L
lynnvinc
Guest
I am not suggesting that these beliefs are rampant among environmentalists (or are more rampant among environmentalists than among non-environmentalists), but this seems to be a concern of some people on CAF; see:
The issue is I don’t want people totally turned off of doing environmentally prudent things to reduce harm to God’s creation (included to us people) just because they are afraid of neopagan strains in environmentalism – of which I’m not too aware (though I have met a few neopagans and one pagan, tho we didn’t discuss environmentalism).
Also in a poll I created some time back (see forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=592531 ), it seems 84% thought only some or a very few environmentalists had pantheistic or neopagan thinking, so it may not really be a big problem, but perhaps one that needs to be addressed.
One of the paradoxes I find is that many environmentalists rely on science, which goes against neopagan and pantheistic thinking. A scientific person would not attribute storms to an angry mother nature goddess, or find other anthropomorphic willful forces in nature to explain what’s going on in nature. They would not, it seems to me, pray to the Sun or forest spirits to reduce global warming or clean up a polluted river – tho I can see a temptation to say sorry to a mountain, etc for destroying it, or hugging a tree for its goodness in the ecosystem (God did say He found His creation “good”).
And in fact I think it is the rise of Christianity – with a non-pagan/non-pantheist transcendent view of God, with a non-anthropomophic, non-deifying view of natural forces – that freed up thinking so as to make science possible in the first place (if anyone has some references on that idea, let me know). And science, in turn, eventually made it possible for us to understand environmental problems scientifically, and what might actually work to mitigate them.
However, it is also possible that people sometimes hold contradictory belief systems…
So how would we address the problem (small or large) of neopaganism and pantheism among environmentalists, while at the same time not throwing out the baby (of doing good environmental things to reduce our harm and “save the earth”) with the bathwater of pantheism and neopagan beliefs?
This quote seems to express a legimate concern and is not over-the-top like some accusations on CAF that ALL environmentalists are neopagans.…Cleaning up our culture consists of removing the neo-pagan environmentalist mindset as well, which I’m unpleasantly surprised to see is more widespread than I thought.
The issue is I don’t want people totally turned off of doing environmentally prudent things to reduce harm to God’s creation (included to us people) just because they are afraid of neopagan strains in environmentalism – of which I’m not too aware (though I have met a few neopagans and one pagan, tho we didn’t discuss environmentalism).
Also in a poll I created some time back (see forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=592531 ), it seems 84% thought only some or a very few environmentalists had pantheistic or neopagan thinking, so it may not really be a big problem, but perhaps one that needs to be addressed.
One of the paradoxes I find is that many environmentalists rely on science, which goes against neopagan and pantheistic thinking. A scientific person would not attribute storms to an angry mother nature goddess, or find other anthropomorphic willful forces in nature to explain what’s going on in nature. They would not, it seems to me, pray to the Sun or forest spirits to reduce global warming or clean up a polluted river – tho I can see a temptation to say sorry to a mountain, etc for destroying it, or hugging a tree for its goodness in the ecosystem (God did say He found His creation “good”).
And in fact I think it is the rise of Christianity – with a non-pagan/non-pantheist transcendent view of God, with a non-anthropomophic, non-deifying view of natural forces – that freed up thinking so as to make science possible in the first place (if anyone has some references on that idea, let me know). And science, in turn, eventually made it possible for us to understand environmental problems scientifically, and what might actually work to mitigate them.
However, it is also possible that people sometimes hold contradictory belief systems…
So how would we address the problem (small or large) of neopaganism and pantheism among environmentalists, while at the same time not throwing out the baby (of doing good environmental things to reduce our harm and “save the earth”) with the bathwater of pantheism and neopagan beliefs?