happy earth day

April 22

It’s Earth Day 2006. I’m going to go plant something or run around outside for awhile.

Here’s a free song from The Depavers: Have a Global Warming Day (mp3). Enjoy!
(right-click + save as to download)

i love my planet
my favorite tree (see from above)

news from b-town

April 20

Things have been pretty busy around here lately…but a whole lot of fun, too.

holy week ::
Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Sunday were beautiful reminders of who I am, what I’m doing, and why. The Easter Barbecue (that is, the First Annual Meat Meet) was great, too; we still have a fridge full of burgers and hot dogs. Sorry, Neil.

the apartment ::
After posting an ad for my apartment to Craigslist and IU’s internal classifieds (”OneStart”), I received about eight extra replies from some colorful people. Fortunately, a friend of mine from class also replied, which I did not expect. Olaolu will be here for the summer - I’m incredibly happy that I’m able to get some money back for rent and provide a great place for a friend to live.

a place in portland ::
I’ve been talking with a guy I’ll be working with this summer quite a bit lately. Ethan and I (who both apparently tried for an internship with Mars Hill in Grand Rapids) will be road-tripping it up to Portland mid-May and hopefully living together, though the latter is to be determined. If you think of it, pray for a place to live for us…I’m looking at the situation as a choice of blessings, but it would be great if everything fell into place as we hope it will.

finishing the semester ::
I gave two presentations and turned in a substantial paper on Tuesday - glad to have that over with. I’m in the middle of writing two longer papers due next Thursday, followed by another of similar length due the Tuesday after that (May 2). There are also three exams to reckon with in the midst of all this, so you can expect to find a caffeinated me near a pile of books, notebooks, and a keyboard somewhere in Bloomington for the next two weeks.

three great papers ::
Look forward to these. I’ll likely be presenting them here at least in part.

  1. An ethnographic exploration of the “testimony” as a rhetorical construction of selfhood and a form of therapeutic discourse.
  2. An analysis of the relationship between evangelicals and ecology (or ecology and evangelicals, depending upon your perspective…and mine). I’ll be referencing Brian McLaren’s A Generous Orthodoxy and NKOC narrative series, Rob Bell’s Velvet Elvis, and Peter Illyn’s Restoring Eden, among other great texts.
  3. A critical examination of the persuasive approach of Jim Wallis’ God’s Politics. I’ll be looking at it as an adaptation of “Invitational Rhetoric” and perhaps draw a few larger cultural conclusions concerning the nature/state of American political participation.

Oh, and I can promise you that these will contain a bit of subtle humor here and there…I can’t stand dry writing.

and, a treat ::
I first saw this over at BoingBoing. Perhaps we should start converting more tanks to wage peace. Or pink. Pink’s okay, too.

wage peace

“subdue it” ?

April 9

update: I’m re-thinking some of what I wrote below…check back in a few days to see what I come up with.

Earlier tonight, I watched “Invisible Children,” a film about the abduction of children in Uganda amidst the war between governmental forces and the LRA. It is a deeply disturbing film, but the problem is so great that to ignore it would be to blind oneself from a terribly painful reality that demands justice. More on this later.

Following the film, we talked a bit about the responsibility of the Christ-follower to the environment. In other words, what is our place in ecology? A good friend of mine said something that disturbed me:

“I don’t have any problems eating meat — I mean, God gave us animals and the earth to subdue them; we can do whatever we want.”

I should note that this is not a direct quote but communicates the same (theo/ideo/il)-logical claim. Friend, I love you…but I’m concerned.

I have no qualms with eating meat — I love a good burger or brat. I believe that the hypermedicated, overcrowded techniques of raising livestock constitute a great injustice in our society and vehemently oppose factory farming. But that’s not the immediate issue here, either.

I believe that this attitude has its root in a contextual misinterpretation of Genesis 1:26-28, which I’ve quoted below (ESV).

Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”

So God created man in his own image,
in the image of God he created him;
male and female he created them.

And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.”

I’ll leave it to my academic and theological betters to dispute the translation of this passage from Hebrew to English. But I will say that several articles I’ve read (such as this one) propose that the Hebrew is better translated as “tend to it” or “be a steward of it” than “subdue” or “dominate.” [update: I’m at least partially incorrect here]

Let’s consider the context of this passage. God has stated that man is created in His own image. God as Creator certainly has dominion over his creation and wishes to share this blessing and authority with us. But let us not overlook verse 27. We are to live today as image-bearers of God. To Christ-followers, this indicates that it is our duty to refine this imago dei within us by the grace and power of our Lord, refining it and living according to it with Him as our model.

God has dominion over the earth - this is certain. But consider the manner in which He exercises it. He does not devastate it or conceive of it as a resource to be unsustainably consumed. Instead, the very nature of the natural world is renewal, resurrection, and a flourishing creation.

If we are to “have dominion” and “subdue” creation in the same manner that our Lord “has dominion” and “subdues” it, I think we must radically reconsider our relationship and interaction with God’s creation.

Perhaps we too are invited to participate in this beautiful dance of resurrection, redemption, and renewal.

a fellow steward,

c. scott andreas

“green energy”

April 9
Green Energy

c. scott andreas // april 8, 2006