Christianity tells us about human responsibility to the world In Genesis it tells us that God created the world. He has built love and compassion for the world we can live in. The first group acted as a housekeeper and told me to take care of the world and all its living things. This means that we still have a lot of responsibilities in the world including mankind. Although the definition of poverty is "very bad", there are poverty or simply inequality.
Christians take a variety of attitudes toward the world, humans, and the attitudes we know about life. Some of the main teachings of the origin of the world is that the two "stories" of Genesis 1 and Genesis have different beliefs. There was much debate about this issue on the birth of the world and how it was made. In Genesis 1, I believe that God is lonely and want the helpers and the whole planet. Then he created all the land, water and many useful things to create the earth and make it beautiful. Then he was still alone, so he made animals, birds, and humans. Then he created the sky, the stars, the sun and the moon. In Genesis 2, God made all animals and living things, but he did not come to Earth. He or she is not the first person on the planet. Instead, he made a man named Adam. And he was in the Garden of Eden. He let the first two on earth go there. Even if the "story" is different, Christians still believe that they are all God's words.
The root causes of human development and consumption of forests and other natural resources. They exist as part of human traditions and beliefs. One source of this belief is Christianity, which is the most popular religion in the world. The dominance of religion in America and Europe has a significant influence on natural resources. The attitude of Christianity is the attitude of mankind. Human beings are drawn as the ultimate creation event and are created in the image of Christian gods. The dominant power on the earth is humanity. The first person, Adam named animals to show this advantage (Winton 1997). The Bible, which leads to Christian doctrine, is not a biophysical environment, but the history of human beings. Changes in modern science and technology begin with the name of Christianity. If Christian beliefs are different, human attitudes towards nature may be protection rather than exploitation.