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CES Musings March 2009

ECOLOGY AND RELIGION: CHRISTIANITY

By Herman Greene

When Thomas Berry writes of how society needs to change he writes of the ā€œfour
establishmentsā€: Ā Government, Education, Religion and Business. As we know the Great Work
involves Ā everyone. As Thomas says, it is something everyone is involved in and no one is
exempt Ā from. When we consider the Great Work it is comprehensive, it involves everything Ā and
no one person can be involved in all the areas of the work. Each person must find her or his Ā place
to make a contribution, and it will not only be one place—one will be involved in the Ā Great
Work in one’s personal and family life, in how one engages in business or how one shops, Ā how
one votes, and so forth.

I have always had an extensive involvement in the Christian church, so religion is one
area in which I engage in the Great Work. I do not make exclusivistic claims for Christianity. I
do claim particularity for this tradition and it is this particularity (diversity) through Ā which it
offers its contribution. Here is an article I wrote in 2004 in reflection on the relationship Ā between
the particularity of Christianity and ecology.