Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Earth Day 2020: Ecological Trusteeship in the Psalms and Baptism


Earth Day 2020: 

Ecological Trusteeship in the Psalms and Baptism


An excerpt from

Analysis, Quantitative Methods, and Ecclesial Development.” Dissertation. San Francisco Theological Seminary/Graduate School of Theology at the University of Redlands, 2020.



The fiduciary principle (derived from a harmonization of Gen. 1.28 and 2.15) directs an agent of the state to “preserve and enhance the assets of [a] trust”—in this case, the natural environment (for humanity specifically, its resource base) as God’s Creation—"keeping always in mind the good of the beneficiaries” (Brown 1994, 71). Beneficiaries include future generations of all species. 
“The general duties of trustees are to act out of loyalty in the best interests of the beneficiary, not those of the trustee…to make the trust property productive” (ibid.). The fiduciary principle recognizes the “direct duty” of the trustee to “serve and enhance the well-being of all” not limited to the current generation.
            Additionally, the fiduciary principle for trustees requires the public governor or administrator of the natural estate to be impartial and deliberative, to respect human rights and be accountable to those rights, and to apply the Golden Rule for structuring its obligations (Brown 1994, 73-4). God entrusts humanity to act as God’s representative in administering our natural estate on behalf of all conceivable generations--the perpetuity condition—treating all beneficiaries as we ourselves would want to be treated.
            The fiduciary principle of trusteeship imposes two duties on each generation. One is the duty of “conserving options so that future generations can survive and pursue their own visions of the good life [sustainability principle]…so that we leave our descendants as many choices with respect to resources [and opportunities, ecosystem richness, and beauty] as we have had…The second duty is the conservation of quality, an obligation we discharge by conserving natural resources and investing in substitutes [like renewable sources so that they neither rise in price nor become depleted] (Brown 1994, 74-5).
              We may recognize the principle of trusteeship in other Near Eastern monotheistic religions. Rabbi David Gordis (2001, 1369) derives the principle of human trusteeship for the natural world from Torah without (as I have done) an excursion into the New Testament. Additionally, the Koran (II:29-30) links Creation with human trusteeship of the earth:

29. He made for you all that lies within the earth, then turning to the firmament He proportioned several skies: He has knowledge of everything.
30. Remember, when your Lord said to the angels: "I have to place a trustee on the earth" (Al-Qur'an 2001).


           As in Genesis 1 and 2, God’s creating activity is linked by the Koran with the need for designating and deriving a trustee in the Creation. In all three religions, humanity is designated the trustee by decree founded in the Creation account itself.
Human trusteeship of God’s created natural estate implies a respect for the beneficiary: the people of God and the Lord Jesus Christ as well as other elements lifted up by Scripture. Jesus instructed, “Let the children come to me.” By our appreciation of this message, we understand that Jesus has an interest in future generations and their opportunities to thrive and live meaningful lives within the renewing covenant of creation. Moreover, Psalm 104 (cf. Deut. 5. 14; Prov. 12.10a) incorporates other species into God’s provident care and commonwealth:

  Psalm 104: 1Bless the LORD, O my soul.
  O LORD my God, you are very great.
  You are clothed with honor and majesty…
    10You make springs gush forth in the valleys;
  they flow between the hills,
  11giving drink to every wild animal;
  the wild asses quench their thirst.
  12By the streams the birds of the air have their habitation;
  they sing among the branches.
  13From your lofty abode you water the mountains;
  the earth is satisfied with the fruit of your work.
  14 You cause the grass to grow for the cattle,
  and plants for people to use,
  to bring forth food from the earth,
  15and wine to gladden the human heart,
  oil to make the face shine,
  and bread to strengthen the human heart.
  16The trees of the LORD are watered abundantly,
  the cedars of Lebanon that he planted.
  17In them the birds build their nests;
  the stork has its home in the fir trees.
  18The high mountains are for the wild goats;
  the rocks are a refuge for the coneys….
    27These all look to you
  to give them their food in due season;
  28when you give to them, they gather it up;
  when you open your hand, they are filled with good things.

Psalm 104 envisions the intentional and interdependent ecosystem—with the non-human species participants in the gracious provision of nature. Psalm 148 incorporates non-human species into the worshiping community, recognizing their intrinsic—non-instrumental--value. Yet humanity has likely caused a massed extinction event of wildlife since 1970 as 60% of fauna, fish, reptile, and bird species have been entirely extinguished. Moreover, human idolatry—greed and failure of trusteeship—has disrupted authentic and covenanted worship of God by the full community of Creation detailed in Psalm 148:
  Psalm 148:1 Praise the LORD!
  Praise the LORD from the heavens;
  praise him in the heights!
  2Praise him, all his angels;
  praise him, all his host!
  3Praise him, sun and moon;
  praise him, all you shining stars!
  4Praise him, you highest heavens,
  and you waters above the heavens!
  5Let them praise the name of the LORD,
  for he commanded and they were created.
  6He established them forever and ever;
  he fixed their bounds, which cannot be passed.
  7Praise the LORD from the earth,
  you sea monsters and all deeps,
  8fire and hail, snow and frost,
  stormy wind fulfilling his command!
  9Mountains and all hills,
  fruit trees and all cedars!
  10Wild animals and all cattle,
  creeping things and flying birds!
  11Kings of the earth and all peoples,
  princes and all rulers of the earth!
  12Young men and women alike,
  old and young together!
  13Let them praise the name of the LORD,
  for his name alone is exalted;
  his glory is above earth and heaven.
  14He has raised up a horn for his people,
  praise for all his faithful,
  for the people of Israel who are close to him.
Praise the LORD!
The totality of the created community is tasked by these two Psalms with praising God.[3] Trusteeship not only involves managing the resource base, it involves preserving the opportunities for a good life for all created beings, including non-human species. The Biblical texts that we have used to determine a narrative of human “dominion” also tell us that animals were also drawn from the soil and filled with the breath of life in common with humanity.[4] Ensouled flesh, they are companions to humanity in the atmospheric processes and similarly endowed with usufruct rights to the garden. Animals are existentially beloved of God and integral to God’s proper worship as citizens of God’s ecosystem and natural commonwealth. To the extent humanity has failed its trusteeship of the natural, created estate, it disrupts the intrinsic value of worship for and by those species gone extinct or are under environmental stress. Humanity brings about a vitiated and debased worship of the Creator when it reduces the biodiversity and integrity of ecosystems for its own self-centered needs. Such self-centeredness is humanity’s idolatrous, contravention of the call to trusteeship.

Baptismal Praxis of Ecological Trusteeship
The awareness of atmospheric trusteeship may be promoted by ritual or in a prayerful attitude of the sacred. Dahill (2015) proposes moving church rituals and sacraments outdoors from the confines of the built sanctuary into the cathedral of the sky.
Human alienation from nature may be countered by a Christian spirituality of biocentric re-immersion into reality, cultivating loyalty to the genius of place and planet. “Rewilding” is a Christian spiritual practice for the Anthropocene. Perceiving the disconnection of contemporary human life from its ecological foundation reveals the link between spiritless consumerism and hasty, combustion-fueled materialism on the horizontal plane. Human obsession with the horizontal plane of the ephemeral obstructs the awareness of eternity which integrates verticality and horizontality in the living rhythms and harmonious inclinations of the animated world inside well-ordered nature. Perpendicularity recognizes the Sky’s punctuated sustenance of nature in rain, air, storm, the intimacy of plant and animal respiration—and our own--inside landscaped moieties of human artifice and wild naturalness. As a corrective of human alienation from nature, Dahill (2005) proposes the liturgical renewal of and venue shift for baptism:
Our bodies have formed themselves in delicate reciprocity with the manifold textures, sounds, and shapes of an animate earth—our eyes have evolved in subtle interaction with other eyes, as our ears are attuned by their very structure to the howling of wolves and the honking of geese. To shut ourselves off from these other voices, to continue by our lifestyles to condemn these other sensibilities to the oblivion of extinction, is to rob our own senses of their integrity, and to rob our minds of their coherence…Out in contact and conviviality [with open-aired nature is] an astonishing fullness of the baptismal life, a much wilder immersion.
Christian practice has moved from the early understanding which involved relishing, drowning in, and enjoying the water of life. The baptismal river became a pool; [then a] cistern; [then] a barrel; [then] a font; [then] a birdbath; [then a] bowl; [then a] fingerbowl…[losing experience with] the transforming symbolic power of full immersion in baptism, and construction of fonts with the sounds of running water and immersive capacity [now] in indoor rituals more or less fully cut off from the actual biological life of the larger watersheds in which such communities are located.
I want to…restore the practice of Christian baptism into the uncontrolled, dangerous, transforming waters of a community’s watershed . . .[to] shape belief, habitus, worldview…powerfully [by] the form of baptismal experience—shap[ing] in formative ways participants’ spontaneous, untutored articulation of what their baptism means[---A] radical spiritual/ecological immersion into the actual local [open-air] watershed and the largest life of Earth that we need today.
It is after immersion in water that Jesus re-emerges into air to meet the Spirit “coming as a dove” (Mt. 3:16). These processive images through water and air recapitulate the sequence of Gen. 1:1-4, with the immersion of God’s incarnate Son at the historical point of border entry by the people into the promised Land, a people sent within the covenantal dispensation of obedience as agents of conquest in the land suffering the cosmic effects of the fall. Jesus emerges by biological necessity to meet with the sent Spirit in the Sky, for the restoration of the ontology of shalom, beauty, and freedom.
Baptism liturgically incarnates the wild death-in-birth and birth-in-death experience of a liminal, refugee mother in labor suffocating under the threat of social eviction and extinction (cf. Romans 8) and released by joy. Rather than inert backdrops of a solely spiritualized drama, the water (cf. Hab. 2:14) and atmosphere have agency in the transmission of the energies of the Trinity manifested by the voice from heaven, the airborne kinematics of the dove, and the baptismal washing and anointing that returns forth (in an extension of divine missio) a new family into the wider cosmos of land and nature. Just as social outsiders and animals were participants in the messiah’s birthing into the land that was promised, all of intended Creation becomes incorporated into the promised renewal dramatized in baptism, intimate agents in the salvific renewal of Eden on this earth. The cosmos is reaffirmed in both its materiality and infused spiritual essence flowing from both the Godhead (in union) and now the presence of the new family of anointed trustees (in communion). God’s new superintendence of gracious love manifests as maternal and not dominating, ever steadfast in loyalty and care (hesed). The wails of the newly delivered give way at the mother’s joy—her shouting and singing at the astounding punctuation of being and history—to become the beneficiary of a new earth. Christ becomes all-in-all, the Spirit diffuses forth through Creation as the Creator intended, bringing what is elected in the cosmos home in adoption and purification, the glorious summation of physical quickening revealed in ringing eternal praise and shining, theophoric bliss.
For you shall go out in joy,
  and be led back in peace;
the mountains and the hills before you
  shall burst into song,
  and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands
(--Isa. 55:12; cf. Ps. 65:13; Zech. 2:14).


CITATIONS
Ali, Ahmed, trans. 2001. Al-Qur’an (The Koran): A Contemporary Translation. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. 
Brown, Peter G. 1994. Restoring the Public Trust: A Fresh Vision for Progressive Government in America. Boston: Beacon Press. 
Dahill, Lisa E. 2015. “Into Local Waters: Rewilding the Study of Christian Spirituality.” Presidential Address (Fall) to the Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality. Manuscript.
Gordis, David M. 2001. “Ecology.” In Etz Hayim: Torah and Commentary, 1369–72. New York: The Rabbinical Assembly.









[3] Cf. Isa. 43: 19–20b:
19 I am about to do a new thing;
  now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?
  I will make a way in the wilderness
  and rivers in the desert.
  20The wild animals will honor me,
  the jackals and the ostriches;
  for I give water in the wilderness,
  rivers in the desert.
[4] Cf. esp. Eccl. 3.19:
“For the fate of humans and the fate of animals is the same; as one dies, so dies the other.
They all have the same breath (רוּחַ rûaḥ),
and humans have no advantage over the animals; for all is vanity (הֶבֶל hebhel)).”


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