
Beauty, Embodiment, and Stewardship: Theological Libraries and Theological Ecology
Author(s) -
David Schmersal,
David Kriegh,
Sandy Shapoval,
Alex Strohschein
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
summary of proceedings/summary of proceedings. annual conference - american theological library association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2769-2027
pISSN - 0066-0868
DOI - 10.31046/proceedings.2019.1620
Subject(s) - contemplation , stewardship (theology) , spirituality , sublime , beauty , nexus (standard) , sociology , faith , praxis , environmental ethics , aesthetics , epistemology , philosophy , law , computer science , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , politics , political science , embedded system
Many faith traditions affirm a profound connection between physicality and spirituality. Similarly, libraries, even while facilitating sublime intellectual connections between authors and readers, have done so, and to an extent continue to do so, as physical places and through the physical medium of books. Given these connections, it is perhaps not surprising that theological libraries can serve as a nexus for exploring the relationship between the physical and the spiritual, between the largely incorporeal acts of intellectual analysis and spiritual contemplation and the physical ecology in which such acts occur and the physical (and digital) media that make them possible. As we have become increasingly aware of the fragility of our physical environment, such connections have taken on greater significance, both as a topic for intellectual analysis and a guide for faithful praxis. This paper offers further consideration of these themes and explores ways in which theological libraries, our collections and services, can both model and further good stewardship.