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Nature Spirituality and Environmental Crisis
Embracing a Sacred, Wounded Earth
Nature Spirituality and Environmental Crisis
Embracing a Sacred, Wounded Earth
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Description
For millennia nature has provided spiritual experiences of wonder, gratitude, and peace. Now nature is being burned, poisoned, and rendered extinct. This book asks: Can nature still provide spiritual inspiration?
Drawing on decades of original work in environmental ethics, religious environmentalism, contemporary spirituality, and fiction, Roger S. Gottlieb explores how ecological crisis reshapes spiritual life. What we trusted would nourish us and our descendants forever is diminished and threatened. We seek a refuge from the cruelties and madness of human culture and find bird species disappearing and oceans filling with plastic.
Gottlieb begins by clarifying what spirituality is and why nature has played a central role in it for religious believers and non-believers alike. He then examines the environmental crisis as a civilizational rupture that transforms hope, grief, meaning, and moral responsibility.
Nature spirituality, he suggests, must adapt to ecological loss and vulnerability. Difficult as it may be, we can nourish a spirituality in which grief coexists with gratitude, compassion with moral outrage, and acceptance with active solidarity and love for all of life.
The book concludes with a fictional narrative illustrating how each of us might face overwhelming environmental realities with a transformed spiritual vision.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
1. A Glimpse of What we Face
2. Spirituality and Nature Spirituality
3. The Environmental Crisis
4. What We've Lost: Nature Spirituality Today
5. Spiritual Life Transformed by the Loss of Nature: And What Remains
6. A Day (week, month, year) In the Life
Notes
Index
About the Author
Product details
| Published | 03 Sep 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 192 |
| ISBN | 9798216372608 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 1 b&w image |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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In this beautifully written and deeply reflective work, Roger Gottlieb confronts the entangled crises of ecological devastation and spiritual disconnection with both urgency and poetic clarity. Moving beyond conventional scientific and religious frameworks, he invites readers not only to reckon with their own complicity but to feel the depth of our shared condition, holding space for grief, wonder, and the fragile persistence of hope. At once sobering and encouraging, this book is a powerful meditation on what remains of nature spirituality and how it might still guide us toward compassion, resilience, and a renewed capacity to heal a wounded world.
Morgan Shipley, Inaugural Foglio Endowed Chair of Spirituality and Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Michigan State University, USA, author of Psychedelic Mysticism: Transforming Consciousness, Religious Experiences, and Voluntary Peasants in Postwar America























