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

By Greg Sterling, Dean of Yale Divinity School

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

By Ryan Darr ’19 Ph.D.

The effort to carry what we love through the fire of ecological trauma challenges the imagination to expand our view of what we love together with others. Enter St. Augustine.

By Sheena Lefaye Crews ’28 M.Div.

The opening of the Living Village on the YDS campus represents a unique moment in School history and beyond. For one of the new residents, daily life in a regenerative residential hall is transforming her idea of ministry.

An Interview with Kathryn Tanner

Christian hope means reliance on God even while doing all one can to make a difference in the world, no matter what the timeline of success. In faith you do it anyway.

By Jason F. McLennan

The world is starting to awaken to the Living Building movement, which is populating the earth with new structures that generate their own energy from the sun, respect the local water balance, and use non-polluting materials. But is it happening fast enough?

By Gregory Mobley

Embedded in scripture is the theme that all life forms, human and non-human, have covenants with the Creator. We’ve managed to ignore this for centuries.

By Carolyn J. Sharp ’94 M.A.R., ’00 Ph.D.

An annual YDS course on eco-preaching honors the beauty of the world as well as a sense of planetary loss because of poisonous human habits—and invites congregations into a richer understanding of the Holy Spirit at work throughout all creation.

An Interview with Willie Jennings

An ethic of sharing the gifts of earth—clean water, air, land—starts with small circles of action. It’s a matter of listening to the Spirit speak to us.

By Walter Kim

If ecological vigilance is truly a theological and religious issue, then it’s time to face the biblical message that says the worship of God must include a profound respect for God’s handiwork.

By Mary Evelyn Tucker

A leading authority on religious teachings about environmental care and consciousness says ecological activism is intensifying because the next generation is committed to it. 

By Gerald Torres ’77 J.D.

The tasks ahead are formidable, but they can be accomplished with toughminded attention to detail and fairness—and with gratitude that there’s still time to act.

By Nathan T. Stucky

In scripture, people set out on world-changing callings, no matter how improbable the journey. In this daunting ecological age, an ancient biblical message is beckoning: the call to life.

By A. Kazimir Brown ’19 M.Div

The modern spirit of division and cruelty has been devastating, but it is also impermanent and unsustainable—a temporary setback. The next world-renewing ecosystem of change awaits to be born. It will need the imaginations of all of us.

By Janet Smith-Rushton ’78 M.Div.

A minister’s long-cherished sense of the holy in the natural world is met with an institutional lack of enthusiasm for earth-bound awe or creation care.

By Na’I’Cesses McKether ’25 M.A.R.

We treat the planet like a domestic laborer trapped in the low-wage economy: an invisible, neglected presence that keeps everything running without rest.

By Andrew K. Barnett ’12 M.Div./M.E.M.

The interlocking ordeals of global climate change and widening wealth gaps, voter suppression, and other ills of governance are multiplying human pain and crying out for solutions. There has never been a better time to proclaim the real Jesus found in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.

By Luke Scott Stringer ’18 B.A., ’23 M.A.R.

The world is chafing under the yoke of powerful economic and political systems that seem to possess us, bending us to their wills, enlisting us in poisonous ecological outcomes. In the language of spiritual warfare, we need deliverance.

By James Jenkins ’15 M.Div.

A Climate War is replacing the old Cold War, with water at the center of conflict. Recovering the value of human interconnection and, not least, durable infrastructure can see us through.

By Lav Kanoi ’24 Ph.D.

New collaborations that involve environmental data, the arts, and faith are opening up spiritual spaces for mutual understanding and social uplift.

By Anna Thurston ’19 M.A.R./M.E.M.

Among freshly planted trees in a hospital garden, an unexpected ceremony grants a sense of fearless vocation across boundaries of ecological anxiety and action.

By Ray Waddle

Here we are, placed in the indestructible cosmos for a time, and our little portals of perception are connected to it, and we set out daily by its glittering flow. This is our ballast and credential as citizens of creation. And it comes with a duty to face moments of decision.

Reflections is a publication of Yale Divinity School