Lynn White’s controversial hypothesis, that Judaeo-Christian belief led to attitudes towards the environment that have spawned an ecological crisis, has received much attention from sociologists of religion, notably in the United States. Surveys of the general population show negative correlations between biblical literalism and environmentalism, but these seem to be due to the particular nature of religion and politics in the usa. This study uses more nuanced measures of biblical interpretation and theological stance to examine the issue among a sample of 537 committed churchgoers from a range of mainly conservative Protestant denominations in the United Kingdom. Literal interpretation of Genesis was directly negatively correlated with concern for the environment, after allowing for indirect effects through dominion and stewardship theologies. The effect of symbolic interpretation was mediated by sacramental understanding of creation and stewardship. Stewardship was a key belief that mediated the effects of symbolic interpretation and theological stance on concern for the environment. Biblical interpretation, dominion and sacramentalism were uncorrelated with willingness to sacrifice to protect the environment, but stewardship was indirectly positively correlated through its effect on environmental concern.
Purchase
Buy instant access (PDF download and unlimited online access):
Institutional Login
Log in with Open Athens, Shibboleth, or your institutional credentials
Personal login
Log in with your brill.com account
Ajzen I. Attitudes, personality and behaviour 2005 Maidenhead McGraw-Hill Education (Open University)
Arbuckle J.L. IBM SPSS Amos 20 user’s guide 2011 Chicago, Il IBM Corporation
arda View of the Bible. 2013 Accessed on: 14 August 2013. http://www.thearda.com/quickstats/qs_107.asp
Bauckham R. God and the crisis of freedom 2002 Louisville, KY Westminster John Knox Press
Berry R.J. Environmental stewardship: Critical perspectives—past and present 2006 London T & T Clark
Berry T. The dream of the earth 1988 San Francisco, CA Sierra Club Books
Bouma-Prediger S. The greening of theology: The ecological models of Rosemary Radford Ruether, Joseph Sittler and Jurgan Moltmann 1995 Atlanta, GA Scholars Press
Boyd H.H. Christianity and the environment in the American public Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1999 38 1 36 44
Byrne B.M. Structural equation modeling with AMOS: Basic concepts, applications, and programming 2010 New York Routledge
Cronbach L.J. Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests Psychometrika 1951 16 3 297 334
Dunlap R.E. Trends in public opinion toward environmental issues: 1965-1990 Society & Natural Resources 1991 4 3 285 312
Dunlap R.E., Gallup G.H. & Gallup A.M. Of gobal concern Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development 1993 35 9 7 39
Dunlap R.E., Van Liere K.D., Mertig A.G. & Jones R.E. New trends in measuring environmental attitudes: Measuring endorsement of the New Ecological Paradigm: A revised nep scale Journal of Social Issues 2000 56 3 425 442
Dunlap R.E. & Vanliere K.D. The New Environmental Paradigm: A proposed measuring instrument and preliminary results Journal of Environmental Education 1978 9 4 10 19
Eckberg D.L. & Blocker T.J. Varieties of religious involvement and environmental concerns: Testing the Lynn White thesis Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1989 28 4 509 517
Eckberg D.L. & Blocker T.J. Christianity, environmentalism, and the theoretical problem of fundamentalism Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1996 35 4 343 355
Fox M. Original blessing 1983 Santa Fe, NM Bear & Company
Fox M. Creation spirituality: Liberating gifts for the peoples of the earth 1990 New York HarperCollins
Fransson N. & Gärling T. Environmental concern: Conceptual definitions, measurement methods, and research findings Journal of Environmental Psychology 1999 19 4 369 382
Greeley A. Religion and attitudes toward the environment Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1993 32 1 19 28
Guth J.L., Green J.C., Kellstedt L.A. & Smidt C.E. Faith and the environment: Religious beliefs and attitudes on environmental policy American Journal of Political Science 1995 39 2 364 382
Hagevi M. Religiosity and environmental opinion in Sweden and the USA Statsvetenskaplig Tidskrift 2008 110 3 249 274
Hand C.M. & Liere K.D.V. Religion, mastery-over-nature, and environmental concern Social Forces 1984 63 2 555 570
Harrison P. Berry R.J. “Having dominion: Genesis and the mastery of nature.” Environmental stewardship: Critical perspectives—past and present 2006 London T & T Clark 17 31
Haught J.F. The promise of nature: Ecology and cosmic purpose 1993 New York Paulist Press
Haught J.F. Gottlieb R.S. “Christianity and ecology.” This sacred earth: Religion, nature environment 1996 London Routledge 270 285
Hayes B.C. & Marangudakis M. Religion and attitudes towards nature in Britain British Journal of Sociology 2001a 52 1 139 155
Hayes B.C. & Marangudakis M. Religion and environmental issues among Anglo-American democracies Review of Religious Research 2001b 42 2 159 174
Hitzhusen G.E. Judeo-Christian theology and the environment: Moving beyond scepticism to new sources for environmental education in the United States Environmental Education Research 2007 13 1 55 74
Hunt R.A. Mythological-symbolic religious commitment. The lam scales Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1972 11 1 42 52
Javor B. Wildmann J. “Religious identities and environmental attitudes in Hungary.” Religions and churches in a common Europe 2012 Bremen EHV
Joranson P.N. & Butigan K. Cry of the environment: Rebuilding the Christian creation tradition 1984 Santa Fe, NM Bear & Company
Kanagy C.L. & Nelsen H.M. Religion and environmental concern: Challenging the dominant assumptions Review of Religious Research 1995 37 1 33 45
Kanagy C.L. & Willits F.K. A “greening” of religion? Some evidence from a Pennsylvania sample Social Science Quarterly 1993 74 3 674 683
Kinsley D.R. Ecology and religion: Ecological spirituality in cross-cultural perspective 1995 Englewood Cliffs, NJ Prentice Hall
Kline P. The handbook of psychological testing 2000 London & New York Routledge
Kollmuss A. & Agyeman J. Mind the gap: Why do people act environmentally and what are the barriers to pro-environmental behavior? Environmental Education Research 2002 8 3 239 260
Kvaløy B., Finseraas H. & Listhaug O. The publics’ concern for global warming: A cross-national study of 47 countries Journal of Peace Research 2012 49 1 11 22
Loman S.E. & Francis L.J. The Loman Index of biblical interpretation: Distinguishing between literal, symbolic and rejecting modes among 11 to 14 year olds British Journal of Religious Education 2006 28 2 131 140
McAndrew S. Park A., Curtice J., Thomson K., Phillips M., Clery E. & Butt S. “Religious faith and contemporary attitudes.” British social attitudes: The 26th report 2010 London SAGE Publications 87 112
Mitchell R.C. & Carson R.T. Using surveys to value public goods: The contingent valuation method 1989 Washington DC Resources for the Future
Northcott M.S. The evolution of green Christianity Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture 2011 5 3 354 363
Palmer C. Ball I., Goodall M., Palmer C. & Reader J. “Stewardship: A case study in environmental ethics.” The earth beneath: A critical guide to green theology 1992 London SPCK 67 86
Poythress N.G. Literal, antiliteral, and mythological religious orientations Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1975 14 3 271 284
Reuther R.R. “Ecofeminism: the challenge to theology.” Christianity and ecology 2000 Cambridge, Mass Harvard University Press 97 112
Schultz P.W., Zelezny L. & Dalrymple N.J. A multinational perspective on the relation between Judeo-Christian religious beliefs and attitudes of environmental concern Environment and Behavior 2000 32 4 576 591
Shaiko R.G. Religion, politics, and environmental concern: A powerful mix of passions Social Science Quarterly 1987 68 2 244 262
Sherkat D.E. & Ellison C.G. Structuring the religion-environment connection: Identifying religious influences on environmental concern and activism Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 2007 46 1 71 85
Taylor E. Park A., Clery E., Curtice J., Phillips M. & Utting D. “Concern about climate change: A paler shade of green?” British social attitudes 28 2012 London SAGE
Thompson S.C.G. & Barton M.A. Ecocentric and anthropocentric attitudes toward the environment Journal of Environmental Psychology 1994 14 2 149 157
van der Lans J. Interpretation of religious language and cognitive style: A pilot study with the lam-scale The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion 1990 1 2 107 23
Village A. The relationship of psychological type to interpretations of Genesis among churchgoers in England Psychology of Religion and Spirituality 2014 6 1 72 82
WCC Justice, diakonia and responsibility for creation 2013 Accessed on: 8 August 2013 http://www.oikoumene.org/en/what-we-do/justice-diakonia-and-responsibility-for-creation
White L. Jr. The historical roots of our ecologic crisis Science 1967 155 3767 1203 1207
Wolkomir M., Futreal M., Woodrum E. & Hoban T. Denominational subcultures of environmentalism Review of Religious Research 1997a 38 4 325 343
Wolkomir M., Futreal M., Woodrum E. & Hoban T. Substantive religious belief and environmentalism Social Science Quarterly 1997b 78 1 96 108
Woodrum E. & Hoban T. Theology and religiosity effects on environmentalism Review of Religious Research 1994 35 3 193 206
Woodrum E. & Wolkomir M.J. Religious effects on environmentalism Sociological Spectrum 1997 17 2 223 234
| All Time | Past 365 days | Past 30 Days | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abstract Views | 796 | 92 | 4 |
| Full Text Views | 236 | 14 | 3 |
| PDF Views & Downloads | 100 | 27 | 3 |
Lynn White’s controversial hypothesis, that Judaeo-Christian belief led to attitudes towards the environment that have spawned an ecological crisis, has received much attention from sociologists of religion, notably in the United States. Surveys of the general population show negative correlations between biblical literalism and environmentalism, but these seem to be due to the particular nature of religion and politics in the usa. This study uses more nuanced measures of biblical interpretation and theological stance to examine the issue among a sample of 537 committed churchgoers from a range of mainly conservative Protestant denominations in the United Kingdom. Literal interpretation of Genesis was directly negatively correlated with concern for the environment, after allowing for indirect effects through dominion and stewardship theologies. The effect of symbolic interpretation was mediated by sacramental understanding of creation and stewardship. Stewardship was a key belief that mediated the effects of symbolic interpretation and theological stance on concern for the environment. Biblical interpretation, dominion and sacramentalism were uncorrelated with willingness to sacrifice to protect the environment, but stewardship was indirectly positively correlated through its effect on environmental concern.
| All Time | Past 365 days | Past 30 Days | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abstract Views | 796 | 92 | 4 |
| Full Text Views | 236 | 14 | 3 |
| PDF Views & Downloads | 100 | 27 | 3 |