Eco Friendly… Or Expectant?
As a newly-wed, I find it exhausting doing housework. It literally
never ends. Just once, I’d like to be able to think “and THAT is the last load
of washing for 6 months.” I’ve even been thinking about buying more underwear
so it can be longer between washes! Coming from a share-house, and before that
a mum-house, chores and housework were sporadic and rostered – not constant,
and definitely not everything. And the worst is when you leave it, juuuuuust
for a little while…. Then BOOM! the house is a disaster area, and I’m looking
around thinking ‘In such a colossal mess, where
do I start?’ and I end up just sitting in front of the television with my
eyes blinkered to all else.
I think lots of things in life are like that: when the problems
seem overwhelming, it’s tricky to know how to tackle it. And that is what
happened with this ecology stuff; the more I read Baulkham’s book, the more snowed
under I felt. I started researching this and that, and realising that the
problem is so big, and so complex, and so messy… at the same time as trying to
remember the humility of being a creature…that the only thing to do was sit
down and have a glass of wine.
That’s why Chapter 5 “From Alpha to Omega” was so encouraging – it
re-centred everything around Christ, and helped me to refocus on the end goal:
everything truly under the Lordship of Christ.
“Because Christ is the creator of
all things, the destiny of all things is bound up with his. Because all things
were made ‘for him’, he will ensure that they reach his goal.”
This is where motivation comes into play: what will keep me taking
these issues seriously and doing something about them in my life is that a)
Jesus will achieve the end, and b) in His doing so, I'm taking part in Jesus'
goals. When we lose sight of the bigger picture, things become more complicated
or hard or tedious than they need to be. Another example would be that just
like when we find it hard to evangelise (although in a sense the stakes are
higher there), we need to remember that we're part of what God is doing in the
world, and can therefore take joy in doing small things, even in fitful starts.
What matters is attitude (or ‘mattitude’ for short): what can we reasonably
expect from caring about the creation now as God sees it?
“… to see the creation whole we
must see it in relation to the crucified and risen Jesus.”
The answer, as it always is (and
it should always be), is in Jesus. In being found in Him, we know where we’re
headed – and that means we know where all of creation is headed. And just as
our hearts and bodies are being
transformed and will be completely
renewed, so too is the eco-system that provides for our needs, and that we need
to tend to much better than we currently do, for the sake and the name of
JESUS.