Geo-Justice: The Emergence of Integral Ecology
Geo-Justice: The Emergence of Integral Ecology
A Book Whose Time Has Finally Come
The world has changed a lot since 1990. George H.W. Bush was in the White House, John Paul II was in the 12th year of his 27-year papacy, and the World Wide Web had yet to be launched. That year, an independent publisher out of Canada called Woodlake Books, Inc. published a title called Geo-Justice: A Preferential Option for the Earth by Jim Conlon. The book melded profound insights from mystical theology with lively and passionate calls to action from prominent community organizers and environmentalists. In that book and others, Conlon's faith-based exhortations to care for our planet combined with those of Theilhard de Chardin, Thomas Berry, and a small cadre of environmental prophets to help pave the way 25 years later for the landmark encyclical of the current pope, Laudato Si'.
Dedicated to Pope Francis, this new edition of Geo-Justice boasts not only a foreword by Thomas Berry and a new foreword by fellow priest and earth-rights activist, Sean McDonagh, but also a fully revised text. The new edition contains fresh poetry from Conlon, reflections on Laudato Si', and updated practices that incorporate another 25 years' worth of experience in preparing lay people for community work and ministry.
Although the world has changed vastly in a quarter century, the need for an updated vision of Christianity that incorporates the truths of science with the soul of our faith has not.
Author: Jim Conlon
Publisher: Planetary People Press
Published: 05/09/2017
Pages: 212
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.54lbs
Size: 8.00h x 5.25w x 0.48d
ISBN: 9780996438728
About the Author
Conlon, Jim: - Priest, poet, professor, and environmentalist Jim Conlon has worked tirelessly building bridges between science and religion for more than a quarter century. Conlon divides his time between his home in Berkeley, CA, and Kingstree, SC, where he is on the staff of the Springbank Retreat for Ecology and the Arts and where he teaches writes, celebrates the liturgy. The author of 11 books, he is currently at work on an update of his classic work on geo-justice, which will be published in 2017. His intention is to draw out the similarities between his own life's work and Pope Francis's profound encyclical, Laudati Si: On Care for Our Common Home. Born in 1936 and raised in rural Ontario, Canada, Conlon studied chemistry in college before following a call to the Catholic priesthood. Taking his theological studies during the heady days of Vatican Council II, the Vietnam War, and the civil rights movement, Conlon gravitated toward urban ministry and social justice. In 1971, he met legendary Chicago organizer Monsignor Jack Egan at The University of Notre Dame in Indiana. Shortly afterwards, Conlon moved to Chicago to study at Saul Alinsky's (Rules for Radicals) Industrial Areas Foundation. After returning to Canada, Conlon founded the Institute for Communities in Canada, a project sponsored by Humber College of Applied Arts and Technology in Toronto. In 1977, he became the assistant director of the Toronto School of Theology, where he carried responsibility for field education, pastoral training, and teaching pastoral theology. In 1983, Conlon's life was upended when he met the legendary founder of the Creation Spirituality movement, Matthew Fox, at a summer institute in Toronto. The following year, Conlon was invited to spend his sabbatical as a theologian-in-residence at the Institute in Culture and Creation Spirituality (ICCS) at Holy Names University in Oakland, CA, which was helmed by Fox at the time. At Holy Names, Conlon was introduced to the writings of Thomas Berry. Known as one of the chief advocates of the New Story of the Universe-a cross-fertilization of Darwin's theory of evolution, the writings of paleontologist and theologian Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, and the creation narrative revealed in sacred scripture-Berry labored toward a time when science and religion are no longer separate spheres. At the end of his sabbatical, Conlon was hired as a faculty member at the Institute. Over the next several years, he formulated the ideas behind what became his life's work: the combination of social and environmental justice with creation spirituality, which he termed geo-justice. After Fox left ICCS, Conlon was appointed director. With Berry's vision as a blueprint, the institute was renamed the Sophia Center and continued to expand as a hotspot for the blending of world religions, science, contemporary philosophy, and theology related to environmentalism and human responsibility. In 2015, Conlon retired from Holy Names to focus on his writing. As Conlon's life continues to unfold, he invites others to join him on the journey, and to discover through his talks and presentations what they want to do with their one wild and precious life.