Without trees, you’d be dead.
Within minutes of your first breath,
you’d get dizzy and nauseated and lose consciousness.
Poisonous gas would overtake you and kill you.
The whole human race would be extinct if it weren’t for trees.
Aren’t you thankful for them?
I love trees.
They have always been my favorite part of the natural world.
Now I know why.
They keep me alive.
In early elementary grades, the scientific process of photosynthesis is introduced.
The concept is expanded in advanced science classes,
but this is all you really need to know.
Tree leaves suck up the lethal carbon dioxide that humans exhale.
Sunlight turns the poison into life-giving oxygen that humans inhale.
Brilliant!
“The average human exhales about 2.3 pounds of carbon dioxide on an average day. Take this number and multiply by a population of 7 billion people, breathing away for 365.25 days per year, and you get an annual CO2 output of 2.94 billion tons.”*
Trees are hard workers.
They carry out their God-given purpose with no problem.
God bless them.
But beyond their scientific, ecological and atmospheric value,
trees do something else—they preach the gospel.
Jesus
hung on a tree,
soaked up my deadly sin,
poured out His light,
and transferred
His breath of life
into me.
I call this
photo-sin-thesis.
CO2 —> O2
Death —> Life
It’s the great exchange.
As we approach Holy Week,
let’s take our stand beneath the cross of Jesus
and breathe deep of the wonders of His redeeming love.
“Jesus offered Himself in exchange
for everyone held captive by sin,
to set them all free.”
1 Timothy 2:4-5
*Statistic from nrdc.org


