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Restoring nature to culture...
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To
reform a society that is fast overwhelming the
natural environment, Austin proposes constitutional
rights for species and living systems, land reform
to assure access to the earth, revitalized agriculture
to support more people on the land while conserving
ecosystems, and a Christian communion that embraces
all creatures loved by our Lord.
"The
greatest value of this book is its capacity to
give hope. After years of devastating news for
the farming and environmental community, Austin's
commitment to demonstrate the power of biblical
justice gives those in the thick of the fight
the energy to answer the bell." - Sojourners
Reclaiming America: Restoring
Nature to Culture. Richard Cartwright Austin.
Creekside Press. ISBN 0-9625831-0-3. 243 pages,
softbound. $10.00, shipping included.
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The following chapter from
Reclaiming America has since been published in
Vitek & Jackson, Home Territory: Essays on
Community and the Land. ©1990 Richard Cartwright
Austin

The following story is not yet true:
It is now fifteen years since 1995, when the Rev. Anne Stem, pastor of two small
Lutheran churches in rural Redemption County, fashioned the plan during winter
evening conversations with Wally Boggs, who taught agronomy at Central College,
and Father John McKay, who chaired the Economics Department at Mercy College, to
buy the whole county, or as much as was for sale, and redistribute lands, homes,
and workplaces to people willing to covenant together for a just society that
respected the earth. They would show to America an alternative to the harsh
exploitation and rapid depopulation of landscapes that prevailed elsewhere. They
believed the plan could double the county's population in twenty-five years and
create a vital, self-sufficient community with a diverse culture that would
inspire people elsewhere to work for similar changes.
Reverend Stem could see that the Lutheran community had been in steady decline
for forty years. Her two congregations were both aging, and although a lot of
land was now on the market, only a few young men and women considered buying a
farm or taking up another trade in the community. Dr. Boggs saw his agronomy
classes dwindle year by year while Central College, a Presbyterian liberal arts
school that had once made an important contribution to regional culture, turned
to students from the East who had been refused by colleges of their first choice.
Father John was disappointed that Mercy College, principally a technical school,
had so little impact upon the community other than providing the training that
helped young men and women to move away. The Catholic population had dwindled to
less than half of what it had been when he was ordained in this diocese; indeed,
the future of the college was now under official review.
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Baptized into Wilderness
| Hope for the Land
| Beauty of the Lord
Reclaiming America
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From the book...
"The innovative skills that distinguish human culture and that have covered the
earth with many constructive artifacts of human civilization are the very skills
which can assure good and satisfying lives for most people if we resolve to
fashion life-sustaining relationships with the other creatures and natural forces
that share this planet with us. Life in communion with God, in harmony with
nature, and in fellowship with one another is still possible upon the earth."
"Agriculture disturbs more land than any other human enterprise. The Bible,
however, is not pessimistic about agriculture. Within God's covenant agriculture
became a moral relationship between humanity and nature which might add to the
beauty of the earth."
"During the first century of our republic, the frontier served adequately to
substitute for periodic redistribution of land, which justice would otherwise
require. Now after a century without a frontier, most Americans are separated
from their land while the landscape itself is dying. Much of our countryside is
bereft of human life as well as of the vital ecosystems of plants and animals. We
need land reform to reopen the frontier not upon some distant territory but
within the familiar and beloved lands of our common heritage."
"I propose a constitutional amendment to confer civil rights upon all the
species, systems of life, and distinctive natural features that - along with
humanity - comprise America. Now is the time to expand our republic to enfold our
lands and waters - the life upon, above, and within them - and the natural forces
that sustain life, within the institutions of society. It is time to confer upon
each of these the rights that are appropriate to their sustenance."
"When Christians resist the extinction of species, the oppression of peoples, the
disruption of both cultures and ecosystems, and all that pollutes human and
natural life, we will suffer with the afflicted and have occasion to lament the
many unnecessary deaths around us. In this we share the sufferings of Christ for
the world. Yet the gospel gives hope to the earth and can inspire our striving
for both social justice and natural abundance. Although the spread of pollution
may create anxiety and sow confusion within the human community, Christian hope
points toward a wholesome future for life on earth."
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