The Rev. Dr. H. Paul Santmire is a historian and pastoral scholar in the discipline of ecological theology and environmental ethics. Widely recognized for his contributions to this field for more than 30 years, he is the author of
Brother Earth: Nature, God, and Ecology in a Time of Crisis (1970), a groundbreaking study, among the first of its kind. He has lectured throughout the U.S., in seminary, university, congregational, and a variety of ecumenical and denominational settings. His latest book,
Renewing Christian Liturgy in a Time of Crisis was published in August, 2008.
His historical overview of Christian theologies of nature,
The Travail of Nature: the Ambiguous Ecological Promise of Christian Theology (1985), published in Fortress Press’s prestigious Theology and the Sciences series, has been called a “little classic” by
Philip Hefner, a leading theological participant in North American religion and science dialogues. The eminent process theologian John Cobb has said that this work is “a fair, historically responsible assessment of the view of nature in the tradition of Christian theology” that allows Christians “in full responsibility to their heritage... to bring the church onto the side of ecological sensitivity.” Of the same book, the renowned historian Lynn White, Jr. wrote: “Anyone, agnostic or religious, who wants to understand public attitudes toward ecology and how the very considerable force of religion in America may continue to shape them will enjoy and profit by this unusual book.”
Much preoccupied with social justice issues throughout his career, Dr. Santmire responded to the church struggle against apartheid in his book
South African Testament: From Personal Encounter to Theological Challenge (1987) at the height of the crisis in that country, when there was little hope for peaceful transformation. During his 13-year inner-city pastorate in Hartford, CT, he was a founder and “the godfather” of a grass-roots community organization that mobilized low-income and minority constituencies. He also regularly addressed social justice issues as an Op-Ed columnist for the Hartford
Courant.Dr. Santmire’s study
Nature Reborn: The Ecological and Cosmic Promise of Christian Theology (2000) presents a “revisionist” testament of ecological theology, ranging through topics such as creation and cosmology, Christology and mission, spirituality and liturgy, ecological ethos and environmental ethics, and drawing on witnesses as diverse as Augustine and the classical Celtic saints, St. Francis and Luther, Martin Buber and John Muir. Of this work, Larry Rasmussen, formerly the Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Social Ethics at Union Theological Seminary in New York, has written: “It is difficult to exaggerate the importance of what Santmire has undertaken. The stream of the Christian story he has identified is plainly critical to the mandatory faith experiment now underway, and Santmire has full command of his materials. He has in fact demonstrated, even in this slender volume, the Earth-honoring promise of the story he identifies.”
In 2004, Dr. Santmire was awarded the “Charles J. Miller Christian Scholar’s Award” by the publisher and editors of
Christian Scholar’s Review for producing the best article of the preceding year (
CSR 32:4 [Summer 2003], 381-412) in that journal: “Partnership with Nature According to the Scriptures: Beyond the Theology of Stewardship.”
Some of the contours of Dr. Santmire’s theology have been discussed in book-length studies: Claude Y. Stewart,
A Study of the Theology of Nature (Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1983), especially chapter 2: “A Neo-Reformation Theology of Nature: the Approach of H. Paul Santmire”;
Roderick Frazier Nash,
The Rights of Nature: A History of Environmental Ethics (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989), chapter 5, “The Greening of Religion,” especially pp. 103-108; and,
Robert Booth Fowler,
The Greening of Protestant Thought (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995), especially pp. 92-100, “The Example of H. Paul Santmire.”
Dr. Santmire is a
cum laude graduate of Harvard College (1957) and the Lutheran Seminary at Philadelphia (1960); in 2004, he was chosen to receive that Seminary’s “Distinguished Alumnus Award.” He completed his doctoral studies at Harvard Divinity School (1966); his dissertation with systematic theologian Gordon Kaufman was a study of Karl Barth’s theology of nature. He brought these learnings to bear in the wider church as a theological writer for the statements on the environment of the Lutheran Church in America (1972), the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (1983), and the National Council of Churches of Christ, USA (2005). After more than thirty years as a college teacher and chaplain and as a parish pastor, Dr. Santmire has now retired in order to devote all of his professional time to research, writing, and lecturing.
Previously he served as Assistant Pastor of University Lutheran Church, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1965-1969), as the College Chaplain and as a Lecturer in Religion at Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts (1969-82), as pastor of an integrated urban church in Hartford, Connecticut (1982-1994), and as the Senior Pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church, Akron, Ohio (1994-2001), a historic metropolitan congregation of the Evangelical Lutheran in America. He now lives in the Boston area, where he is a member of an inner-city African-American congregation, Resurrection Lutheran Church. Throughout the year, he and his wife of four decades regularly retreat to their old farm house in southwestern Maine, overlooking New Hampshire’s White Mountains. In that setting, they garden, read, and care for a small wood lot and its adjacent fields. The Santmires have two adult children and two grandchildren.