Only recently have theologians begun to think and write about the ecological crisis in a focused manner. It is clear, however, that people of faith must come to grips with that crisis and find a way of thinking about it in the context of their beliefs. In this book, Willis Jenkins offers an introduction to Christian environemntal ethics. Following observations of lived environmental theologies, he argues that they often draw on concepts and metaphors of grace, thus placing environmental issues within Christian experiences of salvation. Jenkins therefore surveys major strategies of Christian environmental ethics by mapping them onto major traditions of grace and uses this new map to explore afresh the ecological dimensions of three distinctive theologies of grace.
Willis Jenkins is Margaret Farley Assistant Professor of Social Ethics at Yale Divinity School, where he teaches environmental theology & ethics. He has worked internationally with Christian sustainability initiatives, consulting for mission and development work in over 20 countries.
Just occasionally in a life of much reviewing one encounters a really major book... [a] theological blockbuster, clearly the fruit of vast reading and keenly intelligent reflection... there are very many riches in the book - explore them for yourself.
JENKINS, Jenkins, David Jenkins, Amanda Jacobsen, Anders Henriksen, University of Copenhagen School of Law) Jenkins, David (Associate Professor of Comparative Constitutional Law, Associate Professor of Comparative Constitutional Law, University of Copenhagen School of Law) Jacobsen, Amanda (PhD Fellow, PhD Fellow, University of Copenhagen School of Law) Henriksen, Anders (Assistant Professor of International Law and Director of the Centre for International Law and Justice, Assistant Professor of International Law and Director of the Centre for International Law and Justice