A Word to Enkindle: In Defense of Nature

January 17, 2019 | A Word to Enkindle, Fr. John Bayer

Fr. John Bayer, O. CistIn Defense of Nature by Fr. John Bayer for The Texas Catholic

Do you want a great book for our ideological times? Do you want to be challenged, no matter where you sit on the ideological spectrum between Left and Right? Well, then I’ve got a book for you: In Defense of Nature: The Catholic Unity of Environmental, Economic and Moral Ecology by Benjamin Wiker.

This book embodies one of the things I love most about Catholic faith: an implacable confidence in the truth and therefore, on the one hand, the courage to challenge everyone to find a deeper way of seeing, and yet, on the other hand, the humility to listen to anyone who might shed light on the truth — no matter their ideological persuasion. Concretely, Wiker wants to challenge the Left, which seems concerned with the pollution of our physical environment and yet appears recklessly intolerant of almost any appeal to nature in the moral order. At the same time, he wants to challenge the Right, which seems concerned for morality and religion and yet appears impiously obtuse about economic and environmental justice under God.

The key to challenging ­— and even unifying! — both sides is to encourage them to rediscover nature — that beautiful and integrated order surrounding us in our material and moral environment and animating us from deep within our humanity.

Wiker notes the “coincidence” that our physical and moral environments have both become terribly polluted as a new attitude toward nature arose in modernity. Since sixteenth-century authors like Francis Bacon and René Descartes, a materialist worldview is dominating our culture which suggests the world is nothing more than a machine whose codes we should decipher and manipulate in order to satisfy our own desires. The world is no longer the beautiful habitat within which we ought to find our place in the great harmony of creatures under the Creator; it no longer holds a primordial meaning teaching us who we are and where our happiness resides. Instead, it is only raw material for us to extract and manipulate at will.

One way to see this worldview in action is to look at how “hyper-palatability” drives food and sex in our culture.

Wiker reports that many foods today are designed to be hyperpalatable: that is, they are loaded with salt, sugar and fat so as to become addictive. These foods divide the natural drive of the body for homeostasis from the reward-seeking mechanisms in our brains, thus setting us at war with ourselves. So, while our bodies are designed to send us cues that tell us when we are hungry and when we are full, hyperpalatable foods are designed to overstimulate those parts of the brains that seek reward so much that we ignore those natural cues and just … keep … eating. Why? Because the more we “supersize” our meals, or the more we “can’t stop” once we “pop” open our chips, the more money we make for someone else. Our addiction to food is a business strategy. As this irrational drive to consume – “consumerism” – destroys our natural health and well-being, it also happens to wreak havoc upon our environment. It is astonishing to think about how much trash is produced by our single-serving and convenience-based food economy. Those on the Right might ask themselves how much chemical manipulation and the destruction of our health and environment can be defended in the name of economic freedom.

Sex too has been “engineered” to satisfy our desire for pleasure in a way that is addictive and destructive. We keep eating although we are full, because the chemicals in our foods trigger a response in our brains approximating the addictive effects of cocaine. Similarly, our experience of sexuality is being culturally and chemically re-engineered to separate our natural desire for sex and its fruits (a loving marriage and children) from the reward of pleasure. And thus, we are able to indulge more and more in the pleasure without enjoying — and in fact often destroying — the natural goods of sex. Perhaps surprisingly, a leading cause for divorce is pornography: that’s right, sexual appetite is leading people away from conjugal union. Similarly, studies show that young adults today are significantly less promiscuous than before. And why? Because pornography (to take only one example of the libertinism in our culture) is bringing the separation of sexual pleasure from sexual goods to its logical end: our sexual drive is being re-written to lead people away from relationship and toward the loneliness of vice and self-absorption. Those on the Left might ask whether sexual libertinism can really justify the social devastation caused by denying the truth written all over our DNA and anatomy: namely, that man and woman are complementary, and that they are made to unite in lifelong friendship in order to be happy, give life and serve others.

Hyper-palatability is only one example of how destructive our attitude toward nature is today. We would do well to learn from Wiker to fall back in love with nature as the beautiful order stretching across the cosmos to order all things well, sweetly guiding everything from the cycle of seasons to our moral lives.

Hawk Happenings

Art Exhibit

Stop by the Irving Arts Center to see artwork from Cistercian Preparatory School’s Middle and Upper School students, on display in the Courtyard Gallery through May 10. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, noon to 5 PM. Admission is free.

Mini Arts Festival

Here’s a look at the Mini Arts Festival when the sun was shining and creativity was in full bloom.

Stations of the Cross

Did you know? Cistercian’s campus features a dedicated Stations of the Cross trail, offering students a place to walk, pray, and reflect in the beauty of nature.

Publications

Thy Kingdom Come

The more I reflect on the petitions of the Our Father, the more I’m convinced that I have no idea what I’m praying when I mumble those words multiple times every day.

The current object of my loving mystification is “Thy kingdom come.” In an effort to be slightly less intimidated by this vast and marvelous petition, I will arrange my musings as responses to the time-honored journalistic questions.

Lessons learned in a monastery

One of the most important rooms in a monastery, after the church, is the chapter room. This is the place where monks meet to do various things as a community: hear an exhortation from their abbot; listen to a spiritual reading (often a chapter from “The Rule of St. Benedict”); deliberate and vote on the important material and spiritual questions that arise in a monastery, such as who should be the abbot, whether to welcome a young monk as a permanent member of the community through solemn profession, and how best to structure their lives to promote God’s purpose.

Calling upon the hallowed name of the Lord

Jesus poses a problem when He instructs us to pray to the Father with the words “hallowed be Thy name” (Matthew 6:9). Many Psalms exhort the faithful to praise or call upon the name of the LORD (Psalm 113:1; 116:13; 148:13), and others assert that “Our help is in the name of the LORD” (Psalm 124:8). But how can human beings hallow — that is, make holy — the name of the LORD (in Hebrew, YHWH), Who is already, always, and automatically holy, utterly beyond our ability to add to or subtract from, to influence or change?