Seed Media Group

Search this blog

Profile

away%20from%20computer.jpg

I am the Online Community Manager at PLoS ONE. My scientific specialty is chronobiology (circadian rhythms and photoperiodism), with additional interests in comparative physiology, animal behavior and evolution. I am not an MD so I cannot diagnose and treat your sleep problems. This is a personal blog and opinions within in no way reflect the policies of PLoS ONE. You can contact me at: Coturnix@gmail.com


Join us at ScienceOnline'09

Buy the 2007 Science Blogging Anthology:

The Open Laboratory

Buy the 2006 Science Blogging Anthology:

The Open Laboratory

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

Subscribe via Email

Stay abreast of your favorite bloggers' latest and greatest via e-mail, via a daily digest.

Sign me up!

My Old Stuff

Make Me Happy

Add this blog to my Technorati Favorites!

Add Scienceblogs to your Technorati Favorites!

Make Me Solvent

Amazon Honor System Click Here to Pay Learn More

A Blog Around The Clock swag store

I Support

Project Exploration

Project Exploration

Bloggie Stuff

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

« Why fish in the Arctic seas do not freeze? | Main | Clocks, cell cycle and cancer »

The ecology of the Church

Category: EcologyPoliticsReligion
Posted on: June 29, 2006 1:52 PM, by Coturnix

I hope you have heard the Diane Rehm Show on NPR this morning at 10EDT (the first hour of the show). The guest was the presiding Episcopal Bishop-Elect Katharine Jefferts Schori, the first woman to lead the Episcopal Church. She is an amazing woman. You should listen to the show here (Real Audio) or here (Windows Media) (the best parts are starting at about 8th minute). I especially liked the way her training in oceanography influences the way she looks at the world and the way her church should be organized.

For instance, she is aware that greater species diversity makes an ecosystem more robust and more resistant to disruption. Thus, she is afraid of a religiously unifrm society - she used the metaphor of a monoculture, where having a large plot of land covered in just one crop requires a huge investment in fertilizers, insecticides and work - all unneccessary in a diverse environment.

Another interesting example she used was one about the humpbacks whales. Apparently, individual whales from all around the world leave their groups and travel to a spot close to Hawaii a couple of times a year. There, they sing their songs and, as they listen to each other they modify their songs. They learn songs from each other. In the end, they all together make a single song which is a combination of the individual original songs they brought to the meeting. Then, each whale swims home and teaches neighbors the new song. There, in each locality, the song changes over time as diffeernt individuals make changes to it. Then, the whales go to a Hawaian meeting again with their new songs and make a new song again. She sees this as a model for how the church should operate - bringing the voices of the people to a bishops' meeting, where they write policy, which affects people who respond to it, and so on and one, constantly being modified through this interchange between the clergy and their flocks.

Comments

And so she seeks to creat a god and a church in her own image...to try to create a new God of THE God who said He never changes...

Can you recreate the leviathan? Until you can create one of these great, majestic and ancient animals, do not speak of things so lofty as The God of the universe. For your words are but puffs of smoke - here now and then gone forever, leaving only a smudge of ash somewhere in this vast and miraculous world.

Schori is an abomination to the historic faith and one that is but a blip on the line of the ancient. She too will pass into oblivion. It would have been better for her to remain in the sciences rather than become a laughing stock to The Church.

"But if anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a large millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea." [Matt 18:6]

Posted by: Deacon C | June 30, 2006 12:10 AM

Ha! Religion has always changed and evolved. Having an ecological view of it is brilliant. Having a democratic process change the church is even better. Perhaps, that way, gradually, the religion will end up at the ash-heap of history, where it belongs, together with other dangerous follies.

Posted by: coturnix | June 30, 2006 12:26 AM

[Luther] is an abomination to the historic faith and one that is but a blip on the line of the ancient. [He] too will pass into oblivion. It would have been better for [him] to remain in the [monastery] rather than become a laughing stock to The Church.
-- Pope Leo X (loose paraphrase, ca. 1520-21)

Posted by: wheatdogg | June 30, 2006 11:45 AM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Blogs in the Network

Advertisement

Top Five: Most Active

Search All Blogs