Here in the UK there will be a
General Election on 04 July. Over the five Sundays in June, I intend to look at
several key issues relating to how we vote, continuing, today, with the
environment. My intention is not to tell you who you should or shouldn’t vote
for—though I will touch on policies—but to ask how does Christian faith inform
how we cast our vote?
I think that I could make a case for
the book of Job being the first treatise on the environment. It starts with God
in conversation with an angelic being called the Accuser. God asks whether he
has noticed how exemplary a human being Job is? The Accuser responds that this
is self-serving on Job’s part, because God has planted a hedge around him, to
shelter and protect him. God is not convinced and permits the Accuser to cut
down the hedge and see what will happen. What transpires is a heady cocktail of
attacks from neighbouring tribes competing for resources, and natural
disasters, that between them strip away all Job’s flocks and herds and leave
his servants and his children dead. When Job persists in his integrity of
character, the Accuser asks to afflict his body with sores, but is prevented
from taking his life.
When they hear of Job’s misfortune, his
three closest friends come to him, and they do a beautiful thing. They sit with
him, in silence, for seven days and seven nights. No trying to offer easy answers
where there are none, to ease their own discomfort. And after that, Job speaks.
A damn bursts, and words pour out of him. He wishes that he had died in the
womb, that there had been no joy at his birth, that the stars had been blotted
out by clouds. If you have lost a baby, that might be hard to hear, or understand;
but Job is not alone in wishing that he had never been born, not alone in
finding himself in such a dark place. He feels utterly hedged-in by God—which
does not feel like shelter, but like torment—and his anguish pours out from him
like water. God notes everything Job says but, for now, says nothing in return.
Instead, Job’s friends speak up, and their advice to him is, to put it in
environmental terms, a pile of steaming, well-rotted manure.
Only when they have spent all their
words does God speak, answering Job’s complaint from out of the storm (starting
with our first reading today, Job 38:1-11). He takes up Job’s death-wish image-for-image
with God’s own wish for life. Neither obliterated nor silenced, the morning
stars sing for joy. The sea is born, full of vigorous life; and God uses the sea
fret to make swaddling bands, to wrap the new-born sea tight—as Mary would wrap
Jesus—so that it feels safe and secure. God literally plants a hedge around the
sea—a boundary to shelter it—and brings the swell of outpoured waters to peace.
In what follows, God reveals a divine fascination with and joy in learning
about nature, in discovering how creation will participate in the gift of life.
Christians believe that we are made in the image of this God: which is to say,
we are made to discover and rejoice in the wider environment.
The divine calming of the swelling
waves is taken up in our Gospel passage, Mark 4.35-41. A violent storm comes
out of nowhere, threatening to overwhelm the boats in which Jesus and his
disciples were caught on the lake. We read that Jesus rebuked the wind, but the
Greek means to esteem or place due weight or honour on something. We might say,
Jesus, as a frail human, paid due respect to the power of the wind—and that the
wind, in return, paid due respect to Jesus. There is something here of human
harnessing the wind for human good. There is also something noteworthy in the
calm displayed by Jesus before calm is displayed by the waves. He models the
contrast between excessive fear and having been persuaded of God’s trustworthiness.
The environment is a major issue, and
more so for younger voters. For many younger people, climate change and
environmental loss is an existential crisis, which galvanises some to action
and paralyses others in despair. The four political parties standing in Sunderland
Central—the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, and the Greens—agree that
environmental policy must be tied to energy production and a commitment to
reaching carbon net zero. All four promote significant investment in offshore
wind, onshore wind, and solar energy production, including more localised
storage and distribution, with both the Conservatives and Labour also
supporting new nuclear power, to which the Green party is opposed. All four are
aware that this will take strategic investment, targeted support for industries
in transition, and various mechanisms for holding businesses to account. Holding
water companies to account is prominent in the Conservative and Labour
manifestos.
Reform UK is also standing in
Sunderland Central. They are a registered business, rather than a political
party (thus getting around certain restrictions on political parties, such as
the need to be transparent about their funding). They take a very different
approach, rejecting net zero ambitions, advocating that we adapt to a warmer
climate, and calling for fast-tracking of licenses for North Sea gas and oil,
shale gas extraction (fracking), small nuclear reactors, and incentivised
mining for lithium and clean coal.
Christians believe that God created
the world, and continues to sustain it; that God entrusted humanity with
responsibility to guard the flourishing of all life on earth; and that the threat
to life on earth for all species is at least in part tied to human abdication
of that God-given responsibility, with hope for all living things also tied to God’s
initiative—through the divine person of Jesus Christ—to restore humanity to
their rightful position as environmental guardians. Indeed, ‘to strive to
safeguard the integrity of creation and sustain and renew the life of the
earth’ is one of the five marks of Anglican mission, across the world (the
others being: to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom; to teach, baptise and
nurture new believers; to respond to human need by loving service; to seek to
transform unjust structures of society, to challenge violence of every kind and
to pursue peace and reconciliation). While Labour, the LibDems and Greens all
highlight the importance of international cooperation and targeted development funding,
links across the Anglican Communion allow for actual connection and partnership
between local communities. Durham diocese has a link with the kingdom of
Lesotho, which could benefit from renewal post the hiatus of the global Coronavirus
pandemic.
There are things we can do here, too.
Some are large, and will require drawing on external funds, such as replacing
our heating systems, in the church hall as a matter of priority and in the
church as a matter of planning for the future. But there are other things we
can do, to take responsibility in this regard. We can shape and adopt an
environmental policy, adapting existing templates for churches to our context.
These cover energy use, which banks we might use and which charities we might
support, how we apply principles of reducing, re-using and recycling waste to
the products we buy for church use, the food and dink we consume, the changes
we make in our own homes, and the worship and teaching Sunday by Sunday.
Every church, church school and
diocese in the Church of England is also encouraged to engage with the Eco
Church scheme, which supports churches to become better stewards of God’s
creation working progressively through bronze, silver, and gold awards. We are
signed-up to this—and it wouldn’t take a lot of work to reach bronze
accreditation—but really we need someone with a vision to serve as an
Environmental Champion for the church and parish of St Nicholas, to take this
on. Perhaps this is something that God might put on your heart—perhaps in
response to a sense of discouragement, as God responded to Job and as Jesus
responded to his disciples. Perhaps this is where your faith will grow?
And we can make use of resources from
the wider Church to help us engage with care for God’s creation, resources such
as those produced to support the annual Season of Creation, which runs from 1
September to 4 October each year. This year’s theme is the firstfruits of hope.
Blackburn diocese have produced six sessions of material, including prayers,
worship, play, activity and actions to take, designed to help primary aged
children join in with creation care. They have generously made this resource
available more widely.
The environment is one of those
issues that cannot be left to ‘someone else’ to address: we all need to play
our part, and as Christians, we do so from a faith perspective. It is also one
of those issues where we don’t always know what to do—though there is also
plenty of consensus over what we ought to do, but don’t want to do. Here, too,
our faith engages us, with the promise that Jesus—the one through whom, and for
whom, God created all things—is with us, guiding us where we do not know what
we ought to do, and strengthening us where we do know the way forward—or at
least the next steps—but do not want to follow, for fear of the cost. Where we
are overwhelmed, by guilt or shame or anger or denial, he rises and speaks
peace into being in our lives.
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