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Tinkerntom
 
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Frank Bell wrote:

There's the Garden of Eden, from where man was banished. There's
dominion over the earth and its creatures, ranking the environment
subordinate to man. There's the idea that Jesus can multiply fish

and
bread from thin air to feed the masses. Jesus was a carpenter and

hung
on a wooden cross, placing forest products in a strict utilitarian
context. There's raising the dead and reincarnation, which implies

a
spiritual violation and divorce of spirit from the natural order of
things. There's the whole famine, plague, flood thing of

environment
as antagonist.

Then there's the idea of hell being a volcanic, subterranean realm

in
earthly bowels made of fire and brimstone. I don't know if that

last
idea is in the bible, but it is certainly popular among Christians.
The point is the earth is not a happy place for Christians, and

their
ultimate goal is to reach somewhere better. For Christians, the

earth
is a stepping stone, a place of trials and tribulations, and in

whose
bosom lay the fire and brimstone of eternal damnation. The Bible,

as
used and interpreted by the majority of Christian fundamentalists,

is
not a model of environmental stewardship.



OK, I'm gonna debate ya on this a little, although I certainly don't

share
Larry's perspective. I think you're stretching with your "Bible as
Anti-Environment" thesis. For starters, while the Bible does assign

man the
role of master over the creatures and lands of the Earth, it

explicitly
charges him to PROTECT creation, not destroy it. And harvesting it

for
man's use does not equate to destruction; I don't think anybody would

say
that fishing or hunting equates to environmental destruction. Of

course,
like any activities, you have the good along with the bad- for every

kid
with a fishing pole on a quiet northern lake, there's a trawler with

a drag
net wreaking havoc on marine environments. I'm not sure how you can

say
that Jesus as a carpenter is a sign that the Bible is

anti-environment; one
of my best paddling buddies is a finishing carpenter. For that

matter,
aren't his wooden canoes just as "utilitarian" as a wooden cross?

Famine,
plague, and antagonists? Remember the tsunami thing that several of

our
friends in Asia recently dealt with? I suspect they would agree that

nature
is indeed an antagonist at times! Treating nature as antagonist is

one
thing; destroying it to further your own interests entirely something
different.

Is earth a place of trials and tribulations? Sure. If you're

leading a
life *without* trials and/or tribulations, please share your

experiences- I
bet you're the only one in that position :-) Why is Earth as a place

of
trial a bad thing? I endure the "trial" of whitewater whenever I

can, and
believe me, there are many rapids that I view as being antagonistic,

almost
malevolent! But trials and adversity are not bad; they give you the

chance
to stand tall. I believe that is the true function of creation as

described
in the Bible- a place to rise above trials and tribulation, a place

to meet
those challenges and succeed! If others view the trials and

tribulations of
life on earth as an enemy rather than a spiritual refining process,

that
would be their failing, IMO.

I certainly agree that there is some movement in the Christian right

to
treat the enviroment like a big cookie jar, but that really isn't the

fault
of the Bible or it's writers. I would opine that that is more

indicative of
Christian fundamentalists failure to understand God's desire that man

act as
a steward of the environment. Personally, I believe that Christian
fundamentalists fail to understand God's instructions in more areas

than
just environmental stewardship, but that's a whole different story.


Frank, if it doesn't shake you up to badly, I am with you on this one!
Stewardship is the key, and in fact I believe there will be a day of
reckoning for all those who claim to be Christians and were poor
stewards. The Scriptures say that we who claim a greater understanding,
will be held to a greater responsibility. Now that is not an excuse for
staying ignorant, but those who may be proposing to hurry the Lord's
return by trashing the environment, may not be so happy when He starts
asking them to give account.

Now I would also have to say that I have never heard any of the
Christians I know propose trashing the environment, though I can also
understand that there could be some that would. There are definitely
some wackos out here who make some pretty bizarre claims. However the
solution is not to lump all Christian fundementalist into one big pile.
There are many various flavors, though the lions aren't to
discriminating. TnT