Our June Issue: What’s Mine Is Not Mine

Shaunl / Getty / Vetta

My children have “safe” spaces where they hide toys they don’t want their siblings to touch. This behavior comes naturally. They, like most of us, believe instinctively that they’ll take better care of their things than someone else will. This attitude is probably at the heart of capitalism’s triumph over the past century as the world’s dominant economic system. Its core tenet, the affirmation of private property rights, appeals to our inborn view of the world.

Christians of all people know, however, that human instinct alone quickly reaches its limits as a guiding principle for life, and the subject of ownership is a case in point. For starters, there’s the Bible and its nettlesome insistence that nothing is really ours because “everything under heaven” is in fact God’s (Job 41:11). I’ve never met a good Christian who disagreed with this, at least in theory (even if our credit card statements betray less-than-complete fealty to that theory).

Christians in the West tend to reconcile our contradictory beliefs in private ownership and divine ownership by leaning hard into the principles of personal stewardship. Yes, Genesis 2 commissions man in general to care for God’s resources, but it especially commissions man individually to care for the lot God has entrusted to him. So we’ve received ample formation in, say, stewarding our personal finances. We know what we’re supposed to do with the harvest from our proverbial garden: tithe, give, save, and wisely spend what’s left.

Where we lose our footing is communal stewardship. We’re much less sure about the rules of the garden if not only I depend on it but everyone else does too. This, the classic “tragedy of the commons,” is difficult enough to solve as it is. But what if we add a twist and say that, with every piece of fruit picked, the garden dies some imperceptible amount?

Two stories in this month’s issue broach these and other challenges as part of a larger exploration of Christian approaches to conservation. As our cover story argues, the church unquestionably has something significant to contribute to debates over how we should steward oil and other fossil fuels, regardless of our individual views on contentious topics such as climate change.

Certainly, the solutions can feel complex and elusive. But as a starting point, Christians can feel confident enough in God’s providence that we don’t have to panic. As researcher Eli Knapp’s surprising insights into East African poachers suggest, environmental stewardship may require sacrifice, but it is not a zero-sum game. Joyfully, in the Creator’s genius, we find that what’s good for man and what’s good for the earth are often, in fact, the same thing.

Also in this issue

This issue takes new look at our stewardship of fossil fuels (oil, in particular) through the lens of blessing. Climate writer Ken Baake explores principles that apply not only to carbon-based fuels but to technologies and clean energy sources of the future.

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Therapists’ Free Speech, Grads’ Careers, and Hegseth’s Imprecatory Prayer

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Supreme Court ruling on conversion therapy ban, high unemployment rates of college grads, and the theology of praying judgment on enemies.

Review

Manifest Destiny Was an Act of Volition

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Three books on early American history.

The Scandal and Grace of Christ’s Saturday in the Grave

Hardin Crowder

How Fyodor Dostoevsky saw the whole story of redemption in Holbein’s painting of the dead Jesus.

The Cross that Saves and Heals

Jeremy Treat

Good Friday’s message to a wounded world.

Wonderology

Cosmic Plinko

Are we here by chance?

News

Churches Try Drones and Skydiving Bunnies for Easter Outreach

“We want to make it about Jesus and getting people excited about the Easter season and going to church somewhere.”

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Tony Dungy: What It Costs to Stand for Your Faith

Speaking up for the value of all life in the face of criticism.

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