The colonizers of America saw the wilderness primarily as a storehouse of “natural resources” out of which to make products, a living, and perhaps even a fortune. Lumber barons in great number accomplished the latter. Our town of Grand Rapids and many other Midwestern cities are still graced with their opulent and elegant homes—some of which demonstrate masterful woodworking skills that are now mostly lost or considered too costly to “bother with.”
There was little understanding then about the other values of wilderness—and certainly no grasp of the fact that such “resources” could be depleted. Our forebears lived as though there were no limits. One result is highlighted in my last post about the redwoods, those long-lived and awe-inspiring giants of the forest that were seen as resources for the benefit of mankind alone until they were diminished to only four percent of the former range. Those left are finally treasured by most of us, but are still threatened by those who see in them only an opportunity for their own financial gain.
Certainly the wilderness has provided us with wonderful natural resources. But we seem so slow to learn that it is so much more than a place of economic opportunity. When we look at an Appalachian mountain as mostly a mound of coal or a hill of timber for us to use for our own purposes, we may be failing to see it comprehensively. A second look can help us to see the same mountain as a watershed, a climate regulator, a source of clean air, a shield against flooding, a habitat for wild creatures, a thing of beauty, a place of peace and solitude, and a location for recreation. And we are not seeing it as God sees it—in all its glory with all its purposes.
It’s part of our God-given trust of the earth to have a comprehensive and biblical vision when looking at the wilderness. Followers of Christ have so many reasons to value the wilderness. Because we see the natural world as entrusted to us by an infinitely wise Creator, it’s not difficult to see the wilderness as a treasure of inestimable worth. It allows the wild creatures to fulfill their God-given responsibility to multiply and fill their portion of the earth. Caring for the wilderness is an aspect of the dominion and stewardship mandated to us by our Creator. Further, it helps to preserve our own health and to assure our continued survival. Further still, it no doubt holds many future benefits we are currently not even aware of.
Nancy Newhall reminded us over fifty years ago, in a book featuring the masterful black-and-white wilderness photos of Ansel Adams, that the wilderness holds answers to questions man has not yet learned to ask.
Finally, we come to an observation by John Muir: “Like most other things not apparently useful to man, [poison oak] has few friends, and the blind question, ‘Why was it made?’ goes on and on with never a guess that first of all it was made for itself.”
Muir was hinting at a purpose for the natural world that the patriarch Job learned when God paraded before his mental vision the entire cosmos He created. In the longest direct address of God in the Scriptures (the 129 verses of Job 38-41), the Creator Himself uses numerous parts of the natural world that w
ere at that time in history beyond human control, human understanding, and human utility to humble Job with the reality that we cannot know all the purposes of God for wild creatures and wild places.
The apostle John, however, does reveal to us one of God’s purposes: He created all things for His pleasure (Rev. 4:11 KJV). So if the natural world was in part created to give God pleasure, are we not being irreverent when we forget that while people can preserve, conserve, or destroy the wilderness, only God can create it?![]()
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In the course of our enjoying and properly valuing the wilderness, we can be motivated by the words of Isaac Watts:
I sing the mighty power of God that made the mountains rise,
That spread the flowing seas abroad and built the lofty skies.
I sing the wisdom that ordained the sun to rule the day;
The moon shines full at His command and all the stars obey.I sing the goodness of the Lord that filled the earth with food;
He formed the creatures with His word and then pronounced them good.
Lord, how Thy wonders are displayed where’er I turn my eye:
If I survey the ground I tread or gaze upon the sky!There’s not a plant or flower below but makes Thy glories known;
And clouds arise and tempests blow by order from Thy throne;
While all that borrows life from Thee is ever in Thy care,
And everywhere that man can be, Thou, God, art present there.
See you outdoors!
Dean

January 31st, 2009 at 1:59 pm
Again, Dean, all I can say is “amen” and “amen” again! We err so much on the side of depleting the earth and I hear people laughing over concerns of bringing to extinction some small creature God made. Surely a big mistake.
I guess it is true we do have to balance the use we can get from God’s creation, like from wood from trees, with the concern to preserve God’s good creation, intact. This would take careful planning.
It seems like our society and culture is built too much on “the bottom line”, to which all else is either subjected and often lost all together.
And we don’t have any idea just how much we’ve lost in this exchange, in more ways than one, I’m afraid.
February 2nd, 2009 at 8:29 am
As most who read my posts, know I enjoy feeding and watching wild animals and birds in my backyard. Though I live in a small town I am at the edge and so have a couple acres of woodland in which to enjoy the flora and fauna.
a few years ago some meteorologists were here for an inspection of my weather station. One of the fellows looked up into my back area and said with astonishment. “Do you know you have vaneer grade cherry trees?”
I said yes, but if you look a little higher up you see squirrel nests in their branches.
I guess my point is, we all see nature differently. He saw a tree worth several thousand dollars. I saw a tree that would take my livetime and more to grow. Food for many creatures and a home to others.
February 2nd, 2009 at 10:18 am
Dean, for me, you hit the nail square on the head. I love the wilderness, and try to be a good steward when there. Just this past weekend our scouts were hiking and camping in the northern mountains of NC, and as we did, each of us cleaned up where previously thoughtless others had been. So, I have been trying for some time to be conservation minded and not just enjoy the wilderness.
But this post, reminding us of why God created the wilderness in Rev. 4:11 set me thinking again. He did it because He wanted to. As you said in KJV He did it “for Thy (His own)pleasure”. Being one who says he wants to please God, I was caught off guard with this one. You might say that I see a newer and higher plateau. A more noble reason to care for creation: Because God takes pleasure in it…He enjoys the wilderness too. Since created in His image, I………!! (no words come to mind, I’m awestruck)
Check out the Message on this:
Prowling around the Throne were Four Animals, all eyes. Eyes to look ahead, eyes to look behind. The first Animal like a lion, the second like an ox, the third with a human face, the fourth like an eagle in flight. The Four Animals were winged, each with six wings. They were all eyes, seeing around and within. And they chanted night and day, never taking a break:
Holy, holy, holy
Is God our Master, Sovereign-Strong,
The Was, The Is, The Coming.
Every time the Animals gave glory and honor and thanks to the One Seated on the Throne—the age-after-age Living One—the Twenty-four Elders would fall prostrate before the One Seated on the Throne. They worshiped the age-after-age Living One. They threw their crowns at the foot of the Throne, chanting,
Worthy, O Master! Yes, our God!
Take the glory! the honor! the power!
You created it all;
It was created because you wanted it.
(verses 6-11)
God wants, enjoys, takes pleasure in, has willed the wilderness (and all creation). And the created beings of Revelation continuously praise God because of it! A light has turned on in me. Please keep helping that light to shine.
February 2nd, 2009 at 11:08 am
Thanks, y’all, for a wonderful benediction!