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A Conflict in Christian Attitudes Toward Biodiversity
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| Attesting attitudes:
Pimm, left, and Van Houtan |
| Photo: Jim Wallace |
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Christian attitudes toward
preserving the diversity of plant and animal life can be ranked
into four general "worldviews," ranging from great concern
to complete indifference, conclude a Duke graduate student and
a prominent Duke conservationist.
"
Recently, it seems that more scientists agree that the loss of
species is fundamentally an ethical issue," wrote graduate
student Kyle Van Houtan and Stuart Pimm, the Doris Duke Professor
of Conservation Ecology at Duke's Nicholas School of the Environment
and Earth Sciences in a study. "This places scientists in
the paradoxical position of expressing their deep ethical concerns
to the Christian community, some of whom do not consider this an
issue the Church should address," Van Houtan and Pimm conclude
in their assessment, which was originally presented in an address
and is destined to become a book chapter.
"
Ecology is one of those societal issues that is very important,
but it just seems to be one that the Christian community hasn't
really addressed very energetically," says Van Houtan. "You
might think we all understand that it's really not the right thing
to do to destroy the planet and deplete the variety of life for
future generations," adds Pimm. "Then you begin to look
at the diversity of views expressed by different Christian groups.
There's a massive split there."
Van Houtan did much of the research for the study, which he and
Pimm first delivered as an address to a February 2002 Notre Dame
University conference, "Ecology, Theology in Judeo-Christian
Environmental Ethics."
Van Houtan, a graduate student of Pimm's with strong interests
in both ecology and theology, found that attitudes toward the preservation
of species from extinction due to human activities varied, even
within individual Christian denominations. After analyzing the
literature, public statements, and official policies of various
Christian groups, he found he could separate those attitudes into
four different "worldviews":
- Earthkeeping, which "recognizes the biodiversity crisis
and embraces it as an ethical issue of great concern," exemplified
by the public statements of the conservationist farmer and writer
Wendell Berry, the statements of Orthodox Christian spiritual leader
Patriarch Bartholomew I, and the official policies of the United
Methodist Church;
-
Skeptical, which "engages the issue of biodiversity, but
disagrees with the scientific community that there is an extinction
crisis," seen in the Cornwall Declaration of the Interfaith
Council for Environmental Stewardship, which was co-signed by many
Catholic priests and Protestant ministers and seems far right of
the public statements of Pope John Paul II.
- Non-priority, typified by the views of the Assembly of God,
which "maintains
that biodiversty conservation takes the focus away from more relevant
issues"--such as the affirmation that "humans are more
important than all other species"; and
- Indifferent, which "does not address the issue of biodiversity,
endangered species, or extinction whatsoever." Many of the
groups in this worldview have a self-identified "pro-family
agenda" affirming "the traditional family unit and the
Judeo-Christian value system upon which it is built," the
report says.
Pimm, an internationally known scientist who came to Duke last
summer, says he has been long interested in this topic "because
as a Christian and a conservation biologist, it has always seemed
to me to be self-evident that one of the deepest and most important
reasons why we should be concerned about conserving biological
diversity is an ethical one. We ought to not be destroying a quarter
of all the variety of life on Earth."
Both he and Van Houtan are consequently unsettled by what they
say is a growing notion among scientists and environmentalists
that the attitudes of some Christians are a major cause of environmental
degradation. "It's disturbing to me that the mainstream environmental
community thinks that Christianity is largely to blame for our
ecological crisis around the world," Van Houtan says. "It's
also disturbing to me that the mainstream belief in the secular
environmental community is that Christianity has no relevance to
help us get out of the crisis."
www.env.duke.edu/faculty/bios/pimm/html
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