Our heritage is a blessing from our ancestors upon which we build:
The Passionist Earth & Spirit Center is committed to the Great Work described by Thomas Berry as a commitment “to carry out the transition from a period of human devastation of the Earth to a period when humans would be present to the planet in a mutually beneficial manner.”
Thomas Berry
(1914-2009) was a Passionist priest, cultural historian,
social critic, and one of the leading environmental thinkers of our
time. He saw, before many others became aware, the critical nature of our
present moment, with its looming ecological crisis. For more than 40 years he
worked to develop a comprehensive vision of a viable future for the
Earth community. From his academic beginning as a cultural historian, he
evolved to become a historian of the Earth. He described himself as a
“geologian.”
Berry was president of the American Teilhard Association and is indebted to the
thought of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin for helping shape his own
understanding of the universe story. For two decades, he directed the Riverdale
Center of Religious Research along the Hudson River. During this period he
taught at Fordham University where he chaired the history of religions program.
His major contributions to the discussion on the environment are in his books: The Dream of the Earth (Sierra Club Books, 1988 reprinted, 2006),\; The Great Work: Our Way into the Future (Random House, 1999); The Universe Story (coauthored with Brian Swimme, Harper San Francisco, 1992); Evening Thoughts: Reflecting on Earth as Sacred Community (Sierra Club Books and University of California Press, 2006); The Christian Future and the Fate of Earth (Orbis Books, 2009); and The Sacred Universe: Earth, Spirituality, and Religion in the Twenty-First Century (Columbia University Press, 2009).
The basic
mood of the future might well be one of confidence in the continuing revelation
that takes place in and through the Earth. If the dynamics of the Universe from
the beginning shaped the course of the heavens, lighted the sun, and formed the
Earth, if this same dynamism brought forth the continents and the seas and
atmosphere, if it awakened life in the primordial cell and then brought into
being the unnumbered variety of living beings, and finally brought us into
being and guided us safely through the turbulent centuries, there is reason to
believe that this same guiding process is precisely what has awakened in us our
present understanding of ourselves and our relation to this stupendous process.
Sensitized to such guidance from the very structure and functioning of the
Universe, we can have confidence in the future that awaits the human venture.