On Thursday, December 16, we invited you to join us in a conversation with Words for a Dying World: Stories of Grief and Courage from the Global Church editor Hannah Malcolm and contributor Anupama Ranawana. This anthology weaved together a rich tapestry of diverse experience, all focused around the question of how we grapple with ecological grief in a way that is particular to our location and moment.
In her introduction, Hannah Malcolm writes: “I began this project with the conviction that rooting a theological response to climate grief in particular places really mattered. But what has emerged are stories that emphasize that this grief not only belongs in place, but in time. These are not just grief locations – spontaneous eruptions of sorrow from a wounded earth – but grief histories. The earth remembers, even when the people have forgotten.”
As we come to terms with what it means, and will mean, to live in a climate-changed world, many of us are just beginning to understand our ecological grief and its connection to our places and our privileges. It takes practice and patience to meet our own grief and the grief of others with courage and compassion. And understanding these griefs through a theological lens will inform our spiritual leadership now and in the days to come.
This event was part of The BTS Center’s ongoing season of programming around ecological grief, which has included a book study of Words for a Dying World during the month of November. All were welcome, regardless of participation in other programs.
View the conversation with Hannah and Anupama, recorded on December 16, 2021: