“The trees of the LORD are well watered,
the
cedars of Lebanon that he planted.” Psalm 104:16
Up and
down the broad shoulders of the Missouri River, thousands of dead cedars lie
akimbo, puffs of bronze against the prairie grasses. Ranchers fight a losing
battle with the cedars because they grow like weeds in the hills. Eventually,
if someone weren’t there to cut them down, they’d turn the valley into mighty
forest. A forested Missouri River
neighborhood might be beautiful—and remarkable amid miles of grassland; but
ranchers are cattlemen, not lumberjacks.
The
cedars of Lebanon, I’m told, face a wholly different problem. Those famed broad forests simply are no more,
or are but a shadow of their former selves. They’re gone.
And who
is to blame? Not us, thankfully—well,
not us if we define ourselves by time
and place. But if we define us by species, denuding the forested
hills of Lebanon began thousands of years ago, when more populated areas of the
desert Middle East needed the lumber.
When
their supplies went scarce, wars erupted. Deprivation creates conflict—who’s
going to get what all of us want? Then, later, the cedars of Lebanon became the
building materials of the great Phoenician ships. Supplies waned.
While the
cedars of Lebanon may have been well watered in the Psalmist’s day, today they are
no more. They’re the stuff of legends because we did ‘em in. God may have
planted them, but human enterprise felled them.
It’s just that simple.
So why
not let the cedars of the Missouri River grow into brand new forests? Human enterprise uproots them; why not just
let them grow back?
There
really never was a forest of cedars along the Missouri because they were
continuously wiped out by raging prairie fires. A forest of river valley cedars
would be a new thing.
I don’t
claim to understand a great deal about “the balance of nature” or the
scientific field of ecology. But you
don’t need a degree in ecology to know that our interaction with the forces of
nature changes the landscapes around us. I happen to live in in the county that
leads the entire state in “altered” acres; here and there, on some forgotten
hillside there may be a corner of actual native prairie. What’s more, the state
of Iowa leads the nation is altered land. We have less wilderness here than
anywhere in these United States. In Sioux County, Iowa, change is evident in
every direction.
Right
now, if you want to see the blessed cedars of Lebanon, the trees that thrill
the poet, you can’t. . .they’re gone.
Psalm 104
is a pageant of God’s glory. The psalmist is awed by a landscape that blossoms.
That, today, the “cedars of Lebanon” inspire no music, no poetry, and no awe
suggests is sort of sad; I’d like to see what made the psalmist sing.
Psalm
104:16 is its own reminder to care about our world.
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