
Fall 2025 | A Faith that Sustains: Building Hope for a Living Planet
Despite the discouraging ecological trends that mark the times, good news is stirring to disrupt the bad. The occasion for this Reflections issue is the historic new eco-regenerative Living Village at Yale Divinity School, setting a new standard for sustainable residential buildings on university campuses. As these Reflections writers demonstrate, the painstaking work of creation care and ecotheology—in neighborhoods and municipalities, in pulpits and classrooms, in spiritual and social consciousness itself—is alive and well and will help define the future. The power of faith and conviction to reverse environmental destruction is the real sign of the times.
Photo of the new residential Living Village at Yale Divinity School
Architect: Bruner/Cott, with Höweler + Yoon Architecture
© Robert Benson Photography
Reflections
From the Dean's Desk
When 195 international parties adopted the Paris Agreement on December 12, 2015, some of us thought that we were turning a corner in climate change. Unfortunately, the Agreement has provoked a serious backlash by parties with a vested interest in fossil fuels. The latest UN summit on climate change in Belém, Brazil, just last month, had more representatives from fossil fuel advocates than representatives from the parties who adopted the Paris Agreement.
Contents
Reflections is a publication of Yale Divinity School



















