A Song for Creation: Reflections on Psalm 104

And just as YHWH loves to play with and to watch and admire Leviathan at play, so YHWH is bid by the poet to "rejoice in God's works." Yes, we created ones are to rejoice in God's works, of course, but this God, too, rejoices in God's works, because God sure likes to have a good time! As Annie Dillard says it, "The Lord loves pizzazz!"

Indeed, God loves, adores the creation, all of it, all the clacking, buzzing, whistling, howling, shouting, laughing, weeping cacophony of it. And so must we. If we are to help save our aching earth, our despoiled home, we must first love it, as God loves it. God said to Job, in glorious and frustrated poetry, "It is not all about you, Job! It is about mountain goats, and ravens, and even ostriches." Job had demanded his construal of justice, and God's response was, "Have a look at my ostrich!" And God's answer was not at all beside the point. We all must have a longer look at God's ostrich, at God's soil, at God's mountains. And we must love them—all. If we do not, God's great gift of creation will wither and retreat and dry up, and we will have destroyed our home.

"May the glory of YHWH endure forever," shouts the poet of Psalm 104, and may God's great creation live forever, too. I trust that YHWH will live forever, but the future of earth is not nearly as certain.

6/5/2011 4:00:00 AM
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  • John Holbert
    About John Holbert
    John C. Holbert is the Lois Craddock Perkins Professor Emeritus of Homiletics at Perkins School of Theology in Dallas, TX.