“This book reminds us of the resources–scriptural, scientific and human–that we have as we try to write a new story, one that emphasizes the need for people to back off, to allow the planet to operate on its own (God’s) terms instead of ours. It’s a rich book, which is appropriate, since this is a rich and beautiful world.”
—From the foreword by Bill McKibben, author of Deep Economy and Eaarth
“Making Peace with the Land offers a powerful vision of God as a gardener, physically engaged in the work of restoring all creation to wholeness. And it offers hungry people a way to join in God’s work by getting our hands dirty. This is a book about communion in its deepest sense.”
—Sara Miles, founder of The Food Pantry and author of Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion
“Bahnson and Wirzba have written a compelling summons to food repentance. They call us away from the long-term unsustainable bubble of food in the orbit of fossil fuel. They urge return to the quotidian reality of soil, fresh tomatoes, the daily work of gardening, and realism about the source of food. Their accessible, anecdotal style adds force to the critical bite of their invitation toward life-giving, life-sustaining food.”
—Walter Brueggemann, Columbia Theological Seminary
“When Mary turned from the empty tomb and mistook Jesus for a gardener, it was no mistake: Jesus is the new Adam. Thank you, Fred and Norman, for reminding us of our Genesis 2:15 responsibility to tend and protect the Garden, this earth, and calling each of us to the good work of living peaceably with the land.”
—Nancy Sleeth, cofounder, Blessed Earth, and author of Almost Amish
“This series is on reconciliation, which is at the heart of the Christian faith. One of the early Christians said there are three dimensions to the cross–the vertical, which is about reconciliation with God; the horizontal, which is about reconciliation to other humans; and finally the cross is firmly planted into the earth, which calls us to reconcile with creation. That final dimension is perhaps the most neglected one of all in the piles of books on faith. I am deeply thankful for this addition to the library. We all just got smarter.”
—Shane Claiborne, author, activist and recovering sinner, www.thesimpleway.org
“I cannot think of another book on making peace with the earth that does so much in so few pages–grounding its case with theological care, describing the causes of ‘ecological amnesia’ so clearly that they are impossible to disown and offering a vision of practical response that appeals to hope instead of guilt, and all of this while telling stories that make the book difficult to put down! Here is a book for anyone who is ready to trade ecological despair for practical action, in the company of two men who know what it means to be ‘married to the land.'”
—Barbara Brown Taylor, author of An Altar in the World