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book Reviews
Seeking witness to a
creator God
Title:
When Enough is Enough: A Christian
Framework for
Environmental Sustainability
Editor: RJ Berry
Publisher:
Inter-Varsity Press
Price: £11.99
ISBN:
9781844741809
Purchase this book from the URC Bookshop
This collection
of contributions by Christian academics, of world renown in their
fields, seeks to give a Christian perspective on the question of
environmental sustainability. This is important as we seek to witness to
a creator God, to our belief in the environment as creation and to the
faith values which stem from that.
The Brundtland
report’s definition of sustainable development as that which “seeks to
meet the needs and aspirations of the present without compromising the
ability to meet those of the future” is accepted by all the contributors
as they subject their expert accounts of climate change, biodiversity,
over-consumption, economics, agriculture, water and waste to its
challenge. The contributors are all Christians though their chapters are
mostly weighted towards their professional areas rather than their
faith. This is not the case with the first and final chapters.
The opening
chapter gives an overview of the history of and approaches to the
environmental movement, both secular and Christian, and presents an
evangelical argument as to why a Christian approach is crucial to our
witness. The final chapter is a reflection on Isaiah 55, seeing this
passage as a prophetic call to Christians to live in harmony with
creation and the creator. It sees that imperative also exemplified in
the new covenant expressed in the Eucharist. This interpretation harks
back to the foreword where the editor of this collection states that the
root cause of unsustainability is a lack of justice. Injustice is
contrary to the kingdom of God, to which we look forward in heaven and
also for which we work on earth.
If you want to
read about the theology or biblical interpretation that underpins
Christian environmentalism you will need to look elsewhere. However,
this book is useful as an introduction to the interdisciplinary approach
needed for sustainability from a Christian perspective and it does have
a full bibliography for those wanting to explore further.
David Coaker,
coordinator, Creation Challenge
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