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About The Book
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In the twelfth century an Italian monk named Joachim caught the attention of the Christian West by announcing the Three Ages of the World. Joachim arrived at his formulation by a meshing of the Christian Trinity with the Old and New Testaments proclaiming--in sequence--the Age of the Father the Age of the Son and the Age of the Holy Spirit. In the early modern period however archaeologists uncovered the remains of an agrarian village social stratum that predates the rise of civilization. The divinity of this period was the Mother Goddess a divinity that civilized monotheism with its strict Father God steadily and severely repressed. Paul Gilk has modified Joachims Three Ages revelation by placing this newly discovered Age of the Mother at the beginning of Joachims sequence. But its obvious that Mother Father Son and Holy Spirit are not psychologically coherent or linguistically consistent. The only way to make semantic sense of Joachims enlarged formulation is to recognize the Age of the Holy Spirit as the Age of the Daughter for if theres a Mother a Father and a Son then the Holy Spirit implicitly and quietly reveals Herself as Daughter. With this understanding its possible to discern the prophetic power and transformative cultural significance of both the contemporary womens movement and the feminine-Earth sensibility of the growing ecological outrage. Gilk goes on to assert that the radical servanthood and radical stewardship contained within Jesus kingdom of God proclamation is at least in part an attempt to spiritually reconnect with the agrarian village culture of the Mothers Age; but its also a lifting of that Age to a finer spirituality and toward an ethically Green political order. The kingdom of God is Green Gilk says and its overarching divinity is the Daughter. The Age of the Daughter is Green and is struggling to be born. Paul Gilk is an ecological hermit who lives in the woods of northern Wisconsin. He is the author of Green Politics is Eutopian and Natures Unruly Mob: Farming and the Crisis in Rural Culture both published by Wipf & Stock.