This year, the spring or vernal equinox falls just before the period that Christians using the western calendar call Passiontide. On the one hand we have a sense of the earth awakening from its winter slumber, of blossom emerging and the days lengthening. Yet the reference to passion—which has its roots in the word ‘suffering’—reminds us that all is not well in human relations with nature (and in ourselves).
We have then a sense of a diverse and changing natural world. If you ask people about nature, they will often refer to trees they love or a particular landscape or watershed. From a faith perspective, this sense of attachment and celebration of nature’s profusion may be traced back to creation. The God who creates does so without point, so to speak. The sheer blooming diversity and profusion suggest that God creates lavishly and abundantly. That’s why some theologians have spoken of the extinction of species as a kind of un-creation: an undoing of God’s purposes—creation’s own ‘passion’, we might say.