
The Case for Hope in a Year of Despair
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Due to production issues, we are not running a new podcast today. Instead, we are replaying a unfortunately, once-again-timely episode we recorded last year about California’s devastating forest fires. We’ll see you all...
Rerun: The Fire This Time: How Climate Change Shifts Our Understanding of Suffering is an episode from Quick to Listen by Christianity Today. Due to production issues, we are not running a new podcast today. Instead, we are replaying a unfo...
This episode belongs to Quick to Listen.
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Published Aug 7, 2021, 58:04 long, audio available.
Due to production issues, we are not running a new podcast today. Instead, we are replaying a unfortunately, once-again-timely episode we recorded last year about California’s devastating forest fires. We’ll see you all next week with a fresh episode. Unless you’ve actually been in an area where you can look out your window and see the view with your own eyes, by now you’ve caught images of an orange sky coming from West Coast. For the past week, hundreds of miles of California, Oregon, Washington, and neighboring states have been covered in smokey air as forest fires rage, driving thousands of people from their homes. More than a dozen people have died in these historically catastrophic fires.As climate change has increasingly worsened fire season, it’s changed how Paige Parry, associate professor of Biology at George Fox University, makes sense of these disasters.“ We know that humans are what’s contributing to the fires,” said Parry. “So in my head, that makes my response and the questions that I ask very different than maybe a disaster that's truly natural and not influenced at all by human action.”Parry, a quantitative forest ecologist, has spent most of her life and research in the West.“ Within this context of feeling like we have so little control over the situations that are unfolding here on the West Coast and feeling like we're just victims of these fires ravaging, there's a part of me that also recognizes that our collective actions and choices have in some ways likely contributed to the situation that we've found ourselves in, which I think leaves us to wrestle with it in a very different way,” she said. Parry joined global media manager Morgan Lee and editorial director Ted Olsen to discuss why these fires have grown increasingly worse, what types of consequences the fires have even after they’ve been extinguished, and how a Christian response to fires may look different in the wake of climate change. What is Quick to Listen? Read more Rate Quick to Listen on Apple Podcasts Follow the podcast on Twitter Follow our hosts on Twitter: Morgan Lee and Ted Olsen Learn more about our guest: Paige Parry Visit our guest’s website: The Parry Lab Music by Sweeps Quick to Listen is produced by Morgan Leeand Matt Linder The transcript is edited by Bunmi Ishola Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You can listen to Rerun: The Fire This Time: How Climate Change Shifts Our Understanding of Suffering online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Rerun: The Fire This Time: How Climate Change Shifts Our Understanding of Suffering is an episode from Quick to Listen by Christianity Today.
This episode is 58:04 long.
This episode was published on Aug 7, 2021.
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Rerun: The Fire This Time: How Climate Change Shifts Our Understanding of Suffering is from Quick to Listen by Christianity Today.
Published Aug 7, 2021 and 58:04 long