A Thought to Consider
By Duke White Jr
π When Abraham walked the earth, historians and demographers estimate the world's population was likely somewhere between 25–40 million people.
βοΈ By the time of Yeshua (Jesus), the global population had grown to roughly 200–300 million.
By the early 1930s, humanity had reached approximately 2 billion people. Today, more than 8 billion people share this planet.
The question is not merely how many people exist. The deeper question is: What are we becoming?
In Abraham's day, nations possessed their own languages, cultures, philosophies, ambitions, and systems of influence. Humanity was already wrestling with the same fundamental struggle that confronts us today—the desire to build kingdoms apart from God.
The Babel Blueprint
The story of Babel reveals mankind's attempt to unite around human achievement rather than divine purpose (Genesis 11). The technology has changed. The human heart has not. Throughout history, God has given humanity intelligence, creativity, resources, freedom, and stewardship.
The Institutionalization of Sin
These gifts were intended to cultivate life, justice, family, community, and worship. Yet Scripture and history testify that when mankind rejects the wisdom of God, those same gifts can be redirected toward greed, exploitation, pride, violence, and self-exaltation.
β οΈ A Modern Reality: Today, sin is no longer merely an individual act. It has become institutionalized. It can be found in industries, economies, entertainment, politics, and systems that profit from human brokenness.
Entire markets generate billions—sometimes trillions—of dollars by feeding desires that ultimately leave people empty, divided, and spiritually starving. Why? Because the greatest battlefield has never been land, money, or power. The greatest battlefield has always been the human heart and mind.
We possess unprecedented knowledge, yet wisdom remains scarce. We are more connected digitally than ever before, yet many have never felt more isolated.
π― The Great Commission vs. The Broad Road
The Bible teaches that humanity was created in the image of God (Genesis 1:27), yet every generation faces the temptation to define good and evil apart from Him. This is why the words of Yeshua remain profoundly relevant:
"The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few."
(Matthew 9:37)
There are billions of souls searching for purpose, truth, hope, identity, and reconciliation with God. The need has never been greater. The opportunity has never been larger.
Yeshua gave another warning: "Wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it." (Matthew 7:13).
Truth has never been determined by majority vote. A crowd can be sincere and still be wrong.
The Generational Choice
As the population of the world increases, the question is not whether humanity is advancing technologically. We clearly are. The question is whether we are advancing spiritually.
- 1 Will we use our knowledge to glorify ourselves or to honor our Creator?
- 2 Will we build towers like Babel or altars like Abraham?
- 3 Will we consume the harvest or labor in it?
History is not merely the story of population growth. It is the story of God's relentless pursuit of humanity and humanity's response to that pursuit.
Eight billion people. One Creator. One harvest.
© Reflections on Humanity and Faith | Spiritual Advancement in an Age of Growth