This is a hero who instigates and influences the actions of others, but does not act himself. His heroism is of the mind only—escaped as far as possible, not only from divine rule, from its place in the order of creation or the Chain of Being, but also from the influence of material creation:.
Book I, lines This would-be heroism is guilty of two evils that are prerequisite to its very identity: hubris and abstraction. And because this mind is understood only as a cause, its primary works are necessarily abstract.
We should remind ourselves that materialism in the sense of the love of material things is not in itself an evil. Lewis pointed out, God too loves material things; He invented them. The true lover of material things does not think in this way, but is answerable instead to the paradox of the lost sheep: that each is more precious than all.
Therefore from this high pitch let us descend A lower flight, and speak of things at hand Useful … lines In its immediate sense this is a warning against thought that is theoretical or speculative and therefore abstract , but in its broader sense it is a warning against disobedience—the eating of the forbidden fruit, an act of hubris, which Satan justifies by a compellingly reasonable theory and which Eve undertakes as a speculation.
Application which the heroic approach ignores is the crux, because no two farms or farmers are alike; no two fields are alike.
Just the changing shape or topography of the land makes for differences of the most formidable kind. Abstractions never cross these boundaries without either ceasing to be abstractions or doing damage. And prefabricated industrial methods and technologies are abstractions.
The bigger and more expensive, the more heroic, they are, the harder they are to apply considerately and conservingly. Application is the most important work, but also the most modest, complex, difficult, and long—and so it goes against the grain of industrial heroism. To use knowledge and tools in a particular place with good long-term results is not heroic.
It is not a grand action visible for a long distance or a long time. It is a small action, but more complex and difficult, more skillful and responsible, more whole and enduring, than most grand actions. It comes of a willingness to devote oneself to work that perhaps only the eye of Heaven will see in its full intricacy and excellence.
Perhaps the real work, like real prayer and real charity, must be done in secret. In the loss of skill we lose stewardship; in losing stewardship we lose fellowship; we become outcasts from the great neighborhood of Creation. It is possible—as our experience in this good land shows—to exile ourselves from Creation, and to ally ourselves with the principle of destruction—which is, ultimately, the principle of nonentity.
It is to be willing in general for beings to not-be. And once we have allied ourselves with that principle, we are foolish to think that we can control the results. If we are willing to pollute the air—to harm the elegant creature known as the atmosphere—by that token we are willing to harm all creatures that breathe, ourselves and our children among them.
That is not to suggest that we can live harmlessly, or strictly at our own expense; we depend upon other creatures and survive by their deaths. To live, we must daily break the body and shed the blood of Creation.
When we do this knowingly, lovingly, skillfully, reverently, it is a sacrament. When we do it ignorantly, greedily, clumsily, destructively, it is a desecration.
In such desecration we condemn ourselves to spiritual and moral loneliness, and others to want. Wendell Berry, an essayist, novelist, and poet, has been honored with the T. He lives with his wife on a farm in Henry County, Kentucky. Reprinted by permission of Counterpoint. This essay was originally published in , and with this reprinting Flourish celebrates its 30th anniversary.
To discover more about the life and faith that shaped these words, check out the following: In this Christianity Today article , writer and farmer Ragan Sutterfield places a day spent with Berry in the context of the larger conversation surrounding his work. View an extensive interview with Wendell Berry , conducted by Harold K. Bush, Jr. Wendell Berry speaks eloquently, patiently and compellingly to both camps: those of us who follow God and those who do not.
He does so with wit, passion and wisdom. He makes believing in God seem natural, logical, and without pretense. Thank you for reprinting this.
We forget the Garden and our responsibilities therein at our own peril. I have a considerable history with Wendell Berry. After a 4 year stint as a plant molecular biologist at the UGA, I was allowed two more years in Environmental Ethics to attempt an interdisciplinary Ph. As fate and my committee would have it, that attempt was ill-fated. Since then my wife and I have worked in the woods and fields of KY. We lived without electricity for over a decade, and we used teams of horses and minimal technology to start two businesses and a non-profit.
We have learned much about the woods that was hitherto unknown, and I am currently writing about our system of Integrated forest Management which I hope to get published. The neo-agrarians either misquote Genesis , or they forget to read Genesis Chapter 3, thereby misinterpreting all of Genesis. God will provide. The ravens neither sow nor reap, nor do they put up food in barns, and yet God provides food for them. They were fed by God with quail and manna in the desert for 40 years.
But Deuteronomy is not an agricultural example of good husbandry — it is an example of responsible hunting and gathering. The fundamental problem causing our ecological crisis that Professor White, Jr.
In Matthew and Luke, Jesus instructs his followers to trust in God, but he also says that humans are more important to god than the birds. Wendell acknowledges this when he writes about Adam and Eve naming all the other plants and animals. The Bible — among other good and bad things — makes its followers believe that humans have superiority over Nature. We do not.
This idea human superiority over animals flew in the face of St. Francis, as Professor White, Jr. To them, animals and plants are our sisters and brothers. Not metaphorically, but literally. And the Native Americans are correct. And the European settlers almost always used the Bible in some way to justify the rape and displacement of Natives.
I believe Wendell Berry would have had a much bigger influence if he had interpreted history and the Bible correctly. I give this round to Professor White, Jr. In the Fall issue of Flourish Magazine, we reprinted the essay to celebrate Mr. Below is my contribution to this collection… […]. We also asked a set of Christian leaders to respond to the essay. You can […]. It confirmed what my better senses had long been telling me, but which I had at times rejected on account of my own personal weakness.
Oct 26, John rated it really liked it. The Gift of Good Land collects a number of essays from the late '70s and early '80s, as the sub-title says, "Further Essays Cultural and Agricultural. Berry favors small, subsistence farmers over "agribusiness" or "tractor jockeys" farming monoculture crops. The collection, however, has a broader appeal than simply to those interested in farming.
The fi The Gift of Good Land collects a number of essays from the late '70s and early '80s, as the sub-title says, "Further Essays Cultural and Agricultural. The first two essays, occupying 76 pages, were basically travelogues, Berry describing trips to Peru and the southwestern U.
Unfortunately, both of these essays were, to my taste, too little bang for the buck, and they really slowed my reading of this book because they didn't particularly excite me.
The middle section of the book, though, is filled with incisive, insightful essays. These are perfect gems closely analyzing important questions about cultural and agricultural issues in America. I won't reproduce here all the passages that I marked to come back to, but I won't be surprised if some of them inspire future blog entries.
Even almost three decades later, his essays have power and relevence, in some cases because he was writing against the dominant practices of conventional agriculture just as they were becoming dominant, and in some cases because our energy and economic situation now reflects the concerns of the '70s and then some.
The late section builds on this theoretical framework with profiles of small, diversified farmers in various parts of the country, detailing their histories and methods, and is fascinating in its own right. The final--title--essay wasn't quite as compelling for me, as it was "a Biblical argument for ecological and agricultural responsibility. Still, the collection as a whole was well worth reading.
May 10, Matt rated it really liked it. Written decades prior to Omnivore's Dilemma, this collection of essays sounds many of the same notes, but does so much more from the heart and with clear anger at the multitude of detrimental effects associated with agribusiness. Favorite quotes: It is the rule, I think, that we often romanticize what we have first despised [in reference to farming:] p.
If he loves his soil he will s Written decades prior to Omnivore's Dilemma, this collection of essays sounds many of the same notes, but does so much more from the heart and with clear anger at the multitude of detrimental effects associated with agribusiness. If he loves his soil he will save it.
Whether they are "domestic" or foreign, the interest of the mine owners is in what is under the ground; they respect no living thing that is on top of it. We came with visions, but not with sight. We did not see or understand where we were or what was there, but destroyed what was there for the sake of what we desired. And the desire was always native to the place we had left behind. It will, then, be "organic" gardening Mar 05, Catherine Meng rated it it was amazing.
I want to suggest that it may be impossible to defend the small farm by itself or for its own sake. The small farm cannot be "developed" like a product or a program. Like a household, it is a human organism, and has its origin in both nature and culture. Its justification is not only agricultural, but is a part of an ancient pattern of values, ideas, aspirations, attitudes, faiths, knowledges, and skills that propose and support the sound establishment of a people on the land.
To defend the s To defend the small farm is to defend a large part, and the best part, of our cultural inheritance. Defenders of the small farm to use only the most immediate example must take care never to use the word 'economy" to mean only 'money economy.
And we must therefore judge economic health by the health of households, both human and natural. This is a collection from other collections. Now, I really like some of the essays in this, especially his trip to Peru. Berry often contrasts a small-farm economy with a large-farm economy, and while I'm very sympathetic to this, he does not seem to recognize the dialectical effect of argibusiness and urbanization, and furthermore, once those dynamics have been sealed, the nostaglia of small-farm communities.
There may be some way "back", but these ways back now look like merely isolated commun This is a collection from other collections. There may be some way "back", but these ways back now look like merely isolated communities, filled with people who have the luxuray to "return" to a previous time.
Feb 24, Katie rated it really liked it Shelves: food. Thoughtful essays on farming, community and care of the land. I don't love Berry's style; he tends to jump from vignette, to deep thought, to minor detail rather quickly. His descriptions are clear and pleasant but not particularly lyrical. Perhaps because he was writing and thinking about farming as the interaction between the land and the people who care for it long before most I see how many of his ideas have become a integral part of the back-to-the-land philosophies common today.
I particul Thoughtful essays on farming, community and care of the land. I particularly liked some of his essays on consumerism, community and energy. Feb 07, Bill Schaefer rated it really liked it. This is a collection of essays written in the late 70s and early 80s that still have relevancy today.
He is something of a scold and idealist but his take on big business agriculture and the effects on the land and the quality of food ring truer today. He is an advocate for grow your own food, back to the garden, an idyll that is good for some but impractical in an ever expanding population.
Apr 11, Andrea rated it it was amazing Shelves: sustainability , nature-writers , non-fiction. Wendell Berry is a thoughtful and humble philosopher. Our food system is where many of our societal ills begin, and this was recognized by him decades ago. Through gentle, understated prose a deep respect for small farmers and an anger about their plight at the hands of agribusiness is evident.
This was my first exposure to Berry and I will definately be reading more. Jun 04, Mike rated it liked it. Classic essays on agriculture and farming practices. I read this at Gonzaga and decided to pick it up again with renewed interest. Wendell Berry is just a very intelligent man, and while I was a little young to have been having conversations like this with Grandpa Walt, I imagine he would have talked about farming in a similar fashion.
Apr 17, Stephen rated it it was amazing Shelves: reads , enviro-studies , agriculture. Wendell Berry is a great essayist who understands systems and how aspects of our culture such as the fall of agrarian culture and the replacement of tangible interaction with virtual interactions has led to a muted culture. I am fascinated by his thought- perhaps because they have been at the tip of my own tongue for quite some time now.
Jan 21, Allie Paarsmith rated it really liked it. I will be reading more of Wendell Berry. In several instances, Berry articulates my goals and beliefs better than I do. What struck me particularly was the fact that these essays were written in the late 70s, early 80s, but they still speak volumes of truth. They are still applicable to modern agribusiness! Excellent book. Good variety of essays. Typical Berry writings that inspire thoughtful discussions.
Most of these essays focus on defining or showing examples of Good Farming, a Berry would see it. Good farming takes a long term look at the use of the land, production and ethics. The health of the land and the farmer, as well as the whole eco-system are important to Berry. Oct 12, Florence Millo rated it really liked it Shelves: nonfiction. I loved the essays about the individual farmers and how they cared for the land and animals in their care. Aug 26, Katelyn rated it liked it.
These essays will be more interesting to a farmer than they were to me, due to all of the details. I did find a lot of the main points very interesting though. Wouldn't mind reading the rest in the future, as well as additional works by Berry. Read for book club. Dang Wendell Berry, you did it again.
Punched me in the gut while you also managed to enthrall and challenge my mind. What a fantastic collection essays. The namesake essay of this collection should be required reading, especially for Christians.
Mar 25, Nate rated it really liked it. Way ahead of his time. Great book if you have any interest in farming or the environment.
Sep 04, Mary rated it it was amazing. Wendell Berry is at this moment my favorite nature writer. These essays were written quite a while back but still seem totally relevant today. Sep 10, Rawley rated it really liked it. The world needs to read Wendell Berry! Jan 18, AmyRuth rated it it was amazing.
My first Wendell Berry read. I found a used copy at Powell's City of Books. Sign In. Premier Boxing Champions. Big Big East.
Big Sky. Big South. Big Ten. Big West.
0コメント