Richard Rohr and author and a priest had a website called "Center for Action and Contemplation" He sends out a daily point to meditate and contemplate. All are geared towards improving a person's perspective on life. That is how I view them anyway. Today's missive caught my attention more than usual, So I posting in part. To enjoy the rest go to his website https://cac.org/
Living with the
Land
In the West, most Christians have been shaped by culture and
faith into a paradigm that normalizes acquisition, at great cost to others,
ourselves, and the land itself. As Richard puts it, “Perhaps the primary
example of our lack of attention to the Christ Mystery can be seen in the way
we continue to pollute and ravage planet Earth, the very thing we all stand on
and live from.” Theologian, scholar, and Cherokee descendant Randy
Woodley describes the difference between the attitude of early North American settlers
and the Indigenous people who were already present on the land. He writes:
The very land
itself meant something quite different to the newcomer than it did to the host
people. Something was missing. The difficulty, as the Natives saw it, was with the
settlers themselves and their failure to tread lightly, with humility and
respect, on the land. The settlers wanted to live on the land,
but the host people lived with the land. Living on the land
means objectifying the land and natural resources and being shortsighted
concerning the future. Living with the land means respecting the natural
balance.
To Indigenous
peoples, the problems of a Western worldview are obvious. The way of life
demonstrated by Western peoples leads to alienation from the Earth, from
others, and from all of creation. This lifestyle creates a false bubble called
“Western civilization,” which people in the West think will protect them from
future calamity. This false hope is detached from all experience and reality.
The problem is
that the Western system itself is what brings the calamity.
There is little doubt that much of what we are experiencing today as so-called
natural disasters have their origin in human carelessness.
How do we avoid
the impending disaster brought on by a settler lifestyle of living on the
land and against nature? The answer is simple: we learn to live with nature.
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