Thomas Berry’s The Great Work is a landmark text in ecological spirituality and cultural transformation. Berry names the defining task of our age: moving from an exploitative relationship with the Earth to one that is mutually enhancing. He argues that the ecological crisis is fundamentally a crisis of worldview, requiring a cultural and spiritual transformation as profound as any in human history.
Berry shows how the “extractive mindset” – seeing nature as resource and humans as producers – has shaped economics, education, and religion. Against this, he offers a vision of the universe as a “communion of subjects,” where every form of life holds intrinsic value.
The book is not abstract philosophy but a call to action, addressing how each sphere of society can contribute to the Great Work of transition. His integration of science and spirituality gives readers both grounding and inspiration.
Reading it today is sobering yet hopeful. Berry makes clear the scale of change needed, but he also insists that great transformations have happened before. The Great Work is both compass and call — guiding us toward a more life-giving paradigm.