Eco-Reformation
Grace and Hope for a Planet in Peril
Edited by Lisa E. Dahill and Jim B. Martin-Schramm
Foreword by Bill McKibben
Imprint: Cascade Books
Lisa E. Dahill is Associate Professor of Religion at California Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks, California. From 2005 to 2015 she served on the faculty of Trinity Lutheran Seminary, Columbus, Ohio. She is a scholar and translator of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and the author of Reading from the Underside of Selfhood: Bonhoeffer and Spiritual Formation (Pickwick, 2007) and many other works on spirituality, worship, eco-theology, and the larger ecological expression of Christian life.
James B. Martin-Schramm is Professor of Religion at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa. He is an ordained member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and holds a doctorate in Christian ethics from Union Theological Seminary in New York City. He is the author or coauthor of several publications, including Climate Justice: Ethics, Energy, and Climate Policy (2010) and Earth Ethics: A Case Method Approach (2015).
"Five hundred years ago, the Reformation shook European society's foundations by challenging a corrupted religious order. In recent decades, Protestant churches have joined those who care for the earth, aiming to shake the foundations of our hyper-capitalist, technocratic world order that violates the integrity of creation on a titanic scale. These essays, from leading voices from within the Protestant eco-reformation, issue the challenge and inspiration we all need to hear."
--Fletcher Harper, Executive Director, GreenFaith
"In the footsteps of the religious reformer Martin Luther, who called attention to the spiritual urgencies of his day, the authors in this timely volume express a critical and an expansive Lutheran voice for the urgent care of creation and the common good. The essays make a compelling point that honoring and choosing life in its different forms belongs at the center of the re-orientation and paradigm shifts with the Reformation legacy."
--Kirsi Stjerna, Lutheran History and Theology, Chair, Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary of California Lutheran University
"It is refreshing to see the power of argument and of organizing inherent in these words. For people of faith these questions could not be more real or timely."
--Bill McKibben, from the Foreword