"Reading Ellen Bernstein's Toward a Holy Ecology is to partake in a garden of delights. She refreshes our reading of the Song by enlivening all of our senses." --Rabbi Nancy Flam, Co-founder National Center for Jewish Healing, and The Institute for Jewish Spirituality
Song of Songs is known as the erotic part of the Bible, but Ellen Bernstein shows how it is also an ancient source of deep ecological wisdom.
Toward a Holy Ecology is a new translation of this Hebrew text, illuminating the place of humans in the natural world and inviting you to develop a holy, ecological language for life.
This book sets the natural world before you with intensity and beauty, inviting you to savor it with all your senses. Then you are able to return to the world with a renewed clarity, love, and energy necessary for creating a healthier future for the earth and all her inhabitants.
Toward a Holy Ecology is for all who love the earth and its inhabitants--including outdoor enthusiasts, spiritual seekers, fellow poets, feminists, and students of the humanities, religion, and ecology. It will change how you see, how you speak, and how you live.
"Reading Ellen Bernstein's Toward a Holy Ecology is to partake in a garden of delights. She refreshes our reading of the Song by enlivening all of our senses." --Rabbi Nancy Flam, Co-founder National Center for Jewish Healing, and The Institute for Jewish Spirituality
Song of Songs is known as the erotic part of the Bible, but Ellen Bernstein shows how it is also an ancient source of deep ecological wisdom.
Toward a Holy Ecology is a new translation of this Hebrew text, illuminating the place of humans in the natural world and inviting you to develop a holy, ecological language for life.
This book sets the natural world before you with intensity and beauty, inviting you to savor it with all your senses. Then you are able to return to the world with a renewed clarity, love, and energy necessary for creating a healthier future for the earth and all her inhabitants.
Toward a Holy Ecology is for all who love the earth and its inhabitants--including outdoor enthusiasts, spiritual seekers, fellow poets, feminists, and students of the humanities, religion, and ecology. It will change how you see, how you speak, and how you live.
Rabbi Ellen Bernstein began pursuing studies in both environment and religion in high school and graduated from one of the first programs in environmental studies in the US at U.C. Berkeley in 1975. A pioneer in the field of religion and ecology, she founded the first national Jewish environmental organization, Shomrei Adamah, Keepers of the Earth, in 1988. She has written numerous books and articles on Judaism, Bible and ecology including most recently, The Promise of the Land: A Passover Haggadah (Behrman House, 2020). Ellen’s work on the Bible and ecology has appeared in The Green Bible (Harper One, 2008) and is featured in The Oxford University Press Handbook on the Bible and Ecology (2022). She continues to teach widely on Bible and ecology, and is an advisor to the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology, a steering committee member for the Third Act/faith, and an advisor to the Green Sabbath project.
“What happens when a rabbi with an expertise in biology reads the
holiest and most sensuous book of the Bible? A fresh and
arousing reading springs forth! Ellen Bernstein, founder of
the first national Jewish environmental organization, offers an
inspired ecological reading of the Song of Songs that
will (re)kindle the reader’s love affair with the earth. Her
writing is as rich as the Song is evocative. Her
interpretive insights reflect a deep engagement with
the Song’s poetic nuances. Cultivating
an eros for creation, Rabbi Bernstein’s interpretation is
exactly what today’s ‘earth keepers’ need for continuing the hard
work of shalom-justice for the world. Call it ‘Fifty Shades of
Green.’” —William P. Brown, The Seven Pillars of Creation: The
Bible, Science and the Ecology of Wonder“The lushness of Ellen
Bernstein’s eco-sensitive commentary on the Song of Songs is worthy
of the original, which says a great deal about the ingenuity and
power of her work. Bernstein reads the Song of Songs as a love song
to and from the earth, and in so doing, uncovers truths in this
long-beloved text that are essential, moving, and needed. She
describes the ‘archetypal intimacy between humans and nature’ that
evolves throughout the Song, as lovers co-mingle with the land and
love itself burgeons as spring arrives. Bernstein’s essential
message, which she brilliantly derives from the text, is that
‘beauty calls us to love the world.’ This uplifting and
enlivening book is an important and timely work—a wondrous gift to
all who passionately love the earth, inviting us to find solace in
the Bible’s most erotic and egalitarian text.” —Rabbi Jill Hammer,
PhD, The Jewish Book of Days: A Companion for All Seasons“Toward a
Holy Ecology is a rich and illuminating commentary on
the The Song of Songs. Ellen Bernstein brings a unique
voice that skillfully weaves scholarly and poetic insight. Her book
is accessible for everyone interested in how this iconic text
carries a deep ecological wisdom.” —Mary Evelyn Tucker,
Co-director, Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology“Rabbi Ellen
Bernstein’s masterful commentary reveals the Song’s profound
vision of ecological wholeness and revives an embodied and
earth-honoring tradition that is vitally needed today. This is an
important, timely and beautiful book that deserves your attention.”
—Rabbi Rami Shapiro, Judaism without Tribalism“Reading Ellen
Bernstein's Toward a Holy Ecology is to partake in a
garden of delights. She refreshes our reading of the Song by
enlivening all of our senses. Her penetrating and
compelling thought is expressed with eminently accessible and
beautiful prose. Just as she highlights the importance of
time and timing in the text itself, her commentary appears at just
the right time to nurture a deepened ecological and embodied
spirituality of which the world stands in urgent need.” —Rabbi
Nancy Flam, Co-founder National Center for Jewish Healing, and The
Institute for Jewish Spirituality“[O]ffering keen insight into both
Jewish tradition and contemporary issues of environmental
justice...the book will be accessible to lay readers and will
challenge Jewish scholars with a well-grounded alternative
view.” —Kirkus Reviews
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