Preach Magazine Issue 2- Spring 2015 Feb. 2015 | Page 32

32 FEATURE I’D ABSORBED THE IDEA THAT CREATION WAS A SECONDARY ISSUE, A BEAUTIFUL BACKDROP TO THE CENTRALLY IMPORTANT BIBLICAL STORY OF HUMAN SIN AND SALVATION. I’D BECOME CONVINCED THAT THE WAYS I COULD SERVE GOD BEST WERE BY BECOMING A MISSIONARY, A MINISTER, OR POSSIBLY A TEACHER – ANYTHING THAT ENGAGED WITH PEOPLE AND ENABLED ME TO SHARE MY FAITH Meanwhile, God was stirring my conscience. My wife and I lived relatively simply as students on a church grant. Our car was small, second-hand, and somewhat battered. We didn’t tend to spend a lot on clothing, food or luxuries. Nevertheless I found myself noticing items on the TV news and elsewhere that disturbed me about our lifestyles, and those of the culture we were immersed in. I saw a programme about the hole in the ozone layer, caused by CFC chemicals in aerosols and fridges, and realised how carelessly we were treating the earth. I remembered past disasters – the damage done to bird populations by DDT and to people by thalidomide, the Torrey Canyon oil spillage, the Piper Alpha oil platform fire. Slowly a pattern was forming: recognition that something was badly wrong with the way western industrialised, technocentric, consumerist societies related to God’s good creation. Things came to a head in an unexpected way. My wife and I joined her parents for a holiday on the tiny island of St Martin’s in the Scilly Isles off Cornwall. After two weeks of self-catering we’d accumulated bags and bags of rubbish, and were then told there was no waste collection on the island (it’s changed since). So, one beautiful summer’s day my father-in-law and I walked between wildflowers and wheeling seabirds to a little cliff-top, over which we could see – and smell – the island rubbish tip. The biggest shock, though, was LWPT8462 - Preach Magazine - Issue 2 v2.indd 32 what happened as we silently slung our bin bags over the cliff. Unexpectedly I sensed God speak, not out loud but clearly inside my mind, asking ‘How do you think I feel about what you’re doing to my world?’ As the words sunk in, it was as though a piece of rapid rewiring took place within my brain. Connections were made for the first time between my lifestyle, our wasteful consumer culture, the beauty of ܙX][ۋ[