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"Orthodox Leader Deepens Progressive Stance on Environment" [Η εφημερίδα "New York Times" για τον Βαρθολομαίο]
By MARLISE
SIMONS
December
3, 2012
At a
conference near Istanbul
last June, the chimpanzee expert Jane Goodall spoke about the endangered
habitat of what she called “our closest relatives.” Underlining the evolutionary link,
she described her encounter with a senior male ape who had a “beautiful white
beard.”
With a
smile, she turned to the 72-year-old man in the front row and added, “Very much
like yours.”
The man with the long white beard was Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew I of Constantinople, the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox
Christians. Fortunately, he is known for his easy, affable manner, and he
joined the laughter that followed.
But his commitment to environmental activism is deeply
serious, earning him the nickname the Green Patriarch. He has preached that
caring for the environment is a religious imperative, and for more than a
decade, he has made a point of bringing together theologians and scientists
like Dr. Goodall for debates and briefings.
This
year’s reports of record melting of the earth’s ice sheets and extreme droughts
have given a new urgency to Bartholomew’s messages about the degrading natural
world. While
economists and politicians prescribe more growth and consumption to overcome
economic crises, the patriarch insists that the real crisis is cultural and
spiritual, and can be overcome only by moving away from rampant materialism.
All human
beings, he has said, should draw a distinction “between what we want and what
we need.”
In
September, he published a strongly worded encyclical calling on all
Orthodox Christians to repent “for our sinfulness” in not doing enough to
protect the planet. Biodiversity,
“the work of divine wisdom,” was not granted to humanity to abuse it, he wrote;
human dominion over the earth does not mean the right to greedily acquire and
destroy its resources. He singled out “the powerful of this world,” saying they
need a new mind-set to stop destroying the planet for profit or short-term
interest.
Other
religious leaders, including Pope Benedict XVI, the Dalai Lama and the
archbishop of Canterbury ,
have also called for responsible stewardship of the environment. But
Bartholomew has gone further than most; some theologians call his
stance revolutionary.
“Traditionally in Christianity, sin was what you did to
other humans,” said Kallistos Ware, a prominent Orthodox theologian based in
Britain, “but Bartholomew insisted that what you do to the animals, the air,
the water, the land can be sinful, not just folly, and that was quite a
change.”
Aides say
that Bartholomew’s embrace of environmental issues is part of his agenda to
modernize a deeply conservative church that can seem distant and insular, with
its focus on long Byzantine rituals and mysticism. Speaking in defense of nature as a
creation of God fits church teachings, and perhaps just as crucial, his aides
say, it can also transcend the rivalries and nationalist rifts of the Eastern
Orthodox Church. As a federation of 15 independent national churches, it lacks
the central authority of, say, the Vatican.
Still,
Bartholomew’s seat, established 1,700 years ago, holds primacy among the
world’s 300 million Orthodox Christians. As “first among equals” in the church, he acts as convener
and can set the agenda for discussion.
Not all
church prelates are inspired by his efforts to enlighten the faithful on the
environment. “The
patriarch is going against the current in much of Orthodoxy,” said the Rev.
John Chryssavgis, an archdeacon of the church and adviser on environmental
issues. “He has to preach and promote this constantly.”
Aboard a
ferry steaming toward Istanbul , Father
Chryssavgis pointed out a sprawling church-owned building perched atop of the island of Buyukada . A former orphanage, it was seized by the Turkish
government but returned to the church recently. Now empty and in
disrepair, it will become an interfaith study center for the environment if
Bartholomew has his way.
“He wants
a permanent institution,” Father Chryssavgis said. “When he passes on, there may not
be the same concern for the environment.”
The impact
of the patriarch’s many sermons and conferences is difficult to gauge. There has been wide interest in a
new book, “Greening the Orthodox Parish,” said Frederick Krueger, its American
editor. Subtitled “A Handbook for Christian Ecological Practice” and with a
preface by Bartholomew, it covers theology, special liturgies and prayers as
well as science papers and practical advice.
Numerous
Orthodox monasteries and churches in Eastern Europe and the United States
have switched to solar energy in recent years.
Among them is the Chrysopegi monastery on the Greek island
of Crete, where the nuns use the environmental texts of the patriarch and other
theologians in their teachings.
“More and
more young people are coming to our courses,” Mother Theocheni, the abbess of
the monastery, said at the conference at Halki, near Istanbul . “They come to find meaning. Many seem to find inspiration
in ecology. It’s been growing fast for the last 10 years.”
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