In a recent post I raised
the question about God's involvement with the oil spill in the Gulf. There are
at least two perspectives from which to consider this question. The first perspective
is to consider if God is actively involved and if he is, to what extent. The
second perspective is to consider whether the human agents that are part of
this spill could have benefited from considering relevant biblical principles. A
related issue is how to follow the direction of Deuteronomy 6:4-7 in talking about
the spill with your family.

Drilling for oil in
undersea deposits is a challenging task. These deposits may lie several miles
below the ocean floor. So how is God directly involved? First, He is the one
who placed the oil in these fields. He is the One who bought all of the
individuals involved in this spill together (Acts 17:24-28). It is in him that
we live, move and have our being. Then, there is the reality of Romans 8:28
that God does work all things together for good for those that love him. Without God's active control this promise
would be meaningless. This way of thinking about human events is not common or
popular among our political leaders today. But this was not always the case.
Peter Lillback's number one national bestseller, George Washington's Sacred Fire, is a powerful testimony to the
rock solid trust in the Providence of God held by many of our Founding Fathers.
While it is true that Deism infected the thoughts of leaders like Thomas
Jefferson, it is also true that many others were devoted to the God of the
Bible.
We can establish that the
Bible teaches that God has been and is actively in control of the spill event
in the Gulf of Mexico. Colossians 1:15-20, Job 38-42 and Daniel 2:21 &
4:34-37 are among the many passages which also teach of God's control of the
events of human history. But what does this mean? Because of the spill are we
to conclude that is wrong to drill for oil in the Gulf? This is where the
second perspective comes in. Are there truths in Scripture that were ignored in
this situation? This was covered previously, so let me reprint this for you:
Today,
the Creation Mandate has been replaced with a technological mandate. People do
not ask should a particular task be undertaken so that God would be glorified.
All that is asked now is can we accomplish such and such a task. And if it can
be done, there is the mandate that it should be done. This is a dangerous way
to think. It is dangerous because we
live after the fall of man into sin. When Adam fell he subjected not only the
human race to darkness and misery, but also the creation. As Romans 8 teaches,
the creation itself has been groaning under the weight of sin. In other words, creation has been negatively
impacted. Among other things this means that things will not always work the
way they are intended to, including oil drilling equipment. Add to this the
component of the selfish sinful ways of man and you have a recipe for disaster.
Here
is what this means practically. Biblical humility teaches that given the best
of intentions the noblest of plans for good, and the most careful planning and
foresight possible, there is no guarantee that some catastrophic event would
not have happened. On the natural side there is the possibility of rare
category 5 hurricanes, undersea earthquakes, unknown powerful underwater
currents, an unexpected rupture of the earth's crust and other unlikely but
possible occurrences too numerous to list. On the human side there is the
possibility of faulty equipment and design specifications that were not
comprehensive enough to account for the unexpected. You can see that there is
potential for trouble even if all the human effort involved is as pure as could
be.
But
the Bible also teaches that man is anything but pure and selfless. We should
not be shocked that costs might be cut to increase profit. It is possible that
some people could be motivated by exploitation or greed. Then, there is the
human element of revenge and rage on the individual scale. On a larger scale actions
such as foreign or corporate sabotage or terrorist acts cannot be ruled out.
3,500 oil rigs make an appealing target.
The Bible does give an
essential perspective about drilling for oil in the Gulf or anywhere else. Even
if the best of safety precautions were followed, it is still arrogant for governmental
and industry leaders not to seek God's will and providential care for the safe
operation of each of these 3,500 wells. God is to be acknowledged in all
things.
This is the perspective is
what you must teach your children. The oil spill is in the news. Oil covered
pelicans are pictured everywhere. This is part of the Deuteronomy 6 experience
of walking along the road of life. What are you saying to yourself and to your
children about this spill? Do your
children view this spill as a random out of control event that was caused by
the recklessness of industry? If they do, they are missing the perspective of
God's involvement in this spill. I will not pretend that I have any knowledge
of God's predetermined plan beyond what we see has happened. But I do know that
God is in this to bring glory to himself. Of that much we can be sure.
Perhaps God is showing us
how good and gracious he is. Can you imagine if there were 100 such explosions among
the oil wells in the Gulf - if there were 100 wells spewing oil with no immediate
hope of stopping the flow? Why isn't this happening? Has the government or the
oil industry displayed the skill and leadership these last 64 days that would
cause us to think that it is their careful management that has kept other wells
from suffering the same fate as the Deep Water Horizon well? Or are all the
other wells functioning properly because of something else, like the good
providence of God?
This is the opportunity that
Deuteronomy 6 urges you to take when your children have questions about oil
soaked pelicans.
Please let me know your
thoughts.
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Lots of great information and inspiration, both of which we all need, thanks for this.