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The Gospel According to the Earth: Why the Good Book Is a Green Book

The Gospel According to the Earth: Why the Good Book Is a Green Book
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The Gospel According to the Earth: Why the Good Book Is a Green Book

“Matthew Sleeth is a significant convert in the growing company of Christians who bring intelligence, passion, a biblically trained imagination, and mature Christian witness to the care of creation.”
— Eugene Peterson, Author of Living the Message

“Matthew Sleeth is a breath of fresh air. In The Gospel According to the Earth, he retells the Bible’s most familiar stories in ways that will stimulate your imagination, soften your heart, and challenge you to think more deeply about caring for creation.”
Jonathan Merritt, author of Green Like God

 From Dr. Matthew Sleeth, the leading Christian voice for the green movement, comes a dynamic and surprising primer on all the Bible teaches on caring for the earth— and an ideal companion volume to The Green Bible.

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Product Details:
Author: Matthew Sleeth
Hardcover: 224 pages
Publisher: HarperOne
Publication Date: March 30, 2010
Language: English
ISBN: 006173053X
Product Length: 0.91 inches
Product Width: 5.31 inches
Product Height: 8.19 inches
Product Weight: 0.7 pounds
Package Length: 8.3 inches
Package Width: 5.5 inches
Package Height: 1.0 inches
Package Weight: 0.7 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 4 reviews

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 4 customer reviews )
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5 of 6 found the following review helpful:

5THE book for Earth Day 2010 - Groundbreaking for environmentalists and Christians alike  Apr 04, 2010
By W. Sears
This book will convict Christians to open their minds to a more active role in protecting the environment, while propelling "traditional" environmentalists to look beyond the typical environmental forum for Truth. More than ever, Sleeth does what only he has been able to do with his other writings and his work at his nonprofit, Blessed Earth: intrigue and satisfy the theologian, the environmentalist, the scientist, and the everyday person. Look for stories from his family life and life as a doctor, sound commentary on a number of complex theological issues, and a call to all people across all walks of life to unite behind creation care. This is THE book for Earth Day 2010.

5Meaningful reading with suggestions for action  Dec 28, 2012
By Oma
I have read other books by the Sleeths, who are committed to teaching us about God's requirements for caring for the world he created. The book goes beyond informing, to encouraging action. Just as Scripture teaches that "faith without works is dead," the author knows that understanding without implementaion is insufficient.

0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Back to the Garden  Dec 28, 2011
By A. Deans
We were made for the Earth - put on the planet to garden and tend, but somewhere along the line we got distracted.
This book reminded me and motivated me to get back to my original purpose.
Each chapter is an engrossing journey into scripture and environmental philosophy. And at the end of each chapter, there is a list of practical tips. Some are quite simple, others require real commitment.

THe author points out just how often Nature is mentioned in the Bible.
The Sunday after I read the book, I was lector and the appointed Psalm for Christmas Day was Psalm 96. I'd never really paid much attention to Creation in the Psalms before but suddenly I was awestruck:

"Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth be glad;
let the sea thunder and all that is in it;
let the field be joyful and all that is therein.
Then shall all the trees of the wood shout for joy
before the LORD when he comes,
when he comes to judge the earth."

The Earth belongs to our Creator and all of Creation glorifies Him. How easy that is to overlook!
"The Gospel According to the Earth" opened my eyes and ears...at least for a while (it's easy to slide back)
I definitely recommend this book for anybody who has ever felt God's Presence while hiking desert mountains or watching a Texas sunset or . . . well, you get the drift . . . ever felt His Presence out in His Creation.
Actually, I recommend this book to anyone inhabiting Planet Earth.
God bless you!
Angelina

6 of 16 found the following review helpful:

2Keeping the gospel clear  Jan 09, 2012
By J. A. Wanliss "ExAfrika"
Matthew Sleeth's The Gospel According to the Earth teems with practical advice tethering spiritual profit with green ethics, offering religious insights skillfully woven with intimate stories.

Filled with voluminous, therefore occasionally overwhelming, planet-saving tips, the tone encourages positive behavior changes, rather than bouts of guilt. Perhaps because of his perfect bedside manner and hundreds of yearly lectures at churches, Dr. Sleeth`s message is significantly impacting evangelicals.

We are grateful for Sleeth's recognition that: alone among the creatures humans are created in God's image; Christians should excel at hospitality; we should not make idols of material things; the prosperity gospel is a counterfeit; technology is not "inherently evil"; we should observe the Sabbath. Hugely to his credit, Sleeth makes extensive scriptural references.

Yet defense of vital truths compels one to address faults. We must pay careful attention to the gospel of God's Word, that Christ died for our sins, was buried, rose again (1 Corinthians 15:1-3), and calls us to repent of our sin (including the self-righteous sin of thinking we can save ourselves by works) and trust in Christ, on His terms. Sleeth's `gospel' uses, but distorts, precious Biblical language, asking and answering the question, "How would Jesus save the earth," teaching that it will be through our sacrificial actions. "I believe," Sleeth writes, "that humanity stands at a great crossroads. We hold the fate of God's creation in our hands" (xiv).

Sleeth's `gospel' uses, but distorts, precious Biblical language

We must live less affluent lives, Sleeth argues, for "simplicity as a way of life brings us closer to God. It is a means of receiving God's grace as he transforms us. Simplicity helps us disconnect from the worldly concerns that destroy God's creation and, instead, engage in redemptive actions that heal. ... If simplicity brings us closer to God; consumerism draws us to, the devil" (170).

God's main concern, Sleeth contends, is to save the planet ... from us. He claims that human actions, like consuming "meat, food out of season, and food from exotic places has a detrimental impact on the health of ourselves and the planet" (140). He does not say, so much as imply, that these behaviors are sinful, thus encouraging a sub-scriptural view of sin, and mankind. It does not occur to him that the definitions of `sins' he invents may come from poor science, economics, and Scripture twisting.

Downsizing does not answer gluttony or avarice, yet Sleeth says "the less we fill our homes with material things, the more contented and spirit-filled our lives will become" (ix). Godly Abraham and Job were wealthy, Lazarus was a beggar, yet the Bible exalts them all, like glittering jewels, for our consideration.

Portraying downsizing as virtue is as mistaken as portraying wealth as virtue, neither being virtuous or vicious. Laziness leading to poverty is sinful (violating the Fourth Commandment's requirement to work six days a week), and theft leading to wealth is sinful (violating the Eighth Commandment), but neither poverty nor wealth is sinful, Paul advising contentment in either (Philippians 4:11-12). There is something abortive with a `gospel' that misunderstands sin and misinterprets God's law, leading to conclusions defining as sin what Scripture defines as God`s blessing--like wealth from diligent labor (Proverbs 10:4; Deuteronomy 28:8), or large families (Psalm 127:3-5; 128:3-4).

Sleeth's green `gospel' masquerades in Christian language, distracting attention from the real crisis of sin and separation from God, towards imagining "[t]he world is dying" (x). Materialism, he teaches, births spiritual problems, contrary to Scriptural teaching that materialism is symptom, not cause. Hope is found in ecocentric lifestyles, self-servingly presented as sacrificial: "How could I become more like Jesus-more meek, humble, compassionate, thankful, forgiving, and loving? Clearly, I needed to scale back my lifestyle" (xii). The end result is that carbon-sensitive behaviors, geography and nature become critical for a proper relationship to God. Though sounding noble and humble to serve and sacrifice for the planet, is this not precisely the bondage Paul warned against in Colossians 2:18-23, where narcissistic austerity replaces a sincere love for God displayed in obedience to His commandments, which, unlike Sleeth's, "are not burdensome" (I John 5:3)?

Sleeth's `gospel' invites a tumble into errors characterizing the unbelieving Jews of Jesus' day: having a zeal for righteousness, they sought it not by faith but by law keeping, and so did not get it, because no works of the law can justify us--but the believing Gentiles, not seeking righteousness by the law but by faith, found it (Romans 3:20; 9:30-10:4).

There is a genuine spiritual danger that in replacing the emphasis on Christ we find to our dismay that the "gospel according to the Earth" leads humans to worship or serve the creation, instead of the Creator. This danger is discussed further in Resisting the Green Dragon; Dominion, Not Death

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