Main Article Content

Indonesian biodiversity spirituality and post COVID-19 ecclesiastical implications


Julianus Mojau
Ricardo F. Nanuru

Abstract

The enormous impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has caused Indonesian Christian leaders and theologians to become  preoccupied with theodicy-humanistic questions rather than considering the rights of life for biodiversity. This is unacceptable because humans are not  the only living things with the right to life and are entitled to God’s justice in all-natural disasters. According to biologists and epidemiologists, the  pandemic sends a message of ecological injustice. Therefore, by using a method of reading with a perspective of biological diversity, this research argues  that humans and other living things have a right to God’s justice amid disasters. The Indonesian spirituality of biological diversity, which is in line with the  gratitude of Francis of Assisi and Calvin’s idea of living in a church that considers God’s justice for all creation, can serve as an epistemological  foundation for developing theodicy-ecological ecclesiology.


Contribution: Considering the spirituality of biodiversity enables churches in Indonesia to embrace biodiversity as fellow creatures of God post-pandemic. In this way, they can affirm their ecclesiastical identity as the ecological body of Christ  amid ecological injustice. 


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2072-8050
print ISSN: 0259-9422