CACE Electronic Journal Center for Applied Christian Ethics, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois December 2006 |
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During this season of Advent
I have been meditating on the risks that God took in the Incarnation. Our Lord
Jesus Christ, fully God and fully human, was entrusted by his Father into the
care of Mary and Joseph. While he was still an infant, Jesus was welcomed as
a refugee by the Egyptians. He grew up into manhood under the watchful eyes
of the townspeople of Nazareth. Our Lord trusted his mission to a handful of
humble followers who made many mistakes. The biggest risk, however, was when
Jesus went to the cross on our behalf. He marched into hell for a heavenly
cause. Today he calls his followers to risk their lives for the sake of others.
We, who claim to walk in his steps, are called to give up our lives in risky
sacrificial love for our neighbors, both near and far.
Our geologist colleague and brother in Christ, Jeff Greenberg, urges us to join
him in a risky venture, to get off the fence and to deeply care for God's creation.
Almost two thousand years ago, the Apostle Paul taught that the entire creation
was groaning under the weight of sin. In his own words the creation was waiting
to be "liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom
and glory of the children of God." (Romans 8:19-21) Scientists today concur
that our planet is groaning and needs a healing touch. Jeff Greenberg exhorts
us to be God's hands in that healing process. I highly recommend his article,
included below, for your reading and action.
We also cordially invite you to join us at Wheaton in January. Sir John Houghton,
one of the world's leading climatologist will be on campus to help us face the
difficult challenges that global warming poses. Look at his schedule and join
us if you can for the various plenary sessions. Note also there is a special
breakfast for pastors and church leaders with Sir John on Wednesday, January
24. He will suggest ways we can preach and teach about creation care in the
local church. Please RSVP at 630-752-5886 or CACE@wheaton.edu.
The A Rocha Creation Care group on campus is taking advantage of Sir John's
visit to sponsor an Evangelical Student Summit on global climate change. Students
from colleges around the country will be gathering to strategize how Christian
students can take a leadership role in taking better care of God's good earth.
If you are not able to join us in person for this exciting time on campus you
can hear many of the talks at www.christianethics.org.
May this Christmas season deepen our love for God and for our neighbors.
Yours truly,
Lindy Scott
Director of CACE
Upcoming
Events:
Sir
John Houghton on Campus.
Tuesday, January 23 & Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Environment
and Politics Lecture with Q & A, 1:15 - 3:00 PM Armerding Lecture Hall
Evening
with Sir John, Tuesday,
January 23, 7 PM (more details to come)
Pastor's Breakfast with Sir John, Wednesday, January 23rd 8:00 - 11:15 AM (includes
Q & A and Chapel). Registration required. Please visit our Pastor's
Breakfast webpage for details.
Plenary Session: "Global Warming and Climate Change: a Challenge to Scientists and Christians"
Wednesday, January 24, 2007 7 PM, Edman Chapel
Spring Conference, co-sponsored with Human
Needs and Global Resources
Friday, February 23 & Saturday, February 24, 2007
See www.christianethics.org for our 2006 - 2007 Event Schedule. PDF flyers of these events are available for churches and organizations to download for promotion. Thank you for your support.
New for 2006: CACE Ethical Issues
CLIMATE CHANGE
AS A CASE STUDY IN DECIDING
Dr. Jeffrey K. Greenberg Wheaton College
It really seems to be time to take sides and get off of an unstable seat upon
the fence.
The tree (of evangelicalism) is being shaken right to its roots. Chuck Colson
actually believes that an axe or wedge is being applied to split this tree apart.
The recent concern results from the unexpected turn toward a new environmental
conscience among biblically and politically conservative Protestants. Colson’s
Breakpoint commentary (Sept. 8, 2006) accuses “liberal” influences
of infiltrating the evangelical ranks and using the climate change controversy
as a wedge to divide us. He is right in that this issue finally has the force
to divide opinion. He is wrong about the motivation and its source.
Why now a climate change in evangelical understanding? Evangelical environmentalism
has been around for a good long while but previously failed to make leading
pundits pay so much attention. Francis Schaeffer published Pollution and the
Death of Man back in 1970. Evangelicals for Social Action spawned the Evangelical
Environmental Network and later, a coalition of groups formed the Christian
Environmental Council that met once a year over eight years for fellowship,
worship (of the Creator, not the Creation) and mutual support. Even though the
efforts of these meetings were not generally publicized, one initiative did
make a big difference. A unified CEC statement on the federal ESA, Endangered
Species Act was delivered to legislators in Congress. The statement which urged
a biblical rationale supported the ESA and asked that it not be politically
weakened. Some politically conservative members of Congress admitted that the
CEC statement from biblically-conservative Christians came as a surprise. Washington
D.C. insiders even believe it may have been this support that led to the act’s
renewal. The CEC was not the tool of the political-spiritual-social Left; most
participants typically identified with and voted for Republicans.
Ten years or so later, there is a new momentum among the Jesus-loving, Bible-believing
evangelical crowd. The interested are directed to view the recent PBS production,
Is God Green, in the Bill Moyers series on cultural issues. To distill a key
part of the story line, it shows how a 2004 conference in Oxford, UK came to
be the inspiration for the ECI, the Evangelical Climate Initiative. This is
a document signed by a wide array of the perceived leadership among evangelicals.
To sign (www.christiansandclimate.org) means an affirmation believing that the
great majority of quality science indicates, that not only is Earth’s
overall temperature rising, it is doing so at a remarkable rate. More importantly,
the affirmation is also that (unnecessary) human actions have contributed to
the warming and other climate-changing consequences. The initiative calls for
serious consideration of our role as responsible stewards of God’s world.
At Oxford, Rich Cizik, Vice President for Government Affairs of the National
Association of Evangelicals, was compelled to realize the severity of the climate
change issue after speaking with Sir John Houghton. Houghton is a highly-respected
atmospheric physicist, the Co-Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, author of many books and articles on the issue, and an outspoken evangelical
Christian. Cizik returned home with a zeal to do something of substance about
Creation-care stewardship. The drafting of the EPI and its circulation seeking
signatories is a story worthy of more space. However, as the initiative gathered
support, it also began to attract negative attention from some evangelicals
with a history of opposition to pro-environmental action. There are various
themes to the opposition, including an abhorrence of anything that might be
identified with “non-Christian” organizations and their agendas.
This is a sense of guilt-by-association that does not seek truth in evaluating
issues by their own characteristics. Note that perhaps the most substantial
opposition to setting policy based on climate-change dangers is supposedly from
science. The argument is that unless scientific data in all its various forms
agree and can “prove” greater hazard (costs) in no action than in
the measures needed to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, etc., then we should
not rock the boat. Above all other concepts, this argument must be examined
and
critiqued.
Uncertainty is the excuse. Few will completely deny that human activities can
modify the environment. But is it really that big a deal? Human nature is such
that it is easy to convince of something when one is already so inclined. It
is harder to bring the open and unconvinced to a new decision, and all but impossible
to change strong convictions, with or without hard data as evidence. Scripture’s
dramatic perspective comes from the words of Jesus, “ If they do not listen
to Moses and the prophets, they will not be convinced even if one should rise
from the dead” (Luke 16:31). As it turns out, the strongest of the anti-ECI,
anti-environmentalism convictions derive from extreme economic and political
loyalties. These biases are also worthy of significant examination, but distract
from the main point. Instead of today’s propensity for vilifying those
in opposition, let’s attempt a positive support of responsible stewardship.
Our Christian biblical-moral commitments along with scientific confidence constitute
the weight of assurance needed to move toward effective action. Justification
for this decision begins with physical observation of a multitude of processes
operating globally and with the two operators of concern, nature and humanity.
Of course, people are components of the overall grand earth system. We may be
included along with all living actors, earth worms, bacteria, burrowing crustaceans,
insects, elephants, molds, etc. and the longer list of mostly abiological processes,
glaciers, cyclonic storms, landslides, volcanic eruptions, coastal waves, chemical
erosion, etc. Some believe that we need not worry about anthropogenic influence
on this world because it is so big and we are relatively so small (and few).
Once we can accept that climate change with the current global warming trends
are real (again, few deny this), there is still the major contention that change
is “natural” and will occur as a consequence of megacycles. Any
human-induced alteration would be dwarfed by the regular natural systems. In
testing the hypothesis that humans are not that significant as agents of change,
Prof. Hooke and geoscience graduate-students at the University of Maine gathered
tremendous amounts of data assessing the extent and cause of physical/chemical
change globally each year. After significant review by other earth scientists,
the very comprehensive research was acknowledged to indicate that people are
as effective (for better or worse) in modifying the land, sea and air as all
the other factors combined. We are indeed very much a special creation, with
the ability to unilaterally convert the desert to garden and the garden to desert.
Given our status as unique actors, consider some of the cases in which humans
have actually caused climatic alterations on regional scales. There is no doubt
that within a single human generation, vast tracts of land in Tanzania, south
of Lake Victoria have been transformed from lush forest to degraded, arid waste
land. World Vision filmed a tribal elder living in the region since birth. In
his memory there has been deforestation and the loss of through-flowing streams,
virtually all mammals and most birds, fertile soil, and the seasonal rainfall
events that maintained the environment. The regional degradation was not a coincidence
of natural change over 70 years or so. It was very obviously initiated by poor
land-use practices and deeply injured people as well as other life precious
to its Creator. This East-African saga is reminiscent of the brilliant story,
The Man Who Planted Trees, by Jean Giono, published in 1985. The same scenario
of human-modifying loss can be documented for many, many places on earth. Open
any larger text on environmental science or environmental geology and you can
see myriad testimonies, often with photos of degradation.
Following the above realizations, we then may take a fairly safe leap of faith
scientifically to relate the additive effect of thousands of macro examples
on the mega system of earth climate. The real burden of proof should not be
on those warning of our culpability in harming God’s good earth. It should
be on the anti-environmental thinkers to show that how we have behaved and continue
to behave has not been a heavy blow to the health of the planet and its creatures.
If by any reasonable chance we are responsible for unwisely or selfishly manipulating
the environment, then it is our biblical mandate as the Master’s caretakers
to fix the problems as well as we are able. Can we not at least agree upon that?
This version of the “cautionary principle” is counter to selfish
interests and may mean that our treasured affluent lifestyles need alteration.
To further the call for a decision, we might need to be reminded that unarguable
“proof” is extremely rare in any reality and that people actually
live as probability thinkers. This is to say what most scientists well understand,
that confidence comes in proportions. If we knew that air travel was safe 51%
of the time and fatal 49% of flights, then how many would accept the risk? Of
course this is true for many circumstances but not all. A crucial election can
be won with 51% of the vote (or perhaps less), and yet we may be subject then
to someone with actual power over life and death. Even though the vast majority
of cases where abortions are elected without real threat to maternal life in
this country, only 2% or so of the harder cases are emphasized to justify keeping
existing law. The raw data and percentages pointing one way or the other don’t
tell all of the story. Why do some opponents of pro-environmental legislation,
regulation, preservation and even conservation ask for absolute proof? I am
convinced without such unrealistic proof.
When the Evangelical Environmental Network first circulated as a petition the
document, An Evangelical Declaration on the Care of Creation in 1994, the wording
was such that some of us, especially in science, could not sign it. After wise
revision and now with even stronger supporting evidence, signing on seems like
an important spiritual duty. The most controversial section in the 1994 document
concerns global climate change. Twelve years later the issue has come due for
advocacy among God’s people. The ECI offers us a chance to unite and show
the world that we do truly care about more than just Heaven and proscribing
what is sinful in others. Positive measures to individually and corporately
repent of our hurtful attitudes and practices are available from various sources,
including the Pew Center on Global Climate Change (www.pewclimate.org).
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