New Testament teaching on care of the environment
Most of the usual teaching on what the
Bible says about care of the environment is from the Old Testament.
However, there are two passages from the New Testament that also argue
that we should be caring carefully for the environment. They are
indirect, but their urgency is important.
Romans 1:20 tells us that observing and learning about nature are part of God’s revelation to humans. (So does Psalm 19:1-4).
If that is so, isn’t that another reason to try to preserve nature as
well as we can? The Bible is one of the ways that God reveals Himself to
us. For a long time, Christians have believed that the Bible should be
translated into the language people are most familiar with, so that that
revelation may be as clear as possible. Similarly, it would seem that
God's revelation through nature should be as clear as possible. A person
is more likely to see God in a pristine stream than in a polluted
river. Probably seeing bison herds roam freely in Western North America
gave people a glimpse of one aspect of God’s power and majesty that they
can’t really get now. Therefore, helping to preserve nature in as good a condition as we can is one way to bring people to a saving knowledge of Christ. Not the most direct way, and probably not the most effective, for many people, but it is still a way to do this.
Colossians 1:15-20 says,
of Christ, that “in Him all things hold together.” (ESV -- other
versions have similar language.) That passage also says that He is
working to reconcile all things to Himself, and working to make peace
through the blood of the cross. As Christians, we believe that it is our
duty to be His instruments in reconciling sinners to Christ, and to
help Him in the ministry of making peace. In fact, 2 Corinthians
5:18-19, tells us that: 18 But all things
are of God, who reconciled us to himself through Jesus Christ, and gave
to us the ministry of reconciliation; 19 namely, that God was in Christ
reconciling the world to himself, not reckoning to them their
trespasses, and having committed to us the word of reconciliation.
Doesn’t it follow that we
should also participate in Christ’s work of sustaining “all things,”
including endangered species and ecosystems or biological communities? (I
realize that there are other places in the New Testament where
reconciliation and peacemaking are mentioned, or implied, and this is
probably the only one that mentions Christ's sustaining work. But that
doesn't mean that His sustaining work can be dismissed, or that we have
no responsibility to be His instruments in doing it.)
This post was taken, as is, from a longer post on what the Bible says about environmental stewardship.
No comments:
Post a Comment