EVANSTON, Ill. (BP)A couple of years ago, I was
discussing Genesis 1:28 with a group of Christians when one
ventured the opinion that the part about being fruitful and
multiplying was well taken care of. With over six billion people
on earth, and counting, we were plenty crowded.
At that point, I remembered an amazing statistic Id read
over a decade earlier in the pages of Harpers Magazine.
The item concerned the space in which you could fit everybody if
you bunched them up. I wont tell you what it was right off
since I want you to guess.
Last fall, I preached through Genesis, and once again, I came
upon that verse. Early in one sermon, I pulled out a tape measure
and marked a square yard on the floor. Then I called four college
men forward to stand in that square, which they did comfortably.
Then I asked the people to pick a geographical locale which all 6.4
billion folks on earth would fill if gathered together, four per
square yard.
Go ahead, guess. Perhaps you could pick a state ....
OK. Ill tell you. You couldnt even fill a state
with them. Using my atlas, the closest I could come up with was
the Hawaiian island of Maui, but I wasnt totally happy with
that since you would still have room for around another billion
people on the island. Ive done a little more checking, and
have found that Oahu is closer, but still too big. So are the
city limits of Houston. Yes, you could put the entire world into
Houston.
Lets do the math. How many square yards are there in a
square mile? You have 1,760 on a side, so multiply 1,760 by 1,760,
the same way you would get nine square feet in a square yard by
multiplying three by three. Use a calculator if you must. The
answer is 3,097,600 square yards in a square mile. Then multiply
by four, since we are putting four people in each square yard.
You get 12,390,400 people per square mile. Chances are your town
is a least one square mile in area. Did you know you could
squeeze over 12 million people into it?
Now divide 12,390,400 into 6.4 billion to see how many square
miles it would take to hold everybody. The answer is 532.67
square miles, or 533 rounded off. Thats about a 23-mile
square. Houstons area is 596 square miles, so youd
have an extra 60 square miles, room for another three quarters of
a billion or so.
If you spread out, giving each person his own square yard and
a folding chair, you could just about seat everyone in Delaware.
If you gave everyone ten square yards (a 30-foot square, or 900
square feeta small apartment), you could fit all 6.4
billion people into Texas.
The point is simple. Weve got room. Dont let the
fear of overcrowding discourage you. And even if things get tight
with unbelieving families, we could always use more Christian
parents raising Christian kids, should they be saved.
I once asked two Christian college classes of about 40 each
whether they thought that, if they married, they had a basic duty
to try to have some kids. I dont think I got more than one
or two hands total. They did believe that the exercise
dominion part of Genesis 1:28 still applied, but they
thought that procreation was a matter of moral indifference, like
choosing romaine over iceberg lettuce at the grocery store.
How odd that they would think God gave them such marvelous
reproductive capacities, commissioned their use, repeatedly
celebrated children in Scripture, and then said it was no
big deal if they made nothing of it. How can this be? Several
reasons, I suppose. I do believe that the zero population
growth hysterics have taken their toll. Careerism and
materialism get much of the credit, too. Children take time and
money. Biblical illiteracy is also a factor. But I think that
overall, its a matter of shunning things which might cramp
our style. Well, God can be a major style-cramper when that style
is sub-Christian.
Am I saying we should dismiss all contraception? No. I dont
see a moral obligation to use every God-given capacity to the max.
I have the capacity to sing, but I dont sing myself hoarse
every day. But if I never sang to the glory of God, I should be
ashamed of myself.
Certainly, there are those who are called to singleness. Of
course, there are reasons for couples to delay or interrupt child-bearing.
But the burden of justification before God always rests upon the
willfully childless.
Besides, kids are great. A challenge, yes, but a blessing (see,
for instance, Psalm 127:3-5). Its interesting to read the
late-in-life reflections of those who have chosen career over
family. They often draw their satisfaction from the impact they
had on a few key lives. An architecture professor savors the work
of one of his star pupils, a lawyer remembers an innocent
prisoner he helped free, a stock broker recalls the kid who went
to an expensive school because the fathers investment
portfolio was fruitful.
But what about cutting to the chase and impacting key lives
directly from their moment of conception? Now, thats a
career move.
Mark Coppenger is pastor of Evanston (Ill.) Baptist Church
and distinguished professor of apologetics at Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky. Reprinted from the Illinois
Baptist newsjournal.