Today's Scripture Reading (May 18, 2026): Isaiah 24
I have
to admit that I have read a lot of dystopian fiction and watched many dystopian
movies over the years. The theme of these stories is that something bad has
happened, often a nuclear war or some kind of genetic accident, and it has left
the earth depopulated. The government is either gone or under autocratic rule,
and the fight to survive consumes the energy of a remnant who are left on the
earth.
One of
my favorite dystopian novels is Frank Herbert's, the author of the Dune series of novels, "The
White Plague." Herbert spins a tale about a man whose family is killed by
a terrorist while visiting the United Kingdom, and decides to get his revenge
by constructing a plague that will claim the lives of most of the people living
on the earth. Nations close their borders, reminiscent of the COVID-19
lockdown, but are unsuccessful at keeping the infection out. At the end of the novel,
the man gets to walk the green hills of Ireland, examining his handiwork. Only a
few still survive after the plague that has spread throughout the earth, and it
is a bad place, the literal meaning of "dystopian," to live.
Dystopian
tales like to examine how the world will end. We are probably inundated with
more possible ways that this planet of ours could die than anyone else has had
to deal with in the history of our Earth. For Isaiah, the only way the earth
could die was if God did something. The Bible tells dystopian tales of fire
raining down from the heavens or a flood that covered the earth. But the underlying
agreement in these stories is that God has done this. Today, we realize that
God doesn't need to do anything to destroy this world; we can do it all by
ourselves. Nuclear war, accidents, genetic mistakes, out-of-control pollution,
and the greenhouse effect are just some of the ways this might happen. Venus is
an example of the latter. It is a planet that is very similar to the Earth,
except that it is the hottest planet in our solar system, not because it is the
closest to the sun; Mercury gets that award, but because it has a naturally
occurring greenhouse effect that might foreshadow the artificial one we are
creating on the Earth.
On the
natural side, the eruption of a supervolcano, like the Yellowstone Caldera,
would drastically change life on Earth, killing most of its inhabitants. Almost
weekly, we are told about another comet that is going to make a close pass of Earth.
If one of them actually hit the Earth, again, it would take most life on Earth
with it. But we need to be careful. The potential risk to Earth from natural
causes is not increasing; we are simply becoming more aware of the many ways Earth
might die.
We know
that the Earth will die. It will go out with either a bang or a whimper at some
point in the next three billion years. Isaiah says that it will go out with a
bang, and whether we kill the earth or it comes to a natural end, God will
allow the Earth's destruction as a penalty for our sin.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Isaiah 25
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