| The battle to feed
all of humanity is over. In the 1970's, the world will
undergo famines; hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to
death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.
So predicted Stanford professor
Paul Erhlich in his widely influential 1968 book The Population Bomb. It sold
more than three million copies, but its many predictions of global catastrophe
never came true. Most famines in the 70s and 80s were in African countries
saddled with Marxist governments or political turmoil. Has Erhlich admitted
these errors? No, in 1989 he wrote The Population Explosion. Without comment on
his past mistakes he merely moves them into the future again, like those who
predict the end of the world. Erhlich wrote, The Population Bomb tried to
alert people to the connection of population growth to such events...but
society has turned a deaf ear. Meanwhile, a largely prospective disaster has
turned into the real thing.... There still may be time to limit the scope of
the impending catastrophe, but not much time.
Are we really that close to
disaster? In September of 1989 the Scientific American published a series of
articles on Managing Planet Earth. While somewhat pessimistic in
tone, they are generally balanced in their reviews. In an article on
Strategies for Agriculture the authors conclude, World food
production could grow significantly more slowly than the current rate and there
would still be enough food for 10 million mouths by the time they arrive.
In 1968, Erhlich forecast,
[I]f...our population growth, and our water use continue, in 1984 the
United States will quite literally be drying up." He also declared
"Lake Erie has died.... Lake Michigan will soon follow it in
extinction. In fact, Lake Erie has been reclaimed, and we have not
exactly dried up either.
In 1980 Julian Simon, an
advocate of population growth to fuel economic growth, bet Paul Erhlich $1,000
that prices of five non- renewable metals would go down. For years, Ehrlich and
others had been prophesying that the world would soon run out of many metals,
halting industrial growth. They claimed that the world's supplies of oil and
gas would soon be exhausted and the West would be subjected to crippling
shortages. In 1990 Erhlich quietly paid Simon the $1,000. Not only had the
price of all five metals dropped, but the known world reserves has gone up!
In his 1989 book, The
Population Explosion, Erhlich not only continues to predict apocalyptic
devastation, but he connects population growth to many social problems we are
currently facing. Most people are unaware, he writes, of the
role that overpopulation plays in many of the problems oppressing them....
Visitors to our nation's capital find homeless people sleeping in the park
opposite the White House, and drug abuse and crime sprees fill the evening
news. News about the AIDS epidemic seems to be everywhere.
It is certainly true that
homelessness and AIDS are terrible problems, but to blame them on
overpopulation in America seems either a display of great ignorance (unlikely,
as Erhlich is a Stanford professor) or willful misinformation.
Are There Really Too Many
People?
In the book of Genesis, Adam
and Eve were given the command to multiply and fill the earth. In Genesis 9
Noah is given the same charge. We must consider the rest of the creation as we
determine if we have yet fulfilled that command. But world population is not
the problem. We share the planet with 5.7 billion people. If one could stand
all the people in the world, men, women and children two feet apart, how much
of the world would they take up? All of Africa? All of North America? New York
state? If every person alive today stood two feet apart they would fill less
than the area of Dallas County! And there would still be room for all the
buildings! If the world's people were put together into families of four living
on 50' by 100' lots, they could all live in the state of Texas, with more than
seven thousand square miles left over. So the total number of people is not the
real problem, at least at this point.
One of the statements one hears
with depressing regularity in discussions of world population is If the
present rate continues... In fact, the present rate is almost
never continuing. Consider a frequently used figure, the doubling time for a
country. This is the time it takes for a nation of 100 million people to reach
200 million. It is also a measure of how fast new food supplies must be found.
The faster the doubling time the more urgent the need for agricultural
development. In 1968, the world's doubling time was about every 35 years. This
was frequently used as the basis for pronouncements that if the present
rates continue the world will be faced with mass starvation in some small
number of years. The present rate was already declining, and the
world now doubles about every 82 years. And more conservative scholars had
pointed this out years ago. As the standard of living of a country increases,
its doubling time also increases. Thus the developed nations are close to
stability now, and as less developed nations become more industrialized their
population growth also slows. That is the basis on which many experts predict
that the world population will stabilize at about ten to eleven billion people.
Malthus's essay On the
Principle of Population, has, as he himself said, a melancholy
hue about it. It was Malthus, with his view that human populations would
soon overtake food production, who inspired the labeling of economics as the
dismal science. But was Malthus right? Malthus assumed that food
supplies would always limit population growth. But in the two hundred years
since he wrote, this has not been the case. By one means or another farmers and
agricultural scientists have always found a way to increase farm production to
keep up with population growth. But we have yet to find efficient ways to get
food from where it is produced to where it is needed most. One Christian has
seriously suggested that old oil tankers, which now sit unused because of the
huge world supply of oil, could be put back into service cheaply transporting
grain from producers to consumers. The fact that we have 5.7 billion people in
the world is not why we have starving people. We have the surplus food to feed
all the world's people. What we do not have are stable governments and economic
opportunities that allow people to earn a fair wage for their labor.
Alarmism and Faulty
Predictions
In his 1968 book The Population
Explosion, Paul Erhlich announces the approaching food crisis.
Then, in 1965-66 came the first dramatic blow...mankind suffered a
shocking defeat in...the war on hunger. In 1966, while the population of
the world increased by some 70 million people, there was no compensatory
increase in food production. He continues by laying out likely scenarios
of the world being rocked by food rebellions that will lead to nuclear war and
the devastation of the planet, possibly leaving cockroaches as the most
intelligent creatures on earth. Fortunately, Erhlich was wrong. Food production
continued to increase and more than keep pace with the population.
So what did Erhlich learn?
In 1989 he wrote another book,
The Population Explosion. Doom was again close, In 1988, for the first
time since World War II, the United States consumed more grain than it
grew...only the presence of large carryover stocks prevented a serious food
crisis. It is not clear how easy it will be to restore those stocks.
Again, thankfully, Erhlich was wrong. By 1990, world grain production was up
50% from 1988! And it has continued to increase to the present. Erhlich's
inaccurate prophecies are numerous. In 1968 he quotes Louis H. Bean
approvingly, My examination of the trend of India's grain production over
the last eighteen years leads me to the conclusion that the present 1967 1968
production...is at a maximum level. In seven years, India increased its
grain production by nearly 26%! By 1992 it had increased it 112%!
Famines are the exception in
most countries, and even then absolute lack of food is usually not the problem.
In a Scientific American article on world population, one author says,
Food surpluses exist in many nations, and even when famines do occur the
cause is much less the absence of food than its maldistribution which is often
accentuated by politics and civil war, as in the Sudan. This passing
comment touches on the real problem. Most famines in the last twenty years are
a direct result of internal wars in African nations. Whether in Ethiopia,
Sudan, or Somalia, the devastating famines and the hopeless faces of dying
children we have all seen on TV are the result of politics. As one segment of
the population wars against another, starvation is often a political weapon.
And in each of the famine-torn countries of Africa one can show that it has
been disrupted distribution more than low food production that has caused
people to starve to death.
The Bible itself gives evidence
that population pressures do not cause famines. When is the first famine in the
Bible? In Abraham's time, when the world population could not have been a
problem. There have always been famines, but wise leaders have also known how
to prepare for famines, as did Joseph later in Egypt. Many researchers expect
the world's population to level off between ten and eleven billion people. Two
specialists predicted that world food production could grow significantly
more slowly than the current rate, and there would still be enough food for 10
billion mouths by the time they come. The earth can provide all the food
needed for the foreseeable future. So why are so many saying we must take
powerful measures, like widespread abortion, to control world population?
Environmentalism and World
Population
One of the driving forces
behind much of the population explosion movement is that of environmental
concern. People are afraid that the earth is being rapidly ruined, and they are
sure that world population is one of the worst problems. Unfortunately there is
some truth to this. There are areas in the world where too many people have
been squeezed into one place, or where too many animals are grazing the grass
to the ground. But these happen because other people do not care to help. The
environment is damaged when people must choose between death by starvation and
cutting down trees or overgrazing fields. What we need to protest is the way
the people are treated, not their existence. Many of the role models put
forward by the environmental zealots often have very mixed messages. Paul
Erhlich praises Prince Philip of Great Britain for having taken
courageous stands in the population issue and its connection to environmental
problems. But this is the same Prince Philip who, when asked what he
would like to be reincarnated as, replied, a killer virus to lower human
population levels. Certainly a princely thing to say.
There are also ecological
movements that hate people. The Deep Ecology movement is one such loosely
organized movement. Groups like Green Peace, Earth First! and the Animal
Liberation Front tend to see the human race as a cancer on the environment,
something to be suspected and tolerated, but only in small numbers. Some want
to see no more than 250 million people on earth; others wouldn't mind if humans
died out altogether. These people see any large population as a problem, and
are ready to take action to make the earth right again. Others have
openly said that the AIDS virus is a good thing in that it will eliminate at
least some people who are ruining the environment. Often the extreme positions
of groups like these make other ecological organizations seem almost
conservative by comparison. Much of the time, people accept the argument that
the earth is too crowded because that is all they hear. The media are usually
not interested in reasoned, factual responses to problems because they lack the
shock appeal that gets people to tune in, or read a paper, or buy a magazine.
Thus, TV is filled with those who have extreme views, or who can speak
eloquently about the latest crisis.
So, how can Christians make a
difference in all of this confusion? First, by actually being involved in
caring for the creation God has given us charge of. Too many of us read in our
Bibles about how God created the world and cares for it, but fail to act as if
it were really true. Let us be actively involved in saving the creation, and
then we may earn the right to speak about why we are doing it. Most Christians
were slow in protesting abortion; so too many of us have been slow in showing
an active concern for the environment. The earth that God created can provide
places to live and food for all that God has made. But just as we must take
care of our own houses if we want them to last, so too we must take care of the
earth God has given us to live in.
A Christian
Response
The plight of starving people
in other countries seems to be like many other major world problems so immense
and complicated that we feel we can do little or nothing about them. We often
feel overcome by the task before we even start. How should we begin? What
should we do? One stock statement of the environmental movement is Think
globally, act locally. As Christians we should change this to Pray
globally, act locally. Because our God has created the whole world, we,
too, are to be concerned and to pray for it. Second, we can also show our
concern by how we act in our own communities. And finally, we can give to those
organizations that can act as our hands in other places. Prayer is always our
most powerful weapon. We need to be praying that God would make us sensitive to
the needs of the world. Pray that God will help us be willing to give of what
we have in order to help others. Pray that our lives will be an example to
others of a real concern for the poor and hungry, just the way Jesus' own life
was.
We can also encourage our
churches to consider issues like world population and caring for the creation
in the larger picture of biblical teaching. Instead of Earth Day,
why not Creation Day? Our churches should teach how stewardship can
be lived in daily activities. One good way to be involved is to give to a
relief fund that not only feeds the hungry but also helps people develop the
skills to farm more efficiently. Many relief organizations are involved in
community programs such as improving the local water supply or teaching new
crop rotation techniques. Seek out these organizations and give to them. Get
alternative sources of information. Best-selling books and TV programs usually
follow the most sensational sources of what's new. Find books that cover world
hunger from different perspectives. Look in your local library. Write to Probe.
The problem in the world today is not that there are too many people. The earth
can feed many more mouths than it currently does. But we must pray and work for
justice to prevail in many of the countries that now suffer famines caused by
political wars. More than enough food is produced each year to feed all the
people in the world. But we do need to increase the standard of living and
develop agricultural resources in a way that does not destroy the land in the
process. We need Christians trained in agriculture and resource management.
Why not
consider a career in agriculture? It would be very difficult
to get into Saudi Arabia as a missionary. But if you
go as an agricultural consultant or an irrigation specialist
you will be greeted with open arms. "Sustainable
agriculture" is the need of the future, and if
you train in this field you will be able to go to almost
any less-developed country in the world. What a great
way to be involved in a greater harvest of both food
and souls for the kingdom of God. When we look out at
the world we must not just see teeming hordes of people
but men and women for whom Christ gave His life. And
as we consider our responsibility to the world around
us we need to remember what the Psalmist said: "The
earth is the LORD's and all it contains. (Ps.
24:1)
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