"Despite constant talk about recycling and thinking 'green', we're still a society that produces fantastic quantities of waste," Archbishop Williams says.
"Look at the number of plastic bags flapping around by the roadside, in town and country alike and you see what I mean.
"In a society where we think of so many things as disposable; where we expect to be constantly discarding last year's gadget and replacing it with this year's model, do we end up tempted to think of people and relationships as disposable?
"Are we so fixated on keeping up with change that we lose any sense of our need for stability?"
Ekklesia reports that Dr Williams, who is also spiritual head of the 78 million strong worldwide Anglican Communion, says that those who have learned to discard rubbish and materials too easily are likely to do the same to people and relationships.The archbishop's New Year message is filmed both in Canterbury Cathedral and at a nearby recycling centre, where he stresses his concern for the environment and the emphasises the moral and religious necessity of protecting it.
Dr Williams says that short-term exploitation of the earth's resources which produces fantastic quantities of waste has implications for other areas of life.
"A lot of the time, we just don't let ourselves think about the future with realism," he continued.
"A culture of vast material waste and emotional short-termism is a culture that is a lot more fragile than it knows.
"How much investment are we going to make in a safer and more balanced future?" he asked.
Dr Williams is also making his message available on YouTube as well as BBC television.
The Archbishop adds that "[God] doesn't regard anyone as a 'waste of space', as not worth his time - from the very beginnings of life to its end, whether they are successful, articulate, productive or not".
He concludes: "A life that communicates a bit of what God is like is a life that doesn't give up."
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