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God's Wounded World

American Evangelicals and the Challenge of Environmentalism

God's Wounded World

American Evangelicals and the Challenge of Environmentalism

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Hardback

£40.00

Publisher: Baylor University Press
ISBN: 9781481311731
Number of Pages: 272
Published: 30/10/2020
Width: 19.5 cm
Height: 23.3 cm
Although evangelicals and environmentalists at large still find themselves on opposing sides of an increasingly contentious issue, there is a counternarrative that has received little attention. Since the late 1970s, evangelical creation care advocates have worked relentlessly both to find a common cause with environmentalists and to convince fellow evangelicals to engage in environmental debate and action.

In God's Wounded World, Melanie Gish analyzes the evolution of evangelical environmental advocacy in the United States. Drawing on qualitative interviews, organizational documents, and other texts, her interdisciplinary approach focuses on the work of evangelical environmental organizations and the motivations of the individuals who created them. Gish positions creation care by placing mainstream environmentalism on one side and organized evangelical environmental skepticism on the other. The religiopolitical space evangelical environmental leaders have established ""in-between but still within"" is carefully explored, with close attention to larger historical context as well as to creation care's political opportunities and intraevangelical challenges.

The nuanced portrait that emerges defies simple distinctions. Not only are creation care leaders wrestling with questions of environmental degradation and engagement, they also must grapple with what it means to be an evangelical living faithfully in both present-day America and the global community. As Gish reveals, evangelical advocates' answers to these questions place moral responsibility and mediation above ideology and dogmatic certainty. Such a posture risks political irrelevance in our hyperpartisan and combative political culture, but if it succeeds it could transform the creation care movement into a powerful advocate for a more accommodating and holistically oriented evangelicalism.

Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: An Unlikely Alternative
1 Evangelicalism and Environmentalism
A Contextualizing Overview
2 Theology First!
The Beginnings of Green Evangelicalism
3 Pioneer Creation Care Organizations
4 Politically Unafraid Evangelical Environmental Organizations
5 Organized Evangelical Environmental Skepticism
6 Apolitical Creation Care Organizations
Conclusion: In the Middle but Not Necessarily of It

Melanie Gish

Melanie Gishreceived her Ph.D. in American Studies from Heidelberg University. She is an independent Americanist and lives in Germany.