Tag Archives: Environmental Stewardship

Biofuels – the good, the bad and the ugly

With the 2007 ethanol law, biofuels hit the mainstream – in a way… The problem with this seemly environmental friendly law is that it is taking corn away from food producers to fuel vehicles (ie. ethanol). With the UN reporting a 37% in global food prices, this is the bad part of biofuels.

"Poor people may spend 80 to 90 percent of their household income on food." – Ford Runge, Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy at the University of Minnesota in St. Paul (nationalgeographic.com)

In addition, there has been a recent study that mentioned that the growth of biofuels may accelerate global warming. Sounds far fetched? Well, it seems people are clearing forests or grasslands grow crops for biofuels. These forests and grasslands remove more carbon dioxide from the air then the biofuel crops prevent over their lifetime. This is the ugly.

Now for the good.

There is more then one biofuel crop – say, Jatropha curcas. This unpronounceable plant is a shrub / tree whose seeds contain 30 to 40% oil. Oil – that can be used to make biofuels for your car.

Wait. It gets better.

The residue from the crushed seeds can be used as "organic fertilizer or be burnt for power generation."

[@more@]Then there is the cool fact that the jatropha is drought-resistant. This means that it can be grown on "primarily on nonagricultural or marginal land in Africa and India."

"We're reforesting areas which were really barren and where the local people had a difficulty making a living before." -Lord Ronald Oxburgh, head of D1 Oils (nationalgeographic.com)

Of course, there are some questions concerning jatropha like the long-term impact of a non-native plant… but overall, I like the sound of the jatropha curcas.

We shall see.

Why I Left Greenpeace

The Wall Street Journal just published one of the best articles on the dangers of the environmental movement I've ever read. It was written by Patrick Moore, co-founder and former leader of Greenpeace, who is currently chairman and chief scientist of Greenspirit Strategies.

In the article, Mr. Moore shares how Greenpeace, and the environmental movement as a whole, started from a science background (Mr. Moore holds a Ph.D. in ecology). They opposed nuclear testing and championed the protection of whales based on their "scientific knowledge of nuclear physics and marine biology."

Then things went south.

The directors of Greenpeace no longer had any science background. Instead they were "political activists or environmental entrepreneurs".  Greenpeace "evolved into an organization of extremism and politically motivated agendas."

The tipping point for Mr. Moore was Greenpeace's decision to support a ban on chlorine. In his words:[@more@]

Science shows that adding chlorine to drinking water was the biggest advance in the history of public health, virtually eradicating water-borne diseases such as cholera. And the majority of our pharmaceuticals are based on chlorine chemistry. Simply put, chlorine is essential for our health.

My former colleagues ignored science and supported the ban, forcing my departure. Despite science concluding no known health risks – and ample benefits – from chlorine in drinking water, Greenpeace and other environmental groups have opposed its use for more than 20 years.

This total dis-regard for science highlights the danger of the modern environmental movement. As someone who has become involved in the movement, abet from a Christian perspective, it has been tough to separate the junk-science from the real deal.

There are tons of people out there trying to scare people with semi-factual information – all with a political or personal agenda. Mr. Moore says it best at the end of his article:

We all have a responsibility to be environmental stewards. But that stewardship requires that science, not political agendas, drive our public policy.

I would add that we must also allow the Lord to direct our path and policies. It is His planet after all…

Partisanship Splits Americans' Views on the Environment

Hmm.. Yeah?! Did you really need a poll to tell you that?

Apparently they did as YouGov/Polimetrix just finished a nationally representative survey for the Economist. I thought some of the graphs where interesting, so I copied them for your viewing pleasure (or displeasure). Wink

What do you think is the most important environmental problem facing the world today?

Partisanship Splits Americans' Views on the Environment graphs

[@more@]

The partisan split was again clear in the perceived seriousness of global warming. How serious a problem do you think global warming is?

Partisanship Splits Americans' Views on the Environment graphs

My thoughts:

I think it's a shame to see such a partisans divide when it comes to the environment. It's almost like the political parties are dictating science to the people. Frown

Some times to be Biblical consistent, you have to be political inconsistent.

Energy Savings

The last workshop we held on Sunday evening was about Energy Savings – both in your home and in your business. We had some GREAT guest speakers from Idaho Power and the Small Business Development Center come and share with us. If you’re trying to save money, it might be time to sell mortgage note too.

On a side note, the lady from the Small Business Development Center is helping us reduce the amount of energy used in church. Which is awesome!! If we can lower the church’s electric bill, that means we will have more money to spread the Gospel.

Getting back to the workshop – I wanted to share with you all some of the energy saving tips for home as presented by Idaho Power. While some of the tips are common sense, there are also plenty of clever devices you may not have heard of, like time switches that you can use to automate lighting devices (read more here if that sounds good to you). If you’re like me, you’re probably not even aware of the common sense solutions…

Maybe this year we will all take the time and follow these tips…

Summer Energy Saving Tips

  • Use a ceiling, box or oscillating fan – the moving air cools you, creating less reliance on air conditioning.
  • Close the blinds before the sun gets a chance to heart up the hours, and open windows at night to cool the house down.
  • Replace the furnace filter and clean the outside coil on your air conditioner. If you feel your AC unit has taken a battering over the summer months and it’s not been properly maintained, you might want to learn more about air conditioning maintenance that you can do yourself such as the cleaning of the exterior coil, or hire a professional service (such as the services of a company like Boulden Brothers, more about Boulden Brothers here) and have them thoroughly clean your air conditioning system for you.
  • Don’t drastically turn down the temperature on your thermostat. Your house won’t cool down any faster.
  • Weatherstrip and caulk your doors and windows if you can see light or feel air coming through them.
  • Lower the temperature on your water heater to 120 degrees (unless your dishwasher requires a higher temperature).
  • Wash only full loads of laundry and dishes.
  • Use water- and energy-saving settings on dishwashers and washing machines.
  • Choose compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs qualified as Energy Star.
  • Unplug your second refrigerator and consolidate all your food into one.

Greater Energy Savings – three key areas

1. Air Conditioning

  • Increase insulation in the attic and walls as wells as the crawlspace, where applicable.
  • Seal around plumbing pipes and electrical wires in the walls and floors.
  • Plant shade tree on south- and west-facing sides of the house

2. Water Heating

  • Get the right size water heater. A unit that’s too large costs more money today and in the long run.
  • Buy an Energy Star washing machine or dishwater. They’re designed to use less hot water.
  • You could also consider installing a mini water heater for certain taps that you require hot water at more often. You can read reviews for them and buy a mini water heater here if you think this would benefit your home.

One item Idaho Power didn’t mention, but I like is to install a time on your hot water heater. It would turn off the power to the heater during the night and daytime when you aren’t typically using hot water (ie. most hot water is used in the morning when folks take their shower). In the interest of full discloser, I bought such a timer last fall but have yet to install it… much sadness.

3. Refrigeration

  • Vacuum the refrigerator coils once a year. Dirty coils make the refrigerator work harder.
  • Replace the refrigerator door gasket if you can slip an envelope between the door and the frame

One additional comment: if you are able, dry your clothes on a cloth line (inside or outside). Not only will your clothes last longer and smell better, you will use less energy (dryers use a TON of power).

More Ideas:

Green Cleaning Tips

I feel like everyone needs help and tips when it comes to cleaning. From oven cleaning tips to carpet cleaning help, anything can help make your home nicer. There are a TON of green cleaning tips… I choose only a few to share with you today. Enjoy. Laughing

(note: this IS a FEW!! You should of see the FULL list!!!!!!!)

Green Cleaning Tips


Safety Tips:

  • DO NOT ADD VINEGAR TO THE TOILET BOWL IF YOU ARE USING A BLEACH TAB OR SOME OTHER BLEACH PRODUCT THAT IS RELEASED WHEN YOU FLUSH. THE COMBINATION IS DEADLY!!
  • When using hydrogen peroxide, never swallow it, don’t use it on metal surfaces, and keep it in its dark container until you use it, as it will lose its strength if exposed to light.
  • Clean from the Top Down: When house cleaning, save the floor or carpet for last. Allow time for the dust to settle before vacuuming. When you do get to vacuuming, you may want to think about using something like a robot vacuum to take some of the stress of cleaning off of your shoulders.

Hygiene:

  • Remove residue and styling product build up from hair: After shampooing, rinse your hair with a mixture of 1/2 vinegar, 1/2 warm water to remove all the build up and get rid of that dullness.[@more@]

Generic:

  • A straight 5% solution of vinegar kills 99 percent of bacteria, 82 percent of mold, and 80 percent of viruses. Having said that, mix distilled white vinegar and water in spray bottles to keep in your bathrooms and kitchen – to disinfect and clean.
  • All-Purpose Cleaner: Mix 1/2 cup vinegar and 1/4 cup baking soda (or 2 teaspoons borax) into 1/2 gallon (2 liters) water. Store and keep. Use for removal of water deposit stains on shower stall panels, bathroom chrome fixtures, windows, bathroom mirrors, etc.
  • Another alternative is micro fiber cloths, which lift off dirt, grease and dust without the need for cleaning chemicals, because they are formulated to penetrate and trap dirt. There are a number of different brands. A good quality cloth can last for several years.

Bathroom:

  • Bathroom mold: Mold in bathroom tile grout is a common problem and can be a health concern. Mix one part hydrogen peroxide (3%) with two parts water in a dark color spray bottle and spray on areas with mold. Wait at least one hour before rinsing or using shower.
  • Calcium Deposit Cleanup – Use full strength white vinegar on calcium deposit buildup. Let it soak in.
  • Toilet Bowl Cleaner: Mix 1/4 cup baking soda and 1 cup vinegar, pour into basin and let it set for a few minutes. Scrub with brush and rinse. A mixture of borax (2 parts) and lemon juice (one part) will also work.
  • Clean sink and tub with full-strength vinegar. Simply apply with a sponge, wipe clean to a sparkly shine.
  • Soap scum & hard water spots on the tub and shower stall? Soak a sponge in full strength vinegar, wipe, let stand for five minutes then rinse with clean water.

Kitchen:

  • Disinfect countertops, cleaning sponges, and cutting boards. Also mix 1/4 peroxide with some salt in a sink full of cold water to kill salmonella and viruses on fruits and vegetables.
  • Disinfect and clean wood cutting boards: Rub with vinegar to disinfect and clean. If your cutting board has deep grooves, you can also soak the board in vinegar for 5-10 minutes.
  • Greasy pans, dishes, stovetop – add a few tablespoons of vinegar to your soapy dishwater. Remove grease from kitchen walls: Put straight vinegar on a dishcloth to wipe grease off kitchen walls, or the stovetop.

Living Room:

  • House odors – Place white vinegar in shallow bowls throughout the house to absorb household odors.
  • Carpet stains: Mix equal parts white vinegar and water in a spray bottle. Spray directly on stain, let sit for several minutes, and clean with a brush or sponge using warm soapy water. You may require professional carpet cleaning services for awkward and stubborn stains.

Laundry/Utility:

  • Coffee and tea stains: Stains in cups can be removed by applying vinegar to a sponge and wiping. To clean a teakettle, add 2 cups water and 1/4 cup vinegar; bring to a boil. Let cool, wipe with a clean cloth and rinse thoroughly with water.
  • Stain Remover – Keep a spray bottle filled with 50-part white vinegar to 50-part water near your washing machine
    . Spray on clothes that have stains as you would with a commercial stain remover before you put them in to be washed. Businesses may want to consider a commercial laundry service by phs Besafe to relieve the pressure of managing staff workwear.

Resources

Many uses for Hydrogen Peroxide http://www.using-hydrogen-peroxide.com/index.html

Green and clean recipes http://www.womenandenvironment.org/

Recipes for alternative cleaners http://www.ecocycle.org/hazwaste/recipes.cfm

Using vinegar inside and outside http://www.vinegartips.com/cleaning/

Cleaning with vinegar http://www.apple-cider-vinegar-benefits.com/cleaning-with-vinegar.html

Guide to less toxic products http://www.lesstoxicguide.ca/index.asp?

Toxic household product info http://www.non-toxic.info/index.htm

Toxic contamination http://isitinus.org/home.php

Environmental Working Group http://www.ewg.org/

The following company websites offer information on toxic chemicals, coupons, links, etc.

Seventh Generation products http://www.seventhgeneration.com/

Biokleen products http://biokleenhome.com/

Ecover products http://www.ecover.com/us/en/

Bio Pac products http://www.bio-pac.com/

Dr Bronner’s Fair Trade Soaps http://www.drbronner.com/index.html


Driving alternatives

The driving alternatives workshop was spilt into three areas: gas efficiency, biodiesel, and Hybrids / electric cars. We had three speakers and five attendees. (The other 45 folks were split between the green cleaning and energy saving classes)

Gas Efficiency

As gas prices continues to climb, every ounce of gasoline counts. The evening started off with some basic tips on improving the MPG efficiency of ones car:

  • Lay off the gas pedal – the lower RPMs, the less gas you use
  • When starting from a stand still (ie. a stop light or sign), start up slowly and gradually bring your speed up
  • Watch the road ahead of you – when you see a red light, take your foot off the gas pedal and coast to a stop.
  • Keep your tires full of air

Then we had some interesting tips:

  • Buy your gas in the morning when it’s cold outside – since gasoline turns from a liquid into a gas at high temperatures, the colder it is outside, the more liquid gas you get per dollar
  • Pump your gas at a slow rate – the faster the liquid gas moves, the more it turns into vapors, causing you to lose money.

The highlight of the evening (at least for me) was the Ethos FR presentation (can you guess who presented this part?)[@more@]

Ethos FR is a non-toxic, non-hazardous fuel reformulator that helps your engine burn cleaner and more efficient. I tested the product on my car this winter and saw a 15 to 20% increase in MPG – saving me close to $80 (after the cost of the Ethos). It also reduces your engines emissions.

I could go on and on about Ethos FR, but I have two other topics to cover.. sigh. More info can be found here. If you want to know the cost and how to order, please leave a comment as I’m in touch with the company.

Biodiesel

Did you know the first diesel engine ran on peanut oil? Later on, biodiesel was re-discovered as a byproduct of the manufacturing of explosives for WWII.

Interesting – but what is biodiesel? It is a fatty-acid ester that is formed from either vegetable or animal oil. One processed, biodiesel can be burned in any diesel engine – without any special configurations!

In addition to acting as a lubricant and extending the life of upper engine parts, biodiesel produces no sulfur or net carbon dioxide as well as emitting 20 times less carbon monoxide then regular diesel.

Other benefits / uses:

  • Biodiesel is non-toxic (about as toxic as table salt)
  • Biodiesel is biodegradable (degrades as fast as suger)
  • The by-products of biodiesel can be used for animal feed, soap, or weed control.
  • It is a strong solvent that can clean up grease spills or stains
  • It can also be used to treat wood instead of creosote

Hybrids / electric cars

I don’t have as much information on this part of the workshop as I forgot to take notes… (I had a handout for the biodiesel part!)

However, basically, concerns over the environment, and the launch of new hybrid and electric vehicle models has seen interest in these types of vehicles soar.

Additionally, according to websites like rmhbangor.org, these types of vehicles are really benefitting many businesses across the globe, as they are better for the environment and boost the business’s reputation.

That being said, it is interesting to note that car manufacturers still have a duty to ensure electrical safety for their employees and other visitors to their premises.

Consequently, any employees working with electrical equipment or vehicles should have adequate training so they can work safely and so that the risks of injury and fire or explosion are reduced.

Understandably though this can be challenging in motor trade premises where there is a range of portable and fixed equipment.

Ultimately, it is undeniable that the popularity and complexity of electric and hybrid vehicles have introduced more safety considerations and hazards, especially with regards to the software that is used throughout these particular cars.

Moreover, from a technological perspective, all software included in these vehicles needs to be designed and tested with Motor Industry Software Reliability Association (MISRA) compliance in mind. You can learn more about the importance of MISRA compliance on the Parasoft website.

In a nutshell, electricity is the way of the future. It takes less energy to power an electric car plus the electric can be generated via solar or wind energy. It will also be intriguing to see what else the future holds for hybrid and electric vehicles as well as the underlying software used to build and operate these fascinating cars.

hmm… That’s all I have time for as it’s almost 5:30 and I have an LTTG meeting…. =/

Green Living Seminar

An amazing evening! Wow… We had just over 50 people attend last night's Green Living Seminar – making it the second most attended LTTG class to dated (the first being the 2007 Wilderness Survival class).

The evening started with a brief introduction highlighting the fact that we can make a difference – both as an individual and as a community. Every little act of conservatism adds up and can change the world.  We just need to embrace change and rely on the Lord Almighty to work through us.

The speaker also made references to an article recently published in Delta's Sky magazine entitled "The Power of One". This article shares some numbers on how we can reduce waste and conserve our natural resources. Some of the figures include:

  • If the thermostats in every house in America were lowered 1 degree Fahrenheit during the winter, the nation would save 230 million barrels of crude oil—enough to fill an oil tanker 400 times. (That’s the amount of oil being imported into the United States from Iraq each year.)
  • If Delta’s 40 million SkyMiles members were to spend 1 minute less each day in the shower over their lifetimes, they would save 4 trillion gallons of waterthe total amount of snow and rain that falls over the entire lower 48 United States in a day.[@more@]
  • One out of every 3 pounds of the waste that Americans generate is just for packaging, which each year adds up to 77 million tons—enough to fill the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans 37 times.
  • If every American collected 1 gallon of water once a week while waiting for the shower or bathwater to get hot (use it to water your houseplants!), the total saved would be 15.8 billion gallons of water a yearenough to fill the Reflecting Pool at the National Mall in Washington, D.C., 2,338 times.
  • Replacing just one 500-sheet roll of virgin toilet paper a year with one 500-sheet roll of 100 percent recycled paper in every American household would leave 424,000 trees standing16 times as many trees as in New York City’s Central Park.
  • If one 20-mile trip per week was cut out (by combining errands) for every registered vehicle in the United States, 145 million fewer tons of greenhouse gases would be released into the air each year. That’s equal to the annual carbon dioxide emissions from 36 coal-fired power plants.

After the introduction, we broke up into three classes to allow people to drill down into certain areas:

  • Energy savings at home / in your small businesses
  • Cleaning without poisoning yourself or the environment
  • Driving alternatives – gas efficiency/biodiesel/electric

I'm going to try to post some highlights from each of the three classes this week – so stay tuned.

After the classes where finished, we all returned to the main chapel to browse the tables of the classes we didn't get to attend (that whole "can't be in two places at one time deal").  What's amazing is that everyone returned!  I thought folks would spilt after their class finished, but they didn't – they came back and pick up some information and chatted a bit.

Overall it was a wonderful evening. Laughing

Many thanks to the Education Coordinator and all the volunteers who help advertised, set up, tear down and/or teach the classes. You guys ROCK!!!!

2008 Greener Gadgets Design Competition

The Greener Gadgets Design Competition was held last month in New York City as part of Core77's: "challenged the global design community to design a "greener gadget"; to create innovative solutions addressing the issues of energy, carbon footprint, health and toxicity, new materials, product lifecycle, and social development."

Some of the entries in the competition are…um… shall we say interesting? In the interest of saving you time, I have reviewed all most some of the applications and came up with:

Ardell's top six Greener Gadgets

  1. Plug-in Watch – forget about having to replace batteries, just plug your watch into your computer's UBS port. Wham!! Instant charge! The thing I don't get is why does the watch double as a memory stick? Now that would be cool!
  2. Washup – have you ever lived in a small house where you wish you could do the laundry while you used the toilette?  Well do I have a deal for you! Now you can re-use the water from your washing machine to flush your toilette! If you order now, you will receive the ultra-cool stainless steel model for no extra charge![@more@]
  3. Digital Tattoo Interface – Forget about carrying a cell phone around with you, install one in your arm. That's right – in your arm. This Bluetooth device is permanently implanted under your skin and runs on your "blood's glucose and oxygen". Let's put those tattoos to work!!
  4. EnerJar  – this is the one device that boggles my mind… I mean, while the idea is simple (ie. pug the EnerJar up to any device and you can find out how much energy it is using), what gets to me is that there are already a billion different products that do the same exact thing on the market!!!  *sigh* I guess the fact that it's a "free-ware" item guarantees it as the 2008 Grand Prize Winner.
  5. Kill-A-Watt Button – Since we all are lazy computer nerds, someone came up with a simple button that will shut down our computer, monitor, save all our files and save the world a ton of electrical power.  It actually looks kind cool…kinda like an Apple mouse.. =/

Ardell's Grand Prize Winner is…

No Gadget by Simone Pallotto of Belgium.

That's right – No Gadget.  Mr. Simone simple said:

"We are currently producing too many not useful things, being for practical or emotional purposes; too much trash we accumulate everyday!"

Way to go Simone!!!

Resurrection and Creation Care

Rarely do I post fully articles as they tend to be long and have that nasty copyright issue attached… However, today I have decided to post an article or, one might say, essay about Easter and Creation Care.

While I know that some of you will not agree with Brandon Rhodes views on creation care, he does provide a good view of how some of the ideas of Gnosticism and Platonic Dualism (to be defined in the essay) have sipped into modern Christianity. Hopefully each reader will be able to walk away from this post knowing a little more about how these early heresies are making a comeback.


Resurrection and Creation Care
How Plato Has Hoodwinked Hope and Eviscerated Easter
By Brandon Rhodes
 
Originally Published by Restoring Eden

Easter is about unbridled hope. But I never really got the holiday, about what Easter had to do with the future. Like many Christians, I grew up very confused about hope, and so also about Easter.

Best as I ever heard, the Christian hopes that he or she will go to heaven after they die, and they can do this because of Jesus’ death on the cross. Heaven is really where it’s at, where our home is. This world’s not our home, after all – or so I heard in Sunday School. “I’m just travelin’ through this world, in this life,” I’d hear many say. And at a funeral, death was sanitized as the departed “going home”. This life was just training ground, went the conventional wisdom, for heaven. What happened on Earth, or to the Earth, was of only marginal consequence.

But there was another aspect to this hope – that one day Jesus would come again and judge everyone. We’d all be resurrected, and he’d take us to heaven. It’s the very stuff of that much-loved hymn, “I’ll fly away, oh glory, I’ll fly away.” Death is talked about as a welcomed doorway to escape the jail of this world and flesh, and arrive home on God’s celestial shore.[@more@]

What was lost to me in all this was quite why Jesus would come again, only to take us away. And what would become of the rest of creation? Do our souls get vacuumed out of it and into heaven just as God crumbles it up and throws it into the trash bin? I couldn’t figure out, either, where to put that talk in scripture of “new heavens and new earth” – is this just fancy talk of heaven, or something more? And why would Jesus teach us to pray for heaven to come to earth, if we were only going to heaven in the end anyway? Jesus must have been terribly confused!

Moreover, I couldn’t square this “creation-as-prison” hope with the dozens of clear biblical teachings that creation is good, is to be tended, and will in the end be healed. The gap between this escapist hope and the command of creation care has felt wide indeed.

This is the conventional hope of millions of Christians. But it’s not the hope of the Bible.

This view of escaping creation, of what author Paul Metzger calls “rapture and retreat”, is often pinned on to dispensational theology. It’s the theology popularized in the Left Behind books, and supports the end-times fervor latent in many American evangelicals, whether they’ve heard of dispensationalism or not. I regularly see it blamed for the “it’s all gonna burn anyway” excuse so often used in Christianity to escape ecological responsibility. And indeed, some blame may be appropriate here.

But I won’t settle for the usual lambaste against one school of theology, of smugly poking fun at all those end-timers and letting that be that. We’ve been reading escapism into the Bible for far longer than dispensationalism has been around. The roots of our ambiguous hope go much, much deeper.

It is time for a court summons for these villainous roots, and a presentation of the true Christian hope, that we may again celebrate Easter for all it’s worth. These deep roots have strangled our task as God’s stewards, and have made Easter into a magic trick in the shadow of the cross, rather than God’s emphatic ‘Yes!’ to His good world.

Our culprits now dragged into the courtroom are Platonic Dualism, and its pseudo-Christian partner, Gnosticism. As Westerners, we instinctively read the Bible through the first, and subsequently, for all our creedal vehemence against it, functionally fall into the deceitful morass of the second. Let’s get some brief definitions on the table.

Platonic Dualism is the view that this world is fundamentally bad, and that spiritual things are good. Our bodies are cages, prisons that keep us from the bright light of a disembodied bliss with the divine. Various branches of this physical/nonphysical dualism emphasize different things. To some, it means that the philosophical or contemplative life is best. To others, what we do in the body is of minimal moral importance. And to most dualists, death is a welcome doorway to heaven, God, freedom, nirvana, or whatever. The dead will never rise, and why in the world should we hope for that anyhow, if the spiritual world we’re freed to is home?

We see creeping tendrils of this all over Christianity, as stated above. Heaven is our afterlife, to the dualistic Christian, and creation is something we’ll never have to return to, thank goodness. To borrow from a popular movie, death becomes the welcome liberator which frees our minds and souls from the Matrix of this putrid place. The gospel becomes about only going to heaven after we die, instead of receiving and sharing the life of heaven on earth before we die, much less still anticipating a God-healed world. Judgment isn’t God’s loving setting-things-aright, but a wrathful destruction. And the future is God’s final dissolution of Earth. Trees and caribou, salmon and wild places, weather patterns and springtime blossoms – none of these have a stake in the dualist’s hope. And why, then, should the dualistic Christian want to care for any of it?

Gnosticism was the explicit celebration of this dualistic theology to its uttermost extremes. It was an early heresy soon stamped out by the early church fathers. I grew up hearing that Gnosticism’s great sin was its denial of Christ’s full humanity, which then shredded the meaning of the atonement. While true, Gnosticism’s root sin goes deeper: it denies the goodness of the creation, and so denies the goodness of the Creator God. They believed that the world was made by a bad god, and so was also bad, a prison for our immortal souls; the good god revealed in their vision of Jesus taught us the gnosis, the mysterious way of inward contemplation and emancipation from creation. This led to moral laxness, a ‘prayer closet’ spirituality of inward-bent mysticism, and acquiescence to the Roman Empire’s cruelties. Easter was spiritualized, bodily resurrection denied. Escape was the new hope.

Most pastors and theologians today would veheme
ntly deny and combat any latter-day Gnostic movement. Indeed they have: apologetics against the DaVinci Code and the apocryphal Gospel of Thomas and Gospel of Judas attest to the biblical Christian’s continuing rigor against this ancient heresy.

Yet its dualistic impulses continue to throb in various parts of the American church, as if we’ve denied Gnosticism in name only. Its dualism can continue unchecked in our lives and theologies, so long as it goes by any other name.

“God only cares about your heart” is but one of many oft-said evidences of Gnosticism’s continued creep into Christianity. Embedded within that saying is the assumption that the inside is better than the outside, that the spiritual and the physical do not go hand-in-hand, but can be neatly severed and excluded from one another. What we do with our hands, the semi-Gnostic logic of this goes, is irrelevant so long as our hearts are warm. This can lead to moral collapse regarding sexuality, war, economics, and of course creation care. While God cares deeply about the heart, it should be understood as the lotus of His solution to rescuing all of creation. God’s loving renewal of our hearts is an outworking of the power that raised Jesus from the dead, on the one hand, and so is a microcosm of what God will one day likewise do for the whole world, on the other. God cares so much about our hearts precisely because its renewal enables us to get on with being his new humanity in His new creation, His kingdom agents, firstfruits not of the Pie-In-The-Sky By-And-By, but of God’s good creation at last healed of its bondage to sin, decay, and death.

But I have gotten ahead of myself. Pardon that intrusion of the future.

We turn now to the hope of the New Testament, the Easter hope we will celebrate this Sunday: God’s bodily raising Jesus from the dead. If you want to know what the future will be like, scripture insists, look to the risen Lord. He is the shape of our hope. What God did to Jesus, He will also one day do to all people. But the hope doesn’t stop there, only for humans – all of creation will similarly experience its own resurrection! Romans 8 says that all of creation is groaning for this to happen – it’s bristling with anticipation of the day when its redemption and ours will come in full. It’s not waiting for the dualist’s hope, to itself be discarded as our spirits are uploaded to heaven. That’s no hope at all!

Consider the final picture in Revelation. It is one of heaven and earth coming together, the New Jerusalem coming down to Earth and both being mutually renewed. The angel cries “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.” (Rev. 21:3-4) This is a rapture in reverse: God peels away the grit of pollution and sin, and fills all of creation with His glory. Eden is restored, globally!

And the life of that age is what we find in the risen Jesus. Here is one who is fully physical, made of the same substance that was exhausted on Calvary, but which seems freed of decay and curse. Recognizable yet hard to recognize, radiant yet plain: the risen Jesus defied how we understand creation at all! Expert theologian on this topic N.T. Wright says that the first apostles were struggling to even create language to describe what they met in Him. Here was the presence of the future in the flesh of the risen Lord – a startling, exciting, hope-inciting snapshot of God’s intentions for the world.

Like the ancient frost of curse melting across C.S. Lewis’ Narnia as its false ruler is cast down, so also on Easter we see the long winter of sin and death crackling under Christ’s warmth – the springtime is here, assuring us that the summer of new heavens and new earth are on the way. The climate has indeed changed, and God’s own global warming is on the loose, melting our sins and idols constantly. Just as the dualist finds himself freed from creation and now in heaven, Easter shows heaven healingly burst upon an aching Earth! Better than life after death, in Wright’s word, is life after life after death: resurrection in a restored creation.

An Easter-shaped hope is not God’s throwing creation into the rubbish bin, nor the recycling bin (tempting as that metaphor may be)! No: on this Sunday we celebrate that God’s creation is indeed good, and His mission to heal it has been launched. Creation has been held captive by mutinous powers and humans for a long time, but God’s rescue operation to make it His home was decisively won on Good Friday and launched on Easter. This world is our home, and God’s too, if we are to take Revelation’s curtain-call seriously.

On Good Friday, may we meditate on Jesus taking on the pains of the world, of our sin and creation’s failed bearing of it. And Jesus bears what all creation cannot. He ached for extinct species, for clear-cut forests, for polluted rivers and smog-poisoned children. And it killed him: our exhaust, in effect, exhausting itself on him.

Easter, then, is God’s victory over it all. Where once were sad memories of extinct critters, God invites us to imagine new possibilities of animal care. The old world of oceanic dead zones are replaced with restored zones of life. The reality of the risen Lord Jesus lights up the world with God’s glorious Yes! May we this Easter give thanks to God that in Jesus we may join all of creation in this sure and steadfast hope.

Further Reading: Surprised by Hope, by N.T. Wright, 2008.