What's It Good For?

icon1 Posted by Dean Ohlman |  icon4 December 7th, 2008
icon2 Filed in Creator, Nature, creation care

Several years ago my son Dave and I were on a trail ride in one of southwestern Utah’s seemingly endless awe-inspiring canyons: Kodachrome Basin.  Riding along with us was a California family that included the grandparents, par­ents, and children.  Our trail boss, Bob, a good-humored, experienced wrangler, patiently put up with our amateur horseman­ship on the trail and even took time to give us the natural history of the land and the vegetation.  One of the unusual plants he pointed out was what he called “corral grass.”  Its unique feature is that it grows in circular patches and, as he explained, by making a ring of tight growth, it pro­tects its root space from other encroaching plants.  When Bob finished his explanation, the grand­father, who had been matching wits with the trail boss, quipped, “Yes, but what’s it good for?”  And we all chuckled.

As the horses plodded on toward the next spectacular vista, I thought about the grandfa­ther’s comment:  While I knew it was meant to be funny, almost unconsciously it influ­enced three gen­erations to continue thinking, like the majority of the Western world, that natural things have little value unless we can identify some practical use for them.  If they have no obvious value for me or for mankind in general, they are mere curiosities—not worth much, if anything.

Ecological studies, however, are providing overwhelming evidence that the survival of the earth’s ecosystems depends upon a vast diversity of plants and animals that interdepen­dently maintain life.  Living things once considered worthless, or even harmful, are now known to be vi­tal ingredients in the recipe for a healthy environment.

In fact, Christians can declare without fear of contradiction, “God believes in biodiver­sity.”  How else can we interpret the account of Noah’s ark?  Since God created the earth with biodiver­sity, we can logically conclude that he in­tended for that biodi­versity to continue.  All of us who claim the authority of the Bible as the Word of God should be willing to accept biodiversity as a basic fact of creation.  Further, I believe we have a responsibility to honor all things created because God has reasons that we have no knowledge of.

 We also have an important statement in Scripture about biodiversity and the place of human utility in relationship to what God  has created in Genesis 2:9: “The Lord God made all kinds of trees grow out of the ground—trees that were pleasing to the eye and good for food.”  Here there is biodiversity in “all kinds of trees,” and the beauty of the trees is mentioned before their utility.

I feel it’s wise for us to gain knowledge of all things God created.  Consider all that was included in the gift of wisdom God gave to Solomon: “God gave Solomon wisdom and very great insight, and a breadth of understanding as measureless as the sand on the seashore. . . . He spoke three thousand proverbs and his songs numbered a thousand and five. He described plant life, from the cedar of Lebanon to the hyssop that grows out of walls. He also taught about animals and birds, reptiles and fish” (1 Kings 4: 29, 33).

Hyssop

Hyssop

So, anonymous California grandfather, if you want to match wits with Solomon, you’ll probably have to care more for such things as hyssop—and corral grass.

See you outdoors!

Dean


3 Responses to “What's It Good For?”

  1. rdrcomp Says:

    Oh no, now I am going to have to think before swatting a mosquito or housefly! Can these “pests” actually have value??

    Of course, I know the answer, although I will still slap a biting mosquito, and trap mice which get into the house.

    I used to “hate” snakes. Did you realize that the word enmity that God told the serpent He would put between it and the woman actually means hatred? No wonder most folks I know hate snakes.

    But I won’t kill one now unless I absolutely have to to get one out of a house, and then I try to capture it as much as possible. I have a friend who is a herpetologist (studies amphibians and reptiles) who helped me realize the importance and benefit of snakes and being a Boy Scout leader, I want to pass on true and positive information to my scouts. He helped me see that snakes (along with most wildlife) are not out there looking for someone to bite, in fact even if a venomous snake does bite in self defense, it usually does not inject venom, but reserves venom for prey that it needs to eat.

    Anyway, Dean, I appreciate the post because all of creation is good for something. We and I especially include me, need to find out why.

  2. Linda Says:

    Thanks for drawing our attention to our shortsightedness. God’s economy often seems weird to us, especially when it comes to the natural world. We seem to hate spiders and kill them on sight, even though we would be eaten alive by insects if they disappeared. We find vultures, seagulls and crows to be annoying, forgetting that they are a clean-up crew we depend on for disposing of the final remains of animal life around us. We just don’t get it.
    What is it good for? And don’t we ask that same question about other parts of God’s economy, namely prayer, meditation, memory of Bible verses…self-sacrifice. If we don’t see easy math that adds up to immediate benefit to ourselves, then what good is it? Heaven help us to look beyond our turned up noses!

  3. Ted M. Gossard Says:

    How wonderful, all God has created. Why should we have the strange notion that we can figure out why it’s all there? The amount of diversity is surely mind boggling.

    Thanks for this helpful post, Dean. We need this good reminder and heads up.

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