Title: Celebrating Eucharist
1Celebrating Eucharist
- In a Time of Global Climate Change
2Our Context
- The Australian Climate calamity forecast by end
of century - Tim Flannery by the end of the century,
temperatures will have risen by 3 degrees - The cause our use of fossil fuels
- Australia burns more fossil fuel per capita and
exports more coal than any other nation - 3 degree rise the loss of world heritage areas
and coral reefs and our cities under increasing
water stress. The Murray could dry up, and seas
could rise by up to 6 metres - 2 degree rise loss of places like Kakadu and our
mountain rain forests, with their fauna the
extinction of the polar ecosystems -
3Our Context
- Everyday, there are new reports and predictions
- While experts disagree about details of
predictions, few dispute - That it is occurring
- That it will get far worse
- And that our use of fossil fuels is a major cause
- The most important issue facing the human
community of the 21st c - For a Christian believer, committed to love for
Gods creation and to respect for the dignity of
every person, responding to this issue will have
to be a central dimension of the life of faith
4Our Context
- What does all of this mean for the Christian
community that gathers each Sunday in the name of
Jesus to listen to the Word of God and break the
bread? - Some brief ideas from science - on long-term
climate change and human-induced climate change - Insights on the connection between Eucharist and
creation from the West (Teilhard de Chardin) and
from the East (John Zizioulas) - Building on these with the theme of the Eucharist
as the living memory of all Gods creatures
5Long-Term Climate Change
- 3 variations of Earths orbit cause predictable
cycles of long-term climate change (known since
the 1970s) - One cycle, caused by a wobble in Earths rotation
axis (precession), occurs every 22,000 years - The others, caused by the tilt in Earths axis
and by the shape of its orbit, occur every 41,000
and 100,000 years - Over the last 3 million years, these variations
have produced a series of ice ages followed by
warmer interglacial periods - The last ice age was about 20,000 years ago and
the present interglacial period (the Holocene) is
well advanced
6Long-Term Climate Change
- Ice cores from Antarctica and Greenland provide a
record of 400,000 years of climate change - Bubbles in the ice reveal the levels of carbon
dioxide and methane in atmosphere - This work shows a close relationship between
variations in solar radiation, size of ice sheets
and levels of carbon dioxide and methane - While climate change is driven by variations in
the Earths orbit, it takes effect by altering
the cycles of carbon dioxide and methane and the
size of the ice sheets
7Humans as Agents of Climate Change
- Humans are now agents of climate forcing through
the production of green house gases - A proper level of trace gasses, including carbon
dioxide, methane and nitrous acid, is essential
for life as we know it - The suns energy is reflected from the
atmosphere, the clouds and the Earths surface - The gases absorb some heat, preventing it
escaping into space (the greenhouse effect) - Result average temperature of 5-25 degrees C.
over the last 700 m.y., allowing life to flourish - Humans force the climate by increasing levels of
carbon dioxide and methane in the atmosphere by
burning fossil fuels and clearing land
8Humans as Agents of Climate Change
- 1992 Governments, including Australia, sign UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change - Under this convention, research of hundreds of
scientists from many countries assembled in
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change - Its 4th report is due in 2006. Its 3rd report
(2001), states there is new and stronger
evidence that most of the warming observed over
the last 50 years is attributable to human
activities - Human activities will continue to change
atmospheric conditions during the 21st century - Global average temperatures and sea levels are
projected to rise under all IPPC scenarios - Increase in global average surface temperature of
between 1.4--5.8 degrees C over the century -
9Humans as Agents of Climate Change
- Global average temperature increased 0.75 of a
degree C during the period of extensive
measurement beginning in late 1800s - About 0.5 has occurred after 1950
- Climate modeling by CSIROs Division of
Atmospheric Research average temperatures across
Australia will increase 1-2 degrees by 2030 and
3-4 degrees by 2070
10Humans as Agents of Climate Change
- A recently released report commissioned by the
Australian Government - Accepts that further climate change is now
inevitable - And will need to be adapted to in all decisions
made by Australian governments and industry - Points to some regions that are highly vulnerable
to climate change Cairns and the Great Barrier
Reef, the Murray Darling Basin and south west
Western Australia
11Humans as Agents of Climate Change
- The danger of melting of ice sheets and the need
to preserve coastlines puts a low limit on human
interference with climate - The oceans are already storing excessive amount
of heat - Danger of changing the ocean system, the Global
Ocean Conveyor - Christians who gather for eucharitic assemblies
in Australia brothers and sisters in Kiribati,
Tuvalu, Bangladesh and many other vulnerable
people
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13Insights from the West Teilhard
- Return to Teilhard scholars and church leaders
- John Paul II Gift and Mystery (1995)
- The Eucharist is celebrated in order to offer
on the altar of the whole earth the worlds work
and suffering in the beautiful words of Teilhard
de Chardin (73) - Ecclesia de Eucharistia (2003)
- Every Eucharist has a cosmic character Yes
Cosmic! Because even when it is celebrated on the
humble altar of a country church, the Eucharist
is always in some way celebrated on the altar of
the world. It unites heaven and earth. It
embraces and permeates all of creation (8)
14Insights from the West Teilhard
- J. C. Ratzinger The Spirit of the Liturgy
(2000) - Teilhard went on to give a new meaning to
Christian worship the transubstantiated Host is
the anticipation of the transformation and
divininization of matter in the christological
fullness. In his view, the Eucharist provides
the movement of the cosmos with its direction it
anticipates its goal and at the same time urges
it on (29)
15Insights from the West Teilhard
- 1916, while a stretcher bearer in the trenches
Teilhard wrote his first important essay
Cosmic Life - Already communion is central communion with the
Earth, communion with God - To this he would add the deeply held conviction
that union differentiates - Unable to celebrate the Eucharist, he wrote The
Priest near the Aisne River in 1918 - The Mass on the World in the Ordos Desert
(Western Mongolia) in 1923 - A central text revealing the heart of Teilhards
thought Thomas M. King Teilhards Mass Mlle.
Jeanne Mortier
16Insights from the West Teilhard
- Since I have neither bread, nor wine, nor altar,
I will raise myself beyond these symbols, up to
the pure majesty of the real itself I your
priest will make the whole earth my altar and on
it will offer you all the labours and sufferings
of the world - All the things in the world to which this day
will bring increase all those that will
diminish all those too that will die all of
them, Lord, I try to gather into my arms, so as
to hold them out to you in offering. This is the
material of my sacrifice the only material you
need
17Insights from the West Teilhard
- Over every living thing which is to spring up, to
grow, to flower, to ripen during this day say
again the words This is my Body - And over every death-force which waits in
readiness to corrode, to wither, to cut down,
speak again your commanding words which express
the supreme mystery of faith This is my Blood
18Insights from the West Teilhard
- It is done. Once again the Fire has penetrated
the EarthWithout earthquake or thunderclap the
flame has lit up the whole world from within - Through your own incarnation, my God, all matter
is henceforth incarnate - Now, Lord, through the consecration of the world
the luminosity and fragrance which suffuse the
universe take on for me the lineaments of a body
and a facein you - So, my God, I prostrate myself before your
presence in the universe which had now become
living flame beneath the lineaments of all that
I shall encounter this day, all that happens to
me, all that I achieve it is you I desire, you I
await
19Insights from the West Teilhard
- Teilhard sees the risen Christ as united to the
God who is immanently present to all creatures,
enabling them to exist and to evolve - This presence of the risen Christ at work in the
universe is a prolongation of what is already
begun in the eucharist - The Eucharist is an effective prayer for the
transformation of the universe in Christ - It points towards and anticipates the
divinization of the whole world in Christ
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21Insights from the East John Zizioulas
- Ordained from the laity Metropolitan of
Pergamon, Ecumenical Patriarchate (1986) - Series of lectures in Kings College London,
Preserving Gods Creation (1989) - From 1994, director of the annual seminar on
Halki sponsored by Ecumenical Patriarchate and
World Wide Fund for Nature - His theology Being as communion
- It is communion which makes things be Nothing
exists without it, not even God
22Insights from the East John Zizioulas
- The ecological crisis cannot be met simply by
arguments based on reason or ethical arguments - More is needed if we hope to change priorities
and life-styles - What is needed is different culture and ethos
- As a Christian theologian, Zizioulas is convinced
that what is needed is a liturgical ethos - This can provide a unique and profound foundation
for a genuine ecological ethos
23Insights from the East John Zizioulas
- Humans are called by God to be priests of
creation - Their call is to be like Christ fully relational
beings - This involves being relational rather than
self-enclosed, able to go out of self to the
other, in what Zizioulas calls ek-stasis - Humans beings are called to relate in a personal
way to God, to other humans and to other
creatures. in a truly personal way - Humanity and the rest of creation will come to
completion in Christ though each other
24Insights from the East John Zizioulas
- In the East, the Eucharistic Prayer is known as
the Anaphora, which means the lifting-up - The Eucharist is the lifting-up of creation to
God - The Holy Spirit is invoked to transform the gifts
of creation into the Body of Christ - This priesthood involves all the baptised
faithful - The connection between Christian and Jewish
prayer forms blessing the gifts of creation, and
thanksgiving for both creation and salvation
25Insights from the East John Zizioulas
- This lifting up of creation is not only in the
liturgy, but in the whole of life - The lifting up of creation is to be played out
around the planet continually by every human
being - Zizioulas holds that it is the culture created
through the living ethos of a vibrant Christian
community, centred on the Eucharist that offers
the most powerful long-term resource for
ecological commitment (Pat Fox) - All this involves an ethos that the world needs
badly in our time. Not an ethic, but an ethos.
Not a programme, but an attitude and a mentality.
Not a legislation, but a culture (Zizioulas)
26Eucharist The Living Memory of All Gods
Creatures
- Eucharist as the living memory of creation and
redemption in Christ - Sacrament of the risen Christ at work in the
whole of creation - Participation with all Gods creatures in the
Communion of the Trinity - Solidarity with the victims of climate change
27Living Memory of Creation and Redemption
- Bouyer on the anamnesis every Eucharist is a
thanksgiving memorial for creation as well as
redemption - Jewish and early Christian eucharistic prayers
are always a memory of Gods good creation and a
thanksgiving for the gifts of creation. - When we come to the Eucharist we bring the
creatures of Earth with us - We remember the God who loves each one of them
- We grieve for the damage done to them. We feel
with them and for them an ecological ethos
28Living Memory of Creation and Redemption
- We bring creation to the table, bread and wine,
fruit of the Earth and the work of human hands - Creation and salvation He is the Word through
whom you made the universe, the Saviour you sent
to redeem us (2nd E. Prayer) - We lift up creation to God All creation rightly
gives you praise (3rd E. Prayer) In the name
of every creature under heaven, we too praise
your glory (4th E. Prayer) - In Christ, we remember Gods good creation the
14 billion year history of the universe, the
emergence of life in its diversity and beauty - We remember the vulnerable community of life on
Earth today and bring this to God
29Sacrament of the Risen Christ Transforming
Creation
- The Christ we encounter in the Eucharist is the
risen one in whom all things were created and are
reconciled (Col 115-20) to gather up all
things in him (Eph 110) - Christs death we remember a creature of the
universe freely handing his whole bodily and
personal existence into the mystery of a loving
God - His resurrection we remember part of our
universe being taken up into God, as the
beginning of the transformation of all things - This is not only the promise but also the
beginning of the glorification and divinization
of the whole of reality (Rahner)
30Sacrament of the Risen Christ Transforming
Creation
- We are brought into a living relationship with
Christ, in whom the universe is being transformed
in the Spirit - The Eucharist is the sacrament of Christ who is
the promise and the beginning of the
transformation of all things - It is both sign and agent of the transforming
work of the risen Christ in the whole of creation - In this vision of things, all that respects and
celebrates the life systems of our planet is one
with the work of the risen Christ - Knowingly destroying the living systems of our
planet amounts to a denial of what we celebrate
when we gather for Eucharist, of Christ
31Participation with All Creatures in the Communion
of the Trinity
- In every Eucharist we are taken up into God. We
participate in the divine Communion - All things spring from this Communion, and in as
wy. In a way that is beyond our imagination and
comprehension, all things will be embraced in it - In the Eucharist we participate in anticipation
in the fulfillment of all creation in the divine
Communion of love - The most intense moment of our communion with
God is at the same time an intense moment of our
communion with the earth (Tony Kelly) - We are taken into God and into Gods love for
the creatures of our planetary community
32Participation with All Creatures in the Communion
of the Trinity
- The Eucharist educates the imagination, the
mind, and the heart to apprehend the universe as
one of communion and connectedness in Christ
(Kelly) - In and through this Eucharistic imagination and
distinctive ecological vision and commitment can
take shape - We can see the see the other creatures of Earth
as our kin, as radically interconnected with us
in one Earth community of life before God - We can begin to see critically to see more
clearly what is happening to the Earth - A eucharistic imagination leads to an ecological
ethos, culture and praxis.
33Solidarity with the Victims of Climate Change
- Johannes Metz speaks of the memory of the passion
as a dangerous memory - The cross is a challenge all complacency before
the suffering of others. It brings those who
suffer to the centre of Christian faith - It constantly challenges ideological
justifications of the misery of the poor - The resurrection offers a dynamic vision of hope,
but does not dull the memory of the suffering
the wounds of the risen Christ - This dangerous and critical memory provides an
alternative way of seeing. It can lead to
solidarity, to alternative life-styles and to
personal and political action -
34Solidarity with the Victims
- The WCC points to areas, especially in the
Southern hemisphere that are particularly
vulnerable to climate change Though their per
capita contribution to the causes of climate
change is negligible, the will suffer from the
consequences to a much larger degree - Climate change aggravates social and economic
injustice. To contribute to this destruction is
not only a sin against the weak and unprotected
but also against the earth-Gods gift of life - Solidarity involves personal and political
commitment to the two strategies of mitigation
and adaptation
35Solidarity with the Victims
- Adaptation re-ordering society, budgeting for
disasters and hospitality to refugees - We gather in solidarity with Christians in
Kiribati. We gather in solidarity with those of
other faiths - We remember those displaced from the homes and
the threat to millions of people - Mindful of Australias contribution to
greenhouse, of our wealth created by coal, of our
use of motor vehicles - Praying that our Eucharist advance the peace and
salvation of all the world (3rd E. Prayer) - We commit ourselves again to discipleship, to an
ecological lifestyle, politics and praxis as
people of hope and commitment