This is the season of resurrection! We celebrate the eternal life that we have through Jesus Christ and anticipate our reunion with loved ones who have gone ahead of us into glory. But is resurrection only for us humans? The Bible is concerned not only about us humans, but also about all of creation! On this Sunday following Earth Day, maybe we should take a closer look at that...
Who is resurrection for? I’ll bet that you never even thought about that question. Who is resurrection for? Of course it’s for Christians, we who trust in the grace of God through Jesus Christ and call him “Lord.” Many people believe that the resurrection is for non-Christians, too. They believe that God’s grace is for everyone, whether or not they have ever heard of Jesus. We all agree, though, that the resurrection is for human beings. But… what about animals? Is the resurrection for them, too? Will I see my beloved dogs in the life to come? What about the horse that I love so much? After he dies, will he be lost to me forever? And what about the parts of creation that we don’t know personally: cicadas and sparrows and whales and raccoons? Is the resurrection for them? Well, if we take what Paul wrote to the Romans seriously, the resurrection is for every single bit of creation! That was the message of the scripture that I read just a few minutes ago (Romans 8:19-23). “The whole creation waits in eager anticipation for the children of God to be revealed,” he wrote. “Creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God!” Paul claims that the resurrection is for all creation, not just us human beings! Is that right? Did he make this up, or is this in the biblical tradition? Let’s take a look at some texts in the Old Testament and see what they say about it.
Let’s get into a time machine and travel all the way back to the Garden of Eden, back to the time when resurrection wasn’t necessary, because there was no sin in the world. Everything is beautiful, and the first humans live in harmony with the natural world around them. But as we watch them eat the forbidden fruit, everything changes. People will no longer live in harmony with nature, but will be forced to work the soil in order to get food. In fact, God curses the ground itself because of their behavior. “Cursed is the ground because of you,” God says. “It will produce thorns and thistles…” (You can look it up if you don’t believe me. It’s in Genesis 3:17-18.) The earth itself bears the consequences of our misdeeds. The original harmony that we enjoyed with creation was lost, and we have considered it our enemy ever since.
The earth continued to be an active character in the biblical drama, although we frequently overlook it. Let’s adjust our time machine so that we visit Mt. Sinai and witness God giving Moses the law. Most of that law concerns the way that people treat one another, but right in the middle of it is a commandment to give the land a Sabbath! “When you enter the land that I am giving you,” God says, “the land shall observe a Sabbath for the Lord. In the seventh year, there shall be a Sabbath of complete rest for the land.” (Leviticus 25:2, 4) The Sabbath isn’t just for human beings, the land needs to rest, just like we do! And if we turn our time machine so that it takes us to the time of the prophets, we’ll hear Isaiah complaining that our sins have messed up the natural world (24:4-6): “The earth dries up and withers; the world languishes and withers; the heavens languish together with the earth. The earth lies polluted under its inhabitants, for they have transgressed laws, violated the statutes, and broken the everlasting covenant. Therefore, a curse devours the earth, and its inhabitants suffer for their guilt…" What we do affects the earth; and vice versa. We are tied to the earth from which we came more intimately than a mother is tied to her child.
Now, let’s go to visit Jesus in our time machine and listen as he talks to his followers (Matthew 10:29). “Not one [sparrow] will fall to the ground apart from our Father,” he says. All creation is dear to God’s heart! But the clincher, for me at least, is what he says in John 3:16. We all know that verse. “God so loved the world that he gave his only son…” What you probably don’t know about is the Greek word that is translated “world.” It’s not a word that means “the ground” or “the dirt.” It’s not a word that means “all the people” either. Those are completely different words. No, the word used here is “kosmos.” That word means the whole universe, everything that is! God so loved the whole universe that he gave his only son! It’s not just about us, folks; it’s about all creation! Finally, if we visit the very end of time in our time machine and see what John the visionary saw and wrote about in the book of Revelation, we see the ultimate resurrection: a new heavens and a new earth. Everything that is – you, me, dogs, horses, honeybees, sea turtles, robins, giraffes, hippos, tulips, maple trees, and grass – everything will be resurrected and made new through the grace of Jesus Christ!
That doesn’t mean, though, that we should sit by and wait for God to fix creation any more than we should sit back and wait for God to fix the economic and social messes that we’ve made. God calls us to change systems that keep generation after generation in poverty, withhold opportunities from entire ethnic groups, and assist a few in hoarding wealth while millions of others go hungry. We know that it is our responsibility to try to change those situations! And it is also up to us to be responsible stewards of the earth while we wait for the resurrection that is promised to all those whom God loves. Fortunately, more and more people are recognizing that we are called to “tend and keep” the earth just as Adam was called to “tend and keep” the Garden of Eden. It is very easy to find people who are ready to pronounce doomsday because of the climate change that is taking place all around us. But it’s also becoming easier and easier to find stories about people all over the world who are taking steps to change our old habits of misusing the earth and our fellow creatures.
Let me give you just one example. Every day I log into a website called “Free the Ocean” and I try to answer a trivia question. With every question that I answer, whether or not I get it right, funds are generated to help groups who remove plastic from the ocean. One of those groups is “Sustainable Coastlines Hawaii.” They not only remove tons of plastic from coastlines, they coordinate educational programs and public awareness campaigns. Another is “Ocean Cleanup,” a group based in the Netherlands that not only removes plastic from the ocean, but also intercepts plastic from polluted rivers before it has a chance to even reach the ocean! The plastic that is removed is recycled into new products. And that’s just one example. I could tell you about the International Rhino Foundation that collaborates with hundreds of organizations to eliminate the threat to Black Rhinos in Zimbabwe and stabilize its population. They are succeeding, too. Zoos worldwide cooperate to breed endangered species and, where possible, release them back into the wild. And I haven’t even touched on the thousands of local groups who protect, maintain, and enlarge habitats for native species of plants and the animals that depend on them! Whether we consider manatees in Florida, Siberian Tigers in Russia, or Laysan Albatrosses on Guadalupe Island in Mexico, local groups who love God’s creation are working on behalf of their welfare.
The notion of resurrection is difficult for anyone to grasp. I admit that I have difficulty with it myself. But I have a vision of what a resurrected creation might look like. Isaiah says that the wolf won’t be a threat to the lamb, the leopard will lie down with the young goat, and the calf and the lion will live together in peace. My vision looks like that, but it’s even grander than what Isaiah had in mind. In the resurrected world that I imagine, everyone – even the animals – have a safe place to live, and enough to eat. In my vision, huge flocks of passenger pigeons fly overhead, darkening the sky with their numbers, just as they did before we humans hunted them to extinction. Swarms of healthy honeybees pollinate an abundance of flowers, because the pesticides that are killing them now no longer exist. Giraffes, rhinos, hippos, and elephants are plentiful and safe from poachers. The rain forest with its diversity of plants and animals is thriving. The ocean is once again the cradle of life; and coral reefs shelter an abundance of fish and crustaceans. And all animals live free; none are confined or abused for human benefit. Trees once again grow to great ages without being harvested for wood for fuel or construction. Plastic pollution is a thing of the past. All landscapes are beautiful, because strip mining no longer exists. In the resurrected creation, we no longer take advantage of nature; we love it. Is it possible that when God told us to “love our neighbor as ourselves,” God meant the natural world, too? I think that he did. As that great theologian the Lorax once said, “Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.” On this Sunday after Earth Day, I invite you to embrace the earth as your neighbor, to work for her good, and to anticipate the resurrection that Jesus offers to not only us humans, but to all creation. Thanks be to God that he does!