Citizen George presents the life and work of 86-year-old Quaker activist…
Thomas Berry
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
As a pioneer in the field of spirituality and ecology, Thomas Berry created a quiet revolution. He was a monk, a cultural historian, an author, a teacher, and a mystic.
He saw his life work as waking us up to that sacred story. He called us 'mad' for the way we are despoiling our home, our planet, its beauty, and its living systems. He was a force that reminded us that we are living through the greatest extinction spasm of the past 65 million years. We are the ones responsible. Berry urged us to change our ways.
At the heart of the film is Berry's experience of the universe as a cosmic liturgy. He reminds us that 'we are not a collection of objects but a communion of subjects.' His values were rooted in this sacred cosmology which includes the entire natural world. The mountains, rivers, birds, fish, all living organisms are not there for our use but for a union which is needed for us to become who we are. As Berry said, 'I am not myself without everything else.'
'Tom gave us the picture--it's a picture of the earth as the center of everything...of our consciousness, of our physical being, of our world. As a theological person, that really turned my whole thinking upside down.' Rev. James Parks Morton
'We are grateful to Thomas Berry and to the makers of this marvelous film who have captured some of his spirit and his deep message so important for our times.' Matthew Fox
'Thomas Berry's vision is our best guide to a prosperous future and THOMAS BERRY: THE GREAT STORY is the most comprehensive film presentation of his thought.' Brian Swimme
'Thomas Berry puts forth the grandest story ever told...Beyond all my experiences with universities, literature, and wisdom traditions, Thomas Berry's work has opened the door for me to the most thrilling, over-arching, inclusivist, all-embracing and empowering perspective I have ever encountered. Thomas may well be the most important guide we have, for the future of humanity in concert with the community of life on Earth.' Paul Winter
'Berry's life work eloquently communicates the immanence of the Sacred in the world. He considered that our species is at a crucial evolutionary moment of transition. We need a new spiritual vision to carry us forward from the end of the Cenozoic geological era, for our future to be possible.' Ecological Buddhism: A Buddhist Response to Global Warming website
Citation
Main credits
Berry, Thomas (Interviewee)
Stetson, Nancy (Director)
Stetson, Nancy (Producer)
Morell, Penny (Director)
Morell, Penny (Producer)
Other credits
Editors, Emma Morris, Jane Zipp; cinematographers, Mead Hunt, Dyanna Taylor, Roger Grange; original music, Gary Schreiner.
Distributor subjects
American Studies; Biography; Cosmology; Ecology; Environmental Ethics; Philosophy; ReligionKeywords
WEBVTT
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[sil.]
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[music]
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We’ve gone mad, star on living
earth, destroying the planet
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but more specifically with terminating
the last 65 million years
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of life development.
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We don’t understand the earth
as the sacred reality.
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The trees are sacred, the
rivers, the mountains,
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the universe, in particular planet earth.
It’s a communion of subjects,
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not a collection of objects.
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If we don’t learn that
nothing is gonna work.
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Thomas Berry is a multitude of things,
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something like looking at a mosaic
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or looking at a rose window with many
petals and many colors coming through it.
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So he’s a monk and a priest out
of the Catholic tradition.
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He is an intellectual, an academic,
a professor, he’s also a writer
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and a Geologian who’s put
together a comprehensive story
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of our journey in the universe.
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One of the great contributions that Thomas made to
my life he named, what was the essential discovery
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that was… that the universe is
fundamentally story and when he said that,
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all that I had learned in
geology, or astronomy, or biology
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uh… came together in a
single pattern, a story.
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[music]
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Last night the moon was shining
on this wonderful bay.
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And asked the moon, \"What should I say?\"
And the moon said, \"Tell them the story.\"
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And I asked the wind, \"What should I
say?\" It said, \"Tell them the story.\"
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And I asked the clover out on the lawn,
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\"What should I say?\" And the clover
said, \"Tell them the story, my story,
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the mountain story, the river story,
you’re story, the Indian story.
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The great story.
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Most people’s have their values
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rooted in some kind of a uh… cosmology.
It’s a story of
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how things came to be in the beginning,
how that came to be as they are
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and how humans fit into the cosmology and the
direction in which human affairs should go.
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The whole sense of the sacred
is established in this story,
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traditionally, it’s a story of the universe
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that has come into being and it’s perceived
as moving in seasonal renewals cycles.
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[music]
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In China, they heard this
wonderful sense of cosmic liturgy
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where the whole court
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had to be transformed at season.
The Emperor had to move
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from one set of apartments to
another, he had to change the
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color of his garments and a whole set of
rituals brought the seasons into existence.
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So if they played summer music
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in the winter that would
devastate the cosmological
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and this was the great
ritual story of the Chinese
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that validated their existence. As
long as the cosmology functions well,
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there is a basis for dealing
with human situations.
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There is another time so, however,
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a very difficult cosmological problem.
We have discovered a cosmology
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that is an emerging cosmology
that has gone through
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a sequence of transformations.
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The story we’ve arrived at through all this
work is simple one, it’s that the universe
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flares forth into being, some 13
billion years ago as… as energy,
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as light in these elementary particles and
then goes through a series of transformations.
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At that time, galaxies came forth
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as permanent structures, it was a onetime event
that completely changed the nature of the universe.
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Now this cosmology is a secular cosmology,
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there’s been presented to that to
us as essentially without meaning,
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it’s random or it’s mechanistic,
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but it is not achieved a sacred status. It’s
given us this awesome power that we have
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and it’s the power that we don’t know what
to do with or how to judge good and evil
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because we don’t understand the
Earth as a sacred reality,
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the tree as sacred, the
rivers, the mountains.
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My heaven is to establish
our capacity to experience
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the uh… developmental story of the
universe as our sacred story.
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[music]
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There was a time when the oxygen in the air
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that has been created by
the plant them in the sea.
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This oxygen though was
poison, it was deadly.
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It ate into the rocks. It
killed off every living form.
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There had to be a transformation
take place. Forms had to invent
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a way of using the energy
to create organic substance
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out of the inorganic world.
Animals can’t do that,
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only plants can do that.
That’s why Alcestis says,
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\"All live is grass because all life
depends on what grass can do.”
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This I think it’s a moment of grace.
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Something happened that nobody can explain.
The invention of sexuality,
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it’s a moment of grace. Evolution couldn’t
happen without the invention of sexuality.
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When one life form learned to
subsist on another life form
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that again was a transformation,
the moment of grace.
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The Divine and creating the
universe makes a universe
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that creates itself. That’s
the miracle of the creation.
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The present scientific story of
how the universe came into being,
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how it is evolved in its psychic, spiritual
as well as its physical dimension
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that story is the…
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is the comprehensive story for everyone, for
people of the past, for people of the present,
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for people of the future to know who we are
and the significance of… of our existence.
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It’s not a story that’s
part of our consciousness
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and unless that story becomes the center
of our consciousness we’re… we’re…
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we’re… we’re off stage, where we’re off center,
where we’re not umm… we’re not talking truthfully,
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not trying to be deceptive, but
we just don’t get the picture,
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Tom gave us the picture. And
I do find that the story,
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the new story cuts across all lines. I’ve
been in poor neighborhoods with that story.
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I’ve been in Native American
reservations with that story,
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I’ve been in the Philippines with that story
and barrios with story, people respond.
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It’s… It just opens a world up.
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I can’t remember the year I met Tom
Barry, a couple of things he said,
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it really just turned my
whole thinking upside down.
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He said, \"The earth is the center of everything, of our
consciousness, of our physical being, of our world.
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God is not out of this
picture but the picture
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is a picture of Earth. \"And I
was a nice theological person,
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I had gone to seminary and I had been a
priest and I was running a cathedral
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and so I didn’t think the earth
was the center of everything.
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I thought that… that… that God
was the center of everything
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and that the human personality was the image
of God and at the top of this whole pyramid
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and so for him just to
turn that upside down,
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it blew me away.
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Paul Winter and his concert
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became artist in residence. It’s a
cathedral. In the same way that Tom Barry
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became an honorary canon of the cathedral,
I mean, they became my principal cohorts,
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my partners in crime, in trying to
make the cathedral a green experience,
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a wondrous cosmic experience.
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[music]
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We started off by creating a
program called \"The Winter souls.\"
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And the cathedral is totally black
and then down behind the high altar,
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there was tiny flicker of light
that light grew larger and larger
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and it turned into a golden disc
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and so we said, \"God,
this is the sun rise.\"
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And then the… the whole cathedral was
bathed in light. Well, people went nuts.
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I mean, this was the most
dramatic, moving show of…
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of the most important thing that happens
in the life of the planet, each year.
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[sil.]
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Western civilization developed an alienation
from the natural world very early
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and its religious history and…
and its cultural history.
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In religious history, we uh… move from
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perception of the divine on a cosmological
alter that is in the order of the
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not your world to the
perception of the divine
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and the historical order.
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This alienation was further
deepened in… in the Medieval Period
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in the 14th century, when the Black
Death occurred, a third of Europe died.
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People were frightened of the natural world, after
that they didn’t know what caused all this difficulty.
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So they decided that the world was wicked
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and the most important thing was to
be disengaged from the natural world.
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You get redeemed out of the world rather than
learning how to live intimately with the world
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and the perception of the divine
in the natural world was lost,
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a sacred dimension and from
then on it became possible
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to commodify the world to… to
see the… the natural world
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as being there for use and
this was further developed
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in the 1880s, when we
moved from an organic,
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ever renewing economy based
on the agricultural process
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to an extractive non-renewing
industrial economy.
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Now the extractive economy based on
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use of resources that are limited
and did not renew is the disaster.
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Thomas feels there’s a key idea
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that underlies much of Western thought
and idea which unconsciously drives
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and shapes our actions.
The idea of a millennium
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that is a thousand years that will occur
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toward the end of the world,
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when the human condition would
be surmounted or it’d be peace,
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justice and abundance. Uh… the reign
of the saints would take place.
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The sorrow of life would be done away with.
This was a part of
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the revelatory experience that was
promised to Western civilization
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that this time would come. It
didn’t come but Western Christians
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have always longed for it.
It has been the ideal,
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and the governing idea in the West, even
when it’s lost, its religious appeal
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and that’s what subconsciously is
driving the industrial process,
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the space process.
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In the Western mind, there’s a deep
hidden rage against the human condition
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of accepting life on the terms
that life has granted us.
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So we about to… we’re gonna
take the planet to pieces
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and make a better world, like a dream
world, Disney, painless world.
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[sil.]
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In my own life, the awakening to
the real challenge of our times
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took place rather early. I was
born in 1914 in North Carolina.
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The South after the Civil War found that
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it couldn’t make it as egalitarian
society in confrontation
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with the industrial society so the north.
So the south began to industrialize.
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It built it’s cotton mills
and then it developed
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its commercial world. I lived an area
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without paved roads, the automobile
just come right through a distance.
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And somehow I saw when I was a uh… If I
was gonna make it in this type of world,
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I would have to develop a commercial sense,
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those early years were years when I…
I brooded over, what was happening?
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So from the very beginning, I’ve
instinctively oriented myself
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toward wilderness and became the
governing reflection of my life.
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I began to figure how to escape
the commercial enterprise.
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By the time I was 20, I decided
that I needed time to think,
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I needed time to think about things.
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So I figured, by that time, I have
only two places you could go to think,
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one would be prison and the other monastery.
That’s seriously, right. That’s exactly, right.
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So I decide I go to monastery.
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Thomas Berry joined the
Passionists Order in 1933.
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He took up the study of history especially
that of comparative religious traditions.
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I discovered myself and I don’t think a
person can discover themselves in building,
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roads and all the gadgets that we have.
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After I finished my studies and got
my degree in 1948, I went to China.
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Standing on the deck he noticed
me saying goodbye to my wife.
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And it’s typical of him in his sensitivity
00:16:10.000 --> 00:16:14.999
that it would have been a touching scene for him
so he noticed me even before I ever knew him.
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And uh… then later, I found out that
among this group of missionaries.
00:16:20.000 --> 00:16:24.999
Uh… he was the one who had
00:16:25.000 --> 00:16:29.999
not just been ordained and prepared to
go to the missions, but he had actually
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gotten a PhD in history.
I don’t know of any
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uh… discipline, that is more effective
00:16:40.000 --> 00:16:44.999
in giving a person a
context in which to think
00:16:45.000 --> 00:16:49.999
and so I studied the
Mediterranean Civilization,
00:16:50.000 --> 00:16:54.999
the Palestinian world, the
Persian Empire sent over to the
00:16:55.000 --> 00:16:59.999
world of Asia and even China.
00:17:00.000 --> 00:17:04.999
The Confucian Traditions has had a
great influence on Thomas’s thinking.
00:17:05.000 --> 00:17:09.999
This powerful sense is one
fulfills one’s own human destiny,
00:17:10.000 --> 00:17:14.999
one activates this great virtue of authenticity
and the beauty in the Chinese world is that…
00:17:15.000 --> 00:17:19.999
it’s that authenticity and sincerity
which is in the whole universe itself,
00:17:20.000 --> 00:17:24.999
reflected back and forth between the
human and the whole cosmic order.
00:17:25.000 --> 00:17:29.999
It’s a magnificent sense of
the continuity of the human…
00:17:30.000 --> 00:17:34.999
human interiority, human consciousness
and human action in relation
00:17:35.000 --> 00:17:39.999
to the natural world and the cosmos
itself, which is one of the great avenues
00:17:40.000 --> 00:17:44.999
into the universe story. While I was there
though, studying the language, Moa came in,
00:17:45.000 --> 00:17:49.999
When Mao came in. The university
sent us back to the States.
00:17:50.000 --> 00:17:54.999
I think it was probably
providential because
00:17:55.000 --> 00:17:59.999
what it meant was that he came back
and instead established himself
00:18:00.000 --> 00:18:04.999
as a missionary in a much larger sense.
00:18:05.000 --> 00:18:09.999
Of course, Teilhard was
uh… his inspiration and
00:18:10.000 --> 00:18:14.999
uh… and I suppose that with another… another
thing that he missed about having to leave China
00:18:15.000 --> 00:18:19.999
that he couldn’t explore more
of Teilhard’s time there.
00:18:20.000 --> 00:18:24.999
Teilhard was a Jesuit. He was
trained in paleontology,
00:18:25.000 --> 00:18:29.999
who was following up some of the work of Darwin
in evolution and especially emphasizing the
00:18:30.000 --> 00:18:34.999
development of consciousness
alongside of the
00:18:35.000 --> 00:18:39.999
physical evolution of
humankind in of all species.
00:18:40.000 --> 00:18:44.999
Teilhard is the first person to
understand that we have a sacred story.
00:18:45.000 --> 00:18:49.999
Now… now it has to be our basic
orientation toward the universe
00:18:50.000 --> 00:18:54.999
and he also understood that the universe
from its beginning is… is a spiritual,
00:18:55.000 --> 00:18:59.999
as well as a physical reality.
There’s no such thing
00:19:00.000 --> 00:19:04.999
as a material being. You
cannot even know matter…
00:19:05.000 --> 00:19:09.999
matter without form is nothing
and form is always spiritual.
00:19:10.000 --> 00:19:14.999
Teilhard gave the big view
of the encounter religions.
00:19:15.000 --> 00:19:19.999
He really didn’t enter into them,
but Tom made them come alive
00:19:20.000 --> 00:19:24.999
and I think this is one of the great
creative moments between Tom and Teilhard.
00:19:25.000 --> 00:19:29.999
And then there was another one and that is
00:19:30.000 --> 00:19:34.999
bringing out the ecological issues
00:19:35.000 --> 00:19:39.999
which certainly Teilhard did not address.
00:19:40.000 --> 00:19:44.999
In 1969, Thomas Berry established the
Riverdale Center for religious research
00:19:45.000 --> 00:19:49.999
on the banks of the Hudson. It was a
center in the full sense of the word.
00:19:50.000 --> 00:19:54.999
It was an intellectual center.
It was a Friendship Center.
00:19:55.000 --> 00:19:59.999
It was a Community Creating Center and
he was just beginning to come into this
00:20:00.000 --> 00:20:04.999
fuller phase of his life as a Geologian
00:20:05.000 --> 00:20:09.999
of beginning to see the universe story
emerge. So to be a student of Thomas
00:20:10.000 --> 00:20:14.999
at that time was a time out of time.
00:20:15.000 --> 00:20:19.999
The Riverdale center was found as a place
00:20:20.000 --> 00:20:24.999
where person could come to
understand the universe and
00:20:25.000 --> 00:20:29.999
as meaning dimensions and
it will bring together
00:20:30.000 --> 00:20:34.999
wisdom of the various traditions
of… of the world. And here is a
00:20:35.000 --> 00:20:39.999
Pāli text of Buddhism, which is
the wisdom of indigenous people,
00:20:40.000 --> 00:20:44.999
the wisdom of women, the wisdom
of the classical traditions
00:20:45.000 --> 00:20:49.999
and the wisdom of science. He had
collected thousands of volumes
00:20:50.000 --> 00:20:54.999
of Western history culture,
00:20:55.000 --> 00:20:59.999
religions in the same for Asia and indigenous
traditions, but then also the Indian tradition,
00:21:00.000 --> 00:21:04.999
Mircea Eliade and the scientific
wisdom that was coming out here.
00:21:05.000 --> 00:21:09.999
Out here in India is the Sanskrit world,
00:21:10.000 --> 00:21:14.999
this is the Mahabharata which is the basic
00:21:15.000 --> 00:21:19.999
uh… epic poem of uh… India.
00:21:20.000 --> 00:21:24.999
One evening, Father Thomas gave a paper
based upon his own studies of Buddhism
00:21:25.000 --> 00:21:29.999
and when it was all over,
00:21:30.000 --> 00:21:34.999
this uh… Buddhist monk said, \"I felt
as if I was hearing my old teacher,
00:21:35.000 --> 00:21:39.999
back in Japan.\" He was so moved.
00:21:40.000 --> 00:21:44.999
Buddhist world you have know Pāli,
Sanskrit, Tibetan, Chinese, Japanese.
00:21:45.000 --> 00:21:49.999
There probably were people who were
00:21:50.000 --> 00:21:54.999
more technically competent in Sanskritist
then he was. But I questioned
00:21:55.000 --> 00:21:59.999
whether that anybody who was able to penetrate into the
essence of those religious systems the way he was.
00:22:00.000 --> 00:22:04.999
To be in his classes was to open the doors
00:22:05.000 --> 00:22:09.999
to these great traditions
was to sit with him
00:22:10.000 --> 00:22:14.999
and feel that wisdom. Now we’d
say Riverdale of all things
00:22:15.000 --> 00:22:19.999
is a birthing of the great work. It’s a
birthing of a vision of a new sensibility
00:22:20.000 --> 00:22:24.999
about the universe and
our connection to it.
00:22:25.000 --> 00:22:29.999
Each period of history
has a great work to do
00:22:30.000 --> 00:22:34.999
and to identify that great work is most
important and the nobility of the lives
00:22:35.000 --> 00:22:39.999
of the people, of that period depends
on their fidelity to the great work
00:22:40.000 --> 00:22:44.999
and the extent to which they carry it out.
00:22:45.000 --> 00:22:49.999
Here at the Research Center in Riverdale,
this has been identified with clarity
00:22:50.000 --> 00:22:54.999
that few other places been
equal were identified
00:22:55.000 --> 00:22:59.999
the issue and also the conditions under
which this devastation can be stopped
00:23:00.000 --> 00:23:04.999
and which the renewal can take place.
00:23:05.000 --> 00:23:09.999
And this depends on
something very, very simple
00:23:10.000 --> 00:23:14.999
what is the cause of the difficulty in the first
place? Because of the difficulty in the first place,
00:23:15.000 --> 00:23:19.999
it has to deal with a discontinuity
between the human, and the non-human,
00:23:20.000 --> 00:23:24.999
and the assumption of the
human that they have a right
00:23:25.000 --> 00:23:29.999
to explore it the non-human.
And St. Thomas says,
00:23:30.000 --> 00:23:34.999
\"Why are there so many uh… different things\" and he
says, \"Because the divine could not image itself
00:23:35.000 --> 00:23:39.999
or to anyone being, it created
a great diversity of saint.
00:23:40.000 --> 00:23:44.999
So that the perfection lacking to
one would be supplied by the others
00:23:45.000 --> 00:23:49.999
and the whole universe
together will participate in…
00:23:50.000 --> 00:23:54.999
in manifest the divine more than
any single being whatsoever.
00:23:55.000 --> 00:23:59.999
\"Things cannot be and that is
simply in their isolated selves.
00:24:00.000 --> 00:24:04.999
Or else nothing is itself
without everything else.
00:24:05.000 --> 00:24:09.999
And that is why and the total story of the
universe, it is taken 14 billion years
00:24:10.000 --> 00:24:14.999
to have us here. The greatest failure of…
00:24:15.000 --> 00:24:19.999
of Western civilization of the
greatest destructive force
00:24:20.000 --> 00:24:24.999
comes with a type of jurisprudence
00:24:25.000 --> 00:24:29.999
that shaped America because
we wrote a constitution
00:24:30.000 --> 00:24:34.999
that gave all rights to humans
00:24:35.000 --> 00:24:39.999
and the non-human has no rights.
00:24:40.000 --> 00:24:44.999
It’s simply there is background for the human.
Well, that to my mind, it’s an inadequate way
00:24:45.000 --> 00:24:49.999
of understanding the human because the
human is a member of a great community
00:24:50.000 --> 00:24:54.999
of the planet Earth and
everything is there for
00:24:55.000 --> 00:24:59.999
a communion relationship,
not for use relationship.
00:25:00.000 --> 00:25:04.999
And that’s the flaw. When we get a marigold
00:25:05.000 --> 00:25:09.999
based on four things individual
rights, participatory government,
00:25:10.000 --> 00:25:14.999
private property and to
explore the enterprise
00:25:15.000 --> 00:25:19.999
and these first three have now become
subservient to the economic enterprise.
00:25:20.000 --> 00:25:24.999
Government has defamed in
all its efforts to limit
00:25:25.000 --> 00:25:29.999
the exploitation of the corporation
regime, the whole of education
00:25:30.000 --> 00:25:34.999
is based on the service of the corporation.
00:25:35.000 --> 00:25:39.999
Uh… so that we’re… we’re
giving ourselves over to the…
00:25:40.000 --> 00:25:44.999
to the great financial-industrial-commercial
corporations.
00:25:45.000 --> 00:25:49.999
[music]
00:25:50.000 --> 00:25:54.999
What we have faced with is… is a
transformation of the planet itself.
00:25:55.000 --> 00:25:59.999
Because the planet and
it’s chemistry has being
00:26:00.000 --> 00:26:04.999
upset in such a way that the
life forms are no longer viable
00:26:05.000 --> 00:26:09.999
and how to renew the planet, wherein
it’s saturated with chemical waste.
00:26:10.000 --> 00:26:14.999
Uh… it’s such an order of magnitude
00:26:15.000 --> 00:26:19.999
as those extremely arch was tasked.
00:26:20.000 --> 00:26:24.999
In fact, in the 1940s there was half a million
tons of industrial chemicals made in this country.
00:26:25.000 --> 00:26:29.999
Now, we’re making 200 million
tons each every year.
00:26:30.000 --> 00:26:34.999
Chemicals at the planet Earth cannot deal
00:26:35.000 --> 00:26:39.999
with the extinctions that are
taking place have not been equal
00:26:40.000 --> 00:26:44.999
in 65 million years.
00:26:45.000 --> 00:26:49.999
The geological period now ending due to the
impact of human activity is the Cenozoic.
00:26:50.000 --> 00:26:54.999
Thomas Berry sees the Cenozoic
as an immensely creative period
00:26:55.000 --> 00:26:59.999
for the flourishing of
wildly diverse life forms.
00:27:00.000 --> 00:27:04.999
He writes, \"If moments such as dawn and dusk, birth
and death, and the seasons are of such significance,
00:27:05.000 --> 00:27:09.999
how awesome must be the present moment
00:27:10.000 --> 00:27:14.999
when we witness the dying of the
earth in its Cenozoic expression.\"
00:27:15.000 --> 00:27:19.999
We are not just passing into another historical
period or another culture modification,
00:27:20.000 --> 00:27:24.999
we are changing the
chemistry of the planet,
00:27:25.000 --> 00:27:29.999
we’re change the bio-systems, we’ve
changed the geo-systems of the planet
00:27:30.000 --> 00:27:34.999
on a scale of hundreds of millions of years
but more specifically, we’re terminating
00:27:35.000 --> 00:27:39.999
the last 65 million years
of life development.
00:27:40.000 --> 00:27:44.999
You know, a person would say, \"Well, where do
we go from here?\" To my mind, if we survive it,
00:27:45.000 --> 00:27:49.999
if we go into a really sustainable world,
00:27:50.000 --> 00:27:54.999
we will be passing from the terminal,
Cenozoic into what I call the Equili-Zoic.
00:27:55.000 --> 00:27:59.999
It’s an era of ecology.
00:28:00.000 --> 00:28:04.999
Therefore, it the Zoi means life
and this is ecological life,
00:28:05.000 --> 00:28:09.999
which really means it’s the era in
which the totality of the universe
00:28:10.000 --> 00:28:14.999
of… of the creation, of the
environment has got to be
00:28:15.000 --> 00:28:19.999
that which is foremost in our minds.
00:28:20.000 --> 00:28:24.999
And this is beginning to emerge in very
interesting ways umm… alternatively,
00:28:25.000 --> 00:28:29.999
I think around the planet, as
people are trying to re-imagine
00:28:30.000 --> 00:28:34.999
and reinvent the human in
a more sustainable way.
00:28:35.000 --> 00:28:39.999
For example, Genesis farm in Western New
Jersey has been Miriam MacGills’s response
00:28:40.000 --> 00:28:44.999
for more than two decades
now to Thomas’s vision.
00:28:45.000 --> 00:28:49.999
He gave paper on \"Contemplation and World Order.\" The surprise
was he said, \"Well, I’m not going to really talk about
00:28:50.000 --> 00:28:54.999
contemplation so much as what world
order are you contemplating\"
00:28:55.000 --> 00:28:59.999
and it just shifted the whole
focus of that conference
00:29:00.000 --> 00:29:04.999
and left me in a totally new place.
00:29:05.000 --> 00:29:09.999
My congregation of Dominican Sisters
inherited this 140 acre farm
00:29:10.000 --> 00:29:14.999
and there was an intuitive knowing that it could
be a place where all of these new understandings,
00:29:15.000 --> 00:29:19.999
could perhaps, have an effect.
00:29:20.000 --> 00:29:24.999
The farm would really have to thrusts, one is
wrestling with the new story of the universe
00:29:25.000 --> 00:29:29.999
on every level, which we’re trying to understand
it, in terms of the science, in terms of the…
00:29:30.000 --> 00:29:34.999
of the uh… ecological implications,
the spiritual, religious,
00:29:35.000 --> 00:29:39.999
cultural implications. And so we have academic
programs, where we’re all learning together
00:29:40.000 --> 00:29:44.999
and then the other is the agricultural,
I think a central thing of his work
00:29:45.000 --> 00:29:49.999
is that the earth and the universe
have to become the primary reference
00:29:50.000 --> 00:29:54.999
for how humans think about themselves.
So what we try to do here, for instance,
00:29:55.000 --> 00:29:59.999
is say will then the earth in
its soils and in its microbes
00:30:00.000 --> 00:30:04.999
and in the whole texture of its
development has to be the way we farm.
00:30:05.000 --> 00:30:09.999
The way we farm isn’t the way humans
think agriculture is, in fact,
00:30:10.000 --> 00:30:14.999
that’s been the great work here
uh… reversing those perceptions
00:30:15.000 --> 00:30:19.999
and uh… and with it the economics
on which real integral
00:30:20.000 --> 00:30:24.999
agriculture can survive as a way for
humans to live and not be so devastating
00:30:25.000 --> 00:30:29.999
to the soils in the natural world.
00:30:30.000 --> 00:30:34.999
We have 20 acres of bio dynamically
produced food that is quite extraordinary
00:30:35.000 --> 00:30:39.999
and its vigor, its integrity and the
immense amount of human interaction
00:30:40.000 --> 00:30:44.999
that really happens with the plants
and the soils and the microbial life.
00:30:45.000 --> 00:30:49.999
It’s also a new economic model for
agriculture and so far as we have withdrawn
00:30:50.000 --> 00:30:54.999
from the market system recognizing that the present
market system is at the heart of the destruction
00:30:55.000 --> 00:30:59.999
of the small farmer. 180
families are shareholders
00:31:00.000 --> 00:31:04.999
and there’s an agreement between
the farmers and the families
00:31:05.000 --> 00:31:09.999
that there’s accountability
for the economics.
00:31:10.000 --> 00:31:14.999
The whole new social
arrangement is happening that
00:31:15.000 --> 00:31:19.999
I could never have predicted, but is uh…
maybe it’s significant as that vegetables.
00:31:20.000 --> 00:31:24.999
She’s coming out. She’s pretty. She’s cute.
00:31:25.000 --> 00:31:29.999
I think you’re laying on the potatoes.
We have a committed group of parents
00:31:30.000 --> 00:31:34.999
who are doing alternative child development, home schooling
with the universe story as part of the curriculum
00:31:35.000 --> 00:31:39.999
and a good part of the learning happens here, in the
fields, in the ponds, in the wetlands, in the gardens.
00:31:40.000 --> 00:31:44.999
The children are becoming
versed in the natural world
00:31:45.000 --> 00:31:49.999
much more than the typical child.
Yeah, it’s just like star dust.
00:31:50.000 --> 00:31:54.999
No, I see it down right there. what are you seeing?
I see… How does a child develop as a human being
00:31:55.000 --> 00:31:59.999
in the proper relationship
and the proper intimacy
00:32:00.000 --> 00:32:04.999
with a large experience,
that’s available to them
00:32:05.000 --> 00:32:09.999
and the world about them. The stars,
the Children will never see the star.
00:32:10.000 --> 00:32:14.999
The light pollution of even our
smaller it is, it won’t let children
00:32:15.000 --> 00:32:19.999
see in the stars and not to
see the stars as a sole loss.
00:32:20.000 --> 00:32:24.999
There’s nothing that is
00:32:25.000 --> 00:32:29.999
so necessary I think,
00:32:30.000 --> 00:32:34.999
as uh… recovery of the sense of the sacred.
Catastrophic events sometimes
00:32:35.000 --> 00:32:39.999
can restore a sense awesome that there
are powers gracious than the human.
00:32:40.000 --> 00:32:44.999
Uh… overwhelming and comprehensive power
00:32:45.000 --> 00:32:49.999
that strikes a certain amount of fear
and that’s why it’s sometimes at the…
00:32:50.000 --> 00:32:54.999
at the fear of the Lord
it’s beginning of wisdom.
00:32:55.000 --> 00:32:59.999
So the a certain awakening to spiritual
powers is, as one of the necessities
00:33:00.000 --> 00:33:04.999
for uh… developing a sense of reverence.
And that’s what gives us foreboding
00:33:05.000 --> 00:33:09.999
when we go into the real wilderness,
00:33:10.000 --> 00:33:14.999
it’s frightening experience because he was
an experience a real powers, real powers,
00:33:15.000 --> 00:33:19.999
just experience psychic
powers and you experience
00:33:20.000 --> 00:33:24.999
Cosmic powers. And it evokes
all of this in one place to…
00:33:25.000 --> 00:33:29.999
to get a sense of reverence, I think, is to some
money in the well and become reverent real quick.
00:33:30.000 --> 00:33:34.999
When I did my studies with Father Thomas
00:33:35.000 --> 00:33:39.999
I had occasion to uh… move into my own
00:33:40.000 --> 00:33:44.999
realm of freedom which uh… is a short way of saying, I
had to leave New York and go out to the western regions
00:33:45.000 --> 00:33:49.999
and when I came to Father Thomas to
first talk about this, he looked at me
00:33:50.000 --> 00:33:54.999
and he said, \"You go, you stay,
00:33:55.000 --> 00:33:59.999
you stay, you go, write me
when you wanna come back.\"
00:34:00.000 --> 00:34:04.999
My friends gathered at a
farewell and I kept saying,
00:34:05.000 --> 00:34:09.999
\"Simply, I… I don’t think I’m leaving,
I’m… I’m just going for a while.\"
00:34:10.000 --> 00:34:14.999
Oh, we’ve heard that before and in the
midst of this, came in Father Thomas
00:34:15.000 --> 00:34:19.999
with a book of poetry of “Tufu” and
in the northern woods of Minnesota,
00:34:20.000 --> 00:34:24.999
when I had canoed in four days
in the areas that still I marvel
00:34:25.000 --> 00:34:29.999
at the uh… extent of that journey and
that morning a bear came into our camp,
00:34:30.000 --> 00:34:34.999
sat with my pack, ripped it open,
took out the book of “Tufu”
00:34:35.000 --> 00:34:39.999
and opened that book and looked at it
00:34:40.000 --> 00:34:44.999
and bit it and I have to bear marks in that
00:34:45.000 --> 00:34:50.000
William Home translation of
“Tufu.” It causes me to pause.
00:35:00.000 --> 00:35:04.999
What Thomas Berry is giving us
in his book is a new language,
00:35:05.000 --> 00:35:09.999
that’s going to enable us to discuss the
00:35:10.000 --> 00:35:14.999
uh… task to be done in order
to prevent the total trashing
00:35:15.000 --> 00:35:19.999
of the world which is really… the
earth which is really our life boat.
00:35:20.000 --> 00:35:24.999
The universe…He would say the universe
is, it’s not a collection of objects,
00:35:25.000 --> 00:35:29.999
it’s a communion of subjects.
00:35:30.000 --> 00:35:34.999
When we were having our struggle here
to keep certain lands from developers
00:35:35.000 --> 00:35:39.999
when I wouldn’t use his idea
and say this is an attitude
00:35:40.000 --> 00:35:44.999
that’s clear coming from these town
meetings that the surroundings in our
00:35:45.000 --> 00:35:49.999
local landscape is just an object,
it’s all just up for… for sale and…
00:35:50.000 --> 00:35:54.999
and you try to get the highest bidder and
that’s all that matters. That idea penetrated,
00:35:55.000 --> 00:35:59.999
I can’t tell you how many
people understood that.
00:36:00.000 --> 00:36:04.999
It’s night upon the river,
00:36:05.000 --> 00:36:09.999
mid February, Venus shines
out of the wintry sky
00:36:10.000 --> 00:36:14.999
from the distance the
palisades(ph) long starkly
00:36:15.000 --> 00:36:19.999
over the world. Such a night tend to
mind back into those million years,
00:36:20.000 --> 00:36:24.999
it took to frame all this.
The ancient meadow
00:36:25.000 --> 00:36:29.999
itself a new comer here about the embedded
rock with this glacious creations.
00:36:30.000 --> 00:36:34.999
It’s all her to overwhelm
and for human endurance.
00:36:35.000 --> 00:36:39.999
We are not for ready memories of
the willow saying are new today,
00:36:40.000 --> 00:36:44.999
yellowing in the late evening sunlight.
00:36:45.000 --> 00:36:49.999
It was really a great loss when he… he left Riverdale
and uh… retired, but he was entitled to retire
00:36:50.000 --> 00:36:54.999
so now he’s happily doing his thing, writing
letters to the newspaper stand, North Carolina.
00:36:55.000 --> 00:36:59.999
I… I hope that he can save some of those
00:37:00.000 --> 00:37:04.999
roads from going in.
00:37:05.000 --> 00:37:09.999
I frequently say North Carolina
00:37:10.000 --> 00:37:14.999
come home to yourself, we have some
mountains, we have the fertile region,
00:37:15.000 --> 00:37:19.999
we have the coastal plan,
we have (inaudible) region,
00:37:20.000 --> 00:37:24.999
we have a very rich settled bioregions.
We need an internal economy,
00:37:25.000 --> 00:37:29.999
are we so incompetent or we cannot
create a viable economy of our own,
00:37:30.000 --> 00:37:34.999
why do we had progressively
destroy our inner economy
00:37:35.000 --> 00:37:39.999
and become more and more dependent
00:37:40.000 --> 00:37:44.999
on the exploitive hallmark or the K.
Marx economy,
00:37:45.000 --> 00:37:49.999
to tie us into that and to rip
us out of our own native setting
00:37:50.000 --> 00:37:54.999
and to carry this out by creating this
00:37:55.000 --> 00:37:59.999
vast system of roads and
highways, and all that.
00:38:00.000 --> 00:38:04.999
Development of communities, such as North
Carolina, it never ever pays for itself.
00:38:05.000 --> 00:38:09.999
We should be creating our music,
00:38:10.000 --> 00:38:14.999
our art that brought you, we should be
educating our children in relationship
00:38:15.000 --> 00:38:19.999
to their natural religion.
00:38:20.000 --> 00:38:24.999
If we don’t have certain outer experiences,
we don’t have certain inner experiences
00:38:25.000 --> 00:38:29.999
so at least we don’t have
them in such a profound way.
00:38:30.000 --> 00:38:34.999
We need the sun, the moon,
the stars, the rivers
00:38:35.000 --> 00:38:39.999
and the mountains, the… the tree, the
flowers, the birds, sound of the birds
00:38:40.000 --> 00:38:44.999
the uh… fish in the sea, umm… all of this
00:38:45.000 --> 00:38:49.999
evokes something in our inner
world, evokes a world of mystery,
00:38:50.000 --> 00:38:54.999
it evokes the world the sacred and gives
us that sense above all, a mystery.
00:38:55.000 --> 00:38:59.999
And this can be said to
be the cosmic liturgy.
00:39:00.000 --> 00:39:04.999
The universe itself
00:39:05.000 --> 00:39:09.999
is a kind of a sacred liturgy and humans
00:39:10.000 --> 00:39:14.999
become religious in the
sense by joining at the
00:39:15.000 --> 00:39:19.999
religion of the universe and
so that… apart from that
00:39:20.000 --> 00:39:24.999
our souls ripple, if we lived on
the Moon, our imagination would be
00:39:25.000 --> 00:39:29.999
as flat as the moon, our emotion
would be dull, our sense are divine
00:39:30.000 --> 00:39:34.999
would reflect the lunar landscape.
00:39:35.000 --> 00:39:39.999
In my view, the human came into existence
00:39:40.000 --> 00:39:44.999
at the advance stage of the
Cenozoic period to bear the burden
00:39:45.000 --> 00:39:49.999
and responsibility of human intelligence,
00:39:50.000 --> 00:39:54.999
he needed a magnificent world of beauty in
order to give us the healing that would need.
00:39:55.000 --> 00:39:59.999
It’s a greatest and
deepest tragedy of losing
00:40:00.000 --> 00:40:04.999
the splendor of the other world
is that we will always have
00:40:05.000 --> 00:40:09.999
an inner demand for we
genetically coded to exist
00:40:10.000 --> 00:40:14.999
in the world of beauty.
00:40:15.000 --> 00:40:19.999
Reading Thomas Berry is
an absolute liberation.
00:40:20.000 --> 00:40:24.999
I didn’t really understand how
deeply I was repressing my own truth
00:40:25.000 --> 00:40:29.999
and my own love of the natural world. It… it
was an antidote to my feeling of hopelessness
00:40:30.000 --> 00:40:34.999
and nobody really cared except environmentalists
and here’s a theologian who cared right?
00:40:35.000 --> 00:40:39.999
And who could link the spiritual with… with the
natural, we’ve got culture and nature rejoined again
00:40:40.000 --> 00:40:44.999
because we have this very deadly illusion
that we don’t need the natural world.
00:40:45.000 --> 00:40:49.999
And I mean, you and I, we can’t take our
next breath without the natural world.
00:40:50.000 --> 00:40:58.000
[music]
00:41:05.000 --> 00:41:09.999
The universe is a communion of
subjects not a collection of objects.
00:41:10.000 --> 00:41:14.999
And we have this from our first
awakening to the universe,
00:41:15.000 --> 00:41:19.999
you first impress when you
see a flower, or see a tree,
00:41:20.000 --> 00:41:24.999
or see a sunset, or seeing the ocean,
or see anything in the natural world,
00:41:25.000 --> 00:41:29.999
your first impress is a
communion experience.
00:41:30.000 --> 00:41:34.999
How wonderful is this and to live in the
universe where there’s a sun and the heavens,
00:41:35.000 --> 00:41:39.999
where there’s uh… so many wonderful creatures
of Earth, where the song of the birds
00:41:40.000 --> 00:41:44.999
and the butterflies, and
the cicada in the evening,
00:41:45.000 --> 00:41:49.999
what is all this? Obviously, it’s not
the collection of objects to be used,
00:41:50.000 --> 00:41:54.999
obviously it’s a world to be venerated.
00:41:55.000 --> 00:41:59.999
It’s a world… world to the communed with,
to be present, to be and delighted in
00:42:00.000 --> 00:42:04.999
and together to have a certain
experience, it might be called
00:42:05.000 --> 00:42:09.999
ecstatic experience.
00:42:10.000 --> 00:42:14.999
There is one experience that I think
00:42:15.000 --> 00:42:19.999
it has uh… a really deep influence in somebody’s life,
it’s something that reminded about 10 years old.
00:42:20.000 --> 00:42:24.999
I saw a meadow and I saw it first
00:42:25.000 --> 00:42:29.999
in spring time, in early may.
00:42:30.000 --> 00:42:34.999
And it was filled with wild lilies.
They’re outside together with the sounds
00:42:35.000 --> 00:42:39.999
of the insects or they were the
crickets, there are birds.
00:42:40.000 --> 00:42:44.999
All of this somehow struck me in such a way
00:42:45.000 --> 00:42:49.999
that ever since that… that meadow has
become my norm of reality and value.
00:42:50.000 --> 00:42:54.999
A good economy is what makes
that meadow to survive.
00:42:55.000 --> 00:42:59.999
A good politics protects the meadow.
00:43:00.000 --> 00:43:04.999
A good religion is what enables me to
understand the deep mystery in the meadow.
00:43:05.000 --> 00:43:13.000
[music]
00:43:15.000 --> 00:43:19.999
Thomas’s early experience of the
beauty of the meadow is reflected
00:43:20.000 --> 00:43:24.999
in the dream of the earth, where he
describes Dantes meeting with Beatrice.
00:43:25.000 --> 00:43:29.999
One of the most difficult things
in the ‘Divine Comedy’ is when
00:43:30.000 --> 00:43:34.999
Dante after his journey
through in the inferno,
00:43:35.000 --> 00:43:39.999
purgatorio, he meets Beatrice once again,
00:43:40.000 --> 00:43:44.999
He first met Beatrice when she
was 8 years old, and he was 9.
00:43:45.000 --> 00:43:49.999
This was the great inspiration of his life,
00:43:50.000 --> 00:43:54.999
the inspiration the Divine Comedy.
It’s supporting that meetings because
00:43:55.000 --> 00:43:59.999
at his coming home to himself like to
00:44:00.000 --> 00:44:04.999
that experience that he had that inspired
00:44:05.000 --> 00:44:09.999
the deepest nobility of this nature.
00:44:10.000 --> 00:44:14.999
And which inspired the aesthetic
grandeur of his writing.
00:44:15.000 --> 00:44:19.999
It was just that I think
we need to experience.
00:44:20.000 --> 00:44:24.999
When we see something of wilderness,
00:44:25.000 --> 00:44:29.999
I saying that there’s a sense
of the tragic dimension
00:44:30.000 --> 00:44:34.999
that exist on the earth, but that there
is realms of beauty still survive.
00:44:35.000 --> 00:44:39.999
It needs people to meet in a sense,
00:44:40.000 --> 00:44:44.999
to meet in a sense with Beatrice
00:44:45.000 --> 00:44:49.999
because this is a way in which when we
come to ourselves and come to the divine,
00:44:50.000 --> 00:44:54.999
come to intimacy, once again.
00:44:55.000 --> 00:44:59.999
And the reason why this is so important is
00:45:00.000 --> 00:45:04.999
because to change the situation
we are now, it’s going to take
00:45:05.000 --> 00:45:09.999
an awesome amount of determination,
a lot of insight and endurance.
00:45:10.000 --> 00:45:14.999
We must do this, by means of story
00:45:15.000 --> 00:45:19.999
and shared dream experience.
00:45:20.000 --> 00:45:24.999
The dream drive the action, we have to dream
of a better future, of a different future
00:45:25.000 --> 00:45:29.999
because it’s the dream that creates.
00:45:30.000 --> 00:45:34.999
I think constantly of the future, I
think constantly of the children
00:45:35.000 --> 00:45:39.999
and of the needs that all the
children go into the future,
00:45:40.000 --> 00:45:44.999
as a single sacred community,
the children of the trees,
00:45:45.000 --> 00:45:49.999
the children of the birds,
the children of the animals,
00:45:50.000 --> 00:45:54.999
the children of the insects, all the child.
00:45:55.000 --> 00:45:59.999
There’s no future for the human children,
if there’s no future for the children
00:46:00.000 --> 00:46:04.999
of the… of the life forms.
00:46:05.000 --> 00:46:09.999
[music]
00:46:10.000 --> 00:46:14.999
The child awakens to universe,
00:46:15.000 --> 00:46:19.999
the mind of the child to a world of wonder,
00:46:20.000 --> 00:46:24.999
imagination to a world of beauty,
00:46:25.000 --> 00:46:29.999
emotions to world event in the sea.
00:46:30.000 --> 00:46:34.999
It takes a universe to make a child
both in outer form and in a spirit.
00:46:35.000 --> 00:46:39.999
It takes a universe to educate a child.
00:46:40.000 --> 00:46:44.999
It takes a universe to fulfill a child.
00:46:45.000 --> 00:46:49.999
[music]
00:46:50.000 --> 00:46:54.999
We live inside a story.
00:46:55.000 --> 00:46:59.999
[music]
00:47:00.000 --> 00:47:04.999
We’re just getting a glimpse of what that
means to be part of an expanding universe
00:47:05.000 --> 00:47:09.999
and part of the original Stardust.
00:47:10.000 --> 00:47:14.999
[music]
00:47:15.000 --> 00:47:19.999
No matter where you are in the universe, you see the
same universe that’s the… the basic acceptance of
00:47:20.000 --> 00:47:24.999
science as it exists in present time.
00:47:25.000 --> 00:47:29.999
And no matter where you are,
00:47:30.000 --> 00:47:34.999
you see the universe receding from you.
So you run the
00:47:35.000 --> 00:47:39.999
camera backwards, it
will bring you back to a
00:47:40.000 --> 00:47:44.999
uh… a point that’s the origin point
00:47:45.000 --> 00:47:49.999
of the universe over you.
00:47:50.000 --> 00:47:54.999
That’s why I know that I’m not
myself without everything else.
00:47:55.000 --> 00:48:03.000
[music]
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 49 minutes
Date: 2002
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 10-12, College, Adult
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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