Serving God, Saving the Planet is a study that will broaden the conversation with a focus on the dangers of materialism, workaholism, and spiritual bankruptcy---as well as God's endless invitations for us to enjoy what he has created. This twelve-session study provides simple, everyday ways to focus on stewardship and sustainability according to Scripture. In the first six sessions, Dr. Matthew Sleeth explores his personal salvation experience and desire to follow Jesus in the context of the love story God tells in Genesis. Dr. Sleeth guides readers through each of the created elements, reminding them of the God-given commission to 'tend and protect the planet.' In the final six sessions, Dr. Sleeth examines how God's original command to 'tend and protect the planet' extends into the actions and activities of every Christian's everyday lives. Designed for use with the video.
A former emergency room physician, Dr. Matthew Sleeth felt like he was straightening deck chairs on the Titanic, saving one patient at a time while the whole ship (Earth) was going down. Together with his wife and two teenaged children, he began to bring his lifestyle in line with his values, cutting back on their fossil fuel by two thirds and electricity use by nine tenths.
Following a new calling, Dr. Sleeth resigned from his position as chief of the medical staff and director of the ER to teach, preach, and write about faith and the environment throughout the country. Dr. Sleeth is a graduate of George Washington University School of Medicine and has two post doctoral fellowships. He is the author of Serve God, Save the Planet: A Christian Call to Action (Zondervan), the introduction to the Green Bible (HarperOne), and will release a second book, The Gospel According to the Earth: Why the Good Book Is a Green Book (HarperOne), in fall of 2009. He is currently the executive director of Blessed Earth.
Learned a ton from this and it’s definitely a good launching pad into the world of earth care and our responsibility to care for planet and people, not just as humans but as Christians. But much of it felt pushy & prescriptive, and some extreme viewpoints I did not agree with (like not putting kids into sports, pets being bad for the environment, reducing emphasis on end of life care, etc). Overall, while not "great" this book has challenged me in the best way possible.
A both challenging and encouraging read that tells how Dr. Sleeth and his family take big and bold steps, guided by their Christian faith, to better care for the planet as they lessen their personal impact.
God designed the earth to sustain every generation's needs, not everything we could ever want.
"God gave us dominion over everything." Yes, but when we exterminate a species or destroy a habitat, we forever lose dominion over it. We cancel God's blessings on things that we destroy.
"We don't need to worry about nature; everything will be renewed after the rapture." Similar logic to "sin is okay because God will forgive me anyway".
The real goal of all stewardship: to take a gift, nurture it, and give it away some day. Jesus is the supreme example of stewardship of a human life.
The world doesn't need more princes or princesses. It needs servants of justice, truth, compassion, and love-- it needs servants of God.
Although this book is firmly rooted in Christianity, the message is universal. Dr. Sleeth makes a good case for observing a Sabbath, for physical, mental, social, emotional, and most of all, spiritual reasons.
This book provides a great way for groups to begin a journey of creation stewardship. Highly recommend for anyone looking to "go green" in a biblical sense.