Tuesday, November 04, 2025

Berry - World-Ending Fire

I was introduced to Wendell Berry over coffee by a candidate positioning himself to run for Illinois state representative in my district. I was immediately struck by Patrick Hanley's thoughtfulness and apparent intelligence, so I decided to pick something up and I chose The World-Ending Fire: The Essential Wendell Berry (2017). I chose this book because it was a sequential collection of Berry's writing from 1968 to 2011. I found the entire book interesting but, because it was a collection over time, there are certain themes that are repeated through different stories and revelations. I found that the first several chapters and a couple of concluding chapters captured the "essentials" and I therefore focus on them in this review.

Hanley and Berry are both excellent examples of grounded leadership that is focused on improving communities and the general welfare of those who inhabit them. As studies of character, their conviction in leadership is exemplary.

Berry was a university professor with somewhat eccentric views of the environment and community resulting from his experience in restoring and expanding his family farm throughout his life. The introduction says, "Over the last century, by some estimates, over half the world's topsoil has been washed away by the war on nature that we call industrial farming" (page viii) and that is the central warning that frames the rest of the book. He attributes the fall of small family farms to urbanization that drew young people away from their own origins, origins that previously had connected them to other animals, plants, and the communities that nurtured them. Abundance seemed to prevail in the impersonal, disconnected spaces of cities and thus living abundantly (excessively) became the perceived mark of progress. All the while, the lands and animals that inhabited them were exploited and began a slide to unproductivity.

Berry offers an ominous prediction:
There appears to be a law that when creatures have reached the level of consciousness, as men have, they must become conscious of the creation; they must learn how they fit into it and what its needs are and what it requires of them, or else pay a terrible penalty; the spirit of the creation will go out of them, and they will become destructive; the very earth will depart from them and go where they cannot follow (p. 21).

The antidote is that we must embrace the universal reality that what is good for the world is good for us, which happens only when we try to know the world and our roles in it rather than exploiting and benefitting from it. Filling oneself with knowledge of the earth then brings the realization that the world is inexhaustible and will outlast any humans today or in the future. The question is an earth in what form and condition? A world that is dominated by consumerism and competition "destroys the natural environment" and it "abuses racial and economic minorities" in the same way (p. 49). To correct the abuse of the earth and other humans, "we are going to have to go far beyond public protest and political action. We are going to have to rebuild the substance and the integrity of private life in this country" (p. 53). In sum, "we will be wrong if we attempt to correct what we perceive as 'environmental' problems without correcting the economic oversimplification that caused them" (p. 66).

A theological perspective (not labeled as such) of creating and sustaining a beloved community is Berry's way forward - creating "common experience and common effort on a common ground to which one willingly belongs" (p. 94). The point of this strategy is that only by restoring local soil with joint effort can community cultures be restored - connected, appreciative, moderate, and abundant. A philosophical assumption of this kind of community is that the "standard of the exploiter is efficiency; the standard of the nurturer is care. The exploiter's goals are money, profit; the nurturer's goal is health - his land's health" (p. 122).

Berry's chapter on "Two Minds" describes the "Rational Mind - motivated by the fear of being misled, of being wrong," and the "Sympathetic Mind - motivated by the fear of error of carelessness, of being unloving" (p. 180). The 'Sympathetic Mind' is "informed by experience, by traditionborne stories of the experiences of others, by familiarity, by compassion, by commitment, by faith" (p. 184). In Berry's view, conservation is not enough and must stretch to "conserve the possibilities of peace and good work" (p. 199).

"Compromise Hell" asserts that "The general purpose of the present economy is to exploit, not to foster or conserve" (p. 313). The sustainable alternative economy advocates:

  1. Humans don't have to live by destroying the sources of their life.
  2. Respect ourselves and our dwelling places and quit thinking of rural America as a colony.
  3. Reaffirm the economic value of good stewardship and good work.
  4. Reconsider solving economic problems by 'bringing in industry'.
  5. Confront honestly the issue of scale - bigness promotes greed, indifference, and damage.
  6. Prioritize caring for our land.

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