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This article is also available in Spanish. 
Is There an Environmental Problem?
The news media are full of stories
concerning environmental disasters of one kind or another, from global warming
to endangered species to destruction of the rain forests to nuclear accidents.
Some are real and some are imaginary, but it’s not hard to notice that the
environmental issue receives very little attention in Christian circles. There
are so many other significant issues that occupy our attention that we seem to
think of the environment as somebody else's issue. Many Christians are openly
skeptical of the reality of any environmental crisis. It’s viewed as a liberal
issue, or New Age propaganda, or just plain unimportant since this earth will
be destroyed after the millennium. What we fail to realize is that Christians
have a sacred responsibility to the earth and the creatures within it. The
earth is being affected by humans in an unprecedented manner, and we do not
know what the short or long term effects will be.
Calvin DeWitt, in his book The
Environment and the Christian,{1} lists seven degradations of the earth.
First, land is being converted from wilderness to agricultural use and from
agricultural use to urban areas at an ever-increasing rate. Some of these lands
cannot be reclaimed at all, at least not in the near future.
Second, as many as three species a day
become extinct. Even if this figure is exaggerated, we still need to realize
that once a species has disappeared, it is gone. Neither the species nor the
role it occupied in the ecosystem can be retrieved.
Third, land continues to be degraded by the
use of pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers. While many farmers are
rebelling against this trend and growing their produce “organically” or without
chemicals, the most profitable and largest growers still use an abundance of
chemicals.
Fourth, the treatment of hazardous
chemicals and wastes continues as an unsolved problem. Storing of medium term
nuclear wastes is still largely an unsolved problem.
Fifth, pollution is rapidly becoming a
global problem. Human garbage turns up on the shores of uninhabited South
Pacific islands, far from the shipping lanes.
Sixth, our atmosphere appears to be
changing. Is it warming due to the increase of gases like carbon dioxide from
the burning of fossil fuels? Is the ozone layer shrinking due to the use of
chemicals contained in refrigerators, air conditioners, spray cans, and fire
extinguishers? While I remain skeptical of the global threat that many see,
pollution continues to be a local and regional concern prompting ever more
stringent emission controls for our automobiles.
Seventh, we are losing the experiences of
cultures that have lived in harmony with the creation for hundreds or even
thousands years. Cultures such as the Mennonites and Amish, as well as those of
the rain forests, are crowded out by the expansion of civilization.
Never before have human beings wielded so
much power over God's creation. How should we as Christians think about these
problems?
The Environmental Ethics of Naturalism and
Pantheism
Some people have blamed Western culture's
Judeo-Christian heritage for the environmental crisis. These critics point
squarely at Genesis 1:26-28, where God commands His new creation, man, to have
dominion over the earth and to rule and subdue it.{2} This mandate is seen as a
clear license to exploit the earth for man's own purposes. With this kind of
philosophy, they ask, how can the earth ever be saved? While I will deal with
the inaccuracy of this interpretation a little later, you can see why many of
the leaders in the environmental movement are calling for a radical shift away
from this Christian position. But what are the alternatives?
The need to survive provides a rationale
for environmental concern within an evolutionary or naturalistic world
view. Survival of the human species is the ultimate value. Man cannot continue
to survive without a healthy planet. We must act to preserve the earth in order
to assure the future of our children.
The evolutionary or naturalistic view of
nature is, however, ultimately pragmatic. That is, nature has value only as
long as we need it. The value of nature is contingent on the whim of
egotistical man.{3} If, as technology increases, we are able to artificially
reproduce portions of the ecosystem for our survival needs, then certain
aspects of nature lose their significance. We no longer need them to survive.
This view is ultimately destructive, because man will possess only that which
he needs. The rest of nature can be discarded.
In the fictional universe of Star Trek,
vacations are spent in a computer generated virtual reality and meals are
produced by molecular manipulation. No gardens, herds, or parks are needed.
What value does nature have then?
Another alternative is the pantheistic
or New Age worldview. Superficially, this view offers some hope. All of
nature is equal because all is god and god is all. Nature is respected and
valued because it is part of the essence of god. If humans have value, then
nature has value.
But while pantheism elevates nature, it
simultaneously degrades man and will ultimately degrade nature as well. To the
pantheist, man has no more value than a blade of grass. In India the rats and cows consume needed grain and spread disease with the blessings of the
pantheists. To restrict the rats and cows would be to restrict god, so man
takes second place to the rats and cows. Man is a part of nature, yet it is man
that is being restricted. So ultimately, all of nature is degraded.{4}
Pantheism claims that what is, is right. To
clean up the environment would mean eliminating the “undesirable” elements.
But, since god is all and in all, how can there be any undesirable elements?
Pantheism fails because it makes no distinctions between man and nature.
The Christian Environmental Ethic
A true Christian environmental ethic
differs from the naturalistic and pantheistic ethics in that it is based on the
reality of God as Creator and man as his image-bearer and steward. God is the
Creator of nature, not part of nature. He transcends nature (Gen. 1-2; Job
38-41; Ps. 19, 24, 104; Rom 1:18-20; Col. 1:16-17). All of nature, including
man, is equal in its origin. Nature has value in and of itself because God
created it. Nature's value is intrinsic; it will not change because the fact of
its creation will not change.{5} The rock, the tree, and the cat deserve our
respect because God made them to be as they are.{6}
While man is a creature and therefore is
identified with the other creatures, he is also created in God's image. It is
this image that separates humans from the rest of creation (Gen. 1:26-27; Ps.
139:13-16).{7} God did not bestow His image anywhere else in nature.
Therefore, while a cat has value because
God created it, it is inappropriate to romanticize the cat as though it had
human emotions. All God's creatures glorify Him by their very existence, but
only one is able to worship and serve Him by an act of the will.
But a responsibility goes along with
bearing the image of God. In its proper sense, man's rule and dominion over the
earth is that of a steward or a caretaker, not a reckless exploiter. Man is not
sovereign over the lower orders of creation. Ownership is in the hands of the
Lord.{8}
God told Adam and Eve to cultivate and keep
the garden (Gen. 2:15), and we may certainly use nature for our benefit, but we
may only use it as God intends. An effective steward understands that which he
oversees, and science can help us discover the intricacies of nature.
Technology puts the creation to man's use,
but unnecessary waste and pollution degrades it and spoils the creation's
ability to give glory to its Creator. I think it is helpful to realize that we
are to exercise dominion over nature, not as though we are entitled to exploit
it, but as something borrowed or held in trust.
Recall that in the parable of the talents
in Matthew 25, the steward who merely buried his talent out of fear of losing
it was severely chastised. What little he did have was taken away and given to
those who already had a great deal.{9} When Christ returns, His earth may well
be handed back to Him rusted, corroded, polluted, and ugly. To what degree will
you or I be held responsible?
This more thoroughly biblical view of
nature and the environment will allow us to see more clearly the challenges
that lie ahead. Our stewardship of the earth must grapple with the reality that
it does not belong to us but to God though we have been given permission to use
the earth for our basic needs.
Abuse of Dominion
While God intended us to live in harmony
with nature, we have more often than not been at odds with nature. This reality
tells us that man has not fulfilled his mandate. The source of our ecological
crisis lies in man's fallen nature and the abuse of his dominion.
Man is a rebel who has set himself at the
center of the universe. He has exploited created things as though they were
nothing in themselves and as though he has an autonomous right to do so.{10}
Man's abuse of his dominion becomes clear when we look at the value we place on
time and money. Our often uncontrolled greed and haste have led to the
deterioration of the environment.{11} We evaluate projects almost exclusively
in terms of their potential impact on humans.
For instance, builders know that it is
faster and more cost effective to bulldoze trees that are growing on the site
of a proposed subdivision than it is to build the houses around them. Even if
the uprooted trees are replaced with saplings once the houses are constructed,
the loss of the mature trees enhances erosion, eliminates a means of absorbing
pollutants, producing oxygen, and providing shade, and produces a scar that
heals slowly if at all.
Building around the trees, while more
expensive and time-consuming, minimizes the destructive impact of human society
on God's earth. But, because of man's sinful heart, the first option has been
utilized more often than not.
Christians we must treat nature as having
value in itself, and we must be careful to exercise dominion without being
destructive.{12} To quote Francis Schaeffer, “We have the right to rid our
house of ants; but what we have no right to do is to forget to honor the ant as
God made it, out in the place where God made the ant to be. When we meet the
ant on the sidewalk, we step over him. He is a creature, like ourselves; not
made in the image of God, it is true, but equal with man as far as creation is
concerned.”{13}
The Bible contains numerous examples of the
care with which we are expected to treat the environment. Leviticus 25:1-12
speaks of the care Israel was to have for the land. Deuteronomy 25:4 and 22:6
indicates the proper care for domestic animals and a respect for wildlife. In
Isaiah 5:8-10 the Lord judges those who have misused the land. Job 38:25-28 and
Psalm 104:27-30 speak of God's nurture and care for His creation. Psalm 104 tells
us that certain places were made with certain animals in mind. This would make
our national parks and wilderness preserves a biblical concept. And Jesus spoke
on two occasions of how much the Father cared for even the smallest sparrow
(Matt. 6:26, 10:29). How can we do less?
Christian Responsibility
I believe that as Christians we have a
responsibility to the earth that exceeds that of unredeemed people. We are the
only ones who are rightly related to the Creator. We should be showing others
the way to environmental responsibility.
“Christians, of all people, should not be
destroyers,” Schaeffer said.{14} We may cut down a tree to build a house or to
make a fire, but not just to cut it down. While there is nothing wrong with
profit in the marketplace, in some cases we must voluntarily limit our profit
in order to protect the environment.{15}
When the church puts belief into practice,
our humanity and sense of beauty are restored.{16} But this is not what we see.
Concern for the environment is not on the front burner of most evangelical
Christians. The church has failed in its mission of steward of the earth.
We have spoken out loudly against the
materialism of science as expressed in the issues of abortion, human dignity,
evolution, and genetic engineering, but have shown ourselves to be little more
than materialists in our technological orientation towards nature.{17} All too
often Christians have adopted a mindset similar to a naturalist that would
assert that simply more technology will answer our problems. In this respect we
have essentially abandoned this very “Christian” issue.
By failing to fulfill our responsibilities
to the earth, we are also losing a great evangelistic opportunity. Many young
people in our society are seeking an improved environment, yet they think that
most Christians don't care about ecological issues and that most churches offer
no opportunity for involvement.{18} For example, in many churches today you can
find soft drink machines dispensing aluminum cans with no receptacle provided
to recycle the aluminum, one of our most profitable recyclable materials.
As a result, other worldviews and religions
have made the environmental issue their own. Because the environmental movement
has been co-opted by those involved in the New Age Movement particularly, many
Christians have begun to confuse interest in the environment with interest in
pantheism and have hesitated to get involved. But we cannot allow the enemy to
take over leadership in an area that is rightfully ours.
As the redeemed of the earth, our
motivation to care for the land is even higher than that of the evolutionist,
the Buddhist, or the advocate of the New Age. Jesus has redeemed all of the
effects of the curse, including our relationship with God, our relationship
with other people, and our relationship with the creation (1 Cor. 15:21-22,
Rom. 5:12-21). Although the heavens and the earth will eventually be destroyed,
we should still work for healing now.
For Further Reading
Beisner, E. Calvin. Prospects for
Growth: a Biblical View of Population, Resources, and the Future. Westchester, Ill.: Crossway Books, 1990.
DeWitt, Calvin B., Ed. The Environment
and the Christian: What Can We Learn from the New Testament? Grand Rapids , Mich.: Baker Book House, 1991.
Schaeffer, Francis. Pollution and the
Death of Man: a Christian View of Ecology. Wheaton, Ill.: Tyndale, 1970.
Notes
- Calvin DeWitt, ed., The Environment and the Christian: What Does the New Testament Say About the Environment (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1991).
- Lynn White, "The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis," Science, 155 (1967):1203-07.
- Francis Schaeffer, Pollution and the Death of Man: The Christian View of Ecology (Wheaton, Ill.: Tyndale House Publishers, 1970), 26-27.
- Ibid, 30-33.
- Ibid, 47-49.
- Ibid, 54-55.
- Ibid, 49-50.
- Ibid, 69.
- Ibid, 69-70
- Ibid, 71.
- Ibid, 83.
- Ibid, 74-75.
- Ibid, 74.
- Ibid, 74.
- Ibid, 90-91.
- Ibid, 92-93.
- Ibid, 85.
- Ibid, 85.
© 2005 Probe Ministries
About the Author Raymond G. Bohlin is president of Probe Ministries. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois (B.S., zoology), North Texas State University (M.S., population genetics), and the University of Texas at Dallas (M.S., Ph.D., molecular biology). He is the co-author of the book The Natural Limits to Biological Change, served as general editor of Creation, Evolution and Modern Science, co-author of Basic Questions on Genetics, Stem Cell Research and Cloning (The BioBasics Series), and has published numerous journal articles. Dr. Bohlin was named a 1997-98 and 2000 Research Fellow of the Discovery Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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