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To Be an Earth-Keeper is to Be My Brother’s Keeper: Care of Creation.

Author: Peter Houston
Date: 01.09.2010
Category: Evangelism Training, Science and Bioethics, Creation Care

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Originally Posted in English

(Adding my voice to those of Scott Sabin, Las Newman, Ken Gnanakan, Rod Green and others...)

I am someone who values a sense of wonder.  There is an immediacy and simplicity to wonder that points me to my Creator and God’s wondrous creation.   Technological optimist, tree hugger and deep ecologist are not labels that describe me.   Non-human creation has an inherent value to me but so too, do people! The power politics of prosperity, poverty and the poor frustrate and anger me.  Zimbabwean refugees knocking on my door present me with a dilemma of conscience.

And yes, oil spills, horns cut off from rhinos and the unnoticed rainforest-flower trampled into oblivion do disturb me.  I am not against the culling of elephants in the Kruger National Park, yet I shudder at the thought of shooting an animal myself.  I happily eat most meat.  (My apologies to all ethical vegetarians.)   At an intellectual level I inherently value God’s creation but I also seek to deeply appreciate my existence within God’s created order and worship the God who orders it.

And God saw that it was Good!

I have been challenged in my environmental studies by the argument that our Judeo-Christian view of nature has resulted in the present global environmental crisis.  For example, Lynn White Jr (1967) says that Christian arrogance is responsible for the worsening ecological crisis and the crisis will continue until the Christian axiom that ‘nature has no reason for existence but to serve humans’ is rejected.  Similarly Ian McHarg (1973) believed that “Judaism, Christianity, Humanism tend to assert outrageously the separateness and dominance of man over nature” and that “these same attitudes become of first importance when man holds the power to cause evolutionary regressions of unimaginable effect or even to destroy life.”  I sadly agree, in part, with White and McHarg, yet their portrayal of the Christian worldview is contrary to my own.  I believe that nature in all its complexity, diversity and richness has an inherent value and not just because of how it can be exploited for the benefit of humanity.

God recognises the value of non-human nature before even the creation of humankind (Genesis 1v9-25), and so calls what He has made “good!”  The goodness of nature is not dependent on its usefulness to humanity.  It is good because God has deemed it such.  Furthermore, there is an unbreakable covenantal relationship between God and nature, which is indicated in the words of the prophet Jeremiah (33v21-22), “If you can break my covenant with the day and my covenant with the night, so that day and night no longer come at their appointed time, then my covenant with David my servant…can be broken and David will no longer have a descendant to reign on his throne.”  God’s faithfulness to His Creation demonstrates His faithfulness to all other covenants thereafter, like the New Covenant, which is about salvation through the Son of David, Jesus Christ!

Keywords: Creation, Environment, Covenant, Care, Worship, Neighbour, Mission

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PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down theBlood (1)
United States

God will take care of us, and I agree with that powerful comment.  We are our Brother’s Keeper when we care for His creation.


22.04.2011
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Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Cristianosmedioambiente (0)
United States

We are interesting to have you i our group on face book, cristianosmedioambiente, in our group we fight for help our world. We decided to write about topic that could awake our society about our Planet. We want to have a better world for our future generation. I would like to have your article and comment in our page. Thanks

Cristianos Medio Ambiente.


18.10.2010

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Country: South Africa

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