Eating Our Way to Oblivion: The Spiritual Crisis of Modern Agriculture
Modern agriculture, addicted to oil and to poisons, strips the landscape of farmers, wildlife, biotic integrity, community, moral value, and spiritual vitality; all in an unsustainable effort to feed restless urban populations. To sustain the world we must rebuild rural communities, dense with complex systems of life - human and natural - and rich with culture, ethics, and spiritual significance. Urban communities and choices play an indispensable role in this rebuilding effort.
Catalog #: VEM 068 Production: VHS. 1 Hr. 23 min. Earth Ministry, 1996.
Format: Lecture/presentation Audience: Adults
As part of the Frontiers of Environmental Theology Lecture Series, Dr. Richard Cartwright Austin offers a lecture and workshop March 8/9, 1996.
VEM 068-1: Modern agriculture, addicted to oil and to poisons, strips the landscape of farmers, wildlife, biotic integrity, community, moral value, and spiritual vitality; all in an unsustainable effort to feed restless urban populations. To sustain the world we must rebuild rural communities, dense with complex systems of life - human and natural - and rich with culture, ethics, and spiritual significance. Urban communities and choices play an indispensable role in this rebuilding effort.
VEM 068-2: Workshop
VEM 068-3: Workshop




