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Pollution and the Death of Man

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Pollution and the Death of Man

A Classic Work on the Christian Response to Today’s Ecological Crisis 

The earth is home to 7.8 billion people. As this number grows, so does the awareness of a seemingly endless list of environmental concerns threatening their existence—landfills, off-shore spills, toxic wastes, population explosion, and ozone depletion. As each of these concerns are a threat to humanity, how should Christians respond?

Pollution and the Death of Man by Francis A. Schaeffer was first written in 1970, yet it remains relevant as the ecological threats of Schaeffer’s day continue to pose challenges today. Schaeffer studies these contemporary ecological crises through the lens of theology and Scripture, arguing that Christians must return to a profoundly biblical understanding of God’s relationship to the earth and his divine mandate to exercise godly dominion over it.

120 pages.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: What Have They Done to Our
 Fair Sister?”
Chapter 2: 
Pantheism: Man Is No More Than
 the Grass
Chapter 3: Other Inadequate Answers 
Chapter 4: 
The Christian View: Creation
Chapter 5: A Substantial Healing
Chapter 6: The Christian View: The “Pilot Plant”
Chapter 7: Concluding Chapter by Udo Middelmann

Appendix A:
 The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis Lynn White, Jr.
Appendix B:
 Why Worry About Nature? Richard Means
Notes

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A Classic Work on the Christian Response to Today’s Ecological Crisis 

The earth is home to 7.8 billion people. As this number grows, so does the awareness of a seemingly endless list of environmental concerns threatening their existence—landfills, off-shore spills, toxic wastes, population explosion, and ozone depletion. As each of these concerns are a threat to humanity, how should Christians respond?

Pollution and the Death of Man by Francis A. Schaeffer was first written in 1970, yet it remains relevant as the ecological threats of Schaeffer’s day continue to pose challenges today. Schaeffer studies these contemporary ecological crises through the lens of theology and Scripture, arguing that Christians must return to a profoundly biblical understanding of God’s relationship to the earth and his divine mandate to exercise godly dominion over it.

120 pages.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: What Have They Done to Our
 Fair Sister?”
Chapter 2: 
Pantheism: Man Is No More Than
 the Grass
Chapter 3: Other Inadequate Answers 
Chapter 4: 
The Christian View: Creation
Chapter 5: A Substantial Healing
Chapter 6: The Christian View: The “Pilot Plant”
Chapter 7: Concluding Chapter by Udo Middelmann

Appendix A:
 The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis Lynn White, Jr.
Appendix B:
 Why Worry About Nature? Richard Means
Notes

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