The Coming U.S. Drought (is here) October 30, 2007
Posted by Paul Edwards in Drought, Environmentalism, Global Warming.trackback
It may not be all “sky is falling” theorizing. Joel Belz in the current issue of World magazine compiles a list of “big problems facing our society” garnered from casually surveying his friends. The result was “nearly 20 gloomy things to think about.” Not on the minds of his friends was the reality of drought in the United States. I suspect drought isn’t on your list of gloomy things to think about either.
Not a potential drought, but a very real and present drought in highly populated areas of the U.S. The governor of Georgia recently declared a state of emergency in 85 of the state’s 159 counties “where rainfall the last few years has been about half of what is normal.” Military personnel will enforce the conservation measures. The state of Georgia has now mandated a 10% reduction in water use by force of law.
The University of Nebraska at Lincoln monitors the severity of the drought affecting the United States at their U.S. Drought Monitor website. The image map is alarming.
Belz observes,
We humans can drill deeper for oil and gas, and we can build higher kilowatt electrical generators, and we can print money to bluff our way through an economic crisis. We can even, when desperation sets in, send a surge of soldiers to Iraq. But no one has figured out a way yet to hook a fleet of 747s to a bank of rain clouds, tow them to Georgia, Arizona, or southern California’s wildfires, and flip a switch to make those clouds drop their rain.
Widespread shortages of water - life sustaining water, which most of us take for granted every day - will quickly demonstrate how utterly dependent we humans are on a sovereign God. Our relative comfort as Americans, resulting from our dependence on our ability to master technology and make it our slave, has lulled us into believing that drought is a Third World “problem,” inflicted on humans less technologically advanced than us. ”It could never happen here.” Our American arrogance is in for a very rude awakening by a God many have believed to be Himself asleep. We will wake up to discover it wasn’t our self-created technology sustaining us after all, but “the giver of every good and perfect gift” (James 1:17). When the One “who upholds all things by the word of his power” (Hebrews 1:3) closes the windows of heaven and restrains the rain, no amount of human ingenuity can reverse His will. “Our God is in the heavens: he hath done whatsoever he hath pleased” (Psalm 115:3).
Only God can make it rain, but you and I can be obedient to God’s command to be faithful stewards of the environmental resources he has put in our care. This is not a Liberal or Conservative issue. This is a spiritual issue, and nothing reveals the true nature of our spiritual selves better than how we treat that which is at our disposal. Do we care for it or do we abuse it? How we act will be determined by what we are at the very core of our beings. And what we are at the very core of our beings - outside of the grace of God in Christ Jesus - is depraved.
Our core depravity is vividly on display in our American propensity to avarice and wastefulness. As followers of the One of whom it was said, “All things were made by him, and without him was not anything made that was made,” (John 1:3) we have a spiritual responsibility to stop wasting his natural resources, especially water. One city in southern California has posted a list of water conservation tips which serve as guidelines for all of us. Conserve now, while water is still flowing from your tap (and you don’t need a government permit to drink it). It’s responsible. It’s reasonable. It’s an act of worship - not of the creation, but of the Creator “who gives us richly all things to enjoy” (1 Timothy 6:17).
Well said. Add to this a concern about littering our beautiful land and a viable difference could be realized. A recent report on Lake Superior stated that this great lake is ten feet low with no foreseeable replacement in the future. The amount of missing gallons was in the trillions. About the only thing I might rebel about conserving is snakes. I live in a part of the US where it is common to find copperheads or cottonmouths in your garden, the only reasonable response to these is a garden hoe. Other than this count me in.
Good article Paul.
Looks like John MacArthur is right on, we are suffering the “wrath of abandonment”.
When God Abandons a Nation
http://www.biblebb.com/files/MAC/80-314.htm
God has a huge sense of humour. thats all i can say. i live in Lagos, Nigeria where at up until a few weeks ago, you had to go everywhere with an umbrella! Nowadays it still rains but the season is over.
My point is, i listened to my friends and family members (yep, i confess, even myself!) complain about too much rain and what it would be like not to have to be married to your brolly - and we’re all actually happy now that the rains “behave” and give fair warning before coming.
But now, reading this, im tempted to fall on my knees and repent.
we truly do not know what God is blessing us with until we lose it.