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Sermon - April 22, 2007
"A Sermon for Earth Sunday"
By the Rev. Judith E. Meyer
Unitarian Universalist Community Church
Santa Monica, California
April 22, 2007
READING
If you don't ever want to think about how your food gets to the supermarket
- and you may not want to - then don't read Michael Pollan's book, "The
Omnivore's Dilemma." The book is a penetrating exploration of the many
sources of our food: from industrial farming to hunting. Pollan argues that
the pleasures of eating "are deepened by knowing" about our food.
But so is our ethical responsibility. Here he makes his case:
"[T]here exists a fundamental tension between the logic of nature and
the logic of human industry, at least as it is presently organized. Our ingenuity
in feeding ourselves is prodigious, but at various points our technologies
come into conflict with nature's ways of doing things, as when we seek to maximize
efficiency by planting crops or raising animals in vast mono- cultures. This
is something nature never does, always and for good reasons practicing diversity
instead. A great many of the health and environmental problems created by our
food system owe to our attempts to oversimplify nature's complexities, at both
the growing and the eating ends of our food chain. At either end of any food
chain you find a biological system - a patch of soil, a human body - and the
health of one is connected - literally - to the health of the other. Many of
the problems of health and nutrition we face today trace back to things that
happen on the farm, and behind those things stand specific government policies
few of us know anything about.
"I don't mean to suggest that human food chains have only recently come
into conflict with the logic of biology; early agriculture and, long before
that, human hunting proved enormously destructive. Indeed, we might never have
needed agriculture had earlier generations of hunters not eliminated the species
they depended upon. Folly in the getting of our food is nothing new. And yet
the new follies we are perpetrating in our industrial food chain today are
of a different order. By replacing solar energy with fossil fuel, by raising
millions of food animals in close confinement, by feeding those animals foods
they never evolved to eat, and by feeding ourselves foods far more novel than
we even realize, we are taking risks with our health and the health of the
natural world that are unprecedented.
". . . [T]he way we eat represents our most profound engagement with the
natural world. Daily, our eating turns nature into culture, transforming the
body of the world into our bodies and minds. Agriculture has done more to reshape
the natural world than anything else we humans do, both its landscapes and
the composition of its flora and fauna. Our eating also constitutes a relationship
with dozens of other species - plants, animals, and fungi - with which we have
coevolved to the point where our fates are deeply entwined. Many of these species
have evolved expressly to gratify our desires, in the intricate dance of domestication
that has allowed us and them to prosper together as we could never have prospered
apart. But our relationships with the wild species we eat - from the mushrooms
we pick in the forest to the yeasts that leaven our bread - are no less compelling,
and far more mysterious. Eating puts us in touch with all that we share with
the other animals, and all that sets us apart. It defines us.
"What is perhaps most troubling, and sad, about industrial eating is how
thoroughly it obscures all these relationships and connections. To go from
the chicken (Gallus gallus) to the Chicken McNugget is to leave this world
in a journey of forgetting that could hardly be more costly, not only in terms
of the animal's pain but in our pleasure, too. But forgetting, or not knowing
in the first place, is what the industrial food chain is all about, the principal
reason it is so opaque, for if we could see what lies on the far side of the
increasingly high walls of our industrial agriculture, we would surely change
the way we eat.
"'Eating is an agricultural act,' as Wendell Berry famously said. It is
also an ecological act, and a political act, too. Though much has been done
to obscure this simple fact, how and what we eat determines to a great extent
the use we make of the world - and what is to become of it."
SERMON
When it comes to food, I speak as someone who isn't much of a cook and hates
to shop for groceries. I love to eat and wish I always had a well-stocked cupboard
and planned ahead for dinner. Instead I tend to go from day to day, buying
what we need, cooking simple, mostly vegetarian meals at home.
My one scruple about food has been to avoid imposing my preferences on other
people. When I am a guest in someone else's home, I eat and enjoy whatever
my host serves. Except for broccoli.
I am a meagerly informed consumer - aware of the spinach scare and the Atkins
Diet - but couldn't tell you what to buy at this week's Farmer's Market. Yet
I devoured the information in Michael Pollan's "natural history of four
meals," "The Omnivore's Dilemma". "To eat with a fuller
consciousness of all that is at stake might sound like a burden," Pollan
writes, "but in practice few things in life can afford quite as much satisfaction."[i]
I came away from reading this book convinced that how we shop, cook, and eat
are important choices that need to be informed by knowledge and exposed to
moral reasoning. Not just because it makes the experience of eating more healthy
or pleasurable. But because it expresses our primary relationship to nature.
We cannot separate who we are as human beings from who we are as part of the
earth. Farmers, naturalists and spiritual teachers all tell us that. "By
this earth's life," writes Wendell Berry, "I have its greed and innocence,
its violence, its peace."[ii] Wendell Berry made the decision many years
ago to settle on a piece of land and become a farmer. His writings relate every
aspect of his life - not just his food, but his marriage, his work, and his
creativity - to this foundation.
Michael Pollan, after exploring every way to grow and make a meal, concludes, "what
we eat determines to a great extent the use we make of the world - and what
is to become of it."[iii] Our role as consumers has a moral dimension.
If we ignore the responsibilities of our role, we imperil the earth, not just
ourselves.
And Chief Noah Sealth reminds us that the relationship is mutual. "All
things are connected. Whatever befalls the earth befalls the sons and daughters
of the earth."[iv]
The challenge is especially compelling for us. We live in a part of the world
where we can find anything we want. I can still remember when I moved here
from Boston, how delighted I was to find ripe avocados in the market down the
street from my home.
Not only do we have fresh produce year round, but we have the marketplace for
wealthy, discerning consumers. Take Whole Foods Market, just up the street
from us on Wilshire Boulevard. Michael Pollan has some fun with them. "I
enjoy shopping at Whole Foods," he writes, "nearly as much as I
enjoy browsing a good bookstore, which, come to think of it, is probably no
accident. Shopping [there] is a literary experience, too." Whole Foods
is an emporium of "storied" food, with labels vouching for its pastoral
provenance.
Pollan fills his basket "with eggs 'from cage-free vegetarian hens,' [and]
milk from cows that live 'free from unnecessary fear and distress'" .
. . even an organic broiling chicken named "Rosie."[v] How many of
us are so reassured by such "evocative prose" that we are willing
to pay the higher prices for it? I have done so, many times.
It is good food. It's just that I don't really know why. All I know is that
I feel more confident purchasing something that declares its pleasant origins.
And has ingredients I can understand, not a list of preservatives with synthetic-sounding
names. And in that small but expensive way, I feel I am doing something good.
"So much about life in a global economy," Michael Pollan writes, "feels
as though it has passed beyond the individual's control - what happens to our
jobs, to the prices at the gas station, to the vote in the legislature. But
somehow food still feels a little different. We can still decide, every day,
what we're going to put into our bodies, what sort of food chain we want to
participate in. We can, in other words, reject the industrial omelet on offer
and decide to eat another. This might not sound like a big deal, but it could
be the beginnings of one. Already the desire on the part of consumers to put
something different in their bodies has created an $11 billion market in organic
food. That marketplace was built by consumers and farmers working informally
together outside the system, with exactly no help from the government."[vi]
At that point in reading the book I went over to the Co-op Market on Broadway
and became a member. I'd gone there for years, buying lunch on the fly or looking
for a good apple. But I realized that supporting such a place - a market owned
by the consumers - was a first step in taking responsibility for what I eat.
Once you think about it, the decisions grow and so do their implications. Michael
Pollan investigates industrial farming - high volume "monoculture." Rather
than growing diverse products the way a small farm must do simply to survive
- grass, cows, hens, eggs, and so on - industrial farming streamlines - and
confines - production for profit. As Michael Pollan notes, such an approach
to farming may make sense to the "logic of human industry," but it
goes against the "logic of nature."[vii]
Industrial farming has become a way of life for us, and for many farmers, who
have no choice but to work this way to stay in business. We have been able
to produce large quantities of food this way - and it has kept many from starving.
Yet its critics ascribe all kinds of environmental consequences. The earth
pays a high price for us to enjoy out of season vegetables. And everything
eats corn - not just animals that should be ruminating grass, but even farm-raised
salmon, and most of our processed food is made from it. What happens to us?
One biologist told Michael Pollan, "we North Americans look like corn
chips with legs."[viii]
There is the equally important question of what happens to the animals. Their
brief, confined lives seem miserable by any measure. Whether knowing this makes
you a vegetarian or not, Pollan argues that you do need to know.
The most troubling bit of information I picked up from "The Omnivore's
Dilemma" is how much our not knowing is part of the equation of industrial
farming. "Were the walls of our meat industry to become transparent," Pollan
warns us, "we would not long continue to raise, kill, and eat animals
the way we do. . . . Yes, meat would get more expensive. We'd probably eat
a lot less of it, too, but maybe when we did eat animals we'd eat them with
the consciousness, ceremony, and respect they deserve."[ix]
Becoming conscious about what we eat involves more than just taking what is
healthy for ourselves. It means taking into account everything that goes into
making the food what it is. To do so we need to close the distance between
ourselves and our food, enough so that our ethical sensibilities can play a
part. It is an individual choice, what to eat or not eat, but each choice has
an impact all the way down the food chain, right back to earth itself. There
may be many questions about what it is right to do: but being unconscious about
it is not the answer to any of them.
In the story we heard earlier, the Red Hen asks her animals friends to help
her plant a seed. They all refuse. But as the seed grows from a sprout to a
seedling and finally into a tree, it becomes something the other animals want
to enjoy. The Red Hen remembers how little help she got - and it's her turn
to refuse. But her baby chick changes her mind and all the animals play in
the shade of the "great green whispery tree."[x] Now that they understand
how they all benefited from the Red Hen's labor, they each go home with a seed
of their own.
We may not end up planting our own vegetables if we become more conscious about
food. But to know how our consumer choices affect other lives and the earth
itself is the least we can do to reciprocate. For as Michael Pollan concludes, "we
eat by the grace of nature, not industry, and what we're eating is never anything
more or less than the body of the world."[xi]
[i] Michael Pollan, "The Omnivore’s Dilemma: a natural history of
four meals" (New York: Penguin Press, 2006), p. 11.
[ii] Wendell Berry, "History," from "Clearing" (New York & London:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977), p. 5.
[iii] Pollan, p. 11.
[iv] Words attributed to Chief Noah Sealth, #550 in "Singing the Living
Tradition" (Boston: Beacon Press, 1993).
[v] Pollan, pp. 134-135.
[vi] Pollan, p. 257
[vii] Pollan, p. 9
[viii] Pollan, p. 23.
[ix] Pollan, p. 333.
[x] Tina Matthews, "Out of the Egg" (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2007).
[xi] Pollan, p. 411.
Copyright 2007, Rev.Judith E. Meyer
This text is for personal use only, and may not be copied
or distributed without the permission of the author.
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