Browse: Home / christian ethics
By Jason Fowler on 10/22/2010
Salatin’s sense of urgency serves as a wake up call for Christians to begin embracing a more theologically holistic view of the world and a more sacred view of both eating and farming as environmentally, socially and spiritually transformative acts…
Posted in Audio, Features, Food & Agriculture | Tagged agriculture, audio, Christian agrarian, christian environmentalism, christian ethics, conservative politics, creation, Creation Care, culture, ecology and Christian faith, farming, food system, intellectual agrarian, Joel Salatin, liberal politics, Modernism, Philosophy, polyface farm, Sustainable Agriculture, Theology, Virginia |
By Jason Fowler on 07/29/2010
I found this great video today from PBS featuring Norman Wirzba, Research Professor of Theology, Ecology, and Rural Life Duke Divinity School…This excellent video gives a brief snapshot into the growing confluence between the sustainable agriculture movement and the American Church at large…
Posted in Food & Agriculture, Videos, Voice of One Calling | Tagged agriculture, Anathoth Community Garden, christian ethics, christian faith, church farms, church gardens, community gardening, ethics of eating, faith, food, food and faith, Gardening, Norman Wirzba, Sustainable Agriculture, video |
By Jason Fowler on 05/14/2010
“Acting justly everyday means developing awareness about the problems in the world; it means changing how we shop, how we dress and how we drive; it means starting to see our each and every action as an ethical choice…”
Posted in Book Reviews, Features, Justice | Tagged affluence, book review, christian ethics, christian faith, conscious consumerism, Everyday Justice, fair trade, globalization, Intervarsity Press, IVP, julie clawson, Justice |
By Rusty Pritchard on 11/16/2009
Public policy should focus more directly on the things that make people better off, rather than trying to control their reproductive decisions. Coercive population control is immoral, and other efforts at regulating population are less effective than helping families lead productive, rewarding, and flourishing lives.
Posted in Environment & Creation, Features | Tagged christian ethics, Creation Care, environmentalism, overpopulation |
Recent Comments