Leviticus 25:1-7 · The Sabbath Year
To Care for the Earth
Leviticus 25:1-7
Sermon
by Edward Inabinet
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A health-food enthusiast was dominating conversation at a party. "I don''t eat food with additives, preservatives or anything that''s been sprayed," he said forcefully. "Nor do I eat anything with chemicals added to it."

"How do you feel?" asked an interested listener.

With a sad look on his face he replied, "Hungry!"

This morning we are dealing with a theme that is important to many of us and relevant to all of us--the stewardship of our environment.

The care of the earth is dear to God''s heart. It should be dear to ours as well. There are some wonderful truths found in Genesis about the care of the earth: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth...Then the Lord God formed man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life. And man became a living being. And the Lord God planted a garden in Eden in the east; and that is where he put the man whom he had formed. And out of the ground the Lord God made to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food...And the Lord God took the man and put him into the garden of Eden to till it and to keep it."

There are some life-shaping implications in these verses. One is that our world is not self-generating. It was created by the Lord of the universe.

Another is that humanity, made from the dust of the earth, is an integral part of God''s creation. We are completely dependent upon the earth--its soil, water and air.

The third is that we are stewards of all the earth''s resources. We are to till the earth, according to the writer of Genesis, and to keep it. The former we have done with diligence. The latter we have regarded with dangerous neglect. INDEED A VERY GOOD CASE CAN BE MADE THAT WE ARE DESTROYING THE VERY LAND, WATER AND AIR UPON WHICH WE DEPEND FOR SURVIVAL.

Unless you have been living on a desert isle the past few years, you are aware of the scope of the problem. One study shows that the United States alone generates 150,000,000 metric tons of hazardous waste each year. That includes nuclear wastes that can remain deadly for 250,000 years.

We are producing 1300 pounds of garbage per person per year. Some of that garbage is in the form of plastics which will take hundreds of years to disintegrate. Cities are putting garbage on barges or trains or trucks and trying to ship it off to somewhere else.

We have also witnessed a host of recent disasters that have threatened our environment. The Alaskan oil spill, spills in the Gulf of Mexico and elsewhere are examples, as well as the deliberate despoiling of the environment in the Persian Gulf by Saddam Hussein.

The Chernobyl nuclear explosion which occurred years ago is still affecting the lives of people far removed from the scene. English sheep growers can''t market many of their animals because their flesh is contaminated with radioactivity. Names such as Times Beach, Love Canal and Three-Mile Island have become familiar to all of us as symbols of the growing and persistent problems we have in protecting this fragile planet. As someone has put it: "Children alive today may live to see the first man on Mars and the last elm tree in the United States."

The key verse for this message is found in Numbers 35:34, "Ye shall not defile the land in which you live and the midst of which I dwell...." To defile something is to make it unholy or impure. The Hebrews believed that polluting the land would cause it to take retribution on humanity. There is a troubling body of evidence that indicates that increases in various forms of cancers and respiratory illnesses such as asthma, as well as chronic food shortages in various parts of the world, are nature''s rebellion against humanity''s abuse of this marvelous planet God has provided us.

All of us, I hope, recognize the problem, but what is the solution? A growing world population puts greater strain on our resources. A better quality of life--which all of us desire--demands more and more of our earth. Is there any hope of achieving a balance between human need and environmental protection? The answer is yes, there are some things we as Christians can do as responsible stewards of God''s earth.

One, we can help change the way people think about our world and its resources. People will not do things differently until they see things differently. We are God''s creatures. He made us all and loves us with an infinite love. "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son." We can teach that truth and live it out. Jesus says that God marks the fall of a single sparrow. How much more does He note the destruction of a whole species? We''re connected to our world and to every other person. In a sense the world is our neighbor.

Farmers in Nebraska may be more influenced by crop production in Russia, Argentina and Canada than in California or Texas. The destruction of Brazil''s rain forest affects the quality of the entire earth''s supply of oxygen. The starving people of Africa, stripping the earth of everything green, and thereby increasing the spread of the world''s deserts, ultimately will affect us. As our world becomes a smaller world, we need to think globally. The welfare of one affects the welfare of all.

It is interesting that both ancient Hebrews and American Indians believed that our environment has a spiritual dimension. In fact the sale of land was impossible both among the ancient Hebrews and the American Indians, since in their religious concepts the land belonged to God, and hence to everyone, and could not be held in personal possession. The Indian chief, Seattle, spoke at a tribal assembly in western Washington in 1854. The Indians and government agents were getting ready to sign land treaties. The old chief wanted to say something about the land, about how it is sacred to his people, about how in his words, "All things are connected like the blood which unites one family." What he said strongly echoes the Bible''s view. "How can you buy or sell the sky, the warmth of the land," he asked. "If we do not own the freshness of the air, the sparkle of the water, how can we buy or sell them?"

The chief went on to say, "Teach your children what we have taught our children, that the earth is our mother. Whatever befalls the earth, befalls the children of the earth. If we spit upon the ground, we spit upon ourselves. This earth is precious to God, and to harm the earth is to heap contempt upon its creator. So, if we sell you our land," Chief Seattle concluded, "love it as we loved it, care for it as we''ve cared for it, hold in your mind the memory of the land as it is when you take it, and with all your strength, with all your mind, and with all your heart preserve it for your children and love it--as God loves us all."

In the second place, just as we can change the way we feel about the earth''s resources, we can change our behavior in using them. To hear some environmentalists, you would think the solution is just to abandon the land and let it become a wilderness again, untouched by humans. But God''s plan calls us to nurture and manage earth''s resources, not abandon them.

There are some simple things each of us can do to conserve our natural resources. We can conserve our precious resources of energy. We can do this by insulating our homes, by keeping our heating and air-conditioning use to a minimum, being sure that this equipment is in good working order. We can buy more fuel-efficient cars and keep them in good mechanical repair. I read once that the typical car has pumped its weight in carbon into the atmosphere after its first 10,000 miles. Our future really is going up in smoke--out our exhaust pipes!

Recycling is something we all can do. Every three months this country throws away enough aluminum to rebuild its entire commercial air fleet. Think about that the next time you dispose of a soft drink can.

I enjoyed reading sometime back about a lady in Virginia, Lettie Coffey, who goes out early each morning in her neighborhood and collects aluminum cans, etc., which she takes to a recycling center. She gives the money she earns to charity. Lettie is in her seventies. You and I could take on a project like that.

Paper, glass and other items can be recycled. Did you know that more than 500,000 trees are chopped down to supply paper for one week''s worth of U.S. newspapers? It''s scary.

We can work at having a simpler lifestyle and at using things until they can''t be repaired. We can buy reusable items rather than disposable ones. We could even curb our individual desires and seek to find a greater satisfaction in things of the spirit rather than in material things.

Then there are things we can do in cooperation with others. We can press for legislation to control waste disposal. We can urge manufacturers to find more efficient ways to manufacture goods. Americans use twice the energy to manufacture the same products as do the Europeans and Japanese. We can try to understand what overpopulation, ignorance and greed do to destroy the world''s resources. And we can work to influence governmental leaders at national and international levels so they will encourage responsible use of the earth''s resources.

There is one thing more we can do. We can be ministers of reconciliation and redemption. The fall of humanity brought a curse on the earth and on nature. "Cursed is the ground because of you," says the Lord. This is to say that both humanity and nature need redemption. Christ came to bring about that redemption. "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creation," says the Apostle Paul. Here is the ultimate solution to all the earth''s problems. A redeemed person has a new heart and will. A redeemed person takes on new values and attitudes. A redeemed person understands the earth to be a gift from God of which he or she is only a steward. Calvin DeWitt once put it this way:

Creator word, by whose great power
The oceans roar and plants do flower,
Create in us a love for the earth,
All life, the sky, the sea.
Oh, Word of God who earth did frame,
Who gives to man all things today;
Grant us the knowledge of Thy ways
To care for earth, to bring Thee praise.
Redeemer Lord who earth did save,
Lifted humankind from the grave;
Embrace us with redemptive grace
To heal the earth, its blighted face.
Creator word, by whose great power
The oceans roar and plants do flower,
May we, Thine heirs, Thee emulate,
Our lives as stewards consecrate.

by Edward Inabinet