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  • Writer's picturePhillip Raimo

The Coming Season and The Earth

Creation groans and suffers from the results of human sin.


For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God. We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved.

Creation groans and suffers from the results of human sin. Rather than adding to the bondage to decay in careless acts, we should seek to live in ways that reflect God’s redemptive plan for all of creation as well as for each other as bodily creatures. This, I think, is a significant part of what it means to live with resurrection hope; we work against the groaning and suffering of creation and know that ultimately our work is not futile.


This coming week, I will be reminded again that God created a good physical world for his human creatures to live in, care for, and delight in. The physical bodies God created us with are intimately tied to that good physical earth.


We experience the goodness of creation through our bodily senses: through tastes and smells (including good food and especially fruit pies); seeing the beauty of God’s handiwork (trees and rivers, meadows and flowers, valleys and hillsides); enjoying also the sight of human creativity in a well-built farmhouse or covered bridge; listening to music as well as birdsongs as soundwaves travel through the air and strike our eardrums.


Even the goodness of human relationships is experienced through our bodies as we talk and listen, exchange the warm hugs of greeting or the assuring hand on a shoulder, and recognize that the piece of pie that brings such pleasure through our taste buds was made for us by another person as an act of love—made with apples, butter, and flour grown and harvested by a farmer somewhere, whom I am now relationally connected with through the eating of the meal.


God’s redemptive plan in Romans 8:20-24 goes hand in hand with the redemption of our bodies. In this passage, Paul tells us that God has a redemptive plan for all of creation, to liberate it from the bondage caused by human sin. God’s entire creation—oceans, forests, grasslands, lakes, rivers, mountains, prairies and tundra, birds, and amphibians—all suffer from the consequences of human sin.


Paul describes it as “bondage to decay.”


When I think of God’s redemptive work, and of his promises to bring that work to fruition at the second coming of Christ, I usually think first of the “freedom and glory of the children of God;”


God’s saving work in his human creatures (accomplished by Christ at His first coming) and about the hope of the resurrection.


What I find interesting in this passage, though, is that God’s redemptive plan includes redemption for all of creation. Just as the whole creation has been brought into the suffering that we humans experience as a result of our sin, so also will the whole creation be restored and redeemed; it will be “liberated from its bondage to decay.” That is God’s redemptive plan! It is a glimpse of the second Advent, and of the characteristics of his new kingdom.


When we pray “Your kingdom come, your will be done,” we ought to reflect on the characteristics of God’s kingdom that we are praying will come. The best way to prepare for that kingdom and honor its King is by seeking to live out the characteristics of His kingdom in the midst of the sin-ravaged world we live in.


That should entail care for one another as bodily creatures: healing the sick, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, caring for the widow, the orphan, the poor and oppressed, the stranger and refugee. It also ought to involve caring for all of God’s creation: soil, air, and water, tropical rainforests and arctic tundra, wild places and cultivated fields, domesticated animals as well as the wild goats on the mountainsides and the leviathan that God made to frolic in the deep.

(See Psalm 104.)


That creation not only was proclaimed good when God made it, but we can see in this Romans passage that God still considers it so good that He has included it in his redemptive plan.


Creation groans and suffers from the results of human sin. Rather than adding to the bondage to decay in careless acts, we should seek to live in ways that reflect God’s redemptive plan for all of creation as well as for each other as bodily creatures. This, I think, is a significant part of what it means to live with resurrection hope; we work against the groaning and suffering of creation and know that ultimately our work is not futile.

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