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El. knyga: Theology on a Defiant Earth: Seeking Hope in the Anthropocene

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Humanity operates like a force of nature capable of affecting the destiny of the Earth System. This epochal shift profoundly alters the relationship between humankind and the Earth, presenting the conscious, thinking human animal with an unprecedented dilemma: As human power has grown over the Earth, so has the power of nature to extinguish human life. The emergence of the Anthropocene has settled any question of the place of human beings in the world: we stand inescapably at its center. The outstanding questionwhich forms the impetus and focus for this bookremains: What kind of human being stands at the center of the world? And what is the nature of that world? Unlike the scientific fact of human-centeredness, this is a moral question, a question that brings theology within the scope of reflection on the critical failures of human irresponsibility. Much of Christian theology has so far flunked the test of engaging the reality of the Anthropocene. The authors of these original essays begin with the premise that it is time to push harder at the questions the Anthropocene poses for people of faith.
Preface ix
Peter Walker
Jonathan Cole
Introduction: Theology on a Defiant Earth xi
Peter Walker
Jonathan Cole
Chapter 1 The Anthropocene Epoch and Its Meaning
1(16)
Clive Hamilton
Chapter 2 A Rupture in the Earth: An Implicit Augustinian Theology of the Anthropocene
17(24)
Lisa H. Sideris
Chapter 3 Is It Time for a Theological Step-Change?
41(18)
Clive Pearson
Chapter 4 Icarus Falling: Theological Anthropology and the Anthropocene
59(14)
Scott Cowdell
Chapter 5 Thy Kingdom Come: Bonhoeffer's Earthly Christianity as Theology and Ethic
73(14)
Dianne Rayson
Chapter 6 Anthropocene and Ecclesia: The Church as a Political Swarm
87(22)
Stephen Pickard
Chapter 7 Thinking Eschatologically in the Face of the Anthropocene
109(14)
Christiaan Mostert
Chapter 8 Apocalypse and the Anthropocene: A Biblical Resource for a New Global Epoch
123(22)
David J. Neville
Chapter 9 Redeeming Eden: Biblical Ethics in the Anthropocene
145(16)
Mark G. Brett
Chapter 10 The Serpent in the Garden--Sin and the Anthropocene
161(14)
Peter Walker
Chapter 11 Defiant God: The Fate of Christianity's Holocene Ontology in the Anthropocene
175(14)
Jonathan Cole
Chapter 12 A Climate of Hope? Reflections on the Theology of the Anthropocene
189(12)
Clive Hamilton
Bibliography 201(18)
Index 219(8)
About the Contributors 227
Jonathan Cole is assistant director of the Centre for Religion, Ethics and Society at Charles Sturt University, Canberra.

Peter Walker is research fellow in the Centre for Religion, Ethics and Society at Charles Sturt University, Canberra and Principal of United Theological College, Sydney.