a humble person.
Faith is the doorway to the mysteries. What the eyes of the body are for physical objects, faith is
for the hidden eyes of the soul. Just as we have two bodily eyes, so we have two spiritual eyes,
and each has its own way of seeing. With one we see the glory of God hidden in creatures; with
the other we contemplate the glory of God’s holy nature when he deigns to give us access to the
mysteries.
Faith is the doorway to the mysteries. What the eyes of the body are for physical
objects, faith is for the hidden eyes of the soul. Just as we have two bodily eyes,
so we have two spiritual eyes, and each has its own way of seeing. With one we
180
see the glory of God hidden in creatures; with the other we contemplate the glory
of God’s holy nature when he deigns to give us access to the mysteries.
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182
St. Hubertus (650 - 727)
The German patron saint of hunters and all those involved in game management, Saint
Hubertus spread the message of wildlife conservation after he encountered an image of Jesus Christ
shining on a brilliant crucifix between the antlers of an albino red stag. The deer spoke to him and
conveyed a message that became the basis for conservation programs throughout Germany and
much of Central Europe. After this moving experience, he entered religious life and eventually
became a bishop. In addition to preaching about the spiritual life, he taught that a right attitude
toward the animals was part of what Christ taught him in his forest encounter.
Shortly after the death of his wife, St. Hubertus relates that he went out hunting, and
deep in the woods he encountered a beautiful red deer stag. With a glowing cross
appearing between its broad antlers, the deer spoke to him, asking, "Why do you shoot
only the best stags?"
Awe struck, St. Hubertus could not answer. The stag warned Hubertus that
because he and the other royal hunters shot only the healthiest and strongest of animals,
there were not enough strong stags to breed a healthy herd. The deer said that hunters
should exercise restraint in their hunting and also take weaker stags to help make a more
vigorous herd.
St. Hubertus was ordained a priest and eventually a bishop, and he told his story
to other hunters who joined in practicing this vision of conservation. As his message
spread, many hunters altered their way of hunting and the herds of red deer flourished.
St. Hubertus' attitude toward animals as "beings" rather than just sporting targets
for hunters is still reflected in Germany. At his death, Hubertus' last words were,
"Stretch the "pallium" (a clerical vestment) over my mouth, for I am going to give back
to God the soul which I received from Him."
Today, hunters in Germany still place a small branch of an oak or evergreen in
the mouth of the fallen game. That is an offering of the "last bite," signifying a final
salute to the animal and symbolically giving back to God the life which it received from
Him.
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184
St. Guthlac (673 - 714)
A British monk who lived on a small island near Lincolnshire, Saint Guthlack is one of England's
two most popular saints (along with St. Cuthbert). He was rather unpopular in his early years
because of his example of abstinence from mead and other intoxicating drink, but as his healing
abilities became known, he soon became a popular and respected figure. He is warmly regarded for
his special affinity for the animals and the affection which the birds and waterfowl exhibited
toward him.
Brother, hast thou never learned in Holy Writ, that with him who has led his life
after God's will, the wild beasts and wild birds are tame?
Too often we lose dominion over the creation which is subject to us precisely because we
neglect to serve the Lord of all creation, as it is written, "If you be willing, and will harken unto
me, you shall eat the good things of the land," and so forth (Isaiah 1:19)....
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The song of Guthlac
Cynewulf, the first great Anglo-Saxon poet, called Guthlac "the hero of our time."
The following lines are extracted from his "Song of Guthlac."
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188
St. John lived among the early Islamic people of Damascus in what is modern Syria. His work is
often compared within the Eastern Church to what St. Thomas Aquinas accomplished in the
Western Church. He is distinguished particularly by his voluminous work, "The Exposition of the
True Orthodox Faith," which lays out the parameters for a comprehensive Christian theology. His
writings gather together the wisdom of the past and summarize the best and highest insights of the
doctrinal, ascetical, exegetical and historical works of the Greek and Arabic Fathers. He undertook
to mirror in his writings the tradition of the Greek Church of former centuries. His works especially
deal with acquiring the virtues and renouncing the vices, and they have the ability to make the
sharp distinctions necessary to differentiate between a right relationship of people to material
things, to the world as well as to God.
I do not worship matter. I worship the Creator of matter who became matter for
my sake, who willed to take His abode in matter, who worked out my salvation
through matter. Never will I cease honoring the matter which wrought my
salvation! I honor it, but not as God.... Because of this I salute all remaining
matter with reverence, because God has filled it with his grace and power.
Through it my salvation has come to me.
Treatise
At the bidding of the Creator, (the earth) produced all manner of living creatures,
creeping things, and wild beasts and cattle. All indeed are for the seasonable use of
man. Some of them are for food...; others are for service...; and others for enjoyment.
Again amongst plants and herbs, some are fruit bearing, others edible, others fragrant
and flowery. For there is not a single animal or plant in which the Creator has not
implanted some form of energy capable of being used to satisfy man's needs. For He
Who knew all things before they were, saw that in the future man would go forward in
the strength of his own will, and would be subject to corruption, and therefore He
created all things for his seasonable use.
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Exposition of the Orthodox Faith X
Some have imagined Paradise to have been material while others have imagined it to have been
spiritual. However, it appears to me that, just as man was created both sensitive and
intellectual, so did this most sacred domain of his have the twofold aspect of being perceptible
both to the senses and to the mind. For while in his body he dwelt in this most sacred and
superbly beautiful place, spiritually he resided in a loftier and far more beautiful place. There
he had the indwelling God as a dwelling place and wore Him as a glorious garment. He was
wrapped about with His grace, and, like some one of the angels, he rejoiced in the enjoyment of
that one most sweet fruit which is the contemplation of God, and by this he was nourished.
Now this is indeed what is fittingly called the tree of life, for the sweetness of divine
contemplation communicates a life uninterrupted by death to them that partake of it.
Trees
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The fruit of the Tree of Life
God says, "Of every tree of Paradise thou shalt eat," meaning, I think: By means of
all created things be thou drawn up to Me, their Creator, and from them reap the
one fruit which is Myself, Who am the true Life. Let all things be fruitful life to
thee and make participation in Me to be the substance of thy own existence; for
thus thou shalt be immortal.... He made him a living being to be governed here
according to this present life, and then to be removed elsewhere, that is, to the
world to come, and so to complete the mystery by becoming divine through
reversion to God – this however not by being transformed into the Divine
substance, but by participation in the Divine illumination.
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The divine nature penetrates all creation
The divine nature has the property of penetrating all things without mixing with them and of
being itself impenetrable by anything else.
Man, it is to be noted, has community with things inanimate and participates in the life of the
unreasoning creatures, and shares in the mental processes of those endowed with reason. For
the bond of union between man and inanimate things is the body and its composition out of the
four elements: and the bond between man and plants consists, in addition to these things, of
their powers of nourishment and growth and seeding, that is, generation: and finally, over and
above these links, man is connected with unreasoning animals by appetite, that is anger and
desire, and sense and impulsive movement. ... plus the five physical senses....
Lastly, man's reason unites him to incorporeal and intelligent natures, for he
applies his reason and mind and judgement to everything and pursues after virtues and eagerly
follows after piety, which is the crown of the virtues. And so man is a microcosm.
Exposition of the Orthodox Faith,
Book II, "Concerning Man," ch. 12.
There is but one kingdom delivered from evil. From whence comes evil? For it is quite
impossible that evil should originate from goodness. We answer, then, that evil is no thing else
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than absence of goodness and a lapsing from what is natural into what is unnatural: for nothing
evil is natural. For all things, whatsoever God made, are very good....
By nature therefore, all things are servants of the Creator and obdy Him. Whenever
then, any of His creatures voluntarily rebels and becomes disobedient to his Maker, he
introduces evil into himself. For evil is not any essence nor a property of essence, but an
accident, that is, a voluntary deviation from what is natural into what is unnatural, which is sin.
“The heavens show forth the glory of God,” not by speaking in voice audible to
the sensible ears, but by manifesting to us through their own greatness, the
power of the Creator, and when we remark on their beauty, we give glory to
their Maker as the best of all Artificers.
Life is energy
We hold that there are two energies in our Lord Jesus Christ. For He possesses on the one hand,
as God and being of like essence with the Father, the divine energy, and likewise, since He
became man and of life essence to us, the energy proper to human nature.
But observe that energy and capacity for energy, and the product of energy, and
the agent of energy, are all different. Energy is the efficient and essential activity of nature: the
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capacity for energy is the nature from which proceeds energy; the product of energy is that
which is effected by energy; and the agent of energy is the person or substance which uses the
energy....
Life itself, it should be observed, is energy, yea, the primal energy of the living
creature: and so is the whole economy of the living creature, its functions of nutrition and
growth, that is, the vegetative side of its nature, and the movement stirred by impulse, that is,
the sentient side, and its activity of intellect and free-will. Energy, moreover, is the perfect
realization of power. If, then, we contemplate all these in Christ, surely we must also hold that
He possesses human energy.
The first thought that arises in us is called energy.... Again the revelation and
unfolding of thought by means of articulate speech is said to be energy.... And so in connection
with our Lord Jesus Christ, the power of miracles is the energy of His divinity, while the work
of His hands and the willing and the saying, “I will, be thou clean,” are the energy of His
humanity.
And again, if the providence that embraces all creation is not only of the Father
and the Holy Spirit, but also of the Son, even after the incarnation, assuredly since that is
energy, He must have even after the incarnation the same energy as the Father.
It is not without reason or by chance that we worship towards the East.... Since
God is spiritual light, and Christ is called in the Scriptures the Sun of
Righteousness and Dayspring, the East is the direction that must be assigned to
His worship. For everything good must be assigned to Him from Whom every
good thing arises.... The Scripture also says, “And God planted a garden
eastward in Eden; and there He put the man whom He had formed; and when he
had transgressed His command, He expelled him and made him to dwell over
against the delights of Paradise, which clearly is the West. So then we worship
God seeking and striving after our old fatherland. Moreover the tent of Moses
had its veil and mercy seat towards the East. Also in the celebrated temple of
Solomon the gate of the Lord was placed eastward. Moreover Christ, when He
hung on the cross, had His face towards the West, and so we worship, striving
after Him. And when He was received again into Heaven, He was borne towards
the East, and thus His Apostles worship Him... So then in expectation of His
coming we worship towards the East. But this tradition of the Apostles is
unwritten. For much that has been handed down to us by tradition is unwritten.
194
Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, tr. S.
Salmond, 1898, reprinted by Eerdmans
Publ. Co., 1989, Book IV, chapter XII:1-3
195
The properties of the divine nature
Uncreate, without beginning, immortal, infinite, eternal, immaterial, good, creative, just,
enlightening, immutable, passionless, uncircumscribed, immeasureable, unlimited, unseen,
unthinkable, wanting in nothing, being His own rule and authority, all-ruling, life-giving,
omnipotent, of infinite power, containing and maintaining the universe and making provision
for all: all these and such like attributes the Deity possesses by nature, not having received
them from elsewhere, but Himself imparting all good to His own creations according to the
capacity of each.
The divine nature has the property of penetrating all things without mixing with them
and of being itself impenetrable by anything else.
Since God, Who is good and more than good, did not find
satisfaction in self-contemplation, but in His exceeding goodness
wished certain things to come into existence which would enjoy
His benefits and share in His goodness. He brought all things out
of nothing into being and created them, both what is invisible and
what is visible. And it is by thought that He creates, and thought
is the basis of the work, the Word filling it and the Spirit
perfecting it.
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A Cloud of Witnesses
The Deep Ecological Legacy of Christianity
185
Every creature is a manifestation of God
Every visible or invisible creature is a “theophany” or appearance of God.
The Christian is the one who, wherever he looks, sees God everywhere
and rejoices in Him.... Man is the microcosm in the strictest sense of the
word. He is the summary of all existence. There is no creature that is not
recapitulated in man. There is nothing in the universe that is lower than
body or higher than soul.
De Divisione Naturae
God and the creation are one. We ought not to think of God and the creature as two
and different from one another. The creature exists in God while God Himself in a
wonderful and ineffable way is created in the creature.
De Divisione Naturae, III, 17, 678C
God as the cause of all goodness
Let us take our examples from nature. This goodness is like a river which, rising at its
source, flows in its bed ever downward uninterruptedly to the sea. In the same way,
divine goodness, being, life, wisdom — everything which is in the primordial source of
all — flows downward like a stream, first into the primordial causes, ineffable in their
workings, but still in harmony with them, they flow from higher to lower, finally reaching
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the lowest ranks of the All. The return flow is through the most secret pores of nature
by a concealed path to the source.
quoted in Clarence Glacken, Traces on the
Rhodian Shore, University of California Press,
1967, pg. 211
A contemplation of creation
Consider the infinite, multiple power of the seed – how many grasses, fruits and
animals are contained in each kind of seed; and how there surges from each a
beautiful, innumerable multiplicity of forms. Contemplate with your inner eye how in a
master the many laws of an art or science are one; how they live in a spirit that
disposes them. Contemplate how an infinite number of lines may cross through a
single point, and other similar examples drawn from nature.
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From the contemplation of such examples as these, raised above all things by
the wings of natural contemplation, illumined and supported by divine grace, you will
be able to penetrate by the keenness of your mind the secrets of the Word and, to the
extent that it is granted to the human being who seeks signs of his God, you will see
how all things made by the Word live in the Word and are life: “For in him,” as the
sacred Scripture says, “we live and move and have our being.”
The Voice of the Eagle, Homily X
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St. Symeon the New Theologian (949 - 1022)
One of the greatest of the Byzantine mystics and theologians, St. Symeon began his
career in the Royal Court of the Eastern Roman Empire in Constantinople. He soon
became disenchanted with courtly life and left to join the Studit monastery where a gifted
“staretz,” or spiritual teacher, dwelled. Symeon eventually became more a spiritual master
than a systematic theologian. Among his emphases is the accessibility of spiritual
experience, especially connection to the Divine Light, which he describes as the personal,
visible experience of the light of Christ within. His biographer Nicetas Stephanos wrote:
“Having arrived at a high degree of union with the Holy Spirit, he has become for the
people of Israel, the monks, ʻthe river of God, filled with the water of the Spirit.ʼ” Again, he
writes, “He was entirely possessed by the Holy Spirit. His thought was equal to that of the
Apostles for the Divine Spirit inspired his every movement.” A central theme of Symeonʼs
teaching is that the things of the world belong to everyone and that it is a sin to appropriate
them or hoard them for oneʼs private purposes without sharing and equitable distribution.
He taught the need for the freshness of authentic spiritual experience and not merely a
dependence upon the outward forms of Church life, which are not soul-saving in
themselves. Symeon was instrumental in the revival of early Christian methods of prayer
and spiritual practice which cultivate a direct experience of the brilliant light of Christ. He
describes creation as a gift from God which is to be spiritualized through the rebirth and
growth of Christ within each person. As the individual is renewed in Christ, so the creation
which "awaits the manifestation of the sons of God" (Romans 8:19), is transformed with
him. “Thus he transforms creation, making it sing the praises of the divine Majesty.”
A prayer of thanksgiving
For before the world came into being from thee (John 17:5), Thou didst
have me wholly in Thyself and glorified me by giving me reason, and
honored me with Thy image. For no other reason but for my sake, who
Thou didst create according to Thine image and likeness (Genesis 1:26),
has Thou brought forth all things out of nothing, and made me to be king of
all earthly things for the glory of Thy mighty work and Thy goodness.
From whence could I have known, O Master, that Thou, who are invisible
and without limit, yet may be seen and contained within us? From whence
was I able to think that Thou, the Master who hast created the universe,
unites Thyself to men whom Thou hast formed, making them bearers of
God and Thy sons?
The Discourses, "On Works of Mercy"
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The root cause of failure to share the goods of the world
Through greed we fall under a double accusation and thus are subject to eternal
punishment and condemnation — the one, the accusation of lacking mercy, the other,
of putting our hope in stored treasures instead of in God. For the one who has hoarded
possessions cannot hope in God, as is clear from what Christ our God told us: "there
where your treasure is, there also will be your heart!" He who lets the whole world
profit from the wealth he had put aside is not therefore entitled to a reward. On the
contrary, he is guilty for unjustly depriving others. And even more than this, he is
responsible for all those who perished through hunger and thirst, for all those he could
have fed up till then, but did not. He is guilty of burying the share of the poor and letting
them cruelly die of hunger and cold. He has murdered as many victims as he could
have fed.
Catechesis 9:196-213
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He is in my heart, he is in heaven:
Both there and here He shows Himself to me with equal glory.
Hymns of Divine Love
Contemplating reality
No man can use his visual sense alone and properly comprehend the greatness of the
heavens, or the extent of the earth, or the order of all things. How could bodily eyes ever
manage to grasp things that transcend mind and understandings? It is only with
difficulty that the mind can gain a true contemplation of existing reality, and only then
after it has been purified of its own opinions, freed of its prejudices, and illumined by the
grace and mercy of God. Even then, it only perceives insofar as it has been illumined.
The Practical and
Theological chapters, 1:34
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The nature of “will” in creatures
A man who does His will, even unto death, is thereby left completely without his own
will. Yet no living and moving creature is without will, but only those that have neither
senses nor power to move. Plants possess a certain inner movement and growth; but
it cannot be said that this movement and growth are the result of the natural will — for
they have no soul. But every creature with a soul by nature also possesses a will.
Thus, whoever kills his own will by effort, with attention and zeal especially towards
this end, and becomes devoid of will, has obviously transcended his nature and is
outside of it. Such a man no longer himself wishes anything since he has no wishes of
his own, and does nothing of himself, either good or evil.
Those who with the help of the Holy Spirit have been vouchsafed union with
God and have tasted of His ineffable blessings, no longer delight in empty — I would
even say dishonorable and worthless — glory from men. Neither do they wish for
money, costly garments, or precious stones, as the foolish call them. ... Neither do
they aspire to be close to any famous or renowned men of the world, since no man
cares to exchange riches for poverty....
“Practical and Theological Precepts,” Nr. 179-
180, in Writings from the Philokalia on Prayer
of the Heart, Faber and Faber, London, 1951.
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The bright condition of the future creation
The whole creation, after it will be renewed and become spiritual, will become a
dwelling which is immaterial, incorruptible, unchanging, and eternal. The heaven will
become incomparably more brilliant and bright than it appears now; it will become
completely new. The earth will receive a new unutterable beauty, being clothed in
many-formed, unfading flowers, bright and spiritual. The sun will shine more powerfully
than now, and the whole world will become more perfect than any word can describe.
Having become spiritual and divine, it will become united with the noetic world; it will
be a paradise, a heavenly Jerusalem, the inalienable inheritance of the sons of God....
But when the earthly will be united with the heavenly, then also the righteous will
inherit that already-renewed earth whose inheritors are to be those meek ones who
are blessed by the Lord.
“The Sin of Adam,” translation by Theophan the
Recluse, 1892, “How is the whole creation again
to be renewed?” Homily 45:5
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Sanctifying the temple of the world
When man finds his destiny, which is to glorify God,
he also leads the whole of creation to its destiny, which is to glorify God.
As he sanctifies the temple of his being,
man also sanctifies the temple of the entire world.
Thus he transforms creation,
making it sing the praises of the divine Majesty.
Anestis Kesolopoulos, quoting St. Symeon the
New Theologian, Man and the Environment:
A Study of St. Symeon the New Theologian,
trans. E. Theokritoff, St. Vladimirʼs Seminary
Press, Crestwood, 2001, p. 66.
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St. Peter of Damaskos (1027? - 1107?)
A Syrian monk who writes primarily for other monks. St. Peter lived in a small skete (a
monastic village) in the Syrian desert. He tells us that he does not know what he will write
until he picks up his writing implement and it is actually touching paper.... He never
owned any books. His writings depict a cosmos infused with the presence of God and he
finds everywhere the love of God dwelling in all things. St. Peter of Damascus is
important for ecological awareness because he reflects a cosmological vision in which
“Godʼs providence embraces the whole of creation.” This becomes accessible to us, he
writes, as we mold ourselves into the likeness of God through the acquisition of the
virtues and contemplation. From St. Peter of Damascus we learn that the world is a
manifestation of divinity; that through creation we can discern the Word which sustains
every creature; that through examination of both the little things and the large, we find the
continuing work of our Lord Jesus Christ while still in this world. In accordance with the
monastic style of his time, his writing is deliberately asystematic which requires the
reader to restore the original internal harmony to arrive at his or her own view of their
place in spiritual formation.
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Contemplating the visible things of Godʼs power and providence, His goodness and
wisdom, as St. Paul says (cf. Romans 1:20-21), and perceiving the mysteries hidden in
the divine Scriptures, [the one whose intellect has been purified] is given the grace to
ascend with Christ through the contemplation of intelligible realities.... Perceiving the
invisible through the visible, and the eternal through the transitory, he realizes that if
this ephemeral world... is so beautiful, how much more beautiful must be the eternal,
inconceivable blessings “that God has prepared for those who love Him” (I Cor.2:9)
Philokalia, Vol. III, A Treasury of Divine
Knowledge, Book 1, trans. by Philip Sherrard,
Faber and Faber, London, p. 99
St. Gregory the Theologian says these things [of the magnificence and wo nder of
creation] are insignificant in comparison with Christʼs incarnation and with the
blessings to come. He perceives too how Godʼs goodness and wisdom, His strength
and forethought, which are concealed in created things, are brought to light by m anʼs
artistic powers. ...
Whoever is aware of all this recognizes that there is nothing incidental or evil in
creation, and that even what takes place against Godʼs will is miraculously changed by
God into something good.
Philokalia, Vol. III, “The Sixth Stage of
Contemplation,” trans. by Philip Sherrard,
Faber and Faber, London, p. 137.
Moderation in contemplation
For what one cannot understand, one should give silent thanks, as St. Isaac (the
Syrian) says, but should not presumptuously assume that one has understood it. And
St. Isaac, borrowing his words from Sirach, also says, “When you find honey, eat
moderately, lest by over-indulging you make yourself sick.
As St. Gregory the Theologian says, “Uncontrolled contemplation may well push
us over the edge, when we seek for what is beyond our strength and are unwilling to
say, “God knows this, but who am I?”
And as St. Basil observes, we must believe that He who made the mountains
and the great sea monsters has also hollowed out the sting of the bee.
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Philokalia, Vol. III, “The Sixth Stage of
Contemplation,” trans. by Philip Sherrard,
Faber and Faber, London, pp. 140-141.
As it is said, “In everything gives thanks” (1 Thess. 5:18).... No matter what you do,
you should keep in mind the Creator of all things.... When you see the sky, the earth,
the sea and all that is in them, marvel at these things and glorify their Creator. When
you put on clothing, acknowledge whose gift it is and praise Him who in His providence
has given you life. In short, if everything you do becomes for you an occasion for
glorifying God, you will be praying unceasingly. And in this way your soul will always
rejoice (cf. 1 Thessalonians 5:16; Psalm 77:3. LXX).
Philokalia, Vol. III, “Godʼs Universal and
Particular Gifts,” trans. by Philip Sherrard,
Faber and Faber, London, pp. 173.
Spiritual sight
If we are to attain the humility and spiritual knowledge necessary for the understanding
of the mysteries hidden in the divine Scriptures and in all creation, we need devotion
and stillness, total or partial.... Stillness is the highest gift of all, and without it, we
cannot be purified and come to know our weakness and the trickery of demons;
neither will we be able to understand the power of God and His providence from the
divine words that we read and sing.
Philokalia, Vol. III, “Spurious Knowledge,”
trans. by Philip Sherrard, Faber and Faber,
London, p. 194
Peter addresses the insights which emerge as one experiences the illuminating light of
Jesus Christ and how it opens up a deeper, more profound understanding of creation.
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Hildebert of Lavardin (1056 - 1133)
Bishop of Le Mans, Archbishop of Tours, and celebrated medieval poet, Hildebert was
born in the Castle of Lavardin near Montoir on the Loire river. As Archbishop, he
strenuously defended the rights of the Church against the encroachments of King
Louis VI of France who arrogated to himself the right to appoint officials for the Church.
Hildebert was learned and pious and always had the well-being of the Church at heart.
St. Bernard of Clairvaux calls him a great “pillar of the Church.” Hildebertʼs contribution
to ecological awareness lies in his continual insistence that Godʼs presence is always
with us and with every other aspect of life in creation. Therefore every act ought to be
done with reverence for it is done in and before God. He is also known as one of the
greatest hymnologists of the Middle Ages.
God is over all things, under all things, outside all; within
but not enclosed; without but not excluded; above but not
raised up; below but not depressed; wholly above,
presiding; wholly beneath, sustaining; wholly without,
embracing; wholly within, filling.
As quoted in Christianity Today
September 16, 1991
203
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St. Bernard of Clairvaux (1090 - 1153)
A reformer of monastic life and counselor to kings and popes, St. Bernard led the early
attack by the Church against the movement toward rationalism. He helped stop ethnic
pogroms, advised the rulers of empires, and shaped the course of European history.
His knowledge of natural processes was detailed and he found great charm in what he
called the "sweet scenes" of the French countryside. These scenes delighted him and he
reports on the consolation which he found in reflection upon the mysteries hidden within
it. His great tool for accomplishment was prayer, and because he commended his every
action into the hands of God, he never had a sense of personal accomplishment, knowing
that the credit always belonged to His Creator. He does not write extensively about
creation, but when he does, his insights are profound and reflect the great depth of
insight which underlies his understanding of the place of creation in the Christian world
view. His particular emphasis is upon respect for the body and its senses because these
serve as gateways for our ascent to understanding God.
That spot (in the meadow below the Clairvaux monastery) has much
charm; it greatly soothes weary minds, relieves anxieties and cares,
helps souls who seek the Lord greatly to devotion, and recalls to them
the thought of the heavenly sweetness to which they aspire. The smiling
countenance of the earth is painted with varying colors, the blooming
verdure of spring satisfies the eyes, and its sweet odor salutes the
nostrils. While I am charmed without by the sweet influence of the beauty
of the country, I have not less delight within in reflecting on the mysteries
which are hidden beneath it.
The Works of Bernard, Vol. II, pg. 464-465
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"Indeed, to this day, he confesses that whatever competence he has in
the scriptures, whatever spiritual sensitivity he has for them, stems
mainly from his meditating or praying in woodland or field. And among
his friends, he jokes merrily of having no other masters for such lessons
but the oaks and beeches."
Quoted in Martinus Cawley, Bernard of Clairvaux:
Early Biographies, Lafayette, 1990, Vol. 1, pg. 31.
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The road to God
Theirs is an endless road, yea, even a hopeless maze, who seek for
goods before they seek for God.
quoted in The Harper Religious and
Inspirational Quotation Companion, pg. 445.
St. Bernard describes the healing properties of the plants and herbs in the area around
Clairvaux. He describes how sick monks find solace and pleasure within the pastoral
scenes of the valley because it is a place suitable for healing.
See how, in order to cure one's sickness, the goodness of God multiplies
remedies, causes the clear air to shine in serenity, the earth to breathe
forth fruitfulness, and the sick man himself to inhale through eyes and
ears and nostrils the delights of colors, of songs, and of odours.
quoted from Clarence Glacken, Traces on the
Rhodian Shore, University of California Press,
1967, pg. 213.
Recreating Paradise
It is the duty of monks to work as partners of God in improving His
creation.... Labor is like a prayer which helps in recreating paradise out of
chaotic wilderness.
As quoted by Clarence Glacken and requoted
by Rene Dubos in A God Within, Scribners,
New York, 1972, p. 171
Hugh of St. Victor (1096 - 1141)
An Augustinian monk who served as master of the Abbey School of Paris, he is known
for restoring the mystical tradition of an earlier Christianity and for inspiring concern for
spiritual transformation. His spiritual discipline caused him to shine like a beacon of
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spiritual renewal to the twelfth century. For Hugh knowledge of the world introduces
contemplation of the Creator. “Reflection on creation,” he writes, “should cause one to cry
out in amazement with the Psalmist, ʻHow great are your works, O Lord! In wisdom you
have made them all.” For Hugh, only foolish people will not know God from creation, and
“stupid people will not understand” their spiritualizing potential. “Only spiritual people, who
seek to better know God, will perceive the wisdom of God from the beauty of creation.”
The most prominent themes about care of creation in Hugh of St. Victorʼs writings are the
wisdom and rationality of the world, the ability to know God through contemplation of his
works, and the importance of using the senses prayerfully so that they may apprehend
the beauty of God everywhere in creation.
The whole sensible world is like a book written by the finger of God, that is, created by
the divine power, and individual creatures are like certain characters invented not by
human judgement, but by divine choice to manifest and to signify in some way the
invisible wisdom of God. But just as when unlettered people see an open book, they
see the characters, but do not know the letters, so foolish people and natural human
beings, w ho do not perceive the things of God, see the external appearances in these
visible creatures, but do not understand their inner meaning. But those who are
spiritual persons can judge all things insofar as they consider the beauty of the work
externally, but grasp within them how much the wisdom of the Creator is to be
admired.
The Three Days of Invisible Light, p. 4
208
The light of the wisdom of God in creation
He says that the beautiful features of creation attest to the wisdom of God.
Hugh writes extensively on the beauty of creatures through which Godʼs wisdom can
be perceived. Their beauty can be found in their “arrangement, motion, appearance,
and quality.”
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St. Hildegard of Bingen, (1098 - 1179)
A visionary and prophet in the Old Testament tradition, Hildegard was awed by the
audacity of the tasks given to her as she listened to the Word of God. She submitted to
her interior guidance and served as a Benedictine nun and abess of a medieval German
convent. In the processes of the earth she sensed "divinity everywhere." She combined
Christian theology with ethics and cosmology; produced an encyclopedia of medicine and
natural science; authored liturgical hymns; and wrote the first Christian morality play.
Beginning at the age of sixty, she undertook four lengthy missionary tours of Europe. Her
contemporaries called her “the Sibyl of the Rhine,” and she ministered as an oracle of
inspired counsel on topics from marital troubles to health problems and the ultimate fate
of souls. Today herbalists have rediscovered the benefits of her medical prescriptions
and have applied her remedies in homeopathy. She saw things which were invisible to
those around her; she foretold the future; and those who knew her said there was a
continual “luminosity” around her head which she called “the reflection of the living light.”
She wrote eloquently about God's blessings through the world and proclaimed that sin
and corruption destroy the harmony of the cosmos and besmirch the grandeur of God's
gift of creation. For her, nature evokes joy, wonder, praise, thanksgiving, and especially
love. Hildegard's legacy to the modern world is that only a transformed heart, following
Christ wherever He leads and willing to die to all idols, brings healing to the earth.
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God gives creation to humanity
The high and the low of all creation, God gives to humankind to use. If this privilege is
misused, God's justice permits creation to punish humanity.
quoted in Elizabeth Roberts, Earth Prayers,
Harper and Row, SF, 1991, pg. 69.
Holy Spirit, giving life to all life, moving all creatures, root of all things, washing them
clean, wiping out their mistakes, healing their wounds, you are our true life, luminous,
wonderful, awakening the heart from its ancient sleep.
quoted in Stephen Mitchell, The
Enlightened Heart: An Anthology of Sacred
Poetry, Harper and Row, 1989, pg. 42
The future of creation and of history is decided in the hearts of people willing to die to
all idols as they follow Jesus Christ and open to the immediacy of the Holy Spirit who
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sets their hearts aflame... and who empowers their actions to sprout with "viriditas," (or
"greening power," as Hildegard calls it).
"Letters," as quoted by Renate Craine, in
"Hildegard of Bingen: A Sign for our Times," in
Christian Ecology: Building an Environmental
Ethic for the 21st Century, NACCE
publications, San Francisco, 1988, pg. 25.
The following words, Hildegard says, were dictated to her by the Holy Spirit: I, the
highest and fiery power, have kindled every living spark, and I have breathed out
nothing that can die.... I am the fiery life of the divine essence — the flame above the
beauty of the fields; I shine in the waters; in the sun, the moon and the stars. I burn.
And by means of the airy wind, I stir everything into quickness with certain invisible life
which sustains all. For the air lives in its “green” power and its blossoming; the waters
flow as if they were alive. Even the sun is alive in its own light. I, the fiery power, lie
hidden in these things and they blaze from Me, just as m an is continually moved by
his breath, and as the fire contains the nimble flame. All these things live in their own
essence and are without death, since I am life.... I am the whole of life -- life was not
torn from stones; it did not bud from branches; nor is it rooted in the generative power
of the male. Rather, every living thing is rooted in Me.
The Book of Divine Works, quoted in Kallistos
Ware, “Through the Creation to the Creator,”
paper at the Third Marco Pallis Memorial
Lecture, London, October 9, 1996, p. 11.
I, the fiery life of divine essence, am aflame beyond the beauty of the meadows. I
gleam in the waters, and I burn in the sun, moon and stars.... I awaken everything
to life.
Hildegard. as quoted in Roger Gottlieb, The
Sacred Earth: Religion, Nature and the
Environment, Routledge Press, New York,
1996, p. 46
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The visible and the temporal
And again I heard the voice from heaven, saying to me: “The visible and
the temporal is a manifestation of the invisible and the eternal.
Scivias, “The Universe and its Symbolism,”
Book one, Vision three
Hildegard sees a vision which she describes in these terms: “And the atmosphere
suddenly rises up in a dark sphere of great magnitude.” With this image, she hears a
voice from on high, saying, “This is the material of creation while still formless and
imperfect, not yet full of creatures; it is a sphere, for it is under the incomprehensible
power of God, which is never absent from it, and by the Supernal Will, it rises up in
Godʼs great power in the twinkling of an eye.
Scivias, Book Two,
Vision One: The Redeemer, #6
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Man is part of creation
Of all the strengths of Godʼs creation, Manʼs is the most profound, made in a wondrous
way with great glory from the dust of the earth, and so entangled with the strengths of
the rest of creation that he can never be separated from them....
Scivias, Book One, Vision Three, #16
God, Who made all things by His will, created them so that His
Name would be known and glorified, showing in them not just
the things that are visible and temporal, but also the things
that are invisible and eternal.
Scivias, Book One, Vision three, #1
Do not denigrate anything God has created. All creation is simple, plain and good. And
God is present throughout his creation. Why do you ever consider things beneath your
notice? God's justice is to be found in every detail of what he has made. The human
race alone is capable of injustice. Human beings alone are capable of disobeying
God's laws, because they try to be wiser than God. ...
The rest of Creation cries out against the evil and perversity of the human
species. Other creatures fulfil the commandments of God; they honor his laws. And
other creatures do not grumble and complain about those laws. But human beings
rebel against those laws, defying them in word and action. And in doing so they inflict
terrible cruelty on the rest of God's creation.
Scivias 1.2.29-30
The plants give off the fragrance of their flowers. The precious
stones reflect their brilliance to others. Every creature yearns
for a loving embrace. The whole of nature serves humanity,
and in this service offers all her bounty.
Quoted in Roger Gottlieb, This Sacred Earth:
Religion, Nature, Environment, Routledge
Press, New York, 1996, p. 16
Hildegard urges all the faithful to “recognize all the divine wonders and symbols” that
can be found in the world and to see them as signs of God. She writes:
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All living creatures are, so to speak, sparks from the
radiation of Godʼs brilliance, and these sparks emerge from
God like the rays of the sun.
Book of Divine Works, 4.11: 86-87
Do not mock anything God has created. All creation is simple, plain and good. And
God is present throughout his creation. Why do you ever consider things beneath your
notice? God's justice is to be found in every detail of what he has made. The human
race alone is capable of injustice. Human beings alone are capable of disobeying
God's laws, because they try to be wiser than God.
The rest of Creation cries out against the evil and perversity of the human
species. Other creatures fulfil the commandments of God; they honor his laws. And
other creatures do not grumble and complain at those laws. But human beings rebel
against those laws, defying them in word and action. And in doing so they inflict terrible
cruelty on the rest of God's creation.
Scivias 1.2.29
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St. Aelred of Rievaulx (1110 - 1167)
An English Cistercian monk who was strongly influenced by the Irish missionaries and
their Celtic tradition, Aelred became abbot of the monastery at Rievaulx at the age of 33.
Under his holiness, example and leadership, Rievaulx became the largest monastery in
twelfth century England with more than 650 monks. He is especially known for his
sensitive spiritual direction and the gentle holiness which he radiated. Great throngs of
people were attracted to hear him preach and teach. He was also known for his Celtic
sense of nature as a theophany, for love of the animals, and for cultivating a strong
emphasis on charity within the Cistercian Order.
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217
St. Francis of Assisi (1182 - 1226)
The founder of the Franciscan Order, he exhorted his brothers to love of God, to love of
holy poverty which frees the spirit, and to love of the Gospel before all other things.
Because he sought Christ so fervently, he found Him in every person and every creature.
He gave sermons in the woods and the birds flocked to him. He called all creatures
“brother,” and he discerned the secrets of people and animals alike with his sensitive
heart. He possessed an exceeding love which embraced and touched all creatures. Even
the wild wolf of Gubbio which devoured the people was no match for his holiness and
became tame in his presence. To Francis, the whole creation was alive and close to his
heart. According to those who were closest to him, Francis was “wholly caught up in the
love of God.” Thus he saw in every creature the goodness of God, which caused him to
be possessed with an extraordinary love for created things, particularly those which as
living symbols reminded him of God.” Every single thing to him was symbolic of
something yet higher, and so all created things had sacred meaning beyond their
physical appearance and even their intrinsic value. In the oldest accounts of Francis, the
creatures were to him “a song of Godʼs love.” Francis' life is important because he
demonstrates how praise of the natural world can lead upward to an ecstatic praise of the
Lord, and culminate in a glorious and transforming vision of God. For Roman Catholics
he is the patron saint of ecologists.
Love of creation
When the brothers were out cutting wood, he would forbid them to cut down the whole
tree so that it might grow up again. He also ordered the gardeners not to dig up the
edges of the gardens so that wild flowers and green grasses could grow and glorify the
Father of all things.... He picked up worms so they would not be trampled on and had
honey and wine set out for the bees in the winter season. He called by the name of
brother all animals....
Thomas Celano, Vita Prima, as
quoted by Loren Wilkinson, Earthkeeping,
Eerdmans Publ. Co., 1987
When he found many flowers growing together, it might happen that he would speak to
them and encourage them, as though they could understand, to praise the Lord. It was
the same with the fields of corn and the vineyards, the stones of the earth and in the
woods, all the beauteous meadows, the tinkling brooks, the sprouting gardens, earth,
fire, air and wind -- all these he exhorted in his pure childlike spirit to love God and to
serve Him joyfully. He was wont to call all things his brothers and sisters, and in a
wonderful manner inaccessible to others he would enter into the secret things as one
to whom "the glorious liberty of the children of God" had been given.
Thomas Celano, Vita Prima 80-81
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Instruction to the birds
My little sisters, the birds, many are the bonds that unite us to God. And your duty is to
praise Him everywhere and always.... Praise Him likewise for the food He provides you
without your working for it, for the songs He has taught you, for the numbers that His
blessing has multiplied, for your species which He preserved at the time of the Ark of
olden time, and for the realm of the air which He has reserved for you.
God sustains you without having to sow or reap. He gives you fountains and
streams to drink from, mountains and hills in which to take refuge, and tall trees in
which to build your nests. Although you do not know how to sew or spin, He gives you
and your little ones the clothing you need.
How the Creator must love you to grant you such favors! So, my sister birds, do
not be ungrateful, but continually praise Him who showers blessings upon you.
Thomas Celano, Vita Prima, 56f
Francis loved the creatures, but would not let attachments to them develop. When a
small cricket came near the evening fire and began to chirp and amuse the brothers, it
was kept to provide continuing entertainment. Francis however saw that the cricket
could become a source for self-indulgence or pride, and after some days announced,
Let us give our sister cricket leave to go now, for it has made us
sufficiently happy. We do not want our flesh to glory vainly over things of
this kind.
Thomas Celano, Vita Secunda, 171.
Francis taught that people have a duty to be grateful for the many services which
creation provides toward our sustenance and to appreciate the beauty and benefits of
the material world.
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These creatures minister to our needs every day: without them we could
not live; and through them the human race greatly offends the Creator.
Every day we fail to appreciate so great a blessing by not praising as we
should the Creator and Dispenser of all these gifts.
The Legend of Perugia 43, as quoted
by Roger Sorrell, St. Francis of Assisi and
Nature, Oxford Univ. Press, 1988, pg. 35.
Holy obedience puts to shame all natural and selfish desires. It mortifies our lower
nature and makes it obey the Holy Spirit and our fellow men. Obedience subjects a
man to everyone on earth, and not only to men, but to all the beasts as well, and the
wild animals, so that they can do what they like with him, as far as God allows them.
Salute to the Virtues, as quoted in
Robert Murray, SJ, The Cosmic Covenant,
Sheed and Ward, London, 1993, pg. 156.
In the middle of the night, Francis received a vision which informed him that he should
"be glad and joyful in the midst of your infirmities and tribulations." He related to his
companions,
Plots of flowers
St. Francis ordered a plot to be set aside for the cultivation of flowers when the
convent garden was made, in order that all who saw them might remember the Eternal
Sweetness.
Thomas of Celano, Life of St. Francis,
in The Harper Religious and Inspirational
Quotation Companion, pg. 456.
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Canticle of the Sun
My brothers, birds, you should praise your Creator very much and always love Him; He
gave you feathers to clothe you, wings so that you could fly, and whatever else was
necessary for you. God made you noble among His creatures, and He gave you a
home in the purity of the air; though you neither sow nor reap, he nevertheless
protects and governs you without any solicitude on your part.
Vita Prima 58, Omnibus translation
My little bird sisters, you owe much to God, your Creator, and you must always and
everywhere praise Him, because He has given you freedom to fly anywhere -- also He
has given you a double and triple covering, and your pretty and colorful clothing, and
your food is ready without your working for it, and your singing that was taught to you
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by the Creator, and your numbers that have been multiplied by the grace of God -- and
because He preserved your species in Noahʼs ark so that your race would not
disappear from the earth. And you are indebted to Him for the realm of the air which
He assigned to you. Moreover, you neither sow nor reap, yet God nourishes you, and
He gives you the rivers and springs to drink from. He gives you high mountains and
hills, rocks and crags as refuges, and lofty trees in which to make your nests. So the
Creator loves you very much since He gives you so m any good things. Therefore, my
little bird sisters, be careful not to be ungrateful, but strive always to praise God.
Actus Fioretti 16
In discussing why he composed the “Canticle of the Creatures,” Francis says, “These
creatures minister to our needs every day. Without them we could not live; and through
them the human race greatly offends the Creator. Every day we fail to appreciate so
great a blessing by not praising as we should the Creator and Dispenser of these
gifts.”
“Legend of Perugia,” Nr. 43, as quoted in Roger
Sorrell, St. Francis of Assisi and Nature, Oxford
University Press, New York, 1988, p. 119.
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The creatures as teachers of obedience
Try to realize the dignity which God has conferred on you. He created and formed your
body in the image of His beloved Son, and you are made in His own likeness. And yet
every creature under heaven serves and acknowledges and obeys its Creator in its
own way better than you do.
Admonition 5
Not to hurt our humble brethren is our first duty to them, but to stop there
is not enough. We have a higher mission – to be of service to them
wherever they require it.
St. Francis of Assisi, in Saint Bonaventura, Life,
as quoted in Ingrid Newkirk, Save the Animals,
Time-Warner Book, New York, 1990, p. 33.
Holy obedience puts to shame all natural and selfish desires.... Obedience subjects a
man to everyone on earth, and not only to men, but all the beasts as well and to the
wild animals, so that they can do what they like with him, as far as God allows them.
“Salute to the Virtues,” quoted in Roger Sorrell, St. Francis of Assisi and Nature, Oxford University
Press, New York, 1988, p. 74.
No human language could describe the passionate love with which Francis burned for
Christ.... He sought to love God in everything. He delighted in all the works of Godʼs
hands and from the vision of joy on earth his mind soared aloft to the life-giving Source
and Cause of all. In everything beautiful he saw him who is beauty itself, and he
followed his beloved everywhere by his likeness imprinted on creation; of all creation
he made a ladder by which he might mount up and embrace Him who is all-desirable.
He seemed to perceive a divine harmony in the interplay of powers and faculties given
by God to his creatures.
Quoted about St. Francis by St. Bonaventure,
Major Life, in Br. Ramon, SSF, The Wisdom of
Saint Francis, Eerdman, Grand Rapids,
1997, p. 13
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224
Albert the Great (1193 - 1280)
A monk of the mendicant Dominican order, Albertus Magnus began his religious life
journeying on foot from monastic cloister to cloister, praying and begging for food. His
travels through rural areas inspired the beginnings of a natural theology. His work, "De
Natura Locorum," represented the first elaborate discussion of geographical theory and
its relationship to human culture since the time of Hippocrates. Albert said that every
place differs in some manner from every other place. The basis for Albertʼs conclusions
regarding places and nature was a detailed study and knowledge of the variety of
locations and a detailed identification and examination of the factors which contribute to
each placeʼs uniqueness, without which, he says, one cannot have a true natural science.
Albert achieved a well-ordered system of thought on the effects of nature on human
development. He showed how human settlements change the natural environment and
improve upon it. He saw the finger of Providence in a designed earth; nature as a book
revealing the artisanry of God; and the need to know nature for religious and practical
purposes. Albert wrote numerous texts on chemistry, physiology, geography and
astronomy. He was fascinated by human ability to domesticate and change plants, to
work the soil, to cultivate fields and orchards with a variety of influences. For his
pioneering work in horticulture and his acute observations of nature, he is considered the
patron saint of students of the natural sciences.
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The unfriendly features of the landscape
Men are not helpless in the face of harsh or unfriendly features of nature. Often they
can change it. Areas near or in the middle of a forest have stifling and dense air; in
many of these places the air is cloudy and has whirlwinds. The floor of the forest is
moist; the vapor, in contact with the trees, becomes confined and dense. For that
reason the wise men of the past improved their localities by cutting down trees and
woods. The walnut and the oak and some other trees are harmful because they either
poison the air with their bitterness or confine it because of their height, thus preventing
it from escaping and being purified, for they can be changed by human agency.
De Natura Locorum, Tr. II, chap. 4, as quoted
by Clarence Glacken in Traces on the Rhodian
Shore, Univ. of California Press, 1967, p. 303.
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Two ways of considering the creatures
Parallel between the divine plan and the ideal civil plan
In comparing civil authority with divine authority, Albert says that the
founder or ruler of any city or kingdom or other social unit must take for a
model the example of Godʼs creation of the world. In this “model” each
ruler, in fact every person, can see Godʼs instruction in the way created
things are brought forth, and in “the orderly distinction of the parts of the
world.” He says we notice many distinctions in the forms of creation, from
stars in the heavens, birds of the air, fish in the water, animals on land.
“We notice further that, for each species, things it needs are abundantly
provided by the Divine Power. “
”Therefore the founder of a city or kingdom must first choose a suitable
place which will preserve the inhabitants by its healthfulness, provide the
necessities of life by its fruitfulness, please them with its beauty, and
render them safe from their enemies by its natural protection.”
“On Kingship: Letter to the King of Cyprus,” pp.
99-100, as quoted in Clarence Glacken,
Traces on the Rhodian Shore, pp. 174-175.
In studying nature, we do not have to inquire how God the Creator may,
as He freely wills, use His creatures, to work miracles and thereby show
forth His power. Rather we have to inquire what Nature with its immanent
causes can naturally bring to pass.
De Coelo et Mundo, Book 1, 4:10
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Mechthild of Magdeberg, (1210 - 1297)
Mechtild was a celebrated medieval mystic and nun who lived in Saxony. Under the
spiritual guidance of the Dominicans she led a life of prayer and possessed a remarkable
gift for heavenly inspiration through ecstatic visions. Because she was uneducated and
considered theologically illiterate, she was advised to keep silent about her spiritual
experiences. After much prayer and soul-searching, and after direction from her spiritual
confessor, she wrote, “I am forced to write these words regarding which I would have
gladly kept silent because I fear greatly the power of vainglory. But I have learned to fear
more the judgment of God should I, God's small creature, keep silent.” She helped
cultivate a mystical milieu in Germany during the middle ages. Like others before her, she
affirms a vision of Christʼs presence in every animal, every person and every detail of the
good creation.
A fish cannot drown in water, a bird does not fall in air. In the fire of
creation, gold does not vanish: the fire brightens, and each creature God
made must live in its own true nature. How could I resist my nature, that
lives for oneness with God?
The Flowing Light of the Godhead, as quoted
in The Quotable Spirit, Macmillan Press, NY,
1996, p. 189
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231
St. Bonaventure (1217 - 1274)
Known as the "Seraphic Doctor," Bonaventure consciously tried to follow in the footsteps
of St. Francis. He taught himself theology through prayer and study of Holy Scripture. He
authored texts on the mystical life, and cultivated a love for the virtues. When the
Franciscan friars were torn by dissension and almost disbanded, Bonaventure was
elected minister general. Through his keen spiritual insight, he brought about a renewed
observance of the rule of St. Francis when it seemed the order might dissolve. For this
and his work to establish a spiritual standard, he has been called the second founder of
the Franciscans. To Bonaventure, everything in nature is a sign of God. Following earlier
writings by Augustine, he maintains that each creature is important because in it dwell
“traces of the Trinity.” Because the creatures reflect something of God, they are
embodiments of Godʼs wisdom and so are worthy of respect. In Bonaventureʼs universe,
the least of creatures serves as a translucent, living token, or symbol, of the presence of
God. His contribution to a theology of creation is his emphasis that everything in nature is
a sign of God because it exemplifies some aspect or quality of the Divine Nature. Every
creature is thus important because it carries vestiges of God's own nature.
He, therefore, who is not illumined by such great splendor of created things, is blind;
he who is not awakened by such great clamor is deaf; he who does not praise God
because of all these effects is dumb; he who does not note the first principle from such
great signs is foolish.
Open your eyes, therefore, prick up your spiritual ears, open your lips and apply
your heart, that you may see, hear, praise, love and worship, glorify and honor your
God.
The Mind's Road to God 1:15
We can gather that all the creatures of the world lead the
mind of the contemplative and wise man to the eternal God.
For these creatures are shadows, echoes and pictures...
and vestiges proposed to us and signs divinely given so
that we can see God.
The Mind's Road to God 2:11
The greatness of things – looking at their vast extension, latitude and profundity, at
the immense power extending itself in the diffusion of light, and the efficiency of their
inner uninterrupted and diffuse operation, as manifest in the action of fire – clearly
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portrays the immensity of the power, wisdom and goodness of the Triune Good. Who,
uncircumscribed, exists in all things by His power, presence and essence....
The beauty of things too, if we but consider the diversity of light, forms, and
colors in elementary, inorganic and organic bodies, as in heavenly bodies and
minerals, in stones and metals, and in plants and animals, clearly proclaims these
three attributes of God. Insofar as matter is full of forms because of the seminal
principles, and form is latent with power because of its active potentialities, while
power is capable of many effects because of its efficiency, the plentitude of things
clearly proclaims the same three attributes. In a like manner, manifold activity, whether
natural, cultural, or moral, by its multiple variety, shows forth the immensity of that
power, art and goodness.
The Mind's Road to God 3
233
About St. Francis' view of animals
(Francis) considered all created beings as coming from the paternal heart of God, this
community of origin made him feel a real fraternity with them all. He said,
"They have the same source as we have had. Not to hurt our humble
brethren was our first duty to them; but to stop there is a complete
misapprehension of the intentions of Providence. We have a higher
mission. God wishes that we should succor them whenever they require it."
Brochure from the National Catholic Society
for Animal Welfare, New York, 1959, quoted
by Lewis Regenstein, Replenish the Earth,
Crossroads Books, New York, 1990, pg. 67.
If you ask what is the virtue which makes a person love creatures, because they come
from God and exist for him. I reply that it is compassion and a sort of natural affection.
For example, we see that even now a person can be very fond of a dog because it
obeys him faithfully. In the same way, man in his original state had a natural inclination
to love animals and even irrational creatures. Therefore, the greater the progress a
man makes and the nearer he approaches to the state of innocence the more docile
these creatures become towards him, and the greater the affection he feels for them.
We see this in the case of St. Francis; he overflowed with tender compassion even for
animals, because to some extent he had returned to the state of innocence. This was
made clear by the way irrational creatures obeyed him.
Sentences, translated by Habig, pg. 849, as
quoted by Roger Sorrell, St. Francis of Assisi
and Nature, Oxford Univ. Press, New York,
1988, pg. 52-53.
Thirty-three years after the death of St. Francis, Bonaventure climbed Mt. Alverna
where Francis had some of his most important experiences. There he fasted and
prayed and meditated on how the mind ascends to experiences of God. A series of
visions unfolded before him. From these direct experiences, he saw that all of the
creatures of the world lead the mind to a contemplation of God, because, he says, they
are “shadows, echoes, and pictures, the traces, “simulacra,” and the reflections of the
First Principle most powerful, wisest, and best; of that light and plenitude; of that art
productive, exemplifying, and ordering, given to use for looking upon God.” They are
the exemplifications “set before our yet untrained eyes and minds” to guide them to the
intelligences that they do not see.
Every creature is a sort of picture, a likeness of eternal wisdom. “Those who are
unwilling to give heed to them and to know in them all, to bless Him and to live in Him,
are inexcusable while they are unwilling to be carried forth from the dim shadows of
this world into the wonderful light of God.”
The Mindʼs Road to God, ch. 2, 11-13
234
The universe as a ladder
Whoever is anxious to ascend to God must first eliminate nature-deforming sins, and
then train the mind by prayer, to receive reforming grace; by a good life, to receive
purifying righteousness; by contemplation, to receive perfecting wisdom. And no one
can receive wisdom except through grace, righteousness and knowledge. Likewise, no
one can achieve contemplation except through penetrating meditation, a holy life and
devout prayer.
By the first method, man considers things in themselves, and sees in them
weight, number and measure, and so determine their composition. Thus, man sees in
them mode, species and order, as well as substance, power and operation. From
these, as from so many traces, he can rise to the understanding of the immeasurable
power, wisdom and goodness of the Creator.
By the second method, man considers the world in its origin, development and
end. By faith we understand that the world was fashioned by the Word of God. By faith
we believe that three phases of law succeeded each other and ran their course in
perfect order: the law of nature, the law of Scripture, and the law of grace. Thus are
displayed, first the power, then the providence, lastly the justice of the Supreme
Principle.
By the third method, that of investigation by reason, man sees that some things
possess existence only, others possess existence and life, others again, existence, life
and reason. The first things he sees to be lower, the second to be intermediate, and
the third to be higher. He also sees that some things are only material; others partly
material and partly spiritual; from which he concludes that others still are purely
spiritual....
From these things, which are subject to perception, man rises to the
consideration of divine power, wisdom and goodness as something existent, alive,
intelligent, purely spiritual, incorruptible and immutable.
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This reasoning may be developed in accordance with the sevenfold
characteristics of creatures, which are a sevenfold testimony to the power, wisdom and
goodness of God: that is, by considering the origin, vastness, multitude, beauty,
fullness, operation, and order of all things.
“Journey of the Mind to God,” 1:8-14, in
Bonaventure, Mystical Opuscula, Volume I,
Complete Works of St. Bonaventure, translated
by José de Vinck, St. Anthony Guild Press,
Patterson, NJ, 1960, pp. 12-15.
Creation out of nothing implies, on the part of the creature, a state of being
subsequent upon a state of non-being, and, on the part of the Principle, a
boundless productive power, which is found in God alone. Necessarily then
the universe must be created in time by this same boundless power acting in
itself and without intermediary.
“On Creation,” ch. 1, Nr. 3, The Breviloquium,
The Complete Works of St. Bonaventure, Vol.
II, translated by José de Vinck, St. Anthony
Guild Press, Patterson, NJ, 1963, p. 71.
The universe is like a book reflecting, representing and describing its Maker, the
Trinity, at three different levels of expression: as a trace, an image and a likeness. The
aspect of trace is found in every creature; the aspect of image, in the intellectual
creatures or rational spirits; the aspect of likeness, only in those who are God-
conformed. Through these three successive levels, comparable to the rungs of a
ladder, the human mind is designed to ascend gradually to the supreme Principle who
is God.
This should be understood as follows. All creatures are related to their Creator
and depend upon Him. They may be referred to Him in three different ways: as He is
236
the Principle who creates, the End who motivates, or the Gift who dwells within.... All
creatures, however little they may partake of being, have God for their Principle; all
rational beings, however little they may partake of light, are intended to grasp God
through knowledge and love; and all righteous and holy souls possess the Holy Spirit
as an infused gift.
“On the Trinity of God,” ch. 12, Nrs. 1-2, in The
Breviloquium, Vol. II in The Complete Works of St.
Bonaventure, translated by José de Vinck, Saint
Anthony Guild Press, Patterson, NJ, 1963, p. 104
Francis sought occasion to love God in everything. He delighted in all the works of
God's hands and from the vision of joy on earth his mind soared aloft to the life-giving
source and cause of all. In everything beautiful, he saw Him who is beauty itself, and
he followed his Beloved everywhere by his likeness imprinted on creation. Of all
creation he made a ladder by which he might mount up and embrace him who is all-
desirable. By the power of his extraordinary faith he tasted the Goodness which is the
source of all in each and every created thing, as in so many rivulets. He seemed to
perceive a divine harmony in the interplay of powers and faculties given by God to his
creatures, and like the prophet David he exhorted them all to praise God. ...
His attitude towards creation was simple and direct, as simple as the gaze of a
dove; as he considered the universe, in his pure, spiritual vision, he referred every
created thing to the Creator of all. He saw God in everything, and loved and praised
him in all creation. By God's generosity and goodness, he possessed God in
everything and everything in God. The realization that everything comes from the
same source made him call all created things -- no matter how insignificant -- his
brothers and sisters, because they had the same origins as he.
Major Life of St. Francis, website of the
Discalced Carmelites of Washington, DC.
It is God's way to care for all His creatures, both the greatest and the
least. We should likewise care for creatures, whatsoever they are, in the
sense that we use them in conformity with the divine purpose, in order
that they may not bear witness against us in the Day of Judgement.
De Moribus divinus:
de cura Dei de creaturis
No one species can attain to the likeness of God, says St. Thomas. Neither can any
single creature express the full likeness of God because it cannot be equal to God.
“The presence of multiplicity and variety among created things was therefore
necessary in order that a perfect likeness to God be found in them according to their
manner of being.”
Summa Contra Gentiles, Book 1,
ch. 45, par. 2, transl. by Anton Pegis, Image
Books, Garden City, NY, 1955
The words, "God saw that it was good...," signify that the
things that he had made were to endure, since they
express a certain satisfaction taken by God in his works, as
an artist in his art.
Summa Theologica 1:73
We are not to suppose that the existence of things is caused by God in the same way
as the existence of a house is caused by its builder. When the builder departs, the
house still remains standing.... But God is, directly, by Himself, the cause of the very
existence, and communicates existence to all things just as the sun communicates
238
light to the air and to whatever else is illuminated by the sun. The continuous shining of
the sun is required for the preservation of light in the air; similarly God must confer
existence on all things if they are to persevere in existence.... Therefore, God must be
in all things.
Compendium of Theology 130
For the nature of animals was not changed by man's sin, as if those
whose nature it now is to devour the flesh of others, would have lived on
herbs, as the lion and the falcon.
Summa Theologica 1:96
239
The purpose of creation's diversity
Despite characteristics that produce conflict (the lion cannot be blamed for having
characteristics harmful to the lamb) there is an order in their manner of living. In nature
no one species, left to itself, will multiply to the point of dominance. The diversity and
inequality of the creation are necessary for order, which means the orderly working
together of many creatures differing among themselves in gradation of intellect, in form
and in species.
The diversity and inequality in created things are not the result of chance, not of
a diversity of matter, nor of the intervention of certain causes or merits, but of the
intention of God Himself, who wills to give the creature such perfection as it is possible
for it to have.
Summa Contra Gentiles,
Book 2, ch. 23-24, 45
Thomas lists and discusses five proofs for the existence of God. The fifth derives from
evidence about the governance of the world. The order and regularity in the behavior
of natural bodies presuppose the direction of a being with knowledge and intelligence
"just as the arrow is shot to its mark by an archer." There is thus an intelligent being
directing all natural things to their end, "and this being we call God."
Summa Theologica, Part. 1, Q. 2, Art. 3
God is the most perfect agent. It was His prerogative to introduce His likeness into
created beings most perfectly, to a degree consonant with the nature of created being.
No one species can attain to the likeness of God. No single creature can express in full
manner the likeness of God; it cannot be equal to God. The presence of multiplicity
and variety among created things was therefore necessary that a perfect likeness to
God be found in them according to their manner of being.
Summa Contra Gentiles, Book 1, ch. 45,
240
para. 2.
Ownership of possessions
It is lawful for man to own things. It is even necessary for human life... but man ought
not to regard external goods as his own, but as common so that, in fact, a person
should readily share them when he sees others in need.
Quoted by Pope Leo XIII in the Encyclical
“Rerum Novarum,” and quoted by William F.
Drummond, SJ, Social Justice, The Bruce
Publishing Company, Milwaukee, 1955, p. 60
It is Godʼs custom to care for all of His creatures, both the greatest and the least. We
should likewise care for the creatures, whatsoever they are, in the sense that we use
them in conformity with the divine purpose, in order that they may not bear witness
against us in the Day of Judgement.
Summa Theologica, in Ambrose Aguis, “Godʼs
Animals,” Catholic Study Guide for Animal
Welfare, London, 1970, p. 10
It is evident that if a man practices a compassionate affection for animals, he is all the
more disposed to feel compassion for his fellow men.
quoted in Dayton Foster, The Wisdom of
Nature, Naturegraph, 1993, pg. 92
241
Since God is beyond the whole order of
creation and since all creatures are ordained
to Him and not conversely, it is manifest that
creatures are really related to God himself.
Contra Gentiles, Lib. 2
242
All things are made for man
We believe all things to have been made for manʼs sake, wherefore all
things are stated to be subject to him. Now they serve man in two ways,
first as sustenance of his bodily life, and secondly, as helping him to
know God, inasmuch as man sees the invisible things of God by the
things that are made.
Quoted in Paul Santmire, The Travail of
Nature, Fortress Press, p. 92
Time itself is contained within the universe, and therefore when we speak about
creation, we should not inquire at what time it happened....
Creation precisely states a principle of origin, but not necessarily a principle of
duration.... God is before the world in duration, yet the word “before” does not mean a
priority of time, but of eternity perhaps, if you like, an endlessness of imaginary time.
De Potentia, III, 17, 14, 8
243
could not hold the great throngs that gathered to hear him. His labors revitalized Christian
devotion and spiritual striving in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and
his sermons remain popular as guides to the deeper dimensions of Christian life. His
writings lead into a world where logical argument alone becomes inadequate, and where
we encounter the mystery of the divine which lies beyond rational thinking. He has an
ability to embrace complex ideas about creation and to state their meaning succinctly
while placing them into the larger context of faith. In expressing the Christian theology of
creation, he uses this ability to articulate lofty concepts in simple words. He describes
methods for learning natureʼs secrets, requirements for entering into a mystical
perception of Christ in creation, conditions for breaking into experiences that take one
beyond spacial and temporal confines, and he engages the panorama of themes which
frame the spiritual life as a relentless journey to Jesus Christ. For these things and more,
he is often called the "Father of German Mystical Thought."
Do not be concerned about the style of your food and clothing, thus
laying too much stress on them, but rather accustom your heart andmind
to be exalted about such things, so that nothing may move you to
pleasure or to love except God alone.
Sermons
The seed of God is in us. Given an intelligent farmer and a diligent fieldhand, it will
thrive and grow up to God whose seed it is and, accordingly, its fruit will be God-
nature. Pear seeds grow into pear trees; nut seeds into nut trees, and God-seed into
God.
Sermons
Sermons in creatures
Every creature is on its way to the highest perfection. In each there is movement from
mortality toward Being.... Whether you like it or not, whether you know it or not,
secretly nature seeks, hunts, tries to ferret out the track on which God may be found.
Sermons
To my outer man, creatures taste like creatures, as do wine, bread and meat. To my
inner man, however, they taste like gifts of God rather than creatures, and to my
inmost being they are not even like gifts of God, but rather are timeless....
Every time the powers of the soul come into contact with created things, they
receive the created images and likenesses from the created thing and absorb them. In
this way arises the soul's knowledge of created things. Created things cannot come
nearer to the soul than this, and the soul can only approach created things by the
voluntary reception of images. And it is through the presence of the image that the soul
approaches the created world: for the image is a thing which the soul creates with her
own powers. Does the soul want to know the nature of a stone, a horse, a man? She
forms an image.
quoted in The Luminous Vision,
Anne Bancroft, Unwin Paperbacks,
1982, pg. 137-138
245
Knowledge of God through creatures
All that a man has here externally in multiplicity is intrinsically One. Here all blades of
grass, wood and stone, all things are One. This is at their deepest depth....
If the soul knows God in creatures, night falls. If it sees how they have their
being in God, Morning breaks. But if it sees the Being that is in God himself alone, it is
high noon! See! This is what one ought to desire with mad fervor, that all his life should
become Being.
quoted in The Luminous Vision, Anne
Bancroft, Unwin Paperbacks, 1982, pg. 143
Beyond time
As long as one clings to time, space, number and quantity, that person is on the wrong
track and God is strange and far away.... Those who relinquish their own wills
completely will like what I teach and understand what I say. O ne authority has it that
creatures receive their being directly from God, and that is why, in their true essence,
creatures love God more than they love themselves.
Sermon #25, “Get Beyond Time”
As the soul becomes more pure and bare and poor, and possesses less of created
things, and is emptied of all things that are not God, it receives God more purely, and
is more completely in Him; and it truly becomes one with God, and it looks into God,
and God into it, face to face as it were; two images transformed into one. Some simple
folk think that they will see God as if He were standing there and they here. It is not so.
God and I, we are one.
Meditations with Meister Eckhart, as quoted in
The Quotable Spirit, Macmillan Press, New
York, 1996, p. 234.
246
Criteria for knowing God in nature
Every creature is full of God and is a book, but he who wishes to attain to what I speak
of must be like a morning star, always in the presence of God, always near Him, a
constant distance from Him, exalted above earthly things; with the Word, like a
byword; like an angel among men and creatures.
Sermon Nr. 26, “Like a Morning Star,
God Shines”
If you want to discover natureʼs nakedness, you must destroy its symbols
(i.e., your identification with its outer forms), and the farther in you get,
the nearer you come to its essence.
Unnumbered Sermon
Where is God?
247
Here is the unity of blades of grass and bits of wood and stone, together with
everything else... All that nature tries to do is to plunge into that unity, into the Father-
nature, so that it may all be one, the one Son.
Sermons, 11
One creature sustains another, one enriches the other, and that is why
all creatures are interdependent.
Quoted in “A World in Travail,” Healing the
Earth: An Australian Christian Reflection on
the Renewal of Creation, Publication of the
Uniting Church in Australia, 1990, p. 8.
If we understand that all things are in God, we understand by this that, just as he is
without distinction in his nature yet absolutely distinct from all things, so all things are
in him in the greatest distinction and yet not distinct, because man is God in God.
Latin Sermon IV,1
Only he to whom God is present in every thing and who employs his
reason in the highest degree and has enjoyment in it knows anything of
true peace and has a real kingdom of heaven.
Sermons, in The Quotable Spirit, Macmillan
Press, Inc., New York, NY, 1996, p. 223
To know God
You cannot know God by means of any creature science, nor by any means which
relies upon your own wisdom.... If you are to know God in His divinity, your own
knowledge must become as pure ignorance, in which you forget yourself and every
other creature.
Sermons
248
Purpose for the World
249
250
St. Gregory of Sinai (1282 - 1360)
Gregory of Sinai was a monk who was given vows on Mt. Sinai, which is how he acquired
his surname. He traveled to many monasteries to learn the arts of contemplation, silence
and ceaseless prayer. He found that while the monks generally led pure lives, the ancient
Christian contemplative practices had been lost in many places. Just as St. Paul, who
visited Paradise in a divine vision, St. Gregory gives us a perspective from actually having
experienced some of these heavenly verities. He is known as a teacher of ceaseless
mental prayer and wrote extensively on topics such as guarding the mind, maintaining true
silence, achieving contemplation and avoiding delusions. He founded several monasteries
in Macedonia and his instructions brought thousands to salvation. His cosmological vision
has deep ecological relevance because he shows how the spiritual and physical worlds
interconnect and because he provides instruction on how to find experience of the
heavenly kingdom. His writings are still studied by those who desire to attain deeper
spiritual wisdom and developed contemplative skills. His life has been described in detail
by Patriarch Callistus, the Patriarch of Constantinople, who was his student.
A true philosopher is one who perceives in created things their spiritual Cause, or who
knows created things through knowing their Cause, having attained a union with God
that transcends the intellect and a direct unmediated faith. He does not simply learn
about divine things, but actually experiences them.
Or again, a true philosopher is one whose intellect is conversant equally with
ascetic practice and contemplative wisdom. Thus, the perfect philosopher or lover of
wisdom is one whose intellect has attained — alike on the moral, natural and
theological levels — love of wisdom or, rather, love of God.
Text Nr. 127, in “One Hundred and Thirty
Seven texts,” Philokalia, Vol. IV, p. 245
251
A description of paradise
Eden is a place in which there was planted by God every kind of fragrant plant. It is
neither completely incorruptible, nor entirely corruptible. Placed between corruption
and incorruption, it is always both abundant in fruits and blossoming with flowers, both
mature and immature. The mature trees and fruits are converted into fragrant earth
which does not give off any odor of corruption, as do the trees of this world. This is
from the abundance of the grace of sanctification which is constantly poured forth
there.
Commandments and Dogmas,
No. 10, Little Russian Philokalia
The laws of creation are the qualities investing wholes compounded of energized parts
— qualities also known as generic differences, since they invest many diferent
composites constituted from identical properties. Or again, the natural law is the
potential power to energize inherent in each species and in each part. As God does
with respect to the whole of creation, so does the soul with respect to the body: it
energizes and impels each member of the body in accordance with the energy intrinsic
to that member.
On Commandments and Doctrines, Nr. 81, in
Philip Sherrard, editor and translator, The
Philokalia, Vol. 4, Faber & Faber, 1995, p. 227
252
Man as a second world
If your speech is full of wisdom and you meditate on understanding in your heart (cf.
Psalm 49:3), you will discover in created things the presence of the divine Logos, the
substantive Wisdom of God the Father (cf. 1 Corinthians 1:24); for in created things
you will perceive the outward expression of the archetypes that characterize them, and
thus through your active living intelligence, you will speak wisdom that derives from the
Divine Wisdom.
On Commandments and Doctrines, Nr. 134, as
quoted in Philip Sherrard, editor and translator,
The Philokalia, Vol. 4, Faber and Faber, 1995,
p. 250
253
Who is the true spiritual teacher?
Or again, a teacher initiated into things divine is one who can distinguish
principial beings from participative beings, or beings that have no
autonomous self-subsistent reality.... Inspired by the Holy Spirit, he
perceives the essences of principial beings embodied in participative
beings.
In other words, he interprets what is intelligible and invisible in terms of
what is sensible and visible, and the visible sense-world in terms of the
invisible and supra-sensory world, conscious that what is visible is the
archetype of what is visible. He knows that things possessing form and
pattern are brought into being by what is formless and without pattern,
and that each manifests the other spiritually; and he clearly perceives
each in the other and conveys this perception in his teaching of the truth.
His knowledge of the truth, with all its sun-like radiance, is not expressed
in allegorical form; on the contrary, he elucidates the true underlying
principles of both worlds with spiritual insight and power, and expounds
them forcefully and vividly. In this way the visible world becomes our
teacher, and the invisible world is shown to be an eternal divine dwelling-
place....
Philokalia, Vol. IV, “Texts of Commandments
and Dogma,” Text Nr. 127:3, p. 246.
A man who strives after salvation and forces himself, for the sake of the
Lord, to lead a life of silence, should be satisfied, in my opinion, with a
small portion of bread, three or four cups of water or wine a day, and a
little of any of the other victuals which may be at hand. He must not let
himself eat to satiety; so that, through such wise use of food, that is
through eating all kinds of food, on the one hand he may avoid
boastfulness, and on the other he may not show disdain for Godʼs
creations, which are most excellent. And he thanks God for everything.
Such is the reasoning of the wise!
“Instructions to Hesychasts,” Writings from the
Philokalia on Prayer of the Heart, Faber and
Faber, London, 1951, 1970, tenth edition, p.79.
255
256
St. Gregory Palamas was a personal student and disciple of St. Gregory of Sinai. At the
height of a monastic controversy on Mount Athos in Greece over the perception and nature
of the light of Christ, Gregory Palamas defended the authenticity of the mystical experience
of light because the scriptures show the Apostles saw this same light on Mount Tabor and
because God is light. Gregory maintained that this is an "uncreated light" because God is
uncreated. Experience of this light involves contact with His essence which is diffused
through what he called the "divine energies" of God. The writings of Gregory Palamas are
significant for modern ecology because he provides a theological foundation to assert a
communion between God and creation through humanity and through the energies of
Christ, and because he describes the process of creation's transformation through Christ
without falling into a pantheistic confusion of the creation with the Creator which occurs if
substance and energy are misunderstood.
We are responsible for the world. We are the word through which it
bespeaks itself, and it depends solely on us whether it prays or
blasphemes. Only through us can the cosmos receive grace. For not only
the soul, but the body of man, is created in the image of God. Together
they are created in the image of God.
Philokalia, Vol. 4
God creates everything, but He remains uncreated. The fact that the world has a
beginning is confirmed by nature and taught us by history. ... Creation is not from
God's essence; it is not the uncreated energies of God, but the result of the uncreated
energies.... To "beget" is the property of God's nature, but to "create" is the property of
His energy and will. If there were no distinction between essence and energies,
between nature and will, then the creatures would belong by nature to God....
Man is animal in his body, but his soul originated in the transcendental world
("hyperkosmion") and is a superior creation. Man was made paradoxically a small
world ("mikrokosmos") in which is summarized all the rest of creation. For this reason
He created man to stand between, to include and to beautify, both worlds, the visible
and the invisible.
Sermon 26, Patrologia Graeco, Vol. 151, col.
223, as quoted in George Papademetriou, in
Introduction to Gregory Palamas, 1973, pg. 58.
When the mind, by the grace of Christ, ascends to what is above nature, then it is
enlightened by the illumination of the Holy Spirit and splendidly reaches out into
contemplation. And having come above itself, according to the measurement of grace
given to it by God, it clearly and purely beholds the nature of all things in accordance
with its condition and order.
257
Philokalia, Vol. 4,
God is in the universe and the universe is within God.... Thus all things
participate in Godʼs sustaining energy, but not in His essence.
Philokalia, Vol. 4, p. 393
258
The reach of Godʼs presence into creation
God, Who fills all things and extends infinitely beyond the heavens,
existed before the world, filling as He now fills the whole region of the
world.
Topics of Natural and Theological Science, 6
259
260
St. Birgitta (1303 - 1373)
Saint Birgitta, more commonly called Bridget in the English speaking world, is the patron
saint of Sweden. She was married as a young girl and lived happily for 28 years until her
husband, Ulf, took seriously ill and appeared ready to die. Together they vowed to
dedicate their lives completely to God if he would be healed. After a sudden and
miraculous healing, they set about fulfilling their promises and Birgitta shortly began to
receive visions and revelations. She is known for her kindness to the poor, for her
pilgrimages to holy places, for establishing monasteries, for her inspired counsel to
royalty, for establishing the Order of Brigittines, and especially for her loving care for
animals.
Birgitta speaks of a revelation in which the Lord spoke to her about the
animals and his concern for each:
261
262
St. Sergius of Radonezh (1314 - 1392)
St. Sergius is one of the most popular of the Russian saints. He is the founder of Russian
monasticism. His spiritual influence shaped the mind of Christian Russia and continues
through to the present. In his time the greater part of the saints of the 14th and 15th
century were his disciples, friends or correspondents. The monastery which grew up
around him, now called Holy Trinity-Saint Sergius monastery, has continued as the
spiritual heart of Russia. He taught that the unity within the Holy Trinity was the prototype
of the unity which the monastery should realize in the contemporary world. This unity, this
perfect inner peace, was attained by the saint, not only with his brother monks, but also
with the wild animals. He sought to reaquire and reestablish in practice that normal order of
the universe where the whole of nature, united around man, obeys God. The most
exceptional feature of the life of St. Sergius is his humility. To relieve his brethren, he
undertook the most lowly tasks in his monastery. He wore threadbare, patched garments
so that people who met him failed to recognize him as the renowned abbot of Radonezh.
St. Sergiusʼ disciple, Epiphanius, who chronicled his life, explains a meaning in the
relationship of saints to the animals. [This relationship] “...should astonish no one, for it
should be known with certainty that when God dwells in a man and the Holy Spirit
rests in him, all is subject to him, as all was subject in the beginning to Adam before
the transgression of Godʼs commandment.
Vladimir Lossky, The Meaning of Icons, “St.
Sergius of Radonezh,” 1952, reprinted by SVS
Press, 1989, p. 128
263
264
A self-educated anchoress and solitary, the writings of this medieval British nun describe
her mystical experiences with Christ. Within the the enclosure of her tiny cell, Christ
comes and personally teaches her many things about life, this world, heaven and their
meanings. Julian's writings are simple and direct and they draw a number of clear
conclusions about creation and the world around us. Her writings emphasize the need for
discipline, for renunciation of the excesses and luxuries of the world, for reflection, for
study, and particularly for humble daily prayer. These practices open up creation as a
teaching about the ways of Christ and His kingdom and lead to experiential knowledge of
nature as a loving praise of God which we can all emulate.
There is a treasure in the earth of our being that is a food tasty and pleasing to the
Lord. Be a gardener. Dig and ditch. Toil and sweat. Turn the earth upside down and
seek the "dampness" and water the plants in time. Continue the labor and make sweet
floods to run, and noble and abundant fruits to spring forth. Take this food and drink
and carry it to God as your true worship.
Showings
Nature has been tested in the fire of tribulation, and in it was found no
lack or defect. Thus are nature and grace of one accord. For grace is
God, and unmade nature is God also. He is two in manner of working but
one in love; and neither of these works without the other – they cannot
be parted.
quoted in The Luminous Vision, Anne Bancroft,
Unwin Paperbacks, 1982, pg. 67
I saw three properties in the world: the first is, that God made it. The second is, that
God loveth it. The third is, that God keepeth it. But what beheld I therein? Verily the
Maker, the Keeper, the Lover.
Revelations of Divine Love
265
A vision of everything that has been created
God showed me in my palm a little thing round as a ball about the size of a hazelnut. I
looked at with the eye of my understanding and asked myself: 'What is this thing?'
And I was answered: 'It is everything that is created." I wondered how it could
survive since it seemed so little it could suddenly disintegrate into nothing. The answer
came: 'It endures and ever will endure, because God loves it.' And so everything has
being because of God's love.
quoted in "The Episcopal Church in
Communion with Creation: Toward A
Theological Vision," 1991, pg. 9.
Julian describes a vision of the world which came to her in her monastic cell after a
period of prayer about the nature of God and His creation:
And in this he showed me something small, no bigger than a hazel nut,
lying in the palm of my hand, and I perceived that it was as round as any
ball. I looked at this and thought: What can this be? And I was given the
general answer: It is everything which is made. I was amazed that it could
last, for I thought that it was so little that it could suddenly fall into nothing.
And I was answered in my understanding: It lasts and always will,
because God loves it; and thus everything has being through the love of
God. In this little thing I saw three properties. The first is that God made it.
The second is that He loves it. The third is that God preserves it. But what
is that to me? It is that God is the Creator, the lover and the protector.
Quoted in Andrew Linzey, Compassion for
Animals: Readings and Prayers, SPCK Publ.,
London, 1988, pg. 10
266
St. Catherine of Siena (1347 - 1380)
One of two women doctors of the Roman Catholic Church, St. Catherine received a holy
vision at the age of six which indelibly shaped the rest of her life. Despite great obstacles,
including a family intention to see her married, she joined a religious order where her
striving for holiness blossomed and hundreds sought her eloquent commentary on Christ
and the interior life. She became a renouned moral reformer, peacemaker, counselor and
spiritual guide. She confronted clergy and even the pope for their lack of holiness. She
emphasized that every person has access to the presence of God and that it is in fact
everywhere about us. Her writing sometimes shifts from her personal perspective to the
perspective of Christ who speaks through her. She taught from her experiences, especially
how firsthand knowledge of God leads a person from self-concern to concern for others
and eventually to concern for the entire world.
The only way that we can know and comprehend any of these things
is by means of your light,
the light with which you illumine the soul's noblest aspect,
our understanding.
This light is the light of faith.
You give it to each of us Christians when,
through the sacrament of baptism,
you pour into us the light of your grace and of faith....
Prayers of St. Catherine, 12:100 and 24:208,
as quoted by Catherine Meade, CSJ, My
Nature is Fire: St. Catherine of Siena, Alba
House, New York, 1991, pg. 181.
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Oh, how royally souls like this travel! In everything they see your will, and so in
everything which your creatures do, they look for your will, never passing judgement
on any creature's intention.
Prayers 9:69-70
Catherine proclaims that because we are created in the image of God, our self-
knowledge is intimately intertwined with knowing God. Similarly we will better
understand creation as we understand God: "In your nature, eternal Godhead, I shall
come to know my nature. And what is my nature, but boundless love! It is fire, because
you are nothing but the fire of love. And you have given me mankind a share in this
nature for by the fire of live, you have created us."
Prayers 12:104
Discernment is that light which dissolves all darkness, dissipates ignorance, and
seasons every virtue and virtuous deed. It has a prudence that cannot be deceived, a
strength that is invincible, a constancy right up to the end, reaching as it does from
heaven to earth, that is, f rom the knowledge of me to the knowledge of oneself, from
love of me to love of oneʼs neighbors.
It would never be right to offend me, infinite Good, under the pretext of saving
my finite creation. The evil would far outweigh any fruit that might come of it, so never,
for any reason, must you sin. True charity knows this, for it always carries the lamp of
holy discernment.
The Dialogues, Nr. 11
268
The source of compassion for the animals
These words Catherine says the Lord spoke to her about the way to know God:
To have the material things of the world is not sinful. After all, everything
is good and perfect, made by me, Goodness itself. But I made these
things to serve my rational creatures; I did not intend my creatures to
make themselves servants and slaves to the worldʼs pleasures. They
owe their first love to me. Everything else they should love and possess,
as I told you, not as if they owned it, but as something lent them.
The Dialogue, Nr. 47
Keep in mind that each of you has your own vineyard. But every one is joined to your
neighborsʼ vineyards without any dividing lines. They are all so joined together, in fact,
269
that you cannot do good or evil for yourself without also doing the same for your
neighbors.
All of you together make up one common vineyard, the whole Christian
assembly, and you are all united in the vineyard of the mystic body of holy Church
from which you draw your life. In this vineyard is planted the vine, which is my only-
begotten Son, into whom you must be engrafted. Unless you are engrafted into him,
you are rebels against the holy Church....
270
271
Ramon Sibiude (1378? - 1438)
Ramon Sibiude, sometimes called Raymond Sebond, was born in Barcelona, Spain
around 1378. He was a master (professor) of arts, theology and medicine at the University
of Toulouse in France and authored a landmark text in the history of creation theology
called “A Theology of the Natural World” (Theologia Naturalis) around 1436. While this
thousand-page text was popular in his day, it did not have lasting impact. One hundred
years later, the Spanish Inquisition placed it on the index of banned books because it was
“subversive to the principles of the scholastic method,” the linear mode of thinking which
characterized medieval Western theology, and because it denied separation between
theology and philosophy. Ramon taught that the human person was the connecting link
between the natural and the supernatural, and he said that by studying man and creation,
one could arrive at a knowledge of the profound mysteries of faith. Ramonʼs emphasis, like
many before him, was that God is revealed in two books, the book of nature and the
written book of Scripture (the Bible). To Sibiude, creation is reliable evidence of Godʼs
presence and his handiwork because it can never be separated from its Creator. The
human is exalted over the natural world by virtue of his appointed station in the cosmos
but also because the human serves as the connection between the perceptible world and
the divine. Creation, when understood as a system of knowledge, he says, is not subject
to error or misinterpretation, schism, or conflicting doctrine.
Michel de Montaigne, the French translator of Sibiudeʼs text, described his work as a
“kind of quintessence drawn from Thomas Aquinas.” The practice of this theology,
Montaigne says, will help bring “to morality,” whoever practices it, and make him “happy,
humble, obedient, loathing all vice and sin, yet without puffing up with pride.”
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In addition, this science [or process underlying learning from nature] teaches
every one to see clearly, without difficulty or toil, truth, insofar as it is possible
for natural reason, concerning knowledge of God and of himself and of what
he has need for his salvation and to reach life eternal; it efforts him access to
understanding what is prescribed and commanded in Holy Scripture, and
delivers the human spirit from many doubts, making it consent firmly to what
Scripture contains concerning knowledge of God and of oneself.
Prologue, Theologia Naturalis, as translated by
Michel de Montaigne (1563), in An Apology for
Ramon Sebond, translated into English by M.
A. Screech, Oxford University, 1987, Penguin
Books, London, p. xli.
This doctrine opens up to all a way of understanding the holy Doctors (of the Church);
indeed, it is incorporated in their books (even though it is not always evident in them)
as an alphabet is incorporated in all writings. For it is the alphabet of the Doctors: as
such it should be learned first. For which reason, to make your way towards the Holy
Scriptures you will do well to acquire this science as the rudiments of all sciences; in
order the better to reach conclusions, learn it before everything else, otherwise you will
hardly manage to struggle through to the... higher sciences: for this is the root, the
origin and the tiny foundation of the doctrine proper to Man and His salvation....
And there is no need that anyone should refrain from reading it [the book of
nature] from lack of other learning: it presupposes no knowledge of Grammar, Logic,
nor any other deliberative art or science, nor Physics nor of Metaphysics, seeing that it
is the doctrine which comes first....
This doctrine is common to the laity, the clergy and all manner of people: yet it
can be grasped in less than a month, and without learning anything by heart. No books
are required, for once it has been perceived, it cannot be forgotten.... It uses no
obscure arguments requiring lengthy discourse: for it argues from things which are
evident and known to all from experience – from the creatures and the nature of Man;
from what he knows of himself, it proves what it seeks to prove, mainly from what each
man has assayed of himself. And there is no need of any other witness but Man.
Cited by Michel de Montaigne (1563) from the
Prologue, Theologia Naturalis, in An Apology
for Ramon Sebond, Penguin Books, p. xlii-xliii.
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Thomas Kempis (1380-1471)
Thomas Hammerken was born at Kempen in the duchy of Cleves in Germany in 1380.
He was educated by a small religious order called the Brethren of the Common Life
who took vows and lived communally while holding employment in local towns.
Thomas joined this religious order, was ordained a priest, and became the sub-prior of
a house in which brothers and sisters held possessions in common. Thomas of
Kempis is best known as the author of a four part text on the spiritual life, called The
Imitation of Christ. His De Imitatione Christi, the Latin name under which his guide to
the spiritual life was originally circulated in 1414, has become the second most widely
read Christian text after the Bible and is still held in high regard in many parts of
Christendom. While “The Imitation of Christ” is brilliant in the way it focuses upon the
life of Christ as a model for every disciple, it is notable for dropping much of the
historical biblical and patristic concern for creation which characterized an earlier
Christianity. In this regard the work of Thomas Kempis becomes noteworthy for its
acosmism and its disdain for things material which deflects and distorts the historic
understanding of creation as the handiwork of the Creator.
Nicholas of Cusa (1401 - 1464)
A pious German prelate, philosopher, scientist, author, and Church administrator,
Nicholas was instrumental in advocating reform of the Julian calendar at the Council of
Basel where he also called for the political and religious reunification of all Christendom.
274
In 1437 Pope Nicholas entrusted him with a special mission to Constantinople, where he
successfully enlisted the Eastern emperor, the Greek patriarch, and twenty-eight
archbishops in support of his plan for unity. He served as papal legate to Northern
Germany where he was charged with the reform and correction of parishes and
monasteries and the reunification of the Hussites with the Church. He was an early
astronomer, but criticized for declaring that the earth is a star like other stars, that it is not
the center of the universe, that it is not at rest, and neither are its poles fixed. Had
Copernicus been aware of these assertions, he would have found encouragement to
publish his own findings sooner. Everywhere, according to Abbot Trithemius, Nicholas of
Cusa appeared as a shining angel of light and peace. He wrote The Vision of God for a
Benedictine community where he often spent long hours in prayer and reflection.
A Cloud of Witnesses
The Deep Ecological Legacy of Christianity
Now if I believe in God's Son and bear in mind that He became man, all creatures
will appear a hundred times more beautiful to me than before. Then I will
properly appreciate the sun, the moon, the stars, trees, apples, pears, as I reflect
that he is Lord over and the center of all things.
Our body bears the traces of God's wrath, which our sin has deserved. God's wrath also appears
on the earth in all creatures...
Werke Kritische Gesamtausgabe 42:155
God is substantially present everywhere, in and through all creatures, in all their parts and places,
so that the world is full of God and He fills all, but without His being encompassed and
surrounded by it. He is at the same time outside and above all creatures. These are all
exceedingly incomprehensible matters; yet they are articles of our faith and are attended clearly
and mightily in Holy Writ....For how can reason tolerate it that the Divine majesty is so small
264
that it can be substantially present in a grain, on a grain, over a grain, through a grain, within and
without, and that, although it is a single Majesty, it nevertheless is entirely in each grain
separately, no matter how immeasurably numerous these grains may be? ... And that the same
Majesty is so large that neither this world nor a thousand worlds can encompass it and say:
"Behold, there it is!" His won divine essence can be in all creatures collectively and in each one
individually more profoundly, more immanently, more present, than the creature is in itself; yet
it can be encompassed nowhere and by no one. It encompasses all things and dwells in all, but
not one thing encompasses it and dwells in its.
We are now living in the dawn of the future life; for we are
beginning to regain a knowledge of creation, a knowledge forfeited
by the fall of Adam. Now we have a correct view of the creatures,
more so I suppose, than they have in the papacy....But by God's
mercy we can begin to recognize His wonderful works and
wonders also in flowers when we ponder his might and goodness.
Therefore we laud, magnify and thank him.
Werke Kritische Gesamtausgabe 1:1160
It is God who creates, effects and preserves all things through His almighty power and right
hand, as our creed confesses. For He dispatches no officials or angels when He creates or
preserves something, but all this is the work of the Divine power itself. If He is to create it or
preserve it, however, he must be present and must take and preserve His creation both in its
innermost and outermost aspects.
Luther's Works, Vol. 37, pg. 57.
God writes the Gospel, not in the Bible alone, but also on trees,
and in the flowers and clouds and stars.
Quoted from Caesar Johnson, editor, To See a World
in a Grain of Sand, The C. R. Gibson Company,
Norwalk, Conn., 1972, p. 24, and the literature of the
265
Evangelical Environmental Network, Wynnewood,
PA, January, 1995,
The earth is indeed innocent (of any sin) and would gladly produce the best products, but is
prevented by the curse which was placed upon man because of sin.
Lectures on Genesis 205
Our Lord God commonly gives worldly riches to those gross asses
to whom he vouchsafes nothing else.
Colloquia, 20
266
The power of God is present in creation
The power of God is present at all places, even in the tiniest leaf....
God is entirely and personally present in the wilderness, in the
garden, and in the field.
Luther’s Works 37:57,61
In a mouse we admire God’s creation and craft work. The same may be said about
flies (LW 1:52).
Adam and Eve derived the fullness of joy and bliss from their contemplation
of all the animal creatures (1:66).
God is wholly present in all creation, in every corner, behind you and before you.
Do you think God is sleeping on a pillow in heaven? God is watching over you
and protecting you.
Luther’s Works 51:43
267
God’s Nature dwells in Creatures
If God is to create or to preserve a creature, God must be present and must make and preserve
God’s creation both in its innermost and outermost aspects.... God’s entire divine nature is
wholly and entirely in all creatures, more deeply, more inwardly, more present than the creature
is to itself.
Luther’s Works 37:58,60
I believe that God has created me together with all that exists,
that He has given me, and still sustains, my body and soul, all my
limbs and senses, my reason and all the faculties of my mind,
together with food and clothing, house and home, family and
property.... All this He does out of His pure fatherly and divine
goodness and mercy, without any merit or worthiness on my part.
Luther’s Werke Kritische Gesamtausgbe,
48.201.5
Creation as a Book
All creation is the most beautiful book or bible, for in it God has described and
portrayed Himself.
Luther’s World of Thought, trans. Bertram,
Concordia, 1958, p. 179
268
St. Ignatius of Loyola (1491 - 1556)
Inigo de Loyola was born in 1491 in Azpeitia in the Basque province of Guipuzcoa in northern
Spain. After being wounded in war, he became converted to the religious life. Then following a
vision from which he said he learned more than from everything else in his previous life, he now
saw all creation in a new light. This gave him the impetus to found the Company of Jesus (today
called the Society of Jesus, or Jesuits), which was dedicated to defending Catholic doctrine against
the theologies of the Reformation. This new “company” would uphold virtue as an example and
teaching of Christian life. Through "Spiritual Exercises," which transferred key experiences in the
life of Christ to his priests, though rigorous discipline, and through divine inspiration, he built the
Society into a potent force for Christ and the Catholic Church. In Ignatius’ plan, all actions should
be dedicated “to the greater glory of God.” The heightened experience of Christ in the fabric of
creation would be payment abundant for a life of service. He is regarded as a patron saint for
retreats and for those involved in spiritual exercises.
God's majesty is present in all things, through His indwelling, through His works and through
His essence, and can therefore be found in all things, in speaking, walking, seeing, tasting,
hearing, thinking, and in whatever else we may do.
Letters
In a letter to his first Jesuit priests, the following message was conveyed: "The pay
you receive from Christ is everything that you are and have in the natural order. For He
gives and preserves your being and existence, the powers of the soul, and the powers of
the body together with all external goods. The pay you receive from Christ is the whole
universe; it is all his spiritual gifts.
Letters
I look at how God dwells in the creatures, giving being to the elements, growth to the plants,
sensation to animals, understanding to men.... I must consider how God works and labors for
me in all things.... and then I must reflect upon myself.... I must look how all good things come
down from above... as justice, goodness, pity, mercy, etc., even as the rays of the light come
from the sun and the waters from the spring.
Letters
269
Paracelsus (1493 - 1541)
Called the father of modern pharmacology, Paracelsus is known as one of the great healers of the
Christian era. He was born near Zurich, Switzerland and is remembered as a dedicated disciple of
Jesus Christ who found an unending depth of meaning in both Scripture and nature. He lived
during the early years of the Reformation and sought relief from the contentiousness he found on
both sides. He journeyed to the Holy Land to find deeper dimensions to Christianity. Years later
he returned with amazing insights of the medicinal properties of herbs and plants and taught that a
true understanding of nature could only be found through a firm foundation in Christ. Paracelsus
teaches that each person is a microcosm of the macrocosm of the cosmos. God’s purpose in
creating man as microcosm is so that he can collaborate with God in the processes of creation.
Each person, he says, has an obligation to improve upon the world, but this can only be done in
accordance with the principles of Christ and creation. This means the person must discern both the
will of God and how creation works, or one’s actions will fail to uplift creation. Then, one could
become an unintentional but still destructive blight upon the earth. In his vision of human purpose,
Paracelsus provides Christians with a vision of responsibility to integrate human society
simultaneously into the example of the Lord and the demands of the natural world. A reoccurring
theme of Paracelsus' teaching is that the life of a person cannot be separated from the life of
creation. Therefore, he says, "to understand man, understand the cosmos; to understand the
cosmos, understand man."
It was the Book of Nature, written by the finger of God, which I studied... Nature is the
universal teacher. Whatever we cannot learn from the external appearance of nature, we can
learn from her spirit. Both are one. Everything is taught by Nature to her disciple if he asks for
information in the appropriate manner.
270
An understanding of plants as healing agents
If the physician understands the anatomy of medicines and the anatomy of diseases, he will find
that a concordance exists between the two....
The curative power of medicines often consists, not so much of the spirit that is hidden in
them, as in the spirit in which they are taken. Faith will make them efficacious; doubt will
destroy their virtues....No man can rationally employ remedies without knowing their quality, and
he cannot know the qualities of plants without being able to read their "signatures." ...That which
gives healing power to a medicine is its "spiritus" and it is only perceptible by the senses of the
"sidereal" man. It therefore follows that spiritual perception is a teacher of medicines far
preferable to all written books.
God in the macrocosm and God in the microcosm are one, for there is only one
God, and one law and one nature, through which Wisdom becomes
manifest....The more the soul of man grows perfect, the nearer does it approach to
God, and the more will his understanding grow and his love be exalted. Thus
may man elevate himself into sanctification; he may communicate with perfect
beings in the spiritual kingdom and be instructed and guided by them. He will be
a true child of God. All nature will be subject to him because he will be an
instrument to carry out the will of the Creator of nature.
The more cognition there is in a human being about God's works, the greater is the belief, and the
blissfulness is then accordingly.... Blissful and more than blissful may be those human beings...
which have this grace and heaven. We are really talking about Christum Jesum, the eternal
wisdom.
Aphorismus IV
[To know the mysteries of creation] learn and study the four gospels, for all the
mysteries are contained therein. That is the key to open up this heaven, and
(then) we will be spoken to out of two books -- God and nature. God has his seat
and tabernacle in nature, that is the center of his kingdom, where the prophets
were seated, where Christ was crucified.
Vigilate et Orate Ignitur
271
The effect of knowledge of the mysteries
When a person knows and understands many of God's works and secrets, his belief is greater
and deeper, he is more stable and moral in the rules and virtues, therefore he is in blissfulness,
compared to a wise understanding person who is only merciful.
De perfecto homine in Christo Iesu et contra de
perdito animale homine in Adam, qui lunaticu
dicitur, 1
A clergyman should be a spiritual guide for others; but how can a man be a
spiritual guide if he merely talks about spiritual things, and knows himself
nothing about it? ... A clergyman who does not act rightly does not possess the
truth, and can therefore not teach it. He can only, like a parrot, repeat words and
sentences, and their meaning will be incomprehensible to his hearers, because he
knows nothing about that meaning himself.
272
Nature is a light, and by looking at nature in her own light, we will understand her. Visible
nature may be seen in her visible light; invisible nature may become visible if we acquire the
power to perceive her invisible light.
In man are contained all the forces and beings and forms that may be found in
the four elements out of which the Universe is constructed. Man is the
microcosm containing in himself the types of all the creatures that exist in the
world and it is a great truth which you should seriously consider, that there is
nothing in heaven or upon this earth which does not exist in man, and God, who
is in heaven, exists also in man, and the two are but one.
The inner nature of everything may be known... through the powers of the inner sight. These
are the powers by which all secrets of nature may be discovered, and it is necessary that a
physician should be instructed and become well versed in this art, and that he should be able to
find out a great deal more about the patient's disease by his own inner perception than by
questioning the patient. For this inner sight is the astronomy of medicine, and as physical
anatomy shows all the inner parts of the body, such as cannot be seen through the skin, so this
inner perception shows not only all the causes of disease, but it furthermore discovers the
elements in medicinal substances in the healing powers reside.
Faith is a luminous star that leads the honest seeker into the
mysteries of nature. You must seek your point of affinity in God,
and put your trust into an honest divine sincere, pure and strong
faith, and cling to it with your whole heart, soul, sense and
thought -- full of love and confidence. If you possess such a faith,
God's wisdom will not withhold Truth from you, but He will
reveal His works to you credibly, visibly and consolingly.
273
The search for wisdom
We cannot find wisdom in books nor in any external thing: we can only find it
within ourselves.
“When man was cast out of Eden, he received from the angels their knowledge, but not all
knowledge...” In consequence, Paracelsus says, man must ferret out the secrets of nature by
craft. “For he and his children must learn one thing after another in the light of Nature, in order
to bring to light that which lies hidden in all things. For although man was created whole as
regards his body, he was not so created as regards his ‘art.’ All the arts have been given to him
as his heritage, but not in an immediately recognizable form. He must discover them.”
From Selected Writings, pg. 176-177
as quoted in Clarence Glacken,
Traces on the Rhodian Shore, University of
California Press, Berkeley, 1967, pg. 466.
Everything which man needs to maintain good health can be found in nature.
The true task of science is to identify these things which heal.
Quotes attributed to Paracelsus
274
275
To John Calvin, one of the primary figures of the Protestant Reformation, the created world is
God's "most beautiful theater" where in a wonderful series of declarations, he distinguishes an
innumerable variety of qualities in creation, endowing each with its own nature, assigned
functions, and appointed places and stations. Calvin emphasized the Bible as the primary tool for
understanding God, the human and creation. He wrote the Institutes to serve as a handbook to aid
in Scriptural study. It was to be a hermeneutical guide which would predispose readers to a
believing and obedient response to God's will. Calvin taught that the most important Christian
doctrine "is the doctrine of God," and for this purpose creation provides a magnificent reflection of
His divine glory. He is remembered as a reformer who fostered a theanthropic approach to
creation which focuses upon knowledge of God coupled with a knowledge of oneself as
foundational for a right understanding of creation. Even though he writes extensively about
creation, Calvin’s emphasis shifts religious emphasis away from creation and onto the uniqueness
of the human in creation. In his introduction to the Institutes, he writes, “Our wisdom” consists
almost entirely in two parts: “the knowledge of God and of ourselves.” Creation becomes an effect
of God’s action and an object of right human stewardship, but it fades as the framework for God’s
presence.
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Stewards of God’s creation
Calvin sums up his theology of creation, saying that humans are expected to enjoy creation’s
fruits while sustaining its fruitfulness. Thanksgiving and restraint are both implied. Humans are
also expected to care for the land and everything on it and prevent it from damage. Further
people are expected to treat everything in the world as an inheritance from God and our
forefathers which is to be passed down to our children who will also in their turn serve as
stewards of creation. Each person has the duty to leave the world in better condition than it was
when he or she received it.
Let him who possesses a field, so partake of its yearly fruits that he does not
suffer the ground to be injured by his negligence, but let him endeavor to hand
it down to posterity as he received it, or even better cultivated. Let him so feed
on its fruits that he neither dissipates it by luxury, nor permits it to be marred
or ruined by neglect. Moreover, that this economy, and this diligence, with
respect to those good things which God has given us to enjoy, may flourish
among us, let everyone regard himself as the steward of God in all things
which he possesses. Then he will neither conduct himself dissolutely, nor
corrupt by abuse those things which God requires to be preserved.
Commentary on Genesis, chapter 2:15; translated
from the first Latin edition, 1578, English
translation of 1847, reprinted by Banner of Truth
Publishers, 1965
The creation is quite like a spacious and splendid house, provided and filled with
the most exquisite and at the same time the most abundant furnishings.
Everything in it tells us of God.
Institutes 1:14
In every part of the world, in heaven and on earth, he has written and as it were engraven the
glory of his power, goodness and eternity.... For all creatures, from the firmament even to the
center of the earth, could be witnesses and messengers of his glory to all men, drawing them on
to seek him and, having found him, to do him service and honor according to the dignity of a
Lord so good, so potent, so wise and everlasting....For the little singing birds sang of God, the
animals acclaimed him, the elements feared and the mountains resounded with him, the river
and springs threw glances toward him, the grasses and the flowers smiled.
Opera Selecta 9:273
The overwhelming beauty of the universe
277
You cannot in one glance survey this most vast and beautiful system of the
universe in all its wide expanse, without being completely overwhelmed by the
boundless force of its brightness.
Institutes 1:5.1
Paul does not mean that all creatures will be partakers of the same glory with the sons of God,
but that they will share in their own manner in the better state, because God will restore the
present fallen world to perfect condition at the same time as the human race....Let us therefore
be content with this simple doctrine their constitution will be such, and their order so complete,
that no appearance either of deformity or of impermanence will be seen.
Institutes 1
The earth was given to man with this condition, that he should
occupy himself in its cultivation.... The custody of the garden was
given in charge to Adam, to show that we possess the things
which God has committed to our hands, on the condition that,
being content with the frugal and moderate use of them, we
should take care of what shall remain.
Commentary on Genesis, 1554, from the English
translation of 1847, reprinted by Banner of Truth
Publishers, 1965, pg. 9
We are not our own.... we are God's; all the endowments which we possess are
deposits intrusted to us for the very purpose of being distributed for the good of
our neighbor.... Moreover, the only right mode of administration is that which is
regulated by love.
Institutes III, vii, 1 and 5 (1559), translated by Henry
Beveridge, Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, 1957
278
Let him who possesses a field, so partake of its yearly fruits, that he may not suffer the ground
to be injured by his negligence; but let him endeavor to hand it down to posterity as he received
it, or even better cultivated. Let him so feed on its fruits that he neither dissipates it by luxury,
nor permits it to be marred or ruined by neglect. Moreover, that this economy, and this
diligence, with respect to those good things which God has given us to enjoy, may flourish
among us, let everyone regard himself as the steward of God in all things which he possesses.
Then he will neither conduct himself dissolutely, not corrupt by abuse those things which God
requires to be preserved.
Commentary on Genesis, 1554, from the English
translation of 1847, reprinted by Banner of Truth
Publishers, 1965, pg. 9
A theology of nature
The little birds singing are singing of God; the beasts cry unto
him; the elements are in awe of him; the mountains echo his
name; the waves and streams cast their glances at him; the herbs
and flowers praise him. Nor do we need to labor or seek him far
off, since each one of us finds [God] within himself, inasmuch as
we are all upheld and preserved by his power dwelling in us.
For it is said that it is the wisdom of men to search out God's works, and to set
their minds wholly upon them. And God has also ordained the world to be like
a theater upon which to behold his goodness, righteousness, power and wisdom.
Sermon on Ephesians 3:9-12, CO 51:462, as quoted
in Susan Schreiner, The Theater of His Glory:
Nature and Natural Order in the Thought of John
Calvin, Baker Books, Grand Rapids, 1995, pg. 113.
279
Opening our eyes to the grandeur of God in creation
Let us not be ashamed to take pious delight in the works of God open and manifest in this
beautiful theater.... Wherever we cast our eyes, all things they meet are works of God, and at
the same time (we should) ponder with pious meditation to what end God created them.
The Institutes I:14:20
The most perfect way of seeking God... is not for us to attempt to penetrate His
essence, but for us to contemplate Him in His works whereby he renders himself
near and familiar to us, and in some manner communicates himself.
The Institutes 1:5.9
Let all readers know that they have with true faith apprehended what it is for God to be the
Creator of heaven and earth, if they first of all follow the universal rule, not to pass over in
ungrateful thoughtfulness or forgetfulness those conspicuous powers which God shows forth in
his creatures, and then learn to apply it to themselves that their very hearts are touched.
The Institutes 1:14.21
280
God before the creation of the world
Great shrewdness was discovered by a certain pious old man, who, when some scoffer
ludicrously inquired what God had been doing before the creation of the world, replied that he
had been making hell for over curious men....
Institutes, trans. by the National Board of Young
Men’s Christian Assoc., A Reflection Book,
selections by Hugh Kerr, trans. by M. Gilchrist,
Edinburgh, 1858, Association Press, New York,
1960, I, xiv, 1, 20
This method of investigating the divine perfections, by tracing the lineaments of His
countenance as shadowed forth in the firmament and on the earth, is common both to those
within and those without the pale of the Church. From the power of God we are naturally led
to consider His eternity, since that from which all other things derive their origin must
necessarily be self-existent and eternal.
Institutes, Book I.v.6, as cited in Gordon J.
Spykman, Reformational Theology: A New
Paradigm for Doing Dogmatics, Eerdmans
Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, MI 1992.
To apprehend... what it is for our benefit to know concerning the world, we must first of all
understand the history of the creation of the world....
281
Thence we shall learn that God, by the power of His Word and Spirit, created out of
nothing the heaven and the earth; that from them he produced all things, animate and
inanimate; distinguished by an admirable gradation the innumerable variety of things; to every
species He gave its proper nature, assigned its offices, and appointed its places and stations;
and since all things are subject to corruption, He has, nevertheless, provided for the
preservation of every species until the last day; that He therefore nourishes some by methods
concealed from us, from time to time infusing, as it were, new vigor into them; that on some He
has conferred the power of propagation, in order that the whole species may not be extinct in
their deaths; that He has thus wonderfully adorned heaven and earth with the utmost possible
abundance, variety and beauty, like a large and splendid mansion, most exquisitely and
copiously furnished; lastly, that, by creating man, and distinguishing him with such splendid
beauty, and with such numerous and great privileges, He has exhibited in him a most excellent
specimen of all His works.
Institutes, trans. by the National Board of the
Young Men’s Christian Associations, A Reflection
Book, selections by Hugh Kerr, trans. by M.
Gilchrist, Edinburgh, 1858, Association Press, NY,
1960, I, xiv, 1, 20
282
No excuse for not knowing God through creation
But though we are deficient in the natural powers which might enable us to rise to a pure and
clear knowledge of God, still, as the dullness which prevents us is within, there is no room for
excuse. We cannot plead ignorance, without being at the same time convicted by our own
consciences both of sloth and ingratitude. It were, indeed, a strange defense for man to pretend
that he has no ears to hear the truth, while dumb creatures have voices loud enough to declare
it; to allege that he is unable to see that which creatures without eyes demonstrate; to excuse
himself on the ground of weakness of mind, while all creatures without reason are able to
teach....
Institutes, Book I.v.15 as cited in Gordon J. Spykman,
Reformational Theology: A New Paradigm for Doing
Dogmatics, Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids,
MI 1992.
Since God has given us dominion over all things, and so subjected them to us
that we may use them for our convenience, we cannot hope that our service will
be acceptable to God if we bring ourselves into bondage to external things,
which ought to be subservient to us.
Institutes, Henry Beveridge translation, 1913, Book
IV, 13
283
How the Bible brings God’s lessons into focus
284
St. Teresa of Avila (1515 - 1582)
One of the great Spanish mystics, St. Teresa of Avila is an inspired author of spiritual classics, the
tireless reformer of the Carmelite Order, and the first woman doctor of the Roman Catholic
Church. To Teresa, knowledge came by revelation; obedience meant liberation; and renunciation
filled her with consummate joy and light. For her, the earth frames the journey to salvation, and
the Lord is immanent in all parts of creation, including the human soul. She wrote according to
what she learned in quiet contemplation in her monastic cell.
Beg the Lord that, since it is possible to some extent for us to enjoy Heaven
upon earth, He will grant us His help and that He may show us the path and give
strength to our souls so that we may dig until we find this hidden treasure, since
we have it within ourselves.
The Interior Castle
Believe me, the whole manner of life we are trying to live is.... leading us to
detachment from all created things.
The Way of Perfection
If we learn to love the earth, we will find labyrinths, gardens, fountains and precious
jewels! A whole new world will open itself to us. We will discover what it means to
be truly alive.
Quoted in “Earthkeeping News,
St. Paul, MN., Vol. 7:5, pg. 4
285
Robert Bellarmine (1542 - 1621)
A Renaissance Jesuit who entered the Society of Jesus at the height of the Catholic counter-
reformation, Robert Bellarmine was instrumental in molding the religious fervor of his time. He
served as a bishop and a cardinal, and authored numerous essays and treatises about the religious
life. He is recognized primarily as a writer on spirituality; his major works include a Catechism, a
manual on dying well, and essays on the beauty of God in creation. Gratitude, wonder and praise
are reoccurring themes in his writing as well as the lessons of God infused into creation.
God wanted man to know him somehow through his creatures, and since no creature could
fittingly reflect the infinite perfection of the Creator, he multiplied his creatures and gave a
certain goodness and perfection to each so that from them we could judge the goodness and
perfection of the Creator, who embraces infinite perfection....
The Mind's Ascent to God 2:2
It is not difficult for one seal to make many identical impressions, but to vary shapes
almost infinitely, which is what God does in creation, this is a divine work.
De ascensione mentis in Deum per scalas
creaturarum, 1615
Everything that God has made is beautiful, if we rightly reflect on it... So my soul, if the
Creator has lavished such beauty on created things, how great and marvelous do you think is
the beauty of the all-beautiful Creator? The greatness of God's beauty not only is known with
certainty from the beauty of all creatures gathered together and found on a higher level in him,
but also from the fact that since he is invisible to us... and is known only by the testimony of
scripture and to a degree in the mirror of his creatures, still many saints so burned with love for
Him that some hid themselves in desert places, wishing to devote themselves entirely to
contemplation....
The Mind's Ascent to God 2:5
They should admire not the ingenuity of nature, but the wisdom of the Creator,
for He made nature and discovered the way to accomplish all these wonders.
On the Ascent of the Mind to God, 1615
286
Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642)
Galileo Galilei was born on February 15, 1564 in Pisa, Italy. In 1609, Galileo learned of the
invention of the spyglass in Holland. He used his technical skills to improve upon this device and
built the world’s first telescope. Later that year, he became the first person to observe the Moon
through a telescope and make astronomical discoveries. He found that the Moon was not smooth,
but mountainous and cratered. This new telescope helped him discover moons circling Jupiter, the
phases of Venus, sunspots on the Sun and the stellar composition of the Milky Way, He went on to
affirm Copernicus’s theory that the Earth and all the other planets revolved around the Sun. The
customary view of his time was that the Earth was the center of the Universe. Even though he was a
dedicated Catholic, he was condemned, first for positing a heliocentric world view, and second for
his method which relied upon external observation rather than traditional interior perception.
Galileo is called the "father of modern astronomy," and sometimes the "father of modern physics."
His conflict with the Roman Church is taken as an early example of the conflict of authority and
freedom of thought with science in Western society.
The sun, with all those planets revolving around it and dependent
upon it, still ripens a bunch of grapes, as if it had nothing else in
the universe to do.
287
Born in Stratford-upon-Avon in England, Shakespeare was an actor, poet and playwright who
many consider the greatest author in the English language. He weaves a knowledge of human
nature and Christian principle into unique plots which reveal the deep choices which face
humanity. A few of his writings have ecological value in that they reveal the contemporary
understanding of the cosmos as well as the consequences which follow from the choices which
each person has to make.
A touch of nature
288
Not thine own
Sonnet LXXXVIII
289
Complete Works of William Shakespeare
290
Jacob Boehme (1575 - 1624)
Jacob Boehme is an early Lutheran mystic who powerfully influenced the direction of Christianity
in Northern Europe in the decades following the Reformation. Called the "Teutonic Theosopher,"
and sometimes “Apostle to the Quakers,” Boehme was a devout but unschooled shoemaker, who
experienced an intense vision of the spiritual world while a youth. This vision set him on a journey
to articulate the deep meanings of God and creation. Jacob Boehme's significance is that he helped
bring about a resurgence in mysticism and devotion during the seventeenth century. He was a
quiet and simple man without formal education. His writings often offended the local clergy, yet
he said that he constantly relied upon the living Word of Jesus Christ and the New Testament as
the foundation for his inspirations. To his future readers he writes, "Beloved reader, if you want to
understand the high mysteries, you do not need to put a university upon your nose or any such
spectacles.... To understand them is child's play if only you will let the Holy Spirit illumine your
coming." His ecological importance lies in the vision he presents of heaven and earth integrated
through Jesus Christ.
Everything we see in nature is manifested truth; only we are not able to recognize it as
such, unless truth is manifest within ourselves... Look at the flowers of the fields; each
one has its own particular attributes. Nevertheless they do not wrangle and fight with
each other. They do not quarrel about the possession of sunshine as is daily provided by
the philosophers who are disputing about the attributes and the will of God, and who
nevertheless do not know God, because they do not listen to the word of God within
their souls.
The Aurora
“The whole external world with its physical substance is a covering of the radiant spiritual
world,” he declares, referring to a profoundly transforming experience which came to him
while in the forest:
In this light my spirit suddenly saw through all, and in and by all the creatures,
even in herbs and grass, it knew God, who He is and how He is and what His
will is. And suddenly in that light my will was set on by a mighty impulse to
describe the Being of God.
291
The location of heaven is within
In this world we have nothing of our own, and we ourselves are not our own. We are only
workers and foreign guests in this world for a short time. We are only managers for our God
over His creation and creatures. What we work and produce we do not only for ourselves but
for our God and our neighbor, and that all together we are one in Christ (who is) our salvation,
(and) who is Himself in all of us. We are to heartily and willingly wish to share the gifts that
God gives us through our prayer, be they heavenly or earthly, and to keep ourselves as the tree
does its branches, or the earth does, giving itself willingly to all its fruits, loving and bearing all
of them.
The Way to Christ 3:7
Reflection on dominion
The student said, "God created man in the natural life so that he might have dominion over all
the creatures on earth and be Lord over all life in this world. Therefore he must possess it as his
own."
The master said, "If you only rule externally over the creatures, you are, with your willing
and ruling, bestial, and stand only in a formal and transitory lordship. Moreover, if you lead your
desire into bestial essence, you will be infected and trapped and receive a bestial way of life. But
if you have left the images, you are above the images and rule in the ground over all creatures
out of which they were created and nothing on earth can harm you, for you are like all things and
nothing is unlike you."
The Way to Christ 6:8
The visible world with its host of creatures is nothing else that the
emanated Word which has disposed itself into qualities, as in
qualities the particular will has arisen. And with the receptivity of
the will, the creaturely life arose.
The Aurora
292
Allegiance of the true Christian
A Christian has no sect. He can live among sects, even appear in their services,
and will not be attached to any. He has only one doctrine and that is Christ
within him. He looks only for one way, which is the desire always to do right
and to live right. And he puts all his knowing and willing into Christ's life. He
sighs continually, and wishes that God's will might be done within him, and that
His Kingdom might come within him. Daily and hourly he mortifies the sins of
his flesh.
If you consider the depth of heaven, the stars, the elements, and
the earth, you will, of course, not grasp with your eyes the pure
and clear Godhead, although God is there and within it; but if you
rise up in your thoughts and direct your mind to God, who in His
holiness rules within the All, you are then penetrating through
heaven and grasping the very sacred heart of God himself.
In each external thing there are two qualities, one originating from time and the other from
eternity. The first or temporal quality is manifest, the other one is hidden.
If you behold the earth and the rocks, you will acknowledge that there is life in
them. For if this were not so, there would be in them neither gold nor silver, and
neither herbs nor grasses.
293
The earthly influence of the stars
"All that lives and exists is awakened and brought to life by the stars.... In the constellations are
the cause of all art and science, also of all order and harmony in this world, because they
awaken the trees and metals, enabling them to grow. In the earth is contained everything that is
contained within the stars...."
Boehme goes on to say that the actual realization of this relationship requires an
understanding of the macrocosmic nature of the human being. Without this practical
realization, the academic study of this statement is difficult and of little use. This realization is
possible only through the power of divine love.
The whole outward visible world with all its being is a signature,
or figure of the inward spiritual world; whatever is internally, and
however its operation is, so likewise it has its character
externally; like as the spirit of each creature sets forth and
manifests the internal form of its birth by its body, so does the
Eternal Being also.
God has placed man above the officer (the agent or "governor" of dominion),
and ordained him in the understanding to his own dominion; He has ability to
change nature, and to turn evil into good, provided that first he has changed
himself, otherwise he cannot; so long as he is dead in the understanding, so long
he is the servant and slave of the officer; but when he is made alive in God, then
the officer is his servant.
294
Hearing the Word of God
The disciple said to his master: Sir, how may I come to the supersensual life, so that I may see
God and may hear God speak?
The master answered: Son, when thou can throw thyself into THAT, where no creature
dwells, though it be but for a moment, then you hear what God speaks.
The creation of the whole creation is nothing else but a manifestation of the all-
eternal, unsearchable God; all whatever he is in his eternal unbeginning
generation and dominion, of that is also the creation, but not in the omnipotence
and power, but like an apple which grows upon the tree, which is not the tree
itself, but grows from the power of the tree: Even so all things are sprung forth
out of the divine desire, and created into an essence, where in the beginning
there was no such essence present, but only that same mystery of the eternal
generation, in which there has been an eternal perfection.
As the Deity, viz. the divine light, is the center of all life; so also in the manifestation of God,
viz. in the figure, the sun is the center of all life. ... In every external thing, there are two
properties; one from time, the other from eternity; the first property of time is manifest; and the
other is hidden, yet it sets forth a likeness after itself in each thing.
The greatest obstacle in the understanding of the doctrines in regard to divine mysteries is that
the student imagines that they are dealing with things existing outside of himself and with
which he is not concerned. But these doctrines are called "secret," not because they are not to
be revealed, except to a few favorites, but because they cannot be understood unless the reader
can free himself from that delusive conception of self which causes him to fancy that he is
something separated from the rest of the world, not only in regard to his bodily form, but also
in regard to his real foundations.
295
“The Restoration of Nature and the Generation of
Man,” in The Doctrines of Jacob Boehme, the God-
taught Philosopher, Franz Hartmann, Macoy Publ.
Co., New York, NY, 1919, p. 131.
When I thus see a plant, then I say truthfully: this is an image of the earth-spirit
in which the upper powers rejoice, regarding it as their child. For the earth-spirit
is one substance with the upper eternal powers. And when the plant is matured it
blooms, and the “oleous” spirit signifies itself by beautiful colors. And with the
pleasant smell of the blossom the tincture, or third principle, signifies itself.
Jakob Boehme describes an experience he once had while in praying in the woods. "No words
can express the great joy and triumph which I then experienced.... While in that state, my spirit
immediately saw through everything, and recognized God in all things, even in herbs and
grasses, and it knew what is God and what is His will.
Open your eyes, and behold, the whole world is full of God.
296
Surrender opens the door to experience
Oh, how near is God to all things. Nevertheless, nothing can comprehend Him unless it be
tranquil and surrenders to Him its own self-will. If this is accomplished, then will God be
acting through the instrumentality of everything, like the sun that acts throughout the whole
world.
Oh, how near is God to all things. Nevertheless, nothing can comprehend Him unless
it be tranquil and surrenders to Him its own self-will. If this is accomplished, then
will God be acting through the instrumentality of everything, like the sun that acts
throughout the whole world.
Give me gratitude for your gifts, so that my mind does not say,
“This is mine, I have bought it. I will possess it alone.
I am noble with it, majestic and beautiful;
It belongs to me because of my honor and glory.”
All this comes from the devil and the grevious fall of Adam.
The Virgin [wisdom] is visible like a pure Spirit, and the elements are her body... the holy
Earth... and into this the invisible Deity is entered, that the Deity is in the pure element and the
element is in the Deity; for God and the element are become one thing, not only in Spirit, but in
substance.
Chart of the Three Principles, quoted in J. Stoudt,
Sunrise to Eternity: A Study of Jacob Boehme, U. of
Penn. Press, 1974, p. 72.
Spiritual regeneration
For Boehme the whole exterior world is but a covering for the spiritual world. He describes
how the person who purifies mind and soul can sense the presence of God in all creatures.
Already now, he writes, “heaven pervades the whole world...,” but at the same time it is also a
battleground with strife and struggle with the power of the evil one, “the prince of darkness.”
This thou seest also in all God’s works, how love hath poured itself into all
things and is the most inward and outward foundation of all things.... That, O
God, is Thy inward spiritual kingdom as Thou dwellest in that which is hidden
and fillest all Thy creatures and workest Thyself and doest all in all....
The true heaven is everywhere in this present time until the last day, and the
house of wrath, of hell and death, is also in this world, now, everywhere, until
the last day.... Then will the earth, too, become crystalline, and the divine light
will shine in all beings.
298
All whatever is spoken, written, or taught of God, without the knowledge of the signature is
dumb and void of understanding....
For though I see one to teach, preach, and write of God, and though I hear and read the
same, this is not sufficient for me to understand him (God); but if his sound and spirit out of his
signature and similitude enter into my own similitude, and imprint his similitude into mine,
then I may understand him really, be it spoken or written, if he has the hammer that can strike
my bell. ...
There is nothing that is created or born in nature, but it also manifests its internal form
externally, for the internal continually labors or works itself into manifestation: As we know it
in the power and form of this world, how the one essence has manifested itself with the external
birth in the desire of the similitude, how it has manifested itself in so many forms and shapes,
which we see and know in the stars and elements, likewise in the living creatures, and also in
the trees and herbs.
Therefore the greatest understanding lies in the signature, wherein man (viz. the image
of The Greatest Virtue) may not only learn to know himself, but also he may learn to know the
essence of all essences; for by the external form of creatures, by their instigation, inclination,
and desire, also by their sound, voice, and speech which they utter, the hidden spirit is known.
For nature has given to everything its language according to its essence and form, for out of the
essence the language or sound arises, and that essence forms the quality of the essence in the
voice or virtue which it sends forth....
Everything has its mouth to manifestation; and this is the language of nature, whence
everything speaks out of its property, and continually manifests, declares, and sets forth itself
for what is good or profitable; for each thing manifests its mother, which thus gives the essence
and the will to the form.
299
George Herbert (1593 - 1633)
George Herbert represents all that is lofty, noble and principled in English spirituality. He was
born after the English Reformation, well educated and possessed a powerful intellect. While
opportunities for public service were abundant in London, he chose to serve as parson in a
simple country parish. His spirit was nurtured by Cranmer's "Book of Common Prayer," and by
personal example he soon had his entire rural parish participating in morning Matins and
evening "Evensong." Through devotion to regular morning and evening prayer, he developed a
radiant holiness which shines through his poetry and proverbs. His emphasis on simplicity and
moderation in possessions, the beauty of flowers, trees and the many lessons from God's good
creation fill his writings and provide an example of an integrated concern for God and nature
that gives us an inspiring model for today.
300
Providence II
301
William Penn (1644 - 1718)
William Penn, sometimes called the “first great hero of American liberty” because of his
outspoken insistence on religious freedom, is an early Quaker and the founder of the Pennsylvania
colony. He established a model of respect toward Native Americans and was known for
advocating vigorous spiritual practice as fundamental for healthy, stable community. He saw
religious value in farming; found heavenly lessons in the land; and advocated prosperity through
obedience to God and participation in local government.
The country life is to be preferred, for there we see the works of God, but in
cities little else but the works of men.
The Harper Religious and
Inspirational Quotation Companion, pg. 120.
The world is certainly a great and stately volume of natural things, and may be styled
the hieroglyphics of a better one, but, alas, how very few leaves of it do we seriously
turn over!
Some Fruits of Solitude (1692)
It would go a long way to caution and direct people in their use of the world that they were
better studied and known in the creation of it.
For how could man find the confidence to abuse it, while they should see the Great
Creator stare them in the face, in all and every part thereof?
Some Fruits of Solitude (1692)
The country is both the philosopher’s garden and his library, in which he reads
and contemplates the power, wisdom and goodness of God.
303
Cotton Mather (1663 - 1728)
An early American Puritan clergyman, he once addressed the Royal Society in London on the
subject of natural phenomena as found in God's book of creatures. He authored a text, significant in
his time, titled, "Brontologia Sacra," in which he pondered over “the sacred lessons of thunder” and
other meteorological phenomena. Cotton Mather also authored The Christian Philosopher which
was the first comprehensive attempt in America to reconcile religion and the new science. Even
though he concludes that the study of nature leads to a deeper appreciation of God through His
works, it is during his lifetime that a popular understanding of Christ’s presence in creation fades
from Protestant churches which contributes to a sharply diminished theological understanding of
creation. With this erosion a parallel decline occurs in understanding of how to discern spiritual
lessons from creation. While Mather is able to cite historical knowledge about learning from
creation, and even shows an ability to write about it, albeit shallowly, by his era the practical
dimensions of a Christian “natural literacy” regarding creation was largely lost and forgotten. His
ecological significance lies perhaps in his conscious but nevertheless feeble and inadequate effort to
preserve this fading understanding.
The world is well-planned, ordered and beautiful... [so that to study nature] is to
realize God’s goodness, and therefore, that man can appreciate God by the exercise
of observation and reason.
304
305
A French Jesuit from the southern province of Quercy near Toulouse, Jean Pierre de Caussade is a
widely acclaimed spiritual director. He simplified the search for God by teaching that God is to be
found in the duty of every moment. When performed in the conscious presence of Jesus Christ,
every event, he writes, becomes a sacramental experience of God’s plan. Even though he sought
anonymity, his letters of spiritual instruction to the Visitation nuns in the city of Nancy were kept
and bound. In 1861 just over 110 years after his death these letters were published under the title
“Abandonment to Divine Providence.” Among his themes, he teaches that God can be experienced
by every person through every thing and in every moment. Then awareness of the meaning of each
creature’s place in the divine plan becomes possible. To him, creation is a great book in which the
reverent may study the eternal mysteries of God.
The divine activity permeates the whole universe. It pervades every creature.
Wherever they are, it is there. He moves about the smallest blades of grass as
well as above the mighty cedar. The grains of sand are under His feet as well as
the huge mountains. Wherever you may turn, there you will find His footprints!
All created things are living in the hand of God. The senses see
only the action of the creatures, but faith sees in everything the
action of God.
Abandonment to Divine Providence
Both reason and faith tell us that God’s love is present in every creature and in every event, just
as Jesus Christ and the Church inform us that the sacred body and blood of God are truly
present in the Eucharist. His love wishes to unite itself with us through all that the world
contains, all that he has created, obtained and allowed. ... Every moment of our lives can be a
kind of communion with his love, a communion which can produce in our souls fruits similar to
those we receive with the body and blood of the son of God.
What a festival and never-ending feast is ours! God ceaselessly gives himself and is
received with no pomp and circumstance, but is hidden beneath all that is weak and foolish and
worthless.
306
Abandonment to Divine Providence, ch. 2,
“Embrace the Present Moment,” Nr. 7
All creatures live in the hands of God. By our senses we can see
only the action of the creature, but faith sees the Creator acting in
all things. Faith sees that Jesus Christ lives in everything and
works through all history to the end of time. The actions of
created beings are veils which hide the profound mysteries of the
workings of God.
The concept of every single thing in the entire universe has been with the eternal wisdom for all
time. As the ages pass, God allows these concepts and ideas to emerge. Now suppose that you
knew all the concepts which have nothing to do with you. ... It is surely clear that we shall not
assume that image which the eternal wisdom wishes us to have by trying to understand all the
mysterious activities of God down through the centuries. We can receive God’s seal on our
souls only by abandoning our will to him, not by any efforts of our reason.
307
An attitude toward the creatures
We should regard all creatures as very feeble tools serving God’s purpose. If we
had faith, we should be grateful to all creatures, cherish them and thank them
silently for their good will in helping us, by God’s design, toward perfection.
308
309
St. Alphonsus Liguori (1696 - 1787)
Alphonsus Liguori was a practical man, as familiar with the small farms of rural Italy as with the
seminary halls of Rome. By training Alphonsus was first a lawyer, but his heart and much of his
pastoral work was first among the poor of Naples. He was also a poet, a musician and something of
a “late bloomer,” for he waited until the ripe age of 79 to begin his most important writing, Moral
Theology, for which the Roman Catholic Church has named him a "Doctor of the Church."
Alphonsus was relentless in his intensity and his perseverance was indomitable, perhaps because he
once vowed not to lose a single moment of time. During his life he was known for his intercessions
which healed the sick; for his ability to read the secrets of hearts and for a penetrating insight that
even foretold the future. He once fell into a clairvoyant trance at Arienzo in 1774, and was present
in spirit at the death-bed in Rome of Pope Clement XIV. For him, the surrounding southern Italian
countryside imbued him with a sense of God giving us “the earth and its beauty as a foretaste of the
beauties and glory of heaven.” As he explained it, God has infused His radiant presence into all
aspects of creation.
310
311
John Wesley (1701 - 1791)
Born in England, John Wesley came to colonial Georgia in 1726 to assist in missionary work
among the Native American tribes. In 1782, after many years of selfless labor during which he
acquired a reputation as an inspired preacher and speaker, he wrote a landmark sermon entitled
"The General Deliverance." Here he outlines an eschatological view of creation which includes a
right human attitude toward the creatures. The spirituality of John Wesley is centered upon perfect
love, purity of heart and intention, and continual seeking after the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
Dominion is fundamental to this seeking after the Holy Spirit and Wesley defines this requirement
as "the conveyance of divine blessings" from God into both man and the world. He sees
responsibility for dominion in terms of each person serving as a "governor" of the earth and "vice-
regent" on behalf of God and under God. Through dominion, Wesley writes, "all the blessings of
God flowed through him (man) to the inferior creatures." For his day, John Wesley demonstrated a
keen understanding of natural processes. He emphasized that the eventual redemption of creation
requires human respect and beneficence toward all of God’s creatures.
Creation's restoration
In the new earth, as well as in the new heavens, there will be nothing to give pain, but
everything that the wisdom of God and goodness of God can create to give happiness.
"All the blessings of God flow through him (man) to the inferior creatures." To
Wesley, dominion is clearly not any kind of exploitation, but a "conveyance of
divine blessings."
The whole brute creation will be restored, not only to the vigor, strength, and swiftness which
they had at their creation, but to a far higher degree of each than they ever enjoyed. They will be
restored, not only to that measure of understanding which they had in paradise, but to a degree
of it much higher than that of as the understanding of an elephant is beyond that of a worm....
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In that day all the vanity to which they are now subject will be abolished; they will suffer no
more either from within or without; the days of their groaning are ended.... and they shall enjoy
happiness suited to their state, without alloy, without interruption, and without end.
One more excellent end may undoubtedly be answered by the preceding considerations.
They (the creatures) may encourage us to imitate Him whose mercy is over all His works. They
may soften our hearts toward the meaner creatures, knowing that the Lord careth for them. It
may enlarge our hearts towards these poor creatures to reflect that, as vile as they appear to our
eyes, not one of them is forgotten in the sight of our Father which in heaven.
Love creatures for the sake of God, not for their own sake
Whatever (the Christian who seeks perfection) does, it is all to the glory of God. In all his
employments of every kind, he not only aims at this (which is implied in having a single eye),
but actually attains it. His business and his refreshments, as well as his prayers, all serve to this
great end. Whether he sit in the house, or walk by the way, whether he lie down or rise up, he is
promoting in all he speaks, or does, the one business of his life....
Nor do the customs of this world at all hinder his running the race which is set before him.
He cannot, therefore, lay up treasures upon earth, no more than he can take fire into his own
bosom....
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Jesus Christ leads us to creation concern
I believe in my heart that faith in Jesus Christ can and will lead us beyond an exclusive concern
for the well-being of other human beings, to a broader concern for the well-being of the birds in
our backyards, the fish in our rivers, and every living creature on the face of the earth.
When therefore we pray that the will of God may be done in earth as it is
in heaven, the meaning is that all the inhabitants of the earth, even the
whole race of mankind, may do the will of their Father which is in
Heaven, as willingly as the holy angels; that these may do it continually,
even as they, without any interruption of their willing service; yea and
that they may do it perfectly, that "the God of peace, through the blood of
the everlasting covenant, may make them perfect in every good work to
do his will, and work in them" all "which is well-pleasing in his sight."
To this creature, God said, “Have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air,
and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.” ... So man was God’s viceregent upon
the earth, the prince and governor of this lower world; and all the blessings of God flowed
through him to the inferior creatures. Man was the channel of conveyance between his Creator
and the whole brute creation. ...
What makes the barrier between man and brutes? The line which they cannot pass? It
was not reason. ... But it is this: man is capable of God; the inferior creatures are not. ... This is
the specific difference between man and brute -- the great gulf which they cannot pass over.
And as a loving obedience to God was the perfection of men, so a loving obedience to God was
the perfection of men, so a loving obedience to man was the perfection of the brutes. ...
As all the blessings of God in paradise flowed through man to the inferior creatures; as
man was the great channel of communication between the Creator and the whole brute creation.
When man made himself incapable of transmitting those blessings, that communication was
necessarily cut off. ...
And then it was that ‘the creature,’ every creature, was subject to vanity, to sorrow, to
pain of every kind, to all manner of evils. ...
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As man is deprived of his perfection, his loving obedience to God, so the brutes are
deprived of their perfection, their loving obedience to man.
In reflecting upon the purpose of so many species of animals, Wesley offers the following
commentary:
They may encourage us to imitate him whose mercy is over all of his works. They
may soften our hearts towards the meaner creatures, knowing that the Lord cares
for them. It may enlarge our hearts towards those poor creatures to reflect that, as
vile as they appear in our eyes, not one of them is forgotten in the sight of our
Father which is in heaven. ...
Yea, let us habituate ourselves to look forward, beyond this present scene of
bondage, to the happy time when they will be delivered therefrom into the liberty
of the children of God.
Sermons
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Jonathan Edwards (1703 - 1758)
A Congregational minister famous for his fire-and-brimstone preaching, Edwards showed a gentle
reflective side in his love for contemplative solitude in the midst of nature. He could sense God, he
said, in a thunderstorm and feel the divine majesty and grace on a sunny day. About his view of
the distant Berkshire mountains, he writes, "There are many things wherein we may behold His
awful majesty" and he relates that we could easily make a study of how "...comets, thunder clouds,
and ragged rocks and the brows of mountains" inform our faith. Edwards says that nature should
draw the faithful into introspective meditation and the abandonment of self. Everywhere, creation
proclaimed God's exceeding excellence. To Edwards the Puritan landscape was bursting with
spiritual insight and meaning. Edwards' contribution to an early American ethic of the land relates
to his understanding of covenant as God's promise to be here in creation and to be faithful in
fulfilling his promises to his people everywhere throughout the land. From this derives his view
that if humans are faithful to God, God in His goodness provides abundantly for their needs
through creation.
God's excellency, his wisdom, his purity and love, seemed to appear in every
thing in the sun, moon and stars; in the clouds, and blue sky; in the grass,
flowers, trees; in the water, and all nature; which used greatly to fix my mind. I
often used to sit and view the moon for continuance; and in the day, spent much
time in viewing the clouds and sky, to behold the sweet glory of God in these
things.
We have shown that the Son of God created the world for this very end, to communicate
Himself in an image of His own excellency....
So that, when we are delighted with flowery meadows and gentle breezes of wind, we
may consider that we see only the emanations of the sweet benevolence of Jesus Christ. When
we behold the fragrant rose and lily, we see His love and purity. So the green trees and fields,
and singing of birds, are the emanations of His infinite joy and benignity. The easiness and
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naturalness of trees and vines are shadows of His beauty and loveliness. The crystal rivers and
murmuring streams are the footsteps of His favor, grace, and beauty.
When we behold the light and brightness of the sun, the golden edges of an evening
cloud, or the beauteous (rain)bow, we behold the adumbrations of His glory and goodness; and
in the blue sky, of his mildness and gentleness.
Contemplations in nature
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Lessons from the spider
There are some things that I have happily seen of the wondrous and curious works of the
spider. Although everything pertaining to this insect is admirable, yet there are some
phenomena more particularly wonderful. Everybody that is used to the country knows of their
marching [the spiders] in the air from one tree to another, though they are wholly destitute of
wings; nor can one go out in a dewy morning at the latter end of August, but he shall see
multitudes of webs reaching from one tree and shrub to another. But I have often seen that
which is yet more astonishing. I have seen vast multitudes of little shining webs and glistening
strings, brightly reflecting the sunbeams, and some of them of a great length, and at such height
that one would think that they were tacked to the vault of the heavens.... And this the spider’s
way of working....
Hence, the wisdom of the Creator in providing of the spider with that wonderful liquor
with which their bottle tail is filled, that may so easily be drawn out so exceedingly fine and
being in this way exposed to air will so immediately convert to a dry substance that shall be so
very rare as to be lighter than air, and will so excellently serve to all their purposes.
Hence the exuberant goodness of the Creator, who hath not only provided for all the
necessities, but also for the pleasure and recreation of all sorts of creatures, even the insects.
These, Sir, are the observations I have had opportunity to make on the wonders that are
to be seen in the most despicable of animals. Although these things appear in the main very
certain to me, I submit it all to your better judgement. I humbly beg to be pardoned for running
the venture of troubling you with so prolix an account. Pardon me if I thought it might at least
give you occasion to make better observations on these wondrous animals, that should be
worthy of communicating to the learned world, from whose glistening webs so much of the
wisdom of the Creator shines.
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John Woolman (1720 - 1772)
John Woolman opens his journal of 1774 by penning, “I was born in Northampton, in Burlington
County, West Jersey, in the year 1720....” An early Quaker, preacher and pioneer abolitionist, John
Woolman from his youth was a zealous member of the Society of Friends (Quakers). He despised
those who mistreated animals or owned slaves and advocated compassion for all creatures. He once
authored a Quaker pamphlet entitled, "Advice and Queries," which insisted that Christian doctrine
and law sets no limit upon love and kindness, and thus these qualities must be applied to all creatures
as well as God and people. He advocated for conservation in dealing with the trees and whales
before others spoke on these issues. He especially called for the need for humility in lifestyle so that
“being content with a plain way of life,” citizens might have “more true peace and calmness of mind
than they who, aspiring to greatness and outward show, have grasped.”
I believe that where the love of God is verily perfected and the true spirit of government
watchfully attended to, a tenderness toward creatures made subject to us will be experienced, and
a care felt in us that we do not lessen that sweetness of life in the animal creation which the Great
Creator intends for them under our government.
The produce of the earth is a gift from our gracious Creator to the inhabitants,
and to impoverish the earth now to support outward greatness appears to be an
injury to the succeeding age.
I looked upon the works of God in this visible creation, and an awfulness
covered me: my heart was tender and often contrite, and a universal love to
my fellow creatures was increased in me.
Journal of 1774
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Today's gain may be tomorrow's pain
I look up the works of God in its visible creation and an awfulness covers me. The produce of
the earth is a gift from our gracious Creator... and to impoverish the earth now, to support
outward greatness, appears to be an injury to the succeeding age...
In true silence strength is renewed, and the mind is weaned from all things, save as
they may be enjoyed in the Divine Will; and a lowliness in outward living, opposite
to worldly honor, becomes truly acceptable to us.
Journal, 1774
I was early convinced that true religion consisted in an inward life, wherein the heart doth love
and reverence God the Creator, and learn to exercise true justice and goodness, not only toward
men, but also the brute creatures; that as the mind was moved on an inward principle to love
God as an invisible, incomprehensible being, on the same principle it was moved to love him in
all his manifestations in the world; and as by his breath the flame of life was kindled in all
animal and sensitive creatures, to say we love God as unseen and at the same time exercise
cruelty toward the least creature moving by his life, or by life derived from him, was a
contradiction itself.
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St. Nikephoros of Chios (1750 - 1821)
St. Nikephoros lived on the small Aegean Island of Chios and never once left it for the Greek
mainland. As a chronically sick young boy his parents vowed that if he could be healed of what
appeared to be a certainly fatal illness, they would dedicate him into God's service through a local
monastery. All of his life, Nikephoros lived close to the land, and he used every opportunity to
teach that trees are a primary source of future community wealth. He spent much of his life
planting trees of many kinds and when his parents died, he sold his entire inheritance to assist in
additional tree planting throughout the island.
In future times, he says, "men will become poor because they will not have a
love for trees...."
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William Blake (1757 - 1827)
"I do not behold the outward creation... it is a hindrance and not action." In this way William
Blake, renowned painter, engraver and poet, explained why his work was filled with religious
visions rather than with subjects from everyday life. Few people in his time realized that Blake
expressed these visions with a talent that approached genius. He lived in near poverty most of his
life; he was ignored by the public of his day; he died largely unrecognized. Today, Blake is known
as one of England's great figures of art and literature and one of the most inspired and original
painters of his era. He was a follower of Emanuel Swedenborg, mostly because Swedenborg
offered a mystic interpretation of Christianity which satisfied Blake’s hunger for a deeper, more
profound view of God and creation. His ecological contribution lies in his assertion that every
thing in creation has infinite depth and meaning rooted in the cosmic nature of creation.
And every space smaller than a globule of man's blood opens into Eternity
of which this vegetable Earth is but a shadow.
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The tree
Some scarce see nature at all. But to the eyes of the man of imagination,
nature is imagination itself. As man is, so he sees.
Ballads
Aphorisms
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A Russian monk, nature mystic and "starets" (a Russian word for God-inspired elder), St.
Seraphim is one of the most widely respected of modern Russian saints. He spent most of his adult
life in his monastic hermitage where he lived close to the land and was often in close touch with a
variety of wild animals. There, deep in the Russian forest, he practiced a rigorous form of prayer
and detachment from worldly concerns. He taught that prayerful silence amidst the quiet of
wilderness when coupled with holy detachment will draw the contemplative into proper
concentration on the name of Jesus and that this will bring experience of the divine Light of Christ.
He preached to the animals, shared his food with them, and is especially known for taming the bear
and wolves in his area. His friendship with the animals of the forest was a source of wonder to
visitors and even his fellow monks, and according to eyewitnesses, rabbits, foxes, lynx, lizards and
even the bears and wolves gathered peacefully around his simple hut.
"The animals are a joy to me," he said, and referring to the mosquitoes
which infested the forest swamps where he gathered moss, he spoke of his
joy in them, for "the passions are destroyed through suffering and
afflictions."
Adam... (was) created superior to all the other creatures of God as the crown of creation on
earth. He would have been just like all the other creatures, which, though they have a body,
soul and spirit, each according to its kind, yet they have not the Holy Spirit within them.
Everything was subject to him... as the kind and lord of creation, and everything looked up
to him as the perfect crown of God's creatures....
Adam could see and understand the conversation of the holy angels, and the language of all
the beasts, birds and reptiles and all that is now hidden from us fallen and sinful creatures, but
was so clear to Adam before his fall. To Eve also the Lord God gave the same wisdom, strength
and unlimited power, and all the other good and holy qualities.
Motovilov, The Little Russian Philokalia, Vol. 1,
St. Herman's Press, 1978, pg. 81-82.
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Inner peace
Conversation with
Nicholas Motovilov
Everything was subject to Adam as the beloved of God, as the king and lord of creation, and
everything looked up to him, as the perfect crown of God's creatures. Adam was made so wise
by this breath of life which was breathed into his face from the creative lips of God, the Creator
and Ruler of all, that there never has been a man on earth wiser or more intelligent than he, and
it is hardly likely that there ever will be.
When the Lord commanded him to give names to all the creatures, he gave every creature a
name which completely expressed all the qualities, powers and properties given it by God at its
creation. Owing to this very gift of the supernatural grace of God which was infused into him
by the breath of life, Adam could see and understand the Lord walking in Paradise, and
comprehend His words, and the conversation of the holy angels, and the language of the beasts,
birds and reptiles and all that is now hidden from us fallen and sinful creatures, but was so clear
to Adam before his fall.
To Eve also the Lord God gave the same wisdom, strength and unlimited power, and all the
other good and holy qualities.
When a man contemplates inwardly the eternal light, the mind is pure and
has in it no sensuous images, but, being wholly immersed in the
contemplation of uncreated beauty, forgets everything sensuous and does
not wish to see even itself; but would rather hide in the heart of the earth
than be deprived of his true good -- which is of God.
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Friendship with the forest creatures
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William Wordsworth (1770 - 1850)
An early transcendentalist poet William Wordsworth’s collection of “Ballads” while still a student
marks the beginning of the English Romantic Movement. Wordsworth saw nature as brightly alive
and benign. He went against the conventional religious thought of his day and said that a spiritual
presence filled nature, and therefore through connection to that “presence,” one could discern
insights about God and religion from the natural world. He believed that the more a person
possessed education coupled with experience in the outdoors, the more that person should find
appreciation for mountains, rocks, streams and wild places and derive blessings from it. He was an
ardent defender of the plight of the common person. He was also one of the most prolific poets
ever, composing over 70,000 lines of verse. In his final years he was honored as England’s poet
laureate.
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William Wordsworth in Holly Hughes, Meditations
on the Earth: A Celebration of Nature, Running
Press, Ontario, 1994, p. 14
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St. Paisius Velichkovsky (1772 - 1794)
St. Paisius restored ancient monastic practices in Russia, Romania and Ukraine. He is credited
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God, having created man according to His image and likeness, conducted him
into a Paradise of sweetness to till the immortal gardens, that is, the most pure,
exalted and perfect Divine thoughts. And this means nothing else than that he
remained, as being pure in soul and heart, in contemplative, grace-filled
prayer, sacredly working in the mind alone, that is, in the sweetest vision of
God, and that he manfully preserved this, it being the work of Paradise, as the
apple of his eye, lest it ever decrease in his soul and heart. Wherefore, great is
the glory of sacred and Divine mental prayer, whose verge and summit, that is,
beginning and perfection, were given to man by God in Paradise, and so it is
from there that it has its beginning.
The Scroll, Six Chapters on
Mental Prayer 2
________________________________________
The most eminent Russian religious figure of the nineteenth century, he was a preacher and
theologian, and wrote numerous theological texts on a variety of topics. He has left a particularly
beloved collections of sermons and homilies.
Sermons
William Cullen Bryant (1794 - 1878)
William Cullen Bryant was a lawyer, a father, and the first American poet to win international
acclaim. He was considered a child-prodigy, publishing his first poem at age ten and his first book
at thirteen – a political satire of Thomas Jefferson’s foreign policy. Bryant is most known for what
was called ”romantic expression,” because his intuition of God’s presence in nature went against
the conventional Protestant theology of his day. Bryant was strongly against slavery, endorsing the
Free-Soil party, the early Republican party, and Abraham Lincoln. While Bryant received great
praise for his poetry, he was criticized because he didn't publish enough. His ecological
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significance lies in his emphasis that creation contains opportunities to experience God in this
world.
Thanatopsis
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Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803 - 1882)
Ralph Waldo Emerson was born in Boston and became pastor of that city's famous Second
Church. Sometimes called "the Sage of Concord," he personified the best of New England
individualism and many considered him a spokesman for nineteenth century America. His fame
was due partly to his Yankee common sense, and partly to his religious insight as a devoted
clergyman. His contribution to modern ecological understanding lies in his search for principles
which guide a right perception of nature, and his insistence that a "transcendent" dimension
belonging to God‘s nature permeated every dimension of the natural world. For these views he
encountered criticisms from many clerics, some of whom accused him of promoting a resurgent
pantheism. Emerson is one of the primary voices of the nineteenth century transcendentalist
movement.
Views of nature
The views of nature held by any people determine all of their other institutions.
All science has but one aim, namely, to find a theory of nature. We have theories
of races and of functions, but scarcely yet a remote approach to an idea of
creation. We are now so far from the road to truth, that religious teachers dispute
and hate each other, and speculative men are esteemed unsound and frivolous....
Whenever a true theory appears, it will be its own evidence. Its test is, that it
will explain all phenomena.
"To be" is the unsolved, unsolvable wonder. To be, in its two connections of inward and
outward, the mind and Nature. The wonder subsists, and age, though of eternity, could not
approach a solution. But the suggestion is always returning, that hidden source publishing at
once our being and that it is the source of outward Nature. Who are we, and what is Nature,
have one answer in the life that rushes into us.
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Emerson's Complete Works, Vol. XII, pg. 16.
The happiest man
The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship.
The pilgrim goes into the woods, but he carries with him the beauty which he
visits....
God has not made some beautiful things, but Beauty is the
Creator of the universe...
Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us,
or we find it not.
The Poet
Every natural fact is a symbol of some spiritual fact. Every appearance in nature corresponds to
some state of mind.... An enraged man is a lion; a cunning man is a fox; a firm man is a rock; a
learned man is a torch. A lamb is innocence; a snake is subtle spite; flowers express to us the
delicate affections.... Every natural process is a version of a moral sentence. The moral
influence of nature upon every individual is that amount of truth which it illustrates to him.
The stars awaken a certain reverence, because though always present, they
are inaccessible; but all natural object make a kindred impression, when the
mind is open to their influence. Nature never wears a mean appearance.
Neither does the wisest man extort her secret, and lose his curiosity by
finding out all her perfection. Nature never became toy to a wise spirit. The
flowers, the animals, the mountains, reflected the wisdom of his best hour, as
much as they had delighted the simplicity of his childhood.
Nature, 1836
Nature is medicinal
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To the body and the mind which have been cramped by noxious work or
company, nature is medicinal and restores their tone.
All that I have ever seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all that I have not seen.
The first care of man settling in the country should be to open the face of the
earth to himself by a little knowledge of nature, or a great deal of knowledge, if
he can, of birds, plants and astronomy; in short, the art of taking a walk.
He who knows what sweet and virtues are in the ground and waters, the plants, the heavens,
and how to come at these enchantments, is the rich and royal man.
Live in the fields, and God will give you lectures on natural philosophy every
day. You shall have the snow-bunting, the chickadee, the jay, the partridge, the
chrysalis and wasp for your neighbors.
RWE quoted in Holly Hughes, Meditations on the
Earth: A Celebration of Nature in Quotations,
Poems and Essays, Running Press, Ontario, 1994,
p. 21
Blight
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806 - 1861)
Elizabeth Moulton-Barrett was born in Durham, England, the eldest of twelve children of an
autocratic father who forbade his children to marry. She began writing at a young age, publishing
her first literary work while still in her teens. Because she suffered from a chronic lung ailment,
Elizabeth spent most of her time in a darkened room writing poetry, hymns and letters. The
famous English poet Robert Browning admired her book, "Poems," so much that he wrote to her.
They met, fell in love, and were secretly married in 1846. She was a fervent Methodist who
focused her early life on writing poetry and hymns. As she grew older she increasingly addressed
contemporary issues, including the abolition of slavery and improvement of the position of women
in Victorian society. Her writings include descriptions of how God’s presence is hidden within the
earth.
Work
Poems, 1844
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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807 - 1882)
Longfellow is one of the best loved of American poets. He had a gift of easy rhyme so that his
poems sing their way into the hearts of those who read them. His poetry brings a joyousness, a
spirit of optimism and faith in the goodness of life. Longfellow was one of the first American
writers to employ Native American themes. He wrote about the American landscape, its history
and culture, plus Native life and lore. He traveled on foot through the countryside and learned
the ways of the land. Native culture especially fascinated him. His ”Song of Hiawatha”
describes how Gitche Manitou, the Great Spirit, commanded his people to live in peace. His
contribution to modern ecology lies in his relentless connection between God, the land and the
need for human attitudes which are thoughtful, respectful and discerning of the meanings of the
Creator in nature. "Of all the suns of the New England morning," says a commentator on his
passing, "he was the largest in his golden sweetness."
The laws of nature are just, but terrible. There is no weak mercy in them. Cause
and consequence are inseparable and inevitable. The elements have no
forbearance. The fire burns, the water drowns, the air consumes, the earth
buries. And perhaps it would be well for our race if the punishment of crimes
against the laws of man were as inevitable as the punishment of crimes against
the laws of nature... were man as unerring in his judgements as nature.
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Teaching children gentleness
Nature
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John Greenleaf Whittier (1807 - 1892)
John Whittier was born on a small farm to a Quaker family with deep roots in the New England
countryside. For one hundred and sixty years his ancestors had cultivated the family farm in the
far northeastern corner of Massachusetts near the Atlantic coast. From his youth he was a close
student of the Bible and hungry to learn and read. His first books were sermons and poetry, and
so his first attempts at writing were religious reflections in poetic form. As a patriotic youth
with a strong sense of responsibility for the direction of his community and country, he
vigorously advocated for the abolition of slavery. He became unpopular because of his
forcefulness on this issue, yet persisted because he always sought the good of God in the
behavior of the state. His poetry emphasizes that the mercy of God extends to the earth through
human receptivity to the will of God. He gave popular voice to the principles which powered
the anti-slavery movement and sought their extension to all facets of life and livelihood,
including respect for animals. His ecological relevance stems from the manner in which he
includes care of God’s creation in his poetry and from the same principles and logic which
inform his abolitionist perspective.
The sooner we recognize the fact that the mercy of the Almighty
extends to every creature endowed with life, the better it will be
for us as men and Christians.
Quoted in Lewis Regenstein, Replenish
the Earth, pg. 106,
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The son of an Anglican priest, Alfred Tennyson was born at Somersby, Lincolnshire, the fourth of
twelve children. Alfred Tennyson was a prolific and popular poet who suffered from extreme
near-sightedness – without a monocle he could not even see to eat – which gave him considerable
difficulty writing and reading. This disability accounts for his manner of creating poetry: he
composed most of it in his memory, occasionally working on individual poems for many years.
During his undergraduate days at Cambridge he often did not bother to write down his
compositions until they were finished in his mind, turning phrases over and over until reflection
and inspiration brought the proper turn of phrase. Through this unique method, he was able to
hone his poetic insights to the core of an idea. His themes often deal with the great mysteries of
life and the questions which bring spiritual relevance and religious depth to life’s journey. His
concern for nature revolves around crucial religious questions about the natural order: the reason
for flowers, the out-working of the laws of the universe, and the hidden life of Christ in the world.
In 1850 at age 41 he became Britain’s Poet Laureate, a position which finally established him as
the most popular poet of the Victorian era.
One God
356
Prayer
The sun, the moon, the stars, the seas, the hills, and the plains,
Are not these, O Soul, the Vision of Him, who reigns?
Glory about thee, without thee; and thou fulfillest thy doom,
Making Him broken gleams and a stifled splendor and gloom.
Speak to Him, thou, for He hears, and Spirit with Spirit can meet --
Closer is He than breathing, and nearer than hands and feet.
And the ear of man cannot hear, and the eye of man cannot see;
But if we could see and hear, this Vision — were it not He?
357
Oh yet we trust
358
359
Blessed Athanasia Logacheva (1809 - 1875)
Athanasia Logacheva was born in Nizhnegorod in Russia. She was orphaned at an early age and
lived with relatives until she was 23, when she sought a blessing from St. Seraphim of Sarov to
live a life wholly dedicated to God. Seventeen more years passed, years filled with traveling,
service, pilgrimage and prayerful searching for the appropriate place. At the age of 41 she moved
into the forest wilderness of Northern Russian and led the life of a solitary nun. She became a
renowned and holy ascetic as well as friend to bears and wolves who became tame in her presence.
She was always possessed of an undisturbed cheerfulness and a bright spiritual radiance. Blessed
Athanasia displays the love of creation and wonder at its beauty and depth that characterizes those
who wholly dedicate their lives to God and live prayerfully and selflessly in the wilderness.
Love of creation
Despite severe rheumatism in her later years, Mother Athanasia would pray steadily
through much of the night plus every morning and afternoon. On one particularly difficult
and sore morning, she declared:
I love everything — the sun and the world — and I, the sinful one, fear that
it might be idleness on my part to look on the beauty of the fields covered with
wild flowers. No. This is acceptable... because the beauty was created by the
Lord. ... I want to go into the field where the golden corn is growing and
where, from the forest, comes an aromatic smell....
Even from childhood, I loved the smell of sweet, blossoming wild cherry
trees, the babbling brooks, the dawns an sunsets. What inexplicable contrition
of heart I used to feel, then as now, when the sun is meeting the early spring
morning as its first rays of light are sprinkled upon the earth. What joy is born
then in the heart of man.... In the east there is Paradise; otherwise the hearts of
people would not tremble with exaltation at the sight of the morning light and
the rays of sunlight. Otherwise, the eyes would not look with joy at the
clearing of the dawn; and the birds of heaven would not glorify the Lord
during spring mornings, those mornings which I would still like to see in this
life.
360
361
St. Theophan the Recluse (1815 - 1894)
The son of a Ukrainian Orthodox priest, Georgi Govorov was steeped in Eastern Orthodox
Christianity from his youth. After graduating from the Kiev Theological Academy as a priest-
monk where he was given the name Theophan, he undertook a lengthy tour of the great monastic
libraries of the Holy Land. For seven years he immersed himself in obscure religious texts from
previous centuries. In the process, he became convinced of the importance of monastic prayer for
the health of the Church and increasingly devoted himself to solitude and prayer. Theophan
eventually retired to a life of continual prayer. In his diary, he notes, "People write and ask me,
'Don't you get bored?' But in fact I have so much to do that from the moment I open my eyes, it is
impossible to finish before I close my eyes at night." About solitude, he writes, "Those who love
blessed solitude lead a life of activity that reflects their spiritual powers. They never weary of
praising their Maker to all eternity — so that he who ascends to the heaven of solitude never
ceases to praise his Creator." Theophan is ecologically significant because he is the first nineteenth
century cleric to show how an exclusive concern for empirical science degenerates into blindness
toward the spiritual world and spiritual life. His importance lies in his writings and his close
connection to the vigor and spiritual flavor of the early Church.
As a Christian you must reinterpret in a spiritual way all that you see about you. Then fight
with all of your forces to imprint that new interpretation on your mind. Then, when you look at
something, while your eyes see a tangible object, your mind will be contemplating a spiritual
one. This is a tedious and complicated discipline. It aims eventually at a complete re-education
of oneself, at a regeneration and radical transformation of one's materiality.
Letter, quoted in The Heart of
Salvation, Praxis Press, 1991, pg. 16.
362
All things in creation witness to the Father
Everything, with no exception, is a source from which you can distill a higher and more
celestial knowledge that is both valid and useful. Yet this understanding will vary from one
person to another, depending upon their power of penetration, their degree of attention, and
their faith and devotion. Those who relentlessly and enthusiastically pursue these exercises will
in time feel enriched by the wealth of knowledge that is yielded. Then they will start to
reinterpret everything around them and all that they meet with.
We can start with the house in which we live, and reinterpret all that it contains: the
house itself, its walls, its roof and ceilings, its foundations, its windows, stoves and chimneys,
the furniture that fills it: tables, chairs, beds and mirrors and all the rest.... Then we can pass on
to the inhabitants of the house.... We can also reinterpret the ordinary activities of daily life....
In the Old and New Testaments we will find many keys to show us how to do this in a wise
way....
When we can do so successfully, the world will be like a holy book filled with
uncountable and wonderfully different paragraphs; then any fixed object, any changing event,
will refer us to God, so that our thoughts will be directed toward Him. Every activity and every
movement will be made in His presence. We will walk and act inside the field of the senses and
materiality, yet in reality we move in the realm of the Spirit. Everything will unveil its divine
dimension for us, and this will reinforce the power with which our attention turns towards Him.
This text is fertile beyond anything we can conceive. If everything in daily life can be
spiritually reinterpreted, it is because everything is a symbol of the invisible realm, but
reflected within time and space. This is why it has been said that whatever exists on earth is
modeled on an archetypal essence that is actually present on another plane of God's creation.
Do we not say in the Creed, "Creator of all that is, visible and invisible."
The Heart of Salvation, pg. 16-17.
The world, with its concepts, principles and rules, in general its
entire system made into immutable law, lays a heavy, authoritarian
hand on each of its offspring. As a result, no one dares even to think
of rebelling against it or renouncing its power. Everyone... adheres
to its rules with such timidity. A violation of these rules is
considered as a criminal act. The world is not a person, but its spirit
in some way stands firm on the earth, influences us, and holds us as
if with bonds. ...
The Path to Salvation, St. Herman of Alaska Press,
Forestville, CA, 1996, pg. 114-115
363
The narrowing effect of specialization on spiritual sensitivity
To a student who asked him about which books to read, Theophan gave this enduring counsel:
Some books of human wisdom nourish the spirit; for instance, those that point
out to us through nature and history the proofs of God's wisdom, His truth, and
His great care for us. Read this kind of book, because God reveals Himself in
nature and history, as well as in His Word. Nature and history are God's books
for those who know how to read them.
But test them when you are in a good mood. Start reading a book of human
wisdom, but if the good mood begins to go away, discard the book. Apply this
as a general rule....
It is easier to say read such books than to tell you where to get them. Nowadays,
many books on science attempt to explain the origin of the world without God,
and explain moral, religious and other manifestations in our lives without the
soul of spirit. Do not touch them.... It is good to understand the structure of
plants and animals and especially man, as well as the natural laws which are
manifested in them. The wisdom of God is in all these things.
The Heart of Salvation, pg. 67
Experience shows how frequently the mind, obscured by worldly ways, becomes sober through
contemplation of divine creation.... For example, a man standing at a window and looking at a
tree in the winter came to his senses. ...
Visible nature and the temple of God have not only often brought sense and sobriety to
indifferent and sinful Christians, but have converted even pagans to true worship of God and
devotion to Him. ... The contemplation of the beauties of the visible creation of God converted
the Martyr Barbara.... Their power and influence come from the fact that they vividly and
364
perceptibly offer the best, most blissful way of life for a spirit that is wearied, exhausted,
fatigued and tortured by the vanity of the world.
The Path to Salvation, trans. by Seraphim Rose,
1996, pg. 114-115
Whoever seeks the Lord must remove himself from the world. By “world” is meant everything
passionate, vain or sinful that enters into personal, family and social life, and which becomes
there the custom and rule. Therefore leaving the world does not mean running away from
family or society, but abandoning the morals, customs, rules, habits and demands that are
entirely antithetical to the Spirit of Christ which has entered and ripens within us....
From this it follows that “leaving the world” is nothing other than cleaning up your
entire external life, removing from it everything passionate, and replacing it with something
pure, which will not disrupt the spiritual life, but rather aid it....
The thought that you could live like a Christian while holding onto the world and
worldliness is an empty, deluded thought. Whoever lives by this concept will never learn
anything more than pharisaism and imaginary life, that is, he will be a Christian only in his own
opinion, and not in fact.
The Path to Salvation, trans. by Seraphim Rose, St.
Herman Press, 1996, pg. 265-266
The Holy Fathers have invented a salvific method whereby we can be subject to the
impressions of external things, yet not be distracted by them, at the same time
building spirit. It consists in providing a spiritual substitute for everything seen and
heard, and to become so strong in the remembrance of this spiritual substitute, that
every time the thing is seen, its spiritual substitute impresses the senses rather than
it itself. Whoever does this with everything he meets will always be as if in school.
Light and dark, man and beast, rock and plant, house and field — everything to the
smallest iota will be a lesson to him.
The Path to Salvation, trans. by Seraphim Rose,
1996, pg. 269
365
Henry David Thoreau (1817 - 1862)
Born in Concord, Massachusetts, Thoreau loved to roam the New England woods and he enjoyed
the free feeling of unsullied nature through which he sought to grasp the meanings of life. He
gives this picture of himself in his Daily Journal: "I seek acquaintance with nature, to know her
moods and manners. Pristine nature is the most interesting to me..., as I learn that my ancestors
have torn out... many of the grandest passages, and mutilated it in many places. I should not like to
think that some demigod had come through and picked out the best of the stars. I wish to know an
entire heaven and an entire earth." Thoreau is known for his probing commentaries on life in
industrial society and his critique of the devitalizing effects of modernity upon the spiritual health
of New England citizenry. His contribution to environmental theology is that he is the first person
to develop the theme of nature preservation as a popular Christian concern.
Blessed are they who never read a newspaper, for they shall see nature, and
through her, God.
Journal
Most men, it seems to me, do not care for nature and would sell their share in all
her beauty, as long as they may live, for a stated sum, and many for a glass of rum.
It is for the very reason that some do not care for those things that we need to
continue to protect all from the vandalism of a few.
Journal, January 3, 1861
366
On the alert for God in nature
Every part of nature teaches that the passing away of one life is
the making room for another. The oak dies down to the ground,
leaving within its rind a rich virgin mold, which will impart a
vigorous life to an infant forest.
Journal, October 24, 1837
Nature doth kindly heal every wound. By the mediation of a thousand little mosses and fungi,
the most unsightly objects become radiant of beauty. There seems to be two sides of this world,
presented us at different times, as we see things in growth and dissolution, in life or death. For
seen with the eye of the poet, as God sees them, all things are alive and beautiful; but seen with
the historical eye, or eye of the memory, they are dead and offensive. If we see nature as
pausing, immediately all mortifies and decays; but seen as progressing, she is beautiful.
Journal, March 13, 1842
Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth. Rise free from care before
dawn, and seek adventures. Let the noon find thee by other lakes, and the night
overtake t hee everywhere at home. ... Enjoy the land, but own it not. Through
want to enterprise and faith, men are where they are, buying and selling, and
spending their lives like serfs.
367
My motive
I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the
essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not,
when I came to die, discover that I had not lived.
Walden
I seek acquaintance with nature — to know her moods and manners. Primitive nature is the
most interesting to me. I take infinite pains to know all the phenomena of spring, for instance,
thinking that I have here the entire poem, and then to my chagrin, I learn that it is but an
imperfect copy that I possess and have read; that my ancestors have torn out many of the first
leaves and grandest passages, and mutilated it in many places. I should not like to think that
some demigod had come before me and picked out some of the best of the stars. I wish to know
an entire heaven and an entire earth. All the great trees and beasts, fishes and fowls are gone.
The streams, perchance, are somewhat shrunk.
Journal, March 23, 1856
Perspective on forests
If a man walk in the woods for love of them half of each day, he
is in danger of being regarded as a loafer; but if he spends his
whole day as a speculator, shearing off those woods and making
earth bald before her time, he is esteemed as an industrious and
enterprising citizen. As if a town had no interest in its forests but
to cut them down!
Holly Hughes, Meditations on the Earth:
A Celebration of Nature in Quotations, Poems and
Essays, Running Press, Ontario, 1994,
p. 170
368
The character of the loggers admiration of the forest is betrayed by his very mode of expressing
it. If he told all that was in his mind, he would say, it was so big that I cut it down and then a
yoke of oxen could stand on its stump. He admires the log, the carcass or corpse, more than the
tree. The Anglo-Saxon can indeed cut down, and grub up all the wavering forest, but he cannot
converse with the spirit of the tree he fells, he cannot read the poetry and mythology which
retire as he advances.
The Maine Woods, Penguin Books, London, 1988,
p. 314
Solitude is my companion
Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth. Rise free from care before the
dawn, and seek adventures. ... Enjoy the land, but own it not.
Through want of enterprise and faith men are where they are, buying and selling,
and spending their lives like serfs.
369
Walden, in America the Beautiful: In the Words of
Henry David Thoreau, Country Beautiful Corp.,
1966, p. 81.
370
371
This great Russian novelist was born to an impoverished nobleman in Moscow. Because of
youthful radical involvement, he spent nine years in forced labor at a Siberian prison camp. During
his labor camp years he underwent a religious conversion. On his return to European Russia, he
spent long periods at monasteries which reshaped his world view. His writings reflect faith in the
ultimate triumph of spiritual values and the victory of God's goodness through the crucifixion of
Jesus Christ; they position characters in crisis situations, and reveal the depths of human nature.
His plots describe a continuing search to reconcile the human and the divine, and for this he is
hailed as the precursor and founder of the modern psychology of the unconscious. He was always a
staunch defender of the Russian Orthodox Church and he teaches readers to see beyond human
failings to the mystery of Christ in all people and all things. His writings are important because
they depict the traditional Russian Christian attitude toward the land and the loving respect which
is required of each person toward the earth and its creatures.
There is only one way to salvation, and that is to make yourself responsible for all
men's sins. As soon as you make yourself responsible in all sincerity for everything
and for everyone, you will see at once that this is really so, and that you are in fact
to blame for everyone and for all things.
The Brothers Karamazov
372
Love the whole earth
You are working for the whole; you are acting for the future.
Seek no reward, for your reward on this earth is already great: The
spiritual joy which is only vouchsafed to the righteous man.
Fear not the great nor the mighty, but be wise and serene.
Know the measure, know the times, study them.
When you are left alone, pray.
Love to throw yourself upon the earth and kiss it.
Kiss the earth and love it with an unceasing, consuming love. Love all
men, love everything. Seek that rapture and ecstasy. Water the earth with
the tears of your joy, and love those tears. Don't be ashamed of that ecstasy;
prize it, for it is a gift of God and a great one.
The Brothers Karamazov
It was a bright, warm, still July night; a cool mist rose from the broad river and we could hear
the splash of fish, the birds were still, all was hushed and beautiful, everything praying to
God.... Every blade of grass, every insect, ant, and golden bee, all so marvelously know their
path; though they have not intelligence, they bear witness to the mystery of God and
continually accomplish it themselves.
I saw the dear lad’s heart was moved. He told me that he loved the forest and the forest
birds. He was a bird catcher, knew the note of each of them, could call each bird. “I know
nothing better than to be in the forest,” said he, “though all things are good.”
“Truly,” I answered him, “all things are good and fair, because all is truth. Look,” said
I, “at the horse, that great beast which is so near to man; or the lowly, pensive ox, which feeds
him and works for him; look at their faces, what meekness, what devotion to man, who often
beats them mercilessly. What gentleness, what confidence and what beauty! It’s touching to
know that there’s no sin in them; for all, all except man, are sinless, and Christ has been with
them before us.”
“Why,” asked the boy, “is Christ with the animals too?”
“It cannot but be so,” said I, “since the Word of God is for all. All creation and all
creatures, every leaf is striving toward the Word, singing glory to God, weeping to Christ,
unconsciously accomplishing this by the mystery of their sinless life....”
The Brothers Karamazov, quoted in “The Life of
the Elder Zosima,” in The Gospel in Doestoyevsky,
by Hutterian Brethren, Plough Books, Farmington,
PA, 1988, pg. 179-180.
Love as a teacher
373
Brothers, love is a teacher; but one must know how to acquire it, for it is hard to acquire, it is
dearly bought, it is won slowly by long labor. For we must love not only occasionally, for a
moment, but forever. Everyone can love occasionally, even the wicked can.
My brother asked the birds to forgive him: that sounds senseless, but it is right; for all is like an
ocean, all is flowing and blending; a touch in one place sets up movement at the other end of the
earth. It may be senseless to beg forgiveness of the birds, but birds would be happier at your side
— a little happier, anyway — and children and all animals, if you yourself were nobler than you
are now. It’s all like an ocean, I tell you. Then you would pray to the birds too, consumed by an
all-embracing love in a sort of transport, and pray that they too will forgive you your sin.
The Brothers Karamazov, as quoted in
“Conversations with Father Zosima,” in The Gospel
in Doestoyevsky, Plough Books, Farmington, PA,
1988, pg. 247-248.
Love the animals. God has given them the rudiments of thought
and joy untroubled. Do not trouble their joy, do not harass them,
do not deprive them of their happiness do not work against God's
intent. Man, do not pride yourself on superiority to animals; they
are without sin, and you, with your greatness, defile the earth by
your appearance on it, and leave the traces of your foulness after
you — alas, it is true of almost everyone of us!
The Brothers Karamazov
A tone of jubilation and spiritual expectancy crowns the philosophy which Doestoyevski
conveys through his primary character, the aged village priest, Fr. Zosima.
374
“Truly all is beautiful and a source of wonder, for all is truth, and Christ is with His
creatures. How can it be otherwise, for the Word is truly for all things, the whole
creation and every creature, every leaflet yearns toward the Word, praises God, mourns
before Christ, and achieves this unconsciously through the mystery of its blameless
life.... We alone are the godless and the stupid,” cries Fr. Zosima, “and do not
understand that life is a Paradise, for we need only try to understand, and immediately it
is revealed to us in its full beauty.”
The Brothers Karamazov, as quoted in Nicholas Arseniev, Mysticism and the Eastern Church, Student Christian
Movement, Marburg, Germany, 1926, reprinted by SVS Press, New York, 1979, pp. 118-119.
Prayer as an education
375
376
A Scottish-born Presbyterian whose family immigrated to Wisconsin when he was six years old,
John Muir memorized the entire New Testament and most of the Old Testament by the time he was
sixteen. He was a youthful inventor and achieved early acclaim for his engineering skill. After an
industrial accident blinded him, he vowed he would forsake his worldly career and tell of the glories
of God and his beauties in creation if his sight would be restored. After weeks of intense prayer, his
sight suddenly returned and he set off to fulfill his promise. Amidst glacier-scoured cathedrals of
granite, he found spiritual renewal in the Yosemite wilderness. Muir felt he could best hear the
voice of divine love when he climbed the high peaks of the Sierra Nevada. Muir discovered that his
understanding of wilderness, especially its spiritual dimension, existed as a separate and largely
unconnected strata to his religious understanding. Because the glorious spiritual experiences he
encountered in wilderness never fit the religious concepts of his day, he grew cynical about
organized religion and turned away from church life. The creation itself with its groves and
mountain peaks became his church, while he became increasingly frustrated with the failure of
clergy to explain his lofty experiences or to articulate a coherent theology of creation. Muir
reawakened America to the magnificence and beauty of wild nature and he led the first political
crusade to protect unspoiled wilderness in his effort to preserve Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite
National Park from development.
I wish you could come here and rest a year in the simple unmingled love-fountains of God.
You would return with fresh truth gathered and absorbed from pines and waterfalls and deep-
singing winds, and you would find that they all sang of fountain love just as did Jesus Christ
and all of pure God in whatever form....
The hills and the groves were God's first temples, and the more they are cut down and
hewn into cathedrals and churches, the farther off and dimmer seems the Lord himself....
In our best times, everything turns into religion, all the world seems a church, and the
mountains the altars. When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to
everything in the universe....
I have a low opinion of books; they are but piles of stones set up to show coming
travelers where other minds have been. One day's exposure to mountains is better than a car-
load of books. All that is required is exposure and purity of material, and "the pure of heart,
they shall see God."
God who is light has led me tenderly from light to light to the shoreless ocean of rayless,
beamless Spirit Light that bathes these holy mountains.
“My First Summer in the Sierras,”
Journal of 1868
377
Mountain gospel
For the last two or three months, I have worked incessantly among the most remote and
undiscoverable of the deep canyons of this pierced basin, finding many a mountain page
glorious with the writing of God and in characters that any earnest eye could read....
Providence guides me through every danger and takes me to all the truths which I need
to learn, and some day I hope to show you my sheaves, my big bound pages of “mountain
gospel.”
Letter to his mother, 1871
Doubtless these creatures are happy, and fill the place assigned to them
by the great Creator of us all. Fierce and cruel they appear to us, but
beautiful in the eyes of God.... How narrow we selfish, conceited
creatures are in our sympathies. How blind to the rights of the rest of
creation.
Muir and His Legacy, pg. 52.
All of God's universe is glass to the soul of light. Infinitude mirrors reflecting all
receiving all. The stars whirl and eddy and boil in the currents of the ocean called
space.... Trees in camplight and grasses and weeds impressive beyond thought so
palpably Godful in form and in wind motion.... The pines spiring around me higher,
higher to the star-flowered sky are plainly full of God.... Oh, the infinite abundance and
universality of beauty. Beauty is God. What shall we say of God that we may not say of
Beauty.
Journal of 1872, in the
John Muir papers, 3:6
The hills and groves were God's first temples, and the
more they are cut down and hewn into cathedrals and
churches, the farther off and dimmer seems the Lord
himself.
My First Summer in the Sierras
378
All of nature is in man
Man is so related to all of Nature that he is builded of small worlds. When God made
man "of the dust of the earth," he put into the compound fields and forests complete.
All the mountain ranges of the world. Suns and moons and all animals and plants and
minerals.... He is a bundle of worlds which lie calm until stirred by the appearance of
the material symbol. Thus "all of Nature is found in man."
Journal of 1872, in the
John Muir Papers, 00006:128
Were it not for the exercise of individualizing cares on the part of Nature, the
universe would be felted together like a fleece of tame wool. But we are
governed more than we know, and most when we are wildest. Plants, animals
and stars are all kept in place, bridled along appointed ways, with one another,
and through the midst of one another — killing and being killed, eating and
being eaten, in harmonious proportions and quantities.
“Wild Wool,” chapter one of Steep Trails, at
http://207.90.163/ John Muir exhibit, p. 5.
Originally published in the Overland Monthly
magazine, 1875.
379
The song of the wilderness
The whole wilderness seems to be alive and familiar, full of humanity. The very stones seem
talkative, sympathetic, brotherly. No wonder when we consider that we all have the same
Father and Mother.
Nature is ever at work building and pulling down, creating and destroying, keeping
everything whirling and flowing, allowing no rest but in rhythmical motion, chasing
everything in endless song out of one beautiful form into another.
In this beauty work, every boulder is prepared and measured and put in its place more
thoughtfully than are the stones of temples. If for a moment you are inclined to regard these
talus slopes as mere draggled, chaotic dumps, climb to the top of one of them, tie your
mountain shoes firmly over the instep, and with braced nerves run down without any
haggling, puttering hesitation, boldly jumping from boulder to boulder with even speed. You
will then find your feet playing a tune, and quickly discover the music and poetry of rock
piles — a fine lesson; and all Nature’s wildness tells the same story. Storms of every sort,
torrents, earthquakes, cataclysms, “convulsions of nature,” etc., are only harmonious notes
in the song of creation, varied expressions of God’s love.
My First Summer in the Sierras
Walks in nature
When a man plants a tree, he plants himself. Every root is an anchor, over which
he rests with grateful interest, and becomes sufficiently calm to feel the joy of
living.
“Semi-Tropical California,” San Francisco Daily
Evening Bulletin, September 7, 1877
Toiling in the treadmills of life we hide from the lessons of nature. We gaze
morbidly through civilized fog upon our beautiful world.
380
Alone in the woods at night
When one is alone at night in the depths of these woods, the stillness is at once
awful and sublime. Every leaf seems to speak. One gets close to nature, and the
love of beauty grows as it cannot in the distractions of a camp. The sense of
utter loneliness is heightened by the invisibility of bird or beast that dwells here.
Any fool can destroy trees. They cannot run away; and if they could, they would
still be destroyed — chased and hunted down as long as fun or a dollar could be
got out of their bark hides, branching horns, or magnificent bole backbones. Few
that fall trees plant them, nor would planting avail much toward getting back
anything like the noble primeval forests. It took more than 2,000 years to make
the trees in these western woods — trees that are still standing in perfect
strength and beauty, waving and singing in the mighty forests.... Through all the
wonderful, eventful centuries since Christ’s time — and long before that — God
has cared for these trees, saved them from drought, disease, avalanches, and a
thousand straining, leveling tempests and floods; but He cannot save them from
fools — only Uncle Sam can do that.
Quoted from “Muir Woods: Map and Guide
to Trails,” Golden Gate National Park Association,
Sausalito, CA, 1998
381
Modern culture versus the inherent worth of animals
No dogma taught by the present civilization seems to form so insuperable an obstacle in the
way of right understanding of the relations which culture sustains to wildness as that which
regards the world as made especially for the uses of man. Every animal, plant and crystal
controverts it in the plainest terms. Yet it is taught from century to century as something ever
new and precious, and in the resulting darkness the enormous conceit is allowed to go
unchallenged.
I have never yet happened upon a trace of evidence that seemed to show that any one
animal was ever made for another as much as it was made for itself. Not that Nature manifests
any such thing as selfish isolation. In the making of every animal the presence of every other
animal has been recognized. Indeed, every atom in the creation may be said to be acquainted
with and married to every other, but with universal union there is a division sufficient in degree
for the purposes of the most intense individuality; no matter, therefore, what may be the note
which any creature forms in the song of existence, it is made first for itself, then more and more
remotely for all the world and worlds.
“Wild Wool,” chapter one of Steep Trails, at
http://207.90.163/ John_Muir exhibit, p. 4-5.
Originally published in the Overland Monthly
magazine, 1875.
God as beauty
No synonym for God is so perfect as Beauty. Whether as seen carving the lines
of the mountains with glaciers, or gathering matter into stars, or planning the
movements of water, or gardening — still all is Beauty!
In God's wildness lies the hope of the world — the great fresh unblighted,
unredeemed wilderness. The galling harness of civilization drops off, and
wounds heal ere we are aware.
John of the Mountains, 1938, p. 317
382
The healing potential of wilderness
God is light
383
384
385
Gerard Manly Hopkins, SJ (1844 - 1889)
Gerard Manly Hopkins was born in London and became a Jesuit priest. For most of his life he
served as a relatively obscure professor of Greek in Dublin, Ireland where he was known on
occasion to "dabble in poetry." During his lifetime he was never recognized for the beauty of his
poetical insight nor for the originality and excellence of his unusually robust and innovative style.
None of his poems was published during his lifetime. Instead, he was usually dismissed as a
kindly eccentric and his writings were never taken seriously. His poetry reflects a vision of
"barbarous beauty" in which he finds in a world "charged with the grandeur of God."
God's Grandeur
Pied Beauty
387
388
Vladimir Soloviev (1853 - 1900)
After experiencing a series of profoundly transforming visions, Soloviev embarked upon a lifelong
journey to articulate their meaning. This nineteenth century Russian scholar became known as a
lyrical prophet who envisioned all humanity as mystically tied into one great being. He saw
"Sophia" (or divine wisdom) as representing the entire cosmic creation through all time, and
identified her as "the true, pure, perfect humanity in its highest and all-embracing form, the living
soul of nature and the universe, united to God from all eternity, and in the temporal process
attaining union with Him and uniting to him all that is." Therefore, he says, in the redemption of
man, the redemption of nature is directly implied. Soloviev was a fighter for justice and peace, for
social reformation and a right regard for the creation, and thus he represents a leading edge of
Christian ecological concern over a century before its popularization.
Love is the relationship that should characterize not only interpersonal relations,
but also our relation to the cosmic environment. Our love creates spiritual
energies which inwardly transform the cosmos itself, imprinting upon it the
image of God's love. The cosmos itself is a living organism within which the
pleroma of humanity as a organ has a central and key function almost like the
heart and brain of the body. "Sophia" is both humanity and the earth principle,
the magna matter. The constitution of humanity itself is a mediating principle
between God and nature.
quoted in Paulos Mar Gregorios, The Human
Presence: Ecological Spirituality in the Age of the
Spirit, The Christian Literature Society, Park Town,
Madras,India, 1980, pg.82.
What is needed in the first instance is that we should treat our social and cosmic environment
as an actual living being with which we are in the closest and most complete interaction,
without ever being merged into it....
A Soloview Anthology, SCM Press,
London, 1950, pg. 58.
389
The path to integration with nature
In order that (the false separation of beings in space and time) should be
abolished altogether, and all individuals, both past and present, should finally
become eternal, the process of integration must transcend the limits of social or
strictly human life and include the cosmic sphere from which it started. In
ordering the physical world the divine idea threw the veil of natural beauty over
the kingdom of matter and death; through man, through the activity of his
universally rationale consciousness, it must enter that kingdom "from within" in
order to give life to nature and make its beauty eternal. In this sense it is
essential to change man's relation to nature. He must enter with it too into the
same relation of syzygic [a pair of opposites] unity which determines his true
life in the personal and social sphere.
A Soloview Anthology, SCM Press, London, 1950,
pg. 178.
Nature has so far been either an omnipotent despotic mother of the child man, or a slave, a
thing foreign to him. In that second epoch (of Western thought) poets alone preserved and kept
up a timid and unconscious love for nature as a being possessing full rights and having, or
capable of having life in itself....
To establish a truly loving or syzygic relation between man and his natural and cosmic, as
well as his social environment is a purpose that is quite clear in itself. But the same thing
cannot be said about the ways in which an individual man can attain it. Without going into
premature... details, one can confidently say one thing on the basis of well-established
analogies from cosmic and historical experience. Every conscious human activity, determined
by the idea of universal syzygy and having for its purpose the embodiment of the all-embracing
ideal in some particular here, actually produces or liberates spiritual-material currents which
gradually gain possession of the material environment, spiritualize it and embody in it certain
images of the all-embracing unity.
390
391
Born a slave near Diamond Grove, Missouri, George Washington Carver grew up as a household
helper. He spent his free time wandering through the woods where he was friend to insects, plants
and flowers. There he learned a woodland lore that stayed with him for the rest of his life. He
educated himself through grammar school and struggled to support himself through high school
and college. He was a devout student of the Bible and a dedicated follower of Jesus Christ; he
worshiped alternatively in the African Methodist-Episcopal (AME) Church and the Presbyterian
Church. He had no ties except to God, and no obligations except to his service for the betterment
of humanity. He taught that reading about trees and flowers was fine, but if a person walked
among the things of nature and looked and listened carefully, they would tell him more than what
is in books, “for they speak with the voice of God.” Carver never believed in copyrights or
patents. He said that his findings "were provided free by the Creator." Since they had not cost him
anything, he said it was not right to charge for their use. The epitaph on his gravestone reads, "He
could have added fortune to fame, but caring for neither, he found happiness and honor in being
helpful to the world."
Talking to flowers
How do I talk to a little flower? Through it I talk to the Infinite. And what is the Infinite? It is
that silent, small force. It isn't the outer physical contact. No, it isn't that. The Infinite is not
confined in the visible world. It is that still small voice that calls up the fairies.
Now people will say that I am getting into words, just words. I refer to the unseen Spirit
that defies the power of human reproduction, that challenges the power of human expression.
Try to express it... it can't be done. Yet, when you look out upon God's beautiful world, there it
is. When you look into the heart of a rose, there you experience it. But you can't explain it. You
can talk and talk, but the longer you talk, the worse it gets — and the further you are from the
truth.
Glenn Clark, The Man who Talks with the Flowers,
Macalester Park Press, Shakopee, MN, 1938, pg.
44-45
Once after a talk a lady asked Carver whether he believed the sufferers who
came to him benefitted more from his oils or from prayer. He replied that prayer
came before all things. Why, then, she persisted, didn't he advise these people to
quit the use of medicines and oils, and to put themselves wholly in God's hands?
392
"My dear Madam," he said, "how can any of us deny the reality around us?
The most valuable things in life are God's handiwork expressed in nature. Why
else would He have put the herbs and the healing ointments of the fields onto
this earth if He didn't mean for us to use them?"
quoted in GWC: The Man Who
Overcame, pg. 183
No books ever go into my laboratory. Yet I never have to grope for methods. The thing that I
am to do and the way of doing it come to me. The method is revealed at the moment I am
inspired to create something new.
Lecture before the Women's Board of Domestic
Missions, Reformed Church in America, Marble
Collegiate Church, New York City, 1924, quoted
by James Marion Gray, George Washington
Carver, Silver Burdett Press, Englewood Cliffs, NJ
1991 pg. 103.
Books about chickens and orchards and flowers are fine, but if you walk among
those things and look and listen carefully, they will tell you more than what is in
the books, for they speak with the voice of God.
Sanford Lee, early Tuskegee associate of GWC,
quoted in GWC: The Man Who Overcame, pg.
116-117.
"Mysteries are things we don't understand because we have not learned to tune in. And finding
true faith in the Creator is solving the greatest mystery of all."
To illustrate this principle, Carver told a story of how he once had been invited to the
home of a wealthy individual, but before they could speak, the host had to attend to some
business. He invited George to go into the living room and listen to a musical program on the
radio. What happened though, Carver said, "I sat for an hour in silence. The music was there,
but it was a mystery to me because I did not know how to turn on the radio and tune in the
program."
quoted in GWC: The Man Who
Overcame, pg. 198-199
393
"Live at home"
Carver’s advice to farmers in a program to teach local self-sufficiency, called, "Live at home:
“Don't buy everything you need at the plantation owner's store. Grow your own
food. A garden is the best doctor there is."
“Carver also taught the value of flowers. He often said, ‘Don't forget the
dooryard. A flower is God's silent messenger. It's the sweetest thing he ever
made and forgot to put a soul into.’”
Rackham Holt, quoted by Anne Terry White, in
GWC: The Story of a Great American, Random
House, New York, 1953, pg. 116.
In my early years, I sought meaning to the great questions of life. I asked God, "Oh Mr.
Creator, why did you make this universe?" And the Creator answered me, "You want to know
too much for that little mind of yours. Ask me something more your size.
So I said, "Dear Mr. Creator, tell me what man was made for."
Again He spoke to me, and He said, "Little man, you are still asking for more than you can
handle. Cut down the extent of your request and improve the intent."
And then I asked my last question. "Mr. Creator, why did you make the peanut?"
"That's better!" the Lord said, and He gave me a handful of peanuts and went with me back
to the laboratory and, together, we got down to work.
GWC: The Man Who Overcame, pg. 156
George Carver believed that civilized progress fell into three phases: First civilization "found"
raw materials which an ever-beneficent nature provided. Then society took those materials and
"adapted" them for human use. Now the time in human understanding had come when it was
necessary to "create" entirely new things by making chemical changes in the old. In this
context, he says,
I believe the Creator has put ores and oil on this earth to give us a breathing
spell.... As we exhaust them, we must be prepared to fall back on our farms,
which utilize God's true storehouse and can never be exhausted. For we can
learn to synthesize materials for every human need from the things we grow.
394
Many agricultural scientists believe that this sweeping concept of unlimited potential from the
living creation was Carver's most important gift to humankind.
quoted in Elliott, GWC: The Man
Who Overcame, pg. 208.
Carver often sought solutions to the problems of the poor in the South. A perplexing problem
existed in the drab, weather-beaten cabins with so little comfort and beauty around them. He
had already given the farmers flower seeds but sought a way to brighten these "ugly shacks"
which people had no money to rebuild. He related,
He found a simple solution in the white clays which were abundant in the area around
Tuskegee. By dissolving the clays in water, a wonderful whitewash could be prepared which
would brighten house interiors. Within several weeks he found a variety of colored washes
from various clays which could be easily prepared.
Anne Terry White, in GWC: The Story of a Great
American, Random House, New York, 1953, pg.
117-119.
"How can we know God?" someone asked during one of his weekly Bible classes. "Could we
ever see Him?"
"What are you studying?" Carver came back.
"Electricity."
"Have you ever seen electricity?"
"No, it's..."
"But when you make the proper contact, when you fulfill the laws of your trade, you can
make a bulb light up, can't you, because the electricity is there."
"Yes," the boy conceded.
"Well, God is always there too, just waiting for you to make contact. He is all around you,
in all the little things you look at, but don't really see." He pulled the flower from his lapel and
held it out. Every boy in the room hunched close. "God is here," Carver said. "The seed that
made this flower was created millions of years ago. It survived drought and blizzards and the
assaults of man himself. And in this flower is perhaps the beginning of a seed that will grow
millions of years after all of us are gone."
395
In a voice that rang with meaning, he concluded, "Can any of you believe that the miracle
of the flower is no more than an accident?"
quoted in George Washington Carver: The Man
Who Overcame, pg. 197
Upon receiving an invitation to teach at Tuskegee Normal and Industrial School, Carver wrote
a lengthy reply to Washington in which he penned an outline of his life's aspirations.
"It has always been the one great ideal of my life to be of the greatest good to
the greatest number of 'my people' possible, and to this end, I have been
preparing myself for these many years....
Excerpt from letter to
Booker T. Washington, April 12, 1896
Nothing is more beautiful than the loneliness of the woods before sunrise. At no
other time have I so sharp an understanding of what God means to do with me as
in those early hours of dawn. When other folks are still asleep, I hear God best
and learn His plan.
GWC, quoted by James Marion Grey in George
Washington Carver, A Pioneers for Change book,
Silver Burdett Press,
Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1991 pg. 47.
396
God's little workshop
Students and visitors often crowded into what was called "God's Little Workshop" to talk to
Carver. Often he was asked to explain how he created all these wonderful things. "There is
nothing I can explain," he answered. "I am simply an instrument in God's hands. The things I
am to do always comes to me. I do not have to grope. There comes suddenly the inspiration to
create something. I reach out my hand and there it is. The thing is done. And it is right."
GWC quoted in Anne Terry White, in GWC: The
Story of a Great American, Random House, New
York, 1953, pg. 140.
"Golden Moments"
The following represents one of George's first attempts at poetry. The original was 42 stanzas
long and was cut back to these twelve by his school teacher in Iowa.
397
The joy of reading from God’s creation
As soon as you begin to read the great and loving God out of all forms of existence which He
has created, both animate and inanimate, then you will be able to converse with Him anywhere,
everywhere, and at all times. Oh what a fullness of joy will come to you!
George Washington Carver In His Own Words,
Gary R. Kremer, ed., University of Missouri Press,
1987
Carver did not want to be paid for his amazing discoveries. His advice and information were
always free. "God does not charge us for His wonders. If I charge for anything, I will lose my
power."
At one time Thomas Edison offered him a position in his laboratory. The salary would
be in six figures, but he wasn't interested in the money. A great rubber company also offered
him an important position. “No thank you.” He could not accept. "I have spent twenty years
helping the Negro farmer. If I were to go, my work would not be known as mine. My race
would get no credit. I want it to have the credit of whatever I may do."
Anne Terry White, GWC: Story of a Great
American, Random House, New York, 1953, pp.
143-144.
398
Nature as God’s broadcasting system
As long as he lived, Carver was concerned for the welfare of his students and their future.
Returning from a trip, he told them,
"As I looked at the giddy young people jazzing around on the street, my thought
was, 'How much can the world depend on you?'
"Do not let the world down, and you will never be let down."
Lawrence Elliott in George Washington Carver:
The Man Who Overcame, Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1966. pg. 245-6
More and more as we come closer and closer in touch with nature and
its teachings are we able to see the Divine and are therefore fitted to
interpret correctly the various languages spoken by all forms of nature
about us.
Ah! how quickly those sunny years of my childhood passed by..., but what a sweet imprint
they have left on my soul! ... I still feel the profound and poetic impressions which were born
in my soul at the sight of fields enameled with corn-flowers and all types of wild flowers.
Already I was in love with the wide-open spaces. Space and the gigantic fir trees, the
branches sweeping down to the ground, left in my heart an impression similar to the one I
experience still today at the sight of nature.
Jesus set before me the book of nature. I understood how all the flowers
He created are beautiful, how the splendor of the rose and whiteness of
the lily do not take away the perfume of the little violet or the delightful
simplicity of the daisy.... And so it is in the world of souls, Jesus' garden.
He willed to create great souls comparable to lilies and roses, but He has
created smaller ones and these must be content to be daisies or violets,
destined to give joy to God's glances when He looks down at His feet.
Autobiography, as quoted in Charles Cummings,
ocso, Eco-Spirituality: Toward a Reverent Life,
Paulist Press, 1991, p. 50.
400
Just as the sun shines simultaneously on the tall cedars and on each little flower
as though it were alone on the earth, so Our Lord is occupied with each soul as
though there were no others like it. And just as in nature the seasons are
arranged in such a way as to make the humblest daisy bloom on a set day, in the
same way, everything works out for the good of each soul.
Never will I forget the impression the sea made upon me; I
couldn't take my eyes off it since its majesty, the roaring of its
waves, everything spoke to my soul of God's grandeur and
power.
"The Story of a Soul: Autobiography of
St. Therese of Lisieux," private translation by the
Washington Province of Discalced Carmelites, 1975,
text posted on their website.
You know, dear mother, how much I love flowers. When making myself a
prisoner at the age of fifteen [when Therese entered the convent of the
Carmelites at Lisieux], I gave up forever the pleasure of running through the
fields decked out in their springtime treasures. Well, never in my life did I
possess so many flowers as after my entrance into Carmel. It is the custom for
fiancées to often give their brides bouquets and Jesus didn't forget it. He sent me
in great abundance sheaves of corn flowers, huge daisies, poppies, etc., all the
flowers that delighted me the most. There was even a little flower called corn-
cockle which I had never found since our stay at Lisieux; I wanted very much to
see it again, that flower of my childhood which I picked in the fields of Alencon.
And at Carmel it came to smile at me again and show me that in the smallest
things as well as the greatest, God gives the hundredfold in his life to those souls
who leave everything for love of Him.
The Story of a Soul, 1975
401
Inspiration from mountain grandeur
"Before reaching... the goal of our pilgrimage, we were given the opportunity of
contemplating many marvels.
First there was Switzerland with its mountains whose summits were lost in the
clouds, its graceful waterfalls gushing forth in a thousand different ways, its
deep valleys literally covered with gigantic ferns and scarlet heather. Ah!
Mother, how much good these beauties of nature, poured out in such profusion,
did my soul. They raised it to heaven....
There was, farther on, a huge lake gilded by the sun's rays, its calm waters
blending their azure tints with the fires of the setting sun. All this presented to
our enraptured gaze the most poetic and enchanting spectacle one could possibly
imagine. And at the end of the vast horizon, we perceived mountains whose
indistinct contours would have escaped us had not their snowy summits made
visible by the sun not come to add one more charm to the beautiful lake which
thrilled us so. When I saw all these beauties, profound thoughts came to life in
my soul. I seemed to understand the grandeur of God and the marvels of
heaven....
I shall remember what my eyes have seen today. This thought will encourage
me and I shall easily forget my own little interests, recalling the grandeur and
power of God, this God whom I want to love alone. I shall not have the
misfortune of snatching after straws, now that "my heart has an idea of what
Jesus has reserved for those who love him” (1 Corinthians 2:9).
I have noticed in all the serious circumstances of my life that nature always reflected the
image of my soul. On days filled with tears the heavens cried along with me; on days of
joy the sun sent forth its joyful rays in profusion and the blue skies were not obscured by
a single cloud.
402
403
Teacher, writer, mystic, poet and prolific novelist, Evelyn Underhill sought to make the mystical
side of Christianity more intelligible to ordinary readers. She was born in England and educated at
King’s College for Women in London. She gained fame as a lecturer in religion at Manchester
College in Oxford where she was known for her books on mysticism and her lengthy chronicles of
historical mystical experiences. She emphasized that these experience are fundamental to the full
practice of Christianity or any religion. Her ecological contribution lies in the way she describes
the processes of coming to knowledge of God through experience of His presence in creation,
through the attitudes which bring purification and facilitate knowledge of this presence, and
through the symbolism by which one discerns meaning in creation.
Evelyn Underhill paraphrases in poetic language the Book of Wisdom when she says that
creation is different to different people, depending upon their level of wholeness.
404
Nature reveals little of her secrets to those who only look and listen with the
outward eye and ear. The condition of all valid seeing and hearing, upon every
plane of consciousness, lies not in the sharpening of the senses, but in a peculiar
attitude of the whole personality: in a self-forgetting attentiveness, a profound
concentration, a self-merging, which operates a real communion between the
seer and the seen — in a word, in contemplation.
Mysticism, pg. 300, as quoted in Wayne Simsic,
Songs of Sunrise, Seeds of Prayer, Twenty-Third
Publications, Mystic, CT, 1991, pg. 98.
Forest epiphany
The visible world in its entirety is, or may be, a manifestation of the glory of God; and the
Christian message of hope extends beyond man to the whole created universe, which is
destined to be redeemed and transfigured by the life-giving Spirit of Christ. Already it is
through the transfiguration of its simplest elements, that the very life of God is communicated
to men. Thus the Eucharist, as the focal point of Christian worship, whilst losing none of its
personal and life-giving character, takes on a cosmic meaning. It witnesses to the ultimate
transfiguration of the things of earth by an invasion of supernatural power. It points beyond the
here and now to a transubstantiation of the whole material order; a veritable “bringing in of the
Kingdom of God.”
405
Immanence
A sea of spirit
Nothing in all nature is so lovely and so vigorous, so perfectly at home in its environment, as a
fish in the sea. Its surroundings give to it a beauty, quality, and power which is not its own. We
take it out, and at once a poor, limp, dull thing, fit for nothing, is gasping away its life. So the
soul sunk in God, living the life of prayer, is supported, filled, transformed in beauty, by a
vitality and a power which are not its own.
406
407
Albert Schweitzer (1875 - 1965)
Born in the Vosges mountains near the Alsace-Lorraine border of Germany, Albert Schweitzer
became a world famous organist, a medical doctor, a doctor of theology and philosophy, and
authority on the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. To avoid mediocrity but also to serve his Lord,
Schweitzer renounced a career in medical science to assist the people of French Equatorial Africa.
Amidst primitive and dangerous conditions, through prayer and reflection, Albert Schweitzer
maintained an iron discipline while he built a medical mission in Central Africa. Jesus Christ was
always the center of his life, and Schweitzer demonstrated that one person, enamored of Christ,
can change the shape of the world. His main contribution to environmental theology lies in his
insistence that an ethic of respect for nature must be "an absolute ethic" which does not change
because of circumstances or situations.
Only by means of reverence for life can we establish a spiritual and humane
relationship with both people and all living creatures within our reach.
Only in this fashion can we avoid harming others, and, within the limits of our
capacity, go to their aid whenever they need us....
Albert Schweitzer: Reverence for Life, trans. by
C. Campion, 1933, Holt, Reinhart and Winson,
Kansas City, 1965, p.26
The deeper we look into nature, the more we recognize that it is full of life, and the more
profoundly we know that all life is a mystery, and that we are united with all the life that is in
nature. Man can no longer live his life for himself alone. We realize that all life is valuable and
408
that we are united to all this life. From this knowledge comes our spiritual relationship to the
universe.
Albert Schweitzer: Reverence for Life, trans. by
C. Campion, 1933, Holt, Reinhart and Winson,
Kansas City, 1965, p.47
The ethic of reverence for life recognizes no relative ethic. It considers good only the
maintenance and furtherance of life. It brands as evil all that destroys and hurts life, no matter
what the circumstances may be. It keeps no store of appropriate compromises between ethics
and necessity ready for use. Again and again, and always in some original fashion, the absolute
ethic of reverence for life brings man to terms with reality. It does not rid him of conflicts, but
it forces him to decide for himself in every case how far he can remain ethical, and how far he
must yield to the necessity of destroying and harming life and suffer the ensuing guilt.
A man does not make moral progress by being instructed in compromises between the
ethical and the voice of the ethical, by being ruled ever more strongly by a longing to preserve
life and to promote it, and by withstanding ever more stubbornly the necessity for destroying
and injuring it.
Albert Schweitzer: Reverence for Life,
Hallmark edition, trans. by C. Campion, 1933,
Holt, Reinhart and Winson, Kansas City,
1965, p.47
409
The beginning of reverence for life
But there can be no divine kingdom in world if there is not first of all in our hearts. The
beginning of the kingdom is to be found in our determination to bring our every thought and
deed under the dominion of the kingdom. Nothing will come to pass without this inwardness.
The spirit of God will only contend against the spirit of the world when it has triumphed over
the spirit in our hearts.
410
A flock of wild geese had settled to rest upon a pond. One of the flock was
captured by a gardener who clipped its wings before releasing it. When the other
geese started to resume their flight, this one tried frantically, but vainly, to lift
itself into the air. The others, observing his struggles, flew about in obvious
efforts to encourage him; but it was no use. Thereupon, the entire flock settled
back on the pond and waited, even though the urge to continue on was strong
within them. They waited until the damaged feathers had grown sufficiently to
permit the goose to fly. Meanwhile the gardener, having been touched by the
ethical geese, gladly watched them as they finally rose together, and all resumed
their long flight.
Andrew Linzey, Compassion for Animals:
Readings and Prayers, SPCK Publ., London, 1988,
pg. 49
Any profound view of the world is mysticism in that it brings men into a spiritual
relationship with the Infinite. The view of reverence for life is ethical mysticism. It
allows union with the Infinite to be realized by ethical action.
Out of My Life and Thought, Epilogue,
written in Lambarene (1931), Henry Holt and Co.,
1933, pg. 182
If is harder for us today to feel near to God among the streets and houses of the city than it is
for countryfolk. For them the harvested fields bathed in the autumn mists speak of God and his
goodness far more vividly than any human lips.
Reverence for Life
411
The ethical man
412
The ethical man... tears no leaf from a tree, plucks no flower, and takes care to
crush no insect. ... If he walks on the road after a shower and sees an earthworm
which has strayed on to it, he bethinks himself that he must get dried up in the
sun, if it does not return soon enough to the ground into which it can burrow, so
he lifts it from the deadly stone surface, and puts it on the grass.
Albert Schweitzer, quoted in Andrew Linzey,
Animal Theology, University of Illinois Press, 1995,
pg. 5
The only possible way out of chaos is for us to come once more under the
control of the ideals of true civilization through the adoption of an attitude
toward life that contains those ideals... It consists in an ethical affirmation of the
world and of life.
Out of My Life and Thought, quoted in
The Green Bible, Orbis Books, pg. 5.
To the truly ethical man, all life is sacred, including forms of life that from the human point of
view may seem to be lower than ours.
Man and Creature
Whenever we harm any form of life, we must be clear about whether it was
really necessary to do so. We must not go beyond the truly unavoidable harm,
not even in seemingly insignificant matters. The farmer who mows down a
thousand flowers in his meadow, in order to feed his cows, should be on guard,
as he turns homeward, not to decapitate some flower by the roadside, just by
way of thoughtlessly passing the time. For then he sins against life without being
under the compulsion of necessity.
Reverence for Life, “Man and Creature”
413
When we help an insect out of a difficulty, we are only trying to compensate for man's ever
renewed sins against other creatures. Whenever animals are impressed into the service of man,
every one of us should be mindful of the toll we are exacting. We cannot stand idly by and see
an animal subjected to unnecessary harshness or deliberate mistreatment. We cannot say it is
not our business to interfere. On the contrary, it is our duty to intervene in the animals's behalf.
Reverence for Life, “Man and Creature”
The important thing is that we are part of life.... We possess the capacities to bring still other
lies into existence. In the same way, if we look into a microscope we see cell producing cell. So
nature compels us to recognize the fact of mutual dependence, each life necessarily helping the
other lives which are linked to it. In the very fibers of our being, we bear within ourselves the
fact of the solidarity of life.... Seeing its presence in ourselves, we realize how closely we are
linked with others of our kind. We might like to stop here, but we cannot. Life demands that we
see through to the solidarity of all life which we can in any degree recognize as having some
similarity to the life that is in us.
Out of My Life and Thought
It would seem as if Descartes, with his theory that animals have no souls and are
mere machines which only seem to feel pain, had bewitched all of modern
philosophy. Philosophy has totally evaded the problem of man’s conduct toward
other organisms. We might say that philosophy has played a piano of which a
whole series of keys were considered untouchable.
To the universal ethic of reverence for life, pity for animals, so often smilingly
dismissed as sentimentality, becomes a mandate no thinking person can escape.
Reverence for Life: The Words of
Albert Schweitzer
414
The fact of mutual dependence
The important thing is that we are part of life.... We possess the capacities to
bring still other lives into existence. In the same way, if we look into a
microscope we see cell producing cell. So nature compels us to recognize the
fact of mutual dependence, each life necessarily helping the other lives which
are linked to it. In the very fibers of our being, we bear within ourselves the
fact of the solidarity of life. ... Seeing its presence in ourselves, we realize how
closely we are linked with others of our kind. We might like to stop here, but
we cannot. Life demands that we see through to the solidarity of all life which
we can in any degree recognize as having some similarity to the life that is in
us.
Out of My Life and Thought
Those who carry out scientific experiments with animals, in order to apply the knowledge
gained to the alleviation of human ills, should never reassure themselves with the generality
that their cruel acts serve a useful purpose. In each individual case they must ask themselves
whether there is a real necessity for imposing such a sacrifice upon a living creature. They must
try to reduce the suffering Insofar as they are able. It is inexcusable for a scientific institution to
omit anesthesia in order to save time and trouble. It is horrible to subject animals to torment
merely in order to demonstrate to students phenomena that are already familiar.
The very fact that animals, by the pain they endure in experiments, contribute so much
to suffering humanity, should forge a new and unique kind of solidarity between them and us.
For that reason alone, it is incumbent upon each and every one of us to do all possible good to
nonhuman life.
Reverence for Life: The Words of
Albert Schweitzer
I could not but feel with a sympathy full of regret all of the pain
that I saw around me, not only that of men, but that of the whole
creation. From this community of suffering, I have never tried to
withdraw myself. It seemed to me a matter of course that we
should all take our share of the burden of suffering which lies
upon the world.
Quoted in Andrew Linzey, Compassion for Animals:
Readings and Prayers, SPCK Publ., London, 1988,
pg. 30
Reverence for life and the scholar
415
Reverence for life... does not allow the scholar to live for his science alone, even
if he is very useful to the community in so doing. It does not permit the artist to
exist only for his art, even if he gives inspiration to many by its means. It refuses
to let the businessman imagine that he fulfills all legitimate demands in the
course of his business activities. It demands from all that they should sacrifice a
portion of their own lives for others.
“Ehrfurcht vor dem Leben,” in The World of Albert
Schweitzer, picture editing and book design by
Barbara Morgan, Harper and Brothers, New York,
1955, p. 136.
Let a man once begin to think about the mystery of his life and the links which connect him
with the life that fills the world, and he cannot but bring to bear upon his own life and all other
life that comes within his reach the principle of reverence for life.
Out of My Life and Thought, as quoted in Steve van
Matre, The Earth Speaks,
The Institute for Earth Education, Warrenville, Il,
1983, p. 133
We can find our right place in the Being that envelops us only if
we experience in our individual lives the universal life which
wills and rules within it. The nature of the Living Being without
me I can understand only through the Living Being which is
within me.
Out of my Life and Thought
Gratitude
416
The gratitude ascending from man to God is the supreme transaction between earth and heaven.
Most men, however, live their daily lives oblivious of this supreme event. They have no inkling
that their lives are lost to God because they have not given him thanks.... But to give thanks is
not only a happening that embraces the whole purpose of creation within itself; it is also an
experience. He who thanks God with his whole heart experiences something. He is himself
enriched.
Now take a look at yourselves. The times of poverty within are the times when you do
not give thanks to God. What life brings has no value in itself. It acquires value only by our
giving thanks to God.... Those who thank God much are the truly wealthy. So our inner
happiness depends not on what we experience, but on the degree of our gratitude to God.
Reverence for Life, “Gratitude: the Secret of Life,”
translated by Reginald Fuller from Strassburger
Predigten, Harper & Row, Publ., New York and
London, 1966, p. 39-40
O Heavenly Father,
protect and bless all things that have breath.
Guard them from all evil,
and let them sleep in peace.”
417
Thanksgiving: A key to opening creation
Schweitzer while still in Germany recognized that thanksgiving for creation opens a door to the
joys of life as well as an entry point to creation’s lessons. He says, “When you feel weak,
downcast, and sad, start giving thanks....”
The greatest thing is to give thanks for everything. He who has learned this
knows what it means to live. He has penetrated the whole mystery of life: giving
thanks for everything. If you do not own fields or meadows, take the giving of
thanks at this harvest festival as a parable. That’s what our Lord did, and he too
did not own fields. He took everything in nature as a parable and so owned it in
spirit. We offer up thanksgiving this day for the fruits of the earth. We thank
God for the sunshine, but also for the hard rain that satisfies the thirst of earth,
for the driving wind that carries the pollen from one plant to another, for the
cold that preserved the seed in the earth, for the storms of spring that washed the
land of snow and ice. Thus, you give thanks to God, not only for the happy and
sunny events which ripen your life’s fruit. Much that is sad and hard is also
mixed in with life’s blessings. And for that you must thank God, because it too
has contributed to your spiritual growth.
418
419
Helen Keller was born in Tescumbia in rural Alabama, the daughter of a former Captain in the
Confederate Army. As a 19 month-old baby, she caught a fever so fierce that she nearly died. She
survived but was left entirely without sight or hearing. The story of Helen Keller is the story of
how a blind and deaf girl grew up to become a world-famous author and eloquent public speaker.
She learned a simple language of hand signs, and from that progressed to the symbol language of
braille. From braille she began the slow journey to speech, entirely without the benefit of hearing.
She teaches that we can sense the world and the presence of God with our whole being, and that
there is a psychic dimension beyond hearing and seeing which can awaken and sense what is in
God’s creation. Helen had an unshakable faith that led her into reflections about the world.
Despite being blind, she discerned great injustice in the world and dedicated her life to its
eradication. She became a suffragette, demanding equal rights for women and better pay for
working class people. While there are many lessons from the life of Helen Keller, the most
poignant is her demonstration that there is far more to the world than what can be seen or heard if
one would be quiet and feel and sense with one’s whole being.
420
The joy of the world
What a joy it is to feel the soft, springy earth under my feet once more, to follow
grassy roads that lead to ferny brooks where I can bathe my fingers in a cataract
of rippling notes, or to clamber over a stone wall into green fields that tumble
and roll and climb in riotous gladness.
Life is an adventure
Helen learned to read lips by pressing her fingertips against them and feeling the movement
and vibrations. This method, called tadoma, is a skill few people manage to acquire. She also
learned to speak, a major achievement for someone totally deaf.
Contentment in creation
Everything in nature has its wonders, even darkness and silence, and I learn,
whatever state I may be in, therein to be content....
421
The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or
even touched. They must be felt with the heart.
That the sky is brighter than the earth means little unless the earth
itself is appreciated and enjoyed.
Feeling creation
Helen Keller felt the features and creatures of nature, considering each thing an embodiment of
spirit. To her the sun had volition, trees had personalities and distinct psychic feelings. “Sweet
Mother Nature can have no secrets,” she said, because she discerned the feelings of nature with
her whole body. This sensitivity gave her an unusual ability to describe the innate qualities of
each part of creation in a way others with sight might not.
Helen possessed a spiritual sensitivity to things beyond the physical. To her sightless and deaf
senses, there was no separation between things physical and spiritual. It was said that she could
feel mood changes through her skin; sense attitudes and emotional changes in the people close
around her; she could even discern the thoughts of those who visited her.
Bound to suns and planets by invisible cords, I feel the flame of eternity in my
soul. Here in the midst of the everyday air, I sense the rush of ethereal rains. I
am conscious of the splendor that binds all things of earth to all things in
heaven.
422
Quoted in The Wisdom of Nature, Dayton Foster,
editor, Naturgraph Publ., Happy Camp, CA 1993,
p. 100
T. S. Eliot (1888 - 1965)
T. S. Eliot exerted a profound influence on his contemporaries in the arts as well as on a great
international audience of readers. He is a winner of the Nobel prize in Literature, widely honored
for his poetry, criticism, essays and plays, and known for his insight and ability to convey deep
religious concepts in a few words. His ecological contribution lies in the manner in which he
blends the insights of Christian experience with a metaphysics of nature all blended together in the
music and meter of poetry.
423
424
C. S. Lewis (1893 - 1963)
Born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, Clive Staples ("Jack") Lewis was reared in a bookish home,
where the reality he found in literature seemed as tangible and meaningful to him as anything
outdoors. Lewis emerged during the era of the Second World War as a religious broadcaster who
gained fame as "the apostle to the skeptics" throughout Britain and the United States. His wartime
radio essays explaining the Christian faith comforted the fearful and wounded, and were
eventually collected and published as Mere Christianity. He is one of the most important Christian
writers of the 20th Century.
Experiments on animals
Once the old Christian idea of a total difference in kind between man and beast has been
abandoned, then no argument for experiments on animals can be found which is not also
an argument for experiments on inferior men. If we cut up beasts simply because they
cannot prevent us and because we are backing up our own side in the struggle for
existence, it is only logical to cut up imbeciles, criminals, enemies or capitalists for the
same reason.
Andrew Linzey, Compassion for Animals:
Readings and Prayers, SPCK Publ., London, 1988,
pg. 31
Pan’s purge
426
427
Nicholas Zernov (1898 - 1980)
A Russian historian and commentator on relations between the traditional Orthodox Church and
the Soviet system, his historical descriptions portray the Russian understanding of God and
creation as intertwined. He draws out those elements of Christian faith as understood in
precommunist Russia that connect nature and humanity back to God. His descriptions of creation
in terms of iconic images imply a transparency to all things so that the world and each thing in it is
seen as representative or symbolic of ever deeper meaning and purpose.
Icons were for the Russians not merely paintings. They were dynamic
manifestations of man’s spiritual power to redeem creation through
beauty and art. The colors and lines of the icons were not meant to
imitate nature; the artists aimed at demonstrating that men, animals and
plants, and even the whole cosmos, could be rescued from their present
state of degradation and restored to their proper “Image.” The icons were
pledges of the coming victory of a redeemed creation over the fallen
one.... The artistic perfection of an icon was only a reflection of a
celestial glory – it was a concrete example of matter restored to its
original harmony and beauty, and serving as a vehicle of the spirit. The
icons are part of the transfigured cosmos.
The human body, creation and salvation: eastern and western views
In the West body and spirit are clearly distinguished, and there is a tendency to set them in
opposiiton to each other; in the Christian East they are treated as interdependent parts of the
same creation.
In the West the individual occupies the center of attention; in the East he is always
seen as a member of a community.
In the West mankind is the main object of redemption; in the East the whole cosmos is
brought within its scope.
The West likes clear, precise formulae; it is logical and analytical.... The East treats
religion more as a way of life than as a doctrine; it mistrusts over-elaborate definitions. It
believes that the Church and its sacraments are divine mysteries... and that they will always
evade analysis by logical reasoning.
428
Eastern Christians look upon the world as one great organism; they approach the
divine manifestations of life as an expression of the same reality. The East does not think
about salvation in terms of the individual soul returning to its Maker; it is visualized rather as
a gradual process of transfiguration of the whole cosmos, culminating in theosis. Man is
saved, not from the world, but with the world.
Zernov describes the differences between the understanding of the Holy Eucharist in the East
and in the West which reflect, he says, fundamental differences in cosmology. Because this
deals with differences in worldview, this shapes how one sees the environment, which gives
this passage ecological relevance.
Zernov says that in the West (referring to the theological understanding of the Roman
Catholic Church) the Body of Christ in the Eucharist is seen as God coming down from
heaven in the process of transubstantiation, and Christ taking form within the blessed host.
This reflects the way Christ and creation are understood.
In the East, the mysteries of the Divine Life are set in a timeless
reality. The words of Christ at the Last Supper are repeated and
gradually the Divine Presence is revealed in the metamorphosis
or transfiguration of the bread and wine of the Eucharist into the
Body and Blood of Christ. During the Divine Sacrifice, streams
of Divine Grace flood into the world. Heaven and earth, Infinite
and finite, Uncreated and created, God and man come together
and become one, or rather, their already existing unity is
realized.
The Eucharist, for an Orthodox Christian, is not so much a
sudden intervention from above, as a gradual revelation of the
divine presence which is always here.
429
Dumitru Staniloae (1903-1993)
Dumitru Staniloae is the greatest theologian of the modern Romanian Orthodox Church and one of
the more important Christian theologians of the 20th Century. Born in an isolated agricultural
village in western Romania, he was steeped in the warm Romanian peasant culture of his
childhood and always sought to incorporate its core values – simple faith in God and deep kinship
with the earth and all living things – in his mature thought. One of his abiding concerns was the
cosmic unity of all creation in Jesus Christ. After becoming a priest he received advanced
theological education in Greece, Germany and France, but his greatest love was patristics. In sixty
years of teaching and writing, interrupted by his arrest and imprisonment for five years in the
brutal Romanian gulag of the communists in the fifties, he almost single-handedly restored
Romanian Orthodox theology, giving it a permanent orientation toward patristic spirituality, a
creation-caring, Christ-centered cosmology, and the experience of the prayer of the heart. Never
an "academic" thinker in the narrow sense, Fr. Staniloae was in life a witness to the wholeness and
peace of the Spirit-filled life. His writings continue to bear witness to the Christian art of finding
the Creator in and through the creation.
The economy of God, that is, his plan with regard to the world, consists of the
deification of the created world, something which, as a consequence of sin,
implies also its salvation.
The Experience of God: Orthodox Dogmatic
Theology, Vol. 2, “The World, Creation and
Deification,” Holy Cross Press, Brookline, MA
2000, p. 1.
Salvation and deification have humanity directly as their aim, but not a humanity separated
from nature, rather one that is ontologically united with it. For nature depends on man, or
makes him whole, and man cannot reach perfection if he does not reflect nature and is not at
work upon it. Thus, by “world” both nature and humanity are understood; or when the word
“world” is used to indicate one of these realities, the other is always implied as well
The Experience of God: Orthodox Dogmatic
Theology, Vol. 2, “The World, Creation and
Deification,” Holy Cross Press, Brookline,
Mass., 2000, p. 1
430
Western Christianity has often had the tendency to refer salvation to man as separate from
nature. Eastern Christianity, on the other hand, has never conceived them separately from one
another, although lately the West too has generally abandoned the conception of man’s
salvation as something separate from nature....
According to our faith, each human person is a hypostasis [microcosmic summary] of the entire
cosmic nature, but he is this only in solidarity with others. Cosmic nature is thus common to all
human hypostases, although each one hypostasizes it and lives it personally in a way that is
particular to himself and complementary to that of others....
Nature as a whole is destined for the glory in which men will share in the kingdom of
heaven, and even now that glory is felt in the peace and light that radiate from the person who
is a saint. The glory of Christ on Mount Tabor was spread out over nature too. Yet for the eyes
and senses of the many it can remain hidden, while nature can be degraded and affected by the
wickedness of the few. In its turn nature can be the medium through which the believer
receives divine grace or the beneficent uncreated energies, just as it can be the medium through
which influences driving him toward evil flow out upon him.
432
Creation as tool for deeper communion with God
Only in human subjects does the world discover and fulfill its meaning. For only humans
beings are conscious of a meaning to their existence and to physical and biological nature and
only they are able to go beyond the repetition of the laws of nature, as those who have the
capacity to raise themselves to pursue and realize other meanings through nature.
Through its contingent rationality and the meaning that humans can perceive through it,
the world is at the service of this movement of raising ourselves to our ultimate meaning, or
indeed, of achieving our fullness in communion with the personal God. All these things impose
on us a responsibility before God and before the world itself, and it is by the exercise of this
responsibility that we increase in our communion with God and with our fellow human beings
as we humanize or perfect ourselves.
God gave us things as gifts not only that we might accustom our strength of will to transcend them
his own sake, but for the sake of our fellow humans as well, through our acts of bestowing these
gifts upon them. The love we manifest in using these things as gifts must be directed not only
toward God but also toward our neighbors so that we might gain love for them, and communion
with them (Matt. 10:8).
The good things of God as gifts serve as a bond of life between persons, and hence they
should not come to be like screens that keep them apart. Created things can serve, therefore, either
for the perfecting or for the corrupting of human beings.
433
God does not infuse into the human person ready-made the meanings and the
names of what he has created. He awaits the human person’s effort to decipher
them, and it was to this end that he gave the human person his inner capability
and need. These meanings and the uses of them... are not given to him all at once.
Only thus are spiritual growth and liberty implied in the dialogue. The meanings
of things are given us objectively, just as our capacity to grasp them is also given
us. But at the same time, these meanings have something of the character of a
solicitation from God to which humans must expend themselves in responding.
God waits for the human person to discover the infinite thoughts he has posited
within things. ... God waits for us to have an increasingly better and fuller
understanding of the thoughts he has placed within things and of the words he has
addressed to us through them.
Created things are not given to us only so that each of us can carry on a private dialogue with
God; they have been given so that all of us can take part in a dialogue among ourselves and
collectively take part in a dialogue with God. Put another way, this dialogue is to take place
among ourselves in the consciousness that created things are given us by God so as to be used
as gifts among ourselves in his name, following his command, and out of his richness....
434
Articulating the meanings imbued into creation
435
Through created things God has given humans two gifts: first, the possibility to think and to
speak, for this arises from the fact that God conceived the inner principles of things and posited
them in existence, having created for them beforehand a material covering, adapted to the level
of the humanity; and second, the need to conceive and express these inner principles so as to be
able to make use of them in human relationships and in this way bring about that dialogue
between themselves and God, which God willed to have with them, so that human beings might
respond to God through their own thinking and speaking. It is precisely in this that all things
find their meaning....
This is how we are to understand the words of Genesis: “So out of the ground the Lord
God formed every beast of the field... and brought them to the man to see what he would call
them; and whatever the man called every living creature, that was its name...” (Genesis 2:19).
Thus God has asked man to speak inasmuch as he urged him to put within his nature the need
to discover the words that God himself communicated to man through created things.
For this reason even the words addressed to us by God through created things stimulate
us to reach an understanding of them.
As man was forced to live in ever larger groups because of excessive industrialization and the
growing urban population, much more effort was necessary to bring about love among him
and his fellow-beings. It was easy to live in a small familiar group. Actually we witness today
the contradictory phenomenon: the larger the group in which man lives, the more estranged he
feels. But this is no joy for him. And we have to do our best to discern in any man in a crowd
a valuable face of God that should deserve being loved, that should need my love, a fact
which makes me to leave behind the barrenness of loneliness. As a matter of fact, living
permanently in a large group of people may help me know every man's unique mystery and
make myself richer by what each one of them transmits to me especially. Modern society
requires increasing efforts from the Christian faith to fulfill itself and to help this society to go
deeper in its humaneness.
1993 interview, “Romanians and their contribution
to the world,” website:
http://cpcug.org/user/stefan/listro.html
Speaking more concretely and in accordance with our faith, the content of
natural revelation is the cosmos and man who is endowed with reason, with
436
conscience, and with freedom. But man is not only an object that can be known
with this revelation; he is also one who is a subject of the knowledge of
revelation. Both man and the cosmos are equally the product of a creative act of
God which is above nature, and both are maintained in existence by God
through an act of conservation which has a supernatural character.
Some of the Fathers of the Church have said that man is a microcosm, a world which sums up
in itself the larger world. St. Maximos the Confessor that the more correct way would be to
consider man as a macrocosm, because he is called to comprehend the whole world within
himself as one capable of comprehending it without losing himself, for he is distinct from the
world. Therefore man effects a unity greater than the world exterior to himself, whereas, on the
contrary, the world, as cosmos, as nature, cannot contain man fully within itself without losing
him, that is, without losing in this way the most important part of reality, that part which, more
than all others, gives reality its meaning.
The entire universe bears the stamp of a personal rationality intended for the
eternal existence of human persons.... It is only through an eternal participation
in the infinity of this Supreme Personal reality that our being reckons it will see
its own meaning fulfilled. This is how the Orthodox Christian doctrine of the
deification of our being through participation in God or through grace is to be
understood. In other words, Our being reckons that its own meaning and,
simultaneously the meaning of the whole of reality will be fulfilled only by
virtue of the fact that between our persons and supreme or divine Person, there
is no place for an intermediate existence: after God, man is also, in a way,
immediate, able to participate immediately in everything God possesses as a
degree of the supreme existence, all the while remaining man.
Mother Teresa was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in 1910 in Skopje, Macedonia to a Catholic
family of Albanian descent amidst a community of Serbian Orthodox Christians and Muslims. As
a teenager she joined the Sisters of Loreto and took the name "Teresa" after St. Teresa of Avila,
patroness of the Order. In 1948, while serving as a missionary in India, she came across a half-
dead woman lying in front of a Calcutta hospital. She stayed with the woman until she died. From
that time on, she dedicated her life to helping those in India whom she called “the poorest of the
poor.” She was guided to form an order of nuns called the Missionary of Charity Sisters. Her
sisters would, like her, serve the poorest of the poor. The key to Mother’s devotion, says a
biographer, is that she saw Jesus in every person she met and she felt His presence in every place
she visited. Her devotion to the poor won her respect throughout the world, including the Nobel
Peace Prize in 1979. Her ecological contribution lies in her awareness that the heights of spiritual
attainment include care for the earth.
438
439
Francis Schaeffer is an evangelical Christian who challenged the modern generation to apply
biblical values to the task of everyday living. He passionately defended the idea of the inerrancy of
Scripture when that idea had become weak; he solidified popular evangelical opposition to
abortion; he inspired evangelicals to become serious scholars; and he revitalized the ancient idea
of intentional Christian community. Even before the idea of “care for creation” entered Church
discussion, he authored a little-read text, Pollution and the Death of Man, in which he applied
scriptural principles to ecological concern. Schaeffer correctly predicted that if the Church did not
participate in the debates surrounding ecological strategy, the environmental movement would
adopt forms of pantheism as its foundational doctrines. In the religious void left by the failure of
the Christian churches in the ‘60s and 70's to engage ecological issues, Hinduism, Buddhism and
expressions from the New Age Movement have joined to make pantheism a significant option for
many in the environmental movement. The legacy of Francis Schaeffer is an evangelical Christian
world view which at once cares for creation and points to an intentionally Christian way of
thinking and living.
The Church has not spoken out as it should have done throughout history against the abuse of
nature. But when the Church puts belief into practice, in man and in nature, there is a
substantial healing. One of the first fruits of that healing is a new sense of beauty. The aesthetic
values are not to be despised. God has made man with a sense of beauty, in a way no animal
has: no animal has ever produced a work of art. Man as made in the image of God has aesthetic
quality, and as soon as he begins to deal with nature as he should — as having dominion but
not exploiting nature as though it had no value in itself, and realizing it is also a creature of God
as man is — beauty is preserved in nature.
Christians, of all people, should not be the destroyers. We should treat nature
with an overwhelming respect. We may cut down a tree to build a house or
make a fire to keep warm, but we should not cut down the tree just to cut down
the tree. We may, if necessary, bark the cork tree in order to have the use of the
bark. But what we should not do is to bark the tree simply for the sake of doing
so, and let it dry and stand there a dead skeleton in the wind. To do so is not to
treat the tree with integrity.
440
So we find that when we begin to deal [with nature] on a Christian basis, things
begin to change; not just theoretical things, important as they are, but practical
things. Man is not to be sacrificed, as pantheism sacrifices him, because, after
all, he was made in the image of God, and given dominion. Yet nature is to be
honored, each thing on its own level. In other words, there is a balance here.
Man has dominion because he is a moral creature. He has a right by choice to
have dominion. But he is also by choice to exercise it rightly. He is to honor
what God has made, up to the very highest level that he can honor it, without
sacrificing man.
Man was given dominion over creation. But since the Fall, man has exercised this dominion
wrongly. He is a rebel who has set himself at the center of the universe. By creation man has
dominion, but as a fallen creature, he has used that dominion wrongly. Because he is fallen, he
exploits created things as though they were nothing in themselves, and as though he has an
autonomous right to them. Surely then, Christians, who have returned through the work of the
Lord Jesus Christ to fellowship with God, and have a proper place of reference to the God who
is there, should demonstrate a proper use of nature. We are to have dominion over it, but we are
not going to use it as fallen man uses it. We are not going to act as though it were nothing in
itself, or as though we will do to nature everything we can do.
441
We respect creation because God made it
The hippies today [writing in 1969] are right in their desire to be close to nature, even walking
in bare feet in order to feel it. But they have no sufficient philosophy, so it drifts into pantheism
and soon becomes ugly. But Christians, who should understand the creation principle, have a
reason for respecting nature, and when they do, it results in benefits to man. Let us be clear: it
is not just a pragmatic attitude; there is a basis for it. We treat it with respect because God made
it. When an orthodox evangelical Christian mistreats or is insensible to nature, at that point he
is more wrong than the hippie who has no clear basis for his feeling for nature, and yet senses
that man and nature should have a relationship beyond that of spoiler and spoiled.
The Church, at a point in history when it had the consensus, as it does not
have now, failed (with some notable exceptions) to speak against the abuse
of economic dominion. . . . So man has dominion over nature, but he uses it
wrongly. The Christian is called upon to exhibit this dominion, but exhibit it
rightly, treating the thing as having value in itself, exercising dominion
without being destructive. The Church should always have taught and done
this, but she has generally failed to do so, and we need to confess our
failure.... By and large we must say that for a long time Christian teachers,
including the best orthodox evangelical theologians, have shown a real
poverty here.
When we consider the tree, which is “below” the fish, we may chop it down so long as
remember it is a tree, with its own value as a tree. It is not a zero. Some of our housing
developments demonstrate the practical application of this. Bulldozers have gone in to flatten
everything and clear the trees before the houses are begun. The end result is ugliness. It would
have cost another thousand dollars to bulldoze around the trees, but they are simply bulldozed
down without question. And then we wonder, looking at the result, how people can live there. It
is less human in its barrenness, and even economically it is poorer as the topsoil washes away.
So when man breaks God’s truth, in reality, he suffers.
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A test of how we really love the Creator
If I love the Lover, I love what the Lover has made.... If I don’t love what the
Lover has made — in the area of man, in the area of nature — and really love it
because He made it, do I really love the Lover?
Pollution and the Death of Man, 1970
It is either not knowing or denying the createdness of things that is at the root of the blackness
of modern man’s difficulties.... Once one removes the createdness of all things, meaning and
categories can only be some sort of leap... into an irrational world. Modern man’s blackness,
therefore, rests primarily upon his losing the reality
of the createdness of all things (all things except the God who always has been).
Perspective on dominion
Genesis 1 tells us over and over again an important thing about creation: In verse 4 we read,
“And God saw the light, that it was good.” This phrase that it was good is repeated in verses
10, 12, 18, 21 and 25. And verse 31 sums up the whole of God’s judgement: “And God saw
everything that he had made, and, behold, it was very good.” This is not a relative judgement,
but a judgement of the holy God who has a character and whose character is the law of the
universe. His conclusion: Every step and every sphere of creation, and the whole thing put
together – man himself and his total environment, the heavens and the earth – conforms to
myself. Everything at each of the various levels of creation fulfills the purpose of its creation.
The [so-called] machine part of the universe acts with perfect machineness. The animals and
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the plants act with their animalness and their plantness in perfection. Man stands at his
particular level of creation as being in the image of God and having a reference upward rather
than downward, and God is able to say that man, too, in his mannishness..., is equally good:
“Man conforms to myself on his level of creation.”
Thus we find a doxology of all creation – everything glorifying God on its own level....
Each thing stands in a proper relationship to God and speaks of what God is.
Genesis in Time and Space, InterVarsity Press,
Downers Grove, 1972, p. 55-56
Man has dominion over the "lower" orders of creation, but he is not sovereign over them. Only
God is the Sovereign Lord, and the lower orders are to be used with this truth in mind. Man is
not using his own possessions. . . .
When we have dominion over nature, it is not ours either. It belongs to God, and we are
to exercise our dominion over these things not as though entitled to exploit them, but as things
borrowed or held in trust which we are to use realizing that they are not ours intrinsically.
Man's dominion is under God's Dominion and in God's Domain. . . .
By creation man has dominion; but as a fallen creature he has used that dominion wrongly.
Because he is fallen, he exploits created things as though they were nothing in themselves, and
as though he has an autonomous right to them. . . .
Surely then, Christians, who have returned through the work of the Lord Jesus Christ to
fellowship with God, and have a proper place of reference to the God who is there, should
demonstrate a proper use of nature. We are to have dominion over it, but we are not going to
use it as fallen man uses it. We are not going to act as though it were nothing in itself or as
though we will do to nature everything we can do. . . .
Pollution and the Death of Man, 1970
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An American Cistercian monk and world famous author, Thomas Merton is best known for
articulating a popular understanding of the monastic journey. He interpreted a broad range of
spiritual, philosophical, literary, cultural and political issues, often exploring the religious
questions which these issues posed for society. His writings stretched from monasticism,
spiritual practice, and the mystical experience of illumination, to ecumenism, communism, the
Vietnam War and the cosmos, plus hundreds of other topics which he engaged with perceptive
insight. Despite his large volume of writings, he never articulated a comprehensive theology of
creation. Nevertheless, his attentiveness to the physical world brings him repeatedly to issues of
nature and a right relationship to creation. His emphasis tends toward descriptions of the
mysterious in creation, the world’s infinite depth, its rhythms of life and death, and their
participation in the great mystery of God’s Being. As a monastic, he offers a focus on nature as
experienced through the contemplative life. One of his most important contributions to a
theology of creation involves his vivid descriptions of how silence leads to experience of the
presence of God stretched out everywhere across the cosmos.
What then is the world? Simply the human and non-human environment in which man finds
himself and to which he is called to establish a certain definite relationship.
It is true that most men are content to accept a ready-made relationship which the world
itself offers them, but in theory we are all free to stand back from the world, to judge it, and
even to come to certain decisions are remaking it.
A society of barbarism
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The beginning of the interior life
One of the most important — and most neglected — elements in the beginnings of the interior
life is the ability to respond to reality, to see the value and the beauty in ordinary things, to
come alive to the splendor that is all around us....
Listening to silence
Silent roots
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The cosmic dance
For the world and time are the dance of the Lord in emptiness. The silence of the spheres is
the music of the wedding feast. The more we persist in misunderstanding the phenomena of
life, the more we analyze them out into strange finalities and complex purposes of our own,
the more we involve ourselves in sadness, absurdity and despair. But it does not matter much,
because no despair of ours can alter the reality of things, or stain the joy of the cosmic dance
which is always there. Indeed, we are in the midst of it, and it is in the midst of us, for it beats
in our very blood, whether we want it to or not.
The artist is not a special kind of man, but every m an is a special kind of
artist.... [In the monastery] every monk is, or should be, a special kind of artist.
Nothing is more alien to the monastic life that the cult of art for art’s sake. The
monk ought never to be an aesthete, but rather a “workman,” a “craftsman” —
artifex. ...
Where we find buildings that are ugly, furniture ill-made, doors that do not close
properly, vines and fruits trees clumsily pruned, materials and fodder going to
waste, the lack of skill and care which these things represent might simply be
the fruit of a wrong attitude toward work itself — a false orientation of the
monastic spirit.
Merton writes that human beings often respond to the mystery of the cosmos, not by
acknowledging it and participating in it, but by trying to evade or deny it. Thus it becomes a
source of fear and anxiety instead of wonder, awe and reverence.
One has to be alone, under the sky, before everything falls into place and one
finds his own place in the midst of it all.
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Selling the rain
Merton criticizes the tendency to misuse the natural world because it springs from a disregard
of the mystery of the human which is tied into the mystery of creation. We create what he terms
a “world-within-a-world,” one which is susceptible to human control, management and
manipulation.
The time will come when they will sell you even your rain. By
“they” I mean the people who cannot appreciate its [nature’s]
gratuity, who think that what has no price has no value, that what
cannot be sold is not real.... The time will come when they will sell
you even your rain. At the moment it is still free, and I am in it.
Some beavers in Connecticut have built a dam and are flooding a lot of roads. The highway
department of the county where this disaster is taking place has brought the matter to court,
asking for the power to remove these audacious beavers.
The Attorney General in Hartford hands down a decision making this possible by
saying that rights of rational animals are inferior to those of the state, and therefore the rights of
beavers are just that much more inferior to the rights of the state. Therefore, the beavers have to
get out.
On the other hand, the beavers also have rights, and therefore “these little animals
should be compensated.” They will be removed to another home where they will be able “to
perform and exercise their natural skill and ability.” ...
I have no doubt the beavers have certain natural “rights,” but I have every doubt
whether those rights can be protected by a human court of law as if they were the rights of
human beings. And what are the rights of beavers? Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?
The court said they had a right to perform and exercise their natural skill and ability.
I suppose the same can be said of rabbits. But also I suppose the rights of rabbits are not
eternally fixed: they vary according to whether or not the hunting season is on. When it is
closed, they have a right to life and the performance, etc., of their skills (which are all very
elementary, to be sure), and when the season is open, they lose all their rights.
I don‘t suppose even a State supreme court could go so far as to puzzle over the rights of
rabbits in relation to foxes. Let us take it for granted that irrational animals have rights before men
who are capable of making judgements, but not before other animals.
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Even if beavers have rights (which I don’t doubt), it doesn’t do any good to talk about
them, or to guarantee them, or anything of the sort....
There is one very simple way of dealing with beavers: not according to rights, but
according to love. If you love God, you will respect His creatures, and respect all life because it
comes from Him, and you won’t waste so much time talking about the rights of irrational
beings.
Life is simple. We are living in a world that is absolutely transparent, and God is shining
through it all the time. This is not just a fable or a nice story. It is true. If we abandon ourselves
to God and forget ourselves, we see it sometimes, and we see it maybe frequently. God shows
Himself everywhere, in everything — in people and in things and in nature and in events. It
becomes very obvious that God is everywhere and in everything and we cannot be without
Him. It's impossible. The only thing is that we don't see it.
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Overwork: the most insidious form of violence
Christian tradition
What a thing it is to sit absolutely alone, in the forest, at night, cherished by this wonderful,
unintelligible, perfectly innocent speech, the most comforting speech in the world, the talk that
rain makes by itself all over the ridges, and the talk of the watercourses everywhere in the
hollows.
Nobody started it, nobody is going to stop it. It will talk as long as it wants, this rain. As
long as it talks, I am going to listen.
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Rev. Billy Graham (1918 - )
Born on November 7, 1918, near Charlotte, North Carolina, Billy Graham dreamed of becoming a
professional baseball player through most of his youth. He eventually decided to become a
preacher, and after high school, enrolled in a series of colleges and bible institutes before
graduating in 1943. Throughout the latter half of the twentieth century Billy Graham has been the
dominant preacher in Evangelical Christianity and is considered one of the best-known religious
figures of the twentieth century. He has not said a great deal about the environment, but what he
has said is strong, simple and straight to the point. “Christians,” he says, “ought to take the lead in
caring for the earth.”
It is not right for us to destroy the world God has given us. He
has created everything; as the Bible says, “The God who made
the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven” (Acts
17:24). To drive to extinction something He has created is wrong.
He has a purpose for everything.... We Christians have a
responsibility to take the lead in caring for the earth.
According to the Bible, all the animals on the earth were created good and pure (Genesis
1:25). Man was given responsibility for the animal kingdom. However God never intended
their abuse....
The Bible’s emphasis is on the good treatment of animals, and not just the
forbidding of cruel treatment. For example, not only were men to observe the Sabbath as
a day of rest, but they were to allow their animals to rest on the Sabbath also (Exodus
20:10). A working animal was also to be fed properly: “Thou shalt not muzzle the ox when
he treadeth out the corn” (Deuteronomy 25:4). The Bible says a good man is concerned for
the welfare of his animals, but even the kindness of godless men is cruel (Proverbs 12:10)
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We must take into consideration God's authentic purpose for this planet. We
must be responsible stewards of the resources we have been given by God, and I
believe we have gone too far too fast and put elements of the environment in
jeopardy.
Graham said he also has been increasingly worried about the destruction of the
environment:
The growing possibility of our destroying ourselves and the world with our own
neglect and excess is tragic and very real.
I find myself becoming more and more an advocate of the true ecologists where
their recommendations are realistic. Many of these people have done us an
essential service in helping us preserve and protect our green zones and our cities,
our water and our air....
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Pope John Paul II (1920 - 2005)
Among the world's recent religious leaders, Pope John Paul II was one of the most vigorous and
consistent in advocating for ecological awareness and responsibility. Born Karol Jozef Wojtyla on
May 18, 1920, his birthday coincided with “the Polish Miracle,” the date of Poland’s first major
military victory in two centuries, an event which led to Poland’s rebirth as an independent nation.
After ascending to the papacy in 1978, Pope John Paul II became known as the pope who brought
down Communism, the pope who raised his voice against consumerism, and the pope who warned
America that it was developing a "culture of death" because of the godless ways it treats criminals,
the poor, the unborn and the environment. More than any other pontiff in history, Pope John Paul
II traveled. A reoccurring theme wherever he spoke was that ecological problems are first spiritual
problems. To him, environmental degradation must be solved by seeing the moral side of issues
and placing God and the common good before individual greed and selfishness. Everywhere in his
pastoral journeys, but especially in the developed world, he admonished the faithful to restrain
acquisitive tendencies and embrace a simpler way of life. In clear language, he called all people to
undergo “an ecological conversion,” a change of heart and attitude which would allow all people
to join in the great challenge of the 21st century: addressing environmental problems.
At the beginning of the 1990s, Pope John Paul II chose New Year's Day, 1990, as an
opportune time to emphasize the importance of ecological degradation:
The seriousness of ecological degradation lays bare the depth of man's moral crisis. If
an appreciation of the value of human life is lacking, we will also lose concern for
others and for the earth itself. Simplicity, moderation and discipline, as well as the
spirit of sacrifice, must become a part of everyday life....
In our day, there is a growing awareness that world peace is threatened.... by a lack of
respect for nature, by the plundering of natural resources and by a progressive decline
in the quality of life. The sense of precariousness and insecurity that such a situation
engenders is a seedbed for collective selfishness, disregard for others and dishonesty.
Faced with the widespread destruction of the environment, people are coming to
understand that we cannot continue to use the goods of the earth as we have in the
past....
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In 1979 Pope John Paul II became the first Christian leader to address issues of
overconsumption. To an overflowing crowd at Yankee Stadium he called for a simpler way of
life that reflected the ancient message of the Gospel.
Side by side with the miseries of underdevelopment, we find ourselves up against a form of
super-development, equally inadmissible. This super-development, which consists in an
excessive availability of every kind of material goods for the benefit of certain social groups,
easily makes people slaves of "possession" and immediate gratification, with no other horizon
than the multiplication or continual replacement of the things already owned with others still
better. This is the civilization of consumption, or "consumerism," which involves so much
throwing away and waste.
All of us experience firsthand the sad effects of blind submission to pure consumerism:
in the first place it represents crass materialism, and at the same time it represents a radical
dissatisfaction because one quickly learns that the more one possesses, the more one wants,
while deeper aspirations remain unsatisfied and perhaps even stifled.
One of the greatest injustices in the contemporary world consists precisely in this: that
the ones who possess much are relatively few and those who possess almost nothing are many.
It is the injustice of the poor distribution of the goods and services originally intended for all.
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Distinguishing motives for owning and using
Pope John Paul II distinguishes between motives for acquisition and notes that consumption
and some lifestyles can be improper and damaging.
It is not wrong to want to live better. What is wrong is a style of life which
is presumed to be better when it is directed toward having rather than being,
and which wants to have more, not in order to be more, but in order to
spend life in enjoyment as an end in itself.
Equally worrying is the ecological question which accompanies the problem
of consumerism and which is closely connected to it. In his desire to have
and to enjoy, rather than to be and to grow, man consumes the resources of
the Earth and his own life in an excessive and disordered way.
Pope John Paul says that he asks the Lord to give strength to individuals to put these teachings
on the environment into practice.
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Humanity and the animals
Because man shares the creation with the other creatures and has the same elements of the earth
in his own being and breathes the same air, there is a relatedness between humanity and the
animals. Thus man comes to have a certain affinity with other creatures: he is called to use
them and to be involved with them. As the Genesis accounts says, he is placed in the garden
with the duty of cultivating and watching over it, being superior to the other creatures placed by
God under his dominion. But at the same time, man must remain subject to the will of God
Who imposes limits upon his use and dominion over things.
"Sin" and "structures of sin" are categories which are seldom applied to the situation of the
contemporary world. However one cannot easily gain a profound understanding of the reality
that confronts us unless we give a name to the root of the evils which afflict us. In light of these
moral criteria we would see that hidden behind certain decisions, apparently inspired only by
economics and politics, are real forms of idolatry: of money, ideology, class, technology.
I have introduced this analysis above all in order to point out the true nature of the evil
which faces us with respect to the development of peoples. It is a question of a moral evil, the
fruit of many sins which lead to "structures of sin." To diagnose the evil in this way is to
identify precisely on the level of human conduct, the path to be followed in order to overcome
it.
Papal Encyclical "Sollicitudo Rei Socialis," Vatican
City, 1988, #37
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The solution of the Church
The Church does not have technical solutions to offer.... (Neither does she) propose economic
and political systems or programs nor does she show preference for one or the other, provided
that human dignity is properly respected....There is no justification for despair or pessimism or
inertia.... We are all called, indeed obliged, to face the tremendous challenge... because the
present dangers threaten everyone.... At stake is the dignity of the human person, whose
defense and promotion have been entrusted to us by the Creator, and to whom the men and
women at every moment of history are strictly and responsibly in debt.
Every individual is called upon to play his or her part in this peaceful campaign, a
campaign to be conducted by peaceful means in order to secure development in peace, in order
to safeguard nature itself and the world about us.
I wish to appeal with simplicity and humility to everyone, to all men and women
without exception. I wish to ask them to be convinced of the seriousness of the present moment
and of each one's individual responsibility, and to implement -- by the way they live as
individuals and as families, by the use of their resources, by their civic activity, by contributing
to economic and political decisions, and by personal commitment to national and international
undertakings....
In this commitment, the sons and daughters of the Church must serve as examples and
guides, for they are called upon, in conformity with the program announced by Jesus himself to
"preach good news to the poor... to proclaim release to the captives and recovering of sight to
the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord"
(Luke 4:18-19).
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A universal duty to safeguard creation
We are now aware of the threats to entire regions caused by inconsiderate exploitation or
uncontrolled pollution. Protecting the world's forests, stemming desertification and erosion,
avoiding the spread of toxic substances harmful to man, animals and plants, protecting the
atmosphere, all these can be accomplished only through active and wise cooperation, without
borders or political power plays....
I would like to reiterate the importance of man's responsibility toward the earth with
which God has entrusted him. From the north to the south of your great island, I was able to
admire the beauty, the rich variety of the earth and its fruits. And yet we know that the way the
earth is being used could degrade and sterilize the land. Around the world, we can see the
results of exploitation which destroys much without taking future generations into account.
Today, all men have a duty to show themselves worthy of the mission given them by the
Creator by ensuring the safekeeping of that creation.
When man turns his back on the Creator's plan, he provokes a disorder which
has inevitable repercussions on the rest of the created order. If man is not at
peace with God, then earth itself cannot be at peace: "Therefore the land mourns
and all who dwell in it languish, and also the beasts of the field and the birds of
the air, and even the fish of the sea are taken away" (Hosea 4:3).
In a Lenten message for 1993, Pope John Paul II surprised many by addressing the growing
problem of desertification that afflicts millions of people in Africa, Latin America and
Australia. “We are deeply worried,” he said, “to see that entire peoples have been reduced to
destitution and are suffering from hunger and disease because they lack drinking water." The
expanding deserts, he continued, “are the results of injustice, an abuse of the world's goods
which results in poverty and death for people.”
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Today we are concerned to see the desert expanding to lands which only yesterday
were prosperous and fertile. We cannot forget that in many cases man himself has
been the cause of the barrenness of lands which have become desert, just as he has
caused the pollution of formerly clean waters. When people do not respect the
goods of the earth, when they abuse them, they act unjustly, even criminally,
because for many of their brothers and sisters their actions result in poverty and
death.
We are deeply worried to see that entire peoples, millions of human beings, have
been reduced to destitution and are suffering from hunger and disease because
they lack drinking water. In fact, hunger and many diseases are closely linked to
drought and water pollution. In places where rain is rare or the sources of water
dry up, life becomes more fragile; it fades away to the point of disappearing.
Immense areas of Africa are experiencing this scourge, but it is also present in
certain areas of Latin America and Australia.
Furthermore, it is quite clear to everyone that uncontrolled industrial
development and the use of technologies which disrupt the balance of nature
have caused serious damage to the environment and caused grave disasters. We
are running the risk of leaving as our heritage to future generations the tragedy
of thirst and deforestation in many parts of the world.
We see the Creator by contemplating the beauty of creation. Against the splendid setting of the
mountains of Colorado, with its pure air which gives peace and serenity to nature, the soul
spontaneously is lifted up to sing the Creator's praise: "O Lord, our Lord, how glorious is your
name over all the earth!" (Psalm 8:2).
Young pilgrims, the visible world is like a map pointing to heaven, the eternal dwelling
of the living God. We learn to see the Creator by contemplating the beauty of his creatures. In
this world the goodness, wisdom and almighty power of God shine forth. And the human
intellect, after original sin, in what has not been darkened by error or passion, can discover the
Artist's hand in the wonderful works which he has made. Reason can know God through the
“book of nature”: a personal God who is infinitely good, wise, powerful and eternal, who
transcends the world and, at the same time, is present in the depths of his creatures.
St. Paul writes: "Ever since the creation of the world, his invisible attributes of eternal
power and divinity have been understood and perceived in what he has made" (Romans 1:20).
Jesus teaches us to see the Father's hand in the beauty of the lilies of the field, the birds
of the air, the starry night, fields ripe for the harvest, the faces of children and the needs of the
poor and humble. If you look at the world with a pure heart, you too will see the face of God
(cf. Matthew 5:8), because it reveals the mystery of the Father's provident love.
Young people are especially sensitive to the beauty of nature, and contemplating it
inspires them spiritually. However, it must be a genuine contemplation; a contemplation which
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fails to reveal the face of a personal, intelligent, free and loving Father, but which discerns
merely the dim figure of an impersonal divinity or some cosmic force, does not suffice. We
must not confuse the Creator with his creation.
In order to have life and have it abundantly, in order to re-establish the original
harmony of creation, we must respect this divine image in all of creation, especially in human
life itself.
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In this January 2001 message Pope John Paul II calls the faithful to what he calls “ecological
conversion.” Here we find a succinct summary of his entire message on care for the earth. The
alternative, he says, is to be a despot, a despoiler of the land, who breaks the harmony with
which creation is innately endowed.
The human creature receives a mission to govern creation in order to make all
its potential shine. It is a delegation granted at the origins of creation, when
man and woman, who are the "image of God," receive the order to be fruitful
and multiply, to fill the earth and subdue it, and to have dominion over the fish
of the sea, the birds of the air and every living thing that moves upon the earth
(cf. Gn 1: 28).
Man's lordship, however, is not "absolute, but ministerial: it is a reflection of
the unique and infinite lordship of God. Hence man must exercise it with
wisdom and love, sharing in the boundless wisdom and love of God." In
biblical language "naming" the creatures (cf. Genesis 2:19-20) is the sign of this
mission of knowing and transforming created reality. It is not the mission of an
absolute and unquestionable master, but of a steward of God's kingdom who is
called to continue the Creator's work. His task, described in the Book of
Wisdom, is to rule "the world in holiness and righteousness" (Wisdom 9:3).
Unfortunately, if we scan the regions of our planet, we see that humanity has
disappointed God's expectations. Man, especially in our time, has without
hesitation devastated wooded plains and valleys, polluted waters, disfigured the
earth's habitat, made the air unbreathable, disturbed the hydro-geological and
atmospheric systems, turned luxuriant areas into deserts and undertaken forms
of unrestrained industrialization, degrading that "flowerbed" which is the earth,
our dwelling-place.
We must therefore encourage and support the "ecological conversion" which in
recent decades has made humanity more sensitive to the catastrophe to which it
has been heading.
Man is no longer the Creator's ‘steward,’ but an autonomous despot, who is
finally beginning to understand that he must stop at the edge of the abyss.
"Another welcome sign is the growing attention being paid to the quality of life
and to ecology, especially in more developed societies, where people's
expectations are no longer concentrated so much on problems of survival as on
the search for an overall improvement of living conditions" (Evangelium vitae,
n. 27). At stake, then, is not only a "physical" ecology that is concerned to
safeguard the habitat of the various living beings, but also a "human" ecology
which makes the existence of creatures more dignified, by protecting the
fundamental good of life in all its manifestations and by preparing for future
generations an environment in conformity with the Creator's plan.
Weekly homily, delivered in Rome,
January 17, 2001.
Patriarch Ignatius IV of Antioch (1921 - )
His Beatitude Patriarch IGNATIUS IV was born Ignatios Hazem on April 17, 1921, in the town of
Mhardey, Syria. After university studies in Beirut, Lebanon and a decade of service to the Church,
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he was ordained a deacon after which he obtained a doctorate in theology from St. Sergius
Theological Academy in Paris. In 1961 he was elected bishop and appointed to a monastery near
Tripoli, Lebanon. In 1979, he was elected Patriarch of Antioch, and enthroned as the 170th
successor to the Apostle Peter, the first bishop of Antioch. As leader of the Antiochian Orthodox
Church he helped establish the Middle East Council of Churches. A theme of his patriarchate has
been the preservation of the historical faith while discovering in it answers to the problems of
modern life. This has given rise to his wide-ranging and incisive commentary on ecological issues
which he places in the historic Arab Christian understanding of responsibility to “transfigure
creation,” to raise it to its full cosmological potential. As a key to this understanding, he has
emphasized the need to contemplate creation to realize its spiritual meaning.
The universe is not simply a manifestation of the Godhead.... The universe springs from the
hands of the living God, who sees that it is tov, that is, “good and beautiful.” Thus it is willed
by God, it is the joy of his wisdom, and exults in that reverential joyfulness which is described
in the Psalms and in the cosmic passages of the Book of Job....
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The biblical and patristic conception of creation breaks down the cyclical obsession of
the ancient religions. Creation, the perpetual passage from nothing into being through the
magnetic attraction of the infinite, is a movement in which we are given simultaneously time,
space and matter
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Someone who sanctifies himself by practicing the contemplation of nature ceases to make an
object of the universe through greed and blindness. His presence lightens and brings peace. ...
Contemplation of nature transforms nature, not in the direction of Babel, but in the direction of
the New Jerusalem. When an Orthodox hermit, well into the twentieth century, gives vipers
little cups of milk to drink, he knows them in a different way from that of the scientist....
“The Spirituality of the Creation,” lecture to the
Federation of Swiss Protestant Churches, March 11,
1989, Lausanne, Switzerland, reprinted in Sourozh
magazine, Issue Nr. 38, London, UK, November
1989, p. 7
It falls to man to decipher in a creative way the “book of the world,” this immense
logos alogos, or “speechless word,” as Origen defined the world. In Genesis God asks
Adam to “name the animals,” a naming which includes all modes of knowledge and
expression, from contemplation to art and science.
By withdrawing the intellect from the world of violence and mechanical, objectivised
sexuality, asceticism transforms it, by uniting it with the heart, into an “eye of fire” or the
“dwelling place of light.” This light is linked to the secret light in things, “that ineffable and
prodigious fire hidden in the essence of things as in the burning bush,” said St. Maximus.
The Fathers use here an analogy: our physical eyes cannot see the light unless they
open and purify themselves, and then only because they harbor in themselves, as the ancient
Greek physiology believed, a spark of that same light. In the same way, the eye of the heart
sees the secret hiddenness of things, this writing in light, only to the extent that it has purified
itself and filled itself with this spiritual light. ...
This experience, alas, rare in Western Christianity, has nevertheless found sublime
expression in the “Song of the Creatures,” by St. Francis of Assisi, which begins with the
praise of the sun:
466
This experience ought to enable us to include w with Christianity the Hindu and Far Eastern
understanding of the world as theophany, not with a view to some impersonal fusion, as is too
often the case in the ecological movement, but with a view to personal communion. ...
“The Spirituality of the Creation,” Lecture to the
Federation of Swiss Protestant Churches, March 11,
1989, Lausanne, Switzerland, reprinted in Sourozh
magazine, Issue Nr. 38, London, UK, November
1989, p. 7
Transfiguration or disfiguration
We need to recover, with a view to the transfiguration of nature, the three traditional forms of
asceticism: fasting, chastity and vigilance. ...
Fasting, that is to say the voluntary limitation of one’s requirements, makes it possible
for us, at least in part, to free desire, so that it can recover its original character as desire for
God and love of neighbor. ... The spirit of fasting, which today should be diffused throughout
the whole of our civilization, involves a change from an exploitive relationship with nature to
one which is modeled on the Eucharist.
467
Furthermore, tradition tells us that fasting is inseparable from mercy and sharing. The
Fathers have underlined that material elements pass continuously from one body to another,
and that the universe is therefore in fact but a single body.... That is why, for them, the earth
belongs only to God; men are only its managers, and the products of man’s activity, in a
prolongation of eucharistic sharing and in a spirit of fasting, should be the subject of a
beneficent circulation, a just distribution. A cosmology of transfiguration is t thus inseparable
from a sociology of communion, which has continuously to be invented anew in the concrete
circumstances of history.
It is in a spirit of fasting and with a profound sympathy for nature and our brethren...
that Christians have to face up to the absurdity of the present situation, in which publicity
multiplies the false needs of some while others are dying of hunger, and where chemistry and
biology overstimulate the earth in one place while elsewhere the desert expands....
Christianity... has thrust man forward, for the final stage of cosmogenesis, with a mission to
explore and assume the universe, from the atom to the galaxy....
Today the earth no longer encloses man in her stifling and fecund maternity. Quite near
here, the forest is dying of acid rain, the forest, this primordial temple... Why and how have we
come to this? Christianity stopped treating the world as a god, but this was in order to make it
holy. Has Christianity betrayed its cosmic mission, has it given up, resigned, withdrawn?
The separation of Western and Eastern Christianity in the second half of the Middle
Ages profoundly modified the spiritual context in which technology developed. The Age of
Antioch, above all in its Syrian dimension, has elaborated a truly cosmic view of love, an
immense compassion, for example, for the animal world. St. Isaac the Syrian asked, “What is a
compassionate heart? It is a heart which burns for the whole of creation,... for the birds, for the
beasts of the earth..., for every creature.... So strong, so violent is this compassion that his heart
breaks when it sees the misfortune and the suffering of the least creature. This is why it prays
even for the snakes, in the immense, immeasurable compassion which arises in the heart,
which is in the image of God.”
“The Responsibility of Christians,” lecture to the
Federation of Swiss Protestant Churches, March 12,
1989, Lucerne, Switzerland, reprinted in Sourozh
magazine, Issue Nr. 38, London, UK, November
1989, p. 10-11.
468
Creative exorcism through asceticism
To asceticism there needs to be joined what I shall call “creative exorcism”: i.e., we need
to exorcize the undeclared but invasive totalitarianism of a limitless technology. But this
in no way means trying to discredit or limit scientific research. On the contrary, it means
fighting at the heart of this research to make it more open and attentive to reality. It means
to fight, in the name of the truth of all beings and things, against the Promethean
temptation to construct the world as a closed totality of which man would be the little god.
What should animate science is both a desire to reduce by rational means the
unknown and a respect for the mystery of things when contemplated vertically... Ilya
Prigogine writes: “Scientific knowledge can reveal itself today as a poetic listening to
nature.” Reason as instrument has “disenchanted” the world, ... and reason as
contemplation has now to teach us to admire and to respect it.
In this way exorcism becomes creative. It opens up another way of looking at
reality through even the most careful research: the look which re-enchants! And at the
same time, in relation to technology, it turns us into adults by making us able to
distinguish between the possible and the desirable. “All is permitted,” said St. Paul, “but
all is not expedient.” If not all, at least very much is technically possible, we might
paraphrase, but not everything is expedient.
Let us summon humanity to a common task, drawn by our love of man as the image of God
and of the universe, and as the creation of God.
It will be a common task if all Christians take part in it and share their experience and
their hope, those of the West and those of the East, those of the North and those of the South.
[This is] an immense and concrete task of a renewed ecumenism, in which... I hope the World
Council of Churches and the Roman Catholic Church will collaborate.
Christians will act by giving a cosmic dimension to their prayer, to their hearing of the
Word, to their sacramental life, and to their asceticism. Christians will act by example, by
showing the cultural, social and ecological richness of traditional ascetic values when they open
out onto history: here I am thinking above all, I repeat, of the voluntary limitation of our needs
and of a profound sympathy for all life. ...
This work of common vivification will provoke a spiritual revolution, the repercussions
of which will gradually be inscribed in social and economic life.
One thing we no longer need to be told is that we are in the throes of a crisis of the most
appalling dimensions. We tend to call this crisis the ecological crisis, and this is a fair
description in so far as its effects are manifest above all in the ecological sphere. For here
the message is quite clear: our entire way of life is humanly and environmentally suicidal,
and unless we change it radically, there is no way in which we can avoid cosmic
catastrophe. Without such change the whole adventure of civilization will come to an end
during the lifetime of many now living.
Human Image, World Image: The Death and
Resurrection of Sacred Cosmology, Introduction, pg.
1.
A crisis of vision
The crisis itself is not first of all an ecological crisis.... It is first of all a crisis concerning the
way we think. We are treating our planet in an inhumane, god-forsaken manner because we see
things in an inhuman, god-forsaken way. And we see things in this way because that basically
is how we see ourselves....
470
This means that before we can effectively deal with the ecological problem we have to
change our world image, and this in turn means that we have to change our self-image. Unless
our own evaluation of ourselves, and of what constitutes the true nature of our being, changes,
the way we treat the world about us will not change either. And unless that happens,
conservation theory and practice, however well-intentioned and necessary, will not touch the
heart of the problem. They will at best represent an effort to deal with what in the end are
symptoms, not causes.
Human Image, World Image: The Death and
Resurrection of Sacred Cosmology, 1990,
Introduction, pg. 2.
Having in our own minds desanctified ourselves, we have desanctified nature, too, in our own
minds; we have removed it from the suzerainty of the divine and have assumed that we are its
overlords, and that it is our thrall, subject to our will.
Human Image, World Image: The Death and
Resurrection of Sacred Cosmology, Introduction,
pg. 3
A false self-view breeds a false world-view, and together they breed our nemesis and the
nemesis of the world. Once we repossess a sense of our own holiness, we will recover the sense
of the holiness of the world about us as well, and we will then act towards the world about us
471
with the awe and humility that we should possess when we enter a sacred shrine, a temple of
love and beauty in which we worship and adore. Only in this way will we once again become
aware that our destiny and the destiny of nature are one and the same. Only in this way can we
restore a cosmic harmony.
Human Image, World Image: The Death
and Resurrection of Sacred Cosmology,
Introduction, pg. 9
Our failure to perceive the divine in man has gone hand in hand with a failure to
perceive the divine in nature. As we have dehumanized man, so we have
desanctified nature.
The Eclipse of Man and Nature, p. 33
Perhaps never before have we been faced so urgently with the question of the significance of
creation and man’s role in creation; with the need to justify the world in God, to see how the
creaturely world is united with the divine world, religion with aesthetics. We have to attempt
the reconquest of the idea that God is not only the Creator of the world, but that He is also in
some sense what He creates. A true doctrine of creation must start with the affirmation that any
conception of the creature as a second being existing apart from God is a false doctrine.
472
Creatures not only take their being from God, but are kept in being by remaining in
God. They are in God’s Being: “In Him we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:28).
To create does not mean giving independent existence to another – does not mean that the
creature can be or subsist on its own.... Creation takes place within God, not outside of God....
The forms of life within which man lived in society [during the early centuries
of Christianity] were not in themselves evil – in fact they were often imbued
with divine beauty and wisdom, in such a way that merely living within them
related him directly to God. The evil that people manifested within these forms
was largely the consequence of their own individual choices, independently of
the forms, and it did not contaminate the forms themselves.
Our situation today is totally different from this. We still have to contend with
the forms of evil endemic to the fallen human state. But... we are now forced to
live in society... according to forms that not only do not correspond in any way
to the reality of the divine, human or natural order, but are themselves actively
and positively evil to a degree that goes beyond the evil... that is a consequence
of the Fall. For these forms in themselves represent and demand a denial of
God’s will. It is as if there has been a kind of second fall, one latent of course in
the possibility of the original fall....
As a result, whether we like it or not, we now cannot live in society in such a
way that we do not connive in and contribute to this evil.... Nor is there any
ascesis through which we can allay or transcend this evil, for not only is it now
beyond all human control and comprehension, but such ascesis cannot exempt
us from involvement or prevent us from contributing to activities and practices
that ensure its proliferation.
As a result of this perversion of human thought represented by modern science and its
technological ramifications the nature and purpose of human and other created things
themselves have been perverted and abused. This perversion and abuse have now permeated
into the forms that dominate our society to such a degree that we can no longer prevent them
from having the consequences that they in fact are already having. One might say that not even
God can prevent the development of this evil and its consequences.
473
God is just, and when He makes a covenant with man, He does not break it. His
covenant with man is that what man does must not be imposed on him by God, but must result
from the exercise of his own free will. A rider to this, though, is that man himself must accept
the consequences of what he chooses to do and does. This is part of God’s justice. He will not
violate man’s freedom by intervening to prevent the consequences of man’s free choice, even if
these consequences are disastrous for man.
“The Desert Fathers and Ourselves,”
Divine Ascent, Vol. 1:1, 1997, pg. 26-27
A “Second Fall”
Each individual is now enmeshed not only in the consequences of Adam’s fall,
but also in those of the second fall, and cannot get out of this enmeshment unless
he totally divorces himself from every form of life in society that is permeated
with this evil.
The conception of creation ex nihilo lies at the root of our contemporary ecological crisis. It can
be equally affirmed that as this conception was formulated and promoted by theologians whose
claim to be Christian theologians has not been disputed by the Church, the Christian Church, at
474
least as represented by those responsible for its major dogmatic, canonical and conciliar
orientations and decisions, bears a direct and incontrovertible responsibility for the desecration
of the cosmos. It is absolutely no accident that a purely materialistic view of nature first arose not
within the Hindu, Buddhist, or Islamic world, but within the Christian world. It is absolutely no
accident either that the official responses of the Church, whether of the Christian East or
Christian West, to what we call the ecological crisis have been lamentable: the “official”
theology of the Church being so hamstrung by precisely those conceptions that have directly
promoted this crisis, it is hardly surprising that the pronouncements are as vapid as they are
ineffectual.
The fact that God is present in all things simply by virtue of their being created, and hence that no
special sacramental activity is needed in order to imbue them with divine grace, does not mean
that man has no priestly role as mediator between God and creation. That God is present within all
created things, and that all created things are therefore intrinsically holy, and should be treated as
such, does not mean that this divine presence is always actualized in all things, or “in actu”; it can
equally be latent in all things or in potentia. Thus there is a need of sacramental activity in order to
bring His divine presence, whether in man or in other created things, from a latent to an actualized
state.
475
It is precisely in relationship to this sacramental activity that man possesses a mediating
role. Yet... we must not forget that if man possesses a mediating role between God and creation,
creation equally possesses a mediating role between God and man; for it is by means of the
created elements of wine and bread that man communes with God in the Eucharist. From this
point of view, we can say that if the actualization of the image of God depends upon man, the
actualization of the image of God in man depends upon creation; and that if man is the bond
between God and creation, creation is equally the bond between God and man.
476
The concept of creation ex nihilo: A root of our ecological crisis
All that is in the natural world, then, from its minutest particle to the
constellations, the whole and each particular of the animal, vegetable
and mineral kingdoms, is nothing but a kind of representational
theatre of the spiritual world, where each thing exists in is true beauty
and reality. Each natural form is the center of an influx coming from
its divine archetype or theophanic Divine Name. Thus each natural
form is the image – the icon or the epiphany – of its archetype, and by
virtue of being such an icon each possesses an affinity with its
archetype, it corresponds to it, symbolizes with it.
477
478
Metropolitan of Delhi in the Indian Orthodox Church and a former president of the World Council
of Churches (WCC), Paulos Mar Gregorios chaired the 1979 World Council of Churches
Conference on “Faith, Science and the Future” at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
in Boston. He is known for his lively translations of the Bible into English, but particularly for his
emphasis on the seriousness of environmental problems and the responsibility of the Church to
address this dimension of religious and social insensitivity through a return to the traditional
Christian understanding of creation. In the early 1970s he was one of the first modern Christians
leaders to call for a Christian theological response to ecological problems.
Every crisis is a judgement, a call to see where things have gone wrong
and to seek to set matters right, both within our consciousness and in
society. The environmental crisis, the economic crisis, the crisis of
justice, the crisis of faith, the employment crisis, the monetary crisis, the
crisis of militarism — all these are symptoms not only that humanity has
to yet become what it has to be, but also that we are on the wrong track.
The chariot of human development has gained momentum but seems to be running amok
without a charioteer. We know that consumerism is bad, but what can we do except go on
consuming more and more? We know that the gap between the rich and the poor is widening,
but what can we do except live with our guilt and lend an occasional hand to the poor?
The affairs of the world are largely in the hands of people who are expert at making
money, waging war, and playing politics. Our age is characterized by the absence of true
charisma among the leadership of the nations and churches of the world.... We know that our
vision of reality is defective because of too much reliance on science and technology, but what
alternatives can we develop?
479
The concept of “nature” is totally alien to the Hebrew tradition. Those who have too easily
credited Christianity the Old Testament doctrine of creation with making it possible for western
civilization to know and control nature should note that the Hebrew had no notion of something
“out there” which they were to set about “desacralizing” and then dominating.
The Human Presence: An Orthodox View of
Nature, The Christian Literature Society, Madras,
India, 1978, p. 19
[No biblical rationale can] justify the mindless affluence of consumer society. To impose
austerity on a society may be unwise, but it is even more unwise to impose affluence on a nation
through hidden persuasion, and to make some people more affluent than others. In taking what is
given by “nature,” we should be careful to give back to “nature” what it needs to maintain its
integrity and to supply the needs of the future.
“New Testament Foundations for Understanding
the Creation,” Au Sable Forum paper, Mancelona,
Michigan, 1985
480
Why creation is incomprehensible
Creation is not fully comprehensible in as much as we are unable to stand outside that creation
to gain perspective of the creation as a whole.... Even if we had a vantage point from which we
could see the diastemic creation as a whole, since the creation is a contingent reality dependent
upon the Creator, it cannot be comprehended in a clear and distinct object in itself. Any
understanding we can thus have of the relation between Creation and Creator has to be
necessarily indistinct.
The biblical approach to creation does not pit humans against creation, but
acknowledges that we too are creatures. The language of the Bible makes no
provision for the modern concept of the environment or of man as separated
from the rest of creation. “Nature,” in the sense of non-human self-existent
reality does not occur in the Old Testament; it is a concept alien to the biblical
world.
481
Patriarch Bartholomew (1940 - )
Patriarch Bartholomew was born February 29, 1940, in the village of Aghioi Theodoroi on the
Aegean island of Imvros (Turkey), to Christos and Meropi Archontonis who christened him
Demetrios. He entered religious studies, was ordained and eventually became a bishop and then
metropolitan. As Metropolitan Bartholomew he attended the Seventh Assembly of the World
Council of Churches (WCC) in Australia in 1991 where he assumed a leading role in framing
Orthodox objections that the WCC was departing from essential Christian beliefs. Later that same
year, after the death of +Patriarch Dimitrios, he was elected Archbishop of Constantinople and
New Rome, the title which attends his position as Ecumenical Patriarch. As patriarch his emphasis
has been the great need for spiritual leaders to engage in the issues of the world. He has especially
prioritized theological reasons for environmental care and has convened conferences, addressed the
religious importance of environmental care, and bluntly declared that pollution of the air, land and
water involves sin. He has devoted so much attention to the environment that the media have often
called him the "Green Patriarch." As the leader of the Eastern Orthodox Church, Patriarch
Bartholomew is the 270th successor to the Apostle Andrew and spiritual leader of 300 million
Orthodox Christians worldwide.
The entire universe participates in a celebration of life, which St. Maximos the Confessor
described as a “cosmic liturgy.” We see this cosmic liturgy in the symbiosis of life’s rich
biological complexities. These complex relationships draw attention to themselves in
humanity’s self-conscious awareness of the cosmos. As human beings, created “in the image
and likeness of God” (Genesis 1:26), we are called to recognize this interdependence between
our environment and ourselves.
The Ecumenical Throne of Orthodoxy, ... [has] followed with great interest and
sincere concern, the efforts to curb the destructive effects that human beings
have wrought upon the natural world. We view with alarm the dangerous
consequences of humanity’s disregard for the survival of God’s creation. ...
Orthodox liturgy and life hold tangible answers to the ultimate questions
concerning salvation from corruptibility and death.... And our sin toward the
world, or the spiritual root of all our
482
pollution, lies in our refusal to view life and the world as a sacrament of
thanksgiving, and as a gift of constant communion with God on a global scale.
Our first task is to raise the consciousness of adults who most use the resources
and gifts of the planet. Ultimately, it is for our children that we must perceive
our every action in the world as having a direct effect upon the future of the
environment. At the heart of the relationship between man and environment is
the relationship between human beings. As individuals, we live not only in
vertical relationships to God, and horizontal relationships to one another, but
also in a complex web of relationships that extend throughout our lives, our
cultures and the material world. Human beings and the environment form a
seamless garment of existence; a complex fabric that we believe is fashioned by
God.
483
Priests of creation
In the bread and wine of the Eucharist, as priests standing before the altar of the world, we offer
the creation back to the Creator in relationship to Him and to each other. Indeed, in our
liturgical life, we realize by anticipation, the final state of the cosmos in the Kingdom of
Heaven. We celebrate the beauty of creation, and consecrate the life of the world, returning it to
God with thanks. We share the world in joy as a living mystical communion with the Divine.
Thus it is that we offer the fullness of creation at the Eucharist, and receive it back as a
blessing, as the living presence of God.
Remarks at the Symposium on Religion, Science
and the Environment, Santa Barbara, California,
November 8, 1997
We invite Orthodox Christians to engage in genuine repentance for the way in which we have
behaved toward God, each other and the world. We gently remind Orthodox Christians that the
judgement of the world is in the hands of God. We are called to be stewards and reflections of
God’s love by example. Therefore we proclaim the sanctity of life, the entire creation being
God’s and reflecting His continuing will that life abound. We must love life so that others may
see and know that it belongs to God....
We lovingly suggest to all people... that they help one another to understand the myriad
ways in which we are related to the earth and to one another. In this way, we may begin to
repair the dislocation many people experience in relation to creation.
484
Asceticism as a key to environmental healing
There is also an ascetic element in our responsibility toward God’s creation. This asceticism
requires from us a voluntary restraint, in order for us to live in harmony with our environment.
Asceticism offers practical examples of conservation. Our abundance of resources will be
extended to include an abundance of equitable concern for others.
We must challenge ourselves to see our personal, spiritual attitudes in continuity with
public policy.... We do this out of a personal love for the natural world around us. We are
called to work in humble harmony with creation and not in arrogant supremacy against it.
Asceticism provides an example whereby we may live simply.
Asceticism is not a flight from society and the world, but a communal attitude of mind
and way of life that leads to the respectful use, and not the abuse of material goods.
Excessive consumption may be understood to issue from a world view of estrangement
from self, from land, from life, and from God. Consuming the fruits of the earth unrestrained,
we become consumed ourselves by avarice and greed. Excessive consumption leaves us
emptied, out-of-touch with our deepest self. Asceticism is a corrective practice, a vision of
repentance. Such a vision will lead us from repentance to return, the return to a world in which
we give as well as take from creation.
We are of the deeply held belief that many human beings have
come to behave as materialistic tyrants. Those that tyrannize the
earth are themselves, sadly, tyrannized.
We have been called by God to “be fruitful, increase and have
dominion in the earth” (Genesis 1:28). Dominion is a type of the
Kingdom of Heaven. Thus it is that St. Basil describes the
creation of man in paradise on the sixth day, as being the arrival
of a king in his palace. Dominion is not domination; it is an
eschatological sign of the perfect Kingdom of God, where
corruption and death are no more.
485
A call to halt global climate change
We call on the world’s leaders to take action to halt the destructive changes to the global
climate that are being caused by human activity.
And we call on all of you here today to join us in this cause. This can be our
important contribution to the great debate about climate change. We must be
spokespersons for an ecological ethic that reminds the world that it is not ours to use for
our own convenience. It is God’s gift of love to us and we must return his love by
protecting it and all that is in it. ...
The Lord suffuses all of creation with His Divine presence in one continuous legato
from the substance of the atoms to the Mind of God. Let us renew the harmony
between heaven and earth, and transfigure every detail, every particle of life. Let us
love one another, and lovingly learn from one another, for the edification of God’s
people, for the sanctification of God’s creation, and for the glorification of God’s
most holy Name.
486
Love God, love His creation
It is observed that almost all sensitive souls love and respect God the Creator and Father, but at
the same time they admire and respect all that he has formed. While it is true that they use
natural goods for their lives, they do not destroy nature without cause or for their own benefit.
They enjoy these goods only with much care, only what is needed, so that the earth is
maintained in a state of constant production, and that life will continue normally.
487
Care for the environment is care for justice
We have come to believe that the understanding of the [environmental] problem and the
knowledge of the governmental and individual measures taken contribute greatly to the
bettering of the situation. On the one hand, they exert effective communal pressure against
those responsible for environmental aggravation by looking to abolish it; while on the
other hand, regardless of how small the contribution of each person to the formation of the
general condition, the behavior of the large masses may seriously worsen or better the
situation. On account of this, we do not consider the attempt to enlighten and sensitize the
common opinion for the care of the natural environment to be in vain, but rather beneficial.
The recent floods in Europe, India and Russia... bear witness to the disturbance of
climatic conditions caused by the overheating of the atmosphere of our planet. These
disasters have persuaded even the most incredulous persons that the problem is real, that
the cost of repairing its damages is comparable to the cost of preventing them, and that
there is no margin left for continuing to remain quiet.
The protection of our fellow human
beings from destructive floods, storms, tempests... is our duty; and... failure to take
appropriate measures for avoiding such phenomena is chargeable to us as... a crime of
negligence....
The greatest part of ...this crisis is due to
excessive waste of energy by isolated individuals. Thus, the restriction of wasteful
consumption will blunt the acuteness of the problem, while the increase in the use of
renewable sources of energy will contribute to its alleviation. However insignificant the
contribution of every individual to the averting of new catastrophic natural phenomena
may appear, we are all obliged to do whatever we can, because only then we shall be
able to pray to God boldly to supply what is lacking in our own efforts and possibilities.
Hence, we paternally urge everyone to
come to the realization of their personal responsibility and do whatever they can to avert
the increase of the temperature on the earth and the aggravation of environmental
conditions. We pray fervently to God that He should look favorably on the common
effort of all and prevent other threatening disasters on our natural environment, within
which He ordered us to live and to fight the good fight in order that we enter the
Heavenly Kingdom.
488
489
490
Stranger
God cares for the creatures the same as for the cosmos
While observing how that gaze [of God] never leaves anyone, one may see that it
takes such diligent care of each one as though it cared only for him, and for no other,
and this to such a degree that one on whom it rests cannot even conceive that it takes
care of any other. One will also see that it takes the same most diligent care of the
least of creatures as of the greatest, and of the whole universe.
492
The Vision of God, quoted in The Fire and the Cloud: An Anthology of Catholic Spirituality, David
Fleming (ed.), Paulist Press, New York, 1978.
493