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God's Politics

Seven Steps for Creation Caretaking

by Brian McLaren 09-23-2009

What could be more joyful than rediscovering our God-given role as caretakers, stewards, and lovers of creation? What could be more sad and tragic than missing that dimension of life — linking the human parts of God’s creation with the rest? How much would we miss by neglecting or ignoring the vast majority of God’s creation that came into being before we did — and that was pronounced “good” by God completely apart from its utility to us?

Here are seven first steps that I recommend to all of us who want to re-enter our primal (and deeply fulfilling) role as caretakers of God’s beautiful world.

1. Develop a theology of creation. Sadly, many of us have a gospel of evacuation and abandonment, leaving behind creation to be destroyed so our souls can be beamed up to heaven as soon as possible. We need instead a theology of incarnation and engagement … where we join the Creator in loving and caring for creation. Thankfully, this theology that includes rather than evacuates creation is deeply rooted in the scriptures, and is being rediscovered and freshly articulated by many of us today.

2. Worship the God of creation. God is first revealed to us as Creator, and in the end, God is the gracious source of new creation. From creation to new creation, God the Creator is worthy to be praised. How sad if we worship God within a construction of human doctrines and within man-made walls and ceilings … and never worship God within a forest of trees or under a canopy of stars or with a choir of singing birds, crickets, and tree frogs!

3. Learn the threats to creation. They are many, and they are complex, and they are interwoven and mutually reinforcing. And we are complicit in nearly all of them.

4. Adjust your lifestyle to creation. In the Genesis story, part of Adam and Eve “wanting to be like gods” must surely involve wanting to transcend our God-given role as creatures in an environment. We are as connected to habitats of soil, water, air, grass, and trees as are gazelles and lions, dragonflies and mockingbirds. We have been living in a fantasy world for centuries, forgetting that we are woven in a fabric of creation … and we need to re-enter and adjust our lifestyles to that beautiful fabric. Doing so will be a lifelong task. It will involve personal action (changing light bulbs, recycling, composting, driving less and driving wiser, applying new technologies, etc.), but also social and political action. (More on that in #7.)

5. Choose a part of creation in which to specialize. God loves birds … you can join God. God loves flowers and deserts and wetlands and sea turtles … you can join God. God knows the potential of wind and hydrogen and solar energy to help us live more wisely — you can join God. We can’t all know everything, but we can all specialize in certain areas and share our knowledge and concerns with one another.

6. Start with your environmental address. A zip code is just so mail can find you. Your real address is a watershed … a place on the planet where you consume, pollute, garden, tend, and care. We all have to care for the whole planet, but we each must care especially for our own ecological neighborhood. Here’s a place to start learning …

7. Advocate for creation everywhere. Birds don’t get to vote. Neither do streams or salamanders. Corporations are given legal status and protection, but most forests aren’t (maybe they should be?). If birds and soil and trees and wind are going to be given a voice in life-and-death decisions made by humans, people like you and me are going to have to add-our-voice (advocate) on their behalf. That voice will speak in voting, but also in church, and in the office and classroom, and around the dinner table. We can’t just speak with a kind of guilt-inducing duty; we must also speak with love. Because we love people and other creatures who live in desertifying areas, we must speak up and deal with global climate change. Because we love people and creatures who live in areas devastated by mountaintop removal, we must speak up for protecting the mountains. Because we love the spring peepers and spotted salamanders, we must speak up when another shopping mall is going to bury another vernal pool.

There’s so much more to be said and done, but this is a start. And these things are not simply a duty, but a true joy. The threats and urgency of the moment can be truly overwhelming, but the Spirit of creation that hovered over the surface of the waters in Genesis 1 is still alive, stirring hearts to rediscover a truly human way of living in God’s beautiful green world.

Brian McLarenBrian McLaren (brianmclaren.net) is a speaker and author, most recently of Everything Must Change and Finding Our Way Again.

Categories: Activism, Environment
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  • I digged this for more news from you.
  • I added your post to my college Report
  • millipo11
    wanted to thank you for this great read!! I definitely enjoying every little bit of it I have you bookmarked to check out new stuff you post
  • A piece of the Neo-Consumer is creation caretaking. The Technomad cannot consume without it. This is a simple plan to help our culture move forward. Thanks Brian!

    Thoughts?

    http://www.facebook.com/technomadic?v=app_23474...
  • wjschroeder
    how many theologies do we need. If one follows Christ why do we need another theology. Teach Christ theology first and CORRECTLY and every thing else will come correctly. Global warming is another fad. nothing wrong with taking care of Gods creation. but global warming do to man is not true. No more true then cows farting all the time. Or valcanoes erupting, How sinfull of them to harm the planet. As for the light bulbs, you should let them know they are full a mercury which is RATHER harmfull. what happens when they ALL get into our landfills in the next 50 years then into our water supply. Are you going to go off on this bad idea.
  • sgood
    Brian, in response to #1 and #2...the Mennonite church has provided a resource directly linked to creation care theology and inclusion in worship: https://bookstore.mma-online.org/catalog/displa...

    #4...Mennonites are working on a book related to sustainable lifestyles: http://www.simply-sustainable.org/

    I encourage anyone interested in creation care in our globalized world to check out Hot, Flat and Crowded: http://www.thomaslfriedman.com/
  • irish_annie
    wonderful words. encouraging and inspiring! well done.

    i confess that i often read the sermonizing from the new Liturgical Left with as much cringing as i once felt when the Religious Right held the spotlight. equally polarizing, marginalizing, demonizing of the "other", the flip side of the same old "us vs them", the only change from one ditch to the other.

    i was happily and thankfully surprised to note that the customary condemnation of others for not doing as they "should" was missing. it was good to see a true "post-protestant" perspective shining thru. i thought this statement reflected the tone: "We can’t just speak with a kind of guilt-inducing duty; we must also speak with love."
    a hearty A-MEN! :) your words call but do not condemn, invite and inspire, but do not insult, reaching out, not beating down.

    i pray this beautiful reflection of Love and Light extends to other topics... becoming the bridge between peoples, not succumbing to the temptation to politicize and thereby diminish important truths. selah
  • kansasmennonite
    Thankyou for the article. Taking care of God's creation is part of the reason I'm here. A person in my home church was more interested in monetary increase than taking care of a pollution problem. The hypocracy made me rethink the church I wanted to be affiliated with so I left it.


    I see that the church's who believe in the end of times story as told by the "Left Behind" series tend to not be willing to take care of the planet (as it will burn up some day anyway and we won't be here).
  • DJ9791
    Well said, Brian.

    The list of threats to creation is long, and yes, mostly man-caused. Including abortion, in ALL forms (we believe that includes killing innocents in war) which is a terrible threat to creation; when can we come to grips with this horror, it's causes, and put it aside?

    Sorry to read (continuously) the cries from those who not only deny that climate change is largely due to human factors, but that it isn't occurring at all! How sad that people live in denial in order to fulfill their political beliefs, especially something with world-wide ramifications.

    For those who will denigrate what you say, I would only suggest this: take time in each day to enjoy some small part of God's creation, whether it be the sunrise, or watching the sparrows as they feed, or the magnificent, silent beauty of the stars at night. God's Greatest Show goes on every day, given to us freely by Our Lord. Isn't it sad that too often it plays to an empty house? Is it too much for us to not only revel in His creation, but to do what we can to treat it with respect?

    Pray for Peace and Dare to Act!
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