Today, we share with you an excerpt of an article from the collaborative Presbyterians for Earth Care issue of Unbound Magazine. This reflection excerpt is by the Rev. Neddy Astudillo who will be the worship leader at PEC’s 2013 Conference. Please click here for the entire article! We hope her words inspire and embolden you in your own earth caring work in this new year.
Shifting the Foundations of Eco-Theology to Include Stewardship, Justice, and Spirituality
By Rev. Neddy Astudillo
Este texto también está disponible en español.
An uneasy feeling moves freely through the air these days, while the words of the Gospel keep proclaiming: “Go! and share the Good News with all Creation” (Mark 16:15).
As a pastor of a Latino/a ministry, I find myself struggling, daily, seeking to find new depths for the Evangelist’s words—while I respond to the urgent needs of real people, without forgetting the rest of the earth. Yes! I need to confess: my middle class, westernized-Latina self hoped, when committing to eco-justice ministry, that sharing the Good News would always be an easy, fun and far reaching endeavor. But reality increasingly continues to show me otherwise.
Eco-justice work is complicated, and in many countries today is even dangerous. It touches and challenges many aspects of social life and special interests. But it is necessary, if we want to seriously and faithfully care for God’s earth in a sustainable and transcendent manner.
Eco-feminist theologian Heather Eaton correctly said: “When theology is engaged with the ecological crisis in depth, there are major shifts in the very foundation.”[i] Eco-justice shakes our faith, and also impacts the way we live our lives. The more we have committed our hearts to a consumerist society, the harder it is to understand the Gospel’s message. Eco-justice requires we change more things about our lives than what we may like to accept....
.... Today’s environmental crisis requires we seek ways to understand and translate its information, recognizing the pros and shortcomings of each eco-theology and faithfully deciding a course of action. We may already be late in some of our responses, but the Gospel of Mark’s words are the more poignant, as time goes by, not less.
Church representatives... cannot always speak openly about the complexities of these issues; but church leaders, youth, teachers, pastors, community groups, theologians, and NGOs can. We must do it without delay, helped by the fact that, far from inhibiting action, the complexity of these issues gives us plenty of ways and places from where to start.
I, personally, will continue my advocacy work for immigrants’ rights. I will continue supporting our local community-supported farm and will eat organic food as long as my budget allows. I will give rides to my church members who collect scrap metal and cans for food. I will collaborate with the Backyard Chicken group, to translate materials into Spanish, now that they have convinced our City Council to pass an ordinance allowing chickens in the city. I will continue loving my family, and will celebrate Saint Francis day at church. I will be steward, and justice advocate, and spiritualist, for while these varying approaches may be insufficient alone, they can together inform an eco-theology capable of inviting those young people back into the church, and the church back into the world and its deep need.
We encourage you to click here to read Rev. Neddy Astudillo’s entire article, which includes a reflection on her time at the People’s Summit during the Rio+20 UN Earth Summit!
Read more articles like this one in the Nov 2012–Jan 2013 issue, “Hope for Eco-Activists: Discovering an Environmental Faith”, and check out Rev. Neddy Astudillo’s blog, “Eco-Justicia”!
Neddy Astudillo is an eco-theologian, a graduate of McCormick Theological Seminary (M.Div.), and a candidate for a D.Min. on Eco-justice Ministries and Eco-spirituality at Drew University. Neddy, a Venezuelan-American, is the pastor of an Ecumenical (ELCA/PCUSA) Latino ministry in Beloit, Wisconsin. Neddy lives in Northern Illinois with her husband Tom Spaulding and their three teenagers, where they moved eleven years ago to help start the Angelic Organics Learning Center, an exciting and engaging place to learn about food, farming, and caring for the earth. As part of her doctoral program, Neddy has taught Eco-Theology in Latin American seminaries; Guatemala (CEDEPCA), Perú (AETE) & Bolivia (ISEAT). Neddy is a co-author of the NCCC Declaration “God’s Earth is Sacred”, and of its latest book: “God’s Earth is Sacred: Essays on Eco-Justice” (2011). Neddy was also published in David Rhoad’s book “Earth and Word: Classic Sermons on Saving the Planet”. Neddy shares her passion for God’s creation through worship, workshops and a Spanish website: eco-justicia.org.
Notes
[i] Eaton, Heather, Introducing Ecofeminist Theologies; 2005 (T&T Clark International, New York NY); Pg 77.
[i] Eaton, Heather, Introducing Ecofeminist Theologies; 2005 (T&T Clark International, New York NY); Pg 77.
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