Parashat Bereshit
The Stewardship Paradigm
Humanity's dominion over the earth must be for the sake of the Divine.
By Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with Canfei Nesharim. To learn
more, visit www.canfeinesharim.org.
Few texts have had a deeper influence on
Western civilization than the first chapter of Genesis, with its momentous
vision of the universe coming into being as the work of God. Set against the
grandeur of the narrative, what stands out is the smallness yet uniqueness of
humans, vulnerable but also undeniably set apart from all other beings. The
words of the Psalmist echo the wonder and humility that the primordial couple
must have felt as they beheld the splendor of creation:
"When
I consider your heavens,
The
work of your fingers,
The
moon and the stars,
Which
you have set in place.
What
is humanity that you are mindful of it,
The
children of mortals that you care for them?
Yet
you have made them little lower than the angels
And
crowned them with glory and honor." (Psalm 8:3-5)
The
honor and glory that crowns the human race is possession of the earth, which is
granted as the culmination of God's creative work: "Be fruitful and
multiply, fill the earth and subdue it." This notion is fortified in Psalm
115: "The heavens are the Lord's heavens, but
the earth God has given to humanity." While the creation narrative clearly establishes
God as Master of the Universe, it is the human being who is appointed master of
the earth.
Grappling
with the challenging notion of humans as divinely-ordained owners and subduers
of the earth, we come face to face with the fundamental questions of our place
in the universe and our responsibility for it. A literal interpretation
suggests a world in which people cut down forests, slaughter animals, and dump
waste into the seas at their leisure, much like we see in our world today.
On
the other hand, as Rav Kook, first Chief rabbi of Israel, writes, any
intelligent person should know that Genesis 1:28, "does not mean the domination of a harsh ruler, who afflicts his
people and servants merely to fulfill his personal whim and desire, according
to the crookedness of his heart." Could God have really created such a
complex and magnificent world solely for the caprice of humans?
A Second Narrative
Genesis chapter 1 is only one side of the complex
biblical equation. It is balanced by the narrative of Genesis chapter 2, which
features a second Creation narrative that focuses on humans and their place in
the Garden of Eden. The first person is set in the Garden "to work it and
take care of it."
The
two Hebrew verbs used here are significant. The first--le'ovdah--literally means "to
serve it." The human being is thus both master and servant of nature. The
second--leshomrah--means "to guard
it." This is the verb used in later biblical legislation to describe the
responsibilities of a guardian of property that belongs to someone else. This
guardian must exercise vigilance while protecting, and is personally liable for
losses that occur through negligence. This is perhaps the best short definition
of humanity's responsibility for nature as the Bible conceives it.
We do not own nature--"The earth is the Lord's and
the fullness thereof." (Psalm 24:1) We are its stewards on behalf of God,
who created and owns everything. As guardians of the earth, we are duty-bound
to respect its integrity.
The mid-nineteenth century commentator Rabbi Samson
Raphael Hirsch put this rather well in an original interpretation of Genesis
1:26, "Let us make the human in our image after our own likeness."
The passage has always been puzzling, since the hallmark of the Torah is the
singularity of God. Who would God consult in the process of creating humans?
The "us," says Hirsch, refers to the rest of
creation. Before creating the human, a being destined to develop the capacity
to alter and possibly endanger the natural world, God sought the approval of
nature itself. This interpretation implies that we would use nature only in
such a way that is faithful to the purposes of its Creator and acknowledges
nature's consenting to humanity's existence.
The mandate in Genesis 1 to exercise dominion is,
therefore, not technical, but moral: humanity would control, within our means,
the use of nature towards the service of God. Further, this mandate is limited
by the requirement to serve and guard as seen in Genesis 2. The famous story of
Genesis 2-3--the eating of the forbidden fruit and Adam and Eve's subsequent
exile from Eden--supports this point.
Not everything is permitted. There are limits to how we
interact with the earth. The Torah has commandments regarding how to sow crops,
how to collect eggs, and how to preserve trees in a time of war, just to name a
few. When we do not treat creation according to God's Will, disaster can follow.
A Degraded Planet
We
see this today as more and more cities sit under a cloud of smog and as mercury
advisories are issued over large
sectors of our fishing waters. Deforestation of the rainforests, largely a
result of humanity's growing demand for timber and beef, has brought on
irrevocable destruction of plant and animal species.
We can no longer ignore the massive negative impact
that our global industrial society is having on the ecosystems of the earth.
Our unbounded use of fossil fuels to fuel our energy-intensive lifestyles is
causing global climate change. An international consensus of scientists
predicts more intense and destructive storms, floods, and droughts resulting
from these human-induced changes in the atmosphere. If we do not take action
now, we risk the very survival of civilization as we know it.
The Midrash says that God showed Adam around the
Garden of Eden and said, "Look at my works! See how beautiful they
are--how excellent! For your sake I created them all. See to it that you do not
spoil and destroy My world; for if you do, there will be no one else to repair
it."
Creation
has its own dignity as God's masterpiece, and though we have the mandate to use
it, we have none to destroy or despoil it. Rabbi Hirsch says that Shabbat was given to
humanity "in order that he should not grow overweening in his
dominion" of God's creation. On the Day of Rest, "he must, as it
were, return the borrowed world to its Divine Owner in order to realize that it
is but lent to him."
Ingrained in the
process of creation and central to the life of every Jew is a weekly reminder
that our dominion of earth must be l'shem shamayim--in the name of
Heaven.
The
choice is ours. If we continue to live as though God had only commanded us to
subdue the earth, we must be prepared for our children to inherit a seriously
degraded planet, with the future of human civilization put into question. If we
see our role as masters of the earth as a unique opportunity to truly serve and
care for the planet, its creatures, and its resources, then we can reclaim our
status as stewards of the world, and raise our new generations in an
environment much closer to that of Eden.
Suggested
Action Items:
1. To get started with your commitment to learn and act on a Torah
responsibility towards the environment, calculate your ecological footprint,
that is, how many acres of bioproductive space are devoted to supporting your
lifestyle. This can be done by clicking here.
2. After you complete the quiz, click the "Take Action"
link to consider ways of living more sustainably and with less of an ecological
footprint.
3. Stay tuned! By making a commitment to learn and act on the
practical lifestyle tips at the end of each week's Canfei Nesharim Torah
commentary series, you can make a host of lifestyle changes with significant
implications for your personal stewardship.
Rabbi
Jonathan Sacks is Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations
of the Commonwealth.