Introduction
Thirtyfour years ago Rachel Carson warned us that we were poisoning
not only ourselves but also our whole environment (Silent Spring,
Penguin, London, 1965). The situation has not improved. It is now much
worse. In The Gaia Atlas of Planet Management Norman Myers says
"the data are overwhelmingly clear in their import. Most devastating
are those which show rates of soil erosion, desertification, deforestation,
species loss, pollution ... . Even if some estimates vary ... most of
them are more likely to be under rather than over estimates" (quoted
in Lovett, Life, 49). "What is happening in our times
is not just another historical transition ... . It is a change unparalleled
in the four and a half billion years of earth history" (Berry and
Clarke, 4, Befriending the Earth, Twenty-Third Publications,
Mystic, Connecticut, 1991). We have changed the very structure of our
planet (ibid., 5). I think many people are overwhelmed by the litany
of destruction. Many either cannot grasp the seriousness of the situation
or refuse to. In Japan many people have sold themselves to their company
and are not free to think, let alone act, for themselves.
The
Problem
For the last few months parish council meetings here have centred on
three topics: building, raising money for building and functions (the
first communion party, etc.). And the biggest function in terms of the
number of people who participate in preparation and the personhours
given to preparation is the bazaar. It is bigger than Easter and Christmas
combined. The council does not discuss what the parish can do for the
environment, youth, foreign workers (these three are among Bishop Hamao's
four diocesan priorities), the poor, etc. How could we be oblivious
to this crisis? Maybe it is too much for many to take in, but it was
not always this serious. Why were we not aware and concerned when it
was still a 'small' problem ?
Causes
The
Bible
One of the reasons is our attitude towards our environment, the earth.
American historian Lynn White describes this attitude as one of "arrogance
towards nature" (McDonagh, Sean, The Greening of the Church,
119 Geoffrey Chapman, London, 1990). Some scholars trace this arrogance
to the Bible: So God created humankind in his image ... and God said
to them, "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue
it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the
birds of the air and over every living thing that moves upon the earth"
(Gn 1: 2728). We have an ambivalent attitude towards the Bible.
On the one hand, we believe it is the inspired Word of God. On the other
hand, we do not have a tradition of reading and studying the Bible,
and the reading we do is selective. We know Genesis 2: 1822 (Adam
was created before Eve) but not 1:27 (Adam and Eve were created together).
So Thomas Berry can say that the Bible may be the most dangerous book
in the world (Berry and Clarke, 118). I believe that we give it an unnecessarily
high status. It may be one of the most sublime books in the world, but
it is still no more than the record of where various Jewish and Christian
communities were at particular points in history. The communities existed
before the record of their faith life was put down on paper, and they
continued to exist and grow after the record was finished. Looking to
the past can be a way of avoiding looking at the present. Scholars looking
for something positive in Genesis point out that in Genesis 1:24 (And
God said, "Let the earth bring forth living creatures of every
kind: cattle and creeping things and wild animals of the earth of every
kind"), for example, the earth is a cocreator with a positive
role in creation. But this should be obvious to us. Needing scholars
or the Bible to tell us this is an indication of the degree to which
we are alienated from the earth. While claiming that the Bible is important,
most of us make no effort to study it. Some do not want to know about
biblical criticism (source, form, etc.). As Basil Moore says, "in
no other area of the curriculum world would we tolerate the indifference
to scholarship and research as we do in teaching the Bible" ( Biblical
Studies and Teaching the Bible, pp 29-38 in Readings: Part 1,
URE 512, The University of South Australia, 1994). We prefer new cars
to old. We buy the latest computers. We buy the newest fishing rods.
But when it comes to the Bible, it seems that the older, the better.
Faith vs Beliefs
Perhaps this indicates that our faith is not that deep. Perhaps we are
more insecure than we admit. Roger Haight talks about "beliefs
masquerading as faith" ( Dynamics of Theology, Paulist Press, New
York, 1990, 36). Some of us claim to believe in God, in Jesus, that
the Bible is inspired, etc.; but we also believe that the earth is round,
that Shakespeare wrote Hamlet, that it is going to rain tomorrow. Our
"faith" is mostly intellectual assent to propositions. I believe
the old catechism approach to instruction contributed to this. Many
of us have never actually encountered God. We have never set out on
the kind of journey Abraham made. We have not heard Jesus' call to follow
him. "The error begins with the social tendency of beliefs ...
to take the place of the transcendent object of faith. This dynamism
serves as a buttress against human insecurity, and it reinforces a kind
of natural desire to grasp and control transcendent reality. The result
is that the transcendent object of faith in the same measure ceases
to be transcendent, to break in upon the passive dimension of faith,
and to draw forth ever new commitment to the ever new exigencies of
its cause. But beyond the theological confusion involved, this process
also has disastrous consequences for the life of faith of ordinary people,
especially in a time of radical pluralism when scientific knowledge,
discovery and changing world views have a high profile. Members of such
a community can only be confused and threatened by the growing body
of genuinely new knowledge human beings are generating about themselves
and the world. These external forces drive a wedge between a community
of beliefs taken as knowledge and the competing and seemingly contradictory
knowledge of the rest of the world. The result is that many people leave
the Church, and what is left is a community of closed, eviscerated and
impoverished faith isolated from the world on the basis of archaic beliefs"
(Haight, 3637). We have many pigeon holes in our mind. Hobbies
are in one, work in another; politics in one, faith in another; and
so on. Faith has little connection to this world, to everyday life.
We forget that Judaism and Christianity began when some slaves managed
to escape from their captors. We forget that Palestine in the time of
Jesus was a Roman colony and that Jesus was executed by the Romans.
A few months ago I asked the parish council here to send a letter of
support to the Governor of Okinawa for his stand against the American
military bases. Only two of the 15 councillors present responded, and
both were against the idea. One said we should keep out of politics.
(The other said that some Catholics in France were for the nuclear tests
at Mururoa. And, in the same way, the bases were not completely bad:
that there was something good to be said for them). Our selectivity
in our reading and our reluctance to accept the results of modern biblical
studies mean that we have decided what we want to believe before
we read the Bible. We choose passages that support our chosen way
of life. When did Christianity become divorced from politics, economics,
etc.? Joseph Martos, describing the early Church, writes that "the
general population ... did not always share this interior appreciation
of the liturgy. The wholesale conversion of the Roman Empire in the
fourth century, the baptism of Christians from infancy in the fifth
century, and the mass baptisms of the Germanic peoples beginning in
the sixth century meant that many attended the liturgy because of custom
rather than conviction" (Doors to the Sacred, Triumph, Liguori,
1991, 225). What he says about the liturgy probably applies to the faith
in general. Christianity became the official religion of the Empire
in 324 and "it was sometimes difficult to tell whether those who
wished to join the Church did so out of conviction or convenience. In
the face of growing numbers of conversions, the lengthy catechumenate
was retained but the period of immediate preparation and teaching was
shortened ... " (151152). The Bible itself suffered as a
result of Christianity being proclaimed the official religion. The copyists
of the Byzantine texts seem to have been "more concerned to promote
Constantinian orthodoxy through the text rather than faithfulness to
the texts from which the copy was made" (Moore, Basil, Biblical
Criticism, in Readings Part I, URE 512, The University
of South Australia, 1994, p.162). Theology has lost contact with our
present story of the universe (Berry and Clarke, 28). Whatever prebaptismal
instruction, adult education, homilies, etc. the ordinary Catholic is
exposed to, it obviously is not enabling her or him to grasp and respond
to the present crisis. Nor does it encourage the ordinary Catholic to
reflect on the place of the company in life. The vicedirector
of the Columbans in Japan suggested to me that some, perhaps many, people
come to the Church seeking some kind of solace, that they prefer the
"old" Church of certainty and uniformity. Apparently they
have the impression before they come that this is what the Church will
provide, i.e., this is the image the Church projects. If this is so,
we need to let people know what the Gospel is about when they first
come to the Church.
God
Berry believes that our idea of God is also part of the problem. "The
divine, once perceived as a pervasive divine presence throughout the
phenomenal world, was constellated in the Bible in a transcendent, monotheistic
deity, a creator of the world with a covenant relationship with a special
people ... we appear to give up that primordial, inherent relationship
between the human and the divine within the natural order of things.
To give up that immediacy in favour of a transcendent deity mediated
by a covenant has done something profound to our relationship with the
natural world, even when the natural world is explained as good and
as created by the divine" (114).
The Human
Then there is "the exaltation of the human as a spiritual being
to the exclusion of the spiritual dimension of earthly beings. In Western
Christian thought, the human is so special that the human soul has to
he created directly by the divine in every single case ... there is
a feeling that the human is so special that it does not really belong
to the inherent processes of the natural world. This contributes to
our sense of alienation from the natural world" (Berry and Clarke,
115).
Redemption
Our emphasis on the need for redemption/salvation has also contributed
to our flight from the world. "The believing community put its
emphasis on redemption. We are in the world but not of it ... . The
world, furthermore, is intransigent and irre deemable. We are stuck
with earth for the present, but by being wary of it we can save ourselves
for a better future life" (Farrell, 8). Christianity has indeed
become "the opium of the people".
Prayer
Our prayer also has failed us. People can say their morning and evening
prayers, grace before and after meals, recite the rosary and go to Mass
every day but still not advert to the environmental crisis. Can this
really be prayer? Is it really God we are talking and listening to?
Science
Science also comes in for some of the blame. The discoveries of Francis
Bacon, René Descartes and Isaac Newton undermined "the organic,
holistic, though static and often erroneous, view of the world which
had prevailed in the West for the previous thousand years. For the earth-centred
and static universe they substituted an undoubtedly more scientific
view of nature. However, because it failed to take into account a holistic
view of all the living world, it contributed significantly to the development
of the modern scientific and technological paradigm which regards the
world as complex and intricate, but ultimately a lifeless machine"
(McDonagh, Greening, 109110).
Capitalism
Capitalism has played a large part in the destruction of our earth,
and Christianity has to accept some of the responsibility for its emergence.
"In the 14th and 15th centuries both ecclesial and social institutions
were well and truly perverted into the apparently insatiable pursuit
of wealth". People "were exhorted to work, no longer just
for a living, but for the sake of accumulation ... ". Moral teaching
on killing mutated from the right of the poor person to kill in self
defense into "a right to kill the poor in the interest of preserving
things" (Lovett, Brendan, Life Before Death, 33, Claretian
Publications, Quezon City, 1986). "It is very hard for us to realize
the historical negatives of the system with which we are so involved;
to grasp, for example, the human cost of even the first century of this
system. The population of Mexico was 16,871,408 in 1532: in 1580 it
stood at 1,891,267". "HansGuenther Prien gives the total
population figures for the New World as 100 million in 1492: by 1570
his estimate for the total population was 1012 million survivors".
"This is genocide of unparalleled proportions" (Lovett, Life,
35). If the system had such appalling results in terms of distribution,
why did it begin in the first place? "Wallerstein suggests that
the reason was to ensure precisely such bad distribution. He presents
the following scenario. Economically, feudal Europe was cracking up;
the pressure towards egalitarian distribution was strong; small peasant
farmers were showing great efficiency as producers. Internecine strife
was frequent within the ruling class, and the ideological cement of
Catholicism was internally under strain from egalitarian movements.
The direction of the change desired appalled the upper strata. The effectiveness
of their response to this crisis is shown by Wallerstein in two sets
of figures. Looking at the two hundredyear period between 1450
and 1650, he finds that by the end of this period the basic structures
of our system as a viable social system had been established with a
reasonably high level of continuity between the families who were the
high strata in 1450 and those who occupied this position in 1650. Moving
on to the period 1650 to 1900, he finds that most of the comparisons
with 1450 still hold true. The trend towards egalitarianisation had
been drastically reversed" (Lovett, Life, 36).
Imperialism
As Lovett stays, "it is very hard for us to realize the historical
negatives of the system with which we are so involved". Most of
us would not accept that the purpose of capitalism was to ensure unequal
distribution. Yet the evidence is there. Noam Chomsky documents American
interventions abroad. The number of military interventions alone is
far higher than most people realize. It is hard to choose which examples
to present. From 18491913 U.S. Navy ships entered Haitian waters
24 times to "protect American lives and property" (Chomsky,
Noam, Year 501, Verso, London, 1993, 200). Perry forced Japan
to trade with the West. Marines landed in Hawaii in 1873 and 1893. The
Philippines was annexed. Troops were sent to intervene in the Boxer
Rebellion. The U.S. pressured Panama to rebel against Colombia. Cuba,
Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Korea, Iran, Guatemala, Lebanon, Vietnam,
El Salvador, Chile, Angola, Grenada, Libya, Iraq, Panama. The list goes
on. People might still say that the U.S. (or in the past the U.K. or
whichever colonial power) is doing all this to defend democracy. In
the 1898 debate about whether or not the U.S. should claim the Philippines
as a colony, Senator Albert Beveridge argued, "The power that rules
the Pacific is the power that rules the world. And, with the Philippines,
that power is and will forever be the American Republic" (Asia
Link, p. 2) President Taft claimed that "The day
is not far distant" when "the whole hemisphere will be ours
in fact as, by virtue of our superiority of race, it is ours morally"
(Chomsky, 158). But perhaps the clearest statement of the U.S.'s motives
came from George Kennan. In 1948 Kennan, head of the State Department's
planning staff, stated the basic U.S. policy goals:
...
We have about 50 per cent of the world's wealth, but only 6.3 per
cent of its populations ... In this situation, we cannot fail to be
the object of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period
is to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us to maintain
this position of disparity without positive detriment to our national
security. To do so we have to dispense with all sentimentality and
daydreaming; and our attention will have to be concentrated
everywhere on our immediate national objectives. We need not deceive
ourselves that we can afford today the luxury of altruism and worldbenefaction
... . We should cease to talk about vague and ... unreal objectives
such as human rights, the raising of the living standards and democratisation.
The day is not far off when we are going to have to deal in straight
power concepts. The less we are hampered by idealistic slogans, the
better (Nelson-Pallmeyer, Jack, War Against The Poor, Orbis
Books, Maryknoll, New York, 5).
Politics
The U.S. and other First World countries are maintaining this position.
During the period 1982 to 1990 there was a net transfer of $418 billion
from the poor South to the rich North (George, Susan, The Debt Boomerang,
Pluto Press, London, 1992, xv). George shows how deforestation is directly
linked to the debt crisis. Only by cutting down more trees and planting
more cash crops can poor countries service their debts. Economic interests
have come to govern the legal and political order, and the political
order has displaced the function of culture. The role of politics has
become repression and propaganda, convincing people that they needed
what the economic system was supplying. The true role of politics should
be to mediate cultural values to the shaping of economic institutions
(Lovett, Life, 90).
Population
One final word about population and over-population. The proliferation
of human population literally threatens planetary life itself (Rosemary
Radford Reuther, inside the front cover of Berry and Clarke). (Toward
an Ecological-Feminist Theology of Nature, in Plant, Judith (ed.),
Healing the Wounds, New Society, Philadelphia, 1989). The Church
has an aversion to tackling this issue (McDonagh, Greening, 5972).
McDonagh asks, "What does prolife really mean?" I believe
it means putting our planet first. These, briefly, are the main causes
of our present crisis. It is, of course, possible to inquire further.
Why do we want this kind of political system, this economic system?
Why do we want to have more than others? Why do we refuse to share the
world's goods? Some psychologists believe that our grasping for more
and more possessions arises primarily out of our anxieties in the face
of death. By surrounding ourselves with more and more things we hope
to avoid the reality of death and gain some measure of immortality,
at least in the things that we own (McDonagh, Greening, 162).
If this is true, it means that we do not believe in God, that we do
not believe that God loves us and will take care of us even after death.
We have not yet heard the Gospel.
Hope
A
New Story
Now for the good news. The situation is not hopeless. We can do something.
The most important thing is to learn and tell others the story of the
universe. Here I want to present a long quotation from Brian Swimme:
"... from a physical point of view ... Different ion flows would
give you qualitatively different experiences; or, equally true, a qualitatively
different mood would manifest as a different movement of ions in your
nervous system. The question I want to ask is simply this. What enables
the ions to move? Or what enables you to think? On what power do you
rely for your thinking, feeling and wondering? "Ions do not move
by their own power .... A close examination shows that an energysoaked
molecule in the brain is responsible for the ion movement. Closer examination
shows that this molecule is able to push ions around because of energy
it got, ultimately, from the food that you eat. The food got the energy
from the sun; food traps a photon in the net of its molecular webbing,
and this photonic energy pushes and pulls the ions in your brain, making
possible your present moment of amazing human subjectivity. Right now,
this moment, ions are flowing this way and that because of the manner
in which you have organised energy from the sun. "But we are not
done yet. Where did the photon come from? We know that in the core of
our sun, atomic fusion creates helium atoms out of hydrogen atoms, in
the process releasing photons of sunlight. So, if photons come from
hydrogen atoms, where did the hydrogen get the photons? This leads us
to the edge of the primeval fireball, to the moment of creation itself.
"The primeval fireball was a vast gushing forth of light, first
so powerful that it carried elementary particles about as if they were
bits of bark on a tidal wave. But as the fireball continued to expand,
the light calmed down until ... the energy level decreased to a point
where it could be captured by electrons and protons in the community
of the hydrogen atom. "Hydrogen atoms rage with energy from the
fireball, symphonic storms of energy held together in communities extremely
reluctant to give this energy up. But in the cores of stars, hydrogen
atoms are forced to release their energy in the form of photons, and
this photonic shower from the beginning of time powers your thinking
(quoted in Lovett, Life, 8283)".
"So fires from the beginning of time fires us now: we are cosmic
fire! We are the universe come to consciousness and the psychic energy
by which we live is nothing other than the energy of the whole universe"
(Lovett, Life, 84). The story of the universe is our story.
If we do not know the story, we do not know anything (Berry and Clarke,
7). But it is also the story of God: "... attention needs to be
payed to the extreme fineness - a matter of milliseconds - of the condition
of emergence and survival of the universe. To grasp the emergent probability
of the universe is to experience immanent Providence, revealed in the
passionate finality of the process" (Lovett, Life, 82).
The story of the universe is revelation. We need to see the religious
value of the scientific explanation of creation (Berry and Clarke, 2627).
We are part of the universe. The universe is bigger than we. Its concerns
are more important than ours. "The universe itself is the primary
sacred community" (Berry and Clarke, 16). We have to change our
way of thinking from humancentred to universecentred.
Indigenous People
We can learn much from indigenous peoples. The aboriginal people of
Australia understand their dependence on the land. Bill Neidjie says
"Our story is in the land ..." (Plumwood, Val, Meanjin, 49,
1990, 531). The Navajo tell the story of the universe in their healing
rituals (Berry and Clarke, 27). One of my favourites (even if its authenticity
is disputed) is Chief Seattle's letter to the President of the United
States in 1854:
The Great Chief in Washington ... wishes to buy our land ... . The idea
is strange to us. If we do not own the freshness of the air and the
sparkle of the water, how can you buy them? Every part of this earth
is sacred to my people. Every shining pineneedle, every sandy
shore, every mist in the dark woods, every clearing, and humming insect
is holy in the memory and experience of my people. The sap which courses
through the trees carries the memories of the red man ... . This shining
water that lives in the streams and rivers is not just water but the
blood of our ancestors ... . The White man's dead forget the country
of their birth when they go to walk among the stars. Our dead never
forget this beautiful earth, for it is the mother of the red man. We
are part of the earth, and it is part of us (Lovett, Life, 99100).
Animals
Sometimes it seems that animals are more conscious of our mutual links
than we are. In June 1991, Yvonne Vladislavich was aboard a yacht that
exploded and sank in the Indian Ocean. Utterly terrified, she was thrown
into sharkinfested waters. Then three dolphins approached her.
One of them proceeded to buoy her up, while the other two swam in circles
around her and guarded her from sharks. The dolphins continued to take
care of Yvonne, and protected her until she finally drifted to a marker
in the sea and climbed on to it. When she was rescued from the marker,
it was determined that the dolphins had stayed with her, kept her afloat
and protected her across more than 300 kilometers of open sea (Robbins,
John, Diet for a New America, Stillpoint Publishing, Walpole,
1987, 24).
Conclusion
Every Catholic, from the Pope to the individual lay person, as well
as our structures - Bishops' Conferences, parish councils and schools,
etc. - has to make ecology a top priority. This will necessitate changes
to the Church's structures and way of operating. We need the latest
information and ideas. We need people thinking and taking initiatives.
So the Church must stop trying to control what people think. We need
to promote Thomas Kuhn's notions of paradigm and paradigm shift. Our
people need to know that truth is not fixed and unchanging. Faith is
not acceptance of a body of doctrine, but "a struggle which is
complex and historically without end" (Lovett, Earth, 5).
A large part of this struggle will be trying to persuade governments
and industry that the needed changes are desirable.
The task is enormous but not impossible. Perhaps the biggest hurdle
to be overcome is motivating and energizing people to tackle the problem.
As mentioned in the introduction, mere knowledge of the situation can
be paralysing. Jay Earley (Inner Journeys, Samuel Weiser, Inc.,
York Beach, Maine, 1990) has used Jean Houston's work to develop exercises
that can do this. But in the end it comes down to each of us. Are we
prepared to join the struggle?
Ref. The Japan Mission Journal, Autumn
1997, vol. 51, n. 3.