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Martin Palmer on Spiritual Responses

Episode 4 of 4

Martin Palmer, secretary general of the Alliance of Religions and Conservation, reflects on the spiritual responses evoked by cliffs in religious stories and traditions.

In the last of four illustrated essays by different writers on the theme of cliffs, Martin Palmer, Secretary General of the Alliance of Religions and Conservation, reflects on the spiritual responses evoked by cliffs in religious stories and traditions across the world. Drawing on examples, he explores five spiritual responses. First, a sense of awe "Reverence for such majestic soaring creations". The second is a feeling of being closer to God, and one of the reasons for cliff burials around the world such as those near the town of Sagada in the Mountain Province on Luzon Island in the Philippines "Neither earth nor sky – safe also from scavenging animals". The third is adding to the wonder of nature's creation with shrines, temples and monasteries projecting from cliffs. The fourth response could be described as creating or strutting our own power through use of cliff faces as advertisement of our status; "cliffs have been the setting for monumental carvings of victories, for religious texts or poems extolling the beauty of the place" and for carving vast figures with special significance. Finally, Martin suggests, we have created our own versions of cliffs - from skyscrapers to the facades of great cathedrals and temples - and in these we create our own meaning of the cliff face. Vast creations, our natural cliffs speak both of permanence and time, but also bear witness to change,"even if it is change over an unimaginably long period of time".

Written and narrated by Martin Palmer
Readings by David Acton
Additional sound recordings by Chris Watson
Producer Sarah Blunt

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14 minutes

Last on

Fri 8 Jan 2021 23:30

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Martin Palmer

Martin Palmer
Martin Palmer is Secretary General of the (ARC), a secular body that helps the world's major faiths develop environmental programmes based on their own core teachings, beliefs and practices.

David Acton

David Acton was most recently on tour in A Midsummer Night’s Dream and The Comedy of Errors with the all male Shakespeare company . He has also worked with Propeller on productions of Henry V and Twelfth Night.

His other work includes: The Woman in Black at the Fortune Theatre; Anjin: The Shogun and the Samurai in Tokyo and Sadler’s Wells, television programmes such as Diaries of the Great War, Doctors, EastEnders, Silent Witness, Hollyoaks and the films After Death, Volume and Persuasion.

Broadcasts

  • Thu 12 Feb 2015 13:45
  • Fri 8 Jan 2021 23:30

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