March 2012

“The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.”  – Albert Einstein

It is said that when a frog is deposited in a boiling pan, it right away jumps out, but when it is eased in warm water which then is slowly heated, it blithely burns to death.

I believe this little tale illustrates our society which in the last century has very gradually become addicted to fossil fuel, resulting not only in highly variable climate conditions but also in almost impossible challenges once the supply of finite oil is decreasing.

One of my (many) books is “Something new under the sun”, by historian J. R. McNeill. Its subtitle is: An Environmental History of the Twentieth-Century World.” In it Dr. McNeill writes: “In the last 100 years the number of people in the world has increased by an unprecedented 500 percent.” About energy he notes that: “No other century in human history can compare with the twentieth for its growth in energy use….. The world used 20 million tons of oil in 1900. In 1990 it was 3000 million,” 150 times more.

The consequences of both population growth and our ever expanding oil consumption are truly frightening. The result has been that our earth has contracted a form of leprosy as its skin is being stripped of topsoil; also deforestation and clouds of CO2 have given our planet a form of lung cancer, causing rapid hiccups in its climate, while our growing debts and deficits are deadly for its economy.

Since 2000 we have had extreme weather symptoms, evident in record high and low temperatures and in record high and low precipitation, all related to Global Warming, something Republican politicians deny it exists. Fact is that for the thousand years before 1800, carbon dioxide levels-which regulate climatic activity- remained around 280 parts per million (ppm). Due to industrial activity this ratio increased to 295 ppm by 1900, 310 by 1950 and 360 in 1995, and is accelerating ever faster. We are now experiencing the hottest years in history, and, although surface temperatures increased by only 0.6 degrees Celsius, even such a small increment is causing havoc in the weather.

We happen to live in a world where there is a finite supply of crude oil. No alternative source can provide anything close to the cheap, highly concentrated energy that petroleum provides. Sorry to repeat myself, but in the future we will have to live in a world almost entirely deprived of these highly effective energy sources.

Our use of temporary oil has pampered us into complacency and paralyzed us like the frog in hot water. Our world is extra dangerous because many Christians, who should be in the forefront honouring God’s creation, are among the most outspoken deniers of our air-contamination.  It reminds me of a saying by Luther, the church reformer:  “Sometimes the curses of the godless sound more pleasing to God than the hallelujahs of the pious!” I can well imagine a godless skier cursing when he sees a hymn-singing snowmobiler destroying his ploddingly prepared ski trail.

When we deny a problem we forfeit the future. Yet a different future is forming because soon the gushing of gasoline will be reduced to a trickle. Simply put, we, for the last few generations, have pursued the wrong narrative: we have lived the lie, have chosen the ‘broad way’ which C. S. Lewis called “the easy slope, no sudden turns, the smooth way to hell”. Unless we acknowledge our creation-poisoning, we cannot choose the future, which demands clean, green living.

Actually a shortage of fuel may be a good thing for us, because it gives us the opportunity to free ourselves from our addictive dependence on poisonous petroleum products. I know it can be done. I am old enough to remember how my grandparents before they had electricity were wise in the ways of the Lord. The Thirties in their rural west part of the Province of Groningen had pockets of god-fearing people: vibrant Christian communities where music, poetry, home entertainment were flourishing: yes, labour-intensive, but satisfying and environmentally responsible. Also the war 1940-45 has taught me that human beings are immensely adaptive. Unless we, as clusters of Christians, prayerfully ponder and pursue (ora et labora) ‘new creation-friendly’ ways, Greece’s present predicament provides us with a prognosis of what is to come.

Rereading my column reminded me of an e-mail I received a few weeks ago.

“Although lacking any real commitment to faith, I have found your blog to be both inspiring and in many ways reflecting my own views on life and the current state of the world.

I live in Edinburgh, Scotland, and would be interested in purchasing one of your books.  Obviously price and postage costs would influence my decision to buy, but I would like to know how much your books are, and the cost of postage to the UK. Many thanks for an excellent blog. “

Regards

Martin Smith

I may add that my blog – hielema.ca- received 30,627 hits in 2011. Your reply too is welcome at ‘bert@hielema.ca’

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