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Book Review - God, Creation, and Climate Change: A Catholic Response To The Environmental Crisis

July-August 2011

REVIEWED BY DANIEL DILEO

God, Creation, and Climate Change: A Catholic Response To The Environmental Crisis
By Richard W. Miller
Orbis Books, 2010, 160 pages, $20

Catholic health care increasingly understands environmental sustainability as a core value. For example, Catholic Healthcare West notes on its website, "As health care providers, we also recognize the interdependence between human health and our environment and believe in the caring stewardship of a renewable Earth for the enhancement of all life."

In particular, both the health care and faith communities are addressing climate change. The American Medical Association and the American Public Health Association are concerned with its health-related effects, while the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops points out in Global Climate Change 2011 that "Pope Benedict XVI has continually emphasized the moral dimensions of climate change and our responsibility to care for creation."

As climate change intersects health care and Catholic mission, God, Creation, and Climate Change: A Catholic Response to the Environmental Crisis by Richard W. Miller, assistant professor of systematic theology at Creighton University, Omaha, Neb., can help Catholic health care professionals obtain an advanced understanding of how the church is responding to climate change and how the Catholic health care ministry might continue to do so.

The book is a collection of essays by six prominent Catholic theologians based on lectures they presented Sept. 26, 2009, at the seventh annual Church in the 21st Century Lecture Series in Kansas City, Mo. The book is accessible to a general audience, but it is particularly targeted at readers who possess a basic understanding of theology and how the Catholic Church has already responded to climate change. For them, the distinct yet complementary essays offer an advanced theological reflection on how people of faith and goodwill might further address the issue within the context of Judeo-Christian faith.

For Catholic health care professionals, four of the essays are particularly germane.

Miller's essay, "Global Climate Disruption and Social Justice: The State of the Problem," offers a good explanation of the causes and consequences of climate change. It documents both "the dangerous gap between scientific knowledge and public awareness" and how climate change is understood by people of faith and goodwill as a social justice issue. While Miller spends little time addressing the church's particular response to climate change, his thorough research provides a solid scientific and socio-economic foundation upon which the subsequent five essays build.

"Environmental Degradation, Social Sin, and the Common Good," by Jame Schaefer, Ph.D. associate professor of theology at Marquette University in Milwaukee, argues that climate change necessitates a new conceptualization of sin because the issue transcends time, space and species. Schaefer advances the thought-provoking idea of "planetary sin," described as "an all-encompassing category of human sinfulness and underscores our culpability for actions or inactions — commission and omission — that adversely affect more than human constituents of Earth." Such a concept of sin could be of particular interest to mission leaders and sponsorship personnel in helping Catholic health care organizations more fully reflect on the consequences of actions and choices.

"Theology and Sustainable Economics," by Daniel K. Finn, professor of theology and Clemons professor of economics and the liberal arts at St. John's University in Collegeville, Minn., considers how market-based economics facilitate environmental degradation through their inability to account for the negative ecological impacts of transactions. Finn argues that Christian theology — particularly the teachings that creation is both good and a gift — can serve as market correctives to help Christian individuals and ministries such as Catholic health care make more sustainable economic choices. CFOs and other Catholic health care leaders who deal with finances and purchasing may find this essay especially insightful.

Finally, "Another Call to Action: Catholics and the Challenge of Climate Change" by David J. O'Brien, university professor of faith and culture at Dayton University in Ohio, considers how the church's historical contributions to social movements can help shape our current and future responses to climate change. O'Brien's essay can help the Catholic health care ministry think about how best to advocate for practices and policies that address climate change according to authentic church teaching.

The book's remaining essays address how the books of Wisdom and Job express the place and role of humanity vis-à-vis the rest of creation, and the propensity to over-spiritualize Jesus' resurrection to the detriment of the natural world. Although both offer profound theoretical consideration of climate change and Judeo-Christian theology, they are of less immediate practical use to the Catholic health care ministry. The book concludes with an authors' panel discussion that is theologically engaging but less operationally useful to the Catholic health care ministry.

Additional elements of Christian theology beyond those considered in God, Creation, and Climate Change could contribute to an even fuller discussion of climate change in Catholic health care. These could include: Christian prudence and decision-making; temperance and simplicity; Christian notions of suffering and sacrifice vis-à-vis the common good. Nevertheless, this book is a valuable and highly recommended resource for leadership formation programs and mission teams within Catholic health care who seek a deep understanding of climate change within the Judeo-Christian faith.

DANIEL DiLEO is mission intern at the Catholic Health Association, St. Louis.

 

Copyright © 2011 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States
For reprint permission, contact Betty Crosby or call (314) 253-3477.

Book Review - God, Creation, and Climate Change

Copyright © 2011 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States

For reprint permission, contact Betty Crosby or call (314) 253-3490.