If you plan to
celebrate Earth Day Monday, Gentle Reader, consider well
before you do. I am not a big fan of Earth Day because of its history and
goals.
Celebrated each April
22 since 1970, Earth Day is the brain child of Senator
Gaylord Nelson (D-WI). Nelson, who was also a big advocate of
the Zero Population Growth movement, believed
that stablilizing population growth was a necessary pre-requisite of
enviromentalism. He said, "The bigger the population gets, the more
serious the problems become ...We have to address the population issue."
The outworking of
Nelson's vision has been a dramatic spike in radical environmentalism, explosive
growth in the abortion industry, and the creation of a new-Socialism that seeks
to promote its wealth redistribution programs behind cute pictures of polar
bears or heart wrenching images of starving, crying children.
In their own words,
organizers seek to,
"Mobilize public action and support for effective climate policies and a strong global agreement; large scale investments in renewable energy; a comprehensive green jobs program;poverty-alleviation measures that are compatible with sustainability, and other public actions that will support a resolution of the climate crisis." [Emphases added]
Innocent enough
sounding words but their adoption would lead to dramatic loss of freedom and
massive increases in taxation, as the highlighted buzz phrases imply.
What is the common
denominator in all this? Simply put there are two:
1. The Creation, and not
the Creator, become the focus. Nowhere is God mentioned in Earth Day
literature. Rather
the earth is personified in an almost idolatrous fashion, as people everywhere
are called upon to help Mother Earth.
2.
Man
becomes the greatest enemy of Creation, and not the steward of it. Modern environmentalism believes that man
is the greatest threat to the planet, but not all of us. Reading between the
lines demonstrates that it is usually the affluent West (especially the United
States) that is the locus of all environmental and social evils in the world.
Both views are
unbiblical. Genesis 1-2 clearly teaches that God created everything, out of
nothing, by his powerful word, in six days, and all very good. The Creation
itself testifies to the existence of God and puts on display indisputable proof
of his majesty, glory, and power. (Psalm 19) The problem is that man looks at
the evidence and rather than glorifying God in heaven, he turns to worship the
Creation rather than the Creator.
The second problem is
that the Bible does not cast man as the enemy of Creation, but the steward of
it. Genesis 1:28 says:
And God blessed [the man and the woman]. And God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth."
Far from being the
enemy of the world , mankind was created both to use it and to be its
protector. Here however, is where Christians need to be careful. In aligning
ourselves with Earth Day we align ourselves with a movement headed by idolaters
and murderers. That is not the sort of company God's people should keep.
We can, however, by
environmental in a redeemed way. Christ died not only to
redeem his people but also to redeem Creation. That does lay upon believers,
then, an obligation to be careful with what God has given us and to try to
leave the Creation in good shape for subsequent generations. But it also reminds
us that human efforts will ultimately prove fruitless. In the end, this world
and everything in it will pass away. We look for a new heaven and a new earth
to appear when Christ returns.


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