God's presence to the world has traditionally been conceived of in terms of conservation, governance and concurrence. But what do these concepts mean now that the earth, due to patterns of human (mis)behaviour, is transitioning from a relatively stable Holocene into a much more precarious "Anthropocene", i.e., in a time of irreversible depletion of natural resources, mass biodiversity loss and species extinction, and global climate change? To what extent is the entangled web of creation with all its creatures "great and small" still the object of God's abiding presence and providential care? I will argue that we will need to reconceive of God's providential presence for our times, using more concepts than the traditional triad so as to do justice to the dynamic and often dramatic interplay between God and creatures, in accordance with the much more "polyphonic" (David Ferguson) biblical account of God's presence.