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Publication Date: 21 Oct 2021 |
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Publisher: IVP |
Page Count: 344 |
Author: R. J. (Sam) Berry |
ISBN-13: 9781789743647, 9781789743654 |
John Stott on Creation Care
Summary of John Stott on Creation Care
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I listened to John Stott’s presentation of the Snowy Owl while doing a course at the LICC. I never labelled him as an environmentalist, and he wasn’t – he was a Christian whose life was so rooted in Scripture that his love for and stewardship of the rest of creation was part of his daily life. He was also willing to be challenged and changed in his understanding and interpretation of Scripture. His understanding of stewardship of creation also evolved and this book is an excellent collection documenting this journey. Whatever stage we are at in our own journey – whether you are sceptical, exploring, interested or passionate – this will inspire, inform, invigorate and illuminate your understanding. This book is not an appeal to start caring for creation or a mere reaction to the ever growing environmental crises but a collection of inspiring biblical reflection which will also influence how and why we worship God.
Read this book outside! And follow Jesus’ exhortation and Stott’s example of observing the birds and the lilies of the field. Read it outside, and pause between sections or chapters to reflect and to really see what and who is going on around you... We know now even more than Stott did just what a desperate state our world is in and the terrible destruction that we have wrought on it, and we need to act. We cannot read his words, as we cannot read the scriptures, and fail to take action.
John Stott’s remarkable and visionary embrace of both the biblical imperatives for caring and the need to translate them into practical action, particularly in the majority world where the impacts of both climate change and biodiversity loss are most directly felt, was deeply significant. He took pains to be well-informed and to keep his views under constant revision as both science and biblical theology progressed in response to an unfolding set of ecological crises. In addition, he gave generously of his time to many all over the world who were discovering what their own commitment to Christian callings to care for God’s earth might mean. This book charts John Stott’s creational journey, one that was made with great rigour and precision. It serves not simply as an account of a rapidly developing set of convictions, but as a model for how authentic Christian leaders can empower the whole church when they live in community and deep humility.
What a treasure trove this book is! What a testimony to the prophetic foresight of John Stott in urging Christians to be thoroughly and biblically committed to loving, studying and caring for God’s creation, long before environmental and climate crises came to dominate our consciousness and trouble our consciences. And what a gift to have all these riches of John Stott’s (so quotable!) writing and preaching gathered in one place, within such a helpful historical interpretative framework. May its message still speak as powerfully as the man himself once did.
John Stott was known for unimpeachable character, winsome personality, and rich theological clarity. What a gift to be able to sit at his feet once again through this new volume on the vital subject of creation care. The authors and contributors have done excellent work framing, commenting upon, and expounding Stott’s work. Whether a sermon, excerpt, or lecture, each chapter gleams with his characteristic lucidity and passion. Readers will be delighted to learn about his enthusiasm for wildlife, especially birds, his respect for Charles Darwin, and insistence on the ethical imperative of a simple lifestyle. His is not a secular environmentalism with a little God-talk added on, but a distinctly Christian environmentalism born of faith in the Triune Creator God whom we know and worship by caring for his creation. Throughout, we hear fervent appeal to embrace creation care as the responsibility of every Christian and a central part of the Church’s mission. I pray we will heed his call.
In 2021, Stott still speaks “a word in season” to every disciple of Jesus. In this 94000 word feast, we are invited to explore the deep biblical application of the command of Jesus (Luke 10:25-28) in how we care for creation. This embodied obedience, and Stott’s brilliant questions, hold together his deep love of scripture and the biggest need in the world today. It creates new imagination for everyone who desires to be a faithful disciple and a leader in the world.
This book puts front and center the Cultural Mandate as part of what we now call ‘Integral Mission’, alongside the Great Commission and the Great Commandment. This collection of John Stott’s teachings on creation care shall hopefully move concern for culture and the environment as an important and a most urgent missional task for the churches.
I live in a country that is resource-rich and one of the world’s densest in bio-diversity, yet has become poor and disaster-prone because of bad governance, -- over creation and over society. The disasters we live in have intensified fears about the ‘end times.’ But this book cogently argues for an alternative picture of the ‘apocalypse’ – a ‘new heaven and a new earth’ as the people of God show up in its remaking. “We are not going to be saved out of the earth,” it says, “but saved along with the earth.”
In John Stott on Creation Care, Sam Berry and Laura Yoder have given the creation care movement and the entire church family a wonderful gift. Many of us were aware of John Stott’s commitment to creation care, but few of us knew how much he had written and how deep were his thoughts on the subject. This exhaustive collection of Stott’s writings about creation care along with key commentary from many others gives clear insight as to how his thinking developed in this area over time. It also provides a solid biblical and theological foundation for the “good doctrine of creation” that Stott called for. This book needs to be in every pastor’s library and read by every person preparing for church ministry – and the rest of us as well.
John Stott's The Radical Disciple was the first Christian book I read. I was a teenager and knew nothing about Stott or the global significance of his ministry, but the chapters on Creation Care and Simplicity had a profound impact on me. As a young person passionate about climate justice and very much figuring out faith, those chapters painted a compelling picture of how following Jesus impacts the way we live and consume. I would highly recommend this book to anyone looking for a solid biblical foundation from which to engage in climate justice.
John Stott was a giant of his time but I didn’t know that he was a birdwatcher, nor that this interest enabled him to encounter through scripture a clear mandate to care for creation. The late Sam Berry, himself a giant of a man in the interface between ecology and Christianity, has left an valuable legacy in drawing together Stott’s writing about creation care being a core part of Christian Discipleship. Despite the vintage of some of Stott’s texts, this book has a freshness and an ability to speak prophetically at this time of climate and biodiversity emergency.
In a world where environmentalism and climate change are increasingly central in discussions of public policy, justice, and conscience, Christians must work hard to understand the issues at hand in accordance with Biblical wisdom. With this in mind, ‘John Stott on Creation Care’ offers a helpful synthesis of his teachings, writings, and statements concerning the Christian duty of stewardship. Stott constructs a deep theology of Creation Care that recognises the horror of the fall, the beauty of creation, and the scale of redemption. Not all will agree with the conclusions brought out in this book, but all will benefit from wrestling with Stott’s Biblical approach to this crucial challenge.
This book offers a thoughtfully assembled account of Stott’s decades-long commitment to restoring the doctrine of creation to evangelicalism. His wry and searching observation that ‘human beings find it easier to subdue the earth than they do to subdue themselves’ runs like a faithful thread through his consistent scriptural engagement with growing environmental crises. The collection carefully frames Stott’s writing with accounts of a man who was willing to change his mind, who pursued self-restraint, and who sincerely loved the diversity and beauty of the life he encountered, both human and non-human. In an era where the toxic culture around many evangelical leaders has rightly been exposed, this tribute to a leader of real integrity and vision is welcome and timely.
Showcasing his unique way of explaining the Bible simply and clearly, John Stott on Creation Care traces Stott’s own process of coming to embrace creation care as a vital part of the Christian life – and in turn shows us how it must have an integral place in our own discipleship.
Commentary by noted scientist R. J. (Sam) Berry connects Stott’s writings together and illuminates how his wisdom still speaks to us today. Alongside reflections from others that Stott inspired and discipled, John Stott on Creation Care is the perfect resource for every Christian looking to understand biblical teaching on the environment and how creation care should form part of their discipleship. It is also an ideal biblical and theological resource for those involved in creation care ministry.
Published as part of the John Stott Centenary celebrations, proceeds from John Stott on Creation Care will go to A Rocha International, a charity that carries community-based conservation projects in response to biodiversity loss around the world.
John Stott viewed creation care as an inevitable implication of the biblical message, and as a grounding for Christian engagement in environmental commitments. This collection will give you a deeper, more thorough understanding of his writings and how his views developed, and will leave you motivated and inspired to look again at your discipleship and how you approach creation care.