Raimundo C. Barreto Jr. is associate professor of World Christianity at Princeton Theological Seminary. He is the editor of the Fortress Press series World Christianity and Public Religion. His most recent book is Protesting Poverty: Protestants, Social Ethics, and the Poor in Brazil (Baylor University Press, 2023). Graham McGeoch is a Church of Scotland minister and teaches theology and religious studies at Faculdade Unida de Vitória, Brazil. Wanderley Pereira da Rosa is president of Faculdade Unida de Vitória, Brazil, where he is also a professor of the history of Christianity.
World Christianity and Ecological Theologies represents a spread of essays on a subject of deep significance. Mostly from postcolonial settings in the Global South, these contributions reflect the ferment in current theological scholarship amidst the challenges faced by those most threatened by climate change. In assembling this fine collection, the editors have provided us with a rich resource for contemporary approaches to the theology of creation. --David Fergusson, Regius Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge Only a polycentric yet dialogical approach can help us gain traction on the pressing ecological crises of our times, and thus, World Christianity has much to offer. Nuancing as well as concretizing conversations in religion and ecology from its interconfessional, interdisciplinary, and intercultural plethora, the series' culminating volume invites into ecological engagement and samples ecotheological concerns across diverse contexts and Christian traditions. This volume will be of interest for anyone seeking to be oriented and equipped in the face of our planetary crisis. --Hanna Reichel, associate professor of reformed theology, Princeton Theological Seminary, and author of After Method: Queer Grace, Conceptual Design, and the Possibility of Theology A successful contribution to pursue dialogue on ecotheology between North and South, East and West. A must-read for anyone interested in learning on key topics of ecological theology, addressed especially from the Global South and from Orthodox perspectives. --Guillermo Kerber, coeditor of Penser les relations écologiques en théologie à l'ère de l'anthropocène An excellent collection of essays that brings together diverse voices to a global dialogue on the intersection between religion and ecology. A global interdisciplinary dialogue that seeks to overcome the divide of power and privilege by amplifying the voices and experiences of those often marginalized in this conversation with emphasis on the abundant wisdom these voices bring. --Rev. Dr. Seforosa Carroll, academic dean and lecturer in cross-cultural ministry and theology, United Theological College, School of Theology, Charles Sturt University, Australia The climate crisis has reached a tipping point, and it is clear that solutions will not come from the West, which has both caused and benefited from the exploitation of the earth's resources. Needed are the marginalized voices, especially from the Global South and Eastern Christianity, which have been largely ignored in the field of World Christianity, but also in the dialogue between religion and ecology. This volume marvelously fills that gap and offers hope for new ways of relating to the earth and to each other. --Aristotle Papanikolaou, professor of theology, Archbishop Demetrios Chair in Orthodox Theology and Culture, and co-founding director of Orthodox Christian Studies Center, Fordham University