The Spiritual Implications of Global Warming
Peter's Journal January 2007
“God gave Noah the rainbow sign, no more water, the fire next time!”
This provocative sentence was both descriptive and prophetic. Addressing the issues of justice – civil rights and the potential for a human holocaust – in 1963, author James Baldwin asked that we hold a mirror to our behavior, in the tradition of the prophets of the Old Testament. Now, 40 years later, Baldwin's words have become the single most challenging warning to any civilization in the history of the human family.
The fire next time is upon us now, in the form of heat from the
heavens.
Initially, God gave Noah the rainbow sign after the great flood;
perhaps as both warning and symbol of hope, but now, only the fire!
The fire is from the skies and the globe is warming, and we are
fueling the intensity daily.
The flood of biblical times, which left an ark sitting on top of a
mountain in Turkey, may be a mere bathtub of water compared with the
future defined by global warming. As the polar ice caps melt, snow
packs disappear, and glaciers break into open ocean – a flood
greater than biblical proportions will be unleashed.
The flood of biblical times, which left an ark sitting on top of a
mountain in Turkey, may be a mere bathtub of water compared with the
future defined by global warming. As the polar ice caps melt, snow
packs disappear, and glaciers break into open ocean – a flood
greater than biblical proportions will be unleashed.
This is not science fiction of the future, but fact for the present.
The finite creation we have inherited is becoming an oven for the
inhabitants of our fragile island home, and in all corners of the
globe the consequences are emerging. Islands in the Pacific unable
to stem the rising tides; Himalayan glaciers are retreating; the
Arctic Sea ice will be totally gone in 100 years; blue mussels have
been discovered in the Arctic today; and the concentration of
atmospheric carbon dioxide has increased by 30% since our
Declaration of Independence was signed.
The warming is real, and as Prime Minister Tony Blair recently
remarked: “There is a virtual worldwide scientific consensus on the
scope of the problem.”
For people of faith, there is a consequence. The fire this time is
accelerating the collapse of creation. The creator's life-giving
breath, the ruach elohim , the breath that gives everything life, is
being compromised.
Many scientists think the processes underway are irreversible. The
collapse will happen and the human family will go the way of the
dinosaur. Thankfully, most religious folk are not willing to throw
in the towel just yet, but the time is now, not tomorrow.
Traditionally we are people of hope: we believe in new beginnings,
resurrections if you will, and dismiss a short-term view of history.
Today, we are being called, like no other time in history, to
redirect our focus and become more pro-active in partnership with
God to preserve the creation. Every single human being must
participate in the process. We all must become gardeners of the
fragile island home we call earth.
Hebrew scripture states it best – a loose paraphrase of Genesis
never hurts: “Hey folks”, God might have cautioned, “I worked hard
to get this garden right and I put you here; you are in the earth
garden, and Adam, and Eve you have a job – till and care for the
garden, and since you speak Hebrew; avodah and shomer – keep and
serve creation – now that is the first commandment I give you.”
The Garden of Eden is in need of gardeners. A simple concept – a
gardener works with the inter-play of water, soil, sunlight in order
to achieve balance and harmony. When the garden we tend goes out of
balance nothing survives. When the garden God entrusted to us was
handed over to us it was in balance. Balance was achieved over 8
billion years, give or take a few million. This balance enabled life
as we know it to begin to evolve. By the time Adam and Eve arrived
the right ingredients were in place and the domestication of animals
and the harvesting of the sea led to non-migrating civilizations.
Since that beginning, the gases in the earth's atmosphere acted like
glass in a greenhouse. The planet was warmed because heat was
trapped and life was then possible. The gases were good – very good
– very, very good.
Now the gases are bad – very, very bad.
We arrogantly pump stuff into our atmosphere. The concentrations of
global warming pollutants are increasing the heat-trapping blanket
around the globe, causing average temperatures to rise with
unintended consequences.
How on earth have we gotten into this predicament where the very
foundation of life is threatened? Yes, over-population and
over-consumption, along with industrialization, and no long-term
view of history are the major culprits, but there is something
fundamental to our Christian belief system which contributes to the
collapse of creation.
We continue to put ourselves at the center of the universe. We
really have become a culture that is defined by its anthropocentric
nature and its arrogance; a culture that leaves little room for
God's book of nature to be read and understood. The balance that God
had created for us has been compromised by humankind's setting
ourselves apart from nature. We have adopted and borne the mantle of
supreme authority without the necessary tools to sustain the quality
of life for all generations. We have usurped the power of God to be
God.
Christians are often the leading offenders – this remains our
biggest mistake as a religion. Many of us still play Creator;
believe they know what is best and lift up false gods, like
technology and power to save the day. Often those same playmakers
are claiming a personal relationship with God that gives them a pass
into some perceived arena of invincibility; even if it is in the
after-life. That is hubris of the highest magnitude. They claim
salvation as a right they will be afforded, and what ever happens to
the rest of us is of no consequence.
What the personal salvation devotees fail to realize is that the
ruach elohim – the breath of God – is shared equally. Contaminating
that breath anywhere or earth, heating up that breath in Santiago,
Beijing or Houston hurts all in God's creation. No one can escape to
another world.
Personal salvation is an immoral escape. A personal relationship
with the Creator is not the answer. Hope for solving the
environmental crisis emerges when the human puts itself third in the
hierarchy of importance.
Healing the planet must begin with a new theology crafted for new
times . A theology that says the earth is not ours to mess up, but
that we are part of the whole called to a responsible new direction.
Personal salvation is an immoral escape. A personal relationship
with the Creator is not the answer. Hope for solving the
environmental crisis emerges when the human puts itself third in the
hierarchy of importance.
The transcendent, the power beyond, the Great Spirit, God – must be
first, because from something beyond evolved a planetary system that
worked for eons of time. This is always the best argument for a God
centered theology rather than an anthropocentric or human centered
focus.
Secondly, the collective must be honored – a brother or sister
individual or nation hurting anywhere is reason to keep focused on
the good of the whole. Salvation of the collective must take
precedence over personal salvation. I must accept the premise: “So
what if I am on the fast track to some delusional perception of
being saved when all around me is collapsing.”
When we put ourselves third, then, and only then, are we able to
have a personal relationship with God. Change behavior to reflect
that you are number three in the trinity; as a starter, and a
personal relation with God will occur because it reflects we are
putting God's work above all else – being about the business of
preserving God's created order in how we best serve the Creator –
period. Therefore, for me, and perhaps eventually others, a new
theology with new directives reflecting the importance of collective
salvation is mandatory.
As pioneer visionary environmentalist David Brower once remarked –
we need “C.P.R.” for the planet. Conservation, preservation and
restoration – this will emanate from all who put themselves third on
the ladder, not first because they are too busy about saving
themselves or their own families; without regard for the greater
good.
C.P.R. begins with the garden, the literal Garden of Eden that
sustains all life. For you see, the tiny little critters in the
ocean, the phytoplankton and zooplankton, the trees and ferns in the
forests, and the microbes in the soils on the land are here for
many, many purposes; one big reason is to sink the pollution that is
naturally caused, and human caused, so that we can breathe without
contaminating ourselves.
God, in God's infinite wisdom gave us carbon sinks – that which
absorbs the naturally occurring pollutants. However, with our
industrialization, fascination with combustion engines, and a
consumptive gene now embedded in all, we are over-burdening God's
intricate earth puzzle and the earth's cleansers are losing the
battle as the planet heats up. The carbon sinks are over-burdened.
We are, if you will, to become resurrection gardeners. There is no
other job for the gardener that is any more important than to give
life to the garden. When the garden is dying, all resources are
required and all caretakers are on call, the same call from Genesis
to the human family – keep and serve creation.
So the new theology must at its core begin with literally breathing
life back into a dying entity. This is the most important calling of
all communities of faith! We are, if you will, to become
resurrection gardeners. There is no other job for the gardener that
is any more important than to give life to the garden. When the
garden is dying, all resources are required and all caretakers are
on call, the same call from Genesis to the human family – keep and
serve creation.
It is not even an appropriate point of discussion to talk about
personal salvation when hurricanes destroy and floods wreak untold
havoc on millions; and our personal behavior contributes to the
problem. The least among us may be the Pacific Ocean atoll of 17,000
people gradually disappearing beneath the rising seas; or the
Alaskan Indians forced to move because the sea walls can no longer
contain the melting glacier water. Salvation of the collective must
takes precedence over all individual claims to God.
The fire this time, our warming fragile island home, is our
religious and moral wakeup call; Noah's generation heard and felt
the fury of rising waters. Today the heat on the earth is bending
the established rules of nature and the winds and the waves are
compromising the integrity of creation; yet the arc of the rainbow
can still be seen to offer us hope amidst the fury of nature's
wrath.
The best we can be are stewards, gardeners, caretakers and
hopefully, some of us may choose to be master gardeners willing to
teach others by example. As gardeners of God's garden we may be
asked to reduce our fuel consumption, buy more fuel efficient autos,
take public transportation, purchase energy efficient appliances,
use compact florescent bulbs, plant trees, grow veggies, weatherize
the home, install solar or photovoltaic panels, and vote for those
who promote a new environmental ethic as central to their being. We
may be asked to lead by example, beginning with a willingness to
renounce the archaic theology which speaks of personal salvation.
God gave Noah the rainbow sign – the rainbow sign – hope amidst
change. You can make a difference. As the globe heats up, so must
our passion to conserve, preserve, and restore God's creation. God's
realm, God's garden and our fragile island home is at stake.
