By using the word conscious, I mean to denote something different than the mere state of being alive. It is beyond this post (really, beyond this brain,) to mark the dividing line between the two; I only mean to make clear what kind of question I am asking.
No one will argue the point when you observe that trees are alive: we take that for granted. What intrigues me is whether they - or some of them - possess any measure of self-awareness. When you're in the right kind of forest, sometimes it's not hard to believe.
The Bible, the greatest fairy tale ever, (if I may say so reverently,) is far from silent on this question. Let's examine a few passages and see what we can find.
1 Chronicles 16:33 and Psalm 96:12 speak of the trees "singing for joy," and Isaiah 55:12 of them "clapping their hands." Psalm 148 calls upon all the trees - especially cedars - to praise the Lord. Ezekiel 17:24 speaks of the trees "knowing the Lord," and Jeremiah 6:6 names the cutting down of trees as part of God's judgment.
In Judges 9 we find a delightful parable involving the personification of trees that would hold its own beside any such story. Further, it seems to show that such stories have existed wherever men of vigor and imagination have lived among trees.
In 1 Chronicles 14, a rustling stir in the uppermost branches of a grove of Mulberry trees was to serve as the signal for David to go forth to battle. It is quite likely that the Lord stirred the trees, but it is interesting that He chose to give the sign in this way.
In Deuteronomy 20, the Lord forbids the children of Israel to cut down any fruit-bearing trees for siegeworks. (I suppose one could argue this was a strictly utilitarian prohibition, meant to preserve the fruit-bearing trees for the people to eat from later, but I rather think not.)
"When you besiege a city for a long time, making war against it in order to take it, you shall not destroy its trees by wielding an axe against them. You may eat from them, but you shall not cut them down. Are the trees in the field human, that they should be besieged by you? Only the trees that you know are not trees for food you may destroy and cut down, that you may build siegeworks against the city that makes war with you, until it falls."
Did you notice that? God explicitly stated - through His rhetorical question - that trees are not human. However, in contrast to our modern ideas about ethics, their very non-humanness means they must be respected. We're forever trying to define what is human and what is not so that we know what things we must leave alone and what things we can abuse and vandalize without compunction. As we can see from the above passage, this utilitarian thinking is sadly misguided.
All of this is interesting, but what really got my attention was a single verse in Luke 17:
And the Lord said,"If you had faith like a grain of mustard seed, you could say to this mulberry tree, "Be uprooted and planted in the sea," and it would obey you.
Branches and bristlecones! Not, "it shall be done," or "God will move it," but specifically "it would obey you." It, as in the tree itself. If this astonishing event were really to take place, we see immediately that two things would have to happen: 1) the tree would have to hear and understand the command, and 2) it would have to process the information and make a decision to obey. That sure adds up to something like a conscious tree in my book.
Of course, this may not be what happens at all; indeed, the whole thing may be only theoretical. But what is interesting is that Jesus spoke of the tree as its own entity. I don't know about you, but I find that terribly ticklish, not in a silly or amusing way, but in an exciting way, because it's always exciting to realize that the world is bigger and wilder than our ideas about it.
Image courtesy of willisms.com
10 comments:
Hmmm...interesting thoughts. What prompted this one? Another one you forgot was when Jesus cursed the fig tree...I guess it took it personally! lol. So do trees like it when we climb them? I hope so, b/c I enjoyed climbing some of them.
Nice pictures from your hikes...I wish that we had mountains like that here on the east coast.
I intended to include the incident with the fig tree, but I cut it out to save space.
The post was prompted by the verse in Luke 17 about the obedience of the Mulberry tree. That verse, combined with my steady diet of fantasy this year, just put me over the top I guess.
By all means, come out and hike some real mountains sometime!
I have had very similar thoughts, though I didn't advance them into a biblical study. I have noticed, however, that often when trees get dried up and diseased, they don't merely look sick, they look sad. Maybe it is a grand case of anthropomorphism. Or maybe it is the visual groan of a tree subjected to the curse of "bondage and decay" (Rom. 8:21).
Maybe Tolkien's and Lewis's writings aren't as fantastic as they appear, since the Bible also talks about the stones crying out, and the stars singing. Consciousness doesn't necessarily have to co-exist with a living body, at least in the way we think of living. Like Lewis said in Narnia, "That is not what a star is. That is merely what it is made of." Maybe the science book definition of life is too small. It's interesting to think about.
Raylene
The most vivid memory I have from Prince Caspian is of Lucy walking through the moonlit forest trying to awaken the trees. Your post brought it instantly to mind. I am sympathetic to the idea of conscious trees but not really convince one way or the other.
Max -
I know what you mean, but I think the "sad" part could also be explained as an extension of one's own emotion. Generally speaking, no one enjoys a dead tree. No shade, no kumquats, no happy birds, and possibly the frustrated feeling that comes with finding oneself an unsuccessful gardener. More deeply, I think, a dead tree reminds us of the Fall. (No pun intended!)
Raylene -
Bingo. I really like that quote, and it fits beautifully here. Your paraphrase is nice also. Thanks.
Long live the Ents!
Interesting post, Aaron. Entertaining to say the least. Though I doubt David found it very amusing ;).
David never reads any of my stuff anyway. No worries.
I think this might be my favorite post that I've read here! Like you said,
"it's always exciting to realize that the world is bigger and wilder than our ideas about it."
Definitely! And one of the ways I keep finding more "expansion of my ideas about the world" is in nature. Like the discussion I had with friends recently about dinosaurs/dragons and an aspect we'd never thought about before. Anyway, good thoughts...
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