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Browse: Home / Philosophy

Philosophy

A deep love for small things

A Love for Small Things

By Ragan Sutterfield on 11/01/2011

A deep love for small things forms and trains us to savor the world and to recognize the unsavory when it appears…While major protests and efforts against the forces of global extractive economies have their place, we have the opportunity daily to participate in a slower, more profound work…

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Posted in Agrarian Notebook, Features, Food & Agriculture | Tagged agrarianism, collard greens, cooking, economics, empire, food, food and faith, globalization, localism, love, Philosophy, relocalization, slow food, small is beautiful, southern cooking | 1 Response

What does permaculture have in common with Christian faith? More than you think.

Permaculture and Christian Faith (Part 1)

By Melody Adele Connally on 10/28/2011

When, a few years ago, I read through a summary of David Holmgren‘s “Permaculture Principals,” it had struck me how well it fit into the kind of pursuit of Jesus that is aligned with a pursuit of the kingdom of heaven…

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Posted in Environment & Creation, Features, Food & Agriculture | Tagged agriculture, christian faith, christian permaculture, Christianity, GOD, Green Building, Jesus, permaculture, permaculture design, Philosophy, Sustainability, sustainable development, sustainable landscaping, trash, waste | 2 Responses

Joel Salatin: Why food and farming matters to faith (original image: Fred First)

Joel Salatin | Food: The Cornerstone of Christian Credibility

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…

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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 | 3 Responses

Jesus came to heal our broken hearts (montage by J Fowler)

Why the Church is Full of Sickies

By Scott Bessenecker on 01/26/2010

What is missing from the Church sometimes is our ability to admit that we are all broken beggars clinging to a mysterious Savior whom we understand imperfectly and follow even less perfectly.

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Posted in Community and Ecclesia, Features | Tagged Atheism, Bertrand Russell, christian community, christian faith, Church Life, Intervarsity Fellowship, Jesus, Jesus save us from your followers, Philosophy, Scott Bessenecker, Urbana, wholeness, Why I am not a Christian | 4 Responses

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Mustard Seed vs. McWorld: Reinventing Life and Faith for the FutureOne Church, Many Tribes : Following Jesus the Way God Made YouTending to Eden: Environmental Stewardship for God's PeopleRed Moon Rising: How 24-7 Prayer is Awakening a GenerationPunk Monk: New Monasticism and the Ancient Art of BreathingWendell Berry and the Cultivation of Life: A Readers Guide

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