Today is Earth Day. Established in 1970, Earth Day is a day on which we think anew about the wonder and fragility of the tiny globe on which we spin through this vast, vast cosmos. Earth Day is a call to attend to the ecological balance of the world.
Many, however, deride Earth Day. The reasons for their rejection are religious, political, and economic. They draw from all corners of the human spectrum.
Underlying all them, however, is human arrogance. People who dissent from Earth Day do so ultimately because whether they know it or not, they are assuming that they, and only they are the most important thing on the planet. They assume that nothing is more important than the human's "right" and capacity to fulfill his or her own needs above, in absolute fashion, all else. Our desires reign supreme.
Perhaps Earth Day opponents should learn from the Greek mythological character Narcissus. So obsessed was Narcissus with his own image that when he noticed himself reflected in a stream, he bent down to look. Enraptured, he continued to look, getting closer and closer until he put his head in the water and drowned.
We are living in a world which we in no way made and in which we will in no way control fully. We are only human. If we think otherwise, the world will drown us, metaphorically for sure, in actuality perhaps, in the effects of our ecological follies. We will lose everything God has given to us.
As the psalmist writes, "The earth is the Lord's and all in it" (Psalm 24:1). Let's use our gift responsibly.
No comments:
Post a Comment