All
of this good news left me in mind of Matthew 25, where Jesus gives the
parable of the talents. In context, the passage is about stewarding the
resources of the kingdom of God. Still, stay with me here, because I
think there’s a principle that also applies to ecology.
Remember, it was the servants who invested
their master’s money and multiplied it who were praised as “good and
faithful,” not the one who merely buried it.
This should remind us that humans have a
role to play in nature beyond just sitting back and letting it take its
course. The condor, for instance, was saved through intervention—a
captive breeding program. Likewise, the African animals benefiting from
responsible, commercial hunting show that our stewardship of nature
often means investing and increasing it, not merely preserving it.
Beyond all of this, I’m also struck by how
poorly our conservation efforts and animal success stories fit within a
secular worldview. If humans are just one animal among many, then our
impulse to save endangered species and our sense of responsibility for
them don’t make much sense. Why should one animal care about others,
some which would eat us if given the chance? If anything, we’re a plague
on the planet that would do the most good by disappearing. In fact, that’s what many secular thinkers have concluded!
Humans, of course, aren’t just another
animal, and we aren’t just a problem for the creation. The unique charge
our Creator who made us in His image gave us was to tend His Garden,
name his animals, and increase the natural wealth entrusted to us. That
means we are a pretty important part of the solution as well.
Conservation success stories make the most sense within a Christian
worldview. After all, they’re the stories of Adam’s race doing our job.