Archive for the ‘Biblical Stewardship’ Category

Proverbs: The Importance of Trade-OffsJuly 15th, 2009 by E. Calvin Beisner

“Where no oxen are, the manger is clean, 
      But much revenue comes by the strength of the ox.”

In Proverbs 14:4, the wise Solomon expressed with simplicity one of the most important principles of creation stewardship: trade-offs are both important and unavoidable in the real world. 

That verse came to mind lately while contemplating Michael Abbaté’s interesting book Gardening Eden: How Creation Care Will Change Your Faith, Your Life, and Our World. Abbaté, a landscape architect and urban planner, sensitively discusses a variety of environmental challenges from a Christian perspective. While he often overstates such problems as global warming and species extinction, accepting alarmist claims uncritically and showing little awareness of the scientific controversies involved, he successfully demonstrates that Christians have a responsibility to be good stewards of the planet.

What brought Proverbs 14:4 to mind was not what the book said but its appearance. Aesthetically, it’s a lovely paperback–slightly oversized, with wide external margins in which a leaf pattern surrounds the page numbers, considerable space between lines of text, open word and letter spacing, and a chapter title page followed by a blank page at the start of each of its 13 chapters. Clearly the publisher sought to deliver an aesthetically pleasing and comfortable physical reading experience. 

For comparison, Unstoppable Global Warming–Every 1,500 Years, by climate realists Fred Singer and Dennis Avery, is printed in denser type, with less space between lines, with slightly narrower margins. Abbaté’s’s book, then, puts about 41% less text on each page. With the design used for Singer and Avery’s book, and eliminating the blank pages between chapters, it could have been printed on 161 pages instead of 271–saving 41% on trees and the fuel needed to transport the heavier books (not to mention saving consumers’ money).

Why didn’t Abbaté and his publisher use the more ecologically efficient design? Perhaps because they considered the aesthetics worth the extra paper and fuel–and hoped readers would consider it worth the extra money.

Nothing’s wrong with that judgment in principle. But environmentalists should keep that in mind the next time they jump to condemn what they consider an overuse of natural resources.

Old Testament lifestyle in modern timesJuly 1st, 2009 by E. Calvin Beisner
Millions still live hand-to-mouth.

The abject poverty of the widow in 1 Kings 17 represents
the daily life of millions of our poorest neighbors.

Lost in much of the legislative debate is the effect that policies like cap and trade have on our very poorest neighbors. We would do well to remember.

In one of the most poignant stories in the Old Testament (1 Kings 17:8-24 ), God sends the Prophet Elijah, endangered by wicked King Ahab and Queen Jezebel, to live in Zarephath with a widow and her son. On arriving, Elijah finds the widow “gathering sticks” and asks her to give him water and a little bread. “As the LORD lives,” the widow replies, “I do not have bread, only a handful of flour in a bin, and a little oil in a jar; and see, I am gathering a couple of sticks that I may go in and prepare it for myself and my son, that we may eat it, and die.” God stretches the widow’s food supply and then, when her son gets sick and dies, raises him from the dead, confirming through these miracles that Elijah is His prophet.

Although most people in the wealthy West aren’t aware of it, the life–and death–described in that story remains true today for hundreds of millions of women and children around the world, who spend hours every day gathering sticks or dried dung to cook their food and warm their huts. Smoke from the dirty fuels causes tuberculosis and other respiratory diseases that lead to 2 million or more premature deaths and billions of lost work hours every year–magnifying the poverty these people experience.

In the absence of miracle-working prophets, these people need abundant, affordable energy to spare them from such tragedy. That’s why the WeGetIt.org Declaration says, “With billions suffering in poverty, environmental policies must not further oppress the world’s poor by denying them basic needs. Instead, we must help people fulfill their God-given potential as producers and stewards.” Ask your friends to join you in signing the Declaration today.

Cap and trade heads for the SenateJuly 1st, 2009 by The WeGetIt.org Team

Just in time for Independence Day, a 1428-page bill passed by the House of Representatives last week on a close (219-212) vote will, if it becomes law, in effect be the largest tax increase in American history.

Although it doesn’t directly tax most citizens, its effect, according to economic analysis by the Heritage Foundation’s Center for Data Analysis, will be to

  • increase the average household’s direct energy costs by about $1,200 and other costs by about $3,400 per year for a combined $4,600 per year;
  • reduce gross domestic product by about $9.4 trillion in the years 2012-2035;
  • lower employment by almost 2 million jobs in its first year, reaching nearly 2.5 million in 2035;
  • raise the national debt by about $115,000 per family of four over the same period; and
  • raise all other prices by increasing the cost of the energy used to produce goods and services.

The main rationale for the bill is supposed to be reducing future global warming, but its likely impact by mid-century is only about 0.09 degree F reduction–an amount too small to detect and of no consequence to human or other ecological welfare. Supporters also argued that the bill would create jobs, but the employment loss is net–despite whatever “green jobs” are created, overall employment will be about 1.1 million less in the average year than it would have been without the bill.

Supporters cited a Congressional Budget Office report saying the bill would cost the average family only about $175 per year, not $4,600, but the Heritage Foundation points out that, among other flaws, the CBO report’s numbers are inconsistent, grossly underestimating costs and excluding the $9.4 trillion damage to the economy completely. Results similar to the Heritage Foundation’s were reached by the National Black Chamber of Commerce and the left-leaning Brookings Institution.

The bill now goes to the Senate, where a vote is anticipated this fall. Despite strong support from the House Democratic leadership, the bill was barely passed after weeks of back-room dealing and days of last-minute amendments, culminating in a 300-page amendment being added at 3:00 a.m. on the day of the vote. Supporters are likely to have even more difficulty getting it through the Senate, in part because of strong opposition in the farming community.

According to environmental economist Kenneth W. Chilton, “efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions necessarily result in higher energy costs that impact ‘the least among us’ most harshly. The Biblical command to care for the poor and deal with them justly should give us pause as we consider policies with almost no benefit and great cost to the least of these.”