|
THE TERMS OF OUR LEASE
"He looked for a crop of good grapes,
but it yield only bad fruit" - Is. 5:2
An
example of the Bible's teaching concerning environmental stewardship is
presented in Leviticus chapter 26. This
is a description of a portion of the covenant between God and his people Israel.
This covenant was a formal contract stating what was expected from each
party. Consider it the lease for
Israel to use the Promised Land. Although
this passage is referring to the covenant God made with Israel, the basic
principles of man's relationship to God and to the land still remain true today.
God
does not only promise rewards for obedience, but also punishment is promised for
disobedience. Speaking through
Moses, God instructs the children of Israel concerning ways He would discipline
and correct them to make them change their ways when they rebel against him.
"If you follow my decrees and are careful to obey my commands ... I will
remove savage beasts from the land ... and make you fruitful and increase your
numbers ... But if you will not listen to me ... I will punish you for your sins
... Your strength will be spent in vain, because your soil will not yield its
crop ... If in spite of these things you do not accept my correction ... I will
... turn your cities into ruins ... [and] lay waste the land". (Lev.
26:3-34)
God
warned these things would happen "Because you
did not serve the Lord your God joyfully and gladly in the time of prosperity".
(Deut.
28:47)
The implication of this statement is that our opinion of what is best for
the creation seems seriously flawed. We
have sought the blessing from the land while being ungrateful in our affluence.
We are now being disciplined for turning our hearts away from Him as we
follow our evil desires. Still we
continue to put our faith in other "gods," to deliver us from the
physical trials He has allowed to oppress us.
Instead of asking what God requires of us, today we have chosen to do
battle against His corrections.
Our
environmental problems have not happened because God was not paying attention.
These things are part of God's plan.
The Bible shows us that God used nature as a tool to rebuke Pharaoh,
causing the waters of Egypt to smell and fish to die. Hail stripped every tree and locusts devoured what little was
left. Later, in response to
Israel's unfaithfulness, God sent the army of Assyria to carry the people away.
Why would we doubt that God could still be using the acts of both nature
and men today as a tool to rebuke our behavior?
What
we are calling ecological deterioration can also be called God's progressive
withholding of more and more of the provisions He gives to sustain us.
God is not disciplining us in anger, rather He is like a parent training
a child. "He will again delight in you and make you prosperous ... if you obey the
Lord your God and keep his commands".
(Deut.
30:9-10) He
has promised that when we have been humbled He will remember the covenant that
He has made with us and heal our land. (2 Chron. 7:13-14)
By
Maurice Hamel
6012301
www.healingtheland.org
|