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Following on from our discussion last week on the rise of climate fatalism, we discuss what an authentically Christian response to our environmental crisis would look like. How can we steer a middle path between complacency and despair? Does our different theology of the future change how we act on climate change? And, what can we learn from our evangelical forbears about how to live well in the face of potential climate catastrophe?
Excerpts from CS Lewis's essay Living in an Atomic Age
Christian Aid's climate change projects
A Rocha's Eco Church scheme
The Christian Climate Alliance's principles and values for Christian climate activism
'The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis' - 1967 essay by Lynn White
If you want to go deeper into some of the topics we discuss, find more resources to read, listen to and watch at John's website: http://www.johnwyatt.com
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Following on from our discussion last week on the rise of climate fatalism, we discuss what an authentically Christian response to our environmental crisis would look like. How can we steer a middle path between complacency and despair? Does our different theology of the future change how we act on climate change? And, what can we learn from our evangelical forbears about how to live well in the face of potential climate catastrophe?
Excerpts from CS Lewis's essay Living in an Atomic Age
Christian Aid's climate change projects
A Rocha's Eco Church scheme
The Christian Climate Alliance's principles and values for Christian climate activism
'The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis' - 1967 essay by Lynn White
If you want to go deeper into some of the topics we discuss, find more resources to read, listen to and watch at John's website: http://www.johnwyatt.com
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