Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-rkxrd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-21T14:27:32.542Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Jesus, the Fossil Record, and All Things

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

Extract

As the ecological crisis, fuelled by widespread reality avoidance, deepens, so, fitfully and hesitantly, does the religious response. “Curiously, scientific analysis points toward the need for a quasireligious transformation of contemporary culture. Whether such a transformation can be achieved in time is problematic, to say the least”, writes Stanford biologist Paul Ehrlich. Recent Christian reflection has concentrated on the human presence, the place and responsibility, within creation, of people under God. Fruitful discussion continues about metaphors and models for human dominion, such as stewardship, sacral kingship, co-worker, and co-operative letting be.

Other distinctively Christian questions are also being asked — and convincing answers demanded — that go right to the heart of the Christian religion, questions about Christ and the whole scientifically unfolding reality of life through geological history. We now realize that the cosmos is more immense than our ancestors in the faith imagined; and that our own species, redeemed in Christ and the conscious edge of evolution, is both more fragile and more vulnerable and, simultaneously, more damaging a presence within global and local ecosystems than we like to acknowledge. We are aware that there have been mass extinction events taking out whole ecosystems; in particular we are aware of the dinosaurs. Extinction events take their toll, especially through climate change and habitat loss, over millenia, even millions of years. We may be in such an extinction event in this our time, particularly in the decimation of flora and fauna including numerous insect species in the rainforests of the humid tropics.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1994 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Ehrlich, Paul, “The Loss of Diversity: Causes and Consequences”, in Biodiversity, Wilson, E.O., ed., National Academy Press, Washington, 1988, p. 26Google Scholar.

2 Cf. for example Murray, Robert, The Cosmic Covenant: Biblical Themes on Justice, Peace and the Integrity of Creation, Sheed & Ward, London, 1992, esp. pp. 161175Google Scholar; and Gregorios, Paulos Mar, The Human Presence, Amity House, N.Y., 1987, esp. pp. 6465Google Scholar.

3 Stanley, Steven M., Extinction, Scientific American Books, N.Y., 1988, pp. 123Google Scholar.

4 “Maurice Blondel's First Paper to Augusts Valensin”, in Pierre Teilhard de Chardin ‐ Maurice Blondel Correspondence, Herder & Herder, N. Y., 1967, p. 23Google Scholar.

5 Sloan, R.B. Jr., The Favourable Year of the Lord, A Study of Jubilee Theology in the Gospel of Luke, Schola Press, Austin, 1977, p. 7383.Google Scholar

6 James Crampsey SJ, “Look at the Birds of the Air …”The Way, Volume 31, No. 4, October 1991, p. 292.Google Scholar

7 Meier, John P., A Marginal Jew, Doubleday, N.Y., 1991, pp. 276277Google Scholar.

8 Senior, Donald, Jesus. A Gospel Portrait, rev. ed., Paulist, N.Y., 1992, p. 119Google Scholar.

9 Kasper, Walter, Jesus the Christ, Burns & Oates, London, 1977, p. 95Google Scholar.

10 Echlin, Edward P., “‘Christ the Olive’ in the Decisive Decade”, The Month, July 1992, pp. 288290Google Scholar.

11 Brown, R.A., The Gospel According to John, I–XII, The Anchor Bible, Doubleday, N.Y., 1966, p. 15CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12 Schnackenburg, Rudolf, Ephesians: A Commentary, Heron, H., trans, T. & T. Clarke, Edinburgh, 1991, pp. 8184Google Scholar.

13 Eldredge, Niles, The Miner's Canary: Unravelling the Mysteries of Extinction, Virgin, London, 1993, esp. pp. 209230Google Scholar.