Ecotheology beyond Adjective

Editorial Introduction to Special Issue

Authors

  • Abel K. Aruan Villanova University, United States of America
  • Seoyoung Kim Belfast School of Theology, United Kingdom

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46567/ijt.v13i2.776

Keywords:

ecotheology, adjective, political theology, Asia, the Pacific

Abstract

This editorial introduction explores the distinctive characteristics of doing theology in Asia and the Pacific that should redefine the discourse of ecotheology: not merely a theology qualified as ecological, but one transformed by the earth it names. As a subject matter, too, ecotheology is redefined: not anymore as an item of confession, but as a political theology, that is, an integral part of political life, where nonhumans are also the political subjects. The last section summarizes five contributions to the issue, covering “behavior-regulating” concepts of the Sea, archipelagic everydayness, cash economy, Divine economy, denial/rejection, feel-good theology, Swaraj, Dukkha, and Spirit. The authors hope that the new turn of the field is to be a documentary as well as an alternative to the dualistic, objectifying, and instrumentalizing patterns of thought and behavior; to be genuinely descriptive while remaining committedly normative.   

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Author Biographies

Abel K. Aruan, Villanova University, United States of America

Abel K. Aruan is a Ph.D. student at Villanova University and a Graduate Assistant for Political Theology Network. He was previously trained at Southeast Asia Bible Seminary, the Center of Study & Investigation for Decolonial Dialogues, and Boston University. His research engages with critical cultural studies and environmental humanities to track extractive and repronormative theologies circulating in the modern-colonial world systems, with a special attention to colonial and postcolonial Indonesia.

Seoyoung Kim, Belfast School of Theology, United Kingdom

Seoyoung Kim is a Lecturer in Applied Theology at the Belfast School of Theology, where she also leads the Ministry Placements program. An Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Manchester and a Central Committee member of the World Council of Churches, she specializes in ecotheology, with a focus on the theology of water and the ecumenical movement. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Manchester and is an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church in the Republic of Korea.

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Published

2025-12-25

How to Cite

Aruan, A. K., & Kim, S. (2025). Ecotheology beyond Adjective: Editorial Introduction to Special Issue . Indonesian Journal of Theology, 13(2), 143-155. https://doi.org/10.46567/ijt.v13i2.776