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Witnessing a Wounded World

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A crucial intervention at the intersection of ecotheology and trauma theology We are in the midst of a global ecological crisis. At times, the scale of the suffering involved can be hard to fully c...
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  • 04 November 2025
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A crucial intervention at the intersection of ecotheology and trauma theology

We are in the midst of a global ecological crisis. At times, the scale of the suffering involved can be hard to fully comprehend. The whole planetary ecosystem feels out of kilter. Meanwhile, trauma theorists, and society at large, have become increasingly aware of the incidence of trauma in a growing variety of contexts. In Witnessing a Wounded World, Timothy Middleton asks what might be gained by viewing ecological suffering through the lens of trauma.

By bringing concepts and methodologies from trauma theology to bear on questions that arise within ecotheology, Middleton engages a series of pressing questions. What kind of traumas are being precipitated by anthropogenic climate change and accelerating biodiversity loss? What would it mean to envisage the Earth itself as traumatized? And how might a Christian theologian respond?

From large-scale deforestation and opencast mining to rampaging wildfires and fracturing ice sheets, the Earth itself is subject to intense devastation. Witnessing a Wounded World analyzes such phenomena in terms of three traumatic ruptures—to communication, to flesh, and to time. Drawing on practices of witnessing and the insights of deep incarnation Christologies, Middleton proceeds to offer a theological account of this ecological trauma. For Christians, a model of Christic witnessing can bring the Earth’s suffering to light.

As the first sustained treatment of ecological trauma to address the trauma of the Earth itself, Witnessing a Wounded World makes a profound contribution to discussions of suffering, faith, and the present ecological emergency.

Witnessing a Wounded World is available from the publisher on an open-access basis.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 258
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Publication Date: 04 November 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781531512774
Format: Paperback
BISACs: RELIGION / Christian Theology / General, SCIENCE / Global Warming & Climate Change, PSYCHOLOGY / Psychopathology / Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
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In Witnessing a Wounded World, Tim Middleton integrates new methodologies – deep incarnation, trauma studies, ecotheology, Christian animism and Gaia theory – that renders his book both classically sonorous and bracingly contemporary. His bold aim is to better understand, and hopefully ameliorate, the traumatic ruptures that now define our planetary ecosystem in an advancing state of emergency. Middleton writes that as Jesus suffered at the hands of his executioners, so also is the Earth undergoing its own daily passion at the hands of its abusers. Golgotha is everywhere. But bearing witness to Christ’s and the natural world’s permanently wounded flesh is not reason for despair but the ground of radical hope in solidarity with the suffering of others, human and more-than-human. Carefully researched and superbly written, Middleton compellingly advances the present theological discussion about how to think about and live faithfully on a broken and vulnerable planet.---Mark I. Wallace, James Hormel Professor of Social Justice, Swarthmore College

Beyond Christian theologians and ecotheologians, this book can facilitate reflection among Christians and any individual facing the trauma of global climate change. . . It will become increasingly relevant as global climate change inevitably worsens.
Timothy A. Middleton is a Tutorial Fellow in Theology at Regent’s Park College, University of Oxford. His research focuses on the intersections of theology and religion with science, nature, and the environment.

Preface | ix

Introduction | 1

1 The Traumatized Earth | 19

2 Trauma in Ecotheology | 41

3 Ecology in Trauma Theology | 59

4 The Rupture of Communication: Christ’s Witness to a Wounded World | 74

5 The Rupture of Flesh: Deep Incarnation and Enfleshed Witnessing | 93

6 The Rupture of Time: Witnessing Anthropocene Scars | 110

Conclusion | 129

Acknowledgments | 143

Notes | 145

Bibliography | 207

Index | 233