Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A Hopeful Vision for Stewardship: Integrating Ecological Concerns and Economic Flourishing
A Hopeful Vision for Stewardship: Integrating Ecological Concerns and Economic Flourishing
Feb 21, 2026 4:50 PM

Being a follower of Jesus includes a hopeful vision of the future. In the fullness of the kingdom of God, we will live on a new earth as embodied humans, worshiping and working, married to Christ and in fellowship with sisters and brothers from all nations (Rev. 21-22). There will be no more war, perfect justice, a restored ecology and each person will steward gifts and responsibilities consistent with his or her created design and fidelity during this present age (Isaiah 2; Mt. 25).

The resurrection of Jesus and the gift of the Holy Spirit are the historical/personal guarantees of this eschatological vision (Acts 2-3). This audacious Christian hope inspires our covenant fidelity to the Triune God and concrete service to the world. Because of God’s unconditional love expressed in the Cross-and the liberating power of the resurrection, we now serve others sacrificially and all our present good works are signposts of the future.

This vision – eloquently expressed by Scot McKnight, N.T. Wright and Cherith Fee-Nordling among others – avoids utopian fantasy and dispensational fatalism. Our efforts are substantial but partial, for we are saved in hope of the final redemption (Ro. 8:18-27). We are not merely gathering decisions before the Rapture, but making disciples of all nations that work out their salvation in munities that evangelize and seek mon good (Phil 2:12-16). Our disciples-making includes all elements of human flourishing, from the inner life of contemplation to creating value through our work.

LIVING THE FUTURE NOW

This vision helps us transcend the unhelpful ideological divides and polemical histrionics that characterize civil discourse. With gratitude to A.J. Swoboda, we can speak in tongues and care for trees, engage in robust ecological action and ecstatic experiences. Biblical creation care does not mean policies that operate on zero-sum economic philosophies and radical wealth redistribution animated by fear. Eschatological hope unites ecological care and economic development, sensitivity to scarcity and the belief that wealth can expand.

In practice, this means hopeful believers are active peacemakers between the warring factions of free-market advocates and climate change activists, between those leaning mand structures and those that prefer open global exchange. An honest evaluation of the last 50 years of economic history gives us both concern and hope. The gap between rich and poor remains too wide and the religious and political systems keeping people poor need reformation. At the same time, millions of people have been lifted out of poverty into working and middle-class life.

In our quest for justice/shalom, we must avoid ideological entrapments and political pitfalls that will divide us and weaken our impact for good. The Mars Company recently shared the results of years of research and concluded that there is a way to foster the “triple-win” for people, planet and profits. From the infrastructure needs for Ghanaian cocoa producers to local distributors of M&M’s, it is possible to reward hard work and care for God’s world (See Steve Garber’sVisions of Vocation).

I am skeptical of the extreme claims of climate change advocates, especially when some leaders are millions of dollars richer and will not publicly debate their ideas. I also reject libertarian philosophies devoid of environmental concern and mon good. As a historian, I am aware that climate will change and that humankind (not just the West since 1500) has always found ways to ruin (and occasionally steward) the ecology of their locations.

WHY DOES THIS MATTER?

As we reimagine mission for the 21st century, our fresh visions must include insights for planet care and prosperity, for wealth creation and wise management of God’s world. Our eschatology empowers our ethics. Biblically, there is no gap between personal and social ethics! Our disciple making must include the integration of faith, work and economics and a vision for structural justice that empowers creativity and innovation. Personal stewardship and care for the marginalized are united with a sense of mission and working in harmony with the environment. (See new measurements for assessing integration and progress at ).

We are delivered by grace for meaningful labor and worshipful rest, for transformative initiatives and unselfish relationships that secure mon good. Biblical wisdom heals the disintegrating forces that keep economic developers and environmental activists enemies instead of allies. Change begins with fresh imagination and focused action.

Imagine the following:

Disciple-making that connects Sunday worship and Monday workFaith displacing fear as the reason for creation careEconomic expansion that nurtures long-term ecological healthExecutives voluntarily capping pensation and sharing profits with all that make an enterprise workChristians in all domains of society listening to the Spirit about their local ecology and economy.

Let’s live resurrectional lives for God’s glory and the good of others, refusing disintegration and embracing new possibilities. When God’s mission is paramount, munities will be entrusted with natural and supernatural resources. As culture and society implode, we offer integration. As despair threatens liberty, we offer the liberation of hope. As justice goes to the highest bidders, we speak truth to power and advocate for the voiceless and vulnerable. mand-control efforts fail, we unleash a new generation of ethical entrepreneurs.

With our biblical eschatology informing our ecological vision and economic creativity, we can lift many from poverty of body and spirit, anticipating the Day when “all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well” (Juliana of Norwich).

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
New Issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (Vol. 22, No. 1)
The newest issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality has been published both in print and online here. Scholarly contributions range from a study of joy and labor in Ecclesiastes, virtue and vice in the American founding, whistleblowing, and the economics and ethics of education, including a Controversy debating the merits and demerits of the tenure system. The first two entries of this four-part feature, authored by James E. Bruce and Aeon J. Skoble, respectively, can be read open-access...
Pastors less concerned as religious liberty declined: Poll
AsReligious Freedom es to a close, a survey captures a striking result: Fewer Americans mitted to the right of religious liberty, yet Protestant pastors are less concerned about the issue than they have been in years. The es in a recentpollfrom Barna Research. The good news is that 55 percent of Americans strongly agree with the statement: “True religious freedom means that all citizens must have freedom of conscience, which means being able to believe and practice the mitments and...
New French language translation on Catholicism and communism on Acton’s transatlantic website
The Acton Institute has posted a new translation as part of its ongoing outreach to the French-speaking world. The article, “La montée munisme dans des habits catholiques,” describes efforts to use Catholic rhetoric to promote the same statist aims once advanced by the former Communist Party in Eastern Europe. The article notes how history proves the encroaching power of the state, advanced under the guise of promoting Catholicism, can as easily be used to drive people of faith to society’s...
What Willmoore Kendall can teach us about America
Willmoore Kendall defied the norms of many mainstream intellectual movements. Those who knew him recall a “typical strangeness” that characterized the man and his works. He was a solitary figure who has been largely forgotten in today’s conservative conversations. But, nonetheless, Kendall’s radically original ideas need to be rediscovered just as he was a “rediscoverer of the historic American political orthodoxy.” And what better time to engage his work than this, the fifty-second anniversary of his death. Willmoore Kendall Jr....
Carl Jung and Lord Acton on the delicate fruit of liberty
Lord Acton famously wrote that “liberty is the delicate fruit of a mature civilization.” Liberty, Acton argued was rare and required constant attention to be maintained. As many have noted, one of the challenges with political liberty is that it creates the conditions for its own demise from within. Whether es from decadence and abuse of liberty to revolutionaries within liberal society, or more likely bination of both. One would not normally associate the writings of Carl Jung with those...
Genoa’s Morandi Bridge: Detonating an Economic Era
Today’s demolition of the already half-collapsed Morandi Bridge is the definitive end of an economic revival that began over 50 years ago in the mega Italian port city of Genoa. The economic boom lasted well into the early 2000s thanks to what was then considered a perfect marriage of civil engineering and rapidly merce. Genoa (named from the Latin janua for “door” ) was since ancient Roman times considered one of the principle gates through which merce would be pass...
Letter from Rome: American vs. European Nationalism
Last month’s Sohrab Ahmari-David French debate was the more recent skirmish about the meaning of American conservatism. Acton’s Joe Carter has piled a reading list without appearing to favor one side over the other. Such equanimity is admirable because each side has something to teach us about the still-exceptional character of the United States and its conservative movement. That these debates take place on the American right with some regularity is a sign of its vitality, not its decline. No...
Economics and the social nature of the person
Acton TGS At the center of the economy are human persons. Economics must first be a human discipline before it can be a technical one.One of the essential characteristics of the human person is that we are social beings. While each of us is a subject and a unique and unrepeatable person, we achieve human flourishing and moral perfection in relationship with others. We cannot do this alone. We are neither radical individuals, nor are we indistinct parts of a...
Entrepreneurship, free trade and justice: an interview with Garreth Bloor
Acton University, with alumni from over 100 countries worldwide, inspires many to defend liberty and promote virtue throughout the world. Garreth Bloor, a leader in the Acton Institute network and AU alumnus, serves as an inspiration as he has dedicated much of his life to defending freedom globally. Bloor first attended Acton University in 2006 when he was living in South Africa studying at the University of Cape Town, but his fight to defend liberty started at a much younger...
Review: The Edge of Democracy
The documentary The Edge of Democracy is a personal memoir about the recent political scenario in Brazil. Released on June 19 on Netflix, it is directed by Petra Costa — a Brazilian filmmaker and actress who has close connections with leftist politicians. The film portrays events such as the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, the Operation Car Wash — that arrested the ex- president Lula da Silva — and the rise of the current President Jair Bolsonaro with a leftist perspective....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved