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particular human form of ‘rationality’ (logos), far from separating us from other creatures, connects us
in a unique way to the logos-filled totality. To quote Andrew Louth, ‘[b]ecause humans participate
in the divine Logos, they are logikoi and therefore capable of discerning meaning, that is, logos; they
are capable of discerning the logoi of creation...’ (Louth 2004, p. 189). This also entails that there is no
rivalry between the complexity, wisdom, and depth manifest in the human person, and those same
qualities manifest ‘proportionately’, as Maximus would say, in the rest of creation. This license to look
seriously at the workings of God in the physical universe is starting to be reflected in Orthodox writing
(cf. (Knight 2007, pp. 111–123; Woloschak 2011; Theokritoff 2013)).
Many recent scholars have commented on the ‘strong motivation for an ecological consciousness’
provided by Maximus’ vision of creation (Tollefsen 2008, p. 1), and recognised its enormous importance
for those who see environmental problems as rooted in alienation from the world, and are looking
for answers often anywhere but in the Christian tradition (cf. (Bordeianu 2009; Louth 2004, p. 195)).
Indeed, it is striking how a ‘logos cosmology’ finds echoes in beliefs of indigenous religions that
are sometimes seen as ‘greener’ alternatives to Christianity. Thus Fr Michael Oleksa described how
the nineteenth-century Russian missionaries in Alaska ‘could affirm that the spiritual realities those
societies worshipped were indeed logoi, related to the divine Logos, whose personal existence these
societies had simply never imagined’ (Fr Michael Oleksa 1992, p. 61). Patriarch Bartholomew will
sometimes talk in the same vein: speaking at his Symposium on the Amazon, he commends the belief
of the indigenous people of the Amazon that all life is connected and that every living thing has what
might be called its own ‘logos’ (Chryssavgis 2012, pp. 192, 283–84; cf. (Chryssavgis 2003, pp. 130,
243–244)). Both of them acknowledge here a process of learning from others how to re-discover our
own tradition: as Oleksa writes, ‘there are some insights which pre-modern societies that have become
Orthodox automatically understand better than we do’, in relation to ‘the cosmos as ... God’s icon,
God’s self-portrait, God’s revelation to us’ (Fr Michael Oleksa 1983, p. 21).
A ‘logos cosmology’ may offer an answer to what many people are looking for in nature-worship,
but it does so without in any way compromising the absolute distinction between Creator and creation.
It affirms the paradoxical presence of the Word who ‘is not participated in in any way’ (Ambiguum 7, PG
91: 1081B). Some writers also invoke the terminology of Gregory Palamas to affirm that ‘the whole
God is radically transcendent in His essence, and the whole God is radically immanent in His energies’
(Bishop Metropolitan Kallistos Ware, p. 166). On the other hand, ‘reading’ God in creation, and thus
seeing visible things as revelatory and symbolic of the divine, in no way conflicts with valuing them
for themselves, since one and the same logos makes a thing itself, orientates it towards its Creator, and
enables us to perceive Him in it. As Evdokimov says of the scriptural understanding, ‘the more nature
is firm, living, and full of sap in its own right, the greater is its symbolic meaning’ (Evdokimov 1965,
p. 7).
This vision is also clearly distinct from ‘ecological egalitarianism’ in its insistence that the unity of
creation does not negate a special position for man; indeed, the unity of all creation with God requires
it. This points to an order that is hierarchical in the sense used by Dionysius the Areopagite (who after
all coined the term); and Eric Perl has suggested persuasively that this unfashionable concept may
actually be the key to understanding the value of all creatures, the continuity between them, and
the divine presence in all, without claiming that all are on the same level. In this understanding of
the world, it is not that ‘nature is ordered to man and man is ordered to God..., rather, all things are
ordered to God, each in its own proper way’ (Perl 2013, p. 29). This is an important correction, because
many Orthodox would indeed subscribe to what Fr John Meyendorff (more than thirty years ago,
admittedly) called ‘an anthropocentric cosmology’ and ‘a theocentric anthropology’ (Meyendorff 1983).
In an ‘articulated continuum’, by contrast, ‘the higher any being is, the more—not the less! it is in the
service of ... all that is below it’. Perl suggests that this might be a ‘metaphysical commentary’ on
Mt 20:25–27; a text that the Athonite Archimandrite Vasileios, too, has applied to human lordship of
‘nature’ (Archimandrite Vasileios of Iviron 2013). Perl acknowledges that it is a modern extrapolation