'No child outdoors' is a sad trend in modern society, but Rimmer shows an exit blazed by Thomas Traherne, an early-modern thinker who traced God's love throughout creation. Where others settled for mind against matter, and science against faith, Traherne saw nature and grace to be interrelated in empirical details, and keyed on wonder in moral formation. Readers disheartened by environmental crisis may find in Greening the Children of God a map to hope.
Gilson Waldkoenig, United Lutheran Seminary
In this lucidly written book Chad Rimmer makes a superb case for the ethical imperative to reconnect children with the natural world both for their own wellbeing and as the way to recover a multigenerational sense of responsibility for Earth and her threatened habitats and species. Combining an illuminating new reading of the Anglican spiritual writings of Thomas Traherne with the latest insights from child and developmental psychology, it turns out that humans cannot 'save' the earth unless they learn their need of Earth and her creatures!
Professor Michael Northcott, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia