|
IS POLLUTION PART OF GOD'S PLAN?
"the
plans of the Lord stand firm forever,
the purposes of his heart through all generations."
Psalm 33:11
We
live in a day when people are concerned about how we are failing to conserve our
natural resources. They look to
technology to find ways to lessen our impact on nature and help "save the
planet." People are scared by
what they read and see concerning the condition of the world.
There is a hole in the ozone layer.
Global warming may melt the ice caps and flood our cities.
Species are disappearing as forests shrink and deserts expand.
Pollution is spreading to all points on the globe through the seas and
the air. Even polar bears and
penguins have man-made pesticides in their bodies.
There is no place that is not being impacted.
People
fear that the "balance" of nature is gone.
As judged from their view of reality, they are right to be afraid.
They see the birth pains that Jesus spoke about; the wars, earthquakes
and famines (Mark
13:7-8); and they
worry that the world's health is failing. But
is there any reason to be worried?
Most
people assume what they can see and touch is all that exists.
From the viewpoint of the Israelites being pursued in the desert by Pharaoh, there was no hope when they reached the Red Sea.
The strongest army in the world was approaching and they had no means of
escape. Their choices appeared to
be either stand and be slaughtered by the chariots or swim and drown in the sea.
Neither option offered a chance of survival and so they despaired.
These things were occurring in order to teach this newly formed nation
that they were in God's care. God
was not limited to the choices that they could imagine.
As the Bible records, the Red Sea then parted to let the Israelites
through as though it were dry land.
(Exodus
14)
Today,
the testing of our faith occurs in more mundane ways, but still it has the
ability to stretch us beyond our own limits to come up with solutions on our
own. It is at such times that we
turn to the one who we have heard has delivered others in the past.
God
takes pride in showing himself powerful. Lazarus
was raised from the dead, rather than being healed of his illness before it
turned fatal.
(John
11:1-11 & 32-44)
The loaves and fish were multiplied (Mat.
14:15-19), rather
than someone having more conventionally come to the rescue with a net filled to
over-flowing with fish (John
21:1-6).
These are not isolated examples of God intervening to bring healing or
deliverance. The Bible documents
similar things which were done for Gideon, Elijah, David, Daniel, Peter and
Paul, to name just a few. When
human understanding or ability is inadequate, God shows that He is in control.
His ways are not our ways.
Over
and over in the Bible, as Israel grew comfortable in their prosperity, they
became less aware of God's direct involvement in their affairs.
Like all of us, they had the tendency to make decisions based on their
own experiences. While this may
have seemed right in their eyes, it was in fact rebelling against the clear
instruction that God had given them. God
had promised that when Israel remained loyal He would be their protector and
provider. But when they sought
other religious experiences, or tried to find their own way of doing things, God
would allow them to wander from out from under his protection and live with the
consequences of their choices. As
the suffering of the people increased, they would eventually cry out to the Lord
for deliverance. He then responded
to their pleas and provided relief from their oppression, as they repented of
their behavior.
Man's
track record has already shown that our own brain-power will not deliver us out
of our difficulties, but each generation has had to learn this for themselves. In Psalm 33, King David reminds us:
"No king is saved by the size
of his army ... a horse is vain hope for deliverance; despite all its great
strength it cannot save." (Ps.
33:16-17)
The Bible tells us that in spite of all our knowledge and strength, this
"horse" that we are depending on is not sufficient to rescue us.
All our science, technology and economic strength will not rescue God's
creation from the curse. At best we
can reduce our contribution to its decay. We
do not have the ability to unilaterally undo the effects of the Fall.
But still we try to find solutions to the environmental problems of the
world on our own, with no consensus on a path to take.
We need to remember that God's pronouncements of our weakness is not
without a reassuring promise:
"the eyes of the Lord are on
those who fear him, on those whose hope is in his unfailing love, to deliver
them from death and keep them alive in famine." (Ps.
33:18-19)
We are trying to solve the environmental crisis through our own efforts,
while we leave God to deal with the more "spiritual" things.
We claim to have faith in God, but we place only our future hope in him.
We hesitate to put our present circumstances in his hands.
We doubt that God could be of any help with these types of problems.
Instead we look to technology to solve our problems and for nature to
maintain some sort of self-correcting balance.
We have no reason to be confident man or nature will rescue us, but every
reason to be confident that God is able to.
This is a key point in the incarnation of Jesus, the Son of God who lived
for a time among us. He became like
us to be tangible and not just a nebulous patron like our image of Mother
Nature. Our benefactor took that
extra step.
Immediately there will be some who will point out all the reasons they
feel that the God of the Bible could not possibly exist.
They see the pain and suffering in the world and cannot accept there is a
"good" God who has any power. Therefore
many find a kindly, but somewhat powerless, Mother Nature with a
well-intentioned course for evolution to be a more acceptable perspective.
But that leaves us with little hope as we worry about how we will protect
our elderly mother.
Just as He has proven so many times in the past, God is our hope.
If you want to gain the knowledge necessary to help the environment, it
is not going to be found in biology, chemistry or climatology, unless you first
set out to have a knowledge of God. In
order to begin to gain wisdom, you first need to understand what it means to
have your hope in his "unfailing love".
According to the Bible we have been asking all the wrong questions.
Therefore, it should come as no surprise that the solutions that we are
trying are only increasing our sense of futility.
The first step in recognizing our predicament is to admit that we are
part of the problem. We are in
rebellion against God and unable to fully comprehend the impact of our behavior. Through our rebellion, the land has been cursed.
We have chosen to follow our own ideas of what is the best thing to do or
the right thing to do.
The curse on the creation and the failure of our best efforts have a
definite purpose. After Paul had
struggled with his own powerlessness to overcome his destructive habits, he
cried out, "What a wretched man I am!
Who will rescue me from this body of death?"
(Rom. 7:24)
This is
exactly why the land is cursed and our efforts to repair it are failing.
God desires for us to be dependent upon him, not on our own ability.
God has not lost his control of the creation.
He is not in heaven distraught over the fact that species are becoming
extinct, there is a hole in the ozone layer and the land is being polluted by
chemical and radioactive wastes. The
Lord's plans from before the creation of the world are still in place.
Though these things may not be pleasant to him, none of this surprises
him. He has not been caught off
guard by our present condition. What we grow anxious about as ecological degradation beyond
our control is not beyond his control.
God has not hidden his purposes from us.
Jesus said, "a servant does
not know his master's business. Instead
I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have
made known to you." (John 15:15)
The Bible is the information about our Father's business which he has
provided and preserved for us.
"the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart
through all generations." (Psalm 33:11)
By
Maurice Hamel
www.healingtheland.org
|