Creation Care Discipleship

Why Earthkeeping Is an Essential Christian Practice

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Pub Date 17 Oct 2023 | Archive Date 31 Oct 2023

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Description

Although our planet faces numerous ecological crises, including climate change, many Christians continue to view their faith as primarily a "spiritual" matter that has little relationship to the world in which we live. But Steven Bouma-Prediger contends that protecting and restoring our planet is part and parcel of what it means to be a Christian.

Making his case from Scripture, theology, and ethics and including insights from the global church, Bouma-Prediger explains why Christians must acknowledge their identity as earthkeepers and therefore embrace their calling to serve and protect their home planet and fellow creatures. To help readers put an "earthkeeping faith" into practice, he also suggests numerous practical steps that concerned believers can take to care for the planet.

Bouma-Prediger unfolds a biblical vision of earthkeeping and challenges Christians to view care for the earth as an integral part of Christian discipleship.

Although our planet faces numerous ecological crises, including climate change, many Christians continue to view their faith as primarily a "spiritual" matter that has little relationship to the...


Advance Praise

“Over many years, Steven Bouma-Prediger has been a leading voice charting the way for earthkeeping as an essential Christian practice. Now in his latest wide-ranging book, Creation Care Discipleship, we are treated to a distillation of the wisdom he has acquired along the way. Read it and let it inspire you to love the world that God loves and has chosen to make his abiding home.”—Norman Wirzba, Gilbert T. Rowe Distinguished Professor of Theology, senior fellow, Kenan Institute for Ethics, Duke Divinity School

“This is a book that the whole church in the US will want to welcome: a well-tutored but accessible theological synthesis of biblical testimony to God’s good earth and a suggestive guide to Christian earthkeeping. Deeply informed by recent ecumenical discussions and creatively engaged with current justice issues, this well-written study is predicated on a lucidly rendered ethic of Christian virtue. Pastors will want to read through this theological testament as a resource for their preaching and teaching. Christian lay activists will want to study this book to be more biblically informed and more practically inspired. College and seminary faculty who are looking for a single volume to introduce their students to current trends in ecotheology and its practices will be well advised to choose Creation Care Discipleship.”—H. Paul Santmire, author of Brother Earth, The Travail of Nature: The Ambiguous Ecological Promise of Christian Theology, and EcoActivist Testament

“Steven Bouma-Prediger has the heart of a good teacher, and here he blends decades of reflection, teaching, and scholarship into a comprehensive study. By reexamining the biblical witness and gathering a whole congregation of authoritative Christian voices, Creation Care Discipleship patiently addresses distorted perspectives and ideas, presenting instead a decisive case that creation care is necessary, not optional, to faithful Christian practice.”—Debra Rienstra, professor, Calvin University; author of Refugia Faith

“I was twenty-one years old when I read my first Steven Bouma-Prediger book. I remember the moment as if it were yesterday. For the first time in my life, I was seeing someone connect the dots between loving Jesus and caring for creation. I had no idea they could go together. From that moment on—from doing a PhD on the topic to writing three books to founding an urban farm on our property—my life has been a sequence of events reverberating from reading this brilliant thinker. This book will have the same effect on a whole new generation. I can’t commend it enough. Indeed, caring for the earth isn’t merely part of discipleship. Caring for the earth is discipleship.”—A. J. Swoboda, associate professor of Bible, theology, and world Christianity, Bushnell University; author of After Doubt

“This is a book for our times! I have long turned to Steven Bouma-Prediger for wisdom on how to think and live faithfully in light of our intensifying climate and ecological challenges. This book draws from his vast theological and ethical expertise and from his lifelong experience in the holy work of earthkeeping. It is a rich and practical guide for how we can better live out God’s call to care for all creation.”—Ben Lowe, executive director, A Rocha USA

“Steven Bouma-Prediger’s skills as a teacher are on full display in this wonderful book that manages in a short space to introduce readers to the biblical, theological, ethical, and practical foundations for earthkeeping. Few if any books manage to do all of this, and none so well. Interaction with important thinkers from across the Christian tradition enriches the discussion, as do stories and reflections from Bouma-Prediger’s own decades of experience. Highly recommended!”—Jonathan Moo, professor of New Testament and environmental studies, Whitworth University

“Over many years, Steven Bouma-Prediger has been a leading voice charting the way for earthkeeping as an essential Christian practice. Now in his latest wide-ranging book, Creation Care Discipleship...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781540966322
PRICE US$25.99 (USD)
PAGES 224

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Featured Reviews

Love, love, love this book. Steven Bouma-Prediger carefully discusses Creation Care, exploring the Biblical and Theological perspective of ‘earth-keeping’ and looking at ecumenical views from all Christian corners. These views included some from my favourites (Wendell Berry and Richard Bauckham) and some from people I had never heard from before (Eastern Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew 1). I particularly enjoyed the discussion of Pope Francis’ Laudato Si.

The author carefully unpacked his terms, and it was interesting to see why he had settled on the term ‘earth-keeping’, exploring some of the baggage and assumptions that go with words like ecology and stewardship.

This week, I heard a Christ follower say there was no need to pay attention to ‘the Greens’ as the earth would be destroyed soon anyway. I was glad to have already read what Steven Bouma-Prediger thought about this way of thinking. I would recommend this book to any Christ follower, not just those interested in Creation Care, but those who don’t care about creation at all. One thing I would also enjoy reading would be a companion volume of practical applications of the topics discussed, from churches and individuals.

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This is a difficult book to rate, because it's broken down into several sections, and there is, in my estimation, a stark difference in quality between sections. The first portion of the book, building the case that ecology should rightly be a concern for Christians, is largely solid. There are some hints of leftism floating in the background, but the actual focus of this portion of the content is mostly solid. It's interspersed with personal stories in a manner that feels rather jarring, though. The teaching is good, and the stories are good, but they don't feel well-integrated, so it's awkward the way the book alternates between them. It would have been smoother, in my opinion, to have separated these altogether instead of trying to intersperse them. Four to four-and-a-half stars for the content here and four to four-and-a-half stars for the stories, but loss of a star for the awkward way they're woven together.

Unfortunately, in the latter portions, the book goes off the rails and lands solidly in the morass of "woke" leftism I feared from a book on this subject. There are some good things in this section, but you have to wade for them through the murk of standard liberal leftism with a "Christian" label slapped on top, and a degree of ecumenism that disregards heresy.

We're asked to jettison the biblical terms "stewardship" and "dominion" because they've been abused, rather than recovering their proper use. (I do also appreciate the author's preferred term, "earthkeeping," but encouraging the abandonment of biblical language is never a good thing.) It's chock-full of evolutionary assumptions and unquestioning support of the mainstream narratives. Environmentalism is made out to be one and the same with rejection of racism and "social injustice."

While justice, rejection of racism, and "earthkeeping" are, indeed, all important, there's a wholesale adoption of liberal thinking there that's both often unbiblical, and virtually always lacking nuance. For instance, the author judgmentally speaks of Christians having their "gas guzzling SUVs" parked at church as no better than the world with their gas-guzzling SUVs at the office on Monday -- but you can't transport your family of seven to church in a compact commuter vehicle. The author's comment lacks all sense of context.

While he rightly points us to the importance of our worldview, we don't effectively see him look to the Bible as the source of his, but tip into the opposite ditch, adopting wholesale the worldview of radical leftists and pagan cultures. I would have preferred to see a careful, thoughtful examination of what elements of those worldviews are good and right -- and why they're good and right according to Scripture -- along with an acknowledgement of where ours is good. Instead, we're left with one more resource with an overarching attitude that reads like, "everything that ever came from Christians and white people is totally evil and everything that came from non-white pagans is the ultimate ideal." This is not what I want to read in a Christian book.

For all of those faults, this might still have been a more helpful resource had it been more practical. Apart from a few brief ideas almost in passing, there's little here that informs an everyday reader of how to take practical action. The author wants us to think differently -- which is good and important -- but also lambasts us for lack of action and then doesn't suggest what actions we might reasonably take. There are some good principles early on ("wild nature should be preserved, cultivated nature should be well managed, and fabricated nature should be designed with self-sufficient energy and waste systems"), but most readers are going to be left wondering what that actually looks like.

All in all, three stars because this fell short of expectations.

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