Legacy of Carol P. Christ: Think About the Consequences of Your Actions for Seven Generation

This was originally post on Aug 6, 2018

Nurture life.

Walk in love and beauty.

Trust the knowledge that comes through the body.

Speak the truth about conflict, pain, and suffering.

Take only what you need.

Think about the consequences of your actions for seven generations.

Approach the taking of life with great restraint.

Practice great generosity.

Repair the web

In Rebirth of the Goddess, I offered Nine Touchstones of Goddess Spirituality as an alternative to the Ten Commandments. The Nine Touchstones are intended to inform all our relationships, whether personal, communal, social, or political.

In recent weeks, wildfires have once again been raging in California and in Greece. This weekend, temperatures in Europe have reached over 113 degrees (45 Celsius). Talequah, the Orca whale. and her family are still mourning her baby ten days after its death.

Less than normal rains in winter leave trees dry and exhausted, while out of season rains produce grasses that fuel fire. A German environmentalist says that fish are dying in the Rhine River due to the heat. Scientists tell us that the extended matrilineal family of the dead baby Orca is starving and has been able to rear any babies in recent years.

The sixth touchstone, “Think about the consequences of your actions for seven generations,” reminds us that we live in an interdependent world. Each of our actions, good as well as bad, affects human beings and other beings in the web of life. Exhausted trees, dying fish in the Rhine, and a dead Orca baby are all the result of human action and inaction. The cause is human failure to think about or to care enough about the consequences of our actions.

Orcas are starving and their babies are dying because of over-fishing and ocean pollution. Temperatures are rising in Europe and around the world because of global warming and global climate change. Forests are stressed and fires are burning out of control because of air pollution and global climate change.

Native Americans tell us to think about the consequences of our actions for seven generations. If we don’t change our ways and quickly, in seven generations there will probably be no more Orca whales and very few fish in rivers or seas.  In seven generations most of the world’s forests will have burned, been cut down, or died for lack of water. In seven generations temperatures in Europe and around the world will have risen to unimaginable levels. Many more species will have become extinct, and if there are any human beings left, they will be struggling to survive.

In my genealogical research I have traced my ancestors back seven generations and more. Although I never knew my great-great-great-great-great-great grandparents, I know that the decisions of their lives contributed to my being here today. If there is anyone around to remember us in seven generations, what will they think of us?

Will they know that we lived in an advanced capitalist system that encouraged us to want more and to take more than we really needed? Will they know that we were told that our greed was threatening life on planet earth? That we did nothing or not enough? That too many of us said, “oh well, I won’t be around to see that,” and continued on living in ways that destroy the earth? That we elected leaders who failed to enact and failed to enforce environmental regulations that could have saved lives in the present and the future?

The way we are raising our children will affect the future. Political scientists tell us that the current generation in America is the first one that will not achieve greater economic success its parents. Political commentators agree that this is terrible. But do those of us who have enough to live and to live well, really need more than our parents had? What if we taught our children that sharing is more important that having?

Is it possible that we can live with less? Of course we need to curb the power of the one per cent. And yes, we need to distribute wealth more equally. But many of us—myself included—could live very well with a lot less than we have and want to have.

Only a major revolution in values can save the world for the generations that will come after us. The task ahead of us is massive. What can we do? The Native Americans urge us to think about the consequences of our actions–personal, communal, and political–for seven generations. This is only a beginning, but it is a very good place to begin.

Also see: Ethics of Goddess Religion: Healing the World , Nurture Life: Ethics of Goddess Spirituality,  Walk in Love and Beauty: A Touchstone for Healing,  Trust the Knowledge that Comes through the Body: Heal Yourself, Heal the World,  Speak the Truth About Conflict, Pain, and Suffering, Take Only What You Need

From Losing Earth: The Decade We Almost Stopped Climate Change : “Everyone knew — and we all still know. We know that the transformations of our planet, which will come gradually and suddenly, will reconfigure the political world order. We know that if we don’t act to reduce emissions, we risk the collapse of civilization. We also know that, without a gargantuan intervention, whatever happens will be worse for our children, worse yet for their children and even worse still for their children’s children, whose lives, our actions have demonstrated, mean nothing to us.” —Nathaniel Rich

BIO: Carol P. Christ (1945-2021) was an internationally known feminist and ecofeminist writer, activist, and educator. Her work continues through her non-profit foundation, the Ariadne Institute for the Study of Myth and Ritual.

“In Goddess religion death is not feared, but is understood to be a part of life, followed by birth and renewal.”  — Carol P. Christ 

Author: Legacy of Carol P. Christ

We at FAR were fortunate to work along side Carol Christ for many years. She died from cancer in July, 2021. Her work continues through her non-profit foundation, the Ariadne Institute for the Study of Myth and Ritual and the Goddess Pilgrimage to Crete. To honor her legacy and to allow as many people as possible to read her thought-provoking and important blogs, we are pleased to offer this new column to highlight her work. We will be picking out special blogs for reposting, making note of their original publication date.

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