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Hardcover The Lost Gospel of the Earth: A Call for Renewing Nature, Spirit and Politics Book

ISBN: 0871568888

ISBN13: 9780871568885

The Lost Gospel of the Earth: A Call for Renewing Nature, Spirit and Politics

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

More timely and necessary than ever in the wake of recent calamities like Hurricane Katrina and the Republican war against the environment, "The Lost Gospel of the Earth" is legendary activist Tom... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Kinship with Nature

This book deserves 5 stars based solely on the importance of the subject. Tom Hayden describes three types of relationship that we as humans can have with Nature: dominion, stewardship, or kinship. He correctly concludes that only reestablishing a kinship relationship with Nature offers humans and Earth's other inhabitants any kind of future. In 1982 Paul Shepard published "Nature and Madness" (also Sierra Club)which also pointed a finger at mainstream religion's role in the enviromental crisis. So Hayden's basic thesis in not entirely new.

Addressing previous criticism on this page

Tom Hayden's work in this text, while not perfect, illustrates some legitimate concerns about religion's role in the environmental crisis. To discredit this work based on his background or denounce the writing as "sophistry" would be a poor evaluation. The work is worth reading, and if necessary, refuting based on the content.

Extraordinary--If You Read One Book This Year, Read This One

This is one of the most remarkable books I have ever read. It addresses a fundamental question now facing humanity: will we continue to delude ourselves that we are lords of the universe, that the Earth is ours to do with as we please, or will we come to understand and acknowledge our kinship with nature and the Earth, and our utter dependence upon them for our survival? There is a great spiritual division in our society today. One man or woman walks through a redwood forest, and sees the hand of God at work; another walks through the same forest and sees only board-feet. Which viewpoint ultimately wins over the hearts, minds, and allegiance of our species will determine whether or not we survive. Hayden realizes that if we come to understand the "immanence of the divine" in all creation, we can shape the future of politics to protect it. This is very heartening; "Lost Gospel" is not another hand-wringing book which offers us no guidance. By the way, the first reader review is a classic illustration of this chasm between viewpoints. How anyone at all familiar with the environmental record of the former Soviet bloc could confuse todays Greens with yesterday's Reds has me scratching both my green cover and my red, curly head! There is no need to look for an ulterior motive or hidden agenda to explain environmentalist passions. The goal is to save the Earth. Environmentalism is not a means to any other end, be it restriction of private property rights or anything else.

The Green Spiritual Manifesto

There has been a backlash against the environmental movement initiated by corporations that do not want to be regulated. By an immense stroke of luck, they have found allies in the Christian Right. Let's face it. The environmentalists are losing. Wilderness is on the verge of becoming a theme park. Because of pollution, the rates of various types of cancer are rising. Too many good people are silent, and those who are speaking out appeal almost exclusively to utilitarian and scientific reasoning. Unfortunately, this does not affect people at their deep emotional core--as religion can do. Hayden argues persuasively for the greening of Christianity, Buddhism and other religions. He cites St. Francis, Hildegard of Bingen, and the vow of the Bodhisattvas to protect all beings. He calls for a new Martin Luther to "nail a Green Spiritual Manifesto on the vaulted doors of the powerful." He says we should appeal to spirituality, because people ARE spiritual beings.

A thoughtful and well-written plea for Mother Earth!

...Well, I read this book and found it very rich ( although not exhaustive ) in its attempt to search out the religious/spiritual sources of our alienation from the earth. Hayden is looking in the right places here; the environmental problem is wholly a spiritual/moral issue. How can we honor the Creator whilst heaping contempt upon Creation? So clear to me; so impossible for others...to see. A great book, Tom!
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