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Problem children: Making trouble for Mother Earth

Thursday, August 19, 2010
Problem children: Making trouble for Mother Earth
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Mother Earth can’t take much more of her human offspring’s hell-raising.

Scientists tell us that, by their count, the universe is somewhere between 13 and 14 billion years old, with the earth coming in at somewhere between 5 and 6 billion. According to traditional Jewish reckoning, on the other hand, creation is celebrating a much more modest 5,771 years this September 9.

That date is Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, which rolls around every autumn, just as the earth is yielding crops bountiful enough to fill every table. Jewish tradition has it that when God created the heavens and the earth, they came into being in their fullness, each ripe fruit and ear of grain a sign of the divine goodness literally pushing out at the end of every branch and stalk.

Genesis tells two different stories of this wonder. The first is a tale of goodness built upon goodness, the fullness of which is the divine likeness borne by humankind. The second recounts a more complicated beginning, one that ends in a tragic fall. Yet both give pride of place to women and men: Though part of nature, humankind is charged with governing what God has made by virtue of the divine image they bear.

At least that's how the story goes, though the myth is contradicted over and over by the facts on the ground, or in the case of the oil-sullied Gulf of Mexico, under the sea. We may be forced to judge the ancient writers of Genesis overly optimistic when it comes to humanity's alleged capacity for the divine gifts of knowledge and wisdom. A modern biblical writer would probably be forced to recount how the Creator saved his most spectacular blunder for last, creating the stupidest, most shortsighted fools to ever walk on two legs.

I can think of no other way to describe a species that has, in the mere 150 years since the Industrial Revolution, so recklessly trashed its environment, fouling both land and water to such extremes that creation's other inhabitants, innocent bystanders to our bipedal menace, must either flee or die. What God created as a biosphere, humanity has made an anthroposphere--all about us.

It is bad enough that the endless human quest to mine and process the earth's guts has resulted in the obscene catastrophe that is still washing up on our shores. What is worse is that neither this devastation nor scores of others have provoked any meaningful soul-searching about our future as a species or our deleterious effect on God's handiwork.

There is only one word for this--sin--and it's the same one first described in Creation Story No. 2: That sin had little to do with fruit or snakes or sex; it was rather an attempt to be, in the words of the tempting serpent, "like God," a refusal to be rooted in the soil from which we were drawn.

Our first parents tried to escape their created nature, and their children down these many generations continue to commit the same sin against nature over and over. And as we refuse to admit that we belong to--and are not above or apart from or better than--the world around us, we continue to make an open sewer of the only home we have.

We know well that the remedy for sin is conversion, and the conversion this sin demands is that we remember what we are: earth people, clay vessels made alive by divine breath. We must begin by putting our bare feet on whatever soil we can find, to dig our toes in among the grasses and roots and crawling things, to run our hands over rough bark and through clear water, to love creation as God does, and so discover again our first and primary vocation as vicars of the Creator.

But it is not enough to repent; we must also atone for what we have done and what we are still doing. That atonement requires an abrupt change in how we go about our lives--particularly how we create and use energy--but it cannot stop there. It must include reparation--literal repairs--for the earth scarred so terribly by our wickedness. Perhaps our penance may restore the oneness God intended in the beginning, in which human beings have our proper place as members of the created order.

It is serendipitous that the celebration of Rosh Hashanah leads directly to the most solemn day on the Jewish calendar: Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. In the ten "Days of Awe" between the festivals, religious Jews seek to identify and atone for their failures in the preceding year, in the hope of securing divine favor for the new one.

Our Mother Earth, who is looking all of her 5,771 years thanks to her human children, would surely appreciate such effort on her behalf. It is her birthday, after all. 

Bryan Cones is the managing editor of U.S. Catholic. This article appeared in the September 2010 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 75, No. 9, page 8).

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People: scum of the earth

This article demonstrates the typical disdain people on the left have for common folks (and therefore appoint themselves as arbiters to impose draconian limits on the livelihoods of others):

modern biblical writer would probably be forced to recount how the Creator saved his most spectacular blunder for last, creating the stupidest, most shortsighted fools to ever walk on two legs.
I can think of no other way to describe a species that has, in the mere 150 years since the Industrial Revolution, so recklessly trashed its environment, fouling both land and water to such extremes that creation's other inhabitants, innocent bystanders to our bipedal menace, must either flee or die.
It is bad enough that the endless human quest to mine and process the earth's guts has resulted in the obscene catastrophe that is still washing up on our shores. What is worse is that neither this devastation nor scores of others have provoked any meaningful soul-searching about our future as a species or our deleterious effect on God's handiwork.

We have spent billions of dollars on pollution controls and species and habitat preservation. I marvel at all the beautiful places to enjoy. But in typical leftist crisis making, fear mongering, you’d think the entire planet was a smoldering cinder from the descriptions in this article. We don’t live in utopia. There will be accidents.

God made us AND the earth we live on.

How many of you readers and commenters rip up your home, trash the walls and the yard and leave it a mess? Very few I would guess. Your home is a gift from the God who provides for you.

Yet so often, this care for God's gift stops at the front door of our homes. Think of it.. God created us and even gave us a beautiful home (the earth) to live in and sustain (feed, entertain, relax) us. Yet we don't seem to do too good of a job caring for something that God created and gave us dominion (responsibility to care for).

Come on .. caring for the earth doesn't mean that we have to forgo things like electricity, computers etc. I don't think that the author is suggesting that we return to the dark ages.

Good dominion (stewardship and caring) means that we have to care and do the right thing. A good life and a life of caring for God's creation -- His gift to us can go hand in hand.

If you believe that

If you believe that the author and folks like him are simply calling for good stewardship then you have been out of touch for some time.
You have missed the fanaticism and cultic feelings and actions of most of the green movement worldwide.

My posts here are by way of electricity. If your electric bills have not gone up due to the pressure of self-serving frauds, advocating the punitive taxation of "CO2 emitting" utilities you truly live in a wonderous world.
As for myself and the other carbon-based life forms I live with, we will choose to recognize this movement for the tyranical threat to life that it is.
When the EPA finds that, "...human exhalation is a threat to human life" we are way passed "good stewardship".
Good stewardship, is what we were practicing since I attended the first Earth Day in Manhattan. The air is cleaner, cars/trucks are cleaner, the water cleaner,
etc. What we are now presented with by the "used car" salesmanship on this issue is an extention of the anti-life, anti-God zealots, and those that merely want to be the first "green" billionaires.
Smell the coffee, Fred before they decide that is no good for you again. lol

"The book of nature is one..."

So says Pope Benedict XVI. Mr. Cones makes this point well in this article. In many ways humans have been unruly children but not all of us. Those least responsible for environmental degradation and climate change have and will suffer its worst consequences. Pope Benedict calls us all to "rethink this path which we are traveling together" and to consider soberly our lifestyles. The Catholic approach to climate change and environmental degradation include BOTH the Care of Creation AND the care of the poor.

Our traditions go back to Genesis, not to Earth Day.

Learn more about what the Church teaches and what the U.S. Church is doing to promote this teaching. Go to: catholicclimatecovenant.org.

Don't worry Allen, since

Don't worry Allen, since Bryan Cones is known to be a tower of integrity, I'm sure he has already done his part by getting rid of his car, cell phone, computer, washing machine, dishwasher, refrigerator, heater, air conditioning, television, water heater, electric lighting, and now lives in a lean-to surviving by subsistence farming.

a tower of integrity

Could be Mr. Cones is a congruent person and agrees with Mr. Biddle:

"Biddle had enough money to hire one lobbyist to try to persuade the U.S. Congress to copy the recycling regulations of Europe, Japan and China in our energy bill, but, in the end, there was no bill. So we educated him, we paid for his tech breakthroughs — and now Chinese and European workers will harvest his fruit. Aren’t we clever?"

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/19/opinion/19friedman.html?_r=1&src=ISMR_...

I have to agree with wsxyz

I have to agree with wsxzyz, I am sure that Bryan's computer is not powered by electricity like the rest of us, but by unicorn [filtered word] which are environmentally sound. So any of his or the authors pronouncements on the environment are pure...
When "Mother Earth" promises him immortality, that will be actual news, but last time I checked, she thinks his contribution to all of this will be dust.
Clearly, she is a shortsighted mother. lol
Stop trying to make an idol out of "Mother Earth". The only difference between that and the Golden Calf was the portability of the idol, not the shallowness and vanity of the makers.

Unbelievable! This article

Unbelievable! This article has no business being on a Catholic website. This article espouses the religion of Environmentalism which is contrary to Christianity and to Catholicism. U.S. Catholic should be embarrassed to post an article on its website that seems to question the significance of God's act to create the only creature that was made in His image and likeness.

The Earth was created to be man's temporal home and we should all act in such a way as to best protect and preserve this home as 'we wait in joyful hope for the coming of our Saviour'. BUT, for this article to suggest that God may have somehow "saved his most spectacular blunder for last, creating the stupidest, most short-sighted fools to ever walk on two legs" is borderline blasphemous.

Christianity and Catholicism espouse that God's greatest creation was that of Man. And, that His greatest act was to become a Man like us and then to ultimately trade that life for us. God didn't give his life for the planet, He gave his life of US -- yeah, that blunder of creation called Man.

Let us as Catholics and as Christians not lose sight of what our primary purpose is on this planet. It is not to serve mother Earth, but rather to server each other and through that act of stewardship to each other we are ultimately serving God -- as WE are ALL created in His image and likeness.

Religion of environmentalism?

Allen, your incredulity amazes. You castigate Mr. Cones' article as being contrary to both Catholicism and Christianity. I take it you've never had nor taken time to read Benedict's many statements before and after his 2009 encyclical CARITAS IN VERITATE (Charity in Truth). Evidently all prose for you needs to be literal in expression also - no messy metaphors. Either things are black or white. 2 + 2 ALWAYS = 4. Adam (humankind) was created separate and distinct from all the rest of creation rather than out of it (clay). Our "primary purpose" for us in life is to be for ourselves alone because according to you, it certainly is "not to serve mother Earth" (the rest of creation). What about St. Paul's "all creation groans...?" My conclusion from your comment is that if we continue our "primary purpose" we certainly won't have to worry about a religion of environmentalism because we "God's greatest creation" will have effectively done away with the environment.

Metaphors

So when the left makes extreme statements, it is simply metaphoric prose? Somehow all the ecoterrorists and animal rights terrorists don't see it that way.

When Dr. Tiller was murderered the left (including the Catholic left) told pro-life advocates that the "extreme" rhethoric of calling abortion murder made them partially responsible for Dr. Tiller's murder.

Someone recently died when an ecoterrorist took over the Discovery Channel.

I know.. I know... Chicago Style Catholicism using Saul Alinky's Rule for Radicals:

“The fourth rule is: Make the enemy live up to their own book of rules. You can kill them with this, for they can no more obey their own rules than the Christian church can live up to Christianity.”

http://alinskydefeater.wordpress.com/2009/10/28/the-alinsky-tactics-rule...

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