VISISIONSHARE (blog header)_edited
Showing posts with label Thomas Berry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Berry. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

FOLLOWING THOMAS, TWO TALKS FROM TED

In yesterday's post, marking the passage of Thomas Berry, the videos presented some of his wise and profound words:

The universe, and in particular planet Earth, is a communion of subjects, not a collection of objects. If you don't know that, nothing is going to work.

The planet Earth or the universe is the ultimate and noblest perfection in things and everything in the universe is ultimately for the perfection of the universe. So humans give to the universe a consciousness of itself. In fact, in a certain sense, humans are the way in which the universe creates itself, because the human can be defined as that being in whom the universe reflects on and celebrates itself in a special mode of conscious self-awareness.

What happens to the outer world, happens to the inner world. Without the soaring birds, without the great forests, the free-flowing streams, the sight of the clouds by days, and the stars by night, we become impoverished in all that makes us human.


This is more than a "philosophy". Indeed, it's VERY real. Here are two TED TALKS that provide marvelous portrayals of why...





It's all about HOME -- Healing Ourselves and Mother Earth


Tuesday, June 02, 2009

THOMAS BERRY

ThomasBerry

1914 - 2009

Environmentalist, Priest, Eco-Theologian, dies at 94


Many of us were privileged to be touched by the words of this great soul who believed that "the most important spiritual qualities were amazement and enchantment. Awe is healing. A sense of wonder is the therapy for our disconnection from the natural world."

At the age of 11, he says, his sense of "the natural world in its numinous presence" came to him when he discovered a new meadow on the outskirts of the town to which his family had just moved. "The field was covered with white lilies rising above the thick grass," he said. "A magic moment, this experience gave to my life something that seems to explain my thinking at a more profound level than almost any other experience I can remember."

It was not only the lilies, he said. "It was the singing of the crickets and the woodlands in the distance and the clouds in the clear sky. … This early experience has remained with me ever since as the basic determinant of my sense of reality and values. Whatever fosters this meadow is good. What does harm to this meadow is not good."






For more about Thomas Berry go here and here and here.

[UPDATE 5 June 2009: More on Thomas Berry -- be sure to check out Andrew Revkin's NY Times obituary and his DotEarth piece appropriately called The Great Worker.]