Patron Saint of Environmentalism

02Sep
At your command, all things came to be: the vast expanse of interstellar space, galaxies, suns, the planets in their courses, and this fragile earth, our island home.

-Eucharistic Prayer C, BCP


In 1962, a book was published that changed our understanding of the effects of pesticide use on the environment. Its opening sentence was, “It was a spring without voices.” “Silent Spring” was shocking: it exposed the pesticide industry’s whitewashing of the deleterious effects on wildlife, especially birds, fish, and ultimately the entire food chain. It was vociferously derided by the chemical industry who accused the author of being, variously, a communist, anti- American, a hysterical woman, a fanatic, a pseudoscientist, and even “a spinster with no children…why is she worried about genetics?”


Rachel Carson was in fact a well regarded marine scientist working for the U.S. Department of Fisheries. Concerned about the government’s 1957 fire ant eradication program which sprayed DDT and fuel oil on private land prompted her to research pesticides. Many other scientists supplied her with confidential information.


Rachel Carson’s brave research led to the formation of the Environmental Defense Fund and the Environmental Protection Agency, and was a rallying cry for the ecology movement of the 60’s and the restriction of DDT use. If you happen to spot a bald eagle, you can thank Rachel Carson. She was posthumously awarded the Medal of Freedom by Jimmy Carter. She died young from breast cancer.


Carson was raised a Presbyterian. Although she didn’t discuss religion in her writing, she did believe our interaction with nature was divine. “I believe this affinity of the human spirit for the earth and its beauties is deeply and logically rooted. As human beings, we are part of the whole stream of life…our origins are of the earth. And so there is in us a deeply seated response to the natural universe, which is part of our humanity…the pleasures of the natural world are not reserved for the scientists. They are available to anyone who will place himself under the influence of a lonely mountain top—or the sea—or the stillness of the forest; or who will stop to think about so small a thing as the mystery of a growing seed.”


Let us give thanks for the life and dedication of Rachel Carson, informally known as the Patron Saint of Environmentalism.


Musical Reflection - In the Garden - Van Morrison



We pray for those who make decisions about the resources of the earth, that we may use your gifts responsibly. We thank you that you have called us to celebrate your creation. Give us reverence for life in your world. 

-A New Zealand Prayer Book, 1988

CreationEnvironmentPentecost

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