The weather these past few days invites us to do things
outdoors. Yesterday morning, I headed out on an early morning bike ride to
Boundary Creek Park along the Rancocas Creek, intending to take some pictures.
Because of the early start, I arrived there in time to capture a few shots of the
dew still caressing the flowers and leaves. Looking at these dew drops was a
reminder that there is a cycle in nature that reflects God’s hand.
Creation continues to unfold around us; each tree begins as
a seed; each river begins with smaller streams and water flowing gently from
crevices in mountain rocks. Each senior citizen began as a child, who began as
two cells united through the miracle of God’s grace and loving action in our
lives.
The leaves of a wildflower become surfaces where dew
collects, and from there it may nourish that flower, or trickle down to moisten
the earth. The process of evaporation cools the earth, filters the water vapor,
and allows it to cycle through again as clouds, carrying once again the
moisture to the higher mountains so it can flow through the earth and streams
to provide, quite simply, life itself; none of us could live without water for
more than a few days without dehydration and illness taking over our bodies.
I can look at this process as a scientist: I can put my
undergraduate degree in biology to work to gain some understanding about the
chemical reactions that allow our complex bodies to process nutrition, to
metabolize vitamins, to draw in oxygen with each breath to be carried in
iron-rich red blood cells to our internal organs, to our brain, our muscles and
to our extremities along roughly 60,000 miles of arteries, veins and capillaries.
Or I can look at this process as a child of God: His
creation continues to unfold in me and in my life. It is God’s loving hand
which guides the course of nature so that dew drops form, evaporation occurs,
seeds become plants which become food for each person. Each child grows, first
within their mother’s own body, receiving oxygen through the amazing transfer
of life, until one day they take their first breath within their small,
precious, still-moist lungs. From that mother they have the chance to be
nourished first in the womb, and later with milk that boosts their immune
system, providing for their needs both physically and through an emotional
bond.
This is God’s creation, written about in Genesis, and
written about most recently by Pope Francis in his encyclical, Laudato Si. As
Saint Paul reminds us, “None of us lives for oneself, and no one dies for oneself.
For if we live, we live for the Lord, and if we die, we die for the Lord; so
then, whether we live or die, we are the Lord’s” (Romans 14:7-8). Pope Francis,
in his encyclical, draws from St. Paul when he quotes Colossians 1:16, “All
things have been created through Him and for Him.”
This week, on September 1st, Francis has invited
the world to gather for a day of prayer for the Care of Creation. Planet Earth
is our only ride through the Milky Way during our pilgrimage of human life. Each
of us in our own vocation and calling – as children, parents, spouses,
scientists, ministers, business, government and civic leaders – are responsible
as stewards of the many gifts we receive from God. There is much to be done as
stewards and partners in the unfolding of Creation; we may think our own part
is small, but each small part makes up the whole. For many, uncertain as to “what
can I do,” it may be as simple as to begin with praying along with all the
world for all of God’s creation, each child, each mother, each father and
grandparent; we can pray in thanksgiving for each dew drop and the lives they
sustain. We can begin each day in thanksgiving to God for what He has provided,
and what He will provide each day through His goodness: “Bless us, O Lord, and
these Thy gifts, which we are about to receive, from Thy bounty, through
Christ, Our Lord. Amen.”
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