The storied “sea” (actually a freshwater lake) where Jesus performed miracles among its fisher-folk and from which Jesus called his disciples to become “fishers of men” is now off limits. Galilean fish stocks are so depleted that Israel has instituted a ban on fishing there, in effect for two years, in the hopes that that piscis population will rebound. For those of us who know Galilee from the gospel stories, it’s easy to get sentimental, wishing for a 21st century reality just like we read about Jesus’ first century one.
But as Louis Jenkins‘ poem that Garrison Keillor read on today’s Writers Almanac reminds us, “Everything changes.” He observes, “Dinosaurs did not disappear from the earth but evolved into birds and crock pots became bread makers and then the bread makers all went to rummage sales along with the exercise bikes.”
I’ve been thinking with church groups lately about what the Bible says about environmental issues, and how different the message can be when we consider that everything changes. That we today can radically transform our conditions, that we can take for granted safety from wild animals and the weather and have no worries about access to food makes Genesis 1’s command to subdue and have dominion mean differently than it did in its ancient context.
In the case of Galilee, it means a fishing ban — active care and wise restraint — in what would seem on the surface to be directly opposed to Jesus’ encouraging such industry. The biblical notion of controlling and ruling over the non-human natural world is transformed into intelligent stewardship. Paradoxically, that would seem to be exactly what the biblical texts promote.