{
  "id": "dict_005434",
  "term": "stewardship of creation",
  "slug": "stewardship-of-creation",
  "letter": "S",
  "entry_type": "doctrine",
  "entry_family": "doctrine",
  "tier": 2,
  "aliases": [],
  "short_definition": "stewardship of creation is a biblical and theological term that names a real doctrine, condition, or aspect of God's work.",
  "simple_one_line": "In Christian theology, stewardship of creation means a biblical and theological term that names a real doctrine, condition, or aspect of God's work.",
  "tooltip_text": "Biblical doctrine or theological term.",
  "lede_intro": "Stewardship of creation is a doctrinal category that should be defined from the passages that establish it, located within the biblical storyline, and stated with clear theological limits.",
  "at_a_glance_definition": "Stewardship of creation is a biblical and theological term that names a real doctrine, condition, or aspect of God's work. This doctrine should be read from the passages that establish it and kept distinct from nearby theological claims.",
  "at_a_glance_key_points": [
    "Stewardship of creation should be defined from the biblical texts that establish it rather than from slogan-level shorthand alone.",
    "It belongs within the larger witness of Scripture and the history of redemption, so related doctrines must be distinguished carefully.",
    "A sound account states what this doctrine affirms, what it does not require, and why it matters for the church's teaching, worship, and discipleship."
  ],
  "description_academic_short": "Stewardship of creation is a biblical and theological term that names a real doctrine, condition, or aspect of God's work. As a doctrine, it should be stated from the passages that establish it and distinguished carefully from adjacent theological claims.",
  "description_academic_full": "Stewardship of creation is a biblical and theological term that names a real doctrine, condition, or aspect of God's work. This doctrine should be defined from the passages that establish it, located within the larger storyline of Scripture, and stated with care in relation to nearby doctrines. Responsible use clarifies what the term affirms, what limits belong to it, and why it matters for the church's teaching, worship, and discipleship.",
  "background_biblical_context": "stewardship of creation belongs to Scripture's teaching on creation, providence, and the order of the world and should be read within that Creator-creature frame. Its background lies in God's creative act, his continuing rule over the world, and the ordered relation between Creator, creatures, and history, so the doctrine is framed by dependence, purpose, and providential government.",
  "background_historical_context": "Historically, discussion of stewardship of creation grew where exegesis of creation and providence met philosophical reflection on being, order, causation, and the dependence of creatures upon God. Patristic and medieval theology, followed by Reformation scholasticism and modern dogmatics, used the term to clarify how the world relates to divine agency without collapsing the integrity of created realities.",
  "background_jewish_ancient_context": null,
  "key_texts_primary": [
    "Gen. 1:1-31",
    "Col. 1:15-17",
    "Rom. 1:20",
    "Gen. 1:26-28",
    "Isa. 40:26"
  ],
  "key_texts_secondary": [
    "Job 38:4-7",
    "Ps. 24:1-2",
    "Rom. 8:19-22",
    "Ps. 95:4-6"
  ],
  "original_language_note": null,
  "original_language_terms": [],
  "theological_significance": "stewardship of creation matters because doctrinal precision in this area protects the church’s speech about God, the gospel, the church, or the last things and helps prevent distortions that spill into neighboring doctrines.",
  "philosophical_explanation": "Philosophically, Stewardship of creation raises questions about being, causation, order, contingency, and the relation between divine action and created processes. Discussion usually turns on ontology, causal order, contingency, and how providence relates to ordinary processes without competition or determinist collapse. Its philosophical value lies in showing how metaphysical distinctions can serve theological claims without mastering them.",
  "interpretive_cautions": "Do not define stewardship of creation by polemical shorthand, confessional overreach, or a single disputed proof text. Distinguish Creator and creature, primary and secondary causes, and revealed doctrine from philosophical extrapolation, especially where theological language outruns the explicit wording of the text. State the doctrine at the level of what Scripture and responsible historical theology can warrant, and name secondary disputes as secondary rather than turning them into tests the text itself does not impose.",
  "major_views_note": "Stewardship of creation is widely used to articulate creation and providence, but traditions differ over how strongly it should be defined philosophically and how it should be related to biblical language and created causality. The main points of disagreement concern origins, secondary causes, providential order, and how divine action should be distinguished from creaturely processes without confusion.",
  "doctrinal_boundaries": "Stewardship of creation should remain within the Creator-creature distinction and the Bible's teaching on providence, contingency, and creaturely dependence rather than being driven by an abstract metaphysical scheme. It must avoid both deistic distance and determinist flattening, allowing real creaturely causes and historical contingency under God's wise rule. It should therefore affirm real secondary causes under God's wise and sovereign rule. Sound doctrine therefore uses stewardship of creation as a boundary for faithful metaphysical reflection, not as a license to let metaphysics rule revelation.",
  "practical_significance": "Practically, the truth confessed in stewardship of creation belongs in the pulpit, the classroom, the counseling room, and ordinary Christian life. It steadies faith in ordinary life by reminding the church that creation is not self-explaining or self-sustaining, but upheld by the Lord who made it. In practice, that forms gratitude, stewardship, and humility in a world that often treats created reality as self-originating.",
  "related_entries": [],
  "see_also": [],
  "meta_description": "Stewardship of creation is a biblical and theological term that names a real doctrine, condition, or aspect of God's work.",
  "jsonld_description": "Stewardship of creation is a biblical and theological term that names a real doctrine, condition, or aspect of God's work. This doctrine should be defined from the passages that establish it, located within the larger storyline of Scripture, and stated with care in relation to nearby doctrines. Responsible use clarifies what the term affirms, what limits belong to it, and why it matters for the church's teaching, worship, and discipleship.",
  "source_basis": "scripture-led synthesis",
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