Disconnection and the Healing Practice of Imagination for Mormon Environmental Ethics
Published in Religions, 2021
Recommended citation: Blair, Kristen. 2021. "Disconnection and the Healing Practice of Imagination for Mormon Environmental Ethics" Religions 12, no. 11: 948. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110948 http://kblair-phd.github.io/files/Religion_2021.pdf
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints possesses a subversive and fecund interpretation of the Christian creation narrative. This interpretation, denying creation ex nihilo, bespeaks a particular attention to and care for the living earth. However, Latter-day Saint praxis is wounded by a searing disconnect between the theopoetics of its conceptual creation and its lived practice.
In this paper, I argue that the Church must understand this disconnect as a wound and attend to it as such. I turn to theopoetics, arguing that it is in the lived practices of Latter-day Saints engaging somatically with the Earth that can restore our imaginative potential and move toward healing. I begin by exploring the Christian conception of creation ex nihilo and juxtapose this with the Latter-day Saint understanding of formare ex materia. I then explore the implications of such a cosmology for environmental ethics and probe the disconnections between theory and practice in Mormonism broadly construed. I propose that the healing salve for disconnection is imagination, a salve found in the first heartbeat of the Latter-day Saint story. I speak with Latter-day Saint theopoetics and indigenous voices, proposing ultimately that is with them that the healing of theology and praxis must begin.
You can download the full text of the paper here.
Recommended citation: Blair, Kristen. 2021. "Disconnection and the Healing Practice of Imagination for Mormon Environmental Ethics" Religions 12, no. 11: 948. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110948
