More and more of us are finding that parts of the story we’ve been living aren’t working. When we talk about what we are doing, some words that flowed and described our activity before now stick in our throat, or somewhere. In our gut or heart or head, other voices are saying, “But it’s not working. You need to change.”
This story which is now failing, I call the multi-Earths story because it takes multiple Earths to sustain it. The endless wars and ruthless competition for the resources of our one planet expose this story as utterly inadequate to fit within the carrying capacity of our planet. That the multi-Earths story is a weakling story is further revealed by its reliance on and animation of lower human capacities such as greed and fear. Its frailty to address such realities as radical inequalities of resources and power, species dieoff, and a rapidly expanding population all convince us that we humans are capable of a far better story.
That better story is both as old as homo sapiens and as young as its latest version. It is seasoned by centuries and millennia of previous versions. Contributing to such an updated narrative and helping one another live it, is the mission of the “One-Earth Project.” You can flip to the last chapter and read a version of such a story compiled from the details of the other chapters. It is a story that joyfully fits one Earth.
Early chapters in this “One-Earth Project” describe the story on which the leadership on our planet bases their behaviors. It gives us their version of how to be an economic success as a person, business, or nation. But it has now outlived its viability. Stay with it and it will kill us. So we need to exodus that story with its economy in favor of one that the Earth herself has been telling. That’s what the middle and later chapters are about. In this story, we will experience more about our interconnectedness with all of Creation. Our desire to align our lives and the structures we use with the rest of the Earth Community will be better met. We will feel our solidarity as full participants with all species in the evolutionary processes of one, sustainable Earth, our joint home.
I call this story the one-Earth story. The economics that expresses this story fits with one planet. It builds on perceiving Earth’s abundance and commits itself to the structures by which all, people and species, have enough.
The narrative of the new story has a four part outline.
Putting our faith in a one-Earth story may feel risky or daring. But the risks of the multi-Earth story, when accurately perceived, raise much greater alarm. Shifting our faith to a one-Earth story, though not without risk, places our faith in a more dynamic and assured story. First, I emphasize again that it is the story of Earth and the cosmos—a very old story continually evolving into perpetual newness. Also, it is, truly, the only story that our commonsense affirms, given we have only one planet to live on. Furthermore, our basic sense of fairness and love get that the resources of this planet are to be shared with all—not only all humans, but all species. And beyond our commonsense, fairness, and love, many of us have made a spiritual commitment or sacred vow to our Creator to live according to the design of this magnificent Creation.
Each of us needs to be able to tell a version of this story—one that feels compelling to us. The version we tell will testify to why we live our lives as we do, both flaws and triumphs. Our story will give examples of which economic structures we use and why; it will describe the kind of Earth communities we aspire to be part of. The final chapters give broad contours and essential concepts of a one-Earth economy.
I want to emphasize, then, that a one-Earth story is marked by abundance within the creational order, not by scarcity and fear. It is an exciting story because it releases all of our higher capacities to work in our lives and for the common good. It is a story filled with “ah-hahs” because its evolution never stops and perpetually generates newness in ways that surprise us. Why would we not commit ourselves, mind, heart, soul, and strength to love and live such a holy and human story?