|  | A Christian Response to Earth Day | 
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For the invisible things of  him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by  the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that  they are without excuse  (Romans 1:20) A Christian Response to Earth Day
All  men are religious because all men have an object of worship. All men  have faith in something. In the end, men will either worship and serve  the creature, or they will worship and serve the Creator. But they will  worship something. 
In the 18th century, many  began to worship the mind. The religion of that day was rationalism. In  the 19th century, this god morphed into scientism. But science failed to  provide the answers to ultimate questions. The men of the 20th century  looked for a more immediate solution to the problems of humanity — they  chose to worship the State. This failed. Statism proved to be a harsh  taskmaster. In the absence of any real solutions from rationalism,  scientism, and statism, men fixed their attention on a new god — or  rather, an ancient God that just needed a new facelift. 
That god is the earth.  
21st-century men are earth  worshippers. They are sanitized pantheists. Of course, they don't call  themselves pantheists or earth worshippers, but religious devotion to  the material world is the essence of this modern faith. 
This religious devotion to  the material world as god comes in many shapes and sizes, but it has  become ubiquitous in our culture. The new pantheism is at the heart of  the green movement. It is reflected in the priorities of Hollywood, in  the agenda of politicians, and in the curriculums of the government  schools. It is found in the marketing campaign of Madison Avenue, in the  reality TV shows of cable television, and sadly, even in pulpits across  the nation. The worship of the creation has become a defining  undercurrent in our culture, even as it is reshaping many of the  cultures of the modern world. 
And this is one reason why  this Friday, April 22, millions of people (perhaps billions)  representing the countries of the United Nations will stop to celebrate  the high holy day of this religion as they pay homage to the earth God.  Of Earth Day, evolutionary anthropologist Margaret Meade once explained  that: EARTH DAY is the first holy day which transcends all national borders, yet preserves all geographical integrities, spans mountains and oceans and time belts, and yet brings people all over the world into one resonating accord, is devoted to the preservation of the harmony in nature and yet draws upon the triumphs of technology, the measurement of time, and instantaneous communication through space. EARTH DAY draws on astronomical phenomena in a new way — which is also the most ancient way — by using the vernal Equinox, the time when the Sun crosses the equator making the length of night and day equal in all parts of the earth. To this point in the annual calendar, EARTH DAY attaches no local or divisive set of symbols, no statement of the truth or superiority of one way of life over another. 
Should Christians care about  the earth? Not only must we care about it, we have a holy duty to  engage the earth. The difference between the objectives of biblical  Christianity and radical environmentalism can be found in the religious  assumptions of both groups.  
Four Lies of the Radical Environmentalist Movement With Earth Day comes billions of dollars worth of environmentalist propaganda driven by their religious worldview. Some of the themes you can expect to hear repeated this year include the following: 
 
Four Christian Assumptions About the Earth 
 
Conclusion 
All men are religious  because all men have an object of worship. In the end, they will worship  and serve the creature, or they will worship and serve the Creator. But  they will worship something.  
Earth Day, and the radical  environmental movement that spawned this high holy day of pantheism, are  at war with the Gospel because they perpetuate false worship. The  Christian response to the idolatry of Earth Day might be reduced to this  simple thought: Jesus Christ is the Creator, and He alone is to be  worshipped. He created man as the pinnacle of creation and determined  that humans would be the only part of creation to be made in the very  image of God, and that man as the image-bearer of God would rule over  the earth. 
On a practical level, this  means that Christians need to stop allowing the radical environmentalist  movement to define the issue. We must cease from being the tail and  become the head on the question of our duties, privileges, and  responsibilities vis-a-vis creation. The Bible has a great deal  to say about our use of the resources of the world and our relationship  to the earth. Of all people, Christians who honor the Creator should  have a passion for creation. We are losing the debate through  subversion, silence, lack of vision, and because of the Christian  community’s fear of the God-ordained, perpetually valid, creation  precept called “The Dominion Mandate.” This mandate directs man is to  rule over the earth, subduing it and taking dominion over it for his  benefit and for God’s glory. Implicit to the Dominion Mandate is the  duty of man to cultivate, wisely manage, and   carefully steward the planet.  
Finally, man’s problems  will never be solved through the elevation of human reason, the power of  science, or the interventions of the state. Nor will rescuing the  biosphere of planet earth save man or ensure him a future on this  planet. You cannot save the earth. But human beings can be saved.  And the only hope of salvation is found in Jesus Christ — the Creator!  It is this Creator through whom we live and breathe and who by the very  power of His word holds the worlds together. He will someday establish a  new heaven and a new earth and will bring all of His people into Glory.   
Doug Phillips recently returned from an expedition to the Amazon where he produced Into the Amazon,  a study course with 7-part television-style episodes on the battle  between radical environmentalism and biblical Christianity. To sign up  for Into the Amazon, his exciting online virtual tour and study click here. To see the episode trailers, click here. | 
 
 
It is so wonderful to have a Christian perspective on this day, celebrating and giving thanks to the Creator....
ReplyDeleteIn Christ,
~Shannon~